Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
 
321 · Sep 2017
Home (10w)
Jun Lit Sep 2017
Where
our
faces
kiss
sweat-laden
pillows,
there
our
hearts
roost.­
321 · Oct 2019
Pointing Navels
Jun Lit Oct 2019
Butterflies are guides
Where trees cheer and air is fresh.
Our navels point there.
318 · Oct 2017
Brewed Coffee III
Jun Lit Oct 2017
Bouncing, rebounding
on the floor of my memory -
the ball of my elder sister’s jackstones
and the lead washer of my elder brother’s sipa
travelling to and fro
the tops and yoyos
among the imaginary bread doughs
of gathered dust
from that childhood
sprinkled with the *** of yesterday
to bake make-believe
rice puddings
and rice cakes
- they seem to be spoiled now
in the food cupboards of computers
and eventually interred
in the graveyards of cellular phones

In the cemetery of memories
the ghost of poverty still haunts
never, ever unescapable

for every gulp of you
warmly soothes
the throats of scenarios
of all dramas and movies
in that nesting home
now decrepit, debilitated:
          after the day’s toils:
          you helped me swallow the lump of aromatic rice
          - cooked by Mother - the old fragrant stock
          that she loaned from the vendor from Quezon
          not even a piece of dried fish accompanying
          nothing else, only you, my brewed coffee
          nice both as dip and soup.
A translation of my poem "Kapeng Barako III" published on October 4, 2017
315 · Nov 2021
Undefeated
Jun Lit Nov 2021
They slapped your face.
                                             And you said nothing.
          Crying in silence –
                                             That was your comforting friend.
     You seemed to implore –
                                             Humans are by nature, good.
But the flowers of cosmos
                                             that you plant each day say otherwise.
           And your kindness
                                             has not prepared you.  
Battles happen everyday.
                                             Sometimes you really have to fight
     even if you know that
                                             Love is the ultimate weapon.  
Defend the coast, the cause –
                                             You can, you should.
And I fervently wish
                                             that you win.
We win.
308 · Jul 2019
Haiku for Pinoy Pieta
Jun Lit Jul 2019
On her lap still warm
Hugging dear life and her man
Judged by social gun.
Inspired by a photo by Raffy Lerma of the Philippine Daily Inquirer: https://frame.inquirer.net/2694/la-pieta/
308 · May 2020
Strangling Fig - 4
Jun Lit May 2020
Daydreams neath your crown
There young Tarzan mimics swung
I struck my first gold.
Dedicated to an Indian rubber tree planted in front of the Biological Sciences Building (LB Uichanco Hall) in the University of the Philippines Los Baños, from where I collected the type specimens of my first new species of mealybug.
307 · Jun 2019
Abandoned Nest
Jun Lit Jun 2019
Our world’s much disturbed.
All that’s left hangs by a thread.
A view of sadness.
303 · Nov 2020
Kapeng Barako XII
Jun Lit Nov 2020
Bumalikwas ang madaling araw
Mapula ang sinag ng malamlam na ilaw
Mula sa pagkagupiling ng iniwang gabi
Isang paos na tilaok pinilit magsabi
Tila inutil na tuod ang unan at papag
Walang tugon ni tikhim man lang
para sa likod at ulong lumapat

Mapagkunwari ang kulambo
Lamok pala’y kalaguyo
Akala ng balana’y karamay
Sa magdamag na paglalamay
Batang ipinaglihi sa Sto Niño
Ibebenta pala sa demonyo

Naglaga ng kape ang among kapre
Butil daw ay hinirang ng musang na tumae
Galapong pala’y napanis na sapal
Nilagyan ng dagta ng nilinlang na bangkal
Bang-aw na ang panatikong tagasunod
Lublob na sa pusali, puwit pa rin ang hinihimod:

          Sayang ang kita, mamaya’y bayaran na!
          Copy-paste-post - sige pa!
          Ang perang kikitain ay mas mahalaga
          May paburger pa sina konsi at mayora
          O e 'no kung nasa poso ***** tanang kaluluwa?

