Bring the Noise Virtual Exhibition

Page 91

Make Noise Today is a platform that creates empathy and equity through Asian storytelling.

As Asian Americans, we are considered ‘the quiet ones’. When negative media and hate crimes against Asians escalated during the COVID-19 pandemic, we felt it was time to be heard. This initiative was launched in May 2020 in honor of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, and our powerful voices continue to be loud and strong to take control of our own narrative and combat racism by telling personal stories of our heritage and accomplishments, challenges, grit, inspiration, and culture.

Learn more at makenoisetoday.org

Follow us: @makenoisetoday

CONTENTS Introduction .............................................. 4 Judges ....................................................... 6 Winners ...................................................... 7 Other Select Work ................................. 28 Thanks to Our Partners ....................... 97 Click on page numbers to navigate to page.
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AAPI STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP AND ART EXHIBITION

We held a scholarship contest where high school students nationwide were invited to submit original creative work on the subject of mental health wellness from the lens of AAPI youth. Winning and select submissions are featured in this exhibit to amplify young voices and subvert the stigma surrounding mental health within the AAPI community.

There is much to learn from today’s Gen Z youth, who are empowered to take charge of their lives. In many ways, this generation recognizes that mental wellness is critical to one’s health and fulfillment, propensity for success, and a cornerstone of society’s ability to thrive. The lackluster stats of Asian Americans addressing mental health are well known, but it is time to help shift our cultural norms, perceptions and inhibitions to open real conversations about the importance of mental wellness.

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JUDGES

We wanted to highlight the invaluable efforts of the Make Noise Today team who sorted through all the student submissions, and our esteemed judging panel who took the time to review our finalists. Thank you!

Anthony is the author of Brown and Gay in LA: The Lives of Immigrant Sons and The Latinos of Asia: How Filipino Americans Break the Rules of Race, which has been featured on NPR, NBC News, Literary Hub, and in the Los Angeles Times. He is an Academic Director of the National Center for Faculty Development and Diversity and the co-host of the podcast Professor-ing. His writing has appeared in GQ, Catapult, BuzzFeed, Los Angeles Review of Books, Colorlines, Gravy, Life & Thyme, and the Chronicle of Higher Education, among others. He has received fellowships from the Ford Foundation, Jack Jones Literary Arts, Tin House, and the VONA/Voices of Our Nations Arts Foundation. He was recently featured in the Netflix documentary “White Hot: The Rise and Fall of Abercrombie & Fitch,” as he was one of the employees involved in suing the company for racial discriminatory hiring practices. Raised in Northeast Los Angeles, he earned his BA in comparative studies in race and ethnicity and MA in modern thought and literature from Stanford University and his MA and PhD in sociology from UCLA.

Jocelyn is a Taiwan-born, Shanghai-raised artist. She received her BFA in Graphic Design at the School of Visual Arts. She is a painter, illustrator, and muralist. Though she works in various mediums, the connecting thread throughout her work is her depiction of amorphous figures. Often portrayed in abstracted, liminal spaces, she aims to touch on the emotions as well as the otherworldliness of our human experience. The figures in Tsaih’s work act as extensions of herself. As someone who grew up between multiple cultures and worlds, she’s created her own version of the “in-between”. This is where the figures, and herself, are free to just be. She utilizes color, form, and composition to create images that convey strong moods, possibility for curiosity, and space for introspection.

Dr. Tommy Chang, EdD CEO, New Teacher Center

Tommy brings over 25 years of education experience and leadership to this role, including significant positions in schools, districts, and nonprofit organizations. His journey began with and continues to return to the lifechanging moment he answered the call to become a teacher. Before his most recent position as acting CEO and President of Families In Schools, Tommy spent three years as a consultant and coach to school system leaders and advised organizations such as Great Public Schools Now LA, FourPoint Education Partners, and Whiteboard Advisors. He has served on several nonprofit boards such as Leading Educators and Silicon Schools Fund as well as Education Leaders of Color, an organization dedicated to elevating the leadership, voices, and influence of people of color in education to lead more inclusive efforts to improve education. From 2015-2018, he served as superintendent for Boston Public Schools during which time the district saw increases in student graduation rates and decreases in school dropout rates. He also supported the development and implementation of The Essentials for Instructional Equity, an innovative framework for teaching and learning aimed at closing opportunity and achievement gaps. A native of Taiwan who immigrated with his family to the U.S. at age six, Dr. Chang grew up in Los Angeles and holds an Ed.D. from Loyola Marymount University, M.Ed.’s from the Principals Leadership Institute and the Teachers Education Program at the University of California Los Angeles, and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

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WINNERS

Congratulations to the winning students! Your creative piece was selected as one of the most stirring and contemplative among hundreds of submissions from students nationwide.

We want to thank all of our participants in the Bring the Noise student art scholarship contest. Your submissions on the subject of AAPI mental health were brave and awe-inspiring. We heard you. And we look forward to you continuing to Make Noise Today and every day!

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MemorialCare

Platinum Prize

As a Korean American, I struggled to strike the right balance between two distinct cultures. Growing up in a conservative Korean household taught me to be deferential, reserved, and mature “unnie” (i.e., older sister), whereas American culture emphasized a socially adept lifestyle. Having been exposed to cultural differences since a young age, incidents such as being chastised for bringing my mother’s homemade kimchi and kimbap to school caused me to further isolate my two identities. My piece depicts my internal conflict, a struggle to break free from the grip of my insecurities and fears about how different communities of people perceive different aspects of myself, and to find the courage to overcome them. Furthermore, my piece depicts different stages of emotion, such as frustration, loneliness, and relief. Ropes are prominent in my piece, and they represent the restrictive force that untangles through each stage. As an Asian American, I have discovered the value of combining qualities from both cultures to bring out the best in myself.

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The day that I brought Vietnam home

It took many years of growth and hours of introspection on my own part before I finally realized the reason why my grandmother would search through the trash every week before she took it out to the alley. To a young child, the war-hardened survival techniques that she had never unlearned had just come off as oddities that I could never shake. The houses my friends lived in were clean, white- without shriveled ladies with discerning eyes that would pick through the garbage can after every meal to make sure we never threw anything away.

Popo never liked to talk about Vietnam. At least, not unprompted. It wasn’t a part of her life that she liked to remember, and for the longest time, I was unsure of what exactly my family was. I knew that we were Chinese, the red and gold calendars on the wall reminded me of that every day. They always had scripts that I could never understand, holidays that I had never heard of. For the time, being Chinese was a way of eating my food: never leaving rice behind in my bowl, picking apart oranges and saving the peel, dropping crab shells onto the plates of my grandparents, who would suck on the cartilage until they could gum the legs into paste. China was not a place in my head, nor was I sure that it was exactly where my family came from.

In the seventh grade, I was assigned a project from my physics teacher: make a roller coaster with a central theme. My current obsession that year was TellTale’s series The Walking Dead, a game focused on a world overrun with the undead. Many of the scenes depicted in the games resembled war-torn battlefields, overrun with the bodies of the damned. That was what I had based my entire project on. Melted glue held dirt and moss to a flat piece of cardboard, with sticks that attached themselves to a pool noodle that I painted with various shades of brown, red, and black. I used small props to represent the items left behind by victims in the video games- reminders of the inspiration I had received from them.

While the poster was drying, my Popo had come downstairs to bring me some tea. She has this wonderful habit of putting an amalgamation of herbs and fruits into a pot of boiling water and then claiming it would cure any disease imaginable. I used to be irked by these cups of broth. They were too bitter, and I would gag on the debris that floated at the bottom. But now, I miss them dearly. That day, the tea was sweet.

She paused when she opened the door to the basement, looking squarely at the project that I had put my entire heart into. I thought for a moment that she was disappointed in me, with the way that her thin lips pressed together and turned down. Her legs had given out under her, and she moved to sit in the doorway, looking with exhausted eyes toward my science project. Then, she told me all about Vietnam.

“Yunyi, you do this?”

“Yes Popo, is something wrong?”

“Look like Vietnam,”

It was then when she told me of the past I had no idea existed. Of a time where America fought a war that they were bound to lose. Of a time where my grandfather was a man of grandiosity, and spoke much more than he does now. She told me of the boat that she took my mother on immediately after the fall of Saigon, and how a woman died aboard their ship, leaving them with no other choice to abandon her body or risk illness by leaving all others exposed to it. She told me about the burning fields and the torn-up casinos, and of the police that raided her home.

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Somehow, she managed to say this all with a smile on her face. When I had asked her in a hushed tone if she was alright, she waved her hand at me.

“Chinese never cry. We grateful,” she placed her hand over mine, “grateful because America take care of us.”

For some reason, those words stuck with me. I felt like all of the suffering that I had endured in my own time was nothing, that I would never be allowed to feel pity for myself when my grandmother had already lived through fifteen lifetimes of trauma. It didn’t feel fair.

So, when I ended up in the hospital for a suicide attempt, I had never expected to hear anything from her or Gonggong. I was ashamed. I knew I could never face them after what I had done. After all that they’ve been through, what did I give them to show for it? A destroyed daughter and miserable grandchildren. While I sat in bed for the week I was mandated to stay in the hospital, I kept repeating to myself: “Chinese never cry.”

I told the doctors that I was better, that everything would be okay when I returned home, and that I would not need any further intervention. There was this aching fear inside of me that my mother had told my Popo and Gonggong that I had failed them, that I was not the American dream. I tried everything I could to make my return as normal as possible. I wanted to pretend that nothing had ever happened.

But when I got home, Popo was waiting for me upstairs, sitting next to my bedroom with her hands clasped in her lap. I smiled sheepishly at her and tried to push past silently and just settle into my bedroom, but she called out softly for me not to close the door.

“Mat yeh?”

“Taylor- you not happy?”

Five minutes passed before I could even begin to think of anything to tell her. Of course she noticed I was gone, I lived with her for god’s sake. And why wouldn’t my mother tell her? She was her daughter, she had to tell her mom. I wondered if my Popo held my mother as she cried, just as my mom did to me.

“No, Popo, I’m not happy.”

“Popo loves you, we all love you.”

And that was all I needed to hear to know that everything would be okay.

“I love you too, Popo.”

Dear Asian Americans Gold Prize

Dear Asian Americans Gold Prize

The Masque of Contemplation

The Masque of Contemplation is a piece I created to reflect the difficulties surrounding Asian communal identity whilst growing up. Within the piece, I’ve included elements of Korean “탈춤“ (talchum), a form of Korean performance, to represent the Asian society I was brought up in and was expected to participate in as I became older. The pressure to assimilate and become more “Asian” despite being raised simultaneously in an American culture raised clashes within my American and Asian identities to the point where I felt depressed and anxious in order to make a decision. Therefore, the mask and perspective of the piece shows the main subject (me) in the mirror, hesitant to put on the mask and join the daunting performance. By putting the mask on, I could finally feel assimilated to Korean culture but the

hesitance and cultural differences prevent me from making a definite decision to do so. The internal turmoil has been included in my journey in finding where I belong, anxious to commit to one identity. However, it can be inferred that my piece offers options: one could choose to assimilate to Asian culture, omit doing so, or identify with both. Therefore, a significant part of my journey in finding solace in incorporating both aspects of my cultures into one identity was understanding I do not have to follow any choice set for me; I can choose my path. With my piece, I hope to bring attention to the pressures of Asian society and express the importance for other Asian-Americans to take time to decide for oneself in terms of their identity, because they have the power and liberty to do so.

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Tanghulu

Tanghulu, also called candy haw is a snack that’s commonly found in Northern China in the winter.

Ingredients:

Fresh handpicked hawthorns, bamboo skewers, edible thin rice paper from the closest Chinatown, 2 cups of sugar, and a cup of water.

One of my happiest memories is munching on my tanghulu with my classmates.

We would tear up the rice paper, Lick it and stick it under our nose like little mustaches. We were policemen that caught the bad guys, superheroes that fought the villains, pirates that sailed the ocean.

But when I finally sailed across the ocean one day, I found that I was all alone. A captain without her crewmates, surrounded by riches that didn't shine anymore.

Step one:

Wash the hawthorns thoroughly, dry them, and put them on the skewer.

Washing is the first step of assimilation. You throw away all parts of you that used to make you proud but now are deemed to be weird and Chinese. Take in the American culture as fast as possible. The faster you assimilate, the quicker you’ll have friends again. Put on a new look. Hollister, American Eagle, and Lululemon are your new favorite stores. Get some new lunch.

Chicken nuggets and PB&J are okay, but wait, all the cool kids only eat salad for lunch. Pierce your ears like piercing the hawthorns with the skewer. Those silver hoops will make your face look smaller like all of your other “friends”.

Step two:

Prep the tabletop with a piece of parchment paper. Lay it down lightly just like how Chinese women talk. How they always talk and walk lightly in tradition, how they always have to be elegant, how your mom tells you that you are too direct, too fierce, and too loud to be a Chinese woman.

Step three:

Mix the sugar and water like how you mix your smile with depression. Set it on the stove and let it heat up, but don’t make it boil, because there is sugar in there that oppresses your true feelings. Because your Chinese mom keeps telling you that,

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“No, you’re not depressed, you just want attention like all other teenagers in this country.”

But mom, I’m not like the other teenagers in this country, my culture keeps coming back to haunt me instead of bringing me joy, my accent keeps coming back and getting made fun of, my country keeps appearing in the news headlines, my depression is not validated by anyone except the dark voice in my own head.

Step four:

Dip the hawthorns into the syrup while holding the skewer. Rotate quickly while dipping to cover the fruit entirely with syrup, then place the sugar-coated Tanghulu onto the parchment paper that you have prepared.

Step five: Wait.

