All Nonfiction
- Bullying
 - Books
 - Academic
 - Author Interviews
 - Celebrity interviews
 - College Articles
 - College Essays
 - Educator of the Year
 - Heroes
 - Interviews
 - Memoir
 - Personal Experience
 - Sports
 - Travel & Culture
 All Opinions
- Bullying
 - Current Events / Politics
 - Discrimination
 - Drugs / Alcohol / Smoking
 - Entertainment / Celebrities
 - Environment
 - Love / Relationships
 - Movies / Music / TV
 - Pop Culture / Trends
 - School / College
 - Social Issues / Civics
 - Spirituality / Religion
 - Sports / Hobbies
 All Hot Topics
- Bullying
 - Community Service
 - Environment
 - Health
 - Letters to the Editor
 - Pride & Prejudice
 - What Matters
 - Back
 
Summer Guide
- Program Links
 - Program Reviews
 - Back
 
College Guide
- College Links
 - College Reviews
 - College Essays
 - College Articles
 - Back
 
Anxiety and Depression
There were once two girls, named
 “Anxiety” and
 “Depression.”
 
 Anxiety was always buzzing, she seemed
 filled to the brim with paranoia. 
 As she walked down the street,
 people would touch her shoulder and say,
 “Don’t worry so much.”
 
 Over time, it became so repetitive that
 she drowned out every word.
 But it didn’t fix the buzzing inside of her like
 an angry beehive, constantly whispering 
 sweet nothings so sweet they left 
 a bad aftertaste.
 
 Eventually, Anxiety could not step 
 out of her doorway without feeling the 
 buzzing:
 Youcannottrustyoucannotloveyoucannotwinyoucannotcopeyoucannotinteractyoucannot
 fearyoucannotbreakyoucannotsleepyoucannotbreathe
 You cannot be safe.
 
 Depression was always low, she was
 a flat line on a hospital monitor, still living.
 As she sat on her bedroom floor,
 the tears that longed to spill over never did,
 leaving her empty.
 
 Over time, she stopped trying to cry
 and even simple things were hard.
 Getting out of bed was trouble because she was
 leaden, beaten down, didn’t care enough to 
 move along, move along, move along,
 to do anything. 
 
 Eventually, Depression was so wearied
 that the anvil weight on her chest felt 
 normal:
 Nothingmattersnothingmattersnothingmattersnothingmattersnothingmatters
 nothingmattersnothingmattersnothingmattersnothingmattersnothingmatters
 Nothing changes.
 
 
 The two girls lived their lives in
 separation.
 Anxiety felt the ghostly, tainted touches of
 everyone she passed.
 Depression felt nothing, just the empty bubble of
 her own existence.
 
 One day, Depression felt vibrations on the sides
 of her bubble.
 The sudden feeling gave her such a start that
 she looked up
 and saw Anxiety.
 
 One day, Anxiety felt a strange solemnity
 calming her beehive.
 The pleasant break made her so intrigued that 
 she followed it
 and found Depression.
 
 The two girls became close, finding solace
 in the opposition of the other.
 Because 
 depression was water, and
 anxiety was fire, and
 together they found some sort of 
 balance. 
 
 But then they got too close and too heated and they realized that this 
 was more than friendship.
 By then, it was too late, they were already separated by so many miles of self-loathing they could cross the grand canyon.
 
 And Depression didn’t know how to 
 connect, she didn’t know how to 
 react, she didn’t know what to 
 do except to try to stay distant and close at the
 same time.
 
 And Anxiety was afraid of
 falling, of simply
 clinging, of
 driving Depression away and losing her
 anchor.
 
 But these things didn’t matter because
 they had already begun to fit like
 puzzle pieces.
 And in that moment they began to switch roles.
 
 Depression woke up and was 
 terrified
 to learn that she could breathe fire. 
 She was shocked to find 
 that she had grown armor and begun
 to value a treasure.
 
 Anxiety woke up and was 
 surprised
 to feel that she was flowing like water.
 She was stunned to find
 that she was skipping stones on herself
 to feel placid.
 
 And both of them looked in the mirror and
 saw the other.
 And both of them looked at their lives
 and saw the connection.
 And both of them mourned that they were 
 so lost, so broken, so very, very far 
 from each other.
 
 And at night they felt a stinging loss and ache in their chests that only 
 exaggerated their namesakes.
 And Anxiety couldn’t breathe and Depression couldn’t move and neither could stand the fact that everything was so hard and they were so cracked down the middle and the nights were so lonely and
 
 Somewhere in the middle of all this, 
 Anxiety began to love Depression.
 Not just through beating hearts and awkward kisses, 
 but through the warmest hugs she had 
 ever received and the kindest things
 that had ever been said to her.
 
 And so, in the middle of the night, 
 while the beating songs in her head said
 loneliness, but not really,
 she wrote a long poem to try to describe
 how she felt.
 
 Because, really, how could she leave it un-said?
 Because, really, how better to tell someone thank you?
 
 In the middle of the night, she wrote that poem.
 She cried and she 
 cried and she 
 cried and she
 cried and she poured her entire self into
 just a few words.
 
 *****
 
 “Dear Depression,
 
 Thank  you.
 Thank you so much for being my friend.
 We are so broken but we were so alone and now we’re not and 
 I can feel myself coming together
 every second.
 You are a fire-breathing dragon and
 I am a quiet lake with a reflection of the moon
 on my surface.
 You have not made me whole.
 You have made me better, infinitely better and 
 you have fixed things in me I thought would be broken
 forever.
 I am so afraid. I am so afraid of the world. I am so afraid of scars. I am so afraid of knives. I am so afraid of what those things can do and what I can do with them. I am so afraid of myself. I am so afraid of everything. I am so afraid of this poem.
 I am afraid of losing you.
 But there are some things that have to be said so now I’m saying them
 in the only way I know how.
 Thank you, thank you,
 Thank you, I love everything about you.
 You deserve so much and get so little.
 I hope maybe I’ve helped to crack your bubble but if not, 
 I’ll keep trying, every day,
 I’ll try.
 
 Love,
 Anxiety.”
 
 ******
 
 There were once two girls, named
 “Anxiety” and
 “Depression.”
 They were not perfect, not at all.
 They were messed up in so many ways, too many to name.
 However, it was the kind of messed up
 that’s perfect, in itself.
 It’s the kind of messed up that 
 can sometimes be softened by 
 a single hug
 from 
 Someone Very Important To You.

Similar Articles
JOIN THE DISCUSSION
This article has 0 comments.