
For as long as I can remember, I have dealt with depression.
This is true for almost everyone these days, so most of you reading this are probably familiar with the feeling.
There is a particular exhaustion that comes with depression. It is an exhaustion that sleep, sunlight, or any of the well-meaning list of things friends will suggest to you can’t cure. These suggestions might be to exercise more, drink more water, or read something uplifting.
Depression, and its exhaustion, distorts everything. It gives everything a heaviness that doesn’t really exist. Even the things that are supposed to help. Maybe even especially those things.
When I was a teenager, my dad told me it was my choice of reading material that was making me “morbid.” He said I should read something different, something lighter. (Which ended up being “Clan of the Cave Bear” to appease him.)
When you are a fan of horror (books or movies) and people see you struggling, they try to steer you away from that. They point you toward softer, more hopeful stories. Books about healing. Romantic comedies with a happily ever after. They want you to see that the light can win, and that the world can be a clean and uncomplicated place.
If you’ve never struggled with depression, the logic sounds simple enough: if you feel bad, consume something good to balance the scales.
Too bad it doesn’t really work like that.
Well, maybe it does for some people, but when I’m in a depressive spiral, feeding my brain-meat something bright doesn’t lift the dimness inside; it only highlights the contrast. Every cheerful character is a reminder that I am not them. Hopeful endings feel distant and artificial. Things don’t happen that way in real life. Every act of happiness on the page sharpens the edges of what I am lacking, turning something meant to be soothing into a razor’s edge that hurts more than helps.
Why can’t I feel this? Why don’t things resolve for me like that?
It’s not unusual for those books to deepen my depression instead of offering me comfort. They show me a beautiful but uninhabitable alien landscape. One where I will never belong. It becomes a kind of spiritual isolation.
Horror, on the other hand, opens the door and invites you to come sit down somewhere more reality-based.
Horror has an honesty that other genres often avoid. Horror doesn’t pretend the world is fair. It doesn’t insist that suffering is temporary, purposeful, and neatly resolved. It acknowledges fear, dread, grief, and the knowledge that something is terribly, deeply wrong, and is probably going to stay that way.
For me, the atmosphere of horror matches my internal landscape, and that feels like a breath of fresh air. There is tension, unease, and the sense that something is lurking just beneath the surface, and these things are reflections of reality, not distortions of it.
Horror gives shape to the feelings we suffer that are otherwise difficult to articulate.
Living with depression can feel like being haunted. There is a presence that follows you room to room to room. It sits with you, presses into your thoughts, whispers things you don’t want to hear. It changes the way the world looks by dulling colors, flattening sounds, and stretching time into something unmanageable.
If horror understands anything, it is a good haunting.
Horror knows what it’s like to be pursued by something invisible. It knows how it feels to question your own mind. It knows that sometimes the threat isn’t external, because it’s already inside the house. Most of all, horror knows what it’s like to tell someone that something is wrong, and have them brush it off as a triviality.
There is comfort in that.
Not that horror “fixes” anything. It doesn’t. The monsters don’t cure me, and the stories don’t ease the heaviness or the exhaustion. But it validates it. Horror lets me know that the feeling is real enough to be named, shaped, and confronted.
Horror lets sadness, fear, and overwhelm exist without apology.
In many “happy” narratives, those negative emotions are obstacles to overcome as quickly as possible. They are stepping stones to be walked over on the way to a brighter end. But in horror, those emotions ARE the story. They are explored and lingered over, not rushed past as if they were nothing.
For someone with depression, the ability to linger with those negative emotions instead of feeling pressured to hide them under the rug matters.
It’s the difference between being told to “move on” and being told, “Everything you’re feeling is valid.”
Depression often thrives on vague, formless dread. There is a constant sense that something is wrong, but you can not put a name to it, can’t stop it.
When reading (or watching) horror, you can turn those same feelings into something concrete. There is a monster, or a curse, or a stalker in the dark. And when something has a shape, it can be faced.
In horror, as in reality, sometimes the characters don’t win. The ending can be bleak, but there is still a kind of catharsis in watching it happen at all. The narrative arc becomes something you can follow, rather than something that you can’t figure out.
Happy books (and movies) often skip confrontation, especially confrontation with negative outcomes. They leap from struggle to resolution in one graceful stride, smoothing over the mess in between. And when you are stuck forever in that messy middle, that leap feels like a cheat.
Horror doesn’t skip the mess; it revels in it. It laughs in your face and asks, “What if this doesn’t get better? What if it actually gets worse?” Paradoxically, that kind of bleak taunting can feel more comforting than forced optimism.
Because when you’re depressed, hope usually isn’t believable.
Not that horror is everyone’s refuge. Some people out there might actually have their pain and trauma soothed by the “happily ever after”. But if you’re like me and the cheerful stories end up making you feel worse for every good thing that happens to the characters, maybe you should try horror.
Because horror offers something that is comforting without demanding that we feel better before we’re ready. It allows us to sit with the darkness without pretending it will blow away like a bad dream when the sun comes up. Because there is relief in opening a book and finding that the world inside is just as haunted as you feel.
It makes you feel less alone in the dark.