Bayaning tangan ay tabak, tila nakanganga
Kinain na ng anay ang papel at pluma.
Brewed Coffee - 12; 12th in a series of poems mostly focusing on my memories of Lipa, the place of my birth, childhood and teenage years.
Jun Lit Oct 2018
Trapped we’ve been, believers
and non-believers alike, in this dungeon
- a room full of venomous vipers
- a hall that in the not-so-distant season
of economic lepers, here was where a patient recovers
- hope was glistening, hope was a reason
to hold on, to holding on

Honey-cured tongues scooped,
facts fudged and frothed, truth looped
Alas! we’ve all been duped
Instant change, six months quickly pooped
- rights became wrong, right stooped
- wrong became right,
- villains became heroes overnight
- immorality is might
- and quest for justice a seeker’s fright
This side, this race, these islands of many beaches white
- oft said as worth one’s dying for, one’s lonely fight
suddenly plunged deep into this Pitch Black night

Here Dark prevails, dark thoughts are tools
to maim the wise, the good. Pedestaled mules
treat us like canned sardines – fools
who locked themselves jam-packed inside
but left the key mindlessly outside
now Hope is flickering, seems to hide
After all the sacrifices far and wide
Is this all that there is - a place to deride?

Here Dark prevails, dark thoughts are raging bulls
But behind the door, I know the Great Light rules
Peep through the keyhole, see the fire
burning. Just one lit candle in straits dire
Strong winds blowing, to put it out with hate
Rush, before that last flame dies, we should not wait.
298 · Jun 2019
Exuvia
Jun Lit Jun 2019
Go, leave it behind.
Cast away painful mem’ries.
Hope springs eternal.
Inspired by sights of exuviae (cast skins) of cicadas in the Makiling Forest Reserve in April-June 2019.
296 · Apr 2021
Just A Human
Jun Lit Apr 2021
The saints would want me to forgive. That I have
done. Uphill trek, great effort, conquered the summit.
But then the witch doctors have asked me also to forget,
just forget, like nothing happened. The gray amnesia
intensely urged by incessant chants of choral animé
of aging cherubims would make it difficult, quite
difficult, to explain myself, to myself, with all honesty,
how I got the scars that run deep to the core of my unholy,
(Why not just say sinful? But what is a sin, anyway?),
heart. Unreal these demands. Abnormal? Unnatural.
Unnatural such reactions. Like a Shylock, I would have
yelled, nay, sworn (did he swear?) - a Jew also feels
pain, and bleeds - red blood, not green, not yellow –
when pricked, wounded, ******, slashed, crucified.
But I am not a Jew. Neither a Christian. Nor a Muslim.
Not a saint. Just a human.

Just a human. Not an Avenger or any superhero.
Can’t fly. No imaginary avian wings like those
of Caucasian angels. Not bat wings like those
of soot- or ember-colored devils. Outside an airplane
only my thoughts soar across the blue skies
and above the numerous species and varieties
of clouds. No cloudy mind.

Just a human. Blindfolded Science, not blind nor blinded,
called the species I belong to, just one, **** sapiens.
Wise human. Subspecies **** sapiens sapiens.
Wise, wise human. Made up of matter. That matters.
A lot. Matter not essence. Matter of fact. A living thing.
Not a germ nor a microbe nor a god but surely omnipresent.
Not a plant but may be green-minded. Needs plants.
Not a fungus but may be fungus-faced. Occasionally
attacked by the whitening, not by the illusion of being white,
but by blotching, thanks but no thanks to Tinea versicolor
Not a protist. I just protest. And protest I must.

Just a human. Classified as a hominid. A mammal. Highest
Form? Who said so? Aristotle? Highest? No! Form? Yes -
an animal. Not a microbe. Not a plant. Not a fungus.
Not a protist. I just protest. And protest, protest, I must.
Not a virus. Not white, not black, an Asian, a Filipino.
Not your virus. But like all humans, afraid, very much,
of the new coronavirus. But I am
Not the virus.

Afraid of coronaviruses, and all other deadly viruses,
because I am. Just a human.
296 · Dec 2020
Royal Family
Jun Lit Dec 2020
King and Queen Eagles
On palace trees feed their heir
Our hopes flying proud.
inspired by the discovery of a family of the critically endangered Philippine Eagle inside a forest in Davao, Mindanao, Philippines
288 · Apr 5
Flying Bodies
Jun Lit Apr 5
In Myanmar and Thailand,
images of bodies
dropping from skyscrapers
or cranes displaced, dislodged
natural disasters
humans sadly helpless

In Gaza, Palestine,
images of bodies
tossed high up to the skies
faceless, mercilessly,
by genocidal bombs
Humanity can't rest . . .

