
Courtesy of marta/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).
I.
My mother’s nightly ritual: sitting
on the floor in front of the hallway
mirror, a wet comb, the right
amount of hair. She ropes
a plastic pink curler
into her scalp, locks it
into a forced curl. I watch,
ask her to put a few in my hair,
which she does.
II.
My mother lost all her hair to chemo
in one night. She left on my voicemail:
“It all came out. Even my eyelashes.
I look like a space alien.”
When I saw her, everything
in me screamed horror.
I hid it, deep in my core,
so it wouldn’t taint
my smile, replied:
“You look beautiful. It’ll grow back.
Healthier, softer.” I stroked her head
as if it were a newborn’s.
III.
My mother couldn’t deal
with the wig. It itched,
left red sores. She left it
at home with the exercise
bike she never used. We went
grocery shopping. She, bald,
but with lipstick and her floral,
turquoise, dress. The grocery boy
stared, stared, stared.
My fist hardened,
nails digging into my palm,
ready to break
his teeth. My mother paid
no mind, loaded
the brown paper bags into
the trunk.
IV.
When I came home
at the end of summer,
I didn’t know she would die
in three months, even though
she coughed through the night,
slept most of the day, didn’t leave
the house, blood soaked
paper towels littered the floor
next to her bed.
V.
She asked me to help her
wash her hair in the sink.
I didn’t believe she couldn’t
do it. Mothers can do
everything. And like a spoiled
teenager who thought she’d have
her mother forever, I huffed
like a brat, like I had somewhere
to be, like she was asking me to take
out the trash in the middle
of my favorite TV show. She arched
over the sink. I dumped
cold water over her head
which made her scream, “You’re being
so rough!” I globbed on the shampoo,
rinsed, threw her the towel.
I didn’t know. I didn’t know
that you would die
so soon. I didn’t know.
VI.
I keep my hair long,
almost twenty years later.
And if only to do so
in this poem, I return
to our kitchen and embody
a four star salon, give her
a warm towel for her face,
lean her head back
massage lavender shampoo
into her hair,
or maybe it would be sandalwood
or rosemary. I work
my fingers over her scalp in gentle,
infinite circles,
lather all my love,
all my shame, all
my longing to have her back
and then rinse it clean.