I cry because happiness is a harder concept to grasp than sorrow. Because sorrow greets me as an old friend. Fondly reminding me of my mistakes, my flaws, and my current inner desolation. Reminding me of how I failed and how I cannot fix my mistakes. While we reminisce over a bottle of melancholia and a plate of regret. Leaving me with yet another notch on my belt of nights I cried myself to sleep People pass you by because pretending everything is alright is more convenient than noticing they are broken. They are the people that hide their silent tears at the back of a closet and bury broken smiles into the corner of a sock drawer. But soon …There won’t be enough room for the hidden emotions that you think are irrelevant and can be dealt with another day, soon every emotion you hid will come out of the closet and show its face in the most unpleasant way. Tears. You can’t escape them. I cry because she cries, my best friend, drowning in her own sorrow, I cannot help but drown with her. For what is a friend if that friend will not jump into the murky depth we call depression, sinking ever deeper? At least we sink together. Treading conformity, stress, humiliation, we tread together. As we sink deeper, we try to grasp at the bubbles of happiness escaping our lips, somehow bring them back. We can’t, because once they’re lost no amount of pretending can give us the air we sorely need or the fake smiles to get by without question, day by day. But at least, we drown together. So many times I have looked out to a warm sunset and felt chilled to the bone. Because if I let go of the railing, life would go on. Because if I did not exist right now nothing in the world would change. It would just erase any memory of all the ***** ups I collected like stamps and baseball cards. Because no amount of blankets and soothing words can warm the icy thought in the back of my head whispering in the persuasive voice of a friend, “What’s the point?” I cry for the people who don’t think they matter, who think that turning to something to relieve their pain will fix it. I cry for the people who think killing themselves will make them feel alive. For the people who get lost trying to find themselves. For the people who put on a mask desperately waiting for someone to see through it. And for the people who cut themselves trying to become whole. Breaking themselves down bit by bit, holding all the pieces, and waiting for someone to put them back together.
I cry because this entire explanation is just eloquently realizing that