The Stranger

Who’s that stranger in the mirror

I’m sure we’ve not been introduced

Tho she seems somewhat familiar

I don’t know her, to tell the truth

Has to be someone’s grandmother

With graying hair and sagging skin

Bristly eyebrows meet each other

Crow’s-feet, wrinkles, and double chin

No surprise she doesn’t linger

At the mirror in the hall

She’s no longer a dead ringer

Of her photograph on the wall

I would never be judgmental

For I’m sure I’d do the same

Should time be to me so cruel

That like her image I became

All at once I’m disconcerted 

By the strange person that I see

Quickly turning, eyes averted

I realize that person’s me.