Inktober is a relatively new month-long challenge for artists all over the world. It was created by Jake Parker, who came up with the idea to focus on improving skills and developing positive drawing habits. For 31 days of October, everyone who wants to participate creates an ink drawing and posts it online using the #inktober tag. Each year there's a new prompt list to be used for the pictures. Shawn Coss decided to ditch the guidelines and create within a sore theme, posting new mental illness ink depictions every day of the Inktober.
Shawn's mental illness art translates sicknesses of the mind in an eerily accurate way, and his ghoulish illustrations don't end with Inktober. The artist has worked for such clients as the horror king Stephen King himself, creates Cyanide & Happiness cartoons, and even has his own clothing line.
So if you're searching for support with your mental illness or are plainly into horror, check Shawn's art below. It surely gave us the chills!
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Social Anxiety Disorder
Major Depressive Disorder
Insomnia
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
Bipolar Disorder
Borderline Personality Disorder
I always find it fascinating how others see me, compared to how I see myself. While I understand the interpretation, and it is mesmerizing. I find, for me, it feels, like a perpetual black hole inside that nothing can fill, and, forever trying to decipher the reality of what is going on around me, as compared to how I feel is going on around me. People see BPD as instigatory and drama seeking, while, the few I have had the opportunity to talk to, agree, that it's actually reactionary, in a desperate attempt to keep up with the constantly shifting emotions. Chasing what can't be caught, reacting to what has already passed. Amazingly, I do see myself as naked in front of everyone. Like my emotions leave me perpetually ashamed and exposed.
Autism Spectrum Disorder
I think it's beautiful and perfectly shows the sadness from not being heard or understood.
Paranoid Schizophrenia
My husband is schizophrenic and I must say mostof these images really show the torment of the disorders, but this one could be more so I think. It doesn't show how horrible and degrading schizophrenic delusions can be. It's like torture.. it's like having your entire being torn apart and eaten alive by demons that no one else can see. His voices torment him 24/7... Sometimes his hallucinations keep him from sleeping... Besides it always being like he's in a room full of people judging and putting him down, he also hears explosions and smashing noises that will keep him up all night. This disorder permeates every part of our lives. Of all the seriously mental health disorders I think this one is the most extreme and debilitating BY FAR. Now a days, 2 years into him being a full blown schizophrenic, caring for him is like taking care of an old person with dementia.. he doesn't cook for himself, he barely cleans.. and doesn't remember anthing we talk about.. lots of notes and alarms...
OCD
My OCD is also not to do with cleaning, but it brings the point across. Have to do it else you can't get comfy and it destroys you. Mine's to do with routine, I have routines with routines, and timings. It's pretty bad and pretty much ruins my life.
It annoys me so SO much how "being obsessed with cleaning" is what people still think OCD is. It is so much worse and more complicated and debilitating than just wanting to have clean hands
Load More Replies...Not all OCD is cleaning related. But I appreciate the point that it's making.
Don't know why you're getting down voted for this, I completely agree!
Load More Replies...I don't think the artist understands Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. It's more like having a voice in your head that tells you to do things or something bad will happen. It could be doing something as odd as touching a door handle a certain number of times, but it can be crippling.
I agree, and about a voice in the head as well, but i try very hard to fight it, something bad can happen anyway, not everything is in our control, you have to let go and live with this idea, you are stronger than you think, even strong enough to deal with the consequences od this "bad" thing, just think possitively, you must be very sensetive person, who takes everything close to his heart, knows how to love and known heartbraking and frustration , also you must have something that you value most of all in this life and are afraid to loose... but this is normal thing and adequate emothion , just know that u are stronger than you know, believe in yourself, work on yourself , inspire yourself every day , every hour , don't let OCD destroy your well-being , dont let your subcontios fobias influence youe everyday life and well-being of your beloved ones.
Load More Replies...I have health and death OCD, I think OCD would be better represented by intrusive thoughts perhaps?
It was my first thought also, to show intrusive thoughts that represent OCD. When I am looking this picture again and again it's good, but it would be great with the same approach if it would be "clean clean clean" and showing person with blood on the head. Cause, I am feeling like I'm digging into my brain thinking over and over again when I have this thoughts. Sometimes I clean and wash stuff and myself too much so this is also good illustration of OCD.
Load More Replies...It is a misconception that people with Obssessive Compulsive Disorder are cleanliness freaks. The compulsion can be anything. For some it is to clean their aurroundings or to was ther hands again and again. For some,the compulsion might be to collect,say,candy wrappers. But,it is a compulsion. One has to perform the act or it might destroybthe person from within.
For me, I have to step on drains. But it has to be an even number of drains, I would jump so I can get an even number, if I step on an odd number, it affects me for the rest of the day. Like I have this niggling feeling in the back of my mind, that something bad is going to happen later if I don't do anything to correct it.
Load More Replies...This isn't OCD, I have OCD, it's not overly clean or organized, it's the feeling that you must do something or thinking even, and then doing it again because you don't feel it is right even though it's done perfectly, like counting money and putting it all back and count again because it didn't feel right, even if it was done right, like counting 2 one dollar bills, that easy to get right and can't be done wrong , but something in your head makes you feel it is wrong
Yes Lindsey you're right!! Mine is more about numbers and repetitive checking and rechecking. But this is still so rad and relatable.
My OCD has nothing to do with cleanliness but I definitely rip myself apart with my obsessions and compulsions
Not really captured OCD here it's more guilt, worry, repetition, intrusive thoughts in my opinion as that's how I suffer with it
I do as well but I use organization and perfectionism as a distraction for the intrusive thoughts that have been debilitating for most of my life. I know drugs aren't the answer for everyone but I have found Luvox to help a lot with the obsessive thoughts. One person with OCD to another, you aren't alone.
Load More Replies...Everyones ocd is different. Mine is cleaning and that everything has to be back in its right full place, also when it gets really bad I go into a messed up spring cleaning organization mode. I can get paranoid and it can triggered my insomnia and depression.
Same. The depression hits when I'm forced to recognize that nothing will be perfectly organized and clean all the time. Its a very defeating cycle.
Load More Replies...I have severe OCD centering around fear of contamination. I have been battling it for 32 years, have tried every medication out there numerous times, CBT, ERP therapy, as well as holistic treatments. I am currently looking into DBS surgery. It has taken over so much of my life, destroyed so much, and taken away many things. Hopefully I find some relief soon....
I hope you find relief, friend. No one deserves this.
Load More Replies...This doesn't resonate with me at all. OCD isn't having things in order or being time concious because you consider yourself a perfectionist. Usually people with ocd whose compulsions are hygiene related. It can be because they are afraid of getting sick or making someone else sick. But they do this an unhealthy amount of times to counteract the intrusive thoughts. But there are so many more forms it takes on. Many people have harm ocd, where they think they will hurt themselves or other people. They can form compulsions such as locking the door repetively or turning the stove on and off. People can also form extreme fears that they are pedophiles (it's really common) and can be extremely debilitating. People become avoidant and become really unwell. It's not something I wish on anybody and has nothing to do with being a perfectionist. Often ocd sufferes feel like they are going crazy because the thoughts they have are so horrific.
This is so validating, the big mayority think that OCD is all about cleaning and being a perfectionist when it is not, intrusive thoughts are so much more and horrible than that.
Load More Replies...I have Sensorimotor OCD ... most of the time it's with my breathing. It's a very stressful feeling. When I was a kid, I did it with blinking lol. It's not severe to the point where I can't function but it causes me a lot of anxiety and since my issue is breathing, I tend to hyperventilate and get dizzy a lot.
Mine is the exact same way. Trust me, you're not alone! I asked my doctor once if I could die if I paid too much attention to my breathing. I hope it gets better for you!
Load More Replies...OCD is debilitating. 😔 so many people joke about "Being OCD" because they are tidy and organised, but actually have no idea how crippling and restricting actual diagnosed clinical OCD really is. It affects every waking moment of your day and you are consumed by irrational and obsessive thoughts and compulsions. It's hell. But the treatment and help works if you are able to seek it. My OCD is my complete fear of germs and sickness, it dominates my thoughts basically every waking minute. I'm terrified constantly and my hands are dry and cracked from over use of hand sanitiser. My children are affected by my constant germ phobia and it's really hard to just let them toich normal things and just be normal kids. I have an anxiety reaction if they even touch a handrail. It's ridiculous but it is uncontrollable. I have started to get help though and it's starting to help a lot. OCD is a terrible thing.
