Maya mcomie
gardens
maya mcomie
Gardens
A lot of what we saw was dead. After the studies
had been conducted, and stems left barren,
sucked of all nutrient. You told me
you didn’t know how to care for plants,
and I don’t know why it was that moment
I felt so in sync with you, so much the same.
I forgot the name of the hydrangea: thought
chrysanthemum, thought hyacinth. There’s
no word for what I know how to say
in my mother’s language. There’s a word for
the plant deprived of life, browned, brittle.
And it’s like that, my protectiveness of self
and how I refuse to be tied down—
and because I’d just parted with another much
less kind than you, but how comfortable
to joke around, guess the edges of some rising
tension, something beautiful blooming. In truth,
it seems everyone, you, and the other
who I visited conservatories with—
there’s something alive in me that I can’t
see, but like a faint scent it lingers firmly
in the air and tells you the deep, earth-bound
knowledge you need to know. I will try
not to be sad, not to be lonely. Like the holly
misplaced in Ohio, I’ll have to leave someday.
Like the two chairs awkwardly facing each other;
I’ll look right into the eyes of my kaleidoscopic mind.
Maya McOmie is a biracial/queer writer with connections to Ohio, the West Coast, and Tokyo, Japan. She holds an MFA in Poetry from the Ohio State University; her work has appeared in or is forthcoming from MAYDAY, Gulf Stream Magazine, and New World Writing, among others. Lately, she has been watching 90’s TV shows on YouTube and looking up recipes for unused ingredients in her pantry. Her poems attempt to process the complexities of identity, family, memory and ritual. You can find her on Twitter @MayaMcOmie.