Depression, a Poem
By River Potter
A woman by the name of Elizabeth Wurtzel once said,
“A human being can survive almost anything as long as she sees the end in sight
But depression is so insidious, and it compounds daily that it is impossible to ever see the end.”
And she was right
You see, depression is a cycle that I am forever held captive by.
A cycle that takes me the hardest when I’m alone in the dark.
And regardless of what many may say, depression is not a light switch
I can’t turn it on and off like the lights in my bedroom.
For depression is the tormentor of my dreams
Dreams that throw me back to my memories.
Memories of the people who have left.
Left through hatred or by death.
Death, now a thing I no longer fear.
Fear is only relative to what petrifies me.
And what petrifies me is not dying but living.
Living takes me back to my mind.
My mind sends me into panic
Panic turns to insecurities.
Insecurities turn to self loathing
Self loathing turns to harm
And harm turns into a monster
A monster who’s name is shameful to say in my perfect household.
A monster who eats me from the inside out beginning with my brain and ending with my heart.
It consumes me until there is nothing left.
And when it is done it will leave my scraps for the flies.
It doesn’t need to come back for seconds because it has already eaten me whole.
But it always does
It comes back to lick my bones dry.
Shooing away the flies whom it left me with in the first place
Then it gorges itself on those very bones.
It is a monster who can only be subdued with medication that leaves me numb
And talks with people who probably never even experienced it themselves.
I’m sorry.
I shouldn’t make assumptions.
I’m just tired of the nonsensical bullshit those therapists spew.
Go on a walk, they say
Get some more sunlight, do something new
Like that will drive away this beast.
Nothing can scare it away
If it did I would already be cured.
But instead I lie in the dirt
Letting myself be taken by this cycle over and over again.
Until I can finally get away.
If I can get away.
Now I know I’m not the only one.
It’s not just me who deals with this silent killer
It’s Abraham Lincoln
A man who helped shape our country
It’s Buzz Aldrin
The second ever man on this planet to touch the moon
It’s Robin Williams
A man who has brought so much joy to others
It’s 19.4 million people
People who have been taken hostage by this thing too
Finally, it might even be the person next to you
A person who is one of the strongest on this earth
For they have fought this beast head on
And they are living to tell this much needed tale.
For we are soldiers of a different kind
We are warriors of the mind.
We will face that fear of living.
We will let ourselves be taken by the cycle.
Because we don’t want to become numbers.
We don’t want to seen as cowards or selfish
I don’t want to be a number
I don’t want to be seen as a coward or selfish
Or to let my little sister find me on that bathroom floor.
So I will keep fighting until there is nothing left for me to give.
I am not brave
I am not selfless
I am human.
And I am scared.
But I always have my depression there to comfort me
There to hold me in the dark
Even if I don’t want it to, it does
Because if all else fails at least I can go back to the safety of habit
Back to the endless cycle that leaves me lying in the dirt
Hopeless and uninspired
But at least I won’t be scared
Until I am taken again

River Potter is a student at UMF. They will be graduating in 2026 with a degree in Anthropology. They have always loved writing. Their poem “Depression, A Poem” poem is one that they have worked on for years and has become their all-time favorite. They hope you enjoyed reading it.