Digging in the Dirt
There was something about the smell
Was it primal? A throwback to a different time?
When we were connected with the land.
When we grew what we ate.
But each shovel brought that rich smell.
Loamy. Dark. Full of nutrients.
Children often ate fistfuls of dirt
Parents wiping it out of hands and mouths
Telling them no, we don't eat this!
But the smell was too much for them
And they'd do it again
Skip the middleman
No vegetables, just the dirt
She was tempted to do it herself
What would it taste like?
Chocolate like the color?
She laughed to imagine her own children
Seeing her on her knees digging in the yard
And instead of planting flowers
Eating fistfuls of dirt
I learned it from you!
She would tell them, you did it first!
But of course they hadn't.
She did it before them
Her mother did it, her grandmother...
Down the line; generations of children
Fistfuls of dirt in their mouths
Mothers and fathers in a faraway land
Digging in the dirt
Frantically wiping it away from faces
A generation of children
Fistfuls of dirt in their mouths
Tears watered her garden
Anger hardened her heart
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