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Poetry is often excellent on grief, though I struggle to read about grief while I'm grieving. 
So I try to let myself into feeling through a side door. A poem brimming with sadness that's different from the sadness I'm feeling. The emotional adjacency helps with catharsis but prevents me from falling down a flight of misery stairs. 

OBIT
By Victoria Chang

My Mother’s Teeth—died twice, once in 1965, all pulled out from gum disease. Once again on August 3, 2015. The fake teeth sit in a box in the garage. When she died, I touched them, smelled them, thought I heard a whimper. I shoved the teeth into my mouth. But having two sets of teeth only made me hungrier. When my mother died, I saw myself in the mirror, her words in a ring around my mouth, like powder from a donut. Her last words were in English. She asked for a Sprite. I wonder whether her last thought was in Chinese. I wonder what her last thought was. I used to think that a dead person’s words die with them. Now I know that they scatter, looking for meaning to attach to like a scent. My mother used to collect orange blossoms in a small shallow bowl. I pass the tree each spring. I always knew that grief was something I could smell. But I didn’t know that it’s not actually a noun but a verb. That it moves.

This poem was originally published in Poetry (November 2019)

The Postscript
This week, I'm thinking of the eight people—six Asian women and two others—who passed away in a racist attack on three different spas in Atlanta, Georgia. I'll be making a donation to Kundiman, "a national nonprofit organization dedicated to nurturing generations of writers and readers of Asian American literature. Kundiman creates a space where Asian Americans can explore, through art, the unique challenges that face the new and ever changing diaspora. We see the arts as a tool of empowerment, of education and liberation, of addressing proactively the legacy we will leave for our future." Whenever I see a poet has a Kundiman fellowship in their bio, I'm excited to read their work. 
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Sonia Feldman · 2529 Detroit Ave · Cleveland, OH 44113 · USA

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