I have dealt with ocd since i was a kid, and seriously the only thing that has really helped me is exercising. I started practising pilates just at home it is great because its very similar to yoga + strenght exercise also make sure you are eating healthy, and avoiding coffee even though i do sometimes have a coffee. I notice that when I stop exercising i can feel the ocd sneaking up on me. I have often wondered about people that have ocd if they are really exercising? because it is so very beneficial in every way. But we are all different and maybe I have just found my solution of this mental pain and I do hope that you find yours.
I have OCD as well and exercise helps a lot, especially yoga. Thank you for pointing this out.
Load More Replies...My OCD doesn't have to do with cleaning either. Mine is counting, color coordinating, and some organization. It will drive my brain wonky if things aren't done a certain way
Does anyone else have it that they have to check everything in their house? If it's locked or off. It takes me an hour sometimes to leave the house or go to bed as i need to do it in a special order or way. It's not like i think something bad will happen if i dont. I'm fully aware it's ridiculous but i just have to do it. It's really bad and affects going out and my relationship with others. I definitely hide it though and only have to do it to the extent i do at my own house. I do a tiny look but nothing like at home. Gahhh i hope I dont sound ridiculous. Something else is when putting something down it cant be on anything else or have any cords under it etc. It really f*****g controls your life!
Load More Replies...I have OCD in the form of ruminating or intrusive thoughts, which isn't talked about much. It's absolute torture
I feel that, the mayority of people dont talk about intrusive thoughts when they talk about OCD, which is somehow invalidating because when you suffer from really violent intrusive thoughts its just so frustating and energy consuming. The more you work on it the better it gets tho, when I was little i couldnt live my life in a normal way, i felt sick like why would anyones brain attack you with that type of thoughts... but the more you accept them anda accept that they do not degine you they just represent what you fear not what you are the better it gets, its a slow processes and of course its different for everybody but now i can live my life, the thoughts are in the back of my head sometimes but i know they aint real they are just part of this weird disorder and maybe even that the fact of me fearing them means i am a good person
Load More Replies...I feel like this, many things which can make me feeling disgust, and all of i think is i wanna clean my hand, my hair even my body, oh its really messed me, from every picture i think OCD has many kind.
Mine is with repetition and numbers, too. Quite embarrassing and frustrating.
Same here. I have certain numbers things need to be in, and there are other numbers that bother me. Certain things need to have patterns too. One place its obvious is when I make pancakes, oddly enough- all of them need to have a specific number and pattern of whatever I'm putting in them (chocolate chips, bananas, berries, etc- I lay them on it while it cooks, can't just mix them into the mix). I don't like people helping me cook those due to that, since I panic if its wrong. Very embarrassing.
Load More Replies...It is so disapointing to watch OCD be explained using such a specific phrase. OCD is a devastating destructive and heartbreaking illness. Pure O-OCD can corupt your mind until you are completely paralyzed. What youve worked for is destroyed. Your motivation,your drive; they are all there and you arent allowed to act on them.you live in a box watching yourself. It is a type of schizophreni that even the best doctors dont understand fully.It keeps you a victim in your own life,warps reality and forces you to listen to the rules and rituals it creates.It takes away your power and control over big life choices and everyday actions that others take for granted. Ocd when extreme can confuse your mind until you are constantly pep talking yourself, promising yourself and coming up with plans to break free. Ocd affects some of the strongest willed people and feeds on the fact that its the one thing that can overtake them. It destroys lives. I am appauled at this isolating description.
Its so sad that even within an outlet dedicated to illustrate severity of mental illness that OCD would include such a small fraction of what sufferers face. The destructive and devastating nature of pure o ocd is so heartbreaking , I am appauled and shocked that such a specific phrase is used here to completely isolate victims.
Often OCD isn't visible, especially Pure O and intrusive thoughts. I get the attempt though with the artwork.
I don't like the words "clean" on it because my OCD (as well as many other people's) has nothing to do with cleaning and many people use that stereotype as an excuse to use the term OCD colloquially (i.e. "I'm so OCD" if they organize their room a certain way). The image, however, definitely gets the point across and it's physical representation of the compulsive aspect of OCD really resonates with me.
People NEED to realize that OCD is NOT about organization & perfectionism & timliness! IT IS SO MUCH MORE!!!
Load More Replies...This is missing a huge portion of the problems- -the nagging voice in your head constantly second guessing everything you do (obsession) -the routines that people are so tied to (compulsion) It shows the inability to stop oneself from doing an action that hurts in the short run. That is accurate. But the cleanliness is overemphasized compared to how many people actually deal with that specifically
It's a shame that the "clean" bit was added. I saw the image and immediately connected to it, but then the words just seem to reinforce harmful stereotypes. Beautiful and insightful art nonetheless
OCD is hard to label. Yes most common and noticeable is the cleaning variant. I on the other hand am obsessed with time and perfection. Stuff isn't done when it is done always feels like it can be better or be done more sufficient.
Living the life of your own worst critic. I know it well. I'm sorry you share this.
Load More Replies...I saw my OCD always more as like a collar, or a hand around my neck from behind my shoulders, and controlling me. But there's a fear aspect that does come from inside.
It's more about order, process and routine, things done a certain way or following a pattern of behaviour that causes anxiety if not followed.
I like how most of our comments are mostly drawn toward more focus on the mind
OCD is not about cleaning! Irrational, overwhelming fears compensated by irrational rituals to satisfy them. It's more like a monster living in your head blasting you with intrusive thoughts. I think it's a cool picture and go ahead and downvote this but I am sick to death of people perpetuating something that OCD isn't.
OCD for me has never been about cleanliness. It is obsessive thoughts which keep coming back into my mind. there is help out there for this though. Mine personally came first from myself and second from seeking out http://www.equilibriahealth.com/ Would recommend anyone in Scotland to check this out. Keep well. Alan
I have OCD add well... GREAT illustration however, I would depict oneself clawing despairingly at ones hair, skin, etc. cuz of the frustration and sense of no control and because one has to do it all over again the "right" way and one doesn't it eats and eats away at one's total sense of "self"
I have to remind myself sometimes that I am a person with OCD, that I am NOT OCD. Because, like you said, it takes over your sense of self.
Load More Replies...Could OCD also cause a person to always fuss over their hair, like it has to be done a certain way - for instance if you shower at night and nobody will see you, but you still have to make it a certain way even though you're just about to get in bed? Rearranging objects a certain way? Using the same or very particular items such as a certain fork or cup? Stuff like that? My brother is like this, very very particular. So I've wondered a lot if maybe he might have some sort of OCD? It's just what comes to mind. He's about to turn 17 so I don't think he's just being some picky kid but I'm really not sure, just always made me curious.
There's also a range of severity, to get the clinical diagnosis means it has to disrupt your life in major ways and has to consume a certain amount of time each day... but there are certainly people who may have obsessive and compulsive tendencies yet perhaps it isn't quite as disruptive to their life...
Load More Replies...My OCD involves cleaning, among other things, but I have never found something so accurate when it comes to describing what it feels like.
My OCD has a lot to do with cleaning, order and routines. It drives me crazy... especially with my kids. Everyone has to be in it's right place completly clean and sanitized. The routines are to make sure I'm on time and have every done correctly. It's hard daily but with my husband we get it done
OCD is about routines, not cleaning. OCPD usually is more so about cleaning.
Should say " routine routine routine" ...the cleaning thing is just another misguided stereotype 😒
I hate ocd, hate it! It is destroying my son's life at age of 12 and taking the family slowly apart. Time consuming and absolutely tragic.
I was that 12 year old. For me, relief was found in channeling my thoughts and routines into lists. It's incredibly difficult for a child to feel so different.
Load More Replies...Interesting that you say that because my obsessive thoughts revolve around a fear of something floating into the ceiling fan. No clue why. A doctor once told me that its the fear of what cannot be controlled.
Load More Replies...Mine is usually with having everything in neat sets of either 2 or 3.
Not sure if I officially have OCD, by I am also preoccupied with my schedule and timing everything...down to the minute...can’t be healthy. ;0/
same here, ocd has so many ugly faces. perhaps with input you could draw some more illustrations surrounding ocd.
actually that makes more of a mess mate sorry to have to be the one to tell you x
I have OCD & I like this depiction, there have been many times when I feel like my skin is crawling and I wish I could tear it off...but can I offer a critique, the real reason I feel this way is because I feel like I'm chained, like a slave to my own compulsive, often unwanted, irrational (or seeming so to others) thoughts. So it would be awesome if you could draw a picture of that.
