Killing the Innocent
is the thinning.
I have planted too many seeds
and
in order for some to grow to
maturity,
I must remove the rest
I must remove the rest
from around some chosen
seedling
to ensure its survival.
It is the closest I get
to playing an omnipotent
being
and I do not like it at all.
I peer at the crowded plants
and arbitrarily choose one
survivor
over the others.
I try not to be biased, but I
know that
the larger ones have a better
chance,
and I know that I shouldn't
just select one
because I like the look of
it,
that the red varieties are prettier to me
that the red varieties are prettier to me
than the plain green kinds
so I must force myself to leave some green ones
so I must force myself to leave some green ones
for fairness sake
and I must honor diversity and
and I must honor diversity and
allow for the survival of not
only the red and the green
but the gold as well,
but the gold as well,
or I shouldn't have planted a
salad mix in the first place.
When I have painstakingly
thinned each area
so that there is three inches
between,
when I know full well that there should be six inches
when I know full well that there should be six inches
but I can't bring myself to
do that just yet,
I gather up the wilting seedlings
I gather up the wilting seedlings
carry their lifeless bodies
indoors
try to hose them off in the sink
try to hose them off in the sink
and attempt to eat them for
lunch.
Spitting out wood chips and dirt,
crunching down on an
occasional pebble
I figure I deserve it, and that I owe it to them
I figure I deserve it, and that I owe it to them
to ingest their meager
substance
since they have taken the
trouble to sprout for me
and have done their best to
win the contest.
~Andrine de la Rocha
posted 6/17/2011
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