Activity

  • kiki pape shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 1 months ago

    Hot Girls Have Anxiety: The Mentally-Ill Girl Aesthetic How Internet Feminism Turned Internalized Pain into a Marketable Aesthetic

    It’s okay not to be okay.
    This phrase, now ubiquitous across social media, has become a comfortable mantra for those who struggle with mental health. It seems like a sweet reminder, a gentle nudge to embrace our imperfections and struggles. But in reality, it is much darker–an empty catchphrase hacked by an influencer-driven culture that profits off emotional labor and personal trauma. The rise of the Mentally Ill Girl aesthetic” has transformed mental health struggles from personal battles into visual trends, “personality trait quizzes” to talk about with friends, and worse, marketable commodities. This essay will explore the rise of the “mentally ill girl aesthetic” and the way it reflects the troubling commodification of mental health in the age of social media. What started as an expression of vulnerability has been twisted into a performative, profit-driven identity–one that trivializes mental illness, turning real pain into an aesthetic to be consumed.
    My first personal introduction to mental health came when I was sixteen, during a moment that still feels absurd in retrospect. At my high school, the same girl who once whispered insults behind people’s backs was suddenly leading a campaign for “mental health awareness.” They filmed a promotional video–reminiscent of Mean Girls– for a schoolwide “mental health week,” complete with Pinterest-worthy quotes, trendy but shallow self-care advice, and mindfulness tips pulled from the first page of Google. What was meant to be a safe, inclusive space felt like a performance. Surrounded by classmates who suddenly wore their trauma like their accessories. The exact ways where breakdowns were once a source of gossip were now lined with pastel posters reminding us to “Just breathe” and “Be kind.” Something didn’t feel right; it wasn’t that mental health was finally being discussed. The language was curated and sanitized. The faces behind the campaign had slogans of confessed surface-level experiences of mental health issues and missing themselves without the proper information. Making others who suffer so profoundly feel even more alone.
    That moment was not only the first exposure but also an understanding of the commodification of the struggle. It was mental health awareness without the mess, the nuance, or the accountability. It was activism as an aesthetic, where vulnerability was encouraged only if it was pretty, palatable, and Instagrammable. What I witnessed in the High school hallway has since exploded into a digital phenomenon: influencers crying on TikTok between sponsored posts, the glamorization of trauma on shows like Euphoria, and a generation that learned to self-diagnose to feel seen in a world that rewards performative pain.
    I intend to unpack the cultural machinery behind the Mentally Ill Girl archetype by examining media theory, internet feminism, and real-world pain.
    When the hit HBO Max show Euphoria aired, I remember watching it with a strange mix of awe and discomfort. The visuals were nothing I had ever seen; the soundtrack played repeatedly on my phone, and the characters, especially Rue, felt painfully honest. But what was so unsettling about the show wasn’t just what was on the screen but how everyone around me responded. Friends began to post quotes from the show, filming with glitter tears and romanticizing the numbness. Some related sincerely, and that made sense. But others seemed to perform their sadness like a trend, slipping into archetypes they hadn’t lived but wanted to wear. It was as if vulnerability had become fashionable, and “being broken” had been rebranded as edgy.
    I saw it in myself as well. There were moments I caught reflection, half asleep, mascara smudged, and hadn’t left my bed, and thought, I look like I am in Euphoria. I don’t look tired or need help, but I look cinematic. I was disturbed by my realization: we sought aesthetics instead of healing. Instead of talking about our pain, we were trying to make it palatable. That is the danger of the Mentally Ill Girl Aesthetic” –it blurs the line between expression and limitation, between lived experience and performative identity.
    In the age of participatory media and influencer capitalism, the rise of the Mentally Ill Girl aesthetic on platforms like TikTok or shows like Euphoria reflects a troubling shift: mental illness is no longer just a personal struggle but a marketable identity shaped by algorithms and fandom culture and encoded for consumption. This ultimately blurs the line between authenticity and performance in both digital and real-life spaces.
    I remember scrolling through Tumblr at thirteen, watching girls turn their sadness into something shimmering. Crying selfies, cigarette ash on a mood board, and much more. We weren’t just watching each other suffer but participating in it. As stated in Henry Jenkins’s Fandom Participatory Culture Textual Poachers, “Fan culture production is often motivated by social reciprocity, friendship, and good feeling rather than economic self-interest” (Jenkins). For many of us, reblogging these images wasn’t about attention. It was trying to belong. Participatory culture meant we found each other through these visual codes of jittery despair; in doing so, we confused performance with truth. We were learning how to be seen, and sadness got us noticed.
    This aestheticization of mental health struggles didn’t remain confined to Tumblr. As platforms evolved, so did the manifestations of this trend. On Instagram, for insurance, the curated portrayal of distress becomes more polished yet no less performative. A systematic review examining Instream’s impact on mental health found that “exposure to idealized images and curated content can exacerbate feelings of inadequacy and depressive symptoms among users.” (Fardouly & Vartanian, 2021) This suggests that our platforms for connection and expression also contribute to our emotional turmoil. Blurring the lines between genuine self-expression and the commodification of our struggles.
    That confusion between performance and authenticity, between reaching out and showing off, set the stage for what would later emerge as a fully branded version of emotional vulnerability. The Tumblr girl’s glittered grief matured into the Instagram wellness aesthetic and eventually into the rise of the “therapy influencer.” What once felt like mutual recognition of pain turned into content strategy. Here, the language of healing,” inner child,” “safe space,” and “triggered” aren’t just shared but are sold. Platforms that once offered refuge now blur with consumption, and we’re left to decipher which parts of our feelings are genuine and which are just well-filtered performances.
    Uncredentialed individuals often dispense generalized advice, blending personal anecdotes with sponsored content, thereby monetizing vulnerability. This phenomenon is reflected in Stuart Hall’s Encoding and Decoding Model, where audiences interpret media messages in varied ways–sometimes accepting them as intended, sometimes negotiating their meaning, or outright rejecting them. In this context, followers may either embrace these influencers as relatable figures or critique them for oversimplifying complex mental health issues. In a published journal by Human Behavior Reports, portrayals can raise awareness and perpetuate stereotypes, depending on audience interpretation. This concern is further supported by findings from a systematic review on Instagram and mental health, which indicate that “exposure to upward comparison material has detrimental effects” (Human Behavior Report, 2021) and that the intensity of Instagram use can impact well-being differently depending on the mental health indicator examined. The review also notes that while the number of followers doesn’t consistently predict well-being, the content consumed plays a crucial role. This duality is evident in HBO’s Euphoria, where the characters’ struggles are glamorized and critiqued, prompting viewers to reflect on the authenticity of televised mental health narratives. The intersection of media representation and audience reception underscores the need for critical engagement with online cognitive content.
    I think back to my experience at sixteen– the pastel posters, the whispered slogans, the way pain was suddenly widespread, but only if it was polished. I didn’t have the right words back then, but I knew something fell off. Now I understand it wasn’t that mental health was finally being seen–it was that it was being styled. Packaged and sold. What I felt in that moment has echoed across every platform since, from Tumblr mood boards to TikTok breakdowns to glittered-streaked Rue Bennett tributes.
    This is the danger: in the age of participatory media and influencer capitalism, mental illness has been transformed from a deeply personal struggle into a consumable identity.
    The mentally ill girl’s aesthetic promised connection, but it often delivered performance. It taught us that suffering was beautiful, as long as it looked a certain way. And I admit I played the part, too. I saw my pain through a cinematic lens instead of a compassionate one. But healing doesn’t look like an HBO scene or a well-curated selfie. Healing can be messy, invisible, and authentic. Maybe the most radical thing we do now is stop trying to look like we’re okay– or like we’re not– and take action to heal, not for the likes, the algorithm, but for ourselves.