This is EXACTLY what my OCD feels like (except I would use the word dirty, because I have contamination OCD, but that is besides the point. In fact, I think people who are criticizing you for focusing on cleaning OCD are ridiculous; there are many versions of OCD, like any mental illness, and to capture them all in one picture would be pretty impossible. I also suffer from order & bad thoughts OCD, PTSD, EDNOS, and Depression on and off, and these shetches touched me so deeply. Thank you thank you thank you for choosing this subject matter! Mental illness is incredibly difficult to understand for anyone who doesn't deal with it, so to have illustrations of how they make us feel is an incredibly powerful tool to start conversations and help others try to put themselves in our shoes. I have already shared this on fb, with several family members, and my psychiatrist, and I am certain that I will have future opporyunities to use this drawing. I would so so appreciate a copy of this
I wish this represented people like me who have to have equal feeling on my body. Cleaning isn't the only form of OCD and it's sad that us others get dismissed because of this misconception
Nobody really knows what OCD is unless they have it or know someone who does. It is in the name of people actually took the time to understand. OCD stands for obsessive compulsive disorder . The first part is they obsess about something and this is different for everyone with OCD This obsession could be that they will get sick or that they will go into a store and not have enough money and a person with OCD can have multiple obsessions. Then the compulsive part comes in. They compulsively (meaning they can't control it) do what in there heads will prevent what their obsession is from happening. My daughter has OCD. when I tell people this they always say that must be nice her room must always be clean and then I have to explain to them that really that has nothing to do with OCD and it's a huge misrepresentation of what she is actually going through.
Love the picture, but this was the only piece in the series that I feel like the artist didn't hit the nail on the head, and it happens to be a disorder I have. I get it, the written words are the repetitive intrusive thoughts, which we must obey or never have peace in our minds, to the point of even harming ourselves in order to do it. However, people have this misconception that those of us with ocd are germophobes. We're not always. Yes, I'm a very thorough cleaner, because extreme perfectionism is one of the symptoms. However, I eat off of other people's spoons and only wash my hands when they are genuinely dirty. But if you were to put the volume on my car stereo on a prime number, I would spend the rest of the car ride in anxiety because my brain is insisting that those numbers on the radio volume well cause my death. I also wouldn't be able to follow your conversation because all I could think about would be changing it.
You could slam this home dude with one read at ocfoundations website. It hits one small media pushed stereotype. I think you'll like sharing real OCD in art once you read. Please from somone with OCD I ask you do. Your talent can help bring some real understanding to the table.
I have OCD but In the firm of ruminating thoughts which isn't discussed as often.. It's absolute torture
Me too. It's under control now., but has been hell in the past.
Load More Replies...This is the best I've seen so far. People think it is "cute" that I'm a "perfectionist" and they wish they could be like me. It is not cute, it hurts and it never goes away.
This is exactly how I feel, but everyone thinks it is "cute" that I'm a "perfectionist." It's not cute, it hurts and it never goes away.
I understand this so much, my girlfriend always says I have ocd as a joke but I do which is frustrating for me to admit to myself, but I don't obsessively clean things around me or myself, I have a illness called dermatillomania where I compulsively pick at my skin in an attempt to make it "perfect". Logically I know it's not but I do it subconsciously which is a problem.
Mine is making sure things are locked and tured off. Leaving the house to go to the shops is bad but if I'm on a trip out all day it takes 10 min of me checking and re checking things. Then I could drive back and re check it!!! And the feeling something bad is going to happen if I'm go out for to long
My OCD started with cleaning but 5 years later now, it has absolutely nothing to do with it. I count ransoms things, even letters in words...I say phrases and words over and over. It's my own personal tourment.
Mine isn't anything to do with cleaning either, but this picture represents perfectly the way the awful obsessive thoughts lodge themselves in me and how I want to rip them out.
I don't know if I have OCD but I'm pretty sure I'm a perfectionist. I always tend to be ahead of things, and there's this schedule on my head that I should get done accordingly, and if not, I feel unrelieved. I even set schedules way over ahead of time, like two months before. Everything should be planned and If I don't I always feel like I'm going to fail or won't get the job done right. Whenever I see unsanitized areas, I feel queesy and tend to puke, I just can't stand it that even if nobody asked me to clean that area, I will. Or it'll stay in my head until I sleep. I also can't sleep without bathing first, specially at night before going to bed. And I always carry an alcohol spray, though right now I'm out I feel incredibly uneasy.
This captures my OCD very well. My friends joke about how wonderful it must be to always have a clean house but it's sickening. I'm constantly cleaning to the point where I get hysterical over it. Everything must be in perfect order. Even if I just vacuumed earlier I have to do it again. My hands are horrible from constantly washing. I wish I knew how to stop.
I clean to forcibly regain a sence of control over repetitive looping thoughts. Like burning my self on a stove and then replaying that Instance over and over. Or intrusive thoughts "what if I kicked that dog?" And then looping on that thought .I don't have a method or a patterns that I follow .
As much as a good house cleaning helps me calm down , the majority of mine comes in the form of repetitive thought loops and horrific thought intrusion . Like burning yourself on a hot stove accidentally and then replaying the instance over and over. watching my self touch the stove. The cleaning come from forcibly regaining a since of control. At least for me .
My ocd is to have order everything needs to be in in the right place.
I kind of wish my OCD had to deal with cleaning. I'm on the perfectionist, dwelling, empathetic, controlling side of the coin. It's all horrible.
I'm so disappointed with this one. I have OCD and it doesn't speak to me at all. A lot of people with OCD actually struggle with hygiene. Cleaning is not my "thing" at all.
...the compulsions. It starts with the thoughts in the brain being repetitive.
...think about it again. OCD makes that thought repeat over and over until it causes fear and then fear causes anxiety and anxiety causes...
OCD to me is like not having a filter in your brain that normal people have. When they have a bad thought they can wipe it away and not
This is EXACTLY how I feel. Just change the word "clean" to "perfection" I'm practically ripping my body open trying to be perfect, and "pure" until there's nothing left of me......
I have to agree with a majority of these comments about the stigma that OCD is primarily with keeping things in order. The thing is the way it manifests is different for each person, but the overlying factor is more relative to the anxiety riddling "future telling." I.e. if I don't do this, exactly this way, something in turn will happen that is bad. Some people do have the obsessive trait of cleaning, but its usually for a reason. Within this past year with proper cognitive therapy I have conquered 30 different OCD traits that I have. 30 may seem like somewhat decent number, and I am most definitely proud of myself for getting there, but its no easy task and there are at least 40 more for each one of those 30. We can all agree though the way artist portrayed OCD in this illustration is pretty accurate in the sense that from the outside you may look cool calm and collected, but your gut and heart are ripping to pieces in fear of what might transpire. Take one day at a time :)
I'd like to see people touch more on the other things that come with having OCD because it is much more then just "being clean". You may even be the dirtiest person and still have OCD but somehow everyone seems to focus on that aspect of it.
Beautiful art, but it only captures a fraction of what OCD is about. Intrusive thoughts are the root of OCD, cleanliness is one of the many branches that might grow from it. Still, I appreciate the interpretation and representation. And your style is amazing! Good work.
I agree with Loretta, my fiance has OCD, and has to take prozac to keep his compulsions at bay. And still 20 times a day he will wash his hands. But it's not all cleaning. While this is a beautiful piece of art, I think perhaps a better representation would be a devastation because there is a break in routine. My fiance's whole day can get screwed if he can't have his breakfast in the way he wants it. It seems petty to those who don't have this condition, but it's really debilitating. Not to mention the mental obsessions that he still fights even with the meds. He's explained the horrors his brain has come up with. OCD is a very broad spectrum just like autism actually :)
My OCD is counting. Counting things, counting letters in words, then counting the syllables in those words and adding them to the letters to get an answer. Weird, right? I also run conversations in my head over and over and over. So much more. Very little to do with cleaning.
I know all too well & I'm digging this drawing/art/depiction. People call me predictable because I do the exact same things every single day. The dominant O.C.D. really has to do with VISUAL NUMBERS. They must be the same as the prior but only visual. I'm not a "counter" or a "stepper". It controls me. Also, I look in a mirror I carry around with me all the time. If I forget my mirror at home, when I'm at work, I take several breaks JUST to go to the restroom, not to use it but to look in the mirror for long periods of time. When I'm out a restaurant, I get up from the table several times to pick my teeth or clean the outside of my nose & look in the mirror. If ANY of my numbers are off just by 1 in my bank account, Twitter Followers/Following, Instagram Followers/Following etc, I adjust them almost every minute. My mom tells me stories of when I was a baby, when I first started learning how to hold a spoon, if ONE rice fell off the spoon, I would have a tantrum. Little has changed.
