I told him often and I couldn’t have made it clearer. He needs to stop looking At himself in funhouse mirrors. His nose is too wide His body is just too skinny. Good looking body parts He believes he hasn’t any.
He seldom smiles Even when a comic falls down. He doesn’t like comedy. Not even good circus clowns. He doesn’t read poetry Unless it is written about him And his taste in music Is all based on a passing whim.
He’s thirty years old But he acts like an adolescent, Playing the same games From childhood to the present. He still dresses like he did When he was ten years old And doesn’t clean his room Not ever, unless he is told.
He plays on the computer And keeps dead-end employment, Then gripes about his life And his total lack of enjoyment. His ambition level wrecked Because his family still pays his bills And lets him hide in his room That’s the kind of situation that kills.
He has no ups or downs And takes pills to keep his mood. He buys toys and gadgets And lives on his mother’s food. But, nothing in life calls him To achieve or excel or to win In the halfhearted game of life That he finds himself stuck in.