AT THE SALON
Magazine pages filled with products to volumize,
customize, hydrolosize, defrizz.
Almost as any pages as are devoted
to organizing the closet that stores the bottles
and pumps and tubes of promise.
The stylist runs her fingers through my shampooed hair
and sighs.
She sprays, scrunches and plasters strands
to cover balding spots, brushes tint along roots.
The salon is an old barbershop,
chairs and mirrors rearranged to accommodate either sex.
The stylist’s hair is a long stream
of sienna red sunset,
naturally curly, a calm cascade of light and shimmer.
I sit under the dryer and stare at boxes
filled with siren calls to men who respond
to “rowdy red”, “audacious auburn” and
many variations of golden sun.
When dryer clicks to off
and the last of the holding sprays fogs the air,
the mirror reflects the me
that walked in,
no shimmer, no volume, no siren call.
I put the magazine back
and go home to organize my medicine chest.
THE COOKIE
It was just a cookie,
a careless, erose glob,
harmlessly stuck to
a rusty car hood.
I wanted the cookie,
like an achy itch
left by a swarm
of unending desire.
I wanted the cookie,
its uneasy roundness melting
the taste of last night’s
lemon peels, toasting
it into chocolate ice cubes.
Aroma wafted to full head of steam
as the car rose from stupor,
gears shifting into first
second
third
taking the cookie away
away to a salted caramel
marsh in the desert.
I plunged into the mirage
pulled the clouds of fluff
around me like a clock
ticking so loudly that time
burned the bottom of the cookie
I just wanted the cookie.
As always, Gina’s poetry is on target. It takes us inside and makes us vulnerable. Her “At the Salon” dismount says it all. She is a sharp observer of human strength and frailty.