Most of you are missing the objective of the picture. OCD is more commonly linked to having the urge to clean. It would be incredibly difficult for this artist to include every part of the disorder in what is supposed to be a simple sketch.. These are very beautiful pieces
I don't agree with this at all. It's supporting a stereotype that OCD is directly connected to a need for cleanliness. Many OCD suffers have no connection with cleaning - this obsession stereotype was an outcome of the HIV media hype, which in turn focussed on OCD as a form of compulsive cleanliness. OCD stands for obsessive compulsive disorder, therefore the obsession can be about anything, although they are often grim, perverse and unwanted thoughts. The compulsion is then the outcome of the obsession, trying to remove the thought or feeling.
This made me cry....like it was mentioned my OCD doesn't have much to do with cleaning but routine on top of routine and timing and yeah I can't explain it but It's ruined my life as well
My OCD has nothing to do with cleaning. In fact I tend to be super messy. I'm plagued with obsessive thoughts. It has nothing to with routine or cleaning. My brain replays memories of things I've said. I then think about the ten different ways you could have taken what I said and suddenly your mad at me when your not. I become overwhelmed and than shut down. I have no control over obsessing about these thoughts. They could be from five mins ago or ten years ago. My boyfriend takes the brunt of it. I'm always taking what he says in the wrong way because I over think EVERYTHING
My ocd has nothing to do with cleaning. I suffer from obsessive thoughts. My Brian replays the same memory over and over again leaving me to feel guilty, upset or angry. I become overwhelmed and my entire brain shutdowns. It could be something that happened five mins or it could be something that happened ten years ago. I have particular ways I like to drive. I can't let friends drive because it physically makes me ill when they don't go my way. I become nauseous and angry. But I do lo e the drawing. It's incredible. Never stop
This is so me nothing is ever clean or perfect enough it drags at me constantly I feel like I can't get away it consumes me I feel like there is no me any longer just the compulsion
I have to order all the hangers in my closet and at work among other things...
I have numerical repetitive and hygienic OCDs the numerical has only gotten worse but this picture depicts my exact goal....to be so clean my body feels raw my skin itself feels dirty ...I'm trying to describe it but...
Mine also isn't 100% bout cleaning, mine is about shaps,colors, the way objects face, trying to be the perfect employee, the way objects sit. From how my perfume bottles can't touch each other but have to be close yet form an artistic design. How every dollar has to point the exact same way.
A rather annoying disorder of mine. Gets in the way of life as I like routines and cleanliness. This drawing is perfect
Officially I am diagnosed with BPD and major depressive disorder. I used to have weird routines around safety though, and I can't stand bumps. I have scars on my arms and legs from digging at bumps and then digging at the scabs. It's embarrassing. It's like you dont have any self control. The disease is in charge.
My OCD ruins my life. Though it's not always about cleaning, but this illustrates very well.
I live by set routines. I do thigs a certain way or else I can't be comfortable or stop thinking about it. I don't flip out and it doesn't paralyze me but it will really bug me.
I have a kind of Impulse Control Disorder, Dermatillomania where I scratch and pick on my skin several hours a day. It gives relif at the moment but anxiety afterwards (along with scars all over my body). Anyway I can really relate to the picture since it's exactly what I do, scratch / pick to get rid of something dirty under my skin (which does not exist) until I bleed.
Sorry.. But we're all supossed to know what OCD means? I don't know though....
I have terrible OCD, it's fear induced. Iv'e had it since I was a child, but with different things, when I was a kid, it was counting things and tapping something a certain amount of times. Now, I have a little dog who's my baby, so I check the front door a million and a half times (not touching, just looking and sometimes I have to count how many times I look in a specific minute to feel satisfied). It's also from worrying that someone will break in and my dog will get out, my mom will be hurt and same with myself, so I don't sleep at night because my brain doesn't understand that when a door is locked, it's locked and won't just magically open the second I turn away. I also have to check the stove a number of times, and make sure the fridge is closed. I also have cleaning OCD, I hate disorganization and dishes in the sink. This isn't even a half of the OCD induced things I do.
Mine manifests itself when I'm at work. If things aren't laid out a certain way I panic and can't get anything done.
Unfortunately I have a few of these disorders(social anxiety, bipolar) but having OCD(although it at least keeps things in order) is the most constantly annoying of them all...sometimes I just want to come home from work and do nothing and I try to do just that but that little guy in my head wont let me just be until I completely straighten up and clean the house to a point where it looks like I'm having the family over..its annoying and its hard for people to live with me
I have OCD I clean and clean my house my bedroom everything I can with antibacterial soaps and disinfectant. I destroy my self by wash my hand until they bleed and takeing baths some times 4 of them a day. Meds do help.
I have OCD but I don't feel that this drawing relates to me in any way.
awwee… this is … ugh i find it fascinating that i am disgusted and fascinated at the same time.
I feel like this kind of captures it in the sense that you have these constant, gnawing, often times disturbing thoughts. If you feel...unclean, you wouldn't be able to stop.
My spouse lives with this, but it's more 'things out of place', than 'cleancleanclean'.
I personally feel like a couple big ones are missing: General Anxiety Disorder and Panic Attack Disorder.
I'm not sure if this thing I do, counts as an OCD? Whenever I leave my house or work, I have to check the front door several times to check if it's locked. Not just double-checking, I have gone back up the stairs to check the door (i live in an appartment) or walked back around the block to do this at work. I just get this gnawing feeling and start feeling really uncomfy if I don't do it.
Sounds like severe anxiety. Not obsessive compulsive disorder.
Load More Replies...My OCD is related with the number 3 at the most,and putting in a colouring order clothes,towels etc... cleaning also but .... i hope one day my headache from these thing go away...
DPD
I didn't even know this was a thing. I've never been able to be alone I have to have someone close by. I looked at this picture a very long time. I have never seen something describe me so clearly.
Anorexia Nervosa
Depersonalization Disorder
Absolute 100% accurate depiction. Depersonalization is what triggers my panic attacks, particularly nocturnal panic attacks. I'm 34 and have dealt with pretty severe mental illness since 18. Although managed on meds, it's impossible to ever be 100% again. Thank you for your incredible drawings. I appreciate these so much. ❤️
Agoraphobia
Dissociative Identity Disorder
This is an amazing illustration for the insidious disease that I have. Your work just surpasses words...keep up the good work
Capgras Syndrome
Hadn't heard of this one either! Very interesting. "Capgras Syndrome, also known as Capgras Delusion, is the irrational belief that a familiar person or place has been replaced with an exact duplicate — an imposter (Ellis, 2001, Hirstein, and Ramachandran, 1997)."
Cotard's Delusion
DSED
Schizophrenia
This one reminds me of Carpenter's "In the mouth of madness". Good job!
Brilliant art work & building great awarness for this hidden yet crippling mental disorders <3
Yep, social anxiety and agoraphobia are linked to it, but still misses general anxiety disorder with panic attacks, by which I mean we're not necessarily having it in social situations.
Load More Replies...I'm a student in psychology, and your drawing really fit with all the description that we can see in class. That's an amazing work !
I'm always curious why society has selected a hand full of mental illnesses that should be taken seriously and the small handful of ones that people can "just get over" things that are though to only effect a small group of people like children so when an adult has it they need to just grow up. ADD doesn't go away when you graduate and it isn't just a learning disability. It's there when you try to drive, when you spend five minutes trying to get that word back that you had in your head and you couldn't spit out. When you can't remember a simple task you've been given seconds ago or when you just can't stay on task even if it's a task you want to do and you love to do, sometimes your brain holds the leash and you can't pull it free. It's a deafening silence in your head begging for your attention. It'd be nice if people would stop calling it just a learning disability, it sucks all the time not just in school.
I didn't know I had it until I tried to hold down a job in my field and couldn't manage multiple tasks with differing priority levels and a very rapid paced and stressful worm environment. I always just assumed I had a horrible attention span and ability to focus and stay on task while in college.
Load More Replies...How would you portray ADD? I'm forever told that "oh I know just how you feel" and "I'm just the same" or "you don't run round lots?" And it's infuriating as they don't see that it's not just one little thing but lots,constantly and endless energy in your head or the need to disconnect and having to scratch and bite yourself to stay engaged and stimulated or the way it destroys friendships. Never being able to achieve a dream or idea as its too big or quickly too dull. Held in place by your own enthusiasm and ideas.
