
I push a seed through the dirt,
bursting the watery film of membrane
wrapped around the soil’s cranium
with tendon-deep greed
and the strained color spill of
fleece white knuckles
digging for color
hoping to swap samples of sap
for the gooey, numb blood
of truffles and evergreens and gold
wanting to extract pine needles
from the air to stifle my cold
hoping to find fir trees in
the bleak dark of evening tar,
the air thick like molasses
in an absence of stars.
Coats zipped up like chainmail
battle-armour to the throat
composing the deepest melodies
from my childhood and listening
out for the pitch of nostalgia in every
ringing silver bell note.
Hoping to secure smiles
through frosted windows,
trap the happiness of families
like a spider under a glass
and protect it
cherish it
like the first fresh fall of December snow
these memories bring me warmth
like the haze from a fireplace
in my own ghostly glow.
In the rosary of my memories
now receding into soft spaces
in the back alleys of my mind
I am desperate to unearth them back up,
pull their roots free to turn back time
as the veins of adulthood bind with the earth:
a forced entrapment
besieged with lies and dirt
and un-ripened fruit in a desert pot
dunked in shadows
no sugar packets left in the cupboard
to accompany the ache and
longing of sweet teeth
hungry bellies growl to be pardoned from
these burdens
to have our chains undone
link by link and yard by yard, for we
never wanted to feel this absence,
refuse this inner truth to have been once sung
and all gone…
Oh, to be small and swaddled
in a dressing gown
eyes blinking back the daze
of the glacier lights that
zig-zag the tree,
heart light and excitement fierce
in the embrace of
Christmas Eve.
This was written by our contributing writer, Aimee Donnell.
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