TRIGGER WARNING!


This website contains poetry and true stories about trauma, personality disorders, suicidal thoughts, self-harming, depression and other significant mental health issues, as well as personal stories of emotional neglect and physical and sexual abuse, which some people might find disturbing.


Poetry for Mental Health


Supporting people with mental health challenges by motivating and inspiring them to write poetry.


Poetry for Mental Health has supported thousands of people around the world through words and poetry!



"No matter what your age, background and experience, culture or identity; whether an established writer with many published titles to your credit, or an aspiring poet who has never written a word of poetry in your life, our philosophy here is to embrace, welcome and support everyone, everywhere suffering from mental health challenges, and help you cope through words and poetry."


About ...

ROBIN BARRATT - Founder POETRY FOR MENTAL HEALTH


"I formed Poetry for Mental Health at the outbreak of COVID, as a way of helping people cope mentally through lockdown and the pandemic by inspiring them to write poetry. Six years, seven books (just started working on our eighth), many hundreds of poets, and many thousands of pieces of poetry later, Poetry for Mental Health is still inspiring people to write poetry for positive mental health! And with almost 1900 visitors for the month of Jan, 2026, it is now probably the largest and most visited website of its kind on the net!"


Visitor stats, 26th Jan, 2026



CONTRIBUTE TO OUR NEXT ANTHOLOGY ...

SUBMISSIONS TO THIS TITLE ARE NOW OPEN!


You can now contribute to the next title in our acclaimed mental health book series:


PTSD - Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: A collection of interviews, personal stories, poetry and short prose from around the world on the subject of PTSD.


We are looking for poetry, short prose, interviews and personal stories.

Deadline 31st March 2026

Publication date: SPRING 2026.


Click on the link below for further details and submission guidelines. You can also sponsor this important title too!


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More info

NEW - This Week's Featured Poetry (x4)

Week commencing Monday 09th February, 2026

MEANING'S LABYRINTH

By David M. White, PhD


It is not the words or deeds of others that bring

Woe and suffering upon our troubled mind,

But rather it is the meaning we assign,

The interpretation we make, that does entwine


Our thoughts and emotions in a knot of pain.

Unseen, unconscious assumptions hold sway,

And color all our experiences with their dye,

Shaping our perceptions, and guiding our way,


In themes that whisper sweet or bitter truths to us,

Such as: “My worth, a fragile thing, depends

Upon the praise or censure of other people’s hands.”

Or thus: “My happiness, a leaf on winds of chance,

Does blow, and flutter, at the whims of others’ glance.”


Or darkest of all: “My feelings, monstrous and awry,

Do make me vile, and worthy of nothing but sighs.”

And lastly: “My deepest needs, and innermost desires,

Do threaten to sunder ties that bind me to the fires


Of love and kinship, that do make life worth living.”

Thus, unaware, we weave our own tapestry,

And manufacture our experience, as if by sorcery.


ABOUT DAVID: David M. White, PhD is a Los Angeles–based poet, composer, and clinical psychologist with 35 years of practice. His work explores the ways perception, meaning, and emotional life shape the human experience, often weaving themes of self‑discovery, personal growth, and the human condition.


I CRIED TODAY

By Shaundra Graves


I cried today because before I could even put the vacuum away something got spilt on the floor. 

I cried today because as soon as I straightened up the living room the dogs come in the house muddy jumping on everything.

I cried today because even though I spent over an hour doing dishes by hand yesterday the sink is full again. 

I cried today because my kitchen is piled full of things that have nowhere else to go so it never looks clean. 

I cried today because every time I clean a surface and make it look neat the very next day it's covered in a new mess.

I cried today because it's almost 4pm and I don't know what's for dinner. 

I cried today because I can't manage to get caught up on laundry no matter how hard I try.

I cried today because no matter how many times I ask nicely no one listens to me.

I cried because I wanted to do something special with my daughter today but got stuck at home cleaning instead.

I cried today because I need "down days" after having active or social days.

I cried today because people assume that because I have a hard time leaving the house that I like being alone all the time.

I cried today because no matter how much I beat myself up with guilt or try to push harder there just isn't anymore to give. 

I cried today because I'm insecure in every possible way.