These are all very spot on, but on anorexia, I know a lot of people, including myself, it felt like a voice in the back of your head, so a figure behind them like whispering in their ear would have completed it
These are insanely dope!!! How can I get in contact with the artist?!
He's on Facebook, his page is Shawn Cross - Artist
Load More Replies...I find these pieces valid and beautiful. I am curious as to the process of creating of this art.
Well done I really enjoyed passing by really would like to see what you could do with dyslexia
I have social anxiety really bad, and have had it pretty much all my life, and I've never seen anything so accurate! I'm kind of glad that it was social anxiety rather than general anxiety, because I never see anything with social anxiety, it's good because I have SAD rather than GAD
everytime I see post that I don't understand but somehow get so many viewer or upvotes I always assume it must contain some secret language or so. :|
This has been enlightening. The pictures reminds me of that game "Limbo".
As an autistic person the autism one is the funniest thing I’ve ever seen idk why
Incredible, powerful, accurate, Thank you! The ones speak to me most are PTSD, Bipolar, Autism, Depression, Anxiety, Cotards Delusion, DID. Always protect your Brain kids! Have you ever thought of creating one for PNES(Psychogenic Non-Epileptic Seizures) II believe it may qualify, and would be interested to see how you see it. https://www.epilepsy.com/article/2014/3/truth-about-psychogenic-nonepileptic-seizures
Good thing I don't suffer from any of these. Or...DO I? No...What am I thinking?
I don't understand the BPD picture, I suffer from BPD, but for some reason I don't understand what is happening and why it's happening...in the picture I mean
I have PTSD, and immediately cried upon seeing your illustration on it. It's painfully accurate and I appreciate the artwork as well as bringing awareness to people who may not understand.
Don't understand all the crosses for Schizophrenia. Don't know how they are tied to the disorder, please someone try to elaborate and explain to me why they might be there
Why oh why are all these illnesses portrayed in this way !! we have an illness like malaria or chickenpox. Illustrating this with pen and ink gives a total missinterpratation of what is simply an illness like any other.
Absolutely amazing pictures. I would love to order one of the pictures. Is there any way you can do it? / Emma
I wish you would do one about OCPD, ADHD or Alexithymia. I suffer from these three. :(
These are amazing but the ocd picture only showed one type of ocd and it's the only one most people think of but it's not necessarily most common. It's a misconception that's it's purely a cleanliness or neatness obsession. It is so much more than that. It doesn't help awareness of that illness.
I do think the artwork is really good but OCD isn't just about cleaning as I have OCD and I'm not obsessed with cleaning and I don't think clean clean clean all the time. Jennifer xx
Absolutely fantastic. Actually gave me goose bumps because of how accurate some of these feel for me.
This is amazing! Maybe you could do one for Body dysmorphic disorder, I guess you get requests all the time xx
I found these images a bit triggering. I spend a lot of energy trying to remind myself that mental illness is not mysterious or sinister or having a destructive motive of its own, and that there is no "dark force" at work. I appreciate that these pictures do represent lived experience for some, for me too. But personally I find that personifying the illness makes it scarier than it already is. Certainly it's an interesting post though, and it's encouraging to see from the comments that a lot of people take solace in these pictures.
Great thing to look at if you wanna learn about this kinda stuff but have a artist soul
I wish the artist or someone else could comment on the "#5 bipolar disorder" drawing's symbols...
I would like to see ADHD. Constantly being bombarded with everything around you and not being able to filter things out.
So does this mean you stopped after the 18? Wish I could see some more...
Would have been interested in the artists take on Post Partum Depression, or worse, Post Partum Traumatic Stress Disorder.
The darkness in every one of these really disturbs me - I think they portray people living with mental illness as goulish, halloween characters full of darkness, dangerous and to be feared and despised and dis-intergrated. I see from the comments people living with the various disorders are either really committing to them being an accurate depiction for them or saying 'it's nothing like that" - I am not adverse to the dark AND I think the Ink IS powerful - but it does not describe my lived experience... of two of these diagnoses. It is well known tha mania is a state of hyper connectivity to ideas, thoughts nature, ideas, words, schemas, patterns AND most people in manic highs pretty well wants to involve other people to come on board the fast train. I find these images repellant and want to claim some ground back from them. There is ALWAYS a third face - and space in our times that is something more than the duality, the pain, the harm and hurt. We are people - not monsters.
I do not know what to say because I always wanted to draw these worlds feelings but I did not know how to make them. This artist is siper because with her designs tells a lot of things and feelings. . . I like how to draw because it is similar to how I will like to learn to draw.-/ Non so cosa dire, perché ho sempre voluto disegnare questi mondi sentimenti, ma non sapevo come farli. Questo artista è super perché con i suoi disegni racconta un sacco di cose e dei sentimenti. . . Mi piace come disegnare perché è simile a come mi piacerebbe imparare a disegnare.
I think it's good artwork in and of itself but terrible for getting your point across on your idea of mental illness and the people who have it. If an artist needs people with the disorders to be the majority of people who think their art is a 100% accurate depiction of it, then they're not a very good artist.
Amazingly accurate and impelling art. Having people in my life who have some of these disorders, and having worked in mental health, I'm in awe of someone taking on the task. We need this. Art explains more than words can say.
I wonder if he could put these in a coffee table book with the definitions of the diseases and his motivation. I think that these are amazingly accurate. I would definitely buy that book.
it is amazing art,great. Like every one has problems, but life is so much different with a disorder.
hey im doing a report on anxiety and the multiple disorders that go along in it, is it okay if I were to use some of these, as long as I cite them?
Does anyone know if the artist is selling copies of these? I'm diagnosed with five of those, and honestly as disturbing as some people think they are I find them hauntingly beautiful and so very fitting of how my I feel most days. Especially the PTSD and Social Anxiety.
I have Generalized anxiety disorder, I want to see that drawing :-)
Hello, I really liked your artwork. However, I am having trouble understanding the one with autism. Could you please help me understandt it???
A lot of people with autism (myself included) feel like their brain has so much to say, so many thoughts to express, but their mouth can't put it out. Often my mind keeps jabbing at me wanting me to express what I mean, but my words will come out wrong and I won't be able to verbalize what I'm thinking, because in reality my thoughts are so many at once, and rarely 'coherent' enough to put straight into words.
Load More Replies...You should do one with ADHD. I was diagnosed after my teachers said they couldn't "control" me. I refuse to take meds because I manage it very well on my own. But I've noticed many children have been diagnosed with this and the meds they take turn them into zombies. I am curious what your interpretation of this is. You pretty much nailed everything else!
Should do one on ADHD. I was diagnosed with it, but refuse to take meds for it. I manage it very well on my own. I like to think I just have a hyperactive brain. But i see many children getting diagnosed with this and the meds they take turn them into zombies.. I would love to see your interpretation of this, you pretty much nailed everything else.
What about ADD!? These are amazing and I was on the edge of my seat waiting for the exact feeling to be sprawled out in a sketch
Stunning work. I didn't even know some of these disorders existed. I enjoyed looking at them...even though they saddened me only for the simple fact that so many of us are affected by these diseases and actually feel this type of pain that you have beautifully illustrated. Thank you for showing us your work. God bless you
Loved your art work! You should do some more like epilepsy, cancer and ect.
Brilliant work, bringing these illnesses out of the shadows of their stigmas and shedding light and hope to all who suffer through them , thinking they are alone.
I will have to come back again. My granddaughter had drawings here. I am A VERY PROUD GRANDMA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you for your brave and accurate portrayals of mental illness. There are so many stereotypes that go with it and this was beautifully illustrated. If you do a generalized anxiety I hope to purchase it. Thank you!
Please could you draw General anxiety disorder or the nightmare of coming off SSRI's xxx
Please can you draw general anxiety disorder or the nightmare of coming off SSRI's xxx
If I could draw, I'd draw my depression crying, in the fetal position and chained to my house, surrounded by food containers. But I can't draw.
For me this is what stigma looks like. When people see this it's no wonder they are scared of the mentally ill, insecure around them or want them to be locked away. They may say "it's not you it's the illness the real you that which is like we want it to be" but obviously you cannot be separated from the "thing". I don't think of myself as a monster or possesed by one. I see myself as someone who feels and expriences things everyone feels or experieces but more intensely in certain situations. But like everyone else I do not feel the same all the time nor does anne experince the same states of mind all the time.