    Work Cited

    Duffy, Brooke Erin. “Having It All” on Social Media: Entrepreneurial Femininity and Self-Branding among Fashion Bloggers – Brooke Erin Duffy, Emily Hund, 2015, journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2056305115604337. Accessed 1 May 2025.
    Gill, Rosalind. The Amazing Bounce-Backable Woman: Resilience and the Psychological Turn in Neoliberalism – Rosalind Gill, Shani Orgad, 2018, journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1360780418769673. Accessed 1 May 2025.

    Jenkins, Henry. Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide on JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt9qffwr. Accessed 1 May

    Jenkins, Henry. “Textual Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory Culture.” Routledge & CRC Press, Routledge, 6 Nov. 2012, http://www.routledge.com/Textual-Poachers-Television-Fans-and-Participatory-Culture/Jenkins/p/book/9780415533294.
    Pavlova, Alina. “Mental Health Discourse and Social Media: Which Mechanisms of Cultural Power Drive Discourse on Twitter?” Social Science & Medicine, Pergamon, 6 Aug. 2020, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S027795362030469X?ref=pdf_download&fr=RR-2&rr=93912b5d59db51ef.
    Stuart-Hall-1980.Pdf – Encoding/Decoding, spstudentenhancement.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/stuart-hall-1980.pdf. Accessed 1 May 2025.
    “The Relationship between Instagram Use and Indicators of Mental Health: A Systematic Review.” Computers in Human Behavior Reports, Elsevier, 28 July 2021, http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958821000695.

    kiki pape

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • The Voices of Many

    Thank you for giving me a safe space to exist, even when there were unsafe people around me.
    Thank you for having the strength and willpower of a thousand swords, cutting down any obstacle—or person—that stood in our way.
    Thank you for screaming so loud you liberated the souls of our ancestors.
    Thank you for tenderly massaging my bruised and battered body when no one else would stand by our side.
    Thank you for nourishing me with the love that comes from the belly of the Great Mother Earth.
    Thank you for using your healing hands to create works of art that speak the truth of our soul.
    Thank you for never giving up on life, even when life seemed to give up on you.
    Thank you for wrapping me in warmth when there wasn’t a roof over our head.
    Thank you for laughing so joyfully it shifted the frequency of the world.
    Thank you for never turning your back on others, because you understand the power of healing and community.
    Thank you for believing in love, even when your heart was broken.
    Thank you for crying when our body was ready to release.
    Thank you for laying your head on a pillow, even when the dreams were sometimes worse than reality.
    Thank you for speaking kind words when our mind was telling cruel stories.
    Thank you for walking away from those who harmed you—and never looking back.
    Thank you for always seeing the potential in me to be better, to do better—for our entire family line.
    Thank you for trusting in a power greater than ourselves, so we could surrender into a softer life.
    Thank you for learning to receive blessings of love and prosperity—because we simply deserve them.
    Thank you for being a voice for the ancestors, so they could finally tell their families they love them.
    Thank you for courageously facing the legal system to teach the world that the power of the people will ALWAYS overcome the power of the oppressor.
    Thank you for singing sweet songs of kindness and generosity—expecting nothing in return.
    Thank you for allowing us the space to make mistakes and try again.
    Thank you for always, simply, being there.

    Zi B Savage

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Jake shared a letter in the Group logo of Magical MomentsMagical Moments group 1 months, 1 weeks ago

    YOU ARE MY SUNLIGHT

    Dear Mom,

    These flowers are a symbol of how YOU have been AND WILL CONTINUE to be SUNLIGHT for ME!

    YOU ARE MY WATER, KEEPING ME BLOSSOMING,

    Giving ME a PEP TALK when my motivation dwindles, AND EVEN THOUGH I would like the ARGUMENTS /YELLING to WHITTLE away, I KNOW the ROOT cause STEMS FROM LOVE!

    MOM, YOU ARE ALWAYS THERE, ROOTING ME ON, SEEING the IMPACT I can PLANT BEFORE ME!!

    THANK YOU FOR BEING YOU! LOVE YOU!!

    Many many, MANY MORE!

    Jakey!

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Yvonne Torres shared a letter in the Group logo of Magical MomentsMagical Moments group 1 months, 1 weeks ago

    Cry, Scream, get Angry, feel all your emotions.

    There are two special moments that I experienced that helped change my mindset. Both happened in the state of California, but on different trips. The first trip I ever made to California was for my highschool graduation, the other was to visit some family I haven’t seen in years. Both trips happened within one month though, but before I tell you about those trips, I have to give a bit of a backstory for you to really understand why these moments were so special for me.

    Before I had made any of those trips, I was a mess. It was during my senior year of highschool. I was only a few months in the year when my life went through some major developments, and I didn’t know how to handle them. My mom had gotten in a relationship, and let’s just say it wasn’t a good one. They moved too fast, and before I knew it, he and his kids were basically living in our tiny apartment. My life was turned upside down. My home was my safe place, my comfort. Now I didn’t have that anymore. They even put the responsibility of taking care of his kids on me. I already had my other two siblings to comfort during this time. I had to do all that, plus try and finish my senior year so I could even graduate. It was a lot for me. I felt overwhelmed and tired. I didn’t know it yet, but I was pushing myself to my breaking point. When I did try to explain these feelings to my mother, she turned a cold shoulder to them. Saying I was being ‘dramatic’ and being a ‘brat’. When I would cry to her about how I felt, she would say I’m being sensitive. She didn’t say it, but her actions made me feel that whenever I wanted to cry or express my feelings I was being weak. Strong people don’t cry. If you cry, then your weak. If it’s too much for you then your not strong enough. You can’t cry. You can’t express your feelings. You can’t. This was my mindset back then.

    Fast forward to my graduation trip in June, that’s when I reached my limit. I didn’t know it yet, but that was when I couldn’t be strong anymore. I couldn’t keep a brave face. That weekend I broke down. Tears and all. All the way to my tia’s (aunt) house I cried. I cried while my dad held my hand while he was driving, trying his best to comfort me. He held my hand all the way to his sister’s house. It must’ve been difficult for him to drive that long way with only one hand. I’m grateful he did though. When I got to my tia’s house, I went to the restroom to gather myself together, to put on my strong suit of armor and act like everything was ok. I couldn’t. I couldn’t do it anymore. I sat on the bathroom floor and cried, telling my sister that it was all my fault over and over again. My tia found me crying in the bathroom. She took me to her room and then my tio (uncle) came in. I was crying still, my hands in my face. This is where the moment happened. He came up and wrapped one arm around me, brought me to his side, and kissed the top of my head. That’s it. That’s all he did. But I couldn’t believe he did that. I haven’t seen him in years, since I was a baby. He felt comfortable enough with me to kiss the top of my head like that? Really? I was shocked. Surprised that he did that.