When I was little, one day my mom brought me this big tanghulu on our way back from the park. I was so happy, and I started munching on it like a little chipmunk because the hawthorn fruits are so big compared to my little face. But when I was going upstairs to our apartment, I tripped and dropped the tanghulu onto the ground. I started crying like a petulant child, and my mom thought it was because I scraped my knee. I wasn’t crying because of pain, I was crying because I dropped the tanghulu on the ground.

Now I cry, and my mom thinks it's because I oppose Chinese culture, I wasn’t crying out of disapproval, I was crying out of shame.

Step six: When the candy coating hardens, remove the parchment paper, then wrap it with thin rice paper, completing the final touches of the tanghulu.

I am not ashamed of my culture; I am ashamed of loving it so deeply, of embracing the things that I truly love.

When you take a bite of the tanghulu, you bite through the crunchy layer of sugar, and just before you savor the crispy sweetness, you are greeted by the soft, sour, mealy hawthorn fruit.

Like my Chinese American identity, I wear a hard, loud, and independent armor on the outside, while inside, I possess softness, elegance, and strength.

Like the growing awareness of mental health within the Asian American community, we cry and break, but we are together. We speak and rise together, fight and unite together, love and belong together, grow and thrive together, persevere together,

TeachAAPI Silver Prize

and get back up together.

Like my journey to better mental health, I almost gave up on the hard and sticky hardships, but I was uplifted and saved by the love of friends, family, and culture.

“I love you!”

“Everything is going to be okay.”

“It's not your fault.”

“Mommy can be harsh sometimes, but she loves you!”

“Thank you for everything you've done, and for giving our community a voice.”

For a long time, I searched for ways to heal, and I discovered that more than love from others, there is love from within.

For me, that love began with expression.

It all started with a stage, a place, a chance, a representation, a declaration, a liberation, a voice to speak, to love myself,

to save myself and others from mental illness.

TeachAAPI Silver Prize
(continued) 16

Dear Popo

This song and this poem illustrate the importance of communication, storytelling, and vulnerability as it relates to my relationship with my grandmother.

PLAY VIDEO

Prize

TeachAAPI Silver

Lost Cause by Reihinna H.

This song is about a personal experience I have had with my own mental health, especially during quarantine. It is written in the second person and is addressed to my mother, so that it is as though I am speaking directly to her.

Before COVID-19, I would silence my thoughts or ignore them, but, being inside a quiet house every day, I was forced to listen to what was going on inside my head. When I noticed this, I was afraid of telling my mother at first. Many people from her side of the family, who are all from the Philippines, did not want to admit each other’s mental health problems. They would deny that these problems even existed, and their solution to them was to either ignore them, or pray to God for help [Verse 2/Prechorus]. This is a common belief within the Filipino-American community, but many do not realize the harm that comes with this.

PLAY VIDEO 18

In my song Lost Cause, I utilize the repetition of “silence” in the beginning by saying how it may seem that it’s easier to remain silent than to express your feelings, but at the end, after witnessing how my family has tried to silence a family member, I realize that silence just constricts how you truly feel. I have been lucky to have an understanding mother, however, who does not give into others’ harmful mindsets.

When I approached my mother and told her about how I was feeling down, she told me how she’s felt the same way before [last chorus]. Both my mother and my father opened up to me about their mental health struggles and made me feel seen, and I believe that is something that the AsianAmerican and Pacific Islander community can learn from. To approach mental health, we must first understand that it is a real problem that must not be ignored. Only then can we share our voices and make noise.

TeachAAPI Silver Prize

We step out into a dark night. The humid Houston air immediately surrounds us. Which way today?

Our tradition started during the pandemic. Like many other families, we got a pandemic dog, a scruffy little mutt named Wizard. My dad was against it. Not the dog itself, but the idea of feeding him meat he found thoroughly unethical. “I don’t believe in killing one animal to feed another,” he would say. But we got a dog anyways, under the agreement we would research healthy, mostly vegetarian diets for canines.

Naturally, the dog needed walking. To avoid the oppressive heat of that summer, I chose to walk at night. I didn’t want to walk alone, so I asked my dad to join me. And in this strange COVID summer, where the days seemed to stretch and twist around each other, we had time for very long walks.

Despite the dark, we found ourselves noticing many little wonders in the night. Two great horned owls, spiraling around each other in a mating dance. The city of frogs living underneath the cracked sidewalks. The moon, bright and fat in the sky, casting dappled shadows through the trees.

This is what my dad loves. He is an editor for our city’s newspaper. It’s a grueling job, and often, I was frustrated with him for constantly working. But walking with him, I could see why he keeps going: he is a man who lives in his city, he is a man who cares deeply. On these nighttime walks, I learned how to truly be a part of my place, and how to be a part of our place together.

But most importantly, on these walks, we talked. I told him stories of my online high school. In return, he traded stories of his own high school days, stories I had never heard, even some stories he hid from his mother. I learned how he was similar to me, a high achiever, and someone who cared deeply about words, language, and how he fit into them. I told him what I struggled with somehow, the words came easier walking side by side in the dark. He told me I’m proud of you. I told him of my worries for the future, and he told me his life story, slowly, like a river of stories trickling over the weeks. He told me why he quit medical school to become a writer, how his mother reacted. I asked him for advice, often. I didn’t always agree with what he gave, but I always valued his words. We talked about writing. He told me choose one writer and read them deeply. See what you learn.

We talked about where we fit in America. It was a question that had been weighing heavy on my mind, as a biracial third generation immigrant. In a world so often divided by race, who was I? Did I deserve to claim an identity whose language I did not speak? In response, my dad told me his own lived experiences. What the kids in his hometown of Mobile, Alabama told him, often a mixture of racism and ignorance. Helping my Dada practice jokes in English. All of these seemed

“more” Asian-American experiences. But to 20
like quintessentially

how he fit into them. I told him what I struggled with somehow, the words came easier walking side by side in the dark. He told me I’m proud of you. I told him of my worries for the future, and he told me his life story, slowly, like a river of stories trickling over the weeks. He told me why he quit medical school to become a writer, how his mother reacted. I asked him for advice, often. I didn’t always agree with what he gave, but I always valued his words. We talked about writing. He told me choose one writer and read them deeply. See what you learn.

We talked about where we fit in America. It was a question that had been weighing heavy on my mind, as a biracial third generation immigrant. In a world so often divided by race, who was I? Did I deserve to claim an identity whose language I did not speak? In response, my dad told me his own lived experiences. What the kids in his hometown of Mobile, Alabama told him, often a mixture of racism and ignorance. Helping my Dada practice jokes in English. All of these seemed like quintessentially “more” Asian-American experiences. But to my surprise, he felt the same way I did. He understood my feelings of disconnect, and of not being enough. He described his sense of shame he felt not knowing Gujarati, his despair at not being able to talk to his own grandmother. And he told me a story: When his grandmother almost died of a heart attack, he dedicated himself

to learning Gujarati enough to write her one letter. He worked hard with the limited Gujarati learning resources he had, he even traveled solo to a small town in India to truly immerse himself. And eventually, he succeeded in his goal: He wrote his grandmother a letter in Gujarati. This story had a powerful impact on me. It showed me that I couldn’t let other people define my identity. That was up to me.

As the pandemic eased, we were both drawn back into the chaos of life. I took on AP classes, and his work intensified. We both worked late. Yet every single night, we still made time for our walk. Whether an hour or five minutes, whether we were mad at each other or tired out of our minds, we still walked. They meant: I will always take the time for you. I care about you. I love you.

These walks, these conversations were now vessels for understanding. They had become almost ritual, a way to ground ourselves in this ever-chaotic world. And so, each night, as I step out into the dark, I know it doesn’t really matter which way we go, where I walk. What matters in this world is that we walk side by side and talk.

Honorable Mention
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Skeletons In My Closet

My grandparents were refugees during the Korean War and immigrated to America after my parents became teenagers. As I grew up, I placed great pressure on myself to meet the high standards of my parents and be the “perfect daughter”, the daughter that always got straight A’s, performed well in sports, and had an interesting hobby like art.

This immense pressure to be perfect was taking an toll on my mental health and was falling into multiple cycles of depression and anxiety. I was scared to tarnish my image of being a perfect daughter to my parents when they worked so tirelessly to allow me to flourish in a new country. I felt as though my problems with my mental health were so miniscule in comparison to their hardships that I couldn’t dare to ask to see a therapist. I was so blinded by my longing to be “perfect” that I was hurting myself mentally as each day went on.

I painted my depiction of the idiom “skeletons in the closet” to help me through my dilemmas. I painted myself dragging a giant lifeless skeleton to show how I felt so chained down by my mental health struggles. I wanted the scattered bones to act as my broken mental state. The immense scale of the entire closet in comparison to my painted selfl was to represent how guilty I felt for wanting to ask for help. It felt like an endless walk through the grim and lonely closet.

Honorable Mention
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Carbon Copy

College applications are brutal. We pour everything into compiling our entire lives into essays and lists that someone will look at for a matter of minutes. Comparison is inevitable and crushing. At a certain point, I started feeling like a carbon copy of every Asian girl in the country. The bubble I was living in popped and I couldn’t help dwelling on the fact that there were countless people who I’ve lived parallel lives with. I was always a good student, yet next to hundreds of thousands of other applicants, I felt like a fly.

As we all know, Asian households have a penchant for eliciting excellence. Both through myself, and through my friends, I’ve seen what this process of trying to conform to the mold of a perfect college applicant can do to a person. And despite reassurances of “oh, there is only one you” or “you are unique and special,” sometimes, these platitudes just can’t combat this feeling-- that sinking feeling of being insignificant and believing that there are a million mirror images of you.

Everyone has different ways of coping, and for me, art has always been my outlet when words escape me. The cathartic process of illustration allows me to address mental stressors like these while sharing my sentiments with others, often leading me to realize that I am, in fact, not alone.

Honorable Mention

We are running side by side, Popo

Down the river path of orange muskmelon and flaming grapefruit, adorned with pearl necklaces of tang yuan, to the mountains of nian gao. Back in my chair, back sitting across from you, back celebrating Chun Jie at your house I’ve always thought the branches outside your kitchen window look like faces, peering in, from stinging night air, at our family

Tell me, Popo, why do these foods mean togetherness, but when squeezed between auntie and uncle, I am alone? Tell me, why as mouths close around this feast, the words out of those mouths aren’t the ones I need to hear? Tell me, “how are you doing?” and I will grasp onto the ‘er’ “Climbing higher, pushing further, working harder.” These questions don’t really want an answer.

Shouldering a load of ‘musts,’ I struggle through hard country, looking for the path, the one this family has trod on through generations Blind I am, I can only tumble down twisting slopes Let the brambles cut into my body, I will swipe through with arms inked bloody. When I emerge on the other side– I am lost. I live on the side paths. My home is the bathroom stall I don’t squeeze in, counting to ten, drowning in the air. Late at night, I don’t spend time unable to journal, hands too shaky to write

When doors slammed in the pandemic, when features of those who shared my face became symptoms, when I watched my people lying abandoned, puppets on the news, characters in a larger narrative, when I lay dead alongside them in my bed, tell me they do not exist

Remember that word spray-painted across the wall-ball courts of my elementary school. That word was quickly power washed away, one more stain on the old schoolyard, but that feeling of my playground violated remained. That word never disappeared, but tell me, my feelings do not exist.

Tell me again how you came to the US, my age, my twin. Recount your story so I picture myself. Tell me how we were sent to school with a sign slapped on our backs, “warning: does not speak English.” But don’t tell me, “animal in a zoo, handle with care.” A caution to people gawking. Tell me instead how we shortened our name to something more comfortable for strange lips Don’t tell me the power your name held for you. How erasing it stole ownership of your identity. Tell me rather of a strong mother, who held her husband, her 11 year old daughter when their sister, daughter was lost. But never tell me of losing your baby, of grieving, of breaking. Because there should be nothing to tell

Even with your surgery, one supposed to render you bedridden, you prepared this meal for us Even in your recovery, you must press on, crawling on your knees.

Because we’re full and complete.

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Even with your surgery, one supposed to render you bedridden, you prepared this meal for us. Even in your recovery, you must press on, crawling on your knees.

Because we’re full and complete.

We’re humble and grateful.

We’re hard-working and assured.

We’re excited for tomorrow and excited about yesterday and today

Say I am recovering,

Say I am improving,

Say I am feeling better,

Say I am feeling nothing.

I am nothing.

I look up. Red eyes meet red eyes, there is no room to talk when you are running forward, but there is room for so many words in an incomplete story

Dinner ends and we retreat upstairs into the night.

I lie awake, listening to the sounds of the house They slip through the cracks in my room, barely audible but there, splintering. Stifled sobbing. Soft muttering. Shaky breathing. In the nights at that house, I hear my grandmother crying until sleep frees her.

Tonight, both of us stay up together, separated by a flight of stairs in the dark I cry alongside her, only a few steps away through the black How many members of this family of liars, smothered cryers, are screaming with us, in this quiet, quiet house. We are stranded in this close knit family. Silence, bare feet slide over a shag rug, shuffling towards the stairs. In the dark, you can’t see the bottom of the steps, so at the top, you are standing before an abyss

But finally, I see the path, different than expected. Watch it wind, watch it double back, watch it wrap into itself, confused. I’ll find you in the dark, Popo. We will run side by side.

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Honorable Mention

OTHER SELECT WORK

I was born in America to Chinese immigrant parents. Growing up, I was called an ABC (American Born Chinese), and this label has continued to stick with me. I have always felt as though I’m not “Chinese enough”, especially with my degrading ability to speak Cantonese, which caused a barrier between me and the main exposure to my culture, my parents. What drove me farther away from understanding my roots and myself was that I grew up in a predominantly white small-town community. Apart from my confusion about identity, these two aspects of my life both had their impacts. The disconnect between me and my parents affected my relationship with them and the mental strain from being regarded as “different” outside of my home life has shaped who I am and how am today.

