By BEA AGBI
I didn’t want the mango. I didn’t
want it I was full Just let me have a bit
but my mother said no bites,
peeling and putting it
into my hands, yellowredgreen soft
and malleable in its ripeness, eat
the whole thing.
I had forgotten
where dried sugar mango peels, mango
slushies, mango cubes, mango
popsicles and mango ice cream
come from. I had forgotten
that they are not the real fruit but
imitations of it, because a mango requires
both hands, lips sticky with juice
and spit, a tongue caught in the
web of fibers, and no time to
wipe your fingers clean until the
next bite, then the next next next until
all that’s left is the seed. I had forgotten surrender,
or perhaps I had never known it just as the mango
didn’t know it was falling from the tree
until it realized it was hoping to land somewhere soft
as a patch of grass, or someone’s hands.
So I ask the seed to forgive me of the factory, truck beds,
farmers’ market stands, car trunk, knife’s edge and trash can.
As I shut the lid, I pray it will fall through metal and plastic
to someday find its way back
to dirt. To dirt
and dust I wish you return.
Writer | Bea Agbi ’26 | bagbi26@amherst.edu
Editor | Eliza Becker ’26 | ebecker26@amherst.edu