The Wilt
- Admin

- 5 days ago
- 1 min read
You say I have a
yellow thumb. Our
ferns are over-quenched.
Adding we should nurture
succulents:
they never
ask for more than what
is needed.
I’ve shrivelled from
your bellicose tropes:
the beach doesn’t need
the waves
to be a beach. That merely the
grains suffice, and
you long for Kalahari:
sand is not a desolate
place.
You’ve left me parched &
wanting—a single
drop enduring in the
throat of my canteen,
preferring a snake’s
maraca
to the rattle of a baby’s
toy we bought for nothing.
You’re enamoured with el
amor—the needles
of a cactus misconstrued—
caress them from the bottom,
like the ever-wary
thorns;
that when we love things as
we should, we’ll grasp that it’s
the petals which cut to the quick;
why my dozen, darling roses
have been standing on
their heads—sadhakas
holding breath in
stagnant water—
your hands without a
scratch. And why
would I assume they’re topsy-
turvy, that blood
must pay the toll for
your devotion?
Andreas Gripp
March 6, 2026

RF Photo





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