I have discovered that my blocked nose is not the reason I can’t smell roses. The smell has been cut out of the genus for the sanity of sensors on cargo airplanes. What then, about my children and their’s, when they discover old books for themselves and ask questions about the smell of flowers? About poetry, and the Nineteenth century? How would I tell the tale of family Plantagenet, with flags as dead as Lancaster and York?
This tragedy seems so terribly unfair when roses are so much prettier than instruments on planes, every petal a miniature piece of God’s own skin.
I need to walk down to the roadside florist if I can get out of this sweaty blanket into this chilly weather and find one of these ****** roses so I can dismember its petals one by one. I must disembowel this litany if I can she loves me, she loves me not, she wants me extinct bred out of this world for convenience, just like the forgotten smell of those roses.
The tragedy to be told is that women are not supposed to be the main course in your life, the glorious bouquet of roses that you set the table around. They are more like condiments to an existence already charmed, but if the ketchup has gone rotten it tends to put a damper on how everything tastes and everything smells, I can’t smell the flowers and there are too many forks.
As seen on Apostatements (apostating.wordpress.com)