I Just Want You to Feel Something is an exploration of inherited silence, quiet rebellion, and the radical act of feeling in a world that rewards numbness.
The collection follows a voice coming of age beneath layered expectations of gender, family, politics, and strength, interrogating truths absorbed long before they were understood. Power moves not only through public policy but through domestic spaces and everyday language, shaping autonomy in ways both subtle and profound.
Authority speaks with certainty while bodies bear the consequences. Generational patterns replicate themselves almost imperceptibly, forming identity before self-awareness can interrupt them. Yet within this text of restraint, resistance begins to surface.
Both reckoning and invitation, I Just Want You to Feel Something urges that feminism, and empathy can interrupt inherited cycles, showing that in an age of fragility and uncertainty, the most radical act is to feel.
Related Subjects
Poetry