Diana Keren Lee

In the Morning Light

Cyndi Lauper in the living room,

my mother cooking liver in the kitchen.

I was staring at the sky through the blinds.

At five and six and seven, the song again

during laps in gym class, pausing a second

before running counterclockwise.

Knowing that being a girl was temporary

but I would remember the empty stage

we ran toward and away from.

The phone never ringing,

the moon hiding its lover

the sun even from itself —

at least someone got to walk in it.

A woman lies on the sand.

Mama, who never wanted

a husband, only to climb

mountains and more mountains,

married my poor father.

All those years in a line.

Her once beautiful hands

weathered like maps folded

over and over again,

polishing artificial hearts

of their grit until they shined.  

She saved her worries

for the middle of the night.

In the middle of my life  

at the end of our call

she tells me to enjoy life,

to have fun.    

Diana Keren Lee is the author of How to Cast a Beautiful Animal, winner of the 2025 Poetic Justice Institute Editor’s Prize for BIPOC Writers (Fordham University Press). A National Poetry Series finalist and Poetry Society of America Chapbook Fellowship winner, her work has appeared in Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, The New Republic, Prairie Schooner, Wildness, and elsewhere. She has received awards from MacDowell and Yaddo.