Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

Poetry of Issue 9: Rubbing The Porcupine

Rubbing The Porcupine

I’m in the chair again after two years.

The barber’s a stranger whose body

nudges mine as he comes close.

His razor buzzes through swaths of hair,

leaving a clear path in its wake.

Long, brown-grey curls gone.  His blade

licks all my head, tufts fall.  I’m shorn.

As if fresh from confession, sins at last

forgiven.  Like a bad friendship finally

ended, or one washed up, and there’s no

more growing.  Like a love lost, a split

ending, a falling out. How this man

touches, tilts, plays with my head,

relieves me of all these accumulated inches.

Now that a pile sits on the floor like and

a dearly-loved pet that’s been put down,

come here and rub my newborn crewcut.

It’s prickly like a resurfaced porcupine.

Patrick Hammer, Jr.

Home Planet News