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Thursday, January 2, 2014
Sunflowers Aren't Pretty
I always use the excuse that sunflowers aren't that pretty in real
life, and portraits and paintings always make them out like they are
this beautiful thing, but in truth it is a bent reality, something
ugly made to look beautiful so that we feel better about it. Truth is
I hate sunflowers because it represents everything fake in people,
everything that most people are. However, there was this moment in my
life where sunflowers seemed so beautiful to me. We went to Kansas to
visit my great Grandmother, she had simple sunflowers everywhere in
her house, especially the kitchen. But it wasn't the sunflowers that
I loved necessarily, it was what they represented to this beautiful
wise woman, and how I longed to know what she knew, she had such a
sweet heart, and was always willing to give, but her eyes.... her
eyes spoke more than words could ever give to me, I feel like she
held such sorrow, pain, joy and wisdom. It was curious to me, how a
woman could hold all of that and more and still be the wonderful
woman that she was. Sunflowers represented the fullness in her life.
They had been beautiful to me, because finally they made sense in
that one moment: Sunflowers only live for about three and a half
months and grow to be between about 5 to 12 feet high, and the truth
about that is they only stay pretty for about 1 week and that's right
after they bloom, then they load down with seeds and the petals turn
a dreadful color and fall off. You see, the representation became
plain, because her life represented to me the growth of a sunflower,
not the beauty. Out of the seed, the first root, radicle,
pushes through and develops into a taproot. It continues to expand
through primary and secondary tissues. Primary roots develop from
primary tissues of the apical trimester that increase the length of
the plant. Secondary roots, from secondary tissues of the lateral
trimesters give rise to the girth of the plant. Both structures are
vital for the growth and strength of the stem. The stem
of a sunflower grows from the plume
found inside the seed. The plumule is an embryo shoot with a
hypocaust stem structure below the point where the plume was attached
and an epicycloid stem structure above this attachment point. Since a
sunflower is a dicot, the cross-section of the stem organizes the
vascular bundles in an away to separate the cortex and create a pith.
This is opposite of its root structure, which does not include a
pith. The vascular bundles consisting of xylem
and phloem
transport water, mainly acquired from the roots, and food, mainly
developed in the leaves, throughout the plant. The plumule
gives rise to the first leaves of the plant that will go on to grow
into organs for transpiration,
with the opening and closing of the stomata
found within the cell structure of leaves; for photosynthesis,
and for other metabolic
activities. Then finally the first bud of the flower gives way. The
flower of a sunflower is actually several flowers, which is why it is
considered an inflorescence.
An inflorescence is a group of several flowers. Therefore, the many
individual packets at the center of the head are the fruits of the
plant, not the seeds. Each flower of the sunflower consists of the
typical structures of a flower: receptacle, peduncle, sepal, petals,
stamen, and a pistil. Consequently, every flower is able to develop
fruit, or the ripened ovary, with the ovule (seed) inside. Before I
lose you to boredom completely, the whole meaning is that very rarely
do we see the beauty in people's lives so we choose to hang on to the
one meaningless moment when the outside seemed to show beauty, the
true beauty is on the inside and the trial it takes to get there. Am
I saying that I like sunflowers now? Absolutely not, because they
still represent the fake in the world, the temporary, because if they
were represented correctly, then the true beauty of them could
actually be appreciated.
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