i don’t know, but there just aren’t any words for this, are there?
days later and i still scramble for the right things to say, as if any poetry could make this easier, more okay. (it doesn’t work. i give up soon enough.) (there is no poetry for this.)
i want to let time take my hand, wash away the horror of what america has done; i let angry music blare loud in my ears before i realize—
no. this is not something i can drown out. this was not anything time would heal. this was never something we could have just ignored, see?
you cannot let a sickness grow call it healing while it festers. you cannot watch a burning building and think the fire will put itself out. you must not leave a infected wound out and open and just wait for the blood to stop on its own.
(it’s already infected. it hurts enough already.) (it will scar.)
no. you have to act. you have to say: this is not normal. we cannot live with smoke around us, with open wounds— we cannot live if we are dying.
you cannot succumb. you cannot think of dying yet. you have to say: i am alive. i will not die. not while i am needed, not while i can help.
take a breath. let the image sink before you. stare at it, this open wound; but then you must fight the sickness.
if you put a frog in boiling water it will jump out; if you put a frog in lukewarm water and let it boil, it will die there. haven't you noticed how hot the water is. haven't you noticed how it has always been boiling.
this poem also kinda applies to ferdinand marcos' burial in LNMB— a late dictator whom the supreme court in my country have now voted to bury in a place for national heroes.