Reading Joan Didion in the Condo in Red River
by Angela Janda
Grief turns out to be a place none of us know until we reach it.
– Joan Didion
I was in the condo in Red River,
the one with instructions on all the walls:
Turn on / Turn off / Don’t move dial / Empty
upon departure & the youngest was napping
& the oldest was below the dull brown deck
in the swimming pool with his father & I was reading
Joan Didion in the king-sized bed behind the living
room couch & it had been crawling up inside me
the whole trip & at Chapter 17 the recognition was a full
circle, was an egg in my mouth, how in all the years
since the divorce I’d never grieved it, not properly
or improperly—not at all. & when I came
upon it, when I saw the width of my regret, I wrote
him a letter & would have walked south away
from my sleeping baby through the Sangre de Cristos
to deliver it to him, would have taken his face
into my hands so gently that the touch itself
was the transmission, so the touch itself
was what I’ve lost my chance to say
Angela Janda’s poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in The Sun, Rattle, HAD, and elsewhere. Her work was a finalist for the 2024 Jack McCarthy Book Prize. She is on most social media sites as @angelajanda (@arjanda on Twitter). More information is available at angelajanda.com.