This is what it felt like when I started going to therapy; a light at the end of the tunnel.
This work explores the experience of moving forward while unseen forces—internal or external—linger behind. It reflects themes of transition, fear of the unknown, and the quiet courage required to continue despite uncertainty.
Elongated, humanoid forms emerge from tangled branches and dripping roots, their bodies partially concealed by darkness. They lean inward, curious but restrained, as a solitary human figure walks toward a glowing opening deeper within the woods. The light functions as both invitation and threshold—suggesting escape, truth, or transformation—while the surrounding figures remain suspended between observation and action.
The figures are intentionally ambiguous: not fully monstrous, not fully human. Their gestures echo hesitation rather than threat, creating a sense of psychological tension rather than overt danger. The forest canopy presses downward, enclosing the scene and reinforcing a feeling of being watched, studied, or silently judged.
This is what it felt like when I started going to therapy; a light at the end of the tunnel.
This work explores the experience of moving forward while unseen forces—internal or external—linger behind. It reflects themes of transition, fear of the unknown, and the quiet courage required to continue despite uncertainty.
Elongated, humanoid forms emerge from tangled branches and dripping roots, their bodies partially concealed by darkness. They lean inward, curious but restrained, as a solitary human figure walks toward a glowing opening deeper within the woods. The light functions as both invitation and threshold—suggesting escape, truth, or transformation—while the surrounding figures remain suspended between observation and action.
The figures are intentionally ambiguous: not fully monstrous, not fully human. Their gestures echo hesitation rather than threat, creating a sense of psychological tension rather than overt danger. The forest canopy presses downward, enclosing the scene and reinforcing a feeling of being watched, studied, or silently judged.