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Sorrow's Paradox
I heard a song once.
Its lonely, melancholy melody drew me in
For we felt the same.
My sister asked,
“How can you enjoy such a song?”
But I didn’t care whether it was good music.
I wanted to melt into its misery.
I wanted its strains to pull from me
My dismal, gloomy thoughts,
Like venom sucked from fangs.
“We pull apart the dark,
Compete against the stars…”
The voice keened about our lives
And its sorrow comforted me.
Beauty and sorrow,
That’s what it was.
Making lumps well up
In my throat, in my soul.
And it was the paradox of my life,
That when despondency’s cold fingers started
To wrap ‘round my heart,
Leaching its life-warmth;
Then I turned to sadness, to find happiness.
To dwell in gloom for a time,
That I might live in light.
And somehow, resurfacing, I could.
I wrote this poem about the depression I occasionally fall into, usually from over-thinking life, and the ironyof the fact that sad music actually helps. Specifically, it is written about "In the Embers," by Sleeping At Last, a song whose lyrics deals with the concept of the struggle of our lives in an exquisitely poetical way.