I find these grotesque. It would seem people think mental illness must always be a horrible and traumatising experience. The worst part is the opinions and unacceptance by people who have no experience but plenty of judgement. Autism isn't even a mental health issue, so including that shows some ignorance and bias.
Hey. Person on the autism spectrum here. To me, this is incredibly accurate. This isn't saying that mental health is always a traumatising and horrible thing, but it's illustrating how they certainly can be. You won't meet a depressed person saying their illness is beautiful and nice. You won't meet a person with Borderline Personality Disorder saying it has never felt horrible. And I don't wish to vouch for anyone on the autism spectrum, but autism is alienating. To me, it's feeling like your mind has a lot to say but your mouth won't co-operate. It's hearing people day in and day out telling you you might be misunderstanding. Because your brain doesn't work the way others do. Autism isn't an illness, but don't you dare tell me no one has ever felt pained or scared from any of these illnesses. They're grotesque because having an illness or disorder that isolates you feels terrible, at times. I can rise above my illnesses. That does not mean I haven't felt them push me down.
Load More Replies...Absolutely brilliant. Would have loved to have seen a piece for addiction....
Fantastic way to express these conditions. Thank you for opening the door, the heart, and the mind to create a sense of compassion, empathy, and understanding. I have spent my life working with children with emotional handicaps and it is such a hard road. The real monsters are the administrators who think teachers can cure everything with consistent punishment and overly testing them on academics.
Please don't forget to add ADD or ADHD, because that is a HUGE disorder that is often accompanied with other ones featured above, and affects millions of people.
Dear Artist, you must have gone through some really thick stuff to be able to purge on paper in this way. You are really strong. Kudos. Thank you.
Brilliant art work. But I mist the one for migraine I'm very curious about his one.
The illustrations are much too laden with assumptions that are fatalistic, depicting life with mental illness as inherently grim.
What a dark beautiful pictorial description. As for anxiety though, there are more than social anxiety... maybe something eating or pulling your heart down. But amazing art all in all!
These are haunting, yet frighteningly accurate images of these horrific illnesses. It's about time that mental illness is getting the attention it's needed for so long, unfortunately too late for some. My daughter struggles with a few of these and holds resentment towards me for having her on medication as a child. She believes it set her brain and body up for the need to have them forever. I don't think one medication is enough for bipolar, usually, but she swears she will only be on one medication or she will be able to handle zero medications. This makes me sad... I wish I could organize balance the seratonin and reasoning in her beautiful brain. Thank you for these. It lets me know we are not alone.
Are any of these available as a print, by any chance? I feel like I need the Autism Spectrum on my wall :(
This is amazing. WIll there be more? Like one for every day of october? Please.
Absolutely amazing. Thank you so much for these. I was actually a little bummed when I came to the end. I truly hope you challenge yourself farther and take on the oh so many more illnesses out there! Excited to see more of your work! You give us a voice through your art. Thank you.
These are all truly beautiful in a dark, macabre way. I would love to see your illustrations of 'Histrionic personality disorder'. I have had this disorder since my mid teens and seeing it from an outsiders art would be incredible.
Wish they had done panic Foster or anxiety as well, s**t even perpetual migraines.
These are brilliant, Shawn! Perhaps when you have time, if I may ask you to do an illustration of DID or Dissociative identity disorder? Would love to see it and someone I care deeply for has it and she would love your style. Thank you in advance <3
These images really hit me where I wasn't expecting. Thank you so much for creating these, they're absolutely beautiful. I'm not sure how you managed to do it, but you were able to create something that so deeply describes what many people that live their whole lives trying to explain. Thank you.
Shawn, I work in Mental Health and just want to say that your artwork is fantastic. The depictions tell a lot. Really good work.
I didn't see anxiety/panic attacks... like the anxiety I have is not just social.. anything can trigger it .. I feel like I'm scared of every thing and I think of the worst things possible and I can't control it and I start to panic/shake ... 😔
Stunning. Absuolutely fabulous artwork, with a huge impact. I'm really impressed with those.
Even when it would have been easy, ADHD gets zero respect. Easily way more known than half of these.
wow...when you read Bored Panda's comments on such post, it's like 90% of the planet (or at least of Bored Panda members) have mental illness! :s Maybe (just maybe), it's just disparity from the "norm" (that doesn't really exist) and not illness...and you have to live with been different from others
Impresionantes tus dibujos. Deberías hacer un calendario, yo como estudiante de psicología que soy, lo compraría !!! Sigue así ♥
Can't wait to see the others you do. 13 more to go. Looking forward to seeing ADHD..
If I have one overall critique it's that maybe I would remove the "headings", or, even better incorporate them into the world more, give them a bit more expression. I would probably get rid of the #inktober thing entirely, and just put that in an introduction to the collection, but I suppose the purpose of the repeated labeling is in case people shared just one of the pictures rather than all of them.
No shout out to epilepsy? There are 1 in 26 of us diagnosed (and suffering) in their lifetime. Where's everyone hiding?
Maybe because epilepsy is not a mental illness and these drawings are for mental illnesses specifically.
Load More Replies...I saw the one for PTSD and couldn't stop the tears. That is the most accurate representation of what I'm dealing with.
I can't understand the last one. Why there is a lot of holy cross?
I think these could help non sufferers to understand more what life is like to sufferers. I think this artist did a great job at expressing!
I could look at a book like that all day a little more work and that could be published
This artist amazes me, I wouldn't mind letting them ink my bedroom wall with mine (severe depression).
All catched in mind palace in zoo. Section: Introspektrals. What keeps them locked? It is your unfree will.
Wow, thank you so much for sharing these. They are so interesting and engaging. I have worked in mental health. If a person identifies with such an image it could prove truly invaluable for explaining their experience to others.
Those are so great;an eerie insight to how it feels to have social anxiety.
I think the comments on every piece are a testament to how well this artist manages to capture the sometimes overwhelming struggle of living with these illnesses- it's a powerful tribute.
Wow really touching. All my love to people suffering from any kind of mental dissorder.
Can I make a request?? A disorder I have, and is very rare, is called Munchausen's (Not the by proxy one though). I would really appreciate if you could illustrate it :3 Because it's so rare, I often go around feeling so lonely and hurt that no one else ever seems to possibly know my pain, or even want to get to know it...
Wow, all thumbs up. The drawings are amazing, and so spot on. So grateful to be (almost) healthy.
I have ptsd and a couple of others... I thought they were part of the ptsd its self?
there are many subtypes for each disorder (sometimes symptoms of a disorder are individual disorders themselves ) and i've noticed specific subtypes here have their own illustrations, like paranoid schizphrenia, depersonalization ( type of dissociation disorder), social anxiety and etc
Load More Replies...I need one for me too, anxiety and panic disorder, one that would work would be a choking or smothering sensation, you fell like your having a heart attack.
Screw mental illnesses! Mental illnesses are many times never detected and are people are called crazy for no reason, we should stand against such such individuals and spread awareness of mental illnesses
Those images are so beautiful, I can totally relate. Please draw one for eating disorder!
Autism is not a mental illness so I don't know why its even on here. Autism is part of me and that image is really offensive to me.
I also have Autism. It isn't an illness. It's a disorder.
Load More Replies...I have autism. And you have a low intelligence! :)
Load More Replies...I feel your comment is inappropriate. Mental illness is as real as any physical illness.
Load More Replies...those are the names of the actual disorders though...
Load More Replies...What are you talking about? Nowhere does it say that the artist has experienced all / any of these!! Myself being a sufferer of depression and anxiety find these fantastic and a great insight into what people go through (for those who can't relate). Plus, I learnt a lot about other illnesses. Don't be so narrow minded.
Load More Replies...Brilliant art work & building great awarness for this hidden yet crippling mental disorders <3
Yep, social anxiety and agoraphobia are linked to it, but still misses general anxiety disorder with panic attacks, by which I mean we're not necessarily having it in social situations.
Load More Replies...I'm a student in psychology, and your drawing really fit with all the description that we can see in class. That's an amazing work !
I'm always curious why society has selected a hand full of mental illnesses that should be taken seriously and the small handful of ones that people can "just get over" things that are though to only effect a small group of people like children so when an adult has it they need to just grow up. ADD doesn't go away when you graduate and it isn't just a learning disability. It's there when you try to drive, when you spend five minutes trying to get that word back that you had in your head and you couldn't spit out. When you can't remember a simple task you've been given seconds ago or when you just can't stay on task even if it's a task you want to do and you love to do, sometimes your brain holds the leash and you can't pull it free. It's a deafening silence in your head begging for your attention. It'd be nice if people would stop calling it just a learning disability, it sucks all the time not just in school.
