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Dead Orange

After my father died that winter
I let an orange in the fruit bowl go bad
I was curious to watch and hold it
as it decomposed

I expected it to rot
spread its blight
attract fat flies
But it only dried
into a hardened
sunken shell

It lives still in the corner
of my bedside table drawer
It looks like a fossilized breast
with a thumb print pressed
in its nipple-tipped center
a scar from when it was pulled
from its mother

It once held juice
a sweet and sour fruit
with seeds to be planted
to carry on its name
its brand and reputation

The backside is blackened
with a telltale mark
like a dented bumper
never fixed

Its color is still recognizable
exotic skin squished and frozen
It has no scent
or sound when I shake it

It could be jam
Or someone else’s orange
that was sadly never eaten

Kept in the dark
how long can it last?
What is it good for now?

~ Colleen Redman

Comments

i like it.
I like you
I enjoy coming here never knowing what awaits
but knowing that the thoughts inside your mind
have a familiarity with those in mine.
so many oranges have dried
but few have been turned into prose
and so delicately
well done

Thank you, David. Your feedback means a lot to me.

These relics, how they absorb meaning from the context around them. It's not just us humans. I've seen other species do this, too; don't you dare touch that special whatchamacallit that the dog has hidden in the back of the yard!

Fascinating. How something so simple is so rich in symbolism and memories! It is your creative mind, of course, that puts this into such insightful words.

I second David's comment. And I like that his comment is made in the same poetry form you used.

Nice one Colleen...

I sometimes have a hard time reading poetry, but this drew me right in and invited me to stay.

this is such a powerful poem, colleen. i think it should be published if it isn't yet. it is my favorite of all you have written.

Beautiful, Colleen. So poignant.

And thank you for commenting on my blog. Come back soon! :)

David's comment is so spot on. That is very deep Colleen.

Oh, this one took my breath away. The metaphor of the fruit, the nipple-tipped center, needing to watch the decomposition to bring an understanding or a claiming of power over the death. My lord, woman. This is powerful stuff.

That is haunting and beautiful and sad. I take back what I said about the title in your last post.

Neat experience.

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