This is me, about 30 seconds after ferociously ripping open the parcel containing the very first finished copy of Lighter Than My Shadow.
It smells really good.
This is me, about 30 seconds after ferociously ripping open the parcel containing the very first finished copy of Lighter Than My Shadow.
It smells really good.
Despite my experience of mental illness colouring the majority of my life, I can be remarkably inarticulate when I try to talk about it. I’ve always felt frustrated at not having the words to explain what I went through, or to express the complexities of the recovery process. And I’m not speaking grandly about trying to educate the public here: I struggle even talking to my friends. This is such a huge part of who I am, I’ve always felt that I’m not fully myself around people who don’t know about my ‘stuff’.
When I first tried to explain anorexia to my family, I painted a picture (quite how it took me a further 6 years to realise I should make a graphic novel, I don’t know). My family and I used the painting to communicate, because usually I would clam up and find myself unable to speak at all in a hospital or doctor’s surgery. Sadly the original painting has been lost – perhaps ceremonially burned, I don’t remember. I would have loved to include it in the book. The moment, however, of finding pictures more adequate to express how I was feeling, remains a significant part of the story.
Sneak peek from page 161.
From that first painting it took me 12 years and I don’t want to talk about how much drawing, but now there will be a less ham-fisted telling of the story that I am (mostly) satisfied with.
It feels like forever since I began working on this website. Initially I hoped to launch it and be posting regular updates as I was drawing Lighter Than My Shadow. Clearly that didn’t happen, and perhaps why will become apparent in the posts over the coming weeks and months.
Now the book is finished and there are still five months to wait until publication. Perhaps now is just the right time to talk about and share what it was like to create this, my most personal work.
What better way to start than by offering a preview of the book itself?