The Box Ain’t the Problem


“It’s been seven hours and fifteen days,” (Sinéad O’Connor, Nothing Compares 2U)
or 2191 days if you’re the kind who needs the math,

since you walked in like you owned the place
and bent me into a kind of happy I didn’t trust but wanted anyway.
It only needed water, we thought.
Turns out it needed a whole lot more.

Two plants came up in the same box.
At first you couldn’t tell them apart.
Hell, we even called them the same thing,
a “we” that was going to last.
Then one started growing a little different,
and you slapped the word “weed” on it
like that was the end of the conversation.

You want to cut it out now,
let it rot and feed the one you think is better.
But I keep thinking,
what if we’re swinging the blade at the wrong stalk?
Roots don’t lie, but people sure do.

I gave shade,
kept the dirt wet even when the heat felt like punishment.
I let the crows peck me bald
just so you could sit in the cool of my shadow.
But the water, the food,
it all started going one way.
Roots stayed on the surface,
grabbing quick meals instead of digging deep.
When the wind comes,
or some kid stomps through the patch,
that’s the end of it.
Good plant, bad plant,
they’ll both be mulch by morning.

We’ve all got our boxes.
Some we tend,
some we rip out and start over,
some we leave for the weeds.
And me, being a builder,
I should’ve known better,
the frame matters as much as the seeds.
No more pressure-treated promises,
no concrete coffins,
no redwood boasting it’ll last forever.

Just rock.
Stone that won’t lie.
Let the dirt breathe,
and whatever grows there,
earn the right to stay.

6 responses to “The Box Ain’t the Problem”

  1. That last verse right there is the revelation. The reason you had to go through the ‘poem’. Looking forward to the poems that come when it begins to blossom, and how.

    Like

    1. Thanks Isha always look forward to reading your inciteful comments.

      Like

  2. I adore how you said so much without actually spelling it out with precision. Beautiful W🙏🏻🫶🏼

    Like

    1. Thanks so much J! You brought a smile to an o’l worn out face.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. I think you answered your own questions: and bent me into a kind of happy I didn’t trust but wanted anyway.

    Like

    1. Thanks for picking out that line, it landed with me as well, and somehow thought, hoped it would land with soemone else as well. Not surprised it was you–thanks V

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Violet Lentz Cancel reply