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!


Working cover only

More info

NEW - This Week's Featured Poetry (x3)

Week commencing Monday 16th February, 2026.

THE IRONY OF LEAD

By Maddi Smith-Nelson


I have navigated the waters 

of numbness,

spiritual agony itself. 

As the ego forgets.

I am lost in dark shadows.


The psychiatrists know 

I fear their clinical states,

their enduring psychic oppression.


But the healing nature of light 

will not let me go.


The soul is bitten, hidden.


So, I may walk through the dark

collecting missing souls.

Aligning them with their freedom 

and giving limbo a door.


We are not damaged freaks.

We are survivors of the darkest fires. 

Wishing to love and live

despite the knocks of hell,

the internal beast.


We are flames of pure, compassionate

unconditional love.


For those who walk 

the dark waters of Psychiatry.


Its secrets forced 

Into our hearts.


I have muted the mute.


There is a blink in the eye of eternity,

A moment of laughter for the Soul.


ABOUT MADDI: "I hold a masters in creative writing and wellbeing and am an astrologer and reiki master. I have experienced intense trauma within the Mental Health System. I consider myself a navigator of dark clinical states."


THERE'S ALWAYS AN ANSWER

By James Aitchison


In the wet, the Gulf Country floods.

North Queensland becomes a lake.

Creeks run five metres deep,

ten metres wide.

Then comes the drought.   

The rocky creek beds are dry, 

death hangs in the sullen afternoon,

the heat sucks the air from your lungs,

tree roots cling to the lifeless sandstone, 

leaves limp, desolation everywhere,

no hope of survival.

  But dig —

    dig deep —

      and the dry, dead rock

yields its miracle — clean, fresh water, 

from an ocean buried in the sandstone,

the source of life that waits for your discovery.

Like everything in this world, you just 

have to know it's there ...


THE BENEDICTION FOR THE DETAINED

By Thy-Justice A Lumen


She would pray for all of day

For change for those detained,

Across earths way, and across the UK

And in the way she would pray for all of day

That change would help and surely stay

For when it stayed, none had they paid

For their pain and suffering

The sufferings felt by those detained

Those in fear, those whom are pained

Those that feel heavy

Those that feel ashamed

For when they know God’s love is there

Only then do they know of care

Care they wish they could receive

If only, in all of their dreams

For dreams are broken

When systems are broken

And all of their words

Are left unspoken

Never to be heard , never again

What was this lord, was this pain

I’d never wish it to ever, return again

For in their shame, was their gain

Of souls and of hearts

When the new mental health act spoke, No more would we lose our hope

Hopes of a better start, not one from far apart, One that comes from the heart

For when souls learned to dance,

And hearts sung from the lung

That’s when they really can dance that chance

Then the detained's footsteps, The restrained ones

The ones on the floor, Like never before

Never again, can they do this, 

not no more, not like this

For when the system gets it right

Our lights, will light, light so bright

For every day and every night, it wont be such a fight

In a place we can be free, free as you, not as me

Because the Reform can’t you see, Needs to be rolled out

URGENTLY


ABOUT THE POEM: "The piece is written from lived experience and reflects on psychiatric detention, restraint, faith, and the urgent need for compassionate mental health reform."


ABOUT THY-JUSTICE: Thy-Justice is a UK-based writer and lived-experience advocate. Her work explores mental health, detention, faith, and systemic justice, drawing on personal experience of psychiatric care and recovery. She writes to give voice to those whose experiences are often silenced, and to support compassionate reform within mental health systems.


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 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 ...


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!


Please Donate

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.