CassidyDuddy
How do you feel everyday?
Have you ever been in the darkness?
Have your emotions faded away?
What habits do you have now?
Do you starve yourself?
Have you just spiraled further down?
Who are you when no one's around?
Does your happy-act hold up even when you're on your own?
Who are you deep, deep down?
Elizabeth's story is told as a flashback. She has been viciously bullied for years. If her mom paid any attention, she'd easily see that her daughter is depressed - it's obvious. Elizabeth doesn't care anymore. She just wants to fade to dust. She'd be just fine if no one knew, it would make it easier to go.
In the present, she has just woken up in a hospital, and has to relive the events that brought her there.
As the past and present collide, she's left to deal with what she has done and try to open up to the monotonous therapist she has to see. How is a therapist supposed to help someone who doesn't see any hope for herself?
Beth Anne is in a living Hell, and has been for a while. The one she cares about most leaves her right when she needs him, and then comes back in regret. She already has trust issues, so why should she go back to him? He isn't the kind to deserve such a beautiful girl, but there's one problem. She hates herself. She'd go back to anyone, no matter how bad they have been to her, just because she's so hard on herself. How does a girl begin to heal when she can't even think anything good of herself?
Amber can answer yes to more than one question above. Sounds pretty bad, but the whole story is worse. She isn't someone who has no friends, as she has multiple people who care about her. Sadly, though, she couldn't care less about herself, and she doesn't see why everyone goes through the trouble of worrying about her. She's just Amber, a waste of life, of air, of food. Why should anyone care about that?
A story of three very depressed girls on their way to find help, and how they can help each other in the process.