Our hearts cry, eyes are dry . . .
tounges, ears, anaesthesized . . .
Nostrils and throat choking
with insensitive air . . .
Impunity's blowing
And suffocates the soul!

Who said 'All life matters' ?
Who's sad? - All lives matter . . .
288 · Oct 2017
Brewed Coffee I
Jun Lit Oct 2017
like a stripteaser dancing
the aromatic vapors rising
my heart fast beating
my arms shivering
you’re a storm surge rushing
through my throat drying
the bitter and the sweet teaming
like honey and sap mixing.
A translation of my poem "Kapeng Barako I" published July 27, 2017
278 · Aug 2017
Intensity (10w)
Jun Lit Aug 2017
Young
buds
impatiently
bursting,
blooming . . .
Some
fade.
My
heart
remains.
275 · Feb 2019
Tsuki
Jun Lit Feb 2019
Amidst dark moments
One brightly lit moon's shining . . .
We're always hoping.
The title was changed in a later posting to "Blue Moon."
270 · Jan 2019
The Road
Jun Lit Jan 2019
Life is a journey -
the road may be very long.
We need to go on . . .
262 · Apr 2021
Frontliner ang Kaibigan Ko
Jun Lit Apr 2021
Frontliner ang kaybigan ko
Naglilingkod walang preno
Kontra bayrus ang g’yerang ‘to
S’ya’y bayani at idol ko.
Dedicated to my friend Dr. Ariel Jalil Ahmed Lescano and to other medical frontliners in the Philippines (especially) and elsewhere. Rough translation:
My Friend is a Frontliner
My dear friend is a frontliner
Serving, without break, no breather
Battling COVID, this war's unfair
He's hero, and I'm admirer.
The poem is in Tagalog (with borrowed English & Hispanic words) written in traditional dalit - a poem with a stanza of four lines, each line with eight syllables.
261 · Oct 2017
Brewed Coffee II
Jun Lit Oct 2017
you’re flawless, as I stare
at your dark brown surface bare
warm, hot, that mug I’m feeling
as for that hug I am always longing
you seem to smile, sweet, always inviting
freshly brewed flavor captivating
creamed or black - notwithstanding -
to my throat a massage soothing.
A translation of my poem "Kapeng Barako II" published on August 8, 2017.
260 · Mar 2021
Invincibility Is A Myth
Jun Lit Mar 2021
Whoever told you I am
          invincible must
                    be dreaming. Dreams
aren’t real. Reality, realities.
          Invincibility is an illusion.
Knights in armors live
          nowhere but in fairy tales. Behind
                    the shining shields, little child
                    warriors shiver in fear,
                    aching for a mother’s hugs
                    and a father’s cheer.
The crowds don’t see tears streaming,
          only true friends comfort the weeping
                    each nursing each other's wounds
                    together toward healing.
Survivors are butterflies
          emerging from hiding chrysalises
                    themselves survivors
                              from embattled caterpillars.
Invictus -
                    still the victor recites
                    favorite lines.
259 · Sep 2019
Silent Queens
Jun Lit Sep 2019
Simplicity bloomed
Silent scents lured fly fairies
Where ground orchids rule.
259 · Sep 2024
World of Magic
Jun Lit Sep 2024
A friend I call Sister Shawie silently sobs
And all of her children’s hearts’ knobs
are plugged with mics noise-cancelling
and bluetooth earphones desensitizing.
Old mixed emos - can’t relate, how brute
- worse than real deaf or numb or mute.
Their sympathetic eye implants blue night
and smiling chrysanthemums yellow bright
selectively blind. Their once flawless derma
now pock-marked with socmed anesthesia.

Beneath the optical cables of glass sublime,
the umbilical cords are cremated in time
as the much sought wifi signals reach prime.

