Poem in which my mother cuts off all her hair,
asks for 150 dollars
See this picture here
it's a wounded deer, it's a scoliosis ghost
sat in wheelchair
under ER fluorescent light
I swear I never came from there
but I did
I did
it's her lamentation - I know - for her mother
her sackcloth and ashes
I imagine how she held the scissors
until my father relented and took them in his hands
and cut it all away;
the pain
it's still there
only the hair is gone
and her mother
there's nothing sadder than knowing
that you can't really fix any of this
how grief, like Samson’s strength,
was never in the hair
it was just there
just there.
- © James Diaz 2021
James Diaz is the author of This Someone I Call Stranger (Indolent Books, 2018) and Poetic Disasters (forthcoming, Alien Buddha Press, 2021,) as well as the founding Editor of Anti-Heroin Chic. Their work has appeared most recently in Cobra Milk Mag, Bear Creek Gazette and Resurrection Mag. They live in a far too cold and snowy upstate New York, where they are waiting patiently for the Spring.
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