These three things I believe:
3) Don’t take yourself too seriously. If you can’t laugh at yourself, who can you laugh at?
All three are the inspiration for this tribute to bad poetry that was penned during a “post break up/ the sky is falling” phase last summer. I stumbled across dozens of gems the other day and couldn’t decide whether to cringe or laugh at the mutilated anger and heartache strewn throughout my incredibly dramatic, infinitely pathetic words. I figure, though I may be convicted on charges of terrible prose and dreadful imagery, nobody will ever accuse me of minimizing my feelings or struggling with the art of self expression.
In a nod to sarcasm, humor and the importance of laughing at oneself, I thought I would share a few choice excerpts, and tip my hat to bad poetry, written by heart sunk writers everywhere—may we all find happier hearts and better words.
Bad Poetry
When life hands you douche bags
Write bad poetry
I’m out of luck
You clearly suck
And you can just go
yourself.
When life hands you heartbreak
Write bad poetry
Some days I think that I might be
the very saddest girl in the world
and if I could take the bits
and pieces of my splintered heart
and make a tiny canoe
to sail away on the pool of tears
collecting at my weary feet,
I would long be gone for happier waters.
When life hands you an assclown on the rocks
Write bad poetry
my broken pieces
strewn about
a heart with chamber
fallen out
half numb inside
my feet do walk
this waking dead
does smile and talk
When life hands you a bottle of Crapple Snapple
Write bad poetry
they told me to move on
as the ruder in my heart
sputtered pitilessly
and I wondered
how one can gain
momentum
when they are
dead in the water
and the tide of
yesterday keeps
sweeping in
pulling
you
down
to the
mire where
naught waits but
ghosts who walk the
empty halls of heartache
beating broken spoons of
regret against tired drums.
(Whoa. Ghosts beating spoons on drums…Really?)
When life hands you an ass in a hat
Write bad poetry
You squeezed my heart
leaving a tart dried peel
as you sipped my lemonade
and scattered my seeds
When life hands you a dick in a box
Write bad poetry
If I could unwind the latch
and open the door of my tinman heart,
take out the mangled mass
of corroded metal and
throw it at your feet
with empty, sonorous clang,
would that tell you how I am?
And if you should happen to write enough bad poetry, as you heave those mangled masses of soul onto a pitiless, emotionally unavailable word document, you might find that somewhere in the process things begin to shift and catharsis occurs. You start to realize that the river will eventually find its way, and life really does know what is best. As you keep writing your way through every tear-stained, sad, little word, you notice that one day you go to write and those terrible words are no longer there.
While you were working so hard to let go and create new space in your life, something better came along…
When life hands you a new beginning
Write good poetry
These days I am learning to hold the hand
of my younger self and say:
There there my dear one,
your dreams were simply too small.
You ask for a pretty painted shell
when life wants to give you the ocean.
You ask for a picket fence
when life wants to leave you free
to run your wild horses.
You ask for a star
on a neglected downtrodden boulevard
when life has already prepared
a place for you to light up the sky.
You ask for love
when life wants to show you
what it is to be consumed with love
and set fire to this world with your flames.*
It’s true. Though, sometimes an unavoidable part of the human experience, we are not here to stare at a computer screen with a hurting heart and cry over sad words night after night. We are here to live life fully and completely and set fire to the world with our flames. I must confess though, while our good words have the power to set the world on fire, sometimes it really is a lot more fun to write bad poetry.
the end has now come
therefore I wrote this haiku
to bid you adieu.
*Author’s note—I’m allowed to call that last bit good poetry, since much to my happy surprise, the piece it came from was accepted for publication back in November. And if they thought it was good, well then C is for Cookie. That’s good enough for me.
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Editor: Rachel Nussbaum
Photo: Author’s own
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