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The clouds are heavier than my mascara; my lashes are the weighing scales, they're pressing them down, down, now I'm feeling down, down. My eyes were the drunkest until they met with this waterfall that makes the cars dance outside my bus window. Be this north, south, east, or west; all I know is forward, it gets better there. And what do you know, I told you so; the clouds are getting thinner here, now that we're finally here. The cone trees align like constellations, the air is eucalyptus in my lungs, and the sky spread like one giant cloud that swallowed up the sun so it's still bright even if it's already about to be night. I guess the four long rides are worth the sight of these foreign horses and this patch of a pineapple field. Above me, the sea; below me, the city. The foam and fog made everything gray-blue and the landscape is a moving painting where the santan flowers are magnified and the mountains are blurred. We went up and down, hill by hill; left and right, tree to tree to be somewhere and nowhere at the same time. This hanging bridge would be more thrilling if I were to fall and start a landslide. It's getting darker and the flickering of the city is no longer in silhouette but in full incandescence like that of twinkling stars or Christmas lights 'round the park, and suddenly breathing is an amusement. Now there's a cricket and bird duet featuring the frogs and we're walking in the dark, finding our way through this maze of ilang-ilangs and moss, with the new moon as our north star, tracing our steps back while I lose vision of the lines on my paper. A little firefly leads us out, then we're back at the same yellowbell stairs from the way in. Coldness has never been this memorable and I'd always remember how the Tagaytay wind swept me off my feet and took me back to this tricycle ride, back to this bus ride, and then home to one of our many homes.
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Mar 3, 2016
Mar 3, 2016 at 1:14 AM UTC
The Tourist
The clouds are heavier than my mascara; my lashes are the weighing scales, they're pressing them down, down, now I'm feeling down, down. My eyes were the drunkest until they met with this waterfall that makes the cars dance outside my bus window. Be this north, south, east, or west; all I know is forward, it gets better there. And what do you know, I told you so; the clouds are getting thinner here, now that we're finally here. The cone trees align like constellations, the air is eucalyptus in my lungs, and the sky spread like one giant cloud that swallowed up the sun so it's still bright even if it's already about to be night. I guess the four long rides are worth the sight of these foreign horses and this patch of a pineapple field. Above me, the sea; below me, the city. The foam and fog made everything gray-blue and the landscape is a moving painting where the santan flowers are magnified and the mountains are blurred. We went up and down, hill by hill; left and right, tree to tree to be somewhere and nowhere at the same time. This hanging bridge would be more thrilling if I were to fall and start a landslide. It's getting darker and the flickering of the city is no longer in silhouette but in full incandescence like that of twinkling stars or Christmas lights 'round the park, and suddenly breathing is an amusement. Now there's a cricket and bird duet featuring the frogs and we're walking in the dark, finding our way through this maze of ilang-ilangs and moss, with the new moon as our north star, tracing our steps back while I lose vision of the lines on my paper. A little firefly leads us out, then we're back at the same yellowbell stairs from the way in. Coldness has never been this memorable and I'd always remember how the Tagaytay wind swept me off my feet and took me back to this tricycle ride, back to this bus ride, and then home to one of our many homes.
#30, July 14, 2013
jami-samson
Written by
Mar 3, 2016
Mar 3, 2016 at 1:14 AM UTC
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