Mission

What it’s Like Project is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to removing mental health stigma through the arts, education and community engagement.

Values & Principles

Awareness, activism, empowerment, healing, unification and creativity. People find value through self-expression and expressive arts. The invisible and unspoken can be communicated through various forms of self-expression. As a result, a linkage can be created between the observer and the artist. Our unification and understanding help connect individuals who live with mental illness to peers and the overall community.

Our Story

In early 2016, Nikki Hune attempted suicide. After the attempt, she sought mental health treatment. With little relief from intrusive thoughts of suicide, she made the choice to fully engage with these thoughts rather than avoid them. As an artist and musician, she also began seeking abstract freedom through her own artistic expression. After experiencing a novel form of relief from suicidal thoughts, she began encouraging artistic expression for those with suffering with their mental health in the local Houston, TX community.

Nikki sought to create an avenue by engaging society in the experience of “what it’s like” to experience suicidal ideation; to have survived a suicide attempt; and, to have lost a loved one to suicide. She teamed up with Cailey Baker and Andrew Robinson who had similar experiences to begin the groundwork. In addition to Cailey and Andrew, she recruited Jeff Thompson, Misty Cooper, Jackie Hune, and Edward Odom to comprise the founding team of the What it’s Like Project. After the overwhelming success of the first two events, EXPOSIS and VOXIS, Katy Manning, Justin Anderson and Jose Cortes, Jennifer Van Antwerp, and Dan Workman joined the team to expand the possibilities for What it’s Like Project.