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Vous manquez tellement mauvais ce soir, mon bébé!
Vous souhaiter étaient là pour me tenir la main et de dire:*
"Vous pouvez le faire, ma ... "

Pinaghiwalay tayo ng himpapawid
at ng layunin **** itawid ang kahulugan
ng iyong buhay sa ibayong kalupaan.

Dahil alam nating muling hahalik ang luha
sa ating mga pisngi sa oras na agawin ka na
ng bitbit **** mga bitbitin, saglit tayong

humimpil sa huling kumpisal ng ating
damdamin: "Hindi ito paglisan. Tayo ay
pipisan sa isang katiyakan na ang pag-ibig,

kailanman, 'di tayo iiwan." Sino nga ba sa atin
ang patungo saan, saang lupalop at hangganan?
Hangganan ngang maituturing ang sinambit ng

ating puso: "Ce n'est pas quitte. Nous allons rester
dans la certitude que l'amour, pour toujours,
ne nous quittera jamais."
Para kay KHIWAI, ang aking pinakamamahal na kakawat at kababata.
Para kay MAMA BERN at sa kanyang BEBE.
Read more poems by Filipino poets at http://www.rabernalesliterature.com/

Quezon City, Philippines
October 2, 2013
 Oct 2013 Sofia Paderes
Tallulah
We met on bourbon street
In 1942
With the trumpets bleat
We danced the whole night through

You went back to war
The very next day
But not before you swore
You’d be back in May

But May came and went
Back in 1952
& with each letter sent
came not a peep from you

Now I’m haunted
By 1952
This isn’t what I wanted
But what else is there to do?

We met on bourbon street
In 1952
I was the last girl you kissed
Before you ceased to exist
For Beatrice Mitchell who lost her husband in WWII and never stopped loving  him.
 Oct 2013 Sofia Paderes
Tallulah
A cozy little lot
Our own very spot
With doors and floors
My drawers and yours

There’s a tea ***
For the earl grey I bought
And a French press
For your coffee express

There’s an old stereo
Playing songs from the radio
Peonies hanging in glass jars
In a home we call ours

It’s warm here
I know it will disappear
But maybe if I just believe
I’ll never have to leave
 Oct 2013 Sofia Paderes
Tallulah
At a funky record store
We found on a corner
I sat down on the floor
& chatted up some foreigner

At dark
With cigarettes and warm beer
We stumbled to Alamo Park
& watched the lights disappear

At dawn
I woke up wrapped around you
You kissed me and yawned
& then it hit me, and I knew
 Oct 2013 Sofia Paderes
laura
II.
 Oct 2013 Sofia Paderes
laura
II.
Their sea foam apartment has soaked up the ashes that have hit their bedroom carpet, as well as the remnants of silent conversations passed between quiet lips. She found him in his Victorian chair that he had acquired from last year's flea market.

But staring. As if he wanted to mold into the inanimate walls, so that glares became passing glances, thoughts and feelings would strip into the air. The very fabrics of his mind would form to nothing - nothing significant. He mumbled heavy words towards the window, his view of family distorted under his parent's clumsy hands. She knew his hatred pulsed behind every memory of "family".

She thought, "but they grew older and so did we".

His eyes had never looked so dull. The reluctance in his face reminded her that she was tired. Not tired of her bed. But of this- blanket of clouded emotions. She herself collapsed next to him, freeing her dismantled wonders and collected pool of what used to be.

In a circle-the-drain sort of way, he said that it's killing him.

Killing you? I think killing both of us.
Hesitating, her voice broke the silence.

"Maybe that's our tragic flaw; we think too alike. If you're tired my love, then I feel the same."
THANK YOU FOR MAKING THIS TREND, AH. <3
 Oct 2013 Sofia Paderes
Kaia
on saturdays, they broke our knees.

mondays and wednesdays were reserved
for the study of literature,
for splitting open our heads and branding the words of the great writers
into our bones,
copying them over and over in our own blood,
memorizing masterpieces until we knew them forwards and backwards,
in order to remind us that there was always someone out there
who was better than us
(so we might as well not even try).

on saturdays, they broke our knees,
because pain would make us stronger.

on tuesdays and thursdays,
we were chained to a wall of numbers
and forced to take it apart piece by piece
(then put it back together, exactly how it had been before)
learning the true nature of  things from the inside out,
so that we would always have an answer for everything,
and never have to just sit and wonder
at the world around us.

on saturdays, they broke our knees,
so that we would learn to know the sound of shattering better than our own skin.

fridays were the days
when we were taught history,
when we were told the stories of our pasts and their pasts
and all the pasts that had ever been,
so that we would learn from our mistakes (and their mistakes,
and all the mistakes that had ever been)
a thousand times over—
learn them so well that we would carry them with us forever,
and never be tricked into letting go.

on saturdays, they broke our knees,
so that we would always have something familiar to fall back on.

sundays were our day of rest,
when we stole a rowboat
and paddled off into the mist,
until the fog was so thick that we couldn’t see our own feet
(it was the closest we ever got
to emptiness,
not that we would ever admit
we desired it).

but on saturdays, they broke our knees,
so that we would remember to come back eventually.

we always did.
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