The Whole Journey

Next week, I say, and then, the one after that, and this is how the lawn

opens into an abundance of dandelions stretching their stems up to

the cloud-strewn sky, a riot of yellow I once would have cut,

hoping to avoid the neighbors’ disdain. Now, thigh-high,

incandescent, these weeds are only one of the delights born of my laziness. If I

neglect my duties, the leeks sprout pom-poms, the asparagus stalks turn

gangly, waving wispy fronds. If I forget to harvest the artichokes, they bring

neon purple anemones from their centers, and the radishes I’ve left to grow wooden

emit a bouquet of tapered green mousetails. I’m learning to let time

scuttle my work. When the leaves brown and fold back into the dirt, it’s not a loss.

Soon, time will undo even me. May I go so boldly to ruin, release such dazzling seeds.

Jennifer (JP) Perrine is the author of four books of poetry: Again, The Body Is No Machine, In the Human Zoo, and No Confession, No Mass. Read more.


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God of Cactus