every time i think of you i end up crying

it is april and my eyes are wide open

daydreaming about metropolitan cotton candy

lazing around, careless, sundazed

a hastily manufactured afterthought

stopping mid sentence

to gaze at cloudy skies and stars

seamless streams unbroken, forgotten



april, come it will

on quiet sunny days, seeping sunlight

leaking twilight skies

trail of words

trailing words

i can taste how much you loved me

how much you used to, anyway

yours

when i tried to stop myself from feeling all i felt for you, i couldn’t 

i still tried to stop myself from telling you how much i felt

because if you didn’t know

if i didn’t say it

we’d always be what if.

you’d be my maybe

and i’d be your almost

we’d be perfect

precious, frozen in time

like a dream

but god, you are incredible

you are so easy to love

falling in love with you was inevitable

you hold me close

and touch me gently

you kissed me until there was more happiness inside me than sadness

there is so much love in my soul

my heart feels so full

i love when we just talk

i want to know all of you

i’m so lucky i get to explore your mind

i want to get lost forever

i see oceans in your eyes, it makes me so scared 

if you are the ocean then i am desperate to drown

how can you see me so clearly and still love me?

when i look into your eyes, i feel so bare

how can you see right through me,

and see me for all that i am?

even though i’m scared

even though we aren’t making any promises

i trust you and i trust us

we don’t have to make any promises 

you have all of me either way

when i love, i give my all 

all of me, my heart, completely

and i love every part of you 

i’m scared to say i’m yours but 

i am completely and utterly yours

i’m yours.

today and forever

i’m always so angry at the world

what’s the point of all this pain?

or i’m numb and i don’t care because what is the point?

if tomorrow never came why would it matter

if i already didn’t feel anything at all

when we’re together everything feels right and

the world doesn’t seem as scary as it used to be

it feels like maybe life isn’t so bad because people like you exist and there is hope in the world after all

i’m not angry at the world, i’m grateful to be alive

because if i weren’t, i wouldn’t have met you

i’m no longer numb or cold

there is a light inside me that wants to fight

and i can feel my heart beat so fast all the time

i have never felt more alive

i don’t know what the future holds but i know that i never want to stop feeling this way

the more i know you, the harder i fall

you are so easy to love

your heart is so big and so strong

you hurt but you are still kind

you care about people

and you are kind to them even though they haven’t always been kind to you

they say when a writer falls in love with you, you live forever in their words

i never want this to end

and i am afraid of tomorrow

so there is no tomorrow

only today and forever

and for today and forever

we are alive

losing my battles

drowning

I’m hurting again. The days are bleeding into one another and I am bleeding internally. I promised myself maybe four years ago now, that I wouldn’t make myself bleed anymore. Not externally, anyway. But there is so much pain in not letting go. In not cutting myself open and bleeding out the hurt and pain inside me.

I am so angry sometimes it scares me. I feel like punching a wall. But mostly I just want someone to punch me. Someone to hurt me so hard I forget what it’s like to be hurting on my own. People understand broken bones but they do not understand broken parts. They do not know what it’s like to be screaming all the time. They do not know what it is like to be woken up from visceral nightmares of hanging bodies and loose limbs in the forest. They do not know that when I wake up, I remember. I remember every single detail of my dream and they do not know that I was there. I know it isn’t real. It’s probably stupid and incredibly trivial. But when I wake up from a nightmare, it sticks with me. I sleep a lot more than I should because my nightmares make me tired.

I want to dream about something so incredibly mundane like waiting in line at an airport or buying mayonnaise at the grocery store. These dreams are getting too much for me to handle and they are spilling into my reality. I get scared walking through the streets. I think someone will stab me or shoot me. I’m scared of geocaching in the woods because, what if I find a hand? What if I find a body? I’m not ready for that. My dreams are a part of who I am. I don’t expose myself to violent movies or scary movies even though they’re my favorite kind to watch. I like feeling unsettled from a movie but I can no longer enjoy them because I don’t want to exacerbate my dreams.

I feel lost and out of control. I hate uncertainty and life is known to be full of them. I’m at a tumultuous time in my life where I can’t find the balance between my mental health, work, and school. I feel like a failure. A disappointment. Why is my bar set so high?

These days, I’m grateful to just be able to get out of bed. To brush my teeth and go outside. Normal things that normal people do. But they’re easy for them. It’s a battle every single day for me to even get up. I can’t find the motivation to do it. My bed is my kidnapper and I have Stockholm Syndrome. I love my bed but I hate it. It gives me comfort but it won’t let me leave. Why won’t it let me leave?

