“Some of us wear a prosthesis,” writes Rochelle L. Johnson, an environmental studies professor. “But all of us are amputated.” Johnson’s personal essay for The Georgia Review, winner of the journal’s annual prose prize, braids her shifting work as an educator, navigating her students’ senses of planetary decline, with the loss of her leg, removed due to a longtime medical condition. Considered together, these two experiences challenge conventional ideas about the boundaries of the body. Here, phantom pain is evidence that “nature never forgets what it has been.”

These many years later, my goodbye goes on, because the ghost-limb speaks to me every moment. With each movement, I feel my body doing the work of propelling me on a partial leg. My ghost-limb accompanies me like an eradicated mammal might accompany a nineteenth-century man walking through a landscape severed of parts of its own being. Or like a vanished birdsong might sing to a woman wandering in a meadow. Or like a home might beckon a college student, filling her young heart with the hope of a future return to that place she knows she once was, where she always thought she was meant to be.

More picks about health, the body, and its limits

How Losing My Limbs Turned Me Into a Different Kind of Cook

Yewande Komolafe | The New York Times | January 27, 2026 | 1,678 words

“Two years ago, our cooking columnist Yewande Komolafe woke from a coma and soon learned her body would be profoundly altered. She recounts her journey back to the kitchen, and to herself.”

The Birth Keepers

Sirin Kale and Lucy Osborne | The Guardian | November 22, 2025 | 8,556 words

“Influencers made millions pushing ‘wild’ births–now the Free Birth Society is linked to baby deaths around the world.”

St. John the Wondermaker

Rebecca E. Williams | The Georgia Review | October 14, 2025 | 2,125 words

“Since April, on the past five fourth Wednesdays of the month I have driven to St. John the Wondermaker Orthodox Church, in Atlanta’s Grant Park neighborhood, to wash and trim and file the feet of a handful of the city’s 2,200 unhoused men.”

Profits and False Promises

Sofi Thanhauser | Virginia Quarterly Review | November 13, 2025 | 4,915 words

“How the war on cancer is good for business.”

My Mom and Dr. DeepSeek

Viola Zhou | Rest of World | September 2, 2025 | 4,472 words

“In China and around the world, the sick and lonely turn to AI.”

On Walking

Ira Sukrungruang | The Sun | December 2025 | 3,018 words

“To love walking is to love the body, and this has been a barrier for me.”