Im Ok

2015Exploitable comic / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: I'm Not Okay · I'm OK comic

I'm Ok is a 2015 two-panel exploitable comic by DeviantArt artist DestinyBlue featuring a woman's "I'm OK" wall message that reveals "I'm Not Okay" through a perspective shift.

"I'm OK" is a two-panel exploitable comic where a woman writes "I'm OK" on a wall, but a 90-degree perspective shift in the second panel reveals the full message reads "I'm Not Okay." Originally created as a sincere artwork about depression by DeviantArt artist DestinyBlue in May 2015, the comic was repurposed into a shitposting template starting in 2017, with users swapping the hidden text for absurd punchlines.

Overview

The "I'm OK" comic uses a simple visual trick. In the first panel, a woman stands at a wall where the words "I'm OK" are clearly visible. In the second panel, the camera rotates 90 degrees, revealing that the full text actually reads "I'm Not Okay." The original piece was meant to show how people with depression hide their real feelings behind a surface-level reassurance1.

As a meme template, the format works by replacing the hidden second-panel text with something unexpected or ridiculous. The joke structure flips the comic's emotional weight into comedy: the "secret message" is no longer about depression but about whatever absurd complaint the editor plugs in. The format shares DNA with the "I'm Fine" meme, another template about masking inner turmoil2.

On May 21, 2015, DeviantArt user DestinyBlue published the original comic alongside a long, deeply personal essay about living with depression and anxiety1. In the description, DestinyBlue wrote about how depression "erodes the you-ness of you" and described years of struggling with mental illness before seeking help1. The artwork was part of a broader series of emotionally raw illustrations that DestinyBlue had built a following around on DeviantArt.

The comic's visual concept, using a perspective shift to reveal a hidden truth, struck a chord with viewers dealing with similar experiences. For about two years, the image circulated primarily in its original context as a mental health awareness piece2.

Origin & Background

Platform
DeviantArt (original art), Instagram / Reddit (meme format)
Key People
DestinyBlue, luigilover.tm
Date
2015 (original art), 2017 (meme format)
Year
2015

On May 21, 2015, DeviantArt user DestinyBlue published the original comic alongside a long, deeply personal essay about living with depression and anxiety. In the description, DestinyBlue wrote about how depression "erodes the you-ness of you" and described years of struggling with mental illness before seeking help. The artwork was part of a broader series of emotionally raw illustrations that DestinyBlue had built a following around on DeviantArt.

The comic's visual concept, using a perspective shift to reveal a hidden truth, struck a chord with viewers dealing with similar experiences. For about two years, the image circulated primarily in its original context as a mental health awareness piece.

How It Spread

The comic's second life as a meme template began roughly two years after its original posting. On August 29, 2017, Instagram user luigilover.tm posted one of the earliest known exploitable edits, changing the hidden message to read "I'm last in Mario Kart." The post picked up over 4,300 likes.

Reddit caught on quickly. On November 23, 2017, user JuicedJunkie posted a version to r/me_irl where the revealed text read "I'm Oklahoma," a simple geographic pun that earned over 5,700 points.

The edits kept rolling through 2018 and 2019. On May 19, 2018, r/dankmemes user McMab posted a variation reading "I'm OKn't," playing on the "-n't" suffix trend popular that year, and scored over 6,900 points. Later that year, on November 8, 2018, Redditor yonosoyvictor contributed a version reading "I'm Already Tracer," referencing the viral Overwatch character debate, which pulled in over 5,900 points.

The format's appeal was its simplicity. Anyone could edit the second panel's text to land a punchline, and the dramatic perspective shift gave even weak jokes an extra kick. The original comic's serious emotional weight made the absurd replacements funnier by contrast.

How to Use This Meme

The "I'm OK" template typically follows a two-step process:

1

The first panel stays mostly unchanged, showing the figure next to text that reads "I'm OK."

2

The second panel, where the perspective shifts, is edited so the full revealed message says something unexpected, funny, or absurd instead of "I'm Not Okay."

Cultural Impact

The original comic's spread as a mental health awareness piece was significant on its own. DestinyBlue's accompanying essay about depression, self-harm, and the slow process of seeking help reached a wide audience on DeviantArt and was shared across social media as a resource for people struggling with similar issues. The artist wrote that they hoped sharing their story would "make it easier for the next person to speak about it".

The meme version, while obviously lighter in tone, kept the original comic in circulation years after its initial posting. This created an unusual dynamic where the same image simultaneously existed as a sincere mental health statement and a shitposting template, depending on who was sharing it and in what context.

Fun Facts

DestinyBlue's original DeviantArt description mentions that 1 in 4 people experience mental health issues, framing the comic as part of a broader conversation about invisible illness.

The artist described anxiety as "that half second spike" when you almost fall backward in a chair, except lasting for years.

The "I'm Fine" meme uses a nearly identical concept (hidden distress behind a calm exterior), making the two formats frequent companions in meme compilations.

Urban Dictionary's top entries for "I'm OK" include the deadpan definition: "It's when someone not ok".

Derivatives & Variations

"I'm Oklahoma"

— A geographic pun edit posted to r/me_irl in November 2017, one of the earliest and most popular Reddit variants[2].

"I'm last in Mario Kart"

— The earliest known exploitable, posted by Instagram user luigilover.tm in August 2017[2].

"I'm OKn't"

— A May 2018 edit riding the "-n't" suffix trend, posted to r/dankmemes[2].

