Twelve years have passed since I walked out of the darkest season of my life, and my understanding of mental health has transformed into something far more layered, intentional, and sacred. Back then, mental health meant survival. Today, it means awareness, gentleness, boundaries, and the courage to keep choosing myself even when memories echo louder than comfort.

I no longer see mental health as a moment in time or a singular hurdle to overcome. It is a living, breathing relationship I nurture daily. It is the quiet check-ins with my emotions, the pauses when my mind needs rest, and the permission to feel without judgment. It is learning that healing is not linear and that progress sometimes looks like stillness, reflection, or simply making it through a difficult day with grace.
Music became my refuge when words failed me. It held space for emotions I couldn’t yet articulate. Through melody and rhythm, I found fragments of myself that had been buried beneath years of silence and confusion. Each note became a step forward, a gentle reminder that expression is powerful and that creativity can rebuild what was once fractured.
But growth also requires reckoning. Much of my struggle stemmed from deeply rooted spiritual experiences that never received the care, compassion, or resolution they needed. Faith was once meant to be a source of guidance and safety, yet it became a place of conflict and internal strain. Untreated wounds, especially those tied to belief systems and authority, have a way of imprinting on the soul. Recognizing this has been painful, but profoundly necessary.
Moving on does not mean forgetting. It means learning how to carry the story without allowing it to define the future. It means understanding where the pain came from while refusing to let it dictate who I become. I continue to move forward by creating new meaning, by choosing peace over punishment, and by allowing joy to exist alongside remembrance.
Mental health, to me, is now resilience wrapped in self-compassion. It is growth rooted in truth. It is the bravery to keep walking, even when the path behind me still casts shadows. And most of all, it is the quiet triumph of knowing that I am still here, still creating, still healing — and still choosing life in its most honest form.
