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moonie
Creative writing student from the Land of Promise
The room smelled like the pomade Grandpa put on his hair the moment he got out of the shower. The vines he used to trim in the mornings had crawled to the grills on the windows from the rusty gate where he stood by as he watched me and my cousins play hide-and-seek along Almond Drive on Sunday afternoons. Mama was cleaning out his medicine box when I realized all the containers had not been emptied out. Uncle carried the plump luggage to the top of the closet filled with naked hangers. Grandma could not seem to fold the blanket on his bed the way he used to do it- corner to corner, edge to edge. Tony Orlando started squeaking when the CD player played “Tie A Yellow Ribbon,” but Grandma listened and danced with the air in the same way she danced with Grandpa at the wedding reception of their golden anniversary. I hold this scarf that he wrapped himself in as he sat on his wheelchair one windy afternoon when we drove him to the beach. Nobody dared to sit on the rocking chair in the balcony where he used to nap during sunny days that reminded him, he said, of the Panglao beaches where he used to play when he was young. But now he’s rested somewhere peaceful, where I could no longer massage his feet as he rocked himself to sleep.
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Dec 23, 2016
Dec 23, 2016 at 11:14 AM UTC
Where He Left
If pain was a splinter I could easily pull out of you, I’d be the stem with the thorns protecting the flowers.
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Sep 22, 2016
Sep 22, 2016 at 1:56 PM UTC
Untitled
Nightmares come to visit in teams which win right before the world reveals itself again. The black blanket that never seems to touch my skin feels cold as it trembles and longs for the warmth that radiates from the insides of her arms. I turn my head to her side of their bed, pillows still smell of her hair. For a split of a second, the lightning shed light on the emptiness of her shelves where her clothes and clutter belonged. Only shall my eyes rest again, when she returns.
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Aug 31, 2016
Aug 31, 2016 at 9:32 AM UTC
When She Returns
I like writing poems in buses. I like the image of letters leaving and trailing behind the bus as it moves towards its destination. On stop signs, I get stuck on a word letting it sink in me, leaving me no excuse to escape. In every car, bus, truck, there is a poet driving away from something, leaving his works on the asphalt. Not one pedestrian ever dared to read it or pick it up, at least, to throw it in the trash. If only poems fill up potholes and bumpy roads, bus-rides would be smoother.
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Aug 31, 2016
Aug 31, 2016 at 9:21 AM UTC
Random Bus Thought #1