sad_frog
Member
- May 21, 2019
- 97
I didn't have many toys as a child so I spent much of my time drawing. (or, idk, pretending the pencils were snakes that couldn't slither)
As I got a little older I started making comics with me as the superhero, as many do. Sharing these comics with my friend at school brought me so much joy and I eventually ended up with a reputation for being a good artist. Being recognized for something feels...really good.
Eventually I had created a whole new cast of characters and a new world.
These characters became closer to me than people IRL as my depression awoke in 12y/o me. Drawing always took my thoughts away from the depression and self deprecation.
I think I used drawing as a coping method long before I knew I was. (my drawings helped prove to the court that my father was a possible predator and a danger to myself long before I even had the capability to explain what had happened to me. My brain has blocked it all except for the drawings)
When our family got a VHS player and I watched my first disney movie around 6yo and I fell in love. "These characters are just drawings but they also aren't. They are nearly alive!" I am now a self taught freelance animator, probably because I wanted nothing more than to create even more life-like characters for me to immerse myself in.
Anyways,
It wasn't until I was in my late teens until I discovered that I AM all these characters I made up, that the world is full of situations Ive been through. It's all just... me...At first I felt lonely but then I came to embrace it. I was able to look back at my work and see what was bothering me at the time of drawing the piece, things that I didn't realize while making it...Which I kinda feel like a lot of people might not understand.
As the world has become more, uh, on fire and dying I've retreated further into my head for comfort. Is what I'm doing healthy? I am an artist/animator after all, it is my job to be creative. Do other people share this coping method?
As I got a little older I started making comics with me as the superhero, as many do. Sharing these comics with my friend at school brought me so much joy and I eventually ended up with a reputation for being a good artist. Being recognized for something feels...really good.
Eventually I had created a whole new cast of characters and a new world.
These characters became closer to me than people IRL as my depression awoke in 12y/o me. Drawing always took my thoughts away from the depression and self deprecation.
I think I used drawing as a coping method long before I knew I was. (my drawings helped prove to the court that my father was a possible predator and a danger to myself long before I even had the capability to explain what had happened to me. My brain has blocked it all except for the drawings)
When our family got a VHS player and I watched my first disney movie around 6yo and I fell in love. "These characters are just drawings but they also aren't. They are nearly alive!" I am now a self taught freelance animator, probably because I wanted nothing more than to create even more life-like characters for me to immerse myself in.
Anyways,
It wasn't until I was in my late teens until I discovered that I AM all these characters I made up, that the world is full of situations Ive been through. It's all just... me...At first I felt lonely but then I came to embrace it. I was able to look back at my work and see what was bothering me at the time of drawing the piece, things that I didn't realize while making it...Which I kinda feel like a lot of people might not understand.
As the world has become more, uh, on fire and dying I've retreated further into my head for comfort. Is what I'm doing healthy? I am an artist/animator after all, it is my job to be creative. Do other people share this coping method?