I didn't know I had it until I tried to hold down a job in my field and couldn't manage multiple tasks with differing priority levels and a very rapid paced and stressful worm environment. I always just assumed I had a horrible attention span and ability to focus and stay on task while in college.
Load More Replies...How would you portray ADD? I'm forever told that "oh I know just how you feel" and "I'm just the same" or "you don't run round lots?" And it's infuriating as they don't see that it's not just one little thing but lots,constantly and endless energy in your head or the need to disconnect and having to scratch and bite yourself to stay engaged and stimulated or the way it destroys friendships. Never being able to achieve a dream or idea as its too big or quickly too dull. Held in place by your own enthusiasm and ideas.
These are all very spot on, but on anorexia, I know a lot of people, including myself, it felt like a voice in the back of your head, so a figure behind them like whispering in their ear would have completed it
These are insanely dope!!! How can I get in contact with the artist?!
He's on Facebook, his page is Shawn Cross - Artist
Load More Replies...I find these pieces valid and beautiful. I am curious as to the process of creating of this art.
Well done I really enjoyed passing by really would like to see what you could do with dyslexia
I have social anxiety really bad, and have had it pretty much all my life, and I've never seen anything so accurate! I'm kind of glad that it was social anxiety rather than general anxiety, because I never see anything with social anxiety, it's good because I have SAD rather than GAD
everytime I see post that I don't understand but somehow get so many viewer or upvotes I always assume it must contain some secret language or so. :|
This has been enlightening. The pictures reminds me of that game "Limbo".
As an autistic person the autism one is the funniest thing I’ve ever seen idk why
Incredible, powerful, accurate, Thank you! The ones speak to me most are PTSD, Bipolar, Autism, Depression, Anxiety, Cotards Delusion, DID. Always protect your Brain kids! Have you ever thought of creating one for PNES(Psychogenic Non-Epileptic Seizures) II believe it may qualify, and would be interested to see how you see it. https://www.epilepsy.com/article/2014/3/truth-about-psychogenic-nonepileptic-seizures
Good thing I don't suffer from any of these. Or...DO I? No...What am I thinking?
I don't understand the BPD picture, I suffer from BPD, but for some reason I don't understand what is happening and why it's happening...in the picture I mean
I have PTSD, and immediately cried upon seeing your illustration on it. It's painfully accurate and I appreciate the artwork as well as bringing awareness to people who may not understand.
Don't understand all the crosses for Schizophrenia. Don't know how they are tied to the disorder, please someone try to elaborate and explain to me why they might be there
Why oh why are all these illnesses portrayed in this way !! we have an illness like malaria or chickenpox. Illustrating this with pen and ink gives a total missinterpratation of what is simply an illness like any other.
Absolutely amazing pictures. I would love to order one of the pictures. Is there any way you can do it? / Emma
I wish you would do one about OCPD, ADHD or Alexithymia. I suffer from these three. :(
These are amazing but the ocd picture only showed one type of ocd and it's the only one most people think of but it's not necessarily most common. It's a misconception that's it's purely a cleanliness or neatness obsession. It is so much more than that. It doesn't help awareness of that illness.
I do think the artwork is really good but OCD isn't just about cleaning as I have OCD and I'm not obsessed with cleaning and I don't think clean clean clean all the time. Jennifer xx
Absolutely fantastic. Actually gave me goose bumps because of how accurate some of these feel for me.
This is amazing! Maybe you could do one for Body dysmorphic disorder, I guess you get requests all the time xx
I found these images a bit triggering. I spend a lot of energy trying to remind myself that mental illness is not mysterious or sinister or having a destructive motive of its own, and that there is no "dark force" at work. I appreciate that these pictures do represent lived experience for some, for me too. But personally I find that personifying the illness makes it scarier than it already is. Certainly it's an interesting post though, and it's encouraging to see from the comments that a lot of people take solace in these pictures.
Great thing to look at if you wanna learn about this kinda stuff but have a artist soul
I wish the artist or someone else could comment on the "#5 bipolar disorder" drawing's symbols...
I would like to see ADHD. Constantly being bombarded with everything around you and not being able to filter things out.
So does this mean you stopped after the 18? Wish I could see some more...
Would have been interested in the artists take on Post Partum Depression, or worse, Post Partum Traumatic Stress Disorder.
The darkness in every one of these really disturbs me - I think they portray people living with mental illness as goulish, halloween characters full of darkness, dangerous and to be feared and despised and dis-intergrated. I see from the comments people living with the various disorders are either really committing to them being an accurate depiction for them or saying 'it's nothing like that" - I am not adverse to the dark AND I think the Ink IS powerful - but it does not describe my lived experience... of two of these diagnoses. It is well known tha mania is a state of hyper connectivity to ideas, thoughts nature, ideas, words, schemas, patterns AND most people in manic highs pretty well wants to involve other people to come on board the fast train. I find these images repellant and want to claim some ground back from them. There is ALWAYS a third face - and space in our times that is something more than the duality, the pain, the harm and hurt. We are people - not monsters.
I do not know what to say because I always wanted to draw these worlds feelings but I did not know how to make them. This artist is siper because with her designs tells a lot of things and feelings. . . I like how to draw because it is similar to how I will like to learn to draw.-/ Non so cosa dire, perché ho sempre voluto disegnare questi mondi sentimenti, ma non sapevo come farli. Questo artista è super perché con i suoi disegni racconta un sacco di cose e dei sentimenti. . . Mi piace come disegnare perché è simile a come mi piacerebbe imparare a disegnare.
I think it's good artwork in and of itself but terrible for getting your point across on your idea of mental illness and the people who have it. If an artist needs people with the disorders to be the majority of people who think their art is a 100% accurate depiction of it, then they're not a very good artist.
Amazingly accurate and impelling art. Having people in my life who have some of these disorders, and having worked in mental health, I'm in awe of someone taking on the task. We need this. Art explains more than words can say.
I wonder if he could put these in a coffee table book with the definitions of the diseases and his motivation. I think that these are amazingly accurate. I would definitely buy that book.
it is amazing art,great. Like every one has problems, but life is so much different with a disorder.
hey im doing a report on anxiety and the multiple disorders that go along in it, is it okay if I were to use some of these, as long as I cite them?
Does anyone know if the artist is selling copies of these? I'm diagnosed with five of those, and honestly as disturbing as some people think they are I find them hauntingly beautiful and so very fitting of how my I feel most days. Especially the PTSD and Social Anxiety.
I have Generalized anxiety disorder, I want to see that drawing :-)
Hello, I really liked your artwork. However, I am having trouble understanding the one with autism. Could you please help me understandt it???
A lot of people with autism (myself included) feel like their brain has so much to say, so many thoughts to express, but their mouth can't put it out. Often my mind keeps jabbing at me wanting me to express what I mean, but my words will come out wrong and I won't be able to verbalize what I'm thinking, because in reality my thoughts are so many at once, and rarely 'coherent' enough to put straight into words.
Load More Replies...You should do one with ADHD. I was diagnosed after my teachers said they couldn't "control" me. I refuse to take meds because I manage it very well on my own. But I've noticed many children have been diagnosed with this and the meds they take turn them into zombies. I am curious what your interpretation of this is. You pretty much nailed everything else!
Should do one on ADHD. I was diagnosed with it, but refuse to take meds for it. I manage it very well on my own. I like to think I just have a hyperactive brain. But i see many children getting diagnosed with this and the meds they take turn them into zombies.. I would love to see your interpretation of this, you pretty much nailed everything else.
What about ADD!? These are amazing and I was on the edge of my seat waiting for the exact feeling to be sprawled out in a sketch
Stunning work. I didn't even know some of these disorders existed. I enjoyed looking at them...even though they saddened me only for the simple fact that so many of us are affected by these diseases and actually feel this type of pain that you have beautifully illustrated. Thank you for showing us your work. God bless you
Loved your art work! You should do some more like epilepsy, cancer and ect.
Brilliant work, bringing these illnesses out of the shadows of their stigmas and shedding light and hope to all who suffer through them , thinking they are alone.
I will have to come back again. My granddaughter had drawings here. I am A VERY PROUD GRANDMA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you for your brave and accurate portrayals of mental illness. There are so many stereotypes that go with it and this was beautifully illustrated. If you do a generalized anxiety I hope to purchase it. Thank you!
