what the peonies taught me:
A poem by Jaweerya Mohammad
what the peonies taught me:
they began as gnarly roots resembling chicken feet,
what strange beauty could possibly swirl inside?
every May for five years they only sprouted green foliage,
flowerless. it took five years to bake beneath soil
before the bush birthed bulbs, slight pink flesh
of petals peeking through the knotted spheres.
for weeks ants nibbled and gnawed on sticky sap, though
it was thankfully the ants who prevented other beastly
insects from feasting on fresh petals. buds became swollen
marshmallows but still curled inwards, and I blinked
and blinked again seeing stems weighed down
by drizzle and bolted buds, never flowers.
I squeezed my eyes shut, tracing sun
splotches in the dark, imagining
until it was too real and stung. stretched
my lids open to dreamy, doubled flowers, full
golden pistils hiding at their core.
peonies unfurling not on anyone else’s time but their own,
I watched them sway in the wind, collect dew-like wells,
I cupped their blushed faces and kissed them
one by one, having learned a patient love
from dirt to nectar.

About the Author:
Jaweerya Mohammad is a passionate educator, having taught Middle School English for many years. Her writing is shaped by her Muslim and first-generation Pakistani American identity. Some of her poetry has been published in the “Third Space” Anthology by Renard Press and the literary magazine Muslim Youth Musings.
You can find more of Jaweerya’s work on Instagram (@jaweeryajournals)
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September 25, 2024 at 3:09 PM
I am a flower gardener and I love love this poem about Peonies.
there is hardly any action as tender as kissing flowers.
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September 19, 2024 at 3:45 PM
I love paeonies and really enjoyed this poem, it’s so faithful to the way the flowers behave sometimes. A lovely poem, thank you!
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September 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM
This one is a beauty, rich in enchanting details.
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September 17, 2024 at 9:25 AM
An important life lesson, beautifully related. Thanks
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