I’m supposed to be stronger, to be better, but I don’t know if it’s working. All the medication, all the therapy — is it even worth it? Am I stronger than I was before? Just because I was raped, found out that I was sexually abused as a child, had suicide become a part of my life? Am I stronger than I was before? Because that’s all that matters, right?

All my traumas are spilling out all at once and I don’t know what to do. Every single day is a struggle. Every single day is a battle. And most days, I am not winning.

alive

I was on campus when the paramedics arrived. 

I don’t know who called them or how long I had been sitting on the cold concrete ground. But I was glad to see the flashing lights because that meant I no longer bore the responsibility of having to keep myself upright.

I smiled meekly at the medics as they wheeled me onto the ambulance. It was a panic attack. Again.

I knew how to deal with panic attacks, I got them all the time. I was no stranger to the waves of sheer terror that made my heart feel like it was going to explode. Nor was I a stranger to the trembling, shaking, and feeling short of breath. 

But this time, it was different. I wasn’t just feeling ‘short of breath.’ I was out of breath.

My vision blurred and my head pounded as I gasped for air. I could see my hands trembling and clenching into claws. I couldn’t control it. My fingers twitched and folded into my palms. I couldn’t control anything. My fingers, hands, arms, and legs were tingling with a sensation I cannot describe. I was just out of control. And I felt like I was unraveling.

***

Growing up, I was an avid reader and writer. I started reading romance novels at the age of 12 and they completely changed how I saw my world. Flowers weren’t just flowers. They were symbols of love. Written letters between my grandparents were no longer irrelevant and a waste of space. They were romantic exchanges between lovers. 

I fantasized about what life would be like if I had a boyfriend. And I had so desperately wanted the fictional boys to come to life. 

From grade school to middle school, my head was always buried in a book. I always had my hair up in a pony tail so it wouldn’t cover the words I needed to devour. I never looked up, never glanced at the world around me, never really interacted with my peers. 

I wasn’t interested in the boring world around me. I was encapsulated by my own world of love, and beauty, and joy. 

One day, a boy came up to me. He was one of the popular kids. I had never spoken to him before, nor had I ever looked him in the eye. He tapped my shoulder and I jumped, surprised at any kind of physical contact (since I was always alone, reading). 

He held his palms up, and backed up, apologizing for startling me. This was the first time a boy had approached me ever. I stared at him, not knowing what to say. But what he said to me, I will remember forever.

“You’d look prettier with your hair down,” he said. Then, he left.

I remember mulling over his words again and again. Prettier. He said prettier. Which implied he thought I was already pretty. 

I went home that night, confused but giddy and excited. A boy noticed me! And one of the popular ones too. Maybe I could have my own romance story, similar to the books I had read.

The next morning, my hair was down and I sprayed a little bit of perfume before I left for school. He always got to school earlier than I did. He’d wait for me. He’d kiss my cheek. 

I’m not sure how it happened. I suppose it started with a smile. Shoulder taps. Hugs. I never initiated anything, afraid I would do something wrong. 

The moment I decided to surrender my control to him was the moment I stopped fighting for myself.

The truth is, I was uncomfortable with many of the things we did. I didn’t like the way it felt. His breath was always too hot and I just felt clumsy and awkward. But we did everything he wanted because I thought that that was the “right thing to do” and because “everyone was doing it.” But they weren’t.

I was popular by default because I was his girlfriend. I somehow turned from nerdy bookworm to strange girlfriend to… slut. 

I wasn’t just popular. I was notorious. Jealous girls would follow me around, and try to take exposing pictures of me while I was in the bathroom. I was being bullied and I didn’t know how to handle it.

So, I stuck with my boyfriend. The mean girls were less mean when we all hung out together anyway. But I knew they thought I was a whore.

At one point, I asked myself why I was doing this. I didn’t think my boyfriend was attractive. He was dismissive and demeaning and he wasn’t a nice person at all. He was misogynistic. Obsessed with himself. Nothing like the boys in the books I read. But he was all I had. 

And I loved him nonetheless. I let him do anything he wanted even though they were things that didn’t feel good or right or something that I understood. 

I came to realize later, that what I had thought was love was just the curiosity and excitement about the idea of love. I didn’t know what love was but I should’ve known that it wasn’t this.

He asked me if his friends could take pictures of us kissing. To commemorate the moment, he said. I was extremely uncomfortable. I felt like throwing up. I didn’t want to kiss him, let alone have an audience or any sort of “commemoration.” But I was 12. And he was popular. I didn’t know that I could say no. I already did everything he wanted, might as well keep it going, right?

I made his friends promise to keep those pictures a secret. 

I was heartbroken when he dumped me later that day. Not for him, but for myself. Turns out, our whole relationship, whatever we had, was a lie. It was fake. He had made a bet with his friends. All they wanted were the pictures.

