
Annie Edwards
Bio
Stories (188)
Filter by community
The Truth About Relationships and Depression
My phone lit up with another reminder: dinner tonight, a plan I had said “yes” to days earlier. Back then, I thought I’d be able to handle it. But now the weight of depression had settled into my body like lead. Even the thought of showering, getting dressed, and stepping outside felt impossible.
By Annie Edwards 5 months ago in Psyche
Balcony View
The balcony was perfect. The city sprawled in every direction, softened by the warm tint of late evening. Buildings rose like glass and steel sculptures, catching fire in the golden hour glow. From up here, the world was hushed, the noise of traffic pressed flat into a gentle hum, almost pleasant. It was the kind of view that made people pause, the kind of backdrop that belonged in glossy magazines or realtor ads: Luxury living, skyline included.
By Annie Edwards 5 months ago in Fiction
To Whom It May Concern
To Whom It May Concern, (especially if you’re struggling too). Hi, My Name Is Annie, and I’m a Recovering Psycho. Because, you know… I take antipsychotics. So technically, that makes me a recovering psycho. (Yeah, I know, not everyone finds that funny. My mom didn’t laugh. But I did.)
By Annie Edwards 5 months ago in Psyche
It’s All About Perspective
Perspective is one of the most underused, underestimated tools in life. It won’t erase pain, but it can transform it. It won’t make your circumstances disappear, but it can shift the weight. Perspective is not about denying what is hard—it’s about discovering what is still possible. When you learn to adjust your internal lens, you stop reacting and start responding. You stop bracing for impact and start building from within. Because maybe it was never your life that needed changing—maybe it was the way you were taught to see it. Below are not just quotes I have written concerning perspective. They are my anchors, mirrors, and windows. Each one a reflection of how my view has determined my truth. 1. “Life really is a beautiful thing, but it isn’t always pretty.” – Annie Mae Edwards Beauty isn’t perfection. It’s found in rawness, in resilience, in the mess we survive. Perspective helps you see past the cracks—to the art being made beneath them. 2. “Perspective is one of the least utilized tools in life.” – Annie Mae Edwards The most powerful shifts aren’t external—they’re internal. Change your lens, and suddenly the impossible becomes survivable, the unbearable becomes educational, and the ordinary becomes profound. 3. “The grass isn’t more green on the other side; it is merely another shade.” – Annie Mae Edwards Comparison can blind you to your own blessings. What looks better from afar often fades up close. Your own life may already be rich with color—you just haven’t stood in the right light yet. 4. “When she learned to glow in her own darkness, she became the glimmer of hope she’d been searching for.” – Annie Mae Edwards We’re taught to fear the dark. But it’s in our shadows that we learn to self-illuminate. Hope isn’t always handed to you—sometimes, it’s something you grow inside yourself. 5. “Maybe your world has turned upside down. And maybe that isn’t a bad thing.” – Annie Mae Edwards Disruption feels like destruction—but what if it’s construction? Maybe life flipped you over so you’d stop walking in the wrong direction. 6. “Self-love is more important than any amount of likes.” – Annie Mae Edwards External applause fades quickly. But self-love? That sustains. That nourishes. That builds something no algorithm ever could: true worth. 7. “You are never out of resources. You are the best resource you could ever have.” – Annie Mae Edwards When the world tells you you’re lacking, remember: your creativity, your wisdom, your strength—they are renewable. You carry everything you need to begin again. 8. “Human interpretation is one of the most beautiful tragedies in life.” – Annie Mae Edwards We all see through our own filters, tinted by memory, emotion, and bias. It’s tragic. And beautiful. Because it reminds us how unique—and how misunderstood—we all are. Compassion lives in understanding that truth, and that we may never fully comprehend its scope. 9. “Perhaps the road is only rocky because it needs to be paved.” – Annie Mae Edwards Rough patches aren’t signs to quit—they’re invitations to create something smoother, sturdier, yours. What slows you down today might become your strength tomorrow. 10. “Perhaps the emptiness you are feeling is merely you making room for a fullness waiting to be uncovered.” – Annie Mae Edwards Hollow moments aren’t always signs of loss. Sometimes they’re the quiet before the bloom. Sometimes they’re the soul stretching to make space for what it’s finally ready to receive. 11. “Following the crowd is one of the easiest ways to get lost.” – Annie Mae Edwards When you shrink to fit in, you disappear. Your path was never meant to blend—it was meant to lead. Detours can be dangerous when they’re not truly yours. 12. “The only difference between a glass half empty and a glass half full is perspective. That should put into perspective just how important perspective actually is.” – Annie Mae Edwards A shift that small—a single thought—can change everything. Imagine what could happen if you started seeing your entire life with more grace, more patience, more belief in what could be. 13. “Nobody is perfect. That also includes you. Remember that when making judgment calls.” – Annie Mae Edwards Grace doesn’t just belong to others—it belongs to you. Be softer with your own process. Perfection is a myth. Growth is real. And it’s often disguised as messiness. The Takeaway: Perspective won’t hand you a new life—but it will hand you a new way to live the one you’ve got. And that can change everything. Reframing doesn’t mean lying to yourself. It means freeing yourself. It’s the quiet but radical act of asking, “What if there’s more to this than what I’ve been taught to see?” The road might be rough. The sky might be dim. But shift your gaze—just a little—and you might notice: There’s still beauty in the breakdown. There’s still purpose in the pain. And most of all… there’s still you—capable, worthy, and ready to see things differently. Because sometimes, a better life doesn’t begin with change. It begins with perspective.
By Annie Edwards 5 months ago in Longevity
Xanax Detox: More Than Just Irritability . Top Story - July 2025.
I was prescribed Xanax for severe Generalized Anxiety Disorder. It helped me function at first. But early on—and I mean right away—my doctor prescribed me 8 mg of extended release Xanax per day. That’s not a dosage I slowly worked up to. That was the starting point.
By Annie Edwards 5 months ago in Psyche


