Poison Plants

Considering who your narrator is can be just as important as what they are saying. As an example, we explore the real history of the phrase “riding the broomstick.”
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There are centuries of documentation that celebrate this plant for its medicinal contributions - which makes it all the more interesting that it is so feared today.
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Devices have evolved to entice us like brugmansia’s mesmerizing scent and I am not immune from becoming a human sacrifice.
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I sit with the deadly poisonous plants as a spiritual practice. I handle flowers historically used in human sacrifices with my bare hands. I save seeds that disfigure animals and drive people insane.
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Anthropomorphism is a bad word in our language, especially when it comes to plants. We’re taught that plants and humans are nothing alike - none of our physical parts are similar, after all.
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“Why poison?” is something I’m confronted with on a regular basis. This prompt makes sense - I understand how weird it can seem for someone to be waxing poetic about poison plants, of all things.
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An older woman arrived at my house, a grandmotherly type with an unhurried walk. We said hello with tears streaming down my face. I asked her if she got tired of people crying when they met her.
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