There is moss in my mouth.
I speak in green Latin,
my breath softens the glass,
my teeth split spores and crush chlorophyll.
I haven’t eaten in years.
Hunger still finds me.
I reach with a rhizoid tongue,
for something with a pulse.
The tulips bloom beneath my gaze.
This one is my favourite.
Tulipa gesneriana. Petals part with a sigh.
I press my lips to the soil.
I am everything but patient.
This earth tastes like a memory,
I can no longer name.
Reaching for softness, straight from the vein.
If I am soft will the tulips still bloom?
Will they still come gently undone?
Bleed blossom down my throat,
in velvet purple and pink.
The vines wind tighter,
slow around my ankles.
I don’t fight them. Not anymore.
They thread my ribs devoutly.
I am bound to earth by vine.
They remind me I chose this.
Tangle truth through my thoughts.
Sweet and rotting through my roots.
Still the tulips call,
bending towards my fingertips.
Mouthing something I can’t hear,
teaching me tenderness.
About the Creator
Dorothea Blythe
Mostly, I write about longing, transformation, pain, and the strange tenderness that comes with being human.


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