I got the Blues so bad
my eyes are invisible
I got the Blues so bad
people think I’m a river
I got the Blues so bad
I have constellations on my back
I got the Blues so bad
every day feels like the day after Christmas
I got the Blues so bad
the other colors are jealous
I got the Blues so bad
Muddy Waters sounds cheerful
I got the Blues so bad
Melancholy is my new roommate
I got the Blues so bad
I only have sky and more sky
I got the Blues so bad
my feet are cement blocks
I got the Blues so bad
my mouth is an iron gate
I got the Blues so bad
my hair has turned to snakes
I got the Blues so bad
clouds drift through me
I got the Blues so bad
weeping angels console me
I got the Blues so bad
trees drop their leaves as I pass
I got the Blues so bad
the blue jay lost his voice
I got the Blues so bad
Day won’t get up
I got the Blues so bad
the Moon half smiles at me
I got the Blues so bad
I got the Blues so bad
I got the Blues so bad
even my pen’s ink understands
Susan Scheid has been writing poetry since the days when her father read her poems at bedtime. Her book, After Enchantment, was inspired by beloved fairy tale characters. Susan’s poetry has appeared in About Place Journal, Truth to Power, Beltway Quarterly, Little Patuxent Review, The Sligo Journal, Silver Birch Press, Tidal Basin Review, and other journals. Her work is also included in the anthologies, Poetic Art, Enchantment of the Ordinary, and Dear Vaccine (forthcoming from Kent State University Press). Susan serves on the Board of Directors for Split This Rock. She lives in the Brookland neighborhood of Washington, DC.
Image: Gzzz, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons