A wound the size of my first love opened
my chest one day and sprung flowers—
foxglove, star-aster, outlines sacred to deer
and other prey. It was carnivores, once,
in the eons before this, who first took for
granted the shape of a nesting ground,
the tenderness of an unbroken clavicle.
For love to be born, a great many things
had to perish. It is not surprising that
the first womb founded a thousand ways
to say I love you. Upon discovering such
a seed within myself, I might recount every
extinction: Permian, Cretaceous, Anthropocene—
if not for generations of prey animals behind me,
I might be so reckless as to believe every stone
holds an imprint, a whole life, and I’d press
myself down into that shape, gladly.
K.M. Hanslik is an Ohio-born writer and currently edits for The Turning Leaf Journal. You can find her work in Bleating Thing Magazine, Black Glass Pages, and elsewhere.