I went home that day, exhausted. I lost so much of myself in a toxic relationship that I didn’t even know who I was anymore. I just wanted to sleep.

That same night, our pictures were posted and reposted everywhere on Facebook. I was angry at myself for being so naive. Embarrassed. Humiliated. Why did I do that? Why did I let him do that to me?

I begged him and his friends to take them down, but they wouldn’t. And poof, just like that, all my dignity disappeared. That’s when I heard her for the first time. 

You’re so stupid. This is so fucking humiliating. Stupid, naive, little girl. Everyone hates you. You’re a slut. The world would be better off without you. 

The voice in my head got louder and louder as the years passed by. I was scared the first time I heard her. She was me. But she was invasive and I could only hear her when I was distressed or disappointing. I wished there were a switch to turn off my brain, to turn off my thoughts, but there wasn’t.

The frequent invasive thoughts started dictating who I was. I felt myself slowly disappearing. I didn’t want to feel that way. But my mind was so loud and the world was so fast. 

You’re ugly. No one likes ugly girls. 

I became self-conscious and I started to care about my appearance and how others perceived me. 

I stopped eating. Or when I did, I would run to the bathroom to stick two fingers down my throat. The voice was loud during those times. More, more! Get all the food out of your system. You disgusting fat pig. And I listened. 

I stopped reading. The world was dull and I felt lifeless. A light had gone out of me and I wasn’t sure how to get it back. I didn’t even know if I wanted to. I was depressed and numb. I no longer cared about books.

She got louder and spoke more frequently. Towards the end of eighth or ninth grade, I surrendered myself completely to my thoughts. She’s right, I’d agree. I am stupid. I am a fat pig. I am worthless. 

The more I listened to her, the more people started to like me. I had learned how to put on make up, I was skinny, and I hung out with kids other people deemed were “cool.” Girls came to me for advice on how I stayed so skinny and boys started asking me out.

I felt dead inside but at the same time, I was proud of myself. People started to like me because I was skinny, stylish, pretty. Of course, I didn’t see myself that way — she wouldn’t let me. Stupid, ugly pig, she would repeat over and over. Worthless, worthless, worthless. 

Her voice blended into mine and everything she said, I believed. 

My head was foggy and my thoughts weren’t my own. Something was wrong. Did everyone feel the same way as me? Why did I feel so empty?

I stumbled upon the topic of mental health in a book I was trying to read. I strongly related to the main character of the book, “13 Reasons Why.” She kills herself. I didn’t want to end up like her.

I started looking for more books explaining mental health in hopes of an explanation for what was happening to me. 

She was always quiet when I read. I liked the quiet. But I was tired all the time and I eventually stopped reading. I stopped writing. I stopped crying. I stopped feeling.

That’s when I first started hurting myself. I’d drag a sharp-edged metal ruler against my arm, pressing the sharpest part hard into my skin. She would encourage me. Good. Press harder. This is control. You are in control. I knew what I was doing was wrong but it was the only thing that made me feel. It was the only control I had over my life. 

Over the years, my thoughts would spiral as I cut myself. Keep going. This isn’t pain. It’s control. My thoughts unraveled further and I felt like I was untethered to the world. I wasn’t here nor there, I was simply existing. 

I didn’t hurt myself because I wanted to die. I hurt myself because I wanted to feel alive. My thoughts spiral me into a dark hole and I rescue myself by cutting. It’s strange to say that but it’s true.

I left for boarding school in 11th grade. I thought that if I came to America, where people are more accepting of mental health, I would get better. And I did. For a while, anyway.

I was put on medication, I saw a therapist or the school counselor regularly. It wasn’t so bad. But I still felt untethered. I was floating around a sea of people, only we weren’t in Bangkok anymore, we were in Connecticut. 

During my senior year, a girl killed herself. She hanged herself in the woods next to my dorm. 

I remember seeing an ambulance come and go. I remember throwing up in the bathroom and crying while praying in the chapel. I didn’t know her that well. But she was always kind to me and she was always the life of the party. 

No one knew she was depressed. The school held a memorial service for her. Everyone mourned her loss and her parents, her poor parents, were absolutely devastated. They looked empty. 

I recognized the emptiness in their eyes. They were nearly identical to my own. But what had I lost? I felt guilty and pathetic for being depressed when her parents had a valid reason to mourn.

The impact of her death washed over all of us in a sea of sorrow. Friends checked up on each other more frequently. My friends checked up on me. 

The beginning of my anxiety came when I started dreaming of her lifeless body, swinging against a tree in the cold of New England. My dreams were unsettling. Rotting corpses, severed limbs, and decay were frequently on my mind.