    The second moment happened when I went down there the second time, wanting desperately to escape my toxic household and responsibilities. I stayed a week at my tia’s house and during my stay there she wanted to make it as much fun as she could. She got my cousin and I tickets to go to the amusement park. I had so much fun with her. We were gone the whole day, and didn’t get back until midnight, almost 1. The next day, I slept in until ll, tired from my day before. My tia came in the room where I was staying and said we were gonna go to the outlet mall. I would have been up for it if I wasn’t such an introvert and needed 3 days to recover from a big day out. I just agreed with her, but inside I was dying. I was so grateful that she was doing this though. Later on, my cousin came into the room and said that her mom changed her mind and I wasn’t gonna go to the outlet mall today, but I was going tomorrow. I was grateful for this, but she then said that her mom wanted her to take me somewhere, like bowling or something. I could tell in my cousin’s eyes that she was tired too, and didn’t feel like going anywhere. She had mentioned that she had just started her period, and her mom was pressuring her to take me someplace fun. I was grateful that I even got to come here. I didn’t care where I went, or if I had to stay in this house for a day. I was just happy I was away from all of the chaos back at home. I told her this, saying she didn’t need to take me anywhere, that I was grateful for just being here. I told her she didn’t need to feel bad. She was on her period. I completely understood. I never want to do anything when I’m on my period. Just sleep. This was where the second moment happened. She looked at me for a second. Then she said, “I don’t know why but I always feel like everyone hates me.” Her eyes were glistening with tears and she layed down on the bed next to me. I told her not to feel that way, and I was ok with just staying in and watching a movie. She looked at me with a grateful smile, eyes still watery, and she reached for my hand. I instinctively grabbed it, and she have me a firm but gentle squeeze. I don’t remember if I squeezed back, if I did it was probably only slightly, but this moment stayed with me. I couldn’t believe she was crying in front of me. Showing her raw and unfiltered emotions. Being vulnerable like that in front of me. How could she do that? How could she feel safe enough to do that with me? How? Those were the questions I asked myself in my head.

    Fast forward to present me. The me who is writing this right now, I think I understand why those moments impacted me so much. I was used to never showing my feelings. I used to never crying because if I did then I was weak. I was used to keeping it all inside. I didn’t want to cause trouble or make things harder for my mom. I wanted to be a good daughter. I wanted to help my mother in anyway I could have and make her life easier. I did do that, but at the cost of myself. My feelings. My sanity. I put everyone else first but myself. I neglected my feelings and my needs. I didn’t love me like I loved everyone else. These moments taught me that it’s ok to feel. It’s ok to cry, to be vurelable with someone. To feel your emotions and welcome them with open arms, not pushing them away or burying them deep down within yourself. Just because you feel, you cry, it doesn’t mean you are weak. It doesn’t mean you’re not strong. It’s being on the ground, screaming your lungs out, and still deciding to get up and move forward. That’s real strength. You break down and fall, but still choosing to carry on, broken pieces and all. That’s real strength. I still struggle with this sometimes. I catch myself falling back to my old ways, and I have to remind myself that it’s ok to feel. I still don’t fully have the expressing feelings or vulnerability down yet. I’m still learning to embrace everything I just said. But when I need to cry, I try to let myself have that moment. Or even when I’m angry, I try to feel that anger. I try to understand why I’m feeling it. All this is new to me. I’m still trying to figure it out. But I’m glad I’m trying to do better and change from my old way of thinking. It’s hard for me though, trying to change my old behavior. But I’m grateful to my family in California. I’m especially grateful for my dad. I’m grateful for all of them for helping me realize the damage my old way of thinking was causing me, even though some of them didn’t even know they were helping me.

    Yvonne torres

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • I Loved You Too Much to Be Okay

    For my husband, who left too soon. For me, who stayed.

    We were building something real.
    Something messy and beautiful and ours.
    Three years of laughs,
    Hard talks, late-night plans,
    Tears and kisses and silly fights
    That ended in bed or in smiles.

    You were my safe place.
    My soft landing.
    My best friend and my storm.

    We said forever in March.
    Turned keys to our first home in May.
    And in July—
    You left me
    With a silence so loud
    It still rings in my bones.

    I watched you go.
    I screamed.
    I begged.
    I broke in ways I can’t explain—
    Not even to myself.

    You didn’t just die.
    You tore the sky open,
    And I’m still standing in the wreckage,
    Barefoot, bleeding, trying to breathe.

    People say “you’re so strong.”
    No.
    I’m not strong.
    I’m shattered.
    But I wake up anyway.
    I make coffee.
    I cry quietly in the shower.
    I hold our memories like landmines—
    Knowing any one of them can level me.

    I loved you too much to be okay.
    But I also love you enough
    To keep going.

    Even when it hurts.
    Even when I hate you for leaving me.
    Even when I ache for just one more touch,
    One more laugh,
    One more “I’m home.”

    You were the love of my life.
    The stepfather who adored our kids like they were your own.
    The man who made ordinary things feel magical.
    You were it for me.

    And now I carry all of that
    Inside a heart stitched with grief and fire.

    I’m still here,
    Still breathing,
    Still holding the broken pieces
    Of everything we were supposed to be.

    And I will keep going—
    Not because I’m strong,
    But because love like ours
    Deserves to survive
    Even if one of us didn’t.

    Brittany Goodwin

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Omg Brittany, I am so sorry for your loss. This piece is so beautiful and such an incredibly testament to the power and depth of your love. I am sure he is looking down on you, watching out for you and loving you for afar. I love how you ended the piece. It is so true and so incredibly power. Thank you for sharing. Thank you for being part of The…read more

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

      • Thank you Lauren, these past almost 10 months has been a nightmare. My girls and I have had to go through it alone. We don’t have much family so the ones we do have to lean on are limited. Idk what I would’ve done or how I would’ve made it if I didn’t have my kids and best friend Tayler. I try to remind myself of that everyday, don’t give up a…read more

        Write me back 

        Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Audra Jarrard shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 1 months, 2 weeks ago

    Less of Me for More of You

    Your Word say in Ezekiel 11 verse 19 “I will give them a singleness of heart and put a new spirit in them I will take away their stony stubborn heart and give them a tender responsive heart”, (NIV)

    I come now asking for an exchange.