Please could you draw General anxiety disorder or the nightmare of coming off SSRI's xxx
Please can you draw general anxiety disorder or the nightmare of coming off SSRI's xxx
If I could draw, I'd draw my depression crying, in the fetal position and chained to my house, surrounded by food containers. But I can't draw.
For me this is what stigma looks like. When people see this it's no wonder they are scared of the mentally ill, insecure around them or want them to be locked away. They may say "it's not you it's the illness the real you that which is like we want it to be" but obviously you cannot be separated from the "thing". I don't think of myself as a monster or possesed by one. I see myself as someone who feels and expriences things everyone feels or experieces but more intensely in certain situations. But like everyone else I do not feel the same all the time nor does anne experince the same states of mind all the time.
I find these grotesque. It would seem people think mental illness must always be a horrible and traumatising experience. The worst part is the opinions and unacceptance by people who have no experience but plenty of judgement. Autism isn't even a mental health issue, so including that shows some ignorance and bias.
Hey. Person on the autism spectrum here. To me, this is incredibly accurate. This isn't saying that mental health is always a traumatising and horrible thing, but it's illustrating how they certainly can be. You won't meet a depressed person saying their illness is beautiful and nice. You won't meet a person with Borderline Personality Disorder saying it has never felt horrible. And I don't wish to vouch for anyone on the autism spectrum, but autism is alienating. To me, it's feeling like your mind has a lot to say but your mouth won't co-operate. It's hearing people day in and day out telling you you might be misunderstanding. Because your brain doesn't work the way others do. Autism isn't an illness, but don't you dare tell me no one has ever felt pained or scared from any of these illnesses. They're grotesque because having an illness or disorder that isolates you feels terrible, at times. I can rise above my illnesses. That does not mean I haven't felt them push me down.
Load More Replies...Absolutely brilliant. Would have loved to have seen a piece for addiction....
Fantastic way to express these conditions. Thank you for opening the door, the heart, and the mind to create a sense of compassion, empathy, and understanding. I have spent my life working with children with emotional handicaps and it is such a hard road. The real monsters are the administrators who think teachers can cure everything with consistent punishment and overly testing them on academics.
Please don't forget to add ADD or ADHD, because that is a HUGE disorder that is often accompanied with other ones featured above, and affects millions of people.
Dear Artist, you must have gone through some really thick stuff to be able to purge on paper in this way. You are really strong. Kudos. Thank you.
Brilliant art work. But I mist the one for migraine I'm very curious about his one.
The illustrations are much too laden with assumptions that are fatalistic, depicting life with mental illness as inherently grim.
What a dark beautiful pictorial description. As for anxiety though, there are more than social anxiety... maybe something eating or pulling your heart down. But amazing art all in all!
These are haunting, yet frighteningly accurate images of these horrific illnesses. It's about time that mental illness is getting the attention it's needed for so long, unfortunately too late for some. My daughter struggles with a few of these and holds resentment towards me for having her on medication as a child. She believes it set her brain and body up for the need to have them forever. I don't think one medication is enough for bipolar, usually, but she swears she will only be on one medication or she will be able to handle zero medications. This makes me sad... I wish I could organize balance the seratonin and reasoning in her beautiful brain. Thank you for these. It lets me know we are not alone.
Are any of these available as a print, by any chance? I feel like I need the Autism Spectrum on my wall :(
This is amazing. WIll there be more? Like one for every day of october? Please.
Absolutely amazing. Thank you so much for these. I was actually a little bummed when I came to the end. I truly hope you challenge yourself farther and take on the oh so many more illnesses out there! Excited to see more of your work! You give us a voice through your art. Thank you.
These are all truly beautiful in a dark, macabre way. I would love to see your illustrations of 'Histrionic personality disorder'. I have had this disorder since my mid teens and seeing it from an outsiders art would be incredible.
Wish they had done panic Foster or anxiety as well, s**t even perpetual migraines.
These are brilliant, Shawn! Perhaps when you have time, if I may ask you to do an illustration of DID or Dissociative identity disorder? Would love to see it and someone I care deeply for has it and she would love your style. Thank you in advance <3
These images really hit me where I wasn't expecting. Thank you so much for creating these, they're absolutely beautiful. I'm not sure how you managed to do it, but you were able to create something that so deeply describes what many people that live their whole lives trying to explain. Thank you.
Shawn, I work in Mental Health and just want to say that your artwork is fantastic. The depictions tell a lot. Really good work.
I didn't see anxiety/panic attacks... like the anxiety I have is not just social.. anything can trigger it .. I feel like I'm scared of every thing and I think of the worst things possible and I can't control it and I start to panic/shake ... 😔
Stunning. Absuolutely fabulous artwork, with a huge impact. I'm really impressed with those.
Even when it would have been easy, ADHD gets zero respect. Easily way more known than half of these.
wow...when you read Bored Panda's comments on such post, it's like 90% of the planet (or at least of Bored Panda members) have mental illness! :s Maybe (just maybe), it's just disparity from the "norm" (that doesn't really exist) and not illness...and you have to live with been different from others
Impresionantes tus dibujos. Deberías hacer un calendario, yo como estudiante de psicología que soy, lo compraría !!! Sigue así ♥
Can't wait to see the others you do. 13 more to go. Looking forward to seeing ADHD..
If I have one overall critique it's that maybe I would remove the "headings", or, even better incorporate them into the world more, give them a bit more expression. I would probably get rid of the #inktober thing entirely, and just put that in an introduction to the collection, but I suppose the purpose of the repeated labeling is in case people shared just one of the pictures rather than all of them.
No shout out to epilepsy? There are 1 in 26 of us diagnosed (and suffering) in their lifetime. Where's everyone hiding?
Maybe because epilepsy is not a mental illness and these drawings are for mental illnesses specifically.
Load More Replies...I saw the one for PTSD and couldn't stop the tears. That is the most accurate representation of what I'm dealing with.
I can't understand the last one. Why there is a lot of holy cross?
I think these could help non sufferers to understand more what life is like to sufferers. I think this artist did a great job at expressing!
I could look at a book like that all day a little more work and that could be published
This artist amazes me, I wouldn't mind letting them ink my bedroom wall with mine (severe depression).
All catched in mind palace in zoo. Section: Introspektrals. What keeps them locked? It is your unfree will.
Wow, thank you so much for sharing these. They are so interesting and engaging. I have worked in mental health. If a person identifies with such an image it could prove truly invaluable for explaining their experience to others.
Those are so great;an eerie insight to how it feels to have social anxiety.
I think the comments on every piece are a testament to how well this artist manages to capture the sometimes overwhelming struggle of living with these illnesses- it's a powerful tribute.
Wow really touching. All my love to people suffering from any kind of mental dissorder.
Can I make a request?? A disorder I have, and is very rare, is called Munchausen's (Not the by proxy one though). I would really appreciate if you could illustrate it :3 Because it's so rare, I often go around feeling so lonely and hurt that no one else ever seems to possibly know my pain, or even want to get to know it...
Wow, all thumbs up. The drawings are amazing, and so spot on. So grateful to be (almost) healthy.
I have ptsd and a couple of others... I thought they were part of the ptsd its self?
there are many subtypes for each disorder (sometimes symptoms of a disorder are individual disorders themselves ) and i've noticed specific subtypes here have their own illustrations, like paranoid schizphrenia, depersonalization ( type of dissociation disorder), social anxiety and etc
Load More Replies...I need one for me too, anxiety and panic disorder, one that would work would be a choking or smothering sensation, you fell like your having a heart attack.
Screw mental illnesses! Mental illnesses are many times never detected and are people are called crazy for no reason, we should stand against such such individuals and spread awareness of mental illnesses
Those images are so beautiful, I can totally relate. Please draw one for eating disorder!
Autism is not a mental illness so I don't know why its even on here. Autism is part of me and that image is really offensive to me.
I also have Autism. It isn't an illness. It's a disorder.
Load More Replies...I have autism. And you have a low intelligence! :)
Load More Replies...I feel your comment is inappropriate. Mental illness is as real as any physical illness.
Load More Replies...those are the names of the actual disorders though...
Load More Replies...What are you talking about? Nowhere does it say that the artist has experienced all / any of these!! Myself being a sufferer of depression and anxiety find these fantastic and a great insight into what people go through (for those who can't relate). Plus, I learnt a lot about other illnesses. Don't be so narrow minded.
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