CONSTRICTED

Faded plumes rise out of the large, cracked flowerpot,

the grey-green fronds resembling tattered boa feathers

falling off a worn-out peignoir now lying in a discarded heap.

Imprisoned in an ochre clay jail, the plant struggles while

beside it a yucca blossoms, impervious to poor soil conditions.

 

Like children in Gaza playing stick ball with rounded stones

while others clamor in and out of a rusty, abandoned truck

certain of escape through missing doors and broken windows  

the palm will remain constricted by its earthenware limits.

There’s a certain relief in understanding boundaries

 

although they’re not always easy to recognize, given 

that we are all infatuated by the illusion of freedom,

just as children, knowing they can leap through bent steel

any time, don’t understand that prisons aren’t always metal

and winning games with rocks can be a losing proposition.