Melancholy

There is a kind of melancholy
that inhabits a woman of a certain age.
Like a cloak of kelp and arame draped across her shoulders –
Clinging and dripping,
Enfolding her in saline dampness.
Salty, cold, and wet from a lifetime of tears –
Some shed. Some withheld.
Sorrow-ridden tears of loss.
Bitter tears of betrayal.
Volcanic tears of rage.
All comingled with fleeting tears of joy.

A woman’s heart is tender –
despite the strength she must show to the world.

Melancholy creeps in like mist through a crack in the door
filling every space with a weightless veil
carrying all the pain of the world.
She barely sees its coming
until realizing it’s here.
Impenetrable.
Eternal.
It’s made a home in her.

Initially unwelcome –
something that must be expunged.
But the more it’s met with resistance
the louder its cries become.
Until the moment she accepts melancholy’s heavy wrap,
there she discovers not pain but comfort.

Melancholy is neither curse, nor depression to be shunned.
Instead, melancholy is the acknowledgment of all a woman has held on her own –
the cloak of comfort she could not give to herself and what she didn’t receive from the world.


Discover more from Lauri Ann Lumby

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

2 thoughts on “Melancholy

  1. Ah, one of the first things that pops into my mind is the poetry of Emily Dickinson.  There seems to be a strain of melancholy that runs through her work i.e. “There’s A Certain Slant”  However “Elysium Is As Far” presently wants to be heard.      Elysium Is As Far “Elysium is as far as to The very nearest room, If in that room a friend awaitFelicity or doom.                                                                                                                                                                                                        What fortitude the soul contains,That it can so endureThe accent of a coming foot, The opening of a door! “

    Like

Leave a comment