Putting all these emotions into my piece, I created a sculpture titled “Split.” The clay hands unravel a crochet doll in two directions to represent a divide in identity and the toll it takes on the individual. Though I am incredibly proud of both aspects of my life, they no doubt have had adverse effects on my mental health. Despite this truth, the idea behind using a crochet doll is that it was not only easy to portray the unraveling of oneself but also that it was able to be repaired. Though not as easy as it is taken apart, the strings can be rewoven to become whole once more, representing thriving and self-accepting potential.

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SPLIT by Sharon G.
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The Weeping Willow by Faleha K.

Nestled amongst the expansive field is a single weeping willow tree

The weeping willow is versatile She can turn into paper, which can turn into the greatest classical works of all time by Aristotle and Shakespeare She can also turn into tissue paper, paper towels, and toilet paper; single use, but effective nonetheless

She is quiet, yet bold When in her presence one feels safe, as if the space beneath her branches is a sanctuary where all their worries and sorrows fly away along with the deciduous leaves. Still, the willow dares to stand out. Where there might be a monoculture of trees or trees of different species, the willow is the most distinct and most intriguing. She grazes the sky, whispering to the world. Her roots wander the vast ground, seeking exploration and independence.

She is what little girls envision in their dreams. Her beautiful branches flowing in a warm spring breeze, the smell of lavender and honey in the air. A book and a girl sit against her trunk, the willow hugging them as her light branches sway and kiss the girl's forehead. She provides a sweet, sweet escape She is the girl's secret meadow, her solace, her freedom

She is tied down to a single place, yet her growth doesn't cease. Instead, her resilience is felt farther than the area she resides

She channels her energy into creating a brighter and more secure environment for those creatures inhabiting her abundant leaves and branches

When faced with change the willow is adaptive, photosynthesizing during the warmer seasons and shutting down during the colder ones. She uses her energy stored in autumn to grow and create vibrance in spring Her glorious aura expands throughout her fellow flora and fauna, tantalizing and comforting

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The willow refuses to decay and break, she only bends. She is able to sustain herself, overcoming obstacles without much help from others. While she may prefer dewy grass and clear ponds, she can thrive in drier areas, adjusting to the earth as she may need.

She is sturdy. As much as the dark stormy nights try to knock her down, the willow’s confidence and persistence allow her to fight the wind. Although she wails as the wind howls and lightning strikes, her resistant nature does not allow her to burn, only smoke. She does not only survive, but she grows from these treacherous battles with the natural elements

When her roots expand, she doesn't let sediment and bedrock cease her journey, instead she proudly lays down her roots and flourishes

As much as the insolent people try to carve away at the willows bark, mocking her, the willow stands, the marks fading over time, but forming scars that remind her of her resilience She may be scarred, but her roots remain untouched and as rich as the soil that surrounds them, never letting sediment and bedrock cease her journey The willow doesn’t know what fate lies in front of her, but she does know that her future is bright, she can spread as far as her heart desires

People may see her as the weeping willow, but she's more than what meets their gaze She is a being, forging her own path with integrity, hope, and persistence

I am the weeping willow

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How to Deal with Spiders

How do you deal with a spider? No, not your everyday house spider, but the spider manifested from your deepest, darkest thoughts. Like a fly in a web that tangles and twists, you are trapped within the silk of despair. Yet the silk is not made of iron or diamond—some days you can fly away, but others you are trapped longer.

That spider feeds off your negative thoughts, and thus, you should cut off its food source. Now, I shall pass you my guide on how to deal with this spider! Instead of moping around like a turkey on a plate, how about joining some online communities?

Platforms such as Reddit and Discord consisted of welcoming communities created for Asian Americans struggling with mental health. You don’t have to deal with it alone, it is okay to talk about it, and joining an online community is an easy way to start.

Hey! How about doing some fun stuff? I enjoy listening to music and drawing, it helps me take my mind off of unhappy thoughts. I even tried new things such as fashion and cooking (despite not being good at it). Keep a journey or write (or scream) your feelings out! Nurture your body with good sleep and exercise! There are many things you can do to starve that spider! Eventually, that spider can no longer trap you. Just remember to stay positive, everything will be okay!

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Free(dom) of Speech

Falling from the clouds, earth caused fear yet to the roads he bowed and relief caused tears.

Grasping those years, memory caused him to ascend the mount rice grew near, water balanced on both ends.

He carries the light which others depend, never reaching free-range ‘til nights clashing with friends yet the sun brings fights for change:

A change for freedom, the choice to arrange his own desires, his own claims, to let curiosity seek the strange. to make dream and life one and the same.

He sought the reality free of shame, so he leapt from his roots for almighty fame to freedom’s foreign terrain, to find the loot.

Yet he fell from the soot, and the clouds parted

to reveal the arrogance put where tears had departed.

Now see my broken-hearted ashamed of his shame, from trauma he never parted, yet a trauma never claimed.

A trauma only proclaimed in tears watering this land of the free Yet tears can never name these feelings I fail to see.

“Don’t be like me, anak, my child; just be happy to be in the land of the free.”

Yet how free can I be, with emotions suppressed?

“Tatay, father, use your freedom of speech tell me you are not okay, please, be the human I see.”

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the healing wound by Leeyana

In my day to day life, I find myself meditating upon the collective trauma of my family There is a reason why most Asian parents do not believe in mental health issues, much less support strategies to relieve the associated burdens In just under a century, a look back into our history reveals a dark past of exploitation, displacement, and colonization, both from the West and countries in the Asian continent What happens to a hurt animal? It becomes violent It nips It barks It bites because it thinks that help is just another hand that will hurt them As a community, we have become that dog We push our trauma aside, as we don’t know how to heal We push it away so the hurt lessens But when a wound is left untreated, it becomes infected It seeps into our bloodstream so that every moment is unbearable, and when the infection is too far gone, the stench of it starts to affect the ones around us I can clearly see the way trauma has affected my family and furthermore, how it has affected me I see the pattern, and I have started to heal

My parents were born in the fading years of the Marcos regime Although I was not given much of a glimpse into their lives during the regime, I cannot imagine that it was easy I find myself thinking: is this why they are the way they are? Is the endless poverty of the Filipino people the reason why my father is so resourceful to the point of stinginess? Is it why my mother loves to flaunt the money she has? Is that why they stock up on food we won’t eat or clothes we won’t wear? When I tell them about my struggles, is that why they laugh, like it’s something so menial that it’s not even worth an understanding nod? Oh, their privileged daughter, with no worries of the world around her “You don’t know what struggle is”, that was what I was always told See, trauma works in ways that are incomprehensible and erratic My father brushed me off with a scoff and a swig of his nightly beer because “his uncle was worse” My mother told me I should be grateful and to never “complain”, because “I’m not carrying my family on my back” like she did When I was a child, I hated them for it I hated seeing my father drunk He was so embarrassing to me When he put the bottle on the table, I cringed at him When he drank at our family gatherings, I rolled my eyes, already imagining how disheveled he’d become by the end of the night I bit my tongue as hard as I could when my mother berated me for being “lazy” I imagined getting struck by a semi truck when we got into screaming matches in the car The smell of their wounds was making me gag I vomited everything they gave to me, their privileged, weak daughter All we could do was stare at the mess I made, and sigh, both of us disappointed

But I don’t hate them for it, at least not anymore I’ve made peace with the way they are I can’t heal their wounds, not completely That’s not my job The smell of rotting flesh and pus has gone away The wounds have scarred, thick keloids roping on their bodies I laugh along with my parents now I hold their hands I talk to them instead of blocking them out On my chest, there is a scar above my heart It is small and clean I touch it tenderly Underneath it, inside my heart, is a little girl I have kept her there so she is safe She still knows the smell of rot She is so small, and still so scared I can’t heal my parents’ wounds What I can do is wrap it in cotton and kiss it like they kiss my head I kiss my past self, her little hand covering the crust around her dry lips I can tell her that it’s okay now My parents are like giants to her, with fangs for teeth and claws for nails and scars from past battles covering every inch of their body But I see them for what they really are: hurt They had to use their fangs and their claws to stay safe

They just didn’t know that they were already safe. They didn’t know who they were hurting. I hug my parents closer. I hug the little girl closer. Trauma works in ways we can’t understand, but so does healing. A wound will always close, no matter how long it takes.

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Melting

What is my mental-health path?

Melting is a self-portrait representing my experience with being Asian American. Being apart of two cultures, yet not belonging to either can be isolating and awkward. I showed this by using oil pastels as my main medium making the piece look messier and using a sharp tool to scrap away swirls into the oil pastel making it look disorienting.

I realized how I felt about my race when I went to Thailand with my mom and my sister in the summer of 2022. I am from Thailand but moved to America at a very young age, so for a long time I denied my culture which included little things like, not wanting to bring seaweed to

school because other students would judge it and call it “disgusting”. When I visited Thailand that summer I realized how much I despised being Thai and how much the “Thai side” slowly disappeared while growing up in America. I showed this through the stretching of the left side of my face. I felt like I needed to fit into whatever culture niche I was immersed in. Whether I was in Thailand or America. I either felt too American or too Thai. So with the words:

“If

I’ll Be Somebody I’ll Never Let My Skin Decide

For Me” above my head, I communicated how my appearance defines who I am, how I feel, and if I want to be “somebody”.

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“I’m Proud” an original song by Katie C.

I’ll push down my feelings

So people think I’m fine

“Oh she’s that one happy girl”

But really I’m crying inside

I’d embrace my stereotypes

Mental health talk is a waste

With asian parents like that 你以為你是誰

(Translation: who do you think you are)

Are you Chinese? They’d all ask No, I’m Taiwanese, is what I’d say Confused faces reply

Where the heck is that?

My tears turned to lies

I’d make a lengthy story

Oh, I’m Chinese, Japanese, Looking back, I wish I could say sorry

I should’ve been proud

Oh here I’ll show you on a map

Culture isn’t a barrier

How I shielded it is what makes this story sad

(I am Taiwanese) 我是美國人

(I am American)

(No matter who I am)

I should never run

Never run from who I am

Don’t let it get to my head

Don’t let them flood my mind

Yet I reflect on who I am

I’ve cried but never let the tears flow

I’ve screamed but never let my voice show

I’m tired of pretending that I’m perfectly fine

I should be speaking up; and now’s that time.

I used to overlook my mental health

“Oh it’s okay, when I grow up I’ll understand”

But looking back I see all of my wrongs

Dear future, this is what I demand

I demand to be proud

I’ll say this is not the end

I’m proud of my culture

我一定要勇敢

(I must be brave)

Call this the sequel

Of a story I used to hate

The new and improved reboot

And again and again I’ll say

我是台灣人

(I am Taiwanese)

我是美國人

(I am American)

不管我是誰

(No matter who I am)

I should never run

Still I look back on the past Stories I will carry

I can’t help it, no I can’t

Still their words I find it scary

Taiwanese or Thai?

Slanted eyes or a narrow nose

Why don’t you ever wear a kimono?

Are the asian stereotypes true?

It was questions like these that made me afraid Made me want to hide all of my colors

If there’s nothing on the surface for them to see Then what is there to judge?

But now I’ve learned

I think I’ve grown And now again

I’ll say

我是台灣人

(I am Taiwanese)

我是美國人

(I am American)

不管我是誰 (No matter who I am)

I should never run

Never run from who I am

Don’t let it get to my head

Don’t let them flood my mind

Yet I reflect on who I am

I hope I’ve learned

I hope I’ve grown

But no matter what

I’m Proud

我是台灣人
不管我是誰
PLAY VIDEO 38

Forever Twelve by Alina Q

I am twelve, and the ivory keys of our grand piano do not stir. Days of practicing my triplets and arpeggios expire as my idyllic childhood rots away before my own eyes. I am twelve when I first recognize the talk of a career in computer science or mathematics or engineering that erupts over dishes of scallion pancakes and egg tofu.

But I am only twelve, and I do not understand.

I am thirteen and the pressure of my parents and their parents before them weigh down on me like dumbbells as I lean over my desk, sprawling and poring over the pages. I recite the equations to myself like a war song.

I am bright, and I know it as well as my classmates at school; but I am not bright enough for the prying eyes of the aunties that come over and wonder offhandedly about my whereabouts. I am thirteen and I try to force myself to care.

I am thirteen when I pick up the blade in the mirror of my bathroom. I stare at my reflection and I do not recognize the person staring back with wide and unblinking almond eyes. I stand on the cold tile floor as I watch blood bloom into little crimson beads along my skin, the serrated blade dragging across flesh in one swift motion. I know my mother and father would never understand, even if I summoned the smothered embers of courage remaining within me. This I can control, I assure myself. At least this. I pray fervently to whatever God is in the heavens that as I stare at my bedroom ceiling into the late hours of night.

I am thirteen and yet I still do not understand.

I am fourteen and I curse myself for not being able to be as hardworking as I wished I could be, or as my mother wished I could be. I am fourteen and still the expectations weigh impossibly heavy upon my shoulders, my own towering ambitions adding to my load. This and this and this. I keep up, but just barely so, trembling under my burden. My mother watches me with critical eyes, her voice filled with venom as she speaks sharply in a concoction of both Chinese and English. I am fourteen and I know am not the person she wishes I was and neither God nor I can help it.

I am fourteen and I am exasperated.

I am fifteen and I meet people just like me. They share my skin along with their stories and struggles and worries. We are fifteen as we speak in low, hushed tones of the future ahead of ourselves and our eyes meet in unsaid acknowledgement. We are fifteen and we confide in each other for everything, for we know that together we will always understand. I am fifteen and I find that I am not as alone as I think.

