Unrequited
There is no life without suffering.
The only question is which kind
You would most prefer to carry.
The answer is almost always the
Variety you do not currently possess
Because the true extent of our
Past pain is frankly forgettable.
The provision is out of our control,
To save our fragile sanity, but
It does not help us to keep sound hopes;
Not that they would consent
To be anything but irrational anyway.
Occasionally you might choose
Your present pain, but only for love,
Even a love you cannot define,
A love that refuses to fade with time.
You know nothing but that you
Want their happiness, and any
Personal suffering needed to secure it
Is a necessary evil - no, not so;
A boundless joy that brings a smile
To the eyes, that your tears of
Restraint, hopelessness, and humiliation
May water the seeds of contentment
In their heart as they sprout and bloom.
Your tears are only a fraction
Of the input, and invisible also as they
Must be to do their job effectively,
So they are universally overlooked
In favor of the soil of familiar affection
Giving the roots its grip, in favor of
The sunlight of passionate interests
That warms the soul, in favor of
The soft touch of a sweetheart honeybee.
Yet your restraint is valuable all the more
For its lack of exaltation, for its silence.
On reason, then, causes you to
Embrace the suffering that spurns you,
That crushes you under its heel,
That puts rocks in your stomach,
Thunderclouds in your heart, and
Cotton in your brain, unrelenting to
Your cries for a reason, a definition,
A guide of what is right and wrong
And what lies within yourself,
So that you can understand.
You embrace the suffering either
Deaf or merciless, preferring no other
Softer club or blunter blade,
Only because you know your silence
Spares them a burden, and their joy
Lights up their eyes and yours
In tandem, until you cannot wipe
The smile off your face, even as
You remember your attachment
And attunement are not reciprocated.
Their happiness is yours, and
Your suffering fuels it.
How could you ever let that go?