30 Funny Gemma Correll Comics Looking at Mental Health & Life
If anxiety had a mascot, it’d probably be a cartoon pug drawn by Gemma Correll. Welcome to the world of Gemma Correll comics—a magical place where mental health gets the punchline treatment it desperately deserves. This batch features 30 of her funniest, most honest funny online web comics about living with anxiety, overthinking, and trying to function in a world that feels allergic to introverts. Basically, if your brain has ever hit “panic” over a typo in an email, you’ll feel right at home here. Expect jokes about awkward moments, weird worries, and how coffee is a legitimate coping strategy.
Gemma Correll comics are famous for turning mental health memes, anxiety comics, and relatable comics into pure comfort food for your scrolling thumb. These cartoons nail the truth about therapy, endless spirals, and what it’s like to wake up stressed before your alarm even goes off. Each panel somehow packs in more realness than most actual therapy sessions—plus way more dogs. If you love web comics that poke fun at depression and daily life, these are about to become your new personality. Anxiety memes and relatable webcomic humor have never looked this cute (or this real).






























If you’ve ever binge-read Gemma Correll comics, you know the routine—laugh, nod, then send three strips to your group chat “for research.” Maybe you recognize yourself in her panels about “productivity” (aka, staring at a wall) or the ones about accidentally making everything awkward. If your love language is self-deprecating doodles and you think overthinking deserves a medal, this gallery of funny online web comics will feel like a group therapy session you actually want to attend. You’re not alone—just slightly more illustrated.
And if you need even more self-aware, comic relief, check out our anxiety memes gallery—perfect for anyone whose inner monologue is a bit too honest. Or scroll through relatable mental health memes for another hit of “wow, it’s like they’re in my head.” After this, you’ll never look at mental health—or a pug in a sweater—the same way again.