Her Campus Logo Her Campus Logo
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at MSU chapter.

 

 

I have two poems, the first about virginity and the second about mental health. They’re two very different topics yet the same in certain ways, as both are sensitive and significant and give insights as to how we see ourselves. I also want to point out that these are both written in free verse, symbolizing how both of these topics are in our hands and we do have control over them, even if it doesn’t always seem like it. 

 

Poem #1: “Virginity” 

Virginity is a double-edged sword:

You’re a prude if you haven’t done it, 

You’re a slut if you have; 

If you’re on either end of the spectrum,

a guy doesn’t want you.

 

It’s a lie no more true 

than what tv shows

claim you should look like;

Crescent moon bodies

have no reflection in the water.

 

You get exiled either way. 

 

You want to wait

for a nice guy who truly loves you, 

and you’re the outcast

compared to those who hooked-up

Just to say they did it, 

even though they regretted it. 

But even them, if that’s how they choose to lose it, 

who has the right to say there’s anything wrong

with their choice?

All this labeling, 

What’s that say about all of us?

 

Society is a hoax. 

Everyone follows it like 

a mindless herd of cattle, 

Like it’s a god

almost as godly as men who 

sleep around every day, 

praying on their own conquest, 

Rising above the peasant men 

who haven’t done the deed. 

 

We put a white picket fence 

around everything. 

 

I’ve never been kissed, 

and oh my god, next I know

I’m being served a death sentence. 

 

It’s laughable for me, 

because waiting for meaning is 

fine by me, 

And anyone who thinks otherwise 

quite honestly

just doesn’t deserve my virginity, 

Or me.

 

Poem #2: “Stone Cold”

I used to be a cry baby, 

and now I’m a soldier. 

 

I used to go on every suicide mission, 

Wanting my body blown up

so my mind would be too, 

But now I walk through the heavy 

trenches

and it’s like I don’t feel anything, 

like I can’t. 

I can’t cry. 

My eyes are forever dry, 

a desert dying of dehydration, 

I guess it’s a good thing?

 

It must mean I’m better. 

I used to hear a sad song

and cry for hours 

just looking at myself in the mirror, 

and thinking about what other 

people saw in the mirror. 

 

But now the depressed piano 

goes straight through my head, 

I’m deaf. 

 

I can’t feel anything. 

 

I promised myself I wouldn’t be sad anymore, 

trained myself to be grateful, 

to distract myself with studies

and friends, 

and I’m happy 

Most of the time. 

 

But one bad day, 

I try to go to bed to cry it off

just for a little, 

it’s supposed to be healthy, 

but I stare at my wall, 

blank 

mute, 

I’m stone cold.

 

Sydney Savage is a graduate of Michigan State University with a BA in psychology and a BA English (with a creative writing concentration). Part of her novel called "I Love You More Than Me" is published at Red Cedar Review, and an excerpt of her other novel, “Just Let Me Go” is published at Outrageous Fortune magazine. She will be getting her Masters in Social Work at the University of Michigan and volunteering for CAPS. She plans to work with adolescents and eating disorder populations. Along with this, she'll be continuing her passion for novel writing and pursuing her dream of publication. She hopes to bring more mental health and body image themes into the book publishing market. She is a current member of Michigan Romance Writers. You can read some of her works on her personal blog and website: https://sydsavage13.wixsite.com/sydwriter13 Her twitter is @realsydsavage13 and her writing insta is @sydwriter13
MSU Contributor Account: for chapter members to share their articles under the chapter name instead of their own.