I am fifteen and there is hope.

I am fifteen and I understand.

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PLAY VIDEO

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A Pencil vs. Pen by Nguyen H.

A pen is designed to write smoothly on paper, With ink filled in its cartridge, Leaving a permanent trace wherever it trails, A pen’s mark can’t be undone, Its stains can not be erased, A pen is made for perfection, Its bearer must make no mistake.

In contrast to a pen, A pencil has a built in eraser, Its traces can be erased, A pencil prepares for blunders, Its bearer can review their faults, Ameliorate them.

pen is designed to write smoothly on paper, With ink filled in its cartridge, Leaving a permanent trace wherever it trails, pen’s mark can’t be undone, stains can not be erased, pen is made for perfection, bearer must make no mistake. contrast to a pen, pencil has a built in eraser, traces can be erased, pencil prepares for blunders, bearer can review their faults, Ameliorate them.

When offered a pen or pencil, I choose the pen, I’ve left myself, Without room for error, No, I am not cocky, I’m a perfectionist, Just like a pen, My cartridge is filled with ink, So when I don’t fit in the standards created for me, Just like a pen, My ink bleeds, Leaving an indelible mark that ruins my pristine sheet, To be Asian,

Even if I wanted to fix them, I couldn’t, Scratching those errors would just emphasize them, They’d remain here, Sabotaging my paper for eternity, Soon, my paper is filled with scribbles, As I desperately try to fix my drawing, My brain aches, Wondering why the lines don’t look right, I’m revolted by the image created, I stare at my creation blankly, Continuously loathing it more and more, I realize, I’m no match for perfection, I can’t afford to bleed ink,

I am expected to excel in my academics, The percentage on the top corner of my test, Dictates my self worth, I am defined by my intelligence, To fit the Asian beauty standards, I am expected to be thin and pale, They are what my pen must follow, But of course,

There is bound to be flaws, My pen is forced to wield in such unfamiliar strokes, When I receive a lower score on a test, My pen slips, When I gain another inch of fat, Another mark skids across the sheet, They make up the impurities on my paper, They distract the viewer from the whole picture,

I watch those around me, Wield a pencil, Unlike me, They don’t dwell over a mere mark, They erase it, If their hand slips, They redo that stroke, I notice, They slip about the same times as I do, But all their imperfections are erased, Leaving just a beautiful image behind, Their erasers enabled them to advance, Learn from their mistakes, And so I realize, I don’t have to be bound by my errors, I am not defined by a grade, There’s more to being Asian than just intelligence, I don’t have to set myself into a permanent mold, As I stride along those thoughts, My brain relaxes, I finally accept myself, With every flaw, Instead of letting them dictate my self worth, I understand that I can improve, Erase them on my final paper, So when I’m offered the choice between a pen or a pencil again, This time, I gladly reach for the pencil.

When offered a pen or pencil, choose the pen, I’ve left myself, Without room for error, No, I am not cocky, a perfectionist, Just like a pen, cartridge is filled with ink, when I don’t fit in the standards created for me, Just like a pen, ink bleeds, Leaving an indelible mark that ruins my pristine sheet, be Asian, am expected to excel in my academics, The percentage on the top corner of my test, Dictates my self worth, am defined by my intelligence, fit the Asian beauty standards, am expected to be thin and pale,

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The Exigency for Empathy

My family is pure Korean: my 아빠 (Dad) is Korean, as is my 엄마 (Mom). Being from a conservative Korean household, mental health was taken just about as seriously as double-eyelid surgery. Not as popular, but not taken seriously at all.

Sometimes, I have wished that instead of panic attacks, perhaps it would have been better to break a bone or tear a ligament; at least with excruciating physical pain, there would be people who would sympathize with and understand my affliction. There were no words to describe what I had felt on the inside, and a doctor's diagnosis would find no signs of a physical ailment. Every complaint and concern that I raised would simply enter into my 아빠’s one ear and slide out the other with the default consternation of "go to [my] happy place". My "happy place" was usually closing my eyes and imagining myself on the sandy shores of Jeju Island, where our family frequently vacationed, surrounded by crystal-clear waters and enjoying a cool, frozen Korean pear-flavored Tank Boy while floating on the waters. This meditation has never worked for me.

The feeling of falling from a high altitude and the immediate washing over of a shroud of doom, adrenaline and cortisol coursing through my veins, leading to an inescapable box of horror, exacerbated my already-anxious thoughts. My mind would race with worries about when the next panic attack would strike, and there was no preparing me for its excruciating terror and unpredictable haunting. My 아빠 would tell me, "It’s all in your head. Snap out of it"—in Korean, of course. In a strict, stern, disciplinarian tone, that would make me feel as though what I was going through was my fault—that it was because I wasn’t controlling myself that these terrors were befalling me.

"You’re not actually going to class today", 아빠 assured me. "It will only be a visitation. After our visit, you can go play your ‘Nintendo console device’". It was actually a Wii U, and his promise placed me at ease—after all, pinky promises were unbreakable and irrevocable. He even sealed this pinky promise with his thumb. It was my first time visiting an American classroom after having only seen Koreans throughout my life.

As I began to stroll down, my hands clasped and interlocked with my 아빠’s at the sight of the first Caucasian. A strange feeling began to wash over me. For some reason, I was afraid. Why did he have golden hair? Why were his eyes green? Why was his face so pale? Was he a 도깨비 (goblins in Korean culture)? In Korean folklore, these monsters ate children. I was terrified for my life—of course, I was only a foolish and ignorant child. Many of my close friends are Caucasian today

Suddenly, 아빠 left. Hands unlocked, like his iPhone, I was left in this prison cell, and the door slammed behind him. There, behind the locked doors, my first wave of panic washed over me. Looking around the room, I did not see any Koreans around me. I saw more 도깨비s. I frantically wanted to leave, but I was trapped in a room full of 도깨비s.

Tick, tock, tick, tock. I anxiously watched the clock, but each second felt like minutes, and minutes felt like hours. I anxiously watched the door—where was 아빠? He had to save me from these 도깨비s I closed my eyes for a while and covered my ears, but when I opened them, the 도깨비s were still there. I watched the clock again. Tick, tock, tick, tock. Only 2 minutes

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have passed since 아빠 left. A tidal wave of hopelessness began to wash over me, and suddenly, at that moment, the feeling of betrayal from 아빠, who had pinky-promised and sealed with his thumb that I would not start class today, began to envelop me, and I began to weep. I began to bawl. Urine began to trickle down my ankles as laughter began to trickle into the classroom.

I began to resent 아빠 who threw me into this prison. I began to resent 아빠, who told me that my panic attacks were all in my head. There was no way for me to leave. All the students in the classroom stared with detached and unsympathetic eyes. As a matter of fact, some of them laughed at me with jeers and sneers that only compounded my sorrows; they stretched out the ends of their eyes with their fingers and mocked the physical shape of my eyes. I just wanted all of this to end.

It is estimated that 19.1% of Americans, or over 40 million people, suffer from the diverse spectrum of anxiety disorders every year Those studies under-represent the prevalence of anxiety disorders within Asian demographics because the stigma against mental health leads many Asians to not go to their doctors for a diagnosis. Many people who are undiagnosed feel the emotions that I experienced as a child without ever realizing that there is help and support for their condition. I take a small pill (Lexapro 10mg) that completely removes all of the feelings of dread that wash over me during a panic episode. When I first saw my therapist, I was astounded to learn that what I was going through was not unique to me: this gave me reassurance, as I began to learn that there were communities of people who suffered from my same ailments and were able to provide love and guidance toward recovery- many of the people who helped me in my recovery were Caucasian. Unfortunately, mental health is stigmatized within the Korean community, and as such, more education and outreach as to the prevalence of mental health issues can allow for greater probabilities of acceptance among Koreans and the AAPI community at large. I believe that strong leadership in providing quality education can break down the barricades of ignorance that have plagued Korean society. Today, South Korea leads the world in suicide statistics. Addressing the core mental health issues prevalent within our culture will not only allow us to honestly assess ourselves but also move forward as a society, liberated from the torments of mental disorders.

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“All You Can Eat” is a mixed media painting made of watercolor, then outlined with red and black india ink. It’s hard to explain this piece into so few words, because of how many meanings it can take on. I like to invite viewers to search for symbolism in my art and discover their own interpretation.

Personally, my main statement was pertaining to generations like mine assimilating into American culture and losing our original asian heritage, only to later “consume” all information at once after being starved, taking a toll on our mental health. A specific example of this over-consumption happened during the COVID pandemic, when the phrase “ Stop Asian Hate” was increasing in popularity. Our heads were

collectively being filled with atrocities committed around the country. In America, Asians are minorities and thus we become a melting pot. We can’t care about just one nationality, Asians in America are hurt as a race. We’re all connected at one big circular table.

Another meaning can be found about the beauty standards in Asian cultures. Many prefer thin bodies and double-eyelids, and so we gain eating disorders and body dysmorphia. A common phrase for Asians living in the gluttonous America, land of the large food portions, is “You’re getting fat”. How ironic is it that Asian food is so delicious and culture to be celebrated, yet we cannot eat too much for fear of shame?

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“All You Can Eat” by Sofia D.

Sweat ran down my body in streams, scurrying to escape the heat of my skin. It found refuge on the wooden tiles of the dance floor. The teacher was teaching us a dance step, and my mind tracked the sound her shoes made it was a box step. I grinned as I copied the shape of the footwork, feeling the weight of my feet hit the wooden floor to create a box. Time became inconsequential. All I could hear was the allure of the music, comforting in its embrace of my steps.

“Thank you so much for coming!”

I snapped from my trancelike awe. I glanced at the clock -- one hour had passed. Staring at the mirror, an entirely different figure stared back. Sweat fuzzled his unkempt hair and drenched his white shirt. I beamed. My figure beamed back, only wider and happier. I stared back in wonder, realizing that that figure was me. The past hour felt like an out-of-body experience. It was surreal! How could I experience that again?

10 years ago, that out-of-body experience marked the beginning of my dance journey. From that moment, I would pester my mom about continuing to take Hip Hop classes. I would find happiness. Had it not been for the founding of that new dance studio, I might not have discovered this gemstone of an art. But this was beyond me. This was beyond my fervor. This was passion. Along the rollercoaster of life, this passion was the seatbelt that secured me to my seat, fastening me as I rushed through winds of change and gusts of joy, and I relished its significance in my life.

Passion begets passion. As I progress through my journey, I hope to ignite that spark I felt so many years ago in the communities around me. After all, without the spark of art, our souls’ tinder would be reduced to mere sticks and twigs, incapable of lighting the fire of life.

Growing up, the main priority my parents set was to find me my spark. I was given outlets, each one an electric current of expression and release, and I chose to plug into the vivacity that was Hip Hop. It was my lighthouse of hope and excitement, slicing through any fog of uncertainty and hopelessness. I was a dancer and proud of it.

I grew up in homey Irvine, California, with its cookie cutter HMarts and ni haos. Asian was the fashion style. I was the geek, the know-it-all who knew it all. At night, a plethora of dance classes dotted my schedule. I was the dancer, popping in my seat whenever music played. Through such a childhood, I reveled in the A’s that dotted my report card and the trophies that filled my room. I was an Asian dancer, and as I grew older, that identity grew into a battle between my artistic endeavor and my academic intellect.

We, as a community, are shoved into a stereotype of excellence. Under this plate of academic armor, we charge into the hinterland, wading through terrain of education and erudition. It’s sturdy armor. Yet, such an armor only fits a certain few – a demographic of doctors, lawyers, and engineers. The rest remain unprotected against the swaths of AP classes

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and extracurriculars, unsupported by the elderly. As they should be, right? After all, practicality reigns supreme.

Yet, this plate of academic armor can compress us teenagers, forcing us to comply with the demands of the academic battlefield. It can choke us into concurrence as we march on towards the horizon that is colleges, careers, and cash. The iconoclasts fall out of line. The artists are impaled by the spear of utility. The rejected sulk back to their barracks.

As I near the end of my high school journey, such a dilemma plagues me. I enjoy both my academic pursuits and artistic passions; yet, with this growing pressure to prioritize academics, how can I find a balance? How can I make both my family and myself happy?

My family and I talk. We touch the tainted lens of our thoughts, peering through a spyglass of curiosity and peeking at the tattered remains of our conscience. What does it mean to be Asian-American? Is it the A’s that dot my report cards, staining the Aeries portal a deep navy blue? Or is it the 3 AM freestyles, rejuvenating my soul as I step into an aura of purpose and drive?

As I delve into these questions, I find myself leaning into my soul’s expression, my art. Self-expression is one of the most powerful tools in relieving ourselves of the burden of societal pressures and stress. I’ve continued to live by the belief that passion begets passion as I spread the love of Hip Hop at my school, my studio, and with my peers. I hope to empower the AAPI community to find light in their own avenues of expression. We are all human, but we are each huger than life, unique in our own imperfect, expressive ways.

Maybe this isn’t a battlefield.

When we strip away our armor, who are we? Are we militant warriors, marching towards the frontier of competition and comparison – or rich arsenals of care and compassion, maintained to defend a space for expression and service? Only we can tell.

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I painted “Mask” for a gallery exhibition around Covid-19’s impact on teenage mental-health. It began as an outlet to express an omnipresent feeling of overwhelmedness: During the pandemic, I was terrified for myself and those close to me, angered at political apathy and inaction, and disheartened by how AAPI trauma was being weaponized to support policing and pit Black and AAPI communities against each other. Simultaneously, I was crumbling under academic stress, in a school environment that lacked AAPI representation or support. When I attended class and went through life, I felt pressure to mask what I went through, feigning composure despite being engulfed in a mess of emotion. The double-exposure effect I mimicked aimed to capture the complex experience of feeling everything all at once.

