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Cherdaphne Angel Aug 2017
Mangawit man ang aking leeg sa pagtingala,
palibutan man ako ng mga lamok at gamu-gamo,
manigas man ako sa lamig ng simoy ng hangin,
maabutan man ako ng unang bahid ng liwanag ng bungang liwayway,
ako ay mananatili;
dahil minsan na nga lang
kayo lumabas sa inyong pinagtataguan,
minsan ko nalang kayo masulyapan
at sa tinagal-tagal kong nagmamasid
ay ngayon ko nalang kayo muling natagpuan.
Kaya aking susulitin ang gabi.
Aking gagawin ang lahat ng pagtitiis
para lamang kayo'y masilaya't mapagmasdan,
mga bituin.
Cherdaphne Angel Jul 2017
I remember the days
when everything is just so innocent.

When I need to get some breast milk,
I cry.

When someone makes funny faces
and stick their tongue out their mouth,
I laugh.

Everything is as simple.
Not a word meant another.
It is as it is.

It just so happened that as I grow up,
everything turned out to be so complicated.

When I was a kid,
***** meant cat.
And now I see cat faces printed in front of *******, in women’s lingerie, in bikinis.
I see it being sold online as I scroll in my twitter account.
If ***** was a tourist attraction, it would probably be much visited than Disneyland.

When I was a kid,
***** was a female dog.
And now, everyone turns out to be one.
Go on! Laugh out loudly!
Instead of saying “Hi!”, we say, “Hey *****! Wassup?”
Not that it is meant literally,
it just seems to be a part of our language now;
an expression.

When I was a kid,
**** was a name and BJ was a nickname.
Oh come on, you already know what that means.
But for those who don’t, just look at your seatmate’s…
Uhhh… nevermind.

When I was a kid,
***** was a nut.
And now, it is censored when it is said in movies.
Toot you!
And it was just “***** you!”

When I was a kid,

Bang was a sound,

Rubber was like plastic,

*** was an animal,

*** was a snack.

All of which sounds so pervy now.

I work with words all day.
Is it the words or us who change?

Words seem so nasty now.
Inappropriate to say.

And I wouldn’t be shocked to know that during a Mathematics class in a 4-walled room at the 2nd floor of that building next to us,
The teacher asked, “What are sets?”
S-E-T-S
A student, a 7th grader undoubtedly raised his hand, stood up and answered, “******* po.”

And I knew that even the wrong meaning fits the wrong word.
That even the youngsters are already exposed to those words.

When I was in 7th grade,
sets meant a collection of elements.

When I was a kid,
*** meant gender.
spoken word poetry
Cherdaphne Angel May 2017
beauty is truly in the eye of the beholder,
but sometimes it lies behind the eyes,
hidden and unseen,
but it's for you to define.
maybe beauty is a bit of sense.
a touch on your skin
or a tickle from your throat;
a scent of a flower
or a taste of your own.
maybe beauty is a feeling,
just flattering around.
waiting to be expressed,
from the moment it was found.
maybe beauty is in the mind,
a very definable one.
other times, it seems obvious,
but you can't spit it out.
maybe beauty is vague.
maybe beauty is shy.
let it grow upon you.
let it get out.
for it is for the world to see
to feel or think
that beauty is beauty
and it is beautiful
just as it is.
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