The cyber world defies ethics and all logic . . .
A mother’s milk is replaced just like magic.
258 · Sep 2017
HHWW (10w)
Jun Lit Sep 2017
Hands
aging,
But
Love's
always
young,
holding
yours
while
walking.
252 · Sep 2018
Matatalinong Langgam
Jun Lit Sep 2018
Solomon
nagpayo:
Sangguniin
kayo.
Hiling
ko:
Kaliluhang
naghahari­’y
Lipulin
ninyo
Title translated: "Wisdom of the Ants"
Translation: Solomon counseled, consider your ways; please destroy our evil rulers
Jun Lit Sep 2017
Two
stars
shining -
as
One.
Aging
gracefully
surrendering.
Love
unending.
252 · Mar 2021
Great Bear, Little Bear
Jun Lit Mar 2021
In the darkest of nights even Moon
- it’s face reduced to the narrowest
crescent - hides behind thick
clouds of reluctant silence, a miser
failing to part with one droplet
of encouraging smile. Lonely
apathy rules supreme, solitary,
in the nocturnal palace
of insensitivity, indifference,
heartlessness. Silent night. Unholy night.
Sleepless night. Seeing Ursa Major –
I imagine that Big Bear waving.
And I remain one Little Bear. There
above Polaris I see her Holy Ghost –
the nurturing glance pulsates
to this hour. Six decades of life
humming her lullabies have kept
that young boy captive by caring
offers of coffee sips expertly brewed
in the calming warmth of tight hugs.

The love and compassion that you
planted still grows, still blooms.

And yes, a mother is eternally missed.
248 · Aug 2017
Why do I Love You? (10w)
Jun Lit Aug 2017
Ask
my
Heart,
not
my
Head,
why
my
Love
persists.
247 · Oct 2021
Pink
Jun Lit Oct 2021
Pink is soft
like rose petals
enough to soothe
the sore, the pains
of the black and blue -
a nation’s heart wounded
by years of political ****
and social and economic abuse.
Pink heals.

Pink is the right blend
of the crimson drops shed by heroes
and heroines, burning with sacred love
to fight for freedom, so elusive to a race forlorn,
and of the pure white spirit of those who heed
the people’s call to serve, selfless as a blank
sheet of paper, on whose face a meek verse
from a struggling poet is too shy to burst.
Pink transcends.

Pink is bright
against a backdrop of the now fading black
of the darkest nights in our ravaged islands,
and with faint, fainting faith of sky indigo
but encouraging tinge and peeping rays
of yellowish sun anew, we see a new day
breaking. Hope – a new day spells
our salvation as a people –
And pink is the color
of that dawn.
Originally written as a reply to an Impromptu Poetry Challenge by San Anselmo Publications on the topic/color Pink.
The Tagalog translation is posted separately as Kalimbahin.
245 · Aug 2021
Masked
Jun Lit Aug 2021
You sneezed your disapproval away
and the phlegm of your mind came
raining down.
                                    I didn’t move a finger.
                                    I had my mask on.

The insignia of the emperor, I don’t have,
for the sun that guides my path is bright
but not blood-colored. Your gang judged,
anointed not - I don’t belong, we don’t.
Still I wasn’t moved.  
                                     I have my mask on.

There at the throne, the jolly Governor
sat, flanked by the nobles of Royal Court –
all smiling, like full-grained opaque
white corn, where within the holding cobs
the worms had spread the contagion,
boring the core to pitiful emptiness. But
I wasn’t moved. I won’t move.
I know too well.
                                    They have their masks on.
Jun Lit Jan 2022
You left without a word - no goodbyes nor hints when you’d allow me again to savor that restful slumber with a thousand snores. When was that last time I slept so well? You just left. Nothing said. Nothing.

As hardly as you set off the ticking clock and made me wait for you to sniff the consciousness out of my head, while I count stars so bright or dolly sheep after sheep so white, so was the speed of your departure. I haven’t even had the luxury of precious minutes to ask whether the sheep I was counting had any wool and was there anything wrong with being black for a sheep, and I was too shy to ask the twinkling stars what they really are.

Like a quick scene in this melancholic one-act play in this old stage in the silent theater of memory recalls or the soft fragrance of white lacunosa wax plants on moonlit nights, I hear a loving mother tell her young son to pause his game and take the afternoon siesta on the mat spread on the cool bamboo floor relaxing amidst the dry days of the Lenten season. He just feigned asleep, eyes closed and then open again. I must be dreaming. How I wish I could tell him to relish sleep. For now I want sleep, even without dreaming. Even without dreams. But sleep seems so hard to get.