As I painted and processed, I realized “feeling everything” also encompasses feeling strength and renewal. While the piece began as a visualization of hardship, it also gave me an opportunity to reflect on how my pandemic experience motivated me to build AAPI community and anti-racist education at my school, brought me closer to my loved ones, and cemented the value of culture and intersectional justice in me. The “mask” I put on evolved into genuine leadership skills and confidence that coexists with my stressors. I hope this piece helps others feel seen in both their trauma and strength, and shows that AAPI mental-health is nuanced. A person cannot be reduced to a single experience or stereotype: truly seeing people requires a multifaceted lens.

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Mask by Tula K.

I spin and I twirl in the pretty pink skirt my mother got for me. So feminine, so innocent.

A classmate’s eyes gazed and stared at the way it swished in the air. Another classmate’s pencil scratched his sketchbook pages. A group of boys in the back of class chatted amongst themselves, and their not-so-faint whispers traveled through the class.

“She’s like that girl in that video you watched.”

A woman wearing a sexified Japanese schoolgirl uniform radiated from the computer screen the boys were gawking at. We looked nothing alike, except for the fact she was also Asian. Was it because of my skirt?

He wasn’t looking at my skirt but imagining what was underneath. He wasn’t shading my skirt’s ruffles but using me as reference for his drawing of a sexualized Asian fantasy. All they saw was a slut—no, an Asian slut, which is supposed to be even sluttier than a white girl—to be looked at, unheard and uncared for.

Sometimes other girls called me lucky. Not lucky in the way my mother had gifted me that skirt for good fortune; it was to remind me of how much of a wonderful daughter I was, she said. But lucky that I attracted attention from boys, just by being Asian. To them, it was a blessing from the gods of seduction.

When I finally got the courage to wear a skirt again, I decided on a black skirt perfect for a family reunion. It was more subtle with no erotic ruffles or promiscuous colors. It was nice and plain, just as I should be to not be an attention-seeking, pink-loving Asian slut. It was feminine but not too feminine.

“You’re built like a stick.” My aunties handed me another bowl of rice.

“Who ate the old Michelle?” My uncles instructed me to do laps around the house.

“Here. Take this to massage yourself. It’ll help your curves come in.” I looked back at the mysterious green concoction in a potion bottle that was somehow going to remedy my door-like body structure.

Never did they ask about my grades or academic achievements—that was reserved for phone gossip. Or the new dance I learned for Multicultual Fair. Or the chè ba màu I made for the party.

I was just someone whose arms and face resembled a skeleton and whose legs weren’t straight and skinny like the white girls at my school. My thighs and calves weren’t for walking but for family members to criticize when they jiggled. My looks headlined every conversation. Perhaps all their energy was exerted wandering their drunken eyes and

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blabbering their gluttonous mouths, leaving their ears no power to listen to whatever I had to say about the type of person I was.

I might as well had been a statue. Then, they could fully sculpt my body into something exceptionally tolerable.

Why wear a skirt when you have nothing nice to show? Aren’t sluts Asian sluts supposed to be pretty?

I got a direct message from a faceless Instagram page asking “You’re Asian, right? Are you single?”

Scrolling through his following list, I found they were all Asian girls from my school. His entire reasoning for wanting to date an Asian girl stemmed from his unfortunate dating history. While he was dating non-Asian girls, he always saw his other white male peers dating Asian girls and thought they looked overjoyed. To him, Asian girls are petite, cute, and never mistreat white men.

While he was on his hunt for delicate, docile Asian girls, the prey bit back. I found myself among tens of Asian women calling out the guy for fetishizing Asians, realizing his words aren’t compliments but were creepy comments. As much as he loved us Asian girls so much, he became livid over the fact that we weren’t the Asian schoolgirl sluts he believed we were that I believed I was.

I always thought I was just something to look at, so I never spoke up for myself as an Asian femme. But, these Asian women knew exactly how I felt, and we shared in our pain of feeling trapped in the deep-seated hatred that lies underneath all the sexualized “love and appreciation” white men offered to us.

We deserve to feel like real people in our femininity, our skin, our Asianness and make a fool out of those who try to make us feel like we’re anything but that.

Because it was never the skirt.

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Familiar Flowers by Sarah C.

Growing up in a family of seven has made me realize that familial bonds are important to maintain and cherish throughout life. My family has been there to encourage me on my artistic journey; they are people I can rely on and confide in. The people depicted in this piece are my two sisters, one older and one younger. They are drawn in a field full of chrysanthemums,

a flower that represents friendship and happiness. My sisters are family, but also close friends who I can lean on in tough times. Their body language and expressions imply trust in one another. My artwork strives to show how family and friends can be a place of refuge when situations may bedifficult and a place of relaxation to share laughter.

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Not Just by Remy P.

I am bipolar I struggle with PTSD I am crippled with anxiety I have to fight every day to get out of bed I cannot focus in class for my life I will never be anything other than these things

I am Remy P. I do not let the past haunt me for I am past it. I fight for myself, not against. I am a high achieving student who has been accepted into college, participates at school as a member of the student council, and is part of two international organizations from my high school chapters. I play sports, lift, paint, sing, and do countless other activities. I am Chinese American; I refuse to discard this label by focusing on any others I have been assigned. I cannot be condensed into just a few words.

I can’t be helped none of the medicines have been able to change me what if they never do what if I’m never enough I never should have told anyone all it has been is a waste of time money energy

My mom, my doctors, and my friends– they have been with me throughout this whole journey because they care. They cared before and still care now; everyone only wants the best for me. They haven’t given up on me– I can’t give up on me. I suffered for years on my own, wrestling with the idea that my own mother had abandoned me as a days-old baby, along with the hellish feelings that parasitized my internal war. I do not regret reaching out for help because even if the process has been long and exhausting, it is infinitely times better than being exhausted for so long alone. I am not just dragging those around me down, but being carried through their strength.

Why do I have to change this isn’t fair why am I not good enough to be allowed to be myself why was I not good enough to be kept I’m just a robot trudging through life and just as inhuman

I am not a robot– I still feel feelings like anyone else. I have crushes just like any other teenager. I can feel sadness without it being tied directly to my depression. I can be happy in my life and proud of what I have accomplished. I’m not changing to bend to what society expects of me but so that I can celebrate the time I have. I am not good enough– I am more than enough. I understand my mother was only acting in my best interests despite the hurt she may have felt. I am not just surviving– I am living a life I deserve to enjoy.

Why am I like this would I have been different if I hadn’t been adopted what if I had known about any of my genetic risks could I have been more careful knowing what might happen what I would become

I lead a life here in America that would never have been possible in China. Even if I knew my

immediate family’s medical history, I would only have been more stressed about it for longer. My 54

just as inhuman

I am not a robot– I still feel feelings like anyone else. I have crushes just like any other teenager. I can feel sadness without it being tied directly to my depression. I can be happy in my life and proud of what I have accomplished. I’m not changing to bend to what society expects of me but so that I can celebrate the time I have. I am not good enough– I am more than enough. I understand my mother was only acting in my best interests despite the hurt she may have felt. I am not just surviving– I am living a life I deserve to enjoy.

Why am I like this would I have been different if I hadn’t been adopted what if I had known about any of my genetic risks could I have been more careful knowing what might happen what I would become

I lead a life here in America that would never have been possible in China. Even if I knew my immediate family’s medical history, I would only have been more stressed about it for longer. My birth mother meant the best for me when she gave me up; she left me outside the steps of a

government building, knowing I would be found quickly, and going so far as to leave me with a note of my birthday. I can never be sure how I might have grown up in China but I am glad I can remain true to my heritage, even in a neighborhood with low numbers of Asian Americans. My mom would bring me to Chinese events and celebrations to find connections between myself and those of my background. I found that attending a cultural event in the United States felt as if I were attending an event in China, with all the pomp and circumstance. I am not just a Chinese girl growing up as a minority but a girl coming of age in America.

I am an outsider

I am adopted. I am chosen. I am accepted in my community with wide open arms.

I am unstable

I know who I can turn to when I feel overwhelmed. I know who will support me.

I am a burden

There are people who love me that would not and who have not given up on me.

There is no hope for me no place in the world for me

You are just a voice in my head. And you are wrong.

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Oh Dang by Kieri K.

This piece is titled “Oh Dang”, a play on the phonetics of the Korean dish pictured, 오뎅국 (odeng guk). I wanted this piece to be a semiliteral take on “eat your problems”. 오뎅국, or fishcake soup, is my number one comfort meal. The broth is bland and the fishcakes are soft to chew; a meal that doesn’t put up a fight. Whenever I feel dejected, low in energy, or just tired of the world around me I like to enjoy meals that put my mind at ease. Food is one of the main ways I connect to my Korean heritage, as

well as my best form of communication with my mother. Recently I’ve become more comfortable sharing my state of mind with my mom, which has never been easy for me. When she makes me 오뎅국 I know she sees my struggles and wants to help, and more often I’m finding myself in a place where I can let her. Healthy familial communication is one of the most important steps toward embracing better mental well-being in the AAPI community.

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Ask a Question.

The word “how” is a word I use often. It’s a powerful word, a word of wanting to know more. It’s the word of questioning, the word to use when intrigued. When asked how, so much can be said, yet little is also true. When I ask someone, “How are you?” the answer comes back, “Good.” How can we change this? How can we make people comfortable in saying more? How do we ask a question so that one comes back at us?

As humans, we love to talk about ourselves. But when someone struggles with their mental health, it may be hard for an answer other than “Good.” to come out. What can we do? The answer is more. To understand and make others comfortable, we must talk more and be present more. Be involved! There’s more to a person than a simple “How are you?” can answer, but asking more questions isn’t the only answer to this. We must ask differently. I say, “¿Como estás?” to my Latine friends who don’t speak English. To my Vietnamese friends that seem to struggle in Sunday school, I ask, “Khỏe không?”. And to my Deaf friend, who can only sign, I roll my fists forward and point at her. When you make an effort to speak to others where they feel most comfortable, they give a response.

There have been so many times I wished someone had asked me how I was. The time I felt most vulnerable was during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Before the lockdown started, classmates were chatting about the deadly virus spreading around in China because of some “stupid dude who ate a bat.” Unbothered by the threat of the virus and not being Chinese myself, I laughed along with them about the silliness of the situation. But in weeks after, the blame somehow fell on me. When the first case of COVID-19 in the US happened at school, I felt the spotlight was on me. Other kids asked me if I ate bats; “No way!” I’d said. “I’m not one of those Chinese.” Puzzled now, they asked where I came from. This part of the story I was familiar with. First, I said America because it was true; I’d been born in an American hospital to my parents, who were citizens of the US by then. But that was never a satisfactory answer, so I’d say Vietnam eventually. I was proud of my heritage; my parents told me to be proud of where I came from. But it was isolating to say that I was from Vietnam, even though I’d never been there. To my classmates, I wasn’t allowed to be American. Yes, English was my first language; I grew up in the US, ate mediocre school lunches, and even played baseball. But I was never American, not even Asian-American to them, because I wasn’t white.

I wish someone had asked me how I was doing or any questions. I’d felt so hurt by all the casual xenophobia and racism at the expense of Asians. I had no right to bemoan the awfulness of the

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pandemic; my people were the ones that started it anyway. But I saw the hashtag #StopAsianHate on my Instagram. I was surprised to realize that so many people were going through the same thing I was! I was convinced it wasn’t my fault and I could stick up for myself and others. I even joined in on a rally, being driven 100 miles away, to stand up for myself and my people. Knowing that other Asians like me might be struggling with widespread racism, I went to Asian peers myself. I asked them, “How are you?” because the first thing you say to someone shouldn’t be, “Where do you come from?” I asked questions that made others feel good to answer, not feel embarrassed for saying. Asking questions is the key to building meaningful relationships and supporting one another. It’s important to ask questions to make people feel comfortable and valued and to be present and engaged in the conversation. Doing so can create positive change in the world around us, one conversation at a time. So, let me ask you - how are you doing today?

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Asian American Love

American love is faux laughter and chiming doorbells. American love is the cardboard scents of brand-new board games and bookshelves and cheap plastic figurines. The celebratory “gettogethers” for achievements, dangling prizes over children’s heads as parents laugh.

American love is doting, motherly, soft curves and words to cushion a fall. White walls and countertops, paintings and photos pasted over the empty modern home.

American love is ruffled newspaper, steaming coffee, small grunts and groans echoing in the morning. The clean car seats and windows, polished glasses frames, grocery receipts crumpled and tossed without a second glance.

American love is sudden, strangers accidentally brushing hands, neighbors sharing bits of gossip. It’s long hours in front of mirrors, faking smiles until it becomes instinct.

American love holds secrets. It’s “the talk”, the birds and the bees, pressed condoms and birth control pills into shaky fingers. Long, dark alleyways with no one else in sight. Fingers curling in hair, sweaty bodies pressed against each other, wandering hands and interlocked lips.

American love is free, empty, relaxed. It sits in the shadows, always there but never truly felt.

Asian love is harsh words and the smack of leather on skin. Asian love is the aroma of soy sauce and sriracha, the sharp scents of curry and kimchi. The accented, broken English, vowels fumbling into each other and crashing backwards like waves at sea.

Asian love is A pluses, black and white report cards stacked in a hidden box under the floorboards. It’s harsh punishments for misbehaviors, knowing that actions speak louder than words. Asian love is direct, a knife cutting straight to the point, birthday gifts of red envelopes and green paper, old wooden toys recycled over and over until the edges rot and peel off.

Asian love is ritual, unique names for every relative, every person, hundreds of characters and letters staining the family tree. It’s ceremonial clothing, bride to the groom, tradition steeped into every action like fragrant tea leaves in boiling water. Asian love is shattering that one precious heirloom, rage in father’s eyes and despair in mother’s, only for everything to be replaced and forgotten tomorrow.

