"Two wrongs may not make a right but a thousand wrongs make a writer.”

Monday, January 12, 2026

When We Were Mad or Feeling Sad . . .

 


Dad said Smile!
Hard to smile when feeling bad
But he’d insist
Smile!
It felt invasive
I wanted to be mad!
But hard to stay mad when forced to smile.
I don’t know if that was right 
But I never forgot it
Did I.


Today at dVerse, the pub where poets hang out, we were asked to write a Quadrille (a poem of exactly 44 words) which includes the word smile, in any of its forms. We need more smiles nowadays so I repeated it three times to make it stick. Now visit the poets pub for more smiles, from Nat King Cole to Tim McGraw to Charles Bukowski. 

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

I hear you! Are coerced smiles really smiles? (Dennis Ryle)

Yvonne Osborne said...

Thanks Dennis!

Lisa said...

Yvonne, it was the expectation to smile in forced photos back then. I look at my sad face trying to smile in some old pictures and wonder how nobody seemed to notice how unhappy I was. Nowadays, I much prefer to take candid pics of people, preferably while they are in action. I'm sorry you had to go through it.

Gillena Cox said...

Thanks for sharing that memory


🎇much love

De Jackson said...

I like that pondering question at the end, especially. Could go either way.

Jae Rose said...

Your question at the end really raises a back-story - Jae

Mrityunjay Dixit said...

Nice one!

Petru said...

Had that in my own upbringing, probably like most of people. Infuriating!

brudberg said...

Sometimes that forced smile works, sometimes it just makes it worse.... not easy to answer

Yvonne Osborne said...

Yes, irritating and infuriating. I don't know if it worked or not. Maybe only a temporary fix, but least a sigh and a pause, time to rethink a position.

Yvonne Osborne said...

Has anyone ever seen D. T. smile??? Just curious.

Kim M. Russell said...

I know where you’re coming from, Yvonne. My dad would say smile and then pull a funny face, so I couldn’t help but smile.

Eric Erb said...

Oo I really like the idea of wanting to be mad. Most of our anger really comes down to that. Why do we choose that instead of a smile? I don’t get it, even though I do it too! Lol.

Helen said...

Love your quadrille, many ways to interpret, to wonder, which makes it so intriguing.

Merril D. Smith said...

I agree with others--not sure how to interpret this one, but that makes it more interesting!
And your question above--no, never a real smile from DT--and never a laugh.

Yvonne Osborne said...

Right....and no music, no art, no pets, no children playing under his desk

Laura Bloomsbury said...

nothing worse than a sulky face - but hardly the best advice advice -like poking a grumpy bear

Sanaa Rizvi said...

Sigh .. coerced smiles are the most difficult to manage.

Yvette M Calleiro said...

Great poem, Yvonne!

Yvette M Calleiro :-)
http://yvettemcalleiro.blogspot.com

pvcann.com said...

Uncomfortable situation, I hate coercion like that, irrespective of by who or why.