Adriana Diaz, a woman living with schizophrenia and psychosis, uses social media to chronicle her interactions with the public. Her posts have sparked significant conversations about mental health awareness and the influence of social media on public perception, leading to both concern and interest in the community.
Adriana Díaz’s name once echoed across Colombia’s social media, but not for reasons that reflect her humanity. Her videos, showing outbursts and confrontations aboard Bogotá’s TransMilenio, quickly went viral. In a sea of online content, her behavior became the subject of mockery, memes, and debates. What viewers didn’t realize, however, was that behind the chaos was a woman struggling with schizophrenia—a serious mental health condition that affects how a person thinks, feels, and behaves.
For many, Adriana’s viral videos were just a momentary distraction, but for her, they were a glimpse into a daily battle. As reported by Semana in 2020, her mental health crisis spiraled as she faced public ridicule and isolation. Despite her clear distress, the public treated her situation like entertainment. But this wasn’t a choice she made—it was a condition she lived with, largely alone.
But who exactly is she? Adriana Diaz is an ordinary Colombian woman of about 42 to 45 years old, with a high education, who lives thanks to the help of her mother who gives her money to live in hotels (since she suffers from paranoia and thinks that everyone is after her).
It is said that she had a normal life until her mind stopped working properly, nobody knows for sure what happened, Adriana claims that the doctors who treated her in psychiatric hospitals were the ones who damaged her brain and nerves through medication, but since her stories tend to be incoherent, not many believe in that version. She was not famous and the fame she has now is due more to the morbidity and intrigue of the people who watch her videos on TikTok.
When she returned to social media recently, it wasn’t for attention; it was to ask for help. From a hospital bed, Adriana spoke calmly, explaining her diagnosis: “I’m not crazy. I’m a person with a condition. And I need help, not humiliation.” Her words struck a chord, sparking discussions about mental health in Colombia. Health authorities in Bogotá acknowledged her case, but the real action is unclear.
Adriana’s story is not just about a woman who went viral, it’s about the treatment of those suffering from mental illness. As stated in El Colombiano, she is not the only one facing this silent struggle. Many people with schizophrenia live in the shadows, misunderstood and ignored until they make headlines. Adriana’s case shows how easily society overlooks the humanity of those who are most vulnerable.
The internet may have made her a meme, but now, Adriana Díaz is trying to be seen for who she really is: a woman in need of compassion, understanding, and help. Whether society will listen this time is uncertain, but her story should serve as a reminder: behind every viral moment, there’s a person.

But also is a women who need a limit, because if this situation still like that maybe one day she will take actions an attack someone who don’t react calm like is usual, Many studies have shown how schizophrenia creates and proliferates aggressive and uncontrollable attitudes, which is why a normal life is not feasible for Adriana, and this case should be viewed objectively. Besides laughter, it also generates fear on the streets of Bogota, Colombia.