The Art of The Smile
I was six years old when I first felt the
crippling sadness
That
I would later go on to characterise as the early symptoms of my depression.
I
used to laugh when others laughed,
But
no sooner had the laughter began, it would fade,
Faster
than the bright spark of a fire cracker
Vanishing
in the New Year’s Sky.
My
lips would morph back into a thin straight line,
And
people would ask me why?
“It was funny, just not that funny.”
Was my short curt reply,
But honestly, I had no Idea why.
Why my laughter couldn’t bounce
through the echo chambers of my hollow heart
And fill me with joy.
I never understood why the feeling of
happiness eluded me.
It would be nine years before I learnt
how to smile.
See, I had grown weary of my mother’s
constant drone,
“You should smile more!” she would
say
Tired of teachers breathing down my
neck,
Tired of friends not caring,
Tired of the endless river of tears
I was trying to choke back,
Tired of not being okay because apparently
its not okay to not be okay.
So, at the age of 15,
After God knows how many emotional
breakdowns,
In a last stitch attempt to get
them to leave me alone,
I taught myself how to smile.
A smile born not of joy,
But of emotional suppression.
Understand that in the mechanics of
a ‘genuine’ smile,
Its not so much the quality of happiness,
Rather the absence of negative
emotion,
That makes a smile passable.
So, I scrubbed my face with sand
paper,
Erasing the thick salt lines left
in the wake of my tears,
Raised the corners of my lips so
high
They could have touched the sky,
Stitched it all into place
My ever-genuine smile.
I shoved my pain down my throat
Each time it rose up to undo the façade
Clawing its way out
It left lacerations on vocal cords
Quieting the vocal folds
Until my cried were nothing more
than deafening silence
My tears a ghost glimmering in the
past
And I bathed in their praise
“You look so good when you smile,
Just look at that handsome face.”
Another fine written piece , 👏
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