    Where there is anger,
    Grant me Love.
    Where I harbor resentment,
    Teach me Forgiveness.
    Where there is regret,
    Show me Acceptance.
    Where I hide my shame,
    Give me Honor.
    Where I buried my sorrows,
    Bring forth Gladness.
    Where I have pain
    Restore me with Comfort.
    When I crumble under doubt,
    Rise me up into Assurance.
    Where there is Chaos,
    Bring my thoughts into Order.
    Where there is confusion
    Show me Clarity.
    Where I may pass Judgement,
    Open me up to Compassion.
    Where I have pride,
    Teach me humility.
    Where there is fear,
    Give me Faith.
    Where there is rejection,
    Grant me Detachment.
    When I worry,
    Give me Peace.
    Where there is Long Suffering
    Grant me Patience.
    Where I lost pieces of myself along the way,
    Grant me the Strength, Endurance, Grit, Perseverance and Wisdom to come back, Stronger, wiser, and more Victorious than Before.
    Ase

    Noble Storm

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • This feels like a prayer and a whole lot of mantras all in one. It is beautiful, powerful and inspiring. Thank you for sharing and thank you for being part of The Unsealed. <3 Lauren

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Ruth Liew shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 1 months, 2 weeks ago

    Today

    This gig
    This “being my best self” business,
    This sunny day after the storm
    Is pretty rough.
    With wind blown trash from last week
    (Or last decade) all over the soul
    It is exhausting today, to
    Focus on today’s business.

    Some other day will be enchanting, Exhilarating,
    I’ll be Wonder Woman
    Or
    Maybe I’ll be just enough, ok?
    And putting one foot in front of another will come a little
    Easier, next day
    Even if Van Der Klok assesses the score and my kind intentions are a bit lopsided today, and my hair;
    There will be
    Another day
    For me.

    Ruth

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • you know I feel like sometimes just being able to put one foot in front of the other IS being wonder women. The days can be tough, but just the power to keep going and keep fighting is a superpower. Sending hugs. Thank you for sharing. <3 Lauren

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Jake shared a letter in the Group logo of Magical MomentsMagical Moments group 1 months, 2 weeks ago

    Life Is Greener With YOU

    I think I have fallen in love with you; it’s been a long journey of convincing myself that I am worth having you.

    I get up early just to spend time with you, and you are the last thought that I have at night. You make me a better version of myself, because I never want to give anything but my best to you!

    No matter the day, you are always there for me, encouraging me to be better than yesterday, but regardless, I know I will always have you there!

    You are golf!

    I love you!

    Jake

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Aww Jake I love how you pursue all the things you love and want to do in life. Your spirit is amazing. I am so glad you are enjoying golf! Thank you for sharing <3 Lauren

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Hi Lauren,

      Sorry for my delayed response @theunsealed! Thank you for the kind words! I can truly feel the happiness you have for me in this post!

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Martha Moore shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 1 months, 2 weeks ago

    White Flag Flying

    These conflicting emotions and thoughts always get the best of me and take control. Sinking their teeth into my brain, releasing their venom so it’s always on my mind. I want to just give up and stop trying to take back control. Just give in completely. Let it all go. I’m so tired of trying to hold on and it’s useless anyway. I may or may not have put up a good fight, but the war was fought and the battle is done. It has won. This is the time to surrender and admit defeat.

    Prowriting aid style score: 100%

    Martha C Moore

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Hi Martha, I just want to let you know that I hear you, and see you. our minds can be a scary place sometimes, you aren’t alone in that.

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Hey Martha, I echo what Ava says. I hear you. I see you and you are not alone. When you feel this way, there are some really great resources. You can text or call 988. Sending love and hugs. <3 Lauren

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Jake shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 1 months, 3 weeks ago

    Admiration Is The New Envy

    “Do you have any sage advice for me ” my friend asked after we discussed a beautiful solo act of spoken word combined with the playing of the Harp. The talented performer is a woman named Amanda Peckler. I thought about my friends question, taken aback with honor – and a bit of imposter syndrome.

    My head spun with the amount of answers I could say; I gave so many answers to his one question, I could not even remember what I said.

    “I envy your way of thinking,” he said.

    “You admire it, not envy.”

    After sincerely crediting my mentors for the ability to think the way I do, I explained:

    “Most of the time, we can try what we envy:

    Next time you envy someone for their talent, change it to admiration.

    Inevitably you are going to struggle the first time; just remember:

    Even the advanced were once beginners.

    Jqke

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Noirerequiem shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 1 months, 3 weeks ago

    Dear Major Depression and Anxiety

    You’ve been my shadow for as long as I can remember, lurking in the corners of my mind, whispering doubt, exhaustion, and fear into every crevice of my soul. You’ve made yourself at home in my thoughts, convincing me that stillness is safety, that failure is inevitable, and that I am nothing without you.

    But I see you now. I see how you twist my reflection, how you tangle my dreams in barbed wire, how you drag your fingers through my happiness just to watch it unravel. I hear the lies you tell me—that I’m not good enough, that I’ll never change, that I should just give up. And I won’t pretend your voice isn’t loud. It is. Some days, it’s all I hear.

    But guess what? I’m still here. I’m still writing, still fighting, still daring to want more than the prison you’ve tried to build around me. You’ve stolen too many moments, too many dreams, too many days where I could have felt joy but instead felt only your weight pressing down on my chest.

    So, I’m making something clear today: You don’t get to win.

    I won’t say you’re gone, because I know you’re always lurking. But I will say this—I am learning to live around you, despite you, and in defiance of you. Every time I write, every time I create, every time I move forward even when you’re clawing at my ankles, I am reclaiming myself.

    You are not me. You are something I carry, something I battle, but you do not define me.

    I do.

    And I choose to keep going.

    Sincerely,

    Me

    NoireRequiem

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Wow! Wow! Wow! This is so well-written and so powerful. I am so inspired about your approach and mentality. It does not get to definite. It won’t win. You are power. You are brilliance and you inspire me. Thank you for sharing and thank you for being part of The Unsealed. Sending lots and lots of hugs <3 Lauren

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • a journal on fulfillment

    april 21
    a journal on fulfillment
    unfortunately, I have spent a great deal of my thoughts on the ponderance of what it means to be fulfilled. how we quantify it, test it, live it. most of my 11:11 wishes wish for fulfillment. I know I’m not supposed to give away what I wish for, but that’s not all of it. I’ll keep the rest a secret. I’m under the belief that the majority of people die unfulfilled. the sole thought of going hungry, going broke, going homeless, terrifies people more than the feeling of never finding anything they are passionate about, never falling in love, never feeling like themselves, never feeling as if they’re living out their truth.

    I fear both.

    but I fear never following my passion more. it’s scary to know that money has to be earned and there is no task I currently wish to do in exchange for cash. purpose is so subjective yet as a society, I feel we have found a way to objectify purpose and place it in a see-through box to be displayed. everyone is looking at you, the pressure is on. inside the box, you must do what is subjectively providing a value that has money as currency. I’d rather have fulfillment as currency, get paid in love, joy, contentment, on my own terms. I choose to validate my inner truths rather than suppress them as I believe everyone ought to spend enough of their life digging deep enough within to understand who they are. instead of letting the world tell you. the world tells everyone who to be when they listen to it. but your soul will tell you who to be if you choose to listen to yourself. I think you can only hear yourself when you allow enough quiet, the only thing you can hear is your own production of thoughts, ones that were not placed in your brain externally but created in original form, strictly for your own acknowledgement.

