Memento Mori
“God blessed you with curly hair,”
my mother used to say
and dressed me like Shirley Temple.
On my bare scalp, Australia:
a birthmark that hid
in the thicket of my hair.
Unblessed in a downburst, I lost
my leafy summer, my lovely,
my crest, my crown.
I sleep in a flannel nightcap.
My wig sleeps in a closet,
comb-and-brush in a drawer.
I wake to a still life:
a clock that marks the hour
before it strikes.
No skull on my desk.
Just a face in the mirror,
unrecognizable.
Originally published in The New Yorker