Asian love is loud. It’s a melody, ebbing and flowing, rising and falling. It’s shouted on repeat, holding hands on a crowded street corner, bustling street vendors and musicians background noise to the ears. It haggles with merchants over cheap shoes.

Asian love is unyielding, awkward, bittersweet. It demands to be heard.

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Mental Health Matters!

Mental health conditions are common. The pandemic has highlighted the urgency of tackling mental health. Studies indicate that approximately 1 in 5 teens between ages 12 and 18 suffer from at least 1 diagnosable mental health disorder. Stigma, lack of awareness, and lack of mental health support are some of the potential causes for this rising number. Every child has the right to survive and thrive where mental health issues aren’t stigmatized. According to Mental Health

America, mental conditions and suicidal ideation continue to rise in the Asian American and Pacific Islander students community. Since art plays a prominent role in Asian cultures, my aspiration is to use art therapy as a pathway to bring awareness to mental issues and open a window of opportunity to seek help. Here is my small part in promoting and protecting mental health. We have the power in ourselves to shape the world and change lives. Make Mental Health Your #1 Priority!

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Call Privilege by its Name

“Don’t worry, you would never be able to tell!” My friends laugh whenever the topic of my Asian identity comes up, in an attempt to reassure me that I could almost pass as another Causasian girl in my predominantly white community in Virginia. Without my looks, of course. And it’s true. I do fit in. At least in the ways that count in the strange mathematics of high school popularity. I have friends, play varsity sports, and don’t have to endure the pain of eating lunch alone. Heck, I am the first junior captain of my dance team, and the president of two clubs. I fit in, but ‘fitting in’ is conditional. I make sure to never mention my Asian identity and to spur conversations about American traditions that only white folks would talk about. I know that racism is based on ignorance, that others have it much worse, and that I am lucky to avoid the daily violence and discrimination that racism brings with it. Nonetheless, it is still disheartening to confront.

Sunlight spills through green foliage onto gray cobblestones. The intense heat of the midafternoon smothers Shanghai in a sluggish haze, but below ground in the subway stations, the air grows cooler and life speeds up. Here in China, I am just another face in a sea of people, but this illusion is quickly shattered as soon as I open my mouth to speak. One woman compliments my parents for raising such talented English speakers, comparing us to Jackie Chan. “You should hear their Chinese,” my dad responds dryly. Within a minute, I have lost the comfort of conformity. I am an American. Ironically enough, I am also an outlier in my Northern-Virginian high school… even though my English is indiscernible from anyone else’s and I was born in the same local hospital as many of my peers. As an American-born Chinese, I’ll never truly fit into either of my two worlds. I live a life of dualities, a life of insecurity, a life of perpetual identity crises. Throughout middle school, I desperately coveted a ski-slope nose and freckles; I wanted wavy blonde hair and blue eyes and long lashes. In the perfect realities I liked to imagine before I fell asleep, I was always white. People say there are two sides to every story, and in this case, there are two sides to every life. I don’t completely fit into Chinese society in the same way I don’t completely fit into American society. I fight to break free from stereotypes yet simultaneously work to fulfill them. Each day brings another conscious battle against internalized racism and insecurity permeates deep from years of normalized microaggressions.

In lockdown at home, I witnessed the shooting of Asian American women in Atlanta, repeated hate crimes and assaults, and anti-Asian rhetoric normalized in the media. The pandemic unraveled the rampant Asian American racism, hidden beneath the folds of the illusion of the American Dream. Again, it has required tragedy and violence to bring about a conversation of the consequences of America’s treatment of nonwhite immigrants. It is crucial to understand the harmful privilege of certain groups which masks the injustice and hatred others

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continue to face. America is hailed as the nation of immigrants, the picture of a melting pot of nationalities and cultures, yet the reality remains: America has not welcomed all its immigrants with open arms. Since its founding, America’s fundamental values have been tied to the supremacy of the white race and its conclusion, the inferiority of nonwhite races, from the pursuit of Manifest Destiny to the American Indian Wars. The American Dream has once enticed the first Asian Americans immigrants, but now they face a racist campaign against them: taking on jobs no one else wanted or being forced into self-employment, battling racial segregation in schools, and falling victim to rampant violence and hatred. While they fight for the recognition of their American identity, the message is clear to Asian Americans despite what America might have initially stood for them: they are not truly Americans.

As a child, the sense of inferiority with my race arose when my mother asked me to check her emails for broken grammar, or the boys that I liked in my science classes said that they would only date white girls. Even now, I steer clear of Asian stereotypes: SAT prep classes, strict parents, foreign languages, foreign smells… I pretend to have never had Chinese food before, that I don’t care about my academics, and that I have never watched Mulan. However, for all the times I have been embarrassed, hurt, and excluded because of my “Asian-ness”, I can finally validate my longings to address these inequities and call privilege by its name. I am finally able to recognize my own identity in America: as an Asian woman.

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Swan Song of the Sea by Jodie Y.

There is no doubt that the importance of mental health and mental health awareness is overlooked in the Asian community. It is a taboo topic that many of my older relatives refuse to believe in and talk about. From my personal observations, mental health topics have always been accompanied with shame and guilt. In my mixed media piece titled Swan Song of the Sea, I shed light on depression through the use of fluid watercolor and harsh colored pencil markings to convey the feelings of dissociation, numbness, and sadness. A lady’s face in the sea is woven into the waves that a boat that

seats a woman and a man is on. The two figures are seemingly unaware of the lady in the sea, almost as if she does not exist. The lady is a representation of depression and how easily it can go unnoticed. Her needs and desires are washed away in tune with the waves, with little control over the movement of the ocean (her emotions). The phrase “swan song” refers to a final song before an artist retires or passes away; in this piece, swan song may refer to the lady surrendering to her unpredictable and uncontrollable emotions before she is washed away completely.

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In middle school, to resolve my boredom, I burned papers in the principal’s office, threw my friend’s shoes to the adjacent building’s roof, flushed my friend’s glasses down the toilet, shut off the whole school’s electrical system, and committed other misbehaviors. Consequently, my mom was disappointedly sobbing as she witnessed me being on the verge of expulsion.

Forever in my memories are the days when rain splattered through the window flooding my desk, dusty moisture behind the washer attracted cockroaches, and my single mom drove me in a Honda bike under rain across cities so I could go to school. Since my dad left when I was eight years old and I grew up under my mom’s sacrifice, she is the only person who ceaselessly fuels my rocket to reach the stars. Yet she’s also the person I emotionally bullied the most. Guilty frustrations overflowed when I repeated the cycle of feeling ecstatic for wildly misbehaving followed by intense regret for stealing away the vitality mom used to raise me.

Later, my family immigrated to the US for my future although we didn’t know English. While struggling to adapt, I became “mom” on phone calls with the bank, tax, insurance, schools, and job officers since I was most English-fluent. This showed me firsthand the unfiltered adversities of a single, low-income immigrant. During COVID, the landlord's call informed me that my family was a week away from being evicted if we didn’t mount up enough rent money. Contemplating the worst consequences that would belay my family’s future and regretting my troubled past slowly drive me into depression.

When I hit rock bottom, I realized the only way to transform my family is to transform myself first. One is strongest when one courageously admits and directly confronts their biggest weaknesses. Vulnerability plus responsibility equal invincibility. For the first time ever, I wholeheartedly read self-help books and took notes, truly wanting to better myself. In a reunion call, my middle school friends said I had changed. Utilizing the learned knowledge, I earned awards and enlivened relationships with authorities, making mom smile proudly.

My intimate conversation with mom switched tone as I mature. There was a lot less confrontation on her part and a lot more “thank you” or “sorry” on my part. Every day, I treated my mom as if I were to lose her tomorrow. I realized traumas formalize my core value and solidify my conviction to give mom the life she deserves. However, life is a hike, where one forge meaning as one traverses its constant ups and downs. As one obstacle pass, another appears.

When my grandma got glioblastoma seven months after I immigrated, depression seeped in because I couldn't do anything but witness her slowly dying. But channeling grief into courage, I went deep into cancer research. As the answers to my questions led to more questions, I realized that even after centuries of technological advancements, we still can't defeat an enemy as old as cancer, so instead, we must learn to befriend it.

Though manufacturing individualized CAR-T cells for injection can train our body to tolerate cancer, it’s too expensive and time-consuming. Since my family struggled to pay for grandma’s treatment, I wanted to help low-income families have equitable access to health treatment. Therefore, I attempted to design Universal CAR-T cells that can regulate the extent of cancer growth in almost any patient. Consequently, time, money, and neurotoxic side effects will be greatly reduced since all patients receive different combinations of the same CAR-T cells.

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Amazed by the life-saving power of early detection, I imagined an early-detecting method that also allows for sampling of the patient's cancer's miRNA, which can then be analyzed to determine the best combo of CAR-T cells for this particular patient. Fitting puzzle pieces together, I developed a two-part cancer-combating strategy so that no one will have to experience what my grandma did and their relatives experienced what I did.

Taking advantage of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) head and neck cancers released into the saliva, I prototyped a nano-liquid-biopsy chip to accurately separate CTCs through hydrodynamic cell sorting, inertial focusing, and magnetophoresis. To make this a tangibly impact-making product, I implanted the chip inside the timeless toothbrush, an irreplaceable tool much like seatbelts or curtains, to allow for consistent, unnoticeable, long-term tracking of a patient's tumor.

Three years later, I headlined 15 media enterprises and won several international awards for this groundbreaking idea. Even though the fame was momentarily flattering, what emotionally moved me is the realization that personally pursuing this endeavor allows me to meaningfully do what I love. Actualizing my seemingly random “What Ifs” in honor of my grandma truly made me forget all my past regrets and worries for the future. Investing in my passion significantly relieves me from mental and emotional pain.

Success taught me that in life one should focus on giving, not gaining, because the only way to gain is to first give. Therefore, I envision a world where cancer no longer equates to tragedies but is easily treated as the common cold. And I won’t stop until it’s done! At university, I will leverage mentorships from professors, funding, and peer collaboration to start a biotechnology company to help cancer patients through the toothbrush's early detection and specialized CAR-T cell therapy.

After this experience, I realized the tremendous strength adversity can instill in young people, and founded “First Imagine, Then Actualize” for like-minded teens to share their stories and inspire each other. As my love for self-help intensified because I witnessed how it revolutionized my character, I founded an Instagram page, posting original inspirational quotes, which accumulated more than 25K followers. Amazed at the scale of my impact and underserved teens, I decided to write a compact self-help book that utilizes lots of teenage slang and funny jokes to illustrate many timeless self-help concepts. My work was recognized by the Royal Family through the 2022 Diana Award in memory of Princess Diana of Wales.

Resources, healing, and solutions are deeply interconnected. Healing takes place when you use the resources available to make solutions for others’ problems you experienced so others don’t have to go through the same pain you did. For example, I worked on early cancer diagnosis to help future cancer patients so they don’t have to experience my grandma’s pain. I helped “lost” teens find their purpose so they don’t feel worthless as I did in my immature years. This works because it gives you perspective as you realize, no matter how broken you are, you can still add value to society by lending a helping hand. This tremendously increases your self-esteem, which empowers you to believe in yourself again so you can keep walking through that dark tunnel. Simply put, the best way to heal is to help others heal.

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I have often heard that just one moment, one person, or one experience could change my life forever. If someone had told me a year ago that a little black leathered journal could change my life, I probably would have laughed. Yet I did need a change.

So, I bought a black leather journal and decided to carry it everywhere. I was going to write about the good and not-so-good moments. How does the sky look at 6 a.m., where do I want to journey, or how am I feeling at this moment? I was going to write, draw or just scribble on blank pages. Once this journal is full (that’s funny as I’ve never finished a journal), I was buying a new one.

When I first opened the black leather journal, I remember looking at the pages and not wanting to ruin them with my tangled chaos as the pages were so pretty and clean. How could I put my fears, my insecurities, or my raw authentic self on these pretty and clean pages? In reality, I have always liked things planned, organized, and aesthetic yet these pages were begging me to be real and I thought of the Lao Tzu quote, “A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.” And so the journey began.

Back and forth. That’s the motion I initially began making in my new black leathered journal with my favorite gel pen. I found myself applying more pressure with each and every stroke until I could feel some kind of emotion entering the nonjudgmental and welcoming blank pages. I began to learn the fine art of scratching and scribbling along with the freeness of flowing continuous lines. There were no words in the beginning just the movement of emotions. I can’t really remember when words started crawling onto the page. But as the words began to appear they seem to weave a very dark tapestry of my reality. It was a reality where I believed I wasn’t enough. As a Chinese adopted child, I did not characteristically look like those framed by my family, school, or society. The sense of not belonging created threads that sought to strangle my mind and then my heart.

As I sought to loosen the threads, I began to see how I had previously given words the power to create intrusive thoughts. With time, words felt safer on the pages. I questioned the truth of what I had come to believe about myself and life. What evidence made these twisted thoughts so convincing and damaging? Most of the time, I could not find evidence to support the dark reality I created. The reality is I do have people in my life that accept and love me. As the new reality was emerging on the pages, I could see I was not defined by my struggles, mistakes, ethnicity, or intrusive thoughts.

The black leather journal initially came into my life as a cold and manufactured product. As time brought change, the leather became worn and many of the pages became curled and messy as if they held the scars of a well-fought war. When I look through the pages, I can see the messiness of change and how we fought the war together.

Perhaps it is true, there are those experiences that can be life-changing. For 343 days the black leather journal not only held me but helped me learn how to gently hold myself. It was almost surreal when I reached the last page as I realized I had changed – I had changed a lot. After I dated the last page, I wrote these words, “I AM very proud of MYSELF.” A new black leather journal has been purchased and the journey of a thousand miles or perhaps a million miles continues.

