BY MEL ARTHUR 

I tell my therapist with a mouthful of

squirming tree branches &

white-yellow-blue flowers that I am 

afraid to taste my memory

so when I eat yogurt, I sit infront of my window

halfway hoping a mother squirrel would come

share its mouth with me minus all the nuts 

and untruths  hollowing out

its cheeks. not those. I don’t want those. 

me? my mouth? I want to taste a tree,

remember it from root up, 

soil all stuck in the places my wisdom teeth refuses to grow

and I hope I swallow down

all the dirt&bark&leaves&flowers followed by gallons

of saliva, so maybe the bouquet of unknown memory

hanging out in my body 

can sprout in my stomach

or gurgle like fish, as the saying goes

or maybe the peach-mango flavored Dum-Dum

lollipop

next to my yogurt can reshape 

itself into the mother memories

my therapist says are

too easy for me to forget,

too easy for her silhouette to

be gone from my mind, my tongue

and oh goodness, I can’t see her anymore

or smell her. where can she be where is she

where&where&where&where–

but back to the tree. 

and how its branch also becomes an arm 

reaching for my Chobani cookie dough

flip with hard-ass cookie dough pieces

and the father squirrel has left me by now, so sure

I give it up in exchange for a piece

of its soft soft bark

which become tender

like hands in my mouth,

digits moving on their own

three at a time, each fingertip

swirling chunks of cookie-dough

in the corner of my cheeks 

where all the drool lies in the

shape of my mother moving

all the way down my throat

oh. wait. wait. damn it, I mean bark. I meant bark. yes bark 

but everyone knows bark spelled backwards is hands

and a hand

is what the tree gives me when its finally 

time to spit out all the bouquets of

pink-yellow-red flowers&dirt&leaves beneath my teeth

all mushed 

and gray now 

forgive the trail of oak spouts, lilac seeds,

dirt, sunflower middles that follow in my wake

I am only trying to reach somewhere this flower-body of

mine can report back to a therapist

so she finally smiles and says good job, 

in the tone

of my mother whose voice I can no longer

remember. 

Writer | Mel Arthur ‘25 | marthur25@amherst.edu

Editor | Siani Ammons ‘27 | sammons27@amherst.edu