Wait and See
I could have died at 10 when I stared too long at the medicine bottle
or at 17 when I parked on the tracks, wishing the train would come.
I could have jumped off a balcony the night the bastard dumped me
or hanged myself with the rope once tethered my swing to the oak tree.
I could have ignored the friends who tried so desperately to help me.
I could have quit taking the antidepressant before giving it a chance.
Much as I didn't want to be "on anything," I slowly felt it unfog me,
after a few weeks beholding someone I barely remembered being.
I still have depressed days when all is gray, pointless, and brooding,
wondering if I'm strong enough to ride out a storm, however brief.
Of all the advice I've read or paid to have imparted: "This too shall pass,"
is wisest, the lifesaver. As Scarlett would say, "Tomorrow is another day."