I tried not to think about those things, but the more I tried, the worse it became. My breathing grew rapid, in fear, in terror. I felt out of control again. I started getting panic attacks. My head spun and my mind seemed to unravel while I struggled to breathe.

Depression was a constant – it blanketed everything but anxiety and its attacks, they were something else. They were crippling. 

I was unable to breathe, unable to feel my fingers or toes — I could only feel my heart beat faster and faster like it wanted to jump out of my chest. 

***

I am a senior in college now. I still have depression. I still have anxiety. They no longer cloud my mind and heart like they used to. There are still bad days. Relapse days. Panic attack days. But they always pass. And they will continue to pass. This, I know now. I have been clean for nearly three years now.

But it didn’t just happen overnight. It took work. It took help. I take the right amount of medication every day, and I see my therapist once a week. I still hear her voice sometimes, quiet, but still there. 

She whispers my worst fears and biggest insecurities. She is invasive and unwanted. She is me. Her voice is my voice. My thoughts. 

People would be better off without you. You’re nothing. You are a waste. A burden. An inconvenience. An afterthought.

She is me. But she doesn’t make me who I am.

***

When I had the panic attack on campus last fall, I felt out of control. I was spinning and unraveling. But I knew that the feeling wasn’t going to last. It was horrible and I couldn’t breathe. I was scared and alone but when the paramedics came, I knew I was going to be okay.

I hear my own voice now, it’s stronger than ever — it counteracts the voice that used to put me down and hurt me. I’m okay. I’m okay. Everything will be fine. Just breathe. It’s okay.

There will always be days when my anxiety or depression gets too heavy for me to bear, but I realize now that it isn’t a burden I have to bear on my own. I’m not alone.

As I sat on the cold pavement, watching the ambulance lights flash blue and red, I thought to myself: I am okay. This is temporary. I am loved. I am worth it. I am not alone.

letters, lines, and wretched messes

Your lips taste like honey

Like summer skies and orange sunsets, 

Golden roses, midnight dreams 

Soak slowly, I let you drown me 

Your breath makes me twirly

Like swirling storms inside my stomach

Fluttering marigolds and yellow petals

rain down when you touch me

Our fingers, no, bodies are intertwined

Like messy strands of hair at 11 a.m.

Waking up to kisses and tea

I truly let you drown me

Scattered letters and bleeding pens

Carve their way into my heart

Harsh lines and soft edges stay

Until my sorrows turn into art

Molded and mended

I bleed and I breathe 

The letters that you wrote to me 

Made me realize suddenly

That we are not disorderly

We are a harmony

A synchrony, a symphony

A wretched mess of limbs, we are

Like folded pages in a book of poems

Entangled words all mangled up

And faded ink underneath the sun’s glow

But

We are not entangled letters

Or words or limbs

We are parallel lines

that were never meant to touch 

we matter

I’ve been thinking long and hard about whether or not I should delete this website, in fear of future employers seeing this and believing that I am unstable or incapable of a job. As senior year nears an end, my fear of being unemployed grows. And it keeps growing. This used to be my safe space — and it still is. I won’t let my fear stop me from writing about my mental health and my growth. Until I read a blog post my friend, Madison Griswold, wrote, I thought I would have to shut down my site forever. Because of people like Maddie, people who are unafraid to voice their deepest and darkest secrets, I realize that I too, am doing the same thing. I hope that this blog helps you feel less alone. Because there are people out there, just like you and me, suffering from the same silence. I will not delete my blog. I will not delete my words. I will not delete myself. Thank you, Maddie, for reminding me that my voice matters. I hope one day I can inspire someone to speak out about their mental health and share their experience that we all hide.

Maddie, I am so proud of you and I am so proud to be your friend.

Keep reading to see what Maddie wrote. Here is a link to her original post.


We have all been taught, either implicitly or explicitly, that our mental health is a private matter. I would argue that no, it cannot be. It has been for too long. You should share whatever you are comfortable with to the degree you are comfortable with, but this culture of secrecy is part of what has caused so many to suffer and silence and some to even take their own lives. This is a public health issue. We must bring mental health out of the shadows. That starts with each and every one of us.

A lot of good progress has been made in the public eye, with celebrities and other influential figures speaking out about their own struggles and many more resources coming to the forefront. But there is still so much to do behind the scenes. Besides the abysmal state of publicly funded mental health care, it is still taboo in many circles to openly discuss depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, PTSD, anorexia and bulimia among other disorders. The only way to break the cycle is to be brave enough to share your own story and hopefully empower others to do the same. This is what I hope to do.

Madison Griswold