"I'm Already Tracer"

— A November 2018 edit referencing the viral Overwatch meme, posted to Reddit[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Im Ok

2015Exploitable comic / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: I'm Not Okay · I'm OK comic

I'm Ok is a 2015 two-panel exploitable comic by DeviantArt artist DestinyBlue featuring a woman's "I'm OK" wall message that reveals "I'm Not Okay" through a perspective shift.

"I'm OK" is a two-panel exploitable comic where a woman writes "I'm OK" on a wall, but a 90-degree perspective shift in the second panel reveals the full message reads "I'm Not Okay." Originally created as a sincere artwork about depression by DeviantArt artist DestinyBlue in May 2015, the comic was repurposed into a shitposting template starting in 2017, with users swapping the hidden text for absurd punchlines.

Overview

The "I'm OK" comic uses a simple visual trick. In the first panel, a woman stands at a wall where the words "I'm OK" are clearly visible. In the second panel, the camera rotates 90 degrees, revealing that the full text actually reads "I'm Not Okay." The original piece was meant to show how people with depression hide their real feelings behind a surface-level reassurance.

As a meme template, the format works by replacing the hidden second-panel text with something unexpected or ridiculous. The joke structure flips the comic's emotional weight into comedy: the "secret message" is no longer about depression but about whatever absurd complaint the editor plugs in. The format shares DNA with the "I'm Fine" meme, another template about masking inner turmoil.

On May 21, 2015, DeviantArt user DestinyBlue published the original comic alongside a long, deeply personal essay about living with depression and anxiety. In the description, DestinyBlue wrote about how depression "erodes the you-ness of you" and described years of struggling with mental illness before seeking help. The artwork was part of a broader series of emotionally raw illustrations that DestinyBlue had built a following around on DeviantArt.

The comic's visual concept, using a perspective shift to reveal a hidden truth, struck a chord with viewers dealing with similar experiences. For about two years, the image circulated primarily in its original context as a mental health awareness piece.

Origin & Background

Platform
DeviantArt (original art), Instagram / Reddit (meme format)
Key People
DestinyBlue, luigilover.tm
Date
2015 (original art), 2017 (meme format)
Year
2015

On May 21, 2015, DeviantArt user DestinyBlue published the original comic alongside a long, deeply personal essay about living with depression and anxiety. In the description, DestinyBlue wrote about how depression "erodes the you-ness of you" and described years of struggling with mental illness before seeking help. The artwork was part of a broader series of emotionally raw illustrations that DestinyBlue had built a following around on DeviantArt.

The comic's visual concept, using a perspective shift to reveal a hidden truth, struck a chord with viewers dealing with similar experiences. For about two years, the image circulated primarily in its original context as a mental health awareness piece.

How It Spread

The comic's second life as a meme template began roughly two years after its original posting. On August 29, 2017, Instagram user luigilover.tm posted one of the earliest known exploitable edits, changing the hidden message to read "I'm last in Mario Kart." The post picked up over 4,300 likes.

Reddit caught on quickly. On November 23, 2017, user JuicedJunkie posted a version to r/me_irl where the revealed text read "I'm Oklahoma," a simple geographic pun that earned over 5,700 points.

The edits kept rolling through 2018 and 2019. On May 19, 2018, r/dankmemes user McMab posted a variation reading "I'm OKn't," playing on the "-n't" suffix trend popular that year, and scored over 6,900 points. Later that year, on November 8, 2018, Redditor yonosoyvictor contributed a version reading "I'm Already Tracer," referencing the viral Overwatch character debate, which pulled in over 5,900 points.

The format's appeal was its simplicity. Anyone could edit the second panel's text to land a punchline, and the dramatic perspective shift gave even weak jokes an extra kick. The original comic's serious emotional weight made the absurd replacements funnier by contrast.

How to Use This Meme

The "I'm OK" template typically follows a two-step process:

1

The first panel stays mostly unchanged, showing the figure next to text that reads "I'm OK."

2

The second panel, where the perspective shifts, is edited so the full revealed message says something unexpected, funny, or absurd instead of "I'm Not Okay."

Cultural Impact

The original comic's spread as a mental health awareness piece was significant on its own. DestinyBlue's accompanying essay about depression, self-harm, and the slow process of seeking help reached a wide audience on DeviantArt and was shared across social media as a resource for people struggling with similar issues. The artist wrote that they hoped sharing their story would "make it easier for the next person to speak about it".

The meme version, while obviously lighter in tone, kept the original comic in circulation years after its initial posting. This created an unusual dynamic where the same image simultaneously existed as a sincere mental health statement and a shitposting template, depending on who was sharing it and in what context.

Fun Facts

DestinyBlue's original DeviantArt description mentions that 1 in 4 people experience mental health issues, framing the comic as part of a broader conversation about invisible illness.

The artist described anxiety as "that half second spike" when you almost fall backward in a chair, except lasting for years.

The "I'm Fine" meme uses a nearly identical concept (hidden distress behind a calm exterior), making the two formats frequent companions in meme compilations.

Urban Dictionary's top entries for "I'm OK" include the deadpan definition: "It's when someone not ok".

Derivatives & Variations

"I'm Oklahoma"

— A geographic pun edit posted to r/me_irl in November 2017, one of the earliest and most popular Reddit variants[2].

"I'm last in Mario Kart"

— The earliest known exploitable, posted by Instagram user luigilover.tm in August 2017[2].

"I'm OKn't"

— A May 2018 edit riding the "-n't" suffix trend, posted to r/dankmemes[2].

"I'm Already Tracer"

— A November 2018 edit referencing the viral Overwatch meme, posted to Reddit[2].

Frequently Asked Questions