The land in between
Hello, dear reader.
If you’ve stumbled across this page, then welcome. Truly. Sit down for a minute. Breathe. You made it here, and that already means something.
I’m just a man who has carried pain for most of his life. Depression that felt like wet cement in my lungs. Loneliness that echoed even in crowded rooms. The kind of sadness that doesn’t always scream — it just sits with you at breakfast and follows you to bed. I’ve known hurt in ways that reshape you quietly. And still, every morning, I got up. Not heroically. Not gracefully. Just stubbornly. I kept going even when everything in me wanted to fold.
And somehow, I’m here writing this.
I’m not writing this for sympathy. I’m writing it because if you’re reading these words, you’re alive. You’re breathing. You’re still in the fight. And I need you to keep fighting. Reach out. Find your people. Find groups. Find friends. Find family. Find strangers who understand the language of your wounds. Do not isolate yourself the way I did. Don’t convince yourself that silence is strength. It isn’t. Connection is.
Let it be a reminder. Let it be a warning. Let it be proof that someone else once stood in the dark and tried to map it.
Below are the poems I’ve written over the years — pieces carved out of sleepless nights and heavy thoughts. Writing became my way of surviving. When I couldn’t speak out loud, I bled onto the page. It helped. It gave the chaos somewhere to live outside of me.
A gentle but honest warning: the themes here are not light. These poems deal with depression, anxiety, trauma, PTSD, the sharp rise and fall of life’s moods, suicidal thoughts, suicidal actions, and words that don’t soften themselves for comfort. They are raw. They are unfiltered. They look directly at the darkness instead of pretending it isn’t there.
Because sometimes you don’t defeat the dark by ignoring it. Sometimes you drag it into the light so everyone can see its shape. So we can name it. So we can fight it. So you can fight it.
If any of these words make you feel seen, even for a moment, then they’ve done their job.
Much love to you all. (all rights reserved to the poetry below)









