Q1. Hello, can you please introduce yourself? Readers would love to know more about you.
A1. Hi, my name is Carissa Taylor! I graduated from Huntington University with a double major in Film Production and film Studies, but I refer to it as a professional storytelling degree. When I was in elementary school I wanted to be an author and would constantly be coming up with new story ideas. I even got picked to read one of my stories over the loudspeaker to the entire school when I was in 3rd grade. In 5th grade I was asked to read one of my poems at one of our school-wide performances. I began writing poems more consistently when I was 13 years old.
Q2. What were the key challenges you faced while writing your book “Chronic: A Healing Journey through Poetry”?
A2. I have autism and ADHD. I didnโt realize how difficult it was for me to communicate my emotions until I started my healing journey. Most autistic people have something called alexithymia, which basically means you have trouble recognizing, expressing, and describing your emotions. A lot of my poems in the Before section I can tell I was holding back from my feelings. The poems in the Healing and After sections are a lot more vulnerable and I think I did a better job of feeling my emotions while I was writing the poems.
Q3. What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?
A3. My favorite author is John Green. My favorite books by him are Turtles All the Way Down and Looking for Alaska. I admire how he doesnโt shy away from the more uncomfortable and difficult topics of the human experience.
Q4. Whatโs your favorite spot to visit in your own country? And what makes it so special to you?
A4. I live in the United States of America. I would say that I really enjoy visiting theme parks or places that have roller coasters. Iโm not too good at standing in lines anymore because I have chronic illnesses now, but I really do enjoy getting roller coasters when Iโm able to. Itโs the closest thing to thrill seeking on a safe level without having to do anything crazy. I have been skydiving, and thatโs about as crazy as Iโll get with high adrenaline activities. I usually go to theme parks with friends or family, and I enjoy spending time with them.
Q5. What inspired you to write the book ‘Chronic: A Healing Journey through Poetry’?
A5. One day, in early 2024, I read my poem โFailure Modeโ to my roommate and she encouraged me to publish a book of my poems. I already had a lot of material for it since I had been writing and posting poems since 2017, so I decided to self-publish a book of poetry and organize it into my healing journey. I got some advice about self-publishing, since I had never done it before, and I learned a lot. Iโm hoping the process will be a lot easier for my next books.
Q6. How long did it take you to write your book ‘Chronic: A Healing Journey through Poetry’?
A6. I started a trend called โPoetry Wednesdayโ on my FaceBook page in 2017. In 2019 I started having major health complications and then began my healing journey in 2020 where I went to weekly therapy sessions. My poems range from the year 2017 all the way to July 2024. Theyโre organized into Before, Healing, and After, with the majority of the Before poems coming from my โPoetry Wednesdayโ posts. So this book took about eight years before it was finished.
Q7. On what platforms can readers buy your books?
A7. My book is currently available on Amazon.com in paperback. Iโm hoping to come out with an ebook and a hardcover copy eventually.
Q8. Tell us about the process of coming up with the book cover and the title ‘Chronic: A Healing Journey through Poetry’?
A8. I drew a concept picture for the book cover with stick figures and shared it with one of my artist friends, who then drew the cover illustration. The cover picture is based on Ezekiel 37 โThe Valley of Dry Bonesโ in the Bible. In that story the Lord tells Ezekiel to prophesy to the dry bones and tell them that He will make breath enter them and they will come to life. One of the things I wrote in my concept picture was โskeletal to eternal, dead to alive.โ I feel like the cover art captured my journey from feeling dead to then feeling alive during my healing journey. The definition of Chronic means long-lasting and difficult to eradicate, and being chronically ill I definitely feel like the pain is long-lasting and difficult to eradicate. A Healing Journey through Poetry is basically describing how I healed over time throughout my poetry, and you can really tell that thereโs a difference in my poems between the Before, Healing, and After sections.
Q9. When writing a book how do you keep things fresh, for both your readers and also yourself?
A9. Thatโs a good question. I started keeping journals in 2016 and I have a ton of journals that I keep in a giant storage container. (I still have a ton of empty journals that I need to use and constantly buy more to sit in the pile.) Whenever I get a new idea, or think of a phrase, I always write it down. (Sometimes I wake up in the middle of sleeping and write an idea down in my notes app before I forget. That has been a lifesaver because I usually donโt remember the idea by the time I wake up.) I tend to watch popular shows, movies, and listen to new music and that helps me come up with ideas and get inspired with my writing.
Q10. What is the most valuable piece of advice youโve been given about writing?
A10. While I was taking screenwriting classes in college, I was constantly told to โwrite what you know.โ I think I was afraid of writing about my experiences because I hadnโt processed them. Once I finished going through my healing journey I found it much easier to talk about everything I had gone through in my life, and it was a lot. Iโm even working on writing a fantasy trilogy series, and the main plotline has to do with experiences I have personally gone through that werenโt necessarily the best. I think itโs important to write about your experiences, but not necessarily get lost in them. I think processing them through beforehand definitely helps with writing, especially if they were traumatic.
Buy Chronic on Amazon