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The Garden Girl
It began in the basis of her belly
A seed, layered in fat, corroded by acid sprouted it’s very first root
A root that held her core, planted her soles to the ground
She was stagnant so her heart fell sick with bitterness, she would suck lemons like sweets
The plant germinated hungrily, unforgivingly
Injecting her veins, draining her blood to quench its thirst for the purity found only in the contents untouched by the calloused hands of the world
It praised for the rains that showered down as she swallowed the collected saliva in her mouth
Sunlight provided from the gentle hum she would sing to soothe herself that allowed her belly to grow warm with friction
Unknowingly she fabricated an environment for the young pip to bloom
She alone was unblooming
Vegetative
The juvenile verdure directed her energy to develop foliage and stems
She withered under exhaustion, spending her time indoors, cocooned in a wall she built with her bare hands till bloody
Not realizing that caterpillars cannot transform in such conditions
Butterflies cannot mount without a sky
She had begun a battle with the plant, she had no strength to locate her white flag
The first flower blossomed at the base of her throat
An azure Begonia, unheard of yet brandishing colours so loud her ears ached with ringing
It’s petals a gradient from the unlittered blue of unexplored seas to the colour manifestation of sadness, to cerulean
Like feathered lips tickling her vocal cords, but still, she was unable to speak
When her father passed away
Ichor leaked from the punctured holes of her oesophagus walls
As thorns erupted from the stalk of the greenery
Agonizing her to boundaries of boundaryless pain
Her throat ached with constriction but her mouth stayed firm
Her wails were heard through the droplets of her tears
She would not even open to allow the salty liquid to sterilize her wounds
They became infected
Years passed and the little girl stood in front of the mirror
A woman stared back at her
Her eyes held bags of books full of stories untold
A question left unanswered
Will a person in a coma awaken fatigued, the conundrum of her life
Her loneliness engulfed her, it had never felt so loud
So she escaped to the park down the street, where the world spoke volumes to her through the trees
As she sat on the mahogany bench and observed the way the colours shifted with every blink of her eye
She noticed a seed
An ovule
A pip
So tender so delicate a lump formed in her throat
As that was when she noticed the seed was kept safe in the belly of a young girl
A young girl who’s body so frail, yet so bold, whose veins were yet to be injected sat by herself on another mahogany bench, invisible to the pitted people around her
She was silent
Without a thought in her mind and with the last of her strength the young woman dismounted the bench
And while doing so dismantled her cocoon
And as she made her way towards the little girl oblivious to the demon that had reproduced in her womb
She felt her back begin to sprout wings
Flimsy, insubstantial, defective wings
But wings nonetheless
And when she reached the little girl her hand outstretched, she tipped her chin upward
And with that, a jolt in her stomach occurred as if with the subtle movement she had tipped the whole world off its axis
The girl’s eyes fell on the woman and confusion flooded her face
She was unaware, broken, lost
She was her
And before the young girl could move away
The woman locked contact with her eyes
And slowly, but without hesitation opened her mouth
And a bouquet fell out
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Hi! My name is Mirengeri Diallo and I, like many other people in this word, have once been a garden girl. In our lives, we are often faced with difficult times. We push ourselves into hiding as to not feel anything when these times strike when in reality all we are doing is perpetuating a problem that must be solved. "Garden Girl" is about capturing these difficult moments in our lives, acknowledging them, and then using what we learn to help others. Because in a world where we are constantly being told to be silent, our words are our biggest weapon.