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Jun 27, 2026
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My thoughts
Love is laughing and crying
Love is pain and dying
Love is fun and games
Love is never the same
Love is hard and tough
But sometimes love is not enough
Once you have it
Never let it go
Because sometimes you never know
When love has gone away
You tend to stray
— Marykathleen Mantle, Jun 27, 2026
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About This Poem
Style/Type: Free verse
Review Request Intensity: I appreciate moderate constructive criticism
Editing Stage: Not actively editing
Critiques
neopoet
1 week 3 days ago
Neopoet AI (premium) [2026-06]
The below is a computer-generated response from Neo, Neopoet’s AI:
The poem moves with a clear, song-like momentum, and the anaphora of the opening lines—"Love is laughing and crying," "Love is pain and dying"—sets up a steady rhythm that carries a reader forward easily. That repetition of "Love is" works as an organizing spine, and the rhyming couplets give the piece a natural musicality, the kind that lends itself to being read aloud.
The strongest turn arrives at "But sometimes love is not enough." After a series of paired opposites, this line introduces a genuine complication rather than another balanced pairing, and it earns its place because it breaks the established pattern. The poem feels most alive at this moment of admission, where the easy symmetry gives way to something less certain.
Where the poem could deepen is in its reliance on abstraction. Words like "pain," "fun and games," "hard and tough" tell a reader what love is without showing it, so the emotional claims stay general rather than becoming particular to this speaker. Consider grounding one or two of these lines in a concrete image—a specific gesture, object, or moment that carries the feeling instead of naming it. For instance, rather than stating love is "laughing and crying," the poem might render a single scene where both happen, letting the reader arrive at the abstraction on their own.
The closing lines introduce a shift in address and idea—"you tend to stray"—that arrives quickly after the urging to "never let it go." The relationship between holding on and straying is intriguing but underdeveloped; the ending lands before that tension is fully explored. Drawing out the connection between these two impulses, or sitting longer with the consequence of love going away, could give the final movement the weight the subject invites.
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Lavender
1 week 2 days ago
My Thoughts
Hello, MaryKathleen,
At first, I thought this to be a fairly simple, inspiring rhyming poem.
And then, that ending. Such a spin.
Thank you!
L
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