If you had met me in college, you would’ve thought I had it all together.
I was the “fun one.” Outgoing. Always planning the group trips. Smiling in every photo. I got good grades, volunteered with student orgs, and managed to be the friend who checked in on everyone else. People came to me when they needed advice, or just a good laugh. I knew how to be what people needed. I just didn’t know how to be me.
Because behind the smile was a version of me that no one saw — not even the people closest to me.
I’ve lived with anxiety since I was a teenager, but I learned early on how to mask it. I told myself that if I kept moving, kept performing, kept succeeding, then maybe it wouldn’t catch up to me. But depression doesn’t care how productive you are. It doesn’t care how “put together” your Instagram looks.
Junior year is when things started to fall apart. A long-term relationship ended in a way that shattered my sense of safety. At the same time, I failed a major exam in a class I needed to graduate. Suddenly, my routines stopped working. I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t focus. I’d sit in the shower for an hour, staring at the tiles. I cried constantly, and then — just as quickly — couldn’t cry at all. The feelings would come and go in waves, and eventually I just felt… numb.
I remember walking across campus one night and thinking, “If I just kept walking and didn’t stop, maybe no one would notice I was gone.”
The scariest part of depression isn’t always the sadness. It’s the silence. The quiet thought that maybe your absence would be easier for everyone.
That night, I went back to my dorm, locked the door, and pulled out a bottle of pills. I didn’t have a plan — not really. I just felt like I couldn’t keep doing life like this.
But something inside me — maybe the smallest, most fragile part that still wanted to live — whispered, “Not yet.”
I put the pills away and opened my laptop. I didn’t know what I was looking for. I googled, “how to stop feeling like this.” Somewhere in the middle of clicking through websites and crisis hotlines, I found a page about Project Semicolon. I’d seen the symbol before — the semicolon tattoo — but I didn’t know what it meant.
I learned that a semicolon is used when a sentence could have ended but didn’t. That it represents the decision to continue — even when everything in you wants to stop. I read stories from people who had been through their own darkness and had chosen to stay. Real people. Not perfect. Not fixed. But still here.
I stayed on that site for hours, crying as I read through story after story. I realized I wasn’t the only one who had ever felt this way. I wasn’t broken. I wasn’t alone. There was an entire community of people who understood the pain I’d been carrying in silence.
The next day, I walked into our campus counseling center and told the woman at the front desk, “I think I need help.” It was the scariest thing I’d done in years — but also the bravest.
Therapy didn’t fix me. I’m not sure “fixed” is even the right word. But it gave me tools. It gave me language. And most of all, it gave me space to be human — to unravel safely and start stitching myself back together without shame.
Over time, I told a few close friends what I had been going through. To my surprise, a couple of them admitted they had been struggling too. One of them even said, “You always seemed like you had it together. I didn’t think you could feel like this.”
That’s when I realized how many of us are silently breaking behind curated smiles.
Today, I still have days where my chest tightens or my thoughts spiral. But now I know how to pause. To breathe. To reach out. I journal. I run. I remind myself that healing isn’t a straight line — it’s a choice I keep making.
And yes, I got the semicolon tattoo. Just below my collarbone, where it’s close to my heart. It’s not just a symbol — it’s a promise. A promise I made to myself that night in my dorm room. That I would keep going. That my story wasn’t over.
If you’re reading this and you’re hurting in silence — I want you to know that your pain is valid. You don’t have to be strong all the time. You don’t have to have all the answers. You just have to stay.
Even if it’s just for one more day.
Because you matter. And your story deserves to keep going.