Floodplain
All morning in mid-labornot ready for the hospital walking the floodplain the earth still soft waters receded tulip poplars knotted sycamores clumps of grassghosted with siltthe trees leaned downstreamfrom many floods I clung to themmy sisters I thought if I thought at allsomehow the term did not seem wrongthe ground was washed bare fibrous roots exposed slack water dusty with pollenwe walked and rested and walked againbowing then kneelingto each contraction as it came some bright bit of blue caught on the far bankwithout panicI felt each crest carry me fartheraway from you away from familiar ground in the spaces between your hands lightly— the air on my face—maybe I was the trees their massive trunks shifting as wind poured through high branches maybe I was the riverbed or the light as it pulsed between moving leavesfrom all about usa wordless insistence deep in my interior the forest the water rising
Feature Date
- March 18, 2024
Series
- What Sparks Poetry
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“Floodplain” from SURFACING: by Emily Tuszynska.
Published by Grayson Books on January 2, 2024.
Copyright © 2024 by Emily Tuszynska.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
Emily Tuszynska lives in Virginia, just outside Washington D.C. Her collection of poems about the upheaval of early motherhood, Surfacing (Grayson Books, 2024), was the winner of the Grayson Books poetry award. Her work can be found in EcoTheo Review, The Georgia Review, The Southern Review, and many other journals. For more information visit emilytuszynska.com
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