KateLynn Hibbard :: “Unblossoming”

*

at the last open flower market in LA,
at the peak of the pandemic,
a photographer buys dozens of flowers —
lilies, roses, carnations, freesia —
to document their slow entropic unblossoming
which is another way to say death,
as days turned into weeks and weeks into
you know how the rest of this story goes

*

senescence:  not to bloom
                                                 flower                           open                            unfold
                                develop               mature
but fade

not to progress
                                                  evolve                         flourish                       thrive
                                 prosper               burgeon
but decline

*

To extend the life of cut flowers,
add sugar salt copper pennies vinegar aspirin bleach

*

There is nothing living which does not breathe nor anything breathing which does not live.

*

When does the body leave the room?
When does the person, the being, leave
the body? Why does the body persist,
and why do we sanction its persistence?
When my brain shuts down,
have I left my body? When I fall asleep,
have I left my body? Where
did I leave it? Where does the brain go
when the body is at rest?

*

While still in the womb, the lungs grow like a tree from a bud, with branches sprouting from left and right trunks. 

*

Did you wait too long to quit smoking?
Was that asbestos wrapped around the furnace pipes?
Did you grow up on a farm, inhaling with pleasure
late summer air hazy with particulate matter
while your father harvested grain?

*

Church                                     in regards to the no-property theory, the dead body
                                                    was under the control of the
Corpse                                    The term synonymous to a dead body is
Common Law                      the major source of mortuary law is
Cadaver                                  A dead human body used for anatomical study is a
Decomposition                   The most positive sign of death is
Decent Burial                      The law states that every person has a right to a
Mutilation                              Embalming is a form of
Quasi-property                   A dead human body is said to be
Dead human body            is not property in a real sense
Surviving Spouse             As a rule, the right of decent disposal belongs to the

*

did you actually mean unblushing or unpleasing?

*

A cut flower cannot take on nutrients
so it slowly begins to die, though putting it in water
can lengthen its life. Disturbing the flow of water
shortens life. Cutting flowers in the air
instead of under water
may produce bubbles.
Bent neck.
Quick wilt. 

*

Aren’t we all going to die of something?  Well?

KateLynn Hibbard’s books are Sleeping Upside Down, Sweet Weight, and Simples, winner of the 2018 Howling Bird Press Poetry Prize. Some journals where her poems have appeared include Barrow Street, Ars Medica, Nimrod, and Prairie Schooner. Editor of When We Become Weavers: Queer Female Poets on the Midwest Experience, she teaches at Minneapolis College, sings with One Voice Mixed Chorus, and lives with many pets and her spouse Jan in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Please visit katelynnhibbard.com for more information