Sleep has become an elusive dream.
226 · Nov 2021
Decrowned Rooster
Jun Lit Nov 2021
Somebody in the neighborhood
cut the red comb of Rooster Good,
and the overgrown wattle too;
whoever did, nobody knew.
What’s sure is that the spritely stance
is now lost in his courtship dance.
His dawn tenor arias so proud
now low pitched and hoarse but still loud.

Perhaps those hands that held the knife
Hated that ***** enjoy free life
or had eyes burned on seeing red
or pinkish plume on bloodied head
A rooster’s form must do conform
with all rules of cockfighting norm.
Humans dictate how chooks should look
I should have asked their Holy Book.

And so dear Old Rooster’s de-crowned
Has lighter head, a king dethroned
beard-like wattle, like rouge wisdom
swish swings no more like pendulum
The pride is gone like in folks’ tales
as more mates follow full-combed males
Now fewer hens his harem hosts
mean fewer eggs for breakfast toasts.
In Philippine villages, especially those where cockfighting is still practiced, the comb and wattle of roosters are removed (cut off) particularly for those being groomed for cockfights. I don't do that to my small "flock" of free-range chickens.
225 · May 2019
Forest Choral Ensemble
Jun Lit May 2019
Cicadas sing love
Chants of Gregorian tenors.  
Nature’s selections.
Note: Only male cicadas sing, to court females, aggregate and/or advertise territories.
225 · Feb 2019
Sick Poems - I
Jun Lit Feb 2019
Finding poetry in a disease
is like looking for a nugget
of gold in one Smokey Mountain
of revolting, rotting *******.

A poem is precious.
It breathes us life.
Even one about death
brings hope of imagined
heavens and dreads of
eternal incomplete combustion,
but dengue ***** dry
its hapless victims.

Baby mossies
are cheering,
wriggling,
today, detritus feeding . . .
Tomorrow, the girls among them turning
into little vampires blood feeding;
and the boys will have for drinking
plant juices like wines brewing.
Rightly or not, the winged being
receives much of the blame, poor thing!

The greater pain, the bigger burden,
felt greatly by the downtrodden,
however, lies not so much in the bitten
nor the biter - always the villain.

When those whose tasks are meant to serve,
serve not the ones who need, but only themselves
When solicitors utter Hippocratic mantras
Like gurus descended from Oriental Olympuses
but in truth are Proud Marys burning with empty heads . . .

And when the multitudes blind and blinded,
in Plato’s Cave chained, demented
faithfully follow the falsehoods preached
by the High Priests and Priestesses:
I recall the scenarios of old tales told
of Pied Pipers leading kids out of Hamelin’s fold
to a treacherous realm of eternal repose.

And a nation’s bound to decompose.
224 · Mar 2020
Love in the Covidocene
Jun Lit Mar 2020
Our story starts as the song began
to play, asking where should one begin,
astonished at how great a love can be.
‘Twas not as infectious as the Time of Cholera
not as romantic as Marquez’s novela clásica,
or perhaps it is, in its own right, our own right.

Those were the days of living dangerously
in these islands fair, an archipelagic country
our chains were shorter and barking was difficult
as it was the first time, postwar, we’ve gone to the dogs
and the fake war hero proclaimed himself emperor
edifices hid the emptying of coffers by the great robbers
in the guise of benevolence, murderers drew terrors.

We survived the winters of Canberra
judged as mild by the lands of auroras
and back in the humid slopes of the tropics
perspiring to survive the inhospitable heat
and when respite’s within reach, suddenly
Yolandas of all sorts would pass by
and humbled, but still composed
we stood our ground. It seems the force
was with us, whatever that means.
Natural selection favored us, or did it?

These days are the times when little things
mean a whole lot more. Perhaps far more
than old friends and friends of Old
recount, Kitty Kallens of night shifts
and days of overtime work down under
in the land of gums and wattles
and jumping moms with their joeys.
Memories of the immense joys
that chancing upon an Aussie two-dollar coin brings
along the road to Civic – enough to buy veggies
to be mixed with instant Chinese noodles or some
fish and chips for a late brekkie. The grasses
on the friendly neighbors’ lawns are frozen
and could not be mowed and manicured
to yield ten dollars an hour. No weekend three hours.
And yet, and still, we lived. Had a life, our lives.

