Coffee House Writers

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login

logo

Coffee House Writers

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login
  • The Sounds of the Subway

  • Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 14

  • Our Firm Foundation

  • The Devil and I

  • An ILL One’s Wish

  • LovING IT!

  • The Codfish Carbuncle Case: Chapter 1

  • Teen Witch’s Survival Guide: Chapter 9

  • Sanctuary

  • The Staying Offline Trend

  • Love Is…

  • Lover of the Queen: Fate

  • Quieter Moments

  • For the Feline I Miss

  • Beyond My Outpost

  • A Moonglow Dance

  • Proverbs for Paranoids 2026

  • Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 13

  • Zombie Killer Squad: Chapter Fourteen

  • A Dozen Red Roses

NonfictionCreative Nonfiction
Home›Nonfiction›The Siren

The Siren

By Jaclyn Weber-Hill
July 15, 2024
547
0
Share:
Floating red fluorescent lights with a black background.
Leandro Mazzuquini / Unsplash
0
(0)

Darkness filled the room with silence, the only sound available to me. My juvenile body felt a heavy weight. The rush of worry was loud and blaring like a fire engine. What could this feeling be? How did it appear out of nowhere? I didn’t have the answers to my questions or the words for what I felt. I convinced myself I would die by daybreak. The fire engine siren of my anxiety was set off for the first time at 8 years old. The noise was blaring, but quelled with the guidance and reprimand of my parents. I wasn’t told what worry meant, only that I shouldn’t lie awake and make trouble in the middle of the night. My young parents didn’t know the names of their emotions, let alone how to quell mine. The situation seemed like a one-off, but it started a pattern I needed to learn to navigate.

As I aged, I took the role of the careful child—the one who followed the rules and hated interacting with kids my age. I fit the bill of the “old soul” moniker with ease. The dreaded siren would ring from time to time, but it didn’t stay. It would shriek if I tried to do normal kid things. But, the protection of my family allowed for the unwanted fear’s elimination. How could it stay around when the wisdom of the adults in my life was present? It didn’t stand a chance. Despite the discomfort, I remained loyal to the knowledge of the adults around me. My logic was they had more years on earth, they had to know something more than I did.

My blind faith faded as I entered my late teens and early 20s. I questioned everything and everyone. My quiet rebellion wouldn’t allow the trust I had as a child to work its magic. My mind wouldn’t allow space for anyone’s insight. I was staging my covert insurrection, and the danger signal lingered. It would blare if I didn’t do well in school, fought with a friend, or upset any adults. My people-pleasing tendencies bred themselves during my teenage years. I would do anything to avoid conflict because it made the commotion louder between my ears.

I turned 31 years old in 2020 during a global pandemic. That year was my biggest mental health challenge to date. My alarms blared in my mind. My anxiety was at an all-time high because of the state of the world, but also unresolved issues. I used my quota for “my snooze button” and confronted the overwhelming pandemonium. I started therapy again and took it seriously this time. I had to shut that noise off, or at least bring it to a dull roar. Therapy provided the language I needed to describe the feelings that I had been having for so long. The work was both exhausting and eye-opening. I learned how to name my feelings to take away the fear that came with them. I built a toolbox of coping skills. Some skills were somatic where I would simmer my panic by submersing my hands and face in cold water. The bulk of my skills came from Cognitive Behavior Therapy or CBT. In simplest terms, CBT helped me redirect unhelpful thoughts to improve my mood.

Time and determination healed me. After a long time, the chaos faded of my own accord and not from the external resources I clung to. It went from a bellowing boom to a quiet static in the background. The room to think and put my coping skills to the test has been invaluable. The victory was the realization that I could trust myself. I learned I could care for myself and tend to my needs without outside intervention. Anxiety was able to live in tandem with logic. I didn’t have to get rid of it because I was defective or wrong. I concluded I was a being with a full range of emotions. The siren screams faded into the background. Self-acceptance replaced fear and allowed room for the beauty of the human experience.

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

As you enjoyed this post...

Follow us on social media!

Oh no!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

TagsAnxietyMental HealthWellnesshealingPersonal Growthcreative writingnarrative nonfiction
Previous Article

Room 101

Next Article

Lessons in Censorship

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0

Jaclyn Weber-Hill

Jaclyn Weber-Hill, born and raised in Queens, NY, has been writing since first grade. Jaclyn considers her writing her greatest form of self-expression. She writes with the hope that in sharing her lived experience, she can help someone feel less alone. Since 2023, Jaclyn has been writing her blog on Medium.com. In May 2024, she was "boosted" on the site where her story reached over 500 people and counting. Jaclyn is happily married to her wife Frances, together they share a 6-year-old Pembroke Welsh Corgi named Penelope.

Related articles More from author

  • Awaiting the rapture
    Self-Help & RelationshipsPoetryNonfictionCurrent Affairs & PoliticsCultureEnvironmentMediaCreativityParenting & Family

    Maleficence Scripted

    August 10, 2020
    By Sean Stevens
  • Forest Fire
    FictionFantasy

    The Red Maiden, Part Eighteen

    February 21, 2022
    By Scarlett Faye
  • Dining area
    FictionFantasy

    The Red Maiden, Part Four

    September 21, 2020
    By Scarlett Faye
  • Health & WellnessCreativityFictionEntertainment

    Facing The Throne: Part 1

    November 4, 2019
    By Scarlet Noble
  • CultureCreativitySelf-Help & RelationshipsFictionEntertainmentEnvironment

    Shadow Field Chronicles, Part 2: Prophecy

    February 10, 2020
    By Scarlet Noble
  • There is a protest going on with people crowded together, though the image is focused on one one specific sign being held up. The sign reads "Fight today for a better tomorrow"
    NonfictionCreative NonfictionCurrent Affairs & Politics

    Protest

    November 24, 2025
    By Rowan Moskowitz

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You may be interested

  • white sandy beach with clear blue water and footprints
    FictionMysterySuspense & Thrillers

    The Invitation: Part 1

  • Hearts
    CreativityParenting & FamilySelf-Help & RelationshipsPoetryHome & GardenEntertainment

    What No One Knows, A Poem About Love

  • Seinfeld Cast
    MediaCreativityParenting & FamilyMemoir & AutobiographiesHome & Garden

    15 Surprising Things You Didn’t Know About Seinfeld

Timeline

  • February 23, 2026

    The Sounds of the Subway

  • February 23, 2026

    Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 14

  • February 23, 2026

    Our Firm Foundation

  • February 23, 2026

    The Devil and I

  • February 23, 2026

    An ILL One’s Wish

Latest Comments

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    February 19, 2026
    Thank you very much for reading my poem here on CHW magazine. It was a fortuitous ...

    Beyond My Outpost

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    February 19, 2026
    Thank you for reading my poem here at CHW; I appreciate your thoughtful comments, EugiI

    Beyond My Outpost

  • Cheryl Batavia
    on
    February 18, 2026
    Ivor, the photo is perfectly paired with this poem, both reflecting the uncertainties of this era.

    Beyond My Outpost

  • Eugi
    on
    February 18, 2026
    Beautiful said, and excellent rhyming, Ivor. Where do we land where there is peace and light?

    Beyond My Outpost

  • Susi
    on
    November 3, 2025
    Beautiful, Ivor!

    Paddling In Time

About us

  • coffeehousewriters3@gmail.com

Donate to Coffee House Writers

Coindrop.to me

Follow us

© Copyright 2018-2025 Coffee House Writers. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s administrator and owner is strictly prohibited. Privacy Policy · Disclaimer