    I think a lot of people fear the quiet because they do not like to face the truths of self. most people are numbing themselves with alcohol, drugs, smoking, hooking up with strangers, partying, everyone seems to have a vice. it’s socially acceptable, even. but what is the true motive behind all of these? most people are deeply uncomfortable with the thoughts that arise when they allow enough silence in order for them to do so. and everything has a cost. everything is an energy exchange, for good or for bad.

    when I was in the worst mental position I have ever been in, I hated being alone. I wanted to fill every silence, spend as much time with others, and numb all my thoughts with drinking, partying, or even eating. we find comfort externally to mask the internal turmoil we are destined to feel at some point in our lives. but acceptance of the good and the bad will allow the upheaval of the bad. as when you accept the dark parts of you, you shine a little light on them. over time, they transform to light. you can create life from death. there is renewal in endings. there is a golden nugget in everything that sucks. but if you spend too much time ignoring the darkness, you will never know how well the light within you shines.

    it’s so easy to follow a path and I wish there was one that made sense for me to follow. it would allow be much easier. but I feel as if I have gotten too comfortable with the depths of myself that I can never go to a surface level to complete a mission not created by the innerworkings of my soul. I’m too deep into the acknowledgement of who I am to skip over, neglect, those parts of me. whatever I end up doing in life has to touch my soul in some way. and maybe that will allow me to open up as a vessel of light to others. or maybe it will only go as deep as to shine through myself, never reach anyone. I think my purpose will someday reach others through myself, but maybe it won’t.

    nonetheless, in order to feel as if you have a reason to live, you have to feel like you are fulfilling a purpose or achieving something. that looks different for everyone. but in general, working towards any sort of goal provides meaning in your daily life. I truly believe those who take their own life felt as though day to day life was not fulfilling. they felt as if everything they were working towards had no meaning, a complete lack of passion or care for how they were spending their time. the exchange of their time was not providing any sort of deeper satisfaction. a complete lack of satisfaction. that’s why I think even people who are depressed, when they are working towards something, never switch over to being suicidal. because they have a reason to be alive every day. I have met a handful of people in my lifetime who have openly admitted to being suicidal in their life at some point. and they said the reason they never did it was because they felt like they still had some sort of reason to be alive. for some people, they started training for something like a marathon or even just a weight loss journey, and every day, it gave them a reason to be alive. some people have a pet they have to feed every day; and if not them, the pet would not be alive. or they have a promotion they are working for, and it gives them purpose day to day.

    but the key to this point is that you have to like what you’re doing, feel as though it is fulfilling a part of you that has been empty. people who feel directionless, or as if they are fulfilling someone else’s dream are more likely to be depressed, or even suicidal. that’s why the distinction of the soul’s desires from worldly placement is astronomically important.

    we actually have a very long life to live and that often gets ignored in the urgency of chasing money. motives have been skewed to the value you can provide for others rather than the value you can find within yourself.

    the debate I have been internally struggling with for some time is whether or not my personal fulfillment is worth the potential external failure. on the outside looking in, dropping everything and going broke to do the Camino de Santiago sounds reckless and a waste of time. but my purpose comes from soul searching, spending time with the Creator, and feeling within myself. the woods are my element and the answers of what it means to be human, for me at least, exist within them. walking every day from Albergue to Albergue will provide my purpose. and mine alone. for I claim my own direction. while walking every day provides no benefit for the world around me, the world inside me will be nurtured in a way money cannot buy.

    that’s the problem, we focus on the things money can buy. we assign value in what can be purchased by paper we earned in exchange for our time. we are told not to focus on anything else as most people feel like spending time delving into the significance of human existence has no real intrinsic value. as they fear the confrontation of any spirituality. but I would argue the sole reason we are here is to uncover all the parts of our soul that are flooded with meaningless jargon pressured upon us as a distraction from who we really are and why we’re here.

    when we leave the earth behind, you’ll die with all the things you have acquired. and if you spent a lifetime creating a soul that will ever last death, your fear of death will evaporate. but those finding fulfillment in chasing wealth and materialistic things to quantify, will fear death, likely laying on their deathbed thinking of all the things they should have done, the things that once mattered to them that perhaps had no external, objective value.

    when I look back on the 24 years I’ve lived thus far, all my most rewarding and valuable moments have not earned me any money or have provided me with anything tangible. they have all been moments that I felt my soul was nurtured. that’s what life is all about. nurturing our soul and dying with moments that live on.

    ava lawrey

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Ava- this is beautiful, and full of insight and wisdom.

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Ava, this piece is so insightful and so true. I love love love this line: “whether or not my personal fulfillment is worth the potential external failure.”

      It really does feel like it’s one or the other. At least it has for me — and trying to make both ends meet is really really exhausting and draining. As a creative, this is so real and r…read more

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

      • Thank you Lauren, I am so happy you resonate with this, I am so inspired by you and this project you have created <3 The trying to make both ends meet is the battle I'm currently going through myself.

        Write me back 

        Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • ig: @stinagucci shared a letter in the Group logo of Chasing Your DreamsChasing Your Dreams group 2 months ago

    Saturn’s Message of Surrender (Revised)

    Let go.
    Let go—
    of people who no longer walk beside you,
    of things that weigh down your spirit,
    of places that no longer feel like home.
    Let go—
    of the self you no longer recognize,
    of the inner voice that whispers doubt,
    of labels that confine your essence.
    Let go—
    of habits that dim your light,
    of relationships that drain your energy,
    of mistakes etched in yesterday’s shadows.
    Let go—
    of the past that clings,
    of the future that looms,
    of the fear that stifles the present.
    Let go—
    of perspectives that no longer serve,
    of wounds that ache in silence,
    of hurts that echo in your heart.
    Let go—
    of your first love’s memory,
    of your last love’s goodbye,
    of the scarcity mindset that limits your abundance.
    Let go—
    of all that was once known,
    of truths that no longer resonate,
    of anything that doesn’t align with your soul today.
    Let go—
    to move forward,
    to welcome unwritten chapters,
    to embrace the story only you can write.

    Hello.
    Hello—
    to new faces that light up your path,
    to new things that spark joy,
    to new places that feel like belonging.
    Hello—
    to beginnings that stir excitement,
    to opportunities that beckon growth,
    to chances that invite courage.
    Hello—
    to loves that nurture,
    to abundance that flows freely,
    to the present that grounds you.
    Hello—
    to yourself,
    to your essence,
    to the life you are destined to live.

    Let go—
    to surrender to your journey,
    to trust in your becoming,
    to write the story that is uniquely yours

    Justina Madelaine

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Justina, this is so good and must read by basically EVERYONE. Saying hello to good and letting go to negative sounds so simple but emotionally it’s had to execute. But if you keep reading your piece it’s such a solid reminder and helps to encourage people to choose their piece always. Thank you for sharing and thank you for being part of The…read more

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • The Butterfly at the bus stop Testimony

