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By Jacob Shores-Argüello

My cousin WhatsApps me from Costa Rica, fits the family
into the rectangle of video as they wave from the balcony.


He turns the phone, shows me a swirl of birds in the hurting sky.
But they are not birds. They are neighbor Tinoco’s roof tiles


flying in a storm’s rotary energy. My family is calling because
I’m in Oklahoma, which, to them, is synonym for tornado.


Te amo, I say as my cousin lowers the phone for our grandmother
to hear. She’s scared because she’s lived in the town for 80 years


and can’t recognize all these new skies. Because a year before,
a hurricane reaved its way across this country for the first time


in recorded history. Tornado or torbellino or something else,
I ask her about the valley’s strange wind. And she laughs, says


that she was calling to ask me the same thing. I don’t know why
I keep forgetting the change in climate change. My grandmother


sighs as the sky darkens to the color of rum. Why I still think
that we’ll have names for all the things that will come.


Notes:

Audio version performed by the author.

Source: Poetry (June 2023)

Poet Bio

Jacob Shores-Argüello
Jacob Shores-Argüello is a Costa Rican American writer. His second book of poetry, Paraíso, won the inaugural CantoMundo poetry prize and will appear in 2017. See More By This Poet

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