Saunders Major Project: Poetry Collection

The following poems are first and foremost about my personal experiences with depression and anxiety. That’s just how they started. However, as I went through and revised them, fixing wording here and punctuation there, I found myself wanting to explore the relationship between my mental illnesses and my identity. In the past several years, since starting college, I’ve struggled a lot, trying to find the balance between Depressed Emily, Anxious Emily, and Normal Emily that felt the most true to myself.

I’ve never been one to take my own mental illnesses and romanticize them, so linking the illnesses to my love for writing poetry didn’t feel right, but it didn’t feel honest to say they play no part in the process either. What’s more, each of those versions of myself is just one facet of the whole person. I’m not me without them just the same as I’m not me just because I have them. On making those realizations this project took a new turn. Instead of focusing solely on experience, I changed my direction to explore more of the relationship between myself and my mental illness—each version of myself individually, how they all play together—as well as how they impact my relationship with the people around me, be they strangers or loved ones.

            The purpose of this project isn’t to make a broad statement about disability in general—I have no right to be the sole voice, especially because my disabilities don’t extend into the physical. Instead, I want to shed some light on some of the inner workings of mental illness, specifically depression and anxiety, in order to bring the complicated nature of it all into focus. I hope that the poems I’ve written don’t come across as romanticizing in any way, nor do I hope they belittle. Instead, I hope when you read you find them authentic and real, showing many different facets of what it means to be human.

Hindsight

I want to tell you about the good things, too, I mean

it wasn’t all awful I just don’t remember anything else

but the air smelling dirty and burning and feeling like

suffocating in concrete and also missing the green and

skipping a presentation in my speech class because my

suitemates thought I was having a heart attack (it was

just anxiety and the ER nurse was annoyed with me

until I mentioned you had died, in which case she nodded

like she finally got it) and my professor asked me about

the trip the next day in class, in front of everyone, and I had to

explain, “oh, I’m fine, it was all a misunderstanding,” but

she was nice about it and after that I started seeing a

therapist, Dr. T, and if it weren’t for her I’d probably be

squished under the Green Line at Boylston Street Station

which she said was passive suicidal ideation and anyways

walking through Harvard Square to see Dr. T is one of

my favorite memories of the city because, for once, I

felt like I could breathe and not be stealing someone else’s air.

Auditory Anxiety

It’s like this: I know in my gut something’s wrong

because it leaves a bad taste in my mouth

whenever I leave the room and they start talking.

No, no, sorry, it’s not a bad taste in my mouth

it’s my whole brain tensing up, it’s my blood

stampeding through my chest up to my ears and

It’s like this: I hold my breath so I won’t move

but I still feel my fingers wiggling so I lock up

every joint muscle nerve, begging for silence

to come free me but some stupid tears sneak out

and tickle my ears like they’re teasing me and

I’ve never felt so out of control as when the snap

of my breath sent me running, no, crawling

to press my ear against the wall the crack under the door

anything to fill in the blanks and

It’s like this: When it gets so bad I can’t even breathe,

I know I can’t trust what I hear.

All the Little Selves

Every now and then we hold meetings

to check-in with one another, sit at the round

table and ask questions like “how are you feeling?”

and “what have you been up to?”

It’s not always the same because

I’m not always the same. Sometimes

I’m the monochrome, others the

cartoon. Today I’m neither. I’m plain.

It’s not that we don’t see each other—

The monochrome visits at night, slips

under the covers to keep me warm while

I dream and talks to me when I can’t.

The cartoon finds me in crowds, appears

behind new people, pantomiming surprise

to see me there, clambers up onto the shoulders

of strangers, looks to the sky for pianos and anvils.

Today we’re talking about ourselves.

They haven’t visited recently and, if I’m being honest,

I miss them. I tell them that and they look at me confused,

silent, take one hand each and squeeze. A promise.

Perspectives

Even at rock bottom I never saw myself as

broken. Just faded, dulled, muted. I’d look

at the world and be frightened by the vibrancy,

wishing for the easy comfort of my bedroom.

Sometimes they seemed like they were screaming

technicolor murder, and on those days I’d

stay safe under the covers, blank. That was back when

I couldn’t find where my shadows stopped and I

began. I was so wrapped up in them we were

inseparable, like one big knot. Pisces season

never was very kind to me, but I still greet

her all the same, each tangled finger waving,

To the Me I Was Before

Were you watching? Did you see when

I cut, colored, dyed, pierced, molded myself

in the absence of your shadow, practiced

unfurling my edges and pressing out the creases.

It didn’t stick at first—it’s hard to take up space

when you’re so used to folding in on yourself,

after all, but I’ve decided to let myself be,

to expand and contract as I need to, to let

the colors permeate through me so I can feel

entire spectrums of light. In this time of

me, me, me, this absence of your me,

I want to spark life back into these hollows. 

I want to be bright again.

css.php