Exploring the Wilderness of My Overstimulated Mind
My mind is a wild forest, and I have grown to enjoy walking through its untamed terrain. To embrace the spirit of anti-fragility, where things emerge more resilient in the wake of inevitable chaos. The forests I wander, both in my mind and the world, are far from orderly, yet in their tangled branches and scattered paths, I find a sense of rootedness and freedom. I have grown rather fond of meandering, leaving room for serendipitous encounters.
I despise planned itineraries while traveling. Instead of curated recommendations from social media, I let my feet (and locals) take me to undiscovered places. It’s a journey of exploration, where the destination is never quite as important as the discoveries along the way.
Until my late 20s, mental health, therapy, and the concept of boundaries were foreign to me. I sought refuge in the quiet embrace of nature, unable to conform to the rigid expectations of career paths and relationships dictated by society. My late ADHD changed life as I knew it, inviting me to explore my mind with a newfound vulnerability and curiosity.
Years of therapy and medication have helped me embrace my neurodivergent brain—a mind that weaves connections and uncovers patterns invisible to others, discovering the universal within the personal and poetry within fragility. Art and image-making have become integral to my self-expression, a playful medium of therapy that shapes my identity as an artist.
Being someone with a rather unreliable short-term memory, I find solace in the controlled chaos of collages, where I deconstruct to reclaim. Armed with my scissors and glue-stick, I can spend hours poring over old newspapers, borrowing strangers’ words to create new worlds of my own.
Photography, particularly double exposures and the medium of cyanotypes, allows me to layer memories and create ephemeral art that free me from the weight of remembering.