avatarJonathan Greene

Summary

The text is a personal reflection on the author's complex relationship with melancholy, expressing a deep appreciation for the emotional depth it provides, contrasting with societal expectations of happiness.

Abstract

The author of the micropoem "Melancholy, I Love You" delves into the nuanced layers of human emotion, revealing a personal struggle with outwardly expressing happiness due to a stoic demeanor. Despite a baseline of contentedness, the author confesses a profound and almost romantic connection to melancholy, which stirs the soul in a manner unparalleled by happiness. This intimate piece, published in Medium's "A Few Words" publication, challenges the notion that a constant smile equates to true happiness and instead suggests that there is beauty and significance in the experience of sadness.

Opinions

  • The author does not equate happiness with a constant smile, suggesting a more nuanced understanding of contentment.
  • Sadness is portrayed as having the ability to touch the author's soul and heart in a way that happiness cannot.
  • There is an expressed love for melancholy, indicating a deep appreciation for the emotional complexity it brings.
  • The piece implies that societal expectations of visible happiness do not align with the author's personal experience of true contentment.
  • The author's emotional landscape is characterized by a profound connection to the feeling of melancholy, which is presented as a positive and enriching experience.

Melancholy, I Love You

A Micropoem

Photo by Kinga Cichewicz on Unsplash

I’ve never been a “happy” person on the outside with my stoic facade and straight-faced presentation It’s always been an uphill battle to tell someone that I was truly happy in the present moment

But why don’t you look happy?

My life is a baseline of contentedness and does not require a constant smile to be referred to as happy But there is also something about sadness that touches me in a way that happiness can’t

It reaches into my soul and stirs it, lightly but with direct attention to that tiny part of my heart that is so enamored with the distinct feeling Melancholy, I love you

© Jonathan Greene 2020

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This story is published in a Few Words, Medium’s publication that only accepts stories under 500 words.

If you have a few meaningful words to say and want to be a writer in our publication, visit here.

Poetry
Micropoetry
Sadness
Feelings
Self-awareness
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