    September 2019, I was walking to the bus stop to go to work at the church as the administrative assistant. The day was rough. My body was hurting and I didn’t understand or know why, yet refusing to take the opiates the doctors offered me to mask the pain. Walking with my heavy backpack, my spirit was low and my head was down as I braved the even heavier traffic of Lafayette Road. Walking with my head down, something that growing up in my family and in my neighborhood, was taught not to ever do.
    “You don’t ever walk with your head down. It’s a sign of weakness, insecurity or pain. Always walk with your head held high, no matter what or who, you don’t look down unless you are picking up something.” I heard my grandmother’s words with every step I took, chuckling a bit to myself about how crazy I often drove her.
    I’d joke and say “But Gaga, I’ve found some good stuff with my head down. Remember that $100 bill I found on our way from the ticket house? I found my favorite stone, a lottery ticket and that sack of weed…”
    “Hush!” she’d scream and I’d giggled but straighten my face sure enough out of respect and the fact that I knew that my grandmother was, as always, “speaking the truth.”
    Yet that day in September 2019 with Chronic pain, depression, grief and mourning so much loss – my head was down. I was in the midst of several storms and my backpack probably weighed a ton. Midway in the middle of the street, as the cars raced by on every side, on the ground lay a butterfly on its side. Its wings flapped weakly, barely moving and as the cars passed by us both on every side, I walked past it and thought, “how sad, it’s going to die.”
    I had got to the bus stop but couldn’t take my mind off that butterfly, so I walked back to the middle of the street, noticed it had stopped moving and picked up the butterfly by its wings. Here I was hurting, going through, in the middle of heavy traffic and afraid of bugs – picking up this butterfly by its wings to take it back to the bus stop, for what, I didn’t know. I placed it among some flowers and weeds, and as I waited on my bus to arrive, the butterfly’s wings began to flap as it moved up higher on the flowers and finally the light pole. As my bus came, I took a picture of the butterfly without understanding how significant that moment truly was or what the purpose of this simple encounter with another of Yah’s wounded creatures, on this particular day, was for. I can tell you that when I got on the bus that day, my spirit was much lighter and my head was held high.
    I will never know what happened to the butterfly. It could have dropped dead the minute I was gone, fallen victim to a bird, went back into the streets to be run over or it could have flown to lands unknown. I can’t tell you what happened to that butterfly because that part of its journey was not my assignment. My assignment was a mere simple thing and gesture, to pick up that butterfly and put it in a better position.
    In ancient culture the butterfly is a symbol or personification of the soul and rebirth. In fact the Greek word for “butterfly” means “soul” or “mind”
    “The butterfly at the bus stop” became my testimony on how we should never be content on walking past something or someone who is afflicted, who needs help, and not do anything. This encounter reminds me that we are all Yah’s butterflies and at some point, we have all been that butterfly in the middle of some road or storm in our lives, where we were or felt weak and The Most High sent someone to pick us up by our wings and put us in a better position in life. Be it physically, emotionally, mentally, spiritually, financially or professionally.
    So when we talk about mental health and spiritual health, we have to talk about how 50% of mental health illness is hereditary and 50% environmental. We can not control what we are as far as our heredity but we can control how we help ourselves or others who are afflicted. For those who are commissioned to serve by ministering to others also note that you can’t pick a butterfly up safely by the wings if you are too busy stepping on the body by being judgmental, self absorbed and/or holier than thou attitude. How can you both judge and labor with someone at the same time? Sometimes we call ourselves picking somebody up but because we are either too broken ourselves, ill equipped or too distracted that we end up causing further damage by pulling their wings off.
    And if you are the butterfly at any point in your life, it’s ok to have faith and get help too. It’s ok to have therapy and theology, to allow yourself to be picked up and placed in a better position. Don’t let anyone tell you that therapy is a waste of time, especially when they don’t have the time, because it’s not. When we have been all traumatized by a violent American history, an impatient, unemphatic, unjust and harsh world that results in the lives of our children being taken, them taking each other lives and taking their own lives – it’s’ evident that it feels as if there are more butterflies in the middle of the road than they are up flying. Do we truly see each other? Do we not recognize that how we treat or don’t treat our fellow brothers and sisters has such a ‘butterfly effect’ in the world?
    We need to seek to always be obedient, use our discernment and be bold in our assignments. That each of us are butterflies, a soul, that as long as we are living may be seen at any given time, in the middle of the road or in mid-flight on this journey called life. The next time you see someone in need of being picked up by their wings, may you not walk by content on that it’s not your assignment or so caught up in your own world that you fail to see the beauty and purpose in another. So as we continue to pick each other up, may we pick up our own wings by doing so and fly to destinations unknown but always felt.

    ~ copyright © 2019 TaMara E’Lan G.

    TaMara E'Lan G.

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • kellybeanz87 shared a letter in the Group logo of Magical MomentsMagical Moments group 2 months, 2 weeks ago

    Shelter

    The storm, the sun, the people
    Gimme shelter

    The wars, spiritual or physical
    Gimme shelter

    Higher Power, Universe, provide it wherever my spirit goes ….. If I seek it, it will show

    Just like my glow

    These are magical moments we can experience everyday

    If we seek we shall find.

    Kelly M.B

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Kelly, this poem is very inspiring. Sometimes we have to put forth extra effort to find things we strongly desire. We must be willing to work for what we want! ☺

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Kelly, I really love this, I have always felt that God always puts us where we should be and speaks to us in the language we understand. If you ask, you will receive. Even if you are surprised by the gift and answer you are given.

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Bi-Polar

    Outside my body
    Looking in
    It’s time to alert
    My last of kin

    I’m not myself
    Think I’ve gone crazy
    The last few days
    Have been quite hazy

    What am I thinking?
    Have I gone nuts?
    I’m acting insane
    And I’m dressed like a slut

    My middle finger
    In the air
    I’m drunk by noon
    And i’ve cut my hair

    Couldn’t give a fuck less
    If I get in trouble
    Speed limit’s 30,
    I’m doing double

    Blaring music
    Hysterically screaming
    Everything’s foggy
    I must be dreaming
    Met up with some new friends
    Guess it’s high time to go ghost
    On the people around me
    That care about me the most

    They’ll know exactly
    What this all means
    They’ll try and stop it
    And I’ll cause a scene

    My mom will exclaim
    “Oh, fuck, she’s gone manic!”
    And when you look at her face
    You can see she’s started to panic

    But what everyone here
    Is failing to realize
    Is that a manic episode
    Is like winning the grand prize

    I’m having a great time
    I just quit my job
    I’ve pounded a fifth
    And i’m making kabobs

    I don’t wanna come down
    I don’t wanna stop it
    Won’t take medication
    So you might as well drop it

    So I’m watching my alter
    Destroy all that I’ve built
    She won’t even slow down
    Doesn’t understand guilt

    Give it a week
    And I’ll snap back to reality
    But I’ll be so fucking depressed
    That I’ll crave that mentality

    No one can wake me
    For almost a week
    But when they finally do
    I’m empty and bleak

    I’d rather be mental
    Blissfully crazy
    Than low, sad, or sleepy,
    Vacant and lazy

    It’s no easy task
    Living life with bi-polar
    Cause when she gets on a good one
    Even I can’t control her

    Style Score: 80

    Kendy Bendewald

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Martha Moore shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 3 months ago

    Planted Roots

    Deep inside
    You’ve planted roots
    I can feel you taking over
    I am a subject in your kingdom
    You are the king and queen of my whole being
    Darkness that no light can penetrate
    My ruler, my Lord, my curse
    You grow bigger and stronger everyday
    I simply wither away
    Hoping to stand clear of drowning
    There is no place in my mind to feel safe
    To be safe
    I am a haunted house
    Controlled by you
    Never ending reels in my house of horror
    Never forget
    I’m trapped in my past
    I can’t find my way back home

    Martha Moore

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Lillith Campos shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 3 months ago

    For Emily

    This was written November 26th, 2020. I had been struggling with the death of a friend; it happened to hit a little too close to home for me. I had a sense of survivor’s guilt. I felt that it should have been, could very easily have been me. It wreaked havoc on my mental state for months, thus my therapist suggested writing this in her memory. I remember it as if it happened yesterday, my therapist being so compassionate but also cautioning me, bracing me, making sure I understood that being a part of this community, Emily will not be the only person I lose to suicide or even murder. We as trans people do not have a long-life expectancy.