I cried today because I needed my mom.

I cried today because I needed to cry.

I cried today because I just couldn't stop.

I cried today because I felt defeated.


I cried today, it wasn't the first time and it won't be the last. I cried today because I'm human ... Yes I admit I cried today and then I wiped my own face, Dried my own tears, and went on about my day because time doesn't stop for no one and the world doesn't care who cried today or why.


ABOUT SHAUNDRA: "I am a 35 year old stay-at-home mom. I have ADHD, C-ptsd, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Schizoaffective Disorder, MDD Borderline Personality, Mild Agoraphobia and a form of insomnia called non 24 sleep disorder (it's a lot I know!). I have been writing most of my life but I stopped for a long time, and just recently decided to start writing again. My poems have seemed to centered themselves around my struggles with mental health and I hope that by sharing my words I can help someone else find words for their own struggles."


THE PUZZLE OF MY EXISTENCE

By Barbara Joycee Rani


Tormented by my own race,

To be the Achilles of this very human maze.

Cultured by the money casinos,

I took myself to prolong quarantine.

Crazy sapiens, licking the notes;

As they are leeches and moths.

I saw the truth of sapiens,

When i failed on my own time,

Killed by poisoned lips,

Those insults still bled my heart to my hips.

The riddle never ends

It spirals, spirals like a wall clock

Till it has my body choked.


ABOUT THE POEM:   This poem represents the trauma of being a bright student and excelling academically.Relatives force her to get more good grades. The pressure of being forcefully bounded by her own race questions her mere identity, questioning her own existence.


UNREST

By Barry Thorne


For me there are storms,

where you go to rest,

Explosions and memories

and sounds, more or less.


This isn’t a cry out for help,

nonetheless,

Regardless of what others

may try to suggest.


For me there’s no peace,

No downtime or rest,

But a daily machine

of constant unrest.


The mental and physical,

and emotional ingress,

is too much for this man

alone to digest.


I feel this is weakness,

severe lack of power,

and what it is not

is my finest hour.


The blame here does not

land only with me,

there are others responsible

that hide what you see.


The punishment must only

be directed at me,

the punishment for what

remains to be seen.


It’s constant,

relentless,

continuous,

non-stop.


The effect that it has

keeps piling on top,

nothing disappears,

it just keeps adding up.


Unrelenting in nature,

and keeps speeding up,

will leave me no choice

but to one day give up.



Lots more Featured Poetry here:

Explore

Our Books


Personal Journeys

In their own words, writers and poets write about their own personal journey with mental health.


Interviews

Ten amazing writers and poets talking about their own personal journey with mental health.


Featured Poets

Featuring almost 80 poets around the world, with up to six pieces of their work, and a little about the author and the stories behind their work.


Featured Books

Promoting poetry books and publications.


Articles

Articles about poetry and positive mental health.


Publishing Services

We publish books for other people too!!!


Would you like to see your poetry collection published as a paperback and Kindle, and available for other people to read around the world? Prices start from just £150.00 for a chapbook / short collection. Click on the link for more info. Plus Promoting Your Book- information and advice for promoting and marketing your book. We have published over 100 books for other people. Just a few examples below:




Other ...


Directory of Support Services

Charities, groups and organisations worldwide offering mental health help and support to people in crisis.

More info ...

Mental Health First Aid

Identifying warning signs of common mental health crisis, and how to guide a person towards safety and appropriate help.

More info ...


Newsletters ...

What's new at Poetry for Mental Health. Our monthly newsletters are now available to read online.

Send us your name and email address and we'll keep you updated with our news and calls for submissions. We'll never send you more than one email a month, or pass your details onto anyone else ... ever!

PLEASE DONATE - ALL donations go towards promoting and publishing poetry for mental health. Click on the button below for donation options or contact us to sponsor this platform. Thank you!


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NOTE ON CONTRIBUTIONS: We publish mental health poetry from around the world, and for a number contributors to this website, English is not their first language. Unlike some other platforms, we don't heavily edit a poet's own work (if we did, it would then not be their own work!), so please focus on a poet's messages and meanings, and not necessarily on any grammatical mistakes or translated imperfections that may arise within their contribution.