Depression is not a bad mood you can push through. It is a persistent weight that settles into your mind, your body, and your sense of self — draining your energy, clouding your thinking, and making even the smallest tasks feel impossible. It is not something you chose, and it is not something you should have to carry alone.
For Black communities and communities of color, depression carries layers the clinical definition misses — the pressure to be strong, the exhaustion of racial stress, and the generational pain of simply surviving. Depression here is frequently misread as laziness or attitude. You deserve care that sees past those dismissals, grounded in the same affirming approach we bring to anxiety and trauma.

