in my chest a swelling void
electric hunger humming
heart clenching arrested breath
a text, a smile, a laugh
a tender look, a touch
bring brief alleviation
then thumping, throbbing
begins again, slowly
at first, then escalating
firmly pressing beneath
caged ribs expanding
spreading me wide
open, I want to swallow
life whole - those I love
gulped down inside me
there’s room in there to spare
all the beauty in the world
could not quell the tender bruising
left by restless soul
forever pacing, hunting
for that which might relieve
insatiable desire
During October, theconstantpoet is pulling poetry prompts from The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows. Today’s word was ghough: a hollow place in your psyche that can never be filled; a bottomless hunger for more food, more praise, more attention, more affection, more joy, more sex, more money, more hours of sunshine, more years of your life; a state of panic that everything good will be taken from you too early, which makes you want to swallow the world before it ends up swallowing you.
This is a feeling I’m all too familiar with. Psychological theory might ascribe it to anxious attachment. The Enneagram paradigm might say it’s the famous ‘missing piece’ well-known to Fours. Because this is a feeling I live with all the time with very little respite, I’m well acquainted with these different ways of looking at it. What was so refreshing about this prompt was that I didn’t have to analyze it, explain it, or dissect it… I was just invited to sit with it - to let it be what it is. I found some relief in this - to practice holding and processing what is there instead of trying to do something about it. This relieved the pressure of feeling like I need to fix this quality and instead gently nudged me to get to know it better as it is and always has been. There’s a beauty in that. Even melancholy holds gifts for those able and willing to receive. I received a gift by spending time with this poem.