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 abuse, which some people might find upsetting.

Poetry for Mental Health
Supporting people around the world through words and poetry.
Poetry for Mental Health
has supported thousands of people through words and poetry! No matter what your age, background and experience, culture, nationality, 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, and help you cope through words and poetry.
About ...

"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, eight books, 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 1500 visitors a the month, it
is now probably the largest and most visited website of its kind on the net!"
ROBIN BARRATT - Founder POETRY FOR MENTAL HEALTH
"It is undeniable that putting thoughts, feelings and emotions into words, on paper, can be both therapeutic and an incredibly effective method of self-help and healing ... "
OUT NOW!
PTSD - Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
A collection of personal stories and poetry about life and living with PTSD.
Available from Amazon websites worldwide as a larger format 6 x 9 inch (15.24 x 22.86 cm) paperback and Kindle, and directly from us as paperback and pdf e-book.
ISBN: 9798255872770
277 pages
109 contributors
Over 29 countries represented.
Our Next Title ...
My Mental Health
Writers and poets around the world talk about their own personal journeys with mental health.
We are doing something slightly different for our next title by focusing purely on personal stories about mental health, so if you are a writer and/or poet, and would like to contribute to this title and share your mental health journey with others, please click on the button below:
DEADLINE END JUNE 2026.
PUBLICATION MID JULY, 2026.
NEW - This Week's Featured Poetry (x4)
Week commencing Monday 29th June, 2026.
COMING OUT OF A DEPRESSION
By Dana Fasciano
And suddenly the sun rises,
how long
it has been
since you’ve seen it.
Years
of that desperate darkness
that pressed on you
until your whole body
was numb,
Until everything around you
looked gray and dirty
and broken.
When it rises,
it rises slowly,
gracefully,
tentatively.
And suddenly you can see
color again.
Suddenly everything is dazzling:
the clearness of the sky,
or the sound of the rain falling
on the roof
like a million tiny fingers tapping
on a table.
even the way that car head lights
twinkle and glow
like a holiday display.
Let its warm light
wash over your tired skin
Let it cradle you
gently
until you are fully alive,
until you are sturdy,
until suddenly
you are
someone
again.
You try
to hold onto this,
the warmth,
the light,
the color,
and the memory
that it will always
return.

STUCK RECORD
By Anthony Ward
No sooner do I talk myself into something
I talk myself out of it again
Positives playing against each other
Until the negative attracts
Pulling me away from myself
So that I need to push harder
Heading into the gale of thoughts
As they try to keep me back
The indecisiveness a perpetual emotion
Ebbing back and forth like spring tides
And neap tides
At times overwhelming
At times serene
Both drifting and demented
By the fluctuations of my mind
The low tides like a stuck record
Keeping me in the same place
Interrupting the flow of my thoughts
Disturbing the serenity of the song.

SELF HARM
By Gabriela Sanderson
You do not need
the messiness of blood,
the sticky flowing of its iron smell
when sweet sugar is
colder than serrated blades,
than pins drawn
up and down your tender flesh,
your naked arms
punctured by needles.
You feed your hunger
fearsome fats
and stoke the silent music
of calories
with comfort food,
then escape mirrors
covered like
church images on Good Friday.
When the night kicks you
out of bed
into the eyelids of insomnia
and forgettable TV,
you forget that certain pills
do not collocate
with gin and tonic
or with white wine,
you follow
yawning lost sheep
until the morning
of bright daylight.
And you know
the kisses from the sun
are not French kisses
on your innocent skin,
but still dare it
like unprotected sex.
Girl, what have you done
to your body,
your beautiful body,
your temple
that was
that could be
that should be
once again
sacred?

THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
By Rosie Turner
As I watch through the looking glass, The panic is real.
I try screaming, crying and talking but it, just makes me feel unreal.
I try tapping, smashing, hitting, and punching, but the glass just seems to just grow thicker.
I try moving, waving, and signing, to grab some attention.
But It just gets blurrier.
I’m trapped inside the looking glass, and like a maze I can’t seem to find an escape.
Communication is not a option when I’m behind the looking glass, that blocks everything out of the way.
It’s glass that cuts me off from the wires of my brain,
I'm kept a prisoner, held hostage behind my eyes, I’m kept captive behind the looking glass in the back of my brain.
I’m sat confined in a separate space,
every moment feels so empty and far away.
Things don’t seem real when viewing from the looking glass.
And it never seems to go away.
I sit and watch in a gallery with a far-side view.
A familiar abstract painting the world seems to be around me and you.
So when you catch me watching through the looking glass, and wonder what I see,
It’s like a fuzzy cloud of a dream.
I have no control, or anywords to say,
Because behind the looking glass, I can’t find my way.
So watch out for the looking glass, see if you can notice any change.
I look out of the looking glass and suddenly find my way,
But the shards from the looking glass never seem to leave my brain.
ABOUT THE POEM: The poem is based on my personal experiences of dissociation, trauma, and living with Functional Neurological Disorder (FND). I wrote it to help people understand what these experiences can feel like from the inside, particularly when communication becomes difficult and the world feels distant or unreal. My hope is that the poem will help others who experience dissociation feel seen and understood, while also raising awareness among family members, carers, healthcare professionals, and the wider public. Just because a condition cannot always be seen on a scan or test, does not mean it is not real, and I am passionate about helping to increase understanding of invisible neurological conditions.

Lots more Featured Poetry here:
Our Books
Featured Poets
Featuring poets from around the world, with up to six pieces of their work, and a little about the author and the stories behind their work.
And lots more ...
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 Books
Promoting poetry books and publications.
And lots more ...
Other ...
Directory of Support Services
Charities, groups and organisations worldwide offering mental health help and support to people in crisis.
Mental Health First Aid
Identifying warning signs of common mental health crisis, and how to guide a person towards safety and appropriate help.
What's new at Poetry for Mental Health ...
Poetry for Mental Health's newsletter:
May 2026.
Click the button below to download a pdf version.
NEWSLETTER
Send us your name and email address and we'll keep you updated with what's new at
Poetry for Mental Health, plus calls for submissions for our titles and website. IMPORTANT: we'll never pass your details onto anyone else ... ever!
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 poetry 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:
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.
































































