The earth cracks up; 
Reveals a crevice 
And the tiny green hood 
Of the creature 
That was born within; 
Has ensconced itself; 
Ramified and spread, 
With its sprawling roots, 
Deep, thick and bulgy. 
Beneath the tiny green hood, 
A hungry creeper awakens. 
It is ambitious and presumptuous; 
Feeds on the insides, 
And crawls on the outside, 
Grazing and groveling. 
It grows onto your hand 
You had held out only to toy 
With its flimsy sensitive tendrils 
Which now ingratiate 
And warp around your stiff fingers. 
It grows onto your feet 
Though you stood there 
Only to be a spectator, 
It knots around your legs 
Attempts to tie you up, 
Restricts your freedom. 
Its arms still lengthening, 
Still groping, 
Have clutched you 
As they run across your chest, 
Around your waist, 
Unaware that you are free 
That you have a mind of your own; 
Unaware that you had been 
Only mocking its idiosyncrasies. 
You had felt good when 
It fumbled and found you 
And to know it can thrive 
Only by embracing you. 
It is only irksome now 
In trying to own you. 
You have no use for it any more. 
And so, it is time 
To shake off the fetters. 
To sneeze off the malady; 
To uncurl those silly tendrils, 
And let them dangle. 
It is time to tear apart 
The rampant tangled mess; 
To burn it down; 
To stomp over it; 
And to extricate yourself. 
The gaping crevice it would leave, 
Will be sealed with cement. 
The roots will die and shrink 
And be entombed within. 
You will shrug and walk away 
And find another plaything.