Today’s choice

Previous poems

Sarah Crowe

 

 

 

wig

they gave me the cold
cap to stop my chemo
hair falling out

brain freeze
for hours
a tight band of nausea

but still my hair fell out

i swept up my gold
and silver
hairs

washed them
laid them out to dry
in neat lines
on an old multicoloured
beach towel

threaded a tapestry needle
with my hairs

sewed them through a perished
rubber swimming hat
smelling of summers
chlorine
talc

i wore my wig
to let my hair down
danced with myself
round my empty house

 

 

Sarah Crowe is a poet based in Norwich. She has an MA in Poetry (UEA). She has published in Ink Sweat & Tears, Egg Box Publishing and South Bank Poetry magazine and was recently longlisted in the Dithering Chaps pamphlet competition.

Gerry Stewart

      In My Last Phone Call Did I say it looks like rain? I meant the sky is black with a thirst only crying can quench, clouds smothering the hills. Did I say this was my home? It was a mistake. The walls are collapsing even as I paint myself into a...

S Reeson

There is no evidence anywhere that Albert Einstein ever said the definition of insanity is ‘is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results’ except there he is, all over the Internet, being attributed with having done exactly that.