343 Days
by Malia W.
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Stop Killing Us by Tricia D.

Neesha-Ann. What a strange middle name. Why take two unalike, askew, noncomplimentary names and put them together? As if the hyphen yearned to be some kind of glue, morphing Neesha (Thai traditional name) and Ann (my caucasian grandmother’s middle name) together. However, they cannot be crafted into one, I was never modeled into either or. My mother. The dazzling woman who immigrated to America. The woman who taught me to be the strongest version of myself. Vulnerability is a weakness. Shutting down shows the coward that burrows in the abyss of my heart. Hurt in private, heal in silence, thrive in public. I believe the yellow tint of our skin showcases sunlight, intelligence and perseverance, but being sought out as the model minority created a hungry, ugly, monster inside my mother and I.

“You have Kumon at 1, soccer at 5, tutor at 8,” these events created a rhythm inside my mind. My middle school days were filled with academic boosters. My mother was always looking for the next best learning opportunities to place me into. I was stretched thin to make sure I covered all subjects; making sure I was on the correct pathway to college…college, I was twelve. The college concept landed me in therapy.

My father. A tall pale-skin broad man, from North Dakota and San Jose. In my elementary and middle school years, he referred to me as a “soft petal.” My brother’s teasing or my friend's comment caused me to burst into tears in seconds. When I was high on emotions, tears filled my baby blue bedroom. I desperately yearned to understand why I had episodes of intense hyperventilation or why my body shook uncontrollably on stress-filled nights. My therapist referred me to my pediatrician, who diagnosed me with anxiety and prescribed me medication. However, that prescription was never filled.

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Mental health was always danced around in my household. Like it was a choice. I am mixed. It doesn’t mean much to most. However, the sliver of expectations is what crafts the pain of being biracial. The pain escapes deeper than, “I didn’t know where to sit at lunch.” Rather the pain is the gauging agony that homed in my stomach when my neck was bent over the toilet seat from crying so hard because the “full” kids got praised in my APs, and I got the side eyes and snickers.

!"#$%&'(
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“Sorry, the non-asian side of me took the exam.”

I lived in a world where I was asked, “what kind of asian are you?” As much as I was told, “It’s ok you're only half asian, a B is fine.”

I found an urge to speak for those silenced by the rules of our society. This became my motivation for becoming an officer for the Foreign Exchange Mentorship Organization, helping Japanese students learn English. After my time spent as an officer, I was invited to speak on the Samasakee Thai Youth Panel. I discussed the importance for our generation to use our voice where we see it to be fundamental. I spoke about my participation in the “Stop Asian Hate” protest at the California Capitol, depicting each drop of sweat that raced down my face, and how my voice was lost the next morning after screaming, “STOP ASIAN HATE!”

The hate isn't only the violence my people face on the streets. It’s the violence of Western culture expecting us to be the model minority, and when we fail we are to blame. And if we succeed? That’s the monster that curled under my AP kid personality.

As I entered the last couple years of high school, I began to prioritize my mental health as an Asian American. I yearned to diminish the monster inside of me, it was causing illness to my mind. I seeked help. I encouraged others too as well. I spend days looking out for myself first, as I reflect on the past four years. I used to believe that in order to tackle my anxiety, I had to stay busy. However, I learned it is important to let myself sit and process what I believe is going ary in my life. I used to look at the “bigger picture” from a birds eye view, rather I wished I looked at the present more thoroughly. I encourage the Asian American community to prioritize their mental health first not four years later. The yellow tint of our skin showcases intelligence and perseverance. We deserve to put our minds first before we burn out from expectations. Through language barriers and citizenship hurdles, I yearn to be the voice. I am the voice for my mother and my grandmother. By ordering take-out on the phone, managing doctors' appointments, and helping my grandmother practice for her citizenship test, I use my voice for them. My parents gave me the gift of being biracial. With this gift, I have experienced the feelings of being the minority in a small suburban town but also the privilege that comes with it.

I advocate for the mental health of my people.

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Plate of Fruit

In words, I cannot comprehend. In actions, I do not recognize. Apologies are never how they’re supposed to be.

Arguing for minutes. Silence for hours. Ignorance in seconds.

This is not how it’s supposed to be. Why?

Other families don’t have this. Other families can look each other in the eye and see. Not look, but see.

The rising heat dissipates from my body. I can’t bear to be angry, knowing everything they’ve been through. Generations. Ancestors. Centuries of a stigma one cannot hope to overcome in a night.

But I can try.

Why am I the only one trying?

Our speech bubbles become more jagged and sharp as we fail to find the words.

Suddenly, frustration.

Slamming a door shut is all I can do. The echo rings across the house, and into their head. At least, that’s what I hoped for.

Talking is synonymous with taboo.

Actions, ever so subtle, is what we can afford.

Knock Knock

My Mom. A porcelain plate of freshly cut fruit enters before her. No words of importance are spoken. Small steps seem to be taken, but they lead nowhere. Avoiding the piercing eyes that desperately seek comfort, she leaves.

Here is my apology. Laid out like a dish. One easy to accept, but hard to swallow.

Cantaloupe is my “sorry.” Pear is my “I understand.” Mango is my “I love you.”

I see the fruit, and the eyes that stare back are my own.

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P
Gianna

it ends with me

Generations of my father’s relatives hide their feelings to seem more stable than they are inside. To prevent the thought of others from thinking that they're powerless. If someone shows signs of vulnerability, they are shamed. Therefore, you are pressured to put on a façade to please this pervasive stigma developed through generations of Filipino ancestors. I was a victim of this stigma.

I used to be a naive innocent child. Running around in the streets of Villamar Subdivision, Cagayan De Oro. The comfort of the hot Philippine sun. Though the comfort of my mother’s family was warmer. It was them who gave younger me such a happy care-free childhood. But all good things come to an end.

2015, Missouri. I was in the airport with my mother. Still naive as ever. I thought this was the start of a new chapter for us. Live out the American dream. I thought wrong. I was left with my father. While my mom created a life for herself somewhere else.

My father was never really involved in my childhood. I never even knew I had a father. Just until I was 7, he suddenly had a “change of heart” and took me in for the time that was supposed to be until my mother had built a stable life in the States for herself. I didn’t know how drastically my life would change. What used to be a child filled with happiness turned into someone with such distress.

We shared last names, my father, stepmom, and half-siblings. Yet they never made me feel like I was a part of their family. “Illegitimate child, fake sister,” the many names my stepmom has told my siblings to call me and the unfair treatment I received went on. I couldn’t tell anyone because I thought I’d be shamed if I confessed how I felt. Because my father made me think that way, I hid my true emotions.

One day in middle school, I broke down. First period of the day, a stream of tears ran down my face. My teacher sent me to the counselor. The first time I felt so vulnerable in front of someone. I thought I was safe venting to the school's "therapist." Weeks later, I felt ill and went to the nurses' office. "Are you sure you want to go home? Don’t you want to avoid your stepmom?" I turned to the nurse, who was looking at me with “worry.” How did she know that? I excused myself to the bathroom in the nurse's office. Sitting on the toilet with my head filled with questions. The rambling stopped once I heard the nurses' conversation. She’s probably just faking it. Not only did I never speak about my emotions again, I also never confessed to any illness since that day.

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I’ve neglected how I was feeling to the point I was deteriorating. Despair turned into anger. My grades turned into F’s. I was skipping school. Hanging out with the wrong people. Once a child filled with happiness, was now a person filled with hate. I knew I needed help, but I never asked for it. I was weak, pretending to be strong.

In High School, I knew enough was enough. I begged my mom to get my father to put me into therapy.

"Your mom told me you wanted therapy. Why?" My father said. I needed a professional. I couldn't say it was the unfair treatment of his wife. I couldn't say it was because most of my life was spent watching my back due to the toxicity this household radiates. I couldn’t say because there was no one who would help me.

"I just want it."

"Ate Gianna, you don't need it. Your childhood is easy compared to other kids." He rambled on about kids in low-income places and how he used to get into gang fights back in the Philippines, invalidating my feelings after back-to-back justifications of why I was being overdramatic until I found him trauma-dumping to me about how his father used to treat him. "It's just a part of life. You'll get used to it." He joked, attempting to steer attention away from his troubles. I bottled my feelings as my father advised. Yet again, I was a closed book.

It took my father abandoning me for the 2nd time to make me realize he was wrong. I always shrugged my need for help as me being selfish and weak. But being an individual with personal issues does not make you weak. Sharing it makes you strong. The amount of courage and strength it takes to speak your emotions. I wish I knew that then.

Slowly breaking the tradition of self-suppression that my ancestors have passed on to my father, then to me. I’ve escaped the stigma. I’ve changed for the better. I’m the realest version of myself. I am transparent.

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Embrace of Peace by Audrey J.

My artwork is a mixed media of acrylic paint and colored pencils. In my painting, I wanted to emphasize how I deal with mental health issues. I go to my family and my friends, or more specifically, people that I feel comfortable with. With the support of my friends and family, I am able to successfully sustain my mental health because I am able to rely on people I trust. In my painting, a Mugunghwa is present, which is the national flower of Korea. Being Korean myself, I find comfort in things that remind me of home. Going to Korea and seeing these beautiful flowers everywhere I go brings me back to a place where I feel safe, comforted, and

problem-free. My art is a visual representation of finding comfort in my roots and with my friends and family. Butterflies also tie back into my Korean heritage. Culturally, butterflies are known to contain the souls of deceased loved ones. I incorporated this aspect of my culture to showcase how people you love are always there for you, and knowing that there is always someone with you, though it may not be tangible, is a sense of comfort when one is lonely. I really wanted to emphasize that having a healthy mental health is a result of knowing that you are not alone, and understanding that there are people around you all the time to talk to.

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Kaleidoscope.

My life feels as though it is in shambles,

Only I am left to pick up the broken glass with my bare hands.

And perhaps one day,

I will use these same hands to fabricate a kaleidoscope out of the shards.

These fragments.

They are scrapped from the broken mirror that forced me to face my reality,

Yet there are bits and pieces of rose tinted glass that shattered alongside it.

To a bystander, it could easily be mistaken for pink diamond.

My bruised and sore digits begin to craft this distinguished artifact.

No one else will do so for me.

I must stand on my own witness stand,

For whom else will step aside to indulge themselves in my case?

The case number no longer holds value, though,

For the case has been dropped without my consent.

What good does saving do,

If one does not accept the heroic gestures?

The drop startled me, causing me to drop yet another fragile possession.

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This chalice that once cradled my beverage had shattered completely. The liquid stained the fine fibers.

Any oblivious man may have easily mistaken it for pink diamond. We must remain vigilant.

Life’s beauty has its peculiar ways of revealing itself to us. My hands was where it divulged itself to me, But the mirror had shattered. One erroneous move and the fibers may wound me. This pain is so pleasurable. The same pain that brought me harm Had fulfilled me through my kaleidoscope.

Only I can cater to the mental distortion that this world had so desperately tried to pit against me.

I nurture myself in ways that no one may ever be able to fully comprehend, But similarly to our nourishment, Time allows one to assimilate what is presented to us on the platter.

I will mold these beautiful tragedies.

I will pursue them into a kaleidoscope, For it shall allow me to examine my life in multiple pairs of glasses all at once. Now, I view the world beyond its default dull tints.

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I Just Can’t.

PLAY SOUND

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81

My Becoming

I was falling

Too fast, too hard, too deepSinking and feeling my lungs fill with air that I knew, Air that I knew would never escape. With all this air inside my lungs the question became “Do I deserve the right to breathe?”

“Do I deserve the right to see?”

“Do I deserve the right to be human?”

Staring at my ceiling, It was too early in the morning or perhaps it was night who would know? Staring at my ceiling, I felt that I was akin to nothing; And things that are nothing have no right to hold things tangible for that is something I was akin to nothing.

I was meant to keep my secrets trapped in my lungs, Maybe gift it to my family, But a secret is a secret silent and becoming when muttered.

Strangely, a nothing can keep a secret

For secrets are like the shade -- cold and empty.

It was middle school,

Another boring day in a classroom full of people who could smile, People who could laugh and mean it, People who looked scandalized by the fact that I was not like them I would not smile.

My Lola and Lolo thought something was wrong with me; A constant look, an utterance to keep a smile on my face:

“If you close your eyes, it will go away.”

One day, into the classroom walked my teacher, My teacher who put on a video of three girls

Who had words sounding of vulnerability and strength

And so musical that I felt that I was watching a full orchestra until their voices fell silent and they walked off the stage.

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Poetry

So I took up the pen and splayed open a journal, And in my childish handwriting I put everything down onto the paper until I felt like all that trapped air disappeared at once. It was as if I committed something sacrilege and cruel, For how dare I, a nothingness, create somethingness.

I was writing and writing and writing, Causing me to become something that was finding Into being someone who had made the most important discovery.

As my truth was spun onto the paper, Three journals later, holding the pen to the fourth, I take this moment to realize that life has changed so splendidly, so drastically, The person I once was has left me And told me “You should be on your way.”

I won’t stay silent.

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I drew the piece "Patched Up" as a way for me to look back and reflect on everything I've been through, emphasizing my experiences after immigrating to America five years ago, which is symbolized by the different patches seen on the face. I also used stitches to patch them together because they reminded me of my cleft lip and palate, which were stitched up during my multiple surgeries. I intended to make the meaning behind it subjective, so there isn't exactly a definite interpretation of this work.