    So, we need a little back story. I met Emily in December in a support group on Facebook for depression, anxiety and suicide. She is a transgender woman like myself. She is 25 years old and would have been 26 this month. Her and another transwoman we met in that group bonded rather quickly over not just our suicidal ideations, self-harm and depression, but also from all 3 of us sharing the trials and tribulations of being transgender in this shit hole of a country.

    Her family disowned her for being trans, and very rarely used the correct pronouns. She was kicked out of her home yet was able to find an apartment where she lived in Atlanta. She hated being trans. She was happier on hormones of course but still hated the fact she was not a cis woman. She was in enormous debt from so many medical Bill’s due to numerous suicide attempts and being hospitalized in psych wards. In the 4 months we knew each other she probably spent 5 or 6 weeks in a psych ward. She was of the mind she would fake it until she made it, meaning whatever she had to do to get off suicide watch. She swore once her medical bills were paid off, she would end it. She planned to wait because she did not want to stick the family that disowned her with the medical bills.

    She was always thinking about others and loved to please people. We all became very close in such a short amount of time. When she was in the psych hospital, we would call daily to check on her. She attempted three times in the time I knew her, once with a noose but the rope broke. Twice with pills, the last one resulting in seizures and a hospital stay before another psych stay.

    We had an agreement between the three of us. We knew how depressed we were. We knew we all longed for death, and we hated how people were trying to keep us alive when all we wanted was to die. How could people be so selfish? So, we gave each other permission to die. We would not try to talk each other out of it because we understood each other. We agreed that what we would do was to at least say goodbye to the others in the group. Give the others a chance to say goodbye and that we love each other one last time. That did not happen. Emily left us and we did not get to say goodbye to her.

    I really want to be mad at her for that, but I understand her pain. I understand her fear that we would try and talk her out of it. I am so very sad that I lost her, but I am comforted in the knowledge that she Isn’t suffering anymore. Emily confided in me outside of our group chat a couple of times that one thing that was keeping her going was she did not want others to be sad about her loss. And that she feared Rose (the other one in our group) would kill herself if in fact either one of us did kill ourselves. Rose mentioned as much that she would do that.

    We must do better as humans. Misgendering takes such a toll on us. The things we go through daily wears us down every day, and it seems like this entire country is on a witch hunt with us being the witches (I’m pagan but people just say witches). We are slowly being killed off by mental illness due to the struggles of being transgender. And those struggles, those mental illnesses are caused from outside influences 99 percent of the time.

    We need to talk about this more openly. So many suffer from depression and suicidal ideation. We must remove the stigma from this topic. People have to stop being afraid to talk about it. RIP Emily Nicole Brown. I will miss you.

    Here Is the link to her blog. You will get a better mindset of her thinking. http://www.emilythetransgirl.wordpress.com

    Lillith Raine Campos

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Ava Lawrey shared a letter in the Group logo of Magical MomentsMagical Moments group 3 months ago

    the best day of my life

    march 15 2025
    the best day of my life

    I want to preface this by saying the title may be slightly misleading-march 15 was not the best day of my life in question (although, it was pretty good).

    after spending a couple hours dillydallying about fisherman’s wharf and pier 39 in San Francisco, I decided to take the cable car back to my hotel (only the cable car took us half way, kicked us out, and told us to take the bus, which I opted to walki the mile, I decided I needed to walk that extra scoop of ice cream off). anywho, I was sitting in the cable car, distracting my mind from being present, scrolling through tiktok while also on facetime with my long-distance best friend. i saw a tiktok that nearly stopped me dead in my tracks. he was posing the question of “what was the best day of your life?” and I really thought ‘wow, I can’t pinpoint that’. and of course, the comments were filled with similar thoughts to my own.

    what’s even worse, I could immediately think of an exact date that I’d consider the worst day of my life. I can tell you all the details about that day. almost as if I can relive it.

    so it had me thinking, what could possibly have been the best day of my life? and a lot of people like to go the route of they haven’t lived it yet, they haven’t gotten to the best day ever yet. but that proves the point.
    that proves that we are always just waiting for the next best. that we’re always comparing every good thing to happen to something else. that enough is never actually enough. success isn’t successful enough. happiness isn’t happy enough. every good thing could be better. we have so deeply engrained in us the ideal that the grass is greener on the other side. that’s what drives people to infidelity. because there’s always someone else out there that could be better, right?

    it’s the potential we hold onto, the hope that we grasp onto. I think it gives us purpose- knowing the best day ever has yet to come. that we will always have something to look forward to because the best day has yet to happen. (at least, for the glass half full kinda people- optimistically scouring the earth for meaning, searching for the positive in every situation, seeing the world as beautiful and abundant.)

    but I don’t think that way. I think when we are asked what the best day of our life has been, it’s conclusive only of what we have so far experienced. it’s a day that’s subjective. and may continue to get replaced as we live on, and value other things and find other events more fulfilling or more joyful.

    it’s much easier to pinpoint the worst day ever because we don’t want to top it. we don’t want to one up some really bad shit. we want to leave it in the past. horrible days beg for our acknowledgement because they drain the life out of us. experiencing a day so bad that you were so painfully aware of all of your surroundings down to the smell of the stale air in the brick room of the house that was built in 1812 that you were standing on. down to the sound the floor made when you stepped on the creaky wood on your way out the door for the final time. you’ll remember exact phrases you said, exact ways that you felt. tastes, smells, sights, absolutely consumed you in a moment that left a forever imprint on your being. maybe not everyone’s worst day of their life was a traumatic event, but I think a lot of people have experienced trauma in even smaller scales.

    horrible events beg for us to be sucked into them. they are so energetically draining, like a black hole, an energy vacuum. the energy we put towards negativity requires more effort than feelings of joy, which is why negative memories are far easier to remember than those that were joyful. bad things are often synonymous with our uncontrollables in life. because, unfortunately, we are unable to control everything in our life, which can lead to unfavorable things taking place. and, well, that’s life. but it takes a decision, effort, to make a positive thing happen. it takes effort to have the best day ever, and the worst day ever is typically one that happens TO us, rather than for us, perhaps.

    though, I believe joy requires more autonomy. it’s like the paralysis of decision. deciding which day we can proclaim as the best feels like too much pressure. there’s where the pressure to be perfect comes into play. the pressure for the best. we have more choice in the decision of the best moments in our life than our worst. as I feel joy is a passive feeling, that is fleeting because it feels good to flow with the emotion of. and experiencing pain or suffering is much more active, as we spend the time in efforts to resist the feeling, rather than sitting in it and going with the flow. it’s easy to get in the boat and flow happily along the river, it feels good, natural, easy. it’s much easier to be joyful and have a happy memory. but you’ll remember the time you had to row upstream in a storm and all of the effort you had to put in to keep moving forward. same way our brain works through memories.

    somehow, joy takes effort and happens naturally all at once. that’s the duality of it. it can be easy, and so difficult.

    so, I was thinking about my best day. and I think where I’m struggling is that I want to combine a bunch of favorite memories to make the most perfect best day ever. I find something wrong with each day that I start to think is the best I’ve had. nothing is sufficient. it doesn’t help that I’m a happy crier, it doesn’t take much to make me feel emotional in a good way. and every time I feel so encompassed in my emotion, my eyes swell, I feel so deeply. that’s why I’ve been pondering my best day ever, wracking my brain of every positive memory I have ever had in my 24 years of existence thus far.

    luckily for us, we’re likely to replace our best day ever time and time again. it just means we experience way more good in life than bad, and thank the Lord for that.

    my most recent best day ever was in Belgium.

