Fragmented

Fragmented

  • WpView
    Reads 194
  • WpVote
    Votes 38
  • WpPart
    Parts 54
WpMetadataReadOngoing<5 mins
WpMetadataNoticeLast published Thu, Feb 26, 2026
"Fragmented" is a poetry book that dives deep into the traumas and metal health struggles of the author. It was made with the intention to spread mental health awareness as well as let people know they aren't alone. This book specifically highlights struggles with perfectionism, depression, Eating disorders, abandonment, and heartbreak. Many people are affected by mental health and although you may not be able to see the pain like physical marks {cuts or bruises}; it is still something that drastically affects people everywhere. With that said I hope this book helps someone out there.
All Rights Reserved
#269
poembook
WpChevronRight
Join the largest storytelling communityGet personalized story recommendations, save your favourites to your library, and comment and vote to grow your community.
Illustration

You may also like

  • 3 AM Unsent Messages
  • Doctor  Husband (Complete)
  • အရာအားလုံး
  • Kutty Adhi's Little Wish❤️
  • නොමැකෙන ආදරේ |  Unfading Love  🄾🄽🄶🄾🄸🄽🄶
  • A poem a day keeps who knows what away
  • Best Version Of Yourself
  • Almost Human
  • « أنَت الجَروُح الدَامْية وأنَت ألطَبيِب »
  • رُمَقَ.

What do you do when the world is quiet but your mind won't shut up? 3 AM Unsent Messages is a haunting, intimate collection of fragmented thoughts, whispered confessions, and emotional snapshots scribbled in the dark. Equal parts journal, poetry, and stream-of-consciousness therapy, this book captures the sleepless moments where memories hit hardest, regrets echo loudest, and truths are too raw to say aloud. With the vulnerable honesty of a midnight voicemail and the strange comfort of a stranger's open diary, these unsent messages explore love, loss, nostalgia, and the beautiful chaos of being awake when everyone else is dreaming. This is not a book you read... it's one you feel. This is especially made for anyone who has ever stared at the ceiling and thought, "I shouldn't be feeling this much right now."

More details
WpActionLinkContent Guidelines