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Sarani: “Protector”, Three Syllables, Six Letters, One Word

For a majority of my life, I’ve carried the burden of an uncommon name. I would pick up Starbucks, the coffee bean aroma triumphed by the piercing Sharpie smell, only to give the same fake name, Sara, each time. ‘Sara’ held no meaning to me, but ‘Sarani’, meaning protector, the name my parents took months to choose, meant nothing but discomfiture to me.

After freshmen year on Zoom, the first day of sophomore year stood to be even more special. Tempering my excitement, I prepped for a day of smiling patiently as teachers mispronounce my name during roll call.

By sixth-period PE, I was more than ready to greet my teacher with the same understanding smile. I waited for my name while sitting on the cold gym floor, craning my neck to see my friends in the class

I called out, “Here!” as a jumbled and disjointed form of my name was hesitantly mumbled. I sheepishly chose not to correct my teacher. Despite my name’s meaning, I neglected to protect my identity.

Walking out to the field, I avoided goose droppings and gopher holes and squirmed as the dampness of the grass seeped into my shoes. My teacher turned around, his classic New Balance dad sneakers squeaked on the wet grass, and began an attempt to remember our names.

“Ava, Chandler, and Sar..ani?” I laughed with my friends as they tried to correct his pronunciation of my name.

My teacher threw his hands up in exasperation, as he exclaimed, “Ugh, can I just call you Sara or something?” I felt my patient smile fall into the goose droppings littering the grass, my teacher’s squeaky New Balances stomping over it.

Sara had no meaning to me but it now felt like a prison sentence. Was I such a pushover about my name that I would be addressed by the most white-washed version of it?

Like a rabbit caught in a wolf’s den, I gathered my courage and declared, “No, it’s Sarani, not Sara.”

My peers may not dread roll call or a Starbucks visit as I do, but my name has become something I take pride in. By always correcting that teacher and waiting until that barista gets my name right, I use my uncommon name to remind myself that my identity deserves the protection my name signifies.

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Softness, Strength, and Sweets

I am not one to have a sweet tooth. I grew up with Chinese bok choy, fresh Thai basil, and pickled carrots and daikon as the staples of my Vietnamese family’s kitchen, our fridge always stocked with vegetables and meats to dethaw. We were a savory household – not a sweets one. On the rare occasion my mother brought home pastries – a gift from a friend or sale at the supermarket – she would tear a piece off, take a bite, and draw her face away, scrunching her nose and squinting at the offending baked good.

“It’s too sweet,” she would complain, and confiscate the pastries, suggesting we don’t eat it.

I adopted my mother’s palate, rarely eating sweets of any kind. “It’s not too sweet!” was always a compliment, rather than a criticism, and I never had to worry about cavities. So with my aversion to sweets, I was surprised by the allure that baking them had on me.

“Wait – was it a half cup or one cup of sugar?”

Bowls and measuring spoons sprawled across my friend’s kitchen table, while my hand poised above the electric mixer. My friend reached to her laptop, fingers disturbing the lightly floured keys, to check the recipe.

Despite the haphazard mess, baking days have become a tradition between me and my friends since middle school. Cupcakes, sugar cookies, cake pops – we’ve tried it all. Our afternoons and evenings filled with laughter at forgetting to read the recipe, agony at our indecisiveness of what to make next, and sated happiness as we snacked on the abundance of goods in the end.

I found joy in baking and the break it gave me. I always pushed myself to do well in school. With my parents’ high expectations, influenced by my high achieving older siblings, I internalized the belief that it was my duty to excel in school, that my self worth resided in my success.

I always asked myself: what do I need to do next? If I finished the class work early, I could get started on the homework so I have free time later. With free time later, I could start the assignment due next week so I have more time later. With more time later, I can start reviewing for the test. I prioritized what I believed would make life for future me easier without ever enjoying the time, burden after burden self-imposed.

Baking gave me a reprieve from the spiral of always needing to do more. The clear, simply laid-out steps of the recipes forced me to focus on the present. I couldn’t worry about making sure the skewer comes out without cake crumbs – I could only focus on making the batter first. Baking made me realize I didn’t need to continuously worry about the future, draining my mental health and wellbeing, and that I could simply enjoy the present.

But deeper than the peace recipes gave me, I found something else in baking, too. As we took turns kneading the dough for bread, or passed the piping bag to decorate the sugar cookies, I was surrounded by those I love. It was a place where I felt safe.

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A community.

A community where our trust with each other means we are able to be vulnerable and honest about our emotions.

Growing up a child of immigrant parents, I didn’t understand how to be vulnerable. Like how my parents didn’t have a palate for sweets and baked goods, they didn’t have a practice of opening up. Immigrating from Vietnam after the aftermath of war, my parents became practical, straightforward people with one goal in mind: create a better life. They viewed the world through their black and white lens: how beneficial would this be to their family’s well being?

Why eat sweets when vegetables are healthier? There’s no nutrition in cakes or chocolate. Why remember the war when life is better now? The past is the past. Why talk about your feelings when it will only make you sad?

Be happy.

Vulnerability had no place in our home. I grew up not understanding my emotions, being confused why I would cry or be angry at the smallest thing, not knowing it was the tip of the iceberg of many repressed emotions. My parents didn’t understand, either.

But around the kitchen table, with my friends, I was able to open up and be vulnerable. I felt seen, and knowing that I wasn’t alone gave me the ability to breathe.

Taking care of your mental health means practicing vulnerability and honesty. Though baking provided the first avenue for me to be vulnerable, since then, I’ve learned to be open with others and myself about my feelings in other ways.

I started journaling, a place for me to focus on myself in the present. I realized sports also helped me be present, venting my frustrations or energy in the moment through running or hitting the tennis ball. I became comfortable reaching out to friends for help, finding spaces where I could vent about how I was truly feeling.

To embrace mental health in the Asian American community, we need to embrace vulnerability and build lasting trust with one another. Acknowledging our parents’ pain, and our own pain, is the only way we can heal from past wounds – over a plate of warm cookies, or not.

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Welcome to America by Sabrina J.

Once in elementary school, some of the other students had convinced the teacher to put on the “Asian People Song”, riddled with racist stereotypes and caricatures, while they laughed, and I cowered in the corner. “We played the ‘White People Song’ as well. It’s not that deep.” I was told. But to me, it was. I felt ridiculed and ashamed for just being Asian, the only Asian in class, but nobody else seemed bothered.

This moment stuck with me, even now, as I spent nights lying awake to this memory. Since then, I built up a wall of self-criticism, anger and hatred for every aspect of my character, identity and abilities. But over time, I began to accept myself, and the fact I was Asian-American. Part of that journey was learning how to draw myself as distinctly Chinese, to embrace my features: the flared nose, wide face and “slanted” eyes.

The piece, Welcome to America, is about my struggle and pride in my identity after the influx of Asian-American hate. The bold white letters showcases the refusal to accept divisions and hatred, that it isn’t happening with phrases like, “EVERYTHING IS GOOD” and “WE ARE ALL UNITED”. My self-portrait looks straightforward, however, to dare others to feign ignorance. Underneath the white, hidden from plain view, is my anger about the injustice and my journey of my identity.

I will not cower in fear any longer. I am Asian and proud. Instead, I will take great strides and change the song.

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Soul(Seoul) Walker

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Lotus in Action

I am an Indian American, a child of two worlds, Roots deep in traditions, stories, and swirls, Culture and heritage, woven into my soul, A rich tapestry of life, an intricate and vibrant whole.

But mental health was something not talked about, Stigma and shame left us feeling left out, Silent suffering, internalized pain, Until the breaking point, it was hard to sustain.

How do we talk to family and friends, About the turmoil within, the battle that never ends, Like a mango tree, standing tall and strong, We can find the courage to speak, to own our song.

Mental health, a journey, we all must take, Like a rickshaw, navigating through streets that shake, But with support, love, and care, we can thrive, Our mental health, a garden, where our emotions come alive.

Like the monsoon rains that quench the earth, We can find relief, in sharing our worth, Our stories, like a beautiful Rangoli design, Reflecting our struggles, but also the divine.

The lotus flower, a symbol of strength and growth, Rising from the muddy waters, it's beauty both, A reminder that from pain, can come new life, That our struggles, can help us rise.

So, let's talk about mental health, break down the walls, Like a banyan tree, offering shade to all, We can create a culture of acceptance and care, For those who need it most, for those who dare.

Dare to own their struggles, and find a path, Like a butterfly, breaking free from its chrysalis bath, Embracing their mental health, with love and compassion, A beautiful transformation, like a lotus in action.

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This piece carries a lot of symbolism. It is up to the viewer to interpret the meaning of different aspects: from the position of the fish to the title. The story I gave this piece was my experience with mental health as an Asian American with traditional immigrant parents; however, you may create your own context.

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Healing Against Silence by Chi L.

I smiled when my grandfather passed away three years ago, the same year I first immigrated to the United States. Standing with my family between time-worn wooden benches, I only registered the surreality of the situation as I looked into his closed eyelids, dotted with freckles. Amidst the chaos of melodic funeral chants, ringing percussion, and people crying, I felt appalled—without guidance from my parents on how to process death, I could only smile as a weak attempt at remaining calm.

I had left a part of me back in Vietnam, by that open casket, torn between memories of my birth country and the luster of America. My body seemed to move on its own through cycles of mindless studying, quiet dinners, and irregular sleep. I was skeletal and sluggish. Yet, I failed to uncover the root of my uneasiness—until I forced myself to confront the past again.

The first time I asked my mother about going to therapy, she responded, “it’s only for crazy people.” The second time was when she found me crying on my bed after ending a call with the suicide hotline at 15. In Vietnamese culture, being sick was a burden to others one should feel guilty for imposing. Like a shameful disease that infested the mind but not the body, it felt trivial enough that it only required some willpower to dispel.

My parents raised me with an independent mindset and the fear of inconveniencing others. Guilt plagued me when I accepted snacks from friends during school recess; when I ate food at their houses even after an invitation. It was there when I finally asked my mother to see a therapist, which sounded like, “Could you waste your money on curing a problem that I could’ve just solved if I sucked it up and became an adult?” to me. Throwing away the life they had worked so hard to nurture meant dishonor, dependency, and ungratefulness.

Often, such ideas of tolerance and self-effacement have been passed down through generations. Just as my grandparents were stern and violent towards my father in his childhood punishments, these aftermaths bleed into how my siblings and I were raised. We were taught to internalize emotions to maintain a sense of normalcy in life. We weren’t taught how to process feelings and channel volatile feelings into healthy coping mechanisms to avoid hurting others and ask for support. There was a lack of education on mental health and even fewer talks on how to establish healthy coping mechanisms.

As time passed and Vietnamese society recovered from economic decline, I noticed that topics such as social justice and parenting began to emerge through the media. My parents picked up books on parenting and child psychology and worked inwardly to destigmatize mental health and reflect on their actions. They became more emotionally available, and attentive toward my needs and feelings. Despite growing closer as a family, many of the old pains remained throughout my adolescence.

I believe the first step toward addressing and improving the mental well-being of the Asian-American community should come from parental figures. They must break the cycle of unhealthy behaviors and accept that they are also guilty of imposing these ideas upon children. Parents who carry the burdens of generational trauma should

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search for ways to heal themselves emotionally before deciding to bring a child into the world. By recognizing these harmful traits, they can rectify them and prevent them from being passed down. Providing a safe space and encouraging talk on emotional conflicts is crucial to lightening the burdens of grief and misunderstanding.

Secondly, children should acknowledge that parents are also victims and find a mutual willingness to sympathize with their upbringing. Having a reliable support system and affordable, professional resources will also help an individual heal with time and find courage to seek help. Experimenting with healthy coping mechanisms like journaling, art, and consuming empowering media alleviates the pressure to internalize depression and anxiety.

For me, I found solace in reading and writing as a form of self-expression and in addressing and dissecting any anxieties with my friends and family, allowing them to lighten parts of my baggage. I shared them, whether with loved ones or with my school’s therapist. I watched movies or play piano whenever I felt stressed or upset.

Eventually, I submitted my writing to my school’s literary magazine. Surprisingly, classmates came to me afterward to share their experiences with depression and loss. As such, I grew closer to forming a supportive community within my medium, allowing me to explore the traumatic themes without directing them inward. I write in hopes that my stories resonate and connect me to others, allowing room for mutual healing and understanding to thrive. Ultimately, it wasn’t about the weight I carried, but how I carried it.

I returned to Vietnam this summer to visit the crematorium where my grandfather rested. A bittersweetness washed over me as I let go of my grandfather ’s weight and moved on, clearing the fog that prevented me from registering my grief. Despite the arrival of sadness this time around, I confronted it with hope. I became a translator—not one of languages but of emotions. Behind the hazy incense smoke, his picture smiled at me—and for the first time in four years, I found myself smiling back.

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They Will Know by Bella

7pm on a Friday evening

Words fly from my Mother’s tongue

Each syllable piercing with the force of an arrow

My words don’t seem to amount to hers Blunt sticks to her sharp arrows

And I find I can no longer hide under this polished mask It has begun to chip away

Instead, I blend into the background, wordlessly Beneath my skin and let my dark, long hair cover my eyes I will let myself fall, and be Silently concealed amongst everything in the universe

Eyes lay heavy and weary

A reminder of the feelings I have bottled in A plate of Philippine mangos gazes alluringly at me from my bedside table

Each mango delicately cut, blossoms

It is a flower of apology

I am not the girl that I used to see in the mirror

There is no sorrow behind my eyes Throw me against the white background

But don’t let the dark hue strip me of my power

I will not bottle it in any longer I will not chain myself to this wooden floor Forever bound to my own pain

Instead, I will write A bamboo cover pulls together frail, filled, pages

Spill my burdens onto the page

Find solace in the power of expression

I call you to use your voice

There's no more time to hide from emotion

Let them know who you are

And find blessing in your imperfection

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