    I arrived in Brussels and decided I wanted to take the train to Ghent. oddly, I have felt an overwhelming sense of comfort every time I’ve been to Belgium, a home-like feeling. this time was no different. on the 40-minute train to Ghent, I sat by the window. put my phone face down on the tray table in front of me, took my airpods out and put them back in their case, and just stared out the window. I do this thing when I’m traveling where I actively try to soak in every single moment, especially the mundane moments. (though I’m realizing I’m a hypocrite based on paragraph two of this.) if you lived in Brussels and took the train to Ghent every weekend, you likely would find ways to distract yourself, you would get used to the ride, bored of it even. not me, this was my first time. and looking out at the countryside, it was so eerily similar to parts of Kentucky where I’m from, and I started tearing up. the small part of myself that misses home was feeling engulfed in this moment. the little girl that was coloring next to me kept looking over at me and I’d like to think it was because she thought I was cool, but she probably actually thought I was ridiculous. I actually thought she was really cool, I was thinking wow, how cool would it have been to grow up here.

    after getting dropped off in Ghent, I wandered through the streets, and this is what I have in my note’s app,

    “the countryside of belgium, perhaps ‘the burbs’ inbetween brussels & ghent, actually look eerily like kentucky. and i feel weirdly at home.
    ok everyone comes out on sunday to buy tulips & other flowers in ghent? thats cute. and the rich people have having bottles of wine & charcuterie in the middle of all of it”

    that doesn’t tell you much. but for a moment, I envisioned myself living here, coming out on a Sunday afternoon to buy tulips and have a European brunch with family and friends, and I liked the way I felt a serotonin boost just by picturing that alone.

    I decided to take a little touristy boat tour through the canals for 9 euros (where the f is the euro symbol on my keyboard?). I sat down next to a girl who said she’s from Vancouver, who proceeded to tell me about her corporate job that absolutely went over my head. I thought she was cool enough to share a boat seat with for 40 minutes I suppose.

    when I took the train back to Brussels after having wine and the best brioche with chocolate chips, I wandered around (clearly I do a lot of that). ate more random little bites and stumbled into my favorite little park in the city where there is always live music and people joined around. by live music, I mean men who pull up with a guitar and sing typically. but it always speaks to my soul. and I get emotional every time. I sat and listened, I watched, I took some deep breaths to take it all in.

    later that night, I stumbled into a cool reclining wooden chair looking at the cathedral where I sat to watch as the sun went down, and I felt God smiling at me. I swear. on my walk back, I got mistaken for a local and that made me feel like I belong in a cool girl way. I even got gelato and the man shaped it into a rose for me. I saw more people singing but this time in the Grand Place, and I fell in love with life all over again.

    all of that goes to say, maybe that was my most favorite day ever. but then, I can’t help but to think there was probably a day in my life that tops that. part of me feels like the best day ever should have included a cool accomplishment, like when I graduated flight attendant training and was really emotional about it, or ran 20 miles for the first time, or hiked a mountain, my first solo hiking trip, or my first solo international trip, or something. but maybe my silly little 24-hour work trip to Brussels where I took a train to Ghent will sit there for now. and I won’t rush the next best day ever. somehow there is something really awesome about every single day, even the ‘meh’ days.

    ava lawrey

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Ava, I love everything about this piece. Your honesty and “realness” is refreshing. Though I haven’t been able to travel as much as I’d like, your trip to Belgium sounds like a dream. What you said about always looking for our next best say really resonated with me. Instead of hoping for something better, I will make an effort to soak up what I…read more

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

      • hi emmy, thank you for this <3 I try to be as real as possible, I feel we have lost a bit of originality and authenticity in today's world. all we have is the present moment and I think there is something special about each day. anywho, soak it all up 🙂

        Write me back 

        Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • PSYCHOLOGY OF PROJECTION

    Dear Unsealed,
    PSYCHOLOGY OF PROJECTION
    The theory of the psychology of projection is a phenomenal viral situation in 2024.
    There are people who project their ill feelings, anger, insecurities onto the closest empath standing in their way.
    You spewed obscenities at me that day
    As you do everyday
    you blame me for your failed attitude
    that is not subdued
    I ask you why
    Why do you project your insecurities onto me
    You reply
    It’s all your fault
    It’s my fault you say
    No, you just caught
    In another lie
    I sigh
    Why?
    You yell at me
    You are nothing to me
    So, let it be
    I cry
    I say
    No
    I could be your fake friend
    Until the end
    So, then you yell
    To me
    Not let it be
    But cruel words of anger
    That makes you a danger
    To my world
    To your world
    To all worlds
    As you carry on
    With your blaming me
    For your misdeeds
    Of unconscious reprimanding me
    Or any other empath
    The victim of your wrath
    You are jealous and angry
    You sit around spewing obscenities
    Of hate and bigotry of amenities
    And talents of other people on Earth
    So, tell me,
    For what it’s worth
    How do you wake up everyday
    To your vile words of insanity
    Of what may be your reality
    To trash the Earth
    With your dark soul
    Of cruel intentions of old
    As your soul was sold
    To the vile fiery hell of hades
    Of your life of death,
    Here what I say.
    Your dark empty vessel of skin
    Can not win
    You are the demon of Earth
    For what it’s worth
    You are not anything
    You are a blank empty soul
    Of nothing
    But your lies
    Your ego
    You cry, you scream
    At me
    Let it be
    You are the epitome of humanity
    Garbage dump
    Dump Dump

    Vicki Lawana Trusselli

    Subscribe  or  log in to reply

    • Vicki, I’ve never given much thought to the psychology of projection, but I can see how feelings projected onto an empathetic person would be detrimental to his or her well-being. When people with darkness inside them feel the need to bring down those who would do them no harm, it really shows their true nature. I hope that, as an empath, you can…read more

      Write me back 

      Subscribe  or  log in to reply

  • Load More
Share This:
PNFPB Install PWA using share icon

For IOS and IPAD browsers, Install PWA using add to home screen in ios safari browser or add to dock option in macos safari browser

Would like to install our app?

Progressive Web App (PWA) is installed successfully. It will also work in offline

Push notification permission blocked in browser settings. Reset the notification settings for website/PWA