Autumn Begins in Virginia, Where You Left Me

 
and every year I still yearn to write them—the leaves,
signature picture of beauty 
                                                inevitable
and stock as a sunset. 
                                         The truth? I took a screw-
driver to your window, 
                                         almost dropped your AC 
unit two stories to concrete. 
                                                 The herb garden
is dying. 
                The stinkbugs are finding ways inside.
You’re trekking the opposite half of the country
trying 
           to trace the azimuth to a future
you can believe in 
                                 and I’m thinking of my ma-
ternal line,
                    the sex-specific cancers I stand 
to inherit:       
                   uterine, 
                                 ovarian, 
                                                breast. 
My body is not inevitable. I picture 
it in forty years, 
                          gutted,
                                      unsexed to survive, 
my hands famishing for the feel my twenty-
something self.
                          You mail me a letter on your best 
stationary.
                  I stare at the bathroom mirror, 
snap polaroid nudes.
                                   Season of what we have not 
yet,
       and what we’re scared to lose.
Joanna Currey

Joanna Currey is from Virginia. She holds an MFA in poetry from Vanderbilt University, and previously earned her BA in English and Poetry Writing from the University of Virginia. Joanna’s writing has appeared in Presence: a Journal of Catholic Poetry, Nashville Review, Nimrod International Journal, and Alaska Quarterly Review.

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And Yet There Is Hope: A Review of Dialogues with Rising Tides by Kelli Russell Agodon