Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Throwback Thursday: Poem

I find it so interesting to go back and see what and how I wrote as a child and teen.  For many of my stories I can still remember the writing process, the thought process, how the story actually looked in my imagination versus how it turned out on paper.  Why not have a little fun with it and share one of these old pieces every Thursday in the popular "Throwback Thursday" theme?

Poetry is not my strong suit, though I do have quite a collection of poems anyways.  This one was written around the age of 13, and the visual prompt was a Georgia O'Keeffe painting of a black iris.  I remember that a year or two later I also translated the poem into Hebrew, but my computer won't open the file so I can't revel in how basic my Hebrew was at the time.

So here's a taste of 13-year-old Devorah.

Black Iris

It is not easy being a black iris.
People step on me, walk right on, not caring. 
My pink and gray petals are stomped on,
Smashed into the ground.
It angers me, being treated so.

A small child looks down at me and sighs.
She carefully picks me up
And cradles me in her arms.
The girl gently rinses my petals.
She puts me into a pot of soil on the windowsill.
The sun shines on me and helps me grow.
She gives me water and tells me how pretty I am.
I know that she is my friend.

I am strong again, bigger and prettier than before.
The girl takes me out of my pot,
Being careful to keep me in one piece.
She plants me beside the sidewalk,
In the same place as before.
Now I am too pretty to step on or ignore.

The girl visits me every day without fail.
She builds a small fence around me,
Protecting me from uncaring feet.
Bees are always buzzing around me,
Helping me even as they help themselves.

Other flowers start to come alive around me,
And the girl makes a bigger fence.
I am part of a garden now, not just a lone flower.
People stop when they see me,
Bending over and gently touching my petals.
I am no longer something to be ignored.
I am something to be admired.

I am treasured for two months, perhaps more.
I start to feel drained, tired.
The girl has faithfully watered me all this time,
Faithfully pulled weeds from my soil.
I can no longer hold my petals up, and I start to droop.
The girl looks at me sadly and straightens my stem.

I am at the end of my short days.
I begin to be overlooked instead of cherished.
The girl digs me up from my soil,
Tears standing in her eyes.
She puts me on a heap of grass cuttings,
Detritus to be disposed of.
I plead with her in my mind, but she doesn’t hear.

I am collected into a bag of weeds and dead leaves
And deposited into the alley,
Awaiting the garbage men.
I cry silent and invisible tears.
I know my fate, and am ready to accept it.
I live out my last hours as a pretty flower

Sitting in a garbage can and thinking.

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