Sisyphus and ME
Let me tell you a story, about Sisyphus the Greek
Once cursed to Hades, where the black winged demons shriek
Where the hellfire’s climb higher and the sanity wanes
Where love vacates you heart and blood vacates your veins
A mountain of sheet rock and Sulphur slumps all on its own
Housing only one feeble King and his bothersome stone
His curse is quite simple, but not lacking innovation
A maddening task defines his damnation
Push the grand hunk of granite up this sad little hill
And consider your soul blessed again with free will
No matter how hard Sisyphus
Clawed,
Shoved,
Scratched,
Pushed,
Tasted the hairbreadth of difference between him and success
He failed.
As per usual, I’m going to make this about me, Megan Marie.
Who, as you can see,
Is quite astute at A. talking,
B. Yelling,
C. Bellyaching,
D. All of the above
I carry my on rock, plot twist.
It’s small, awful, about the size of my fist
It clumps in my throat at every social function
It twists my tongue in at every turn and conjunction
No matter how much that barrier becomes sickening, fat, and vile
No matter how hard I push it back into a stomach drenched in bile
It won’t disappear, it never breaches the hill
And in turn, off my tongue jumbled words still spill
It’s catching up for years in hibernation
Inside my own private social damnation
Called Middle School.
I can tell you Greek myths as much to your heart’s content
But there’s no possible way I can describe in this lament
That great hunk of dread at the words “Pair up with a friend”
Or knowing you won’t be seeing anyone after a school years end
Or a social event to which everyone is excited,
You’ll hear I meekly add I wasn’t invited.
Now I’ve gotten better, don’t let this poem get you down
Each day I put on my smile like a good little clown
I joke and I tease and I love all my friends
And even those I don’t love I’d take a bullet for in the end
Because everyone deserves to have someone that cares
Under layers of positive hides the loneliness and despair
I can see behind your mask, as a fellow survivor,
How you’re barely hanging on, barely alive or
How you have old social scars, just like me
The healed, warm, and loved Megan Marie.