These days, indeed, little things
mean a whole lot more. Social distancing.
That’s the rule. And so we blow a kiss
from across the room. But tell me I’m nice
only after I’ve showered and changed my clothes
to decent office wear. We’re officially on work from home
so please don’t take a video of me sleeping on the couch
or singing a line or two on online videoke channel.
Can’t touch your hair, until I’ve washed my hands
with soap and water while singing ‘Happy Birthday’ twice
- no more alcohol nor sanitizer in the supermarkets -
nor pass near one’s chair. We’re on self-quarantine,
fearing unwanted previous exposure to the dreaded,
dreadful Wuhan virus, while shopping, and holding hands
while walking. The long-term asthmatic cough a suspect.
And we better be detained as no formal charge is possible
no trial could be done in a fair court, for we are the victims,
actual or potential, imagined or real, pauper or royal.

COVID19 is the villain in this so grandiose reality
of a horror booth show, and its molecules point to an ancestry
related to the bats or the pangolin or the engineering laboratory.
The plot is set with the sweet unraveling of our love – we need
not hoard this feeling, our hearts aren’t rolls of Oz tissue paper.  

Love has evolutionary history – the length of time’s an eon of we,
approaching senior years but still together, gracefully, lovingly
growing old in decades-long phylogeny – a novel, a love story
that will go beyond this Covidocene, this epoch, this age that’s crazy
and full of misery - brought to life human’s inhumanity.
But still no choice but to give another chance, patiently,
to the forever young Muse named Hope, shall we, shouldn’t we?
as the WHO preaches that ‘Solidarity is the Key.’
written for World Poetry Day 2020
224 · Nov 2020
Ulysses' Strong Winds
Jun Lit Nov 2020
You huffed and you puffed
Howling, blowing all night long.
We’re but poor li’l pigs.
The Philippines just experienced its 21st typhoon this year, from last Tuesday until today, 12 November 2020. Locally named Ulysses (International name: Vamco), it is the 7th in a succession of destructive tropical cyclones within just 6 weeks. Climate change is real.
224 · Feb 2019
In the Company of Giants
Jun Lit Feb 2019
Rows and rows of friends,
tall and mighty trunks, ancients.
Humbled, I am home.
223 · Mar 2019
Rafflesia
Jun Lit Mar 2019
Woody vine’s poor friend
Gave all up for Beauteous end.
Nature’s investment.
Inspired by my seeing blooms of Rafflesia lagascae, a rare parasitic plant, that depends entirely on a wild woody vine called Tetrastigma, on Mount Makiling in Laguna, Philippines
Jun Lit Jan 2018
Eyes shut but sleepless
My mind's a river flowing
"Why?" tirelessly swims
220 · Nov 2020
Molawin Creek
Jun Lit Nov 2020
Loud gush or chilled chimes
Hornbills’ chants accent your flows
Sounds bring inner peace.
Molawin Creek in Mount Makiling flows from midmontane part of the rainforest and downstream to the UPLB Campus. During the rainy season the sound of gushing waters dominate the sounds along the trail. In the drier months the flow brings calming sounds of a gentle stream.
219 · Dec 2020
Biting Midges
Jun Lit Dec 2020
Small bites penetrate.
Large blisters declare the war.
Human invaders . . .
Jun Lit Mar 3
Webs catch the small flies
But big bees just pass through them.
Talk about justice . . .
Jun Lit Nov 2020
When all trees cease breath
and all rivers smell of death
Money means worthless.
Widespread destruction of lives, sources of income and natural habitats - happening in the Philippines and in other places in the world right now are products of human activities - worsening as climate change increasingly approaches the point of no return. It reminds me of the Cree Indian saying: "Only when the last tree has died and the last river been poisoned and the last fish been caught will we realise we cannot eat money." This haiku paraphrases it.
213 · Jul 2019
Punò ng Pag-ibig
Jun Lit Jul 2019
Kung dumating ang panahon
Ulap na lang, aking dahon
Kung sakaling may magtanong
Pag-ibig ang s’yang tutugon.
My poem in Tagalog written in traditional dalit form; dalit is a short poem with 4 lines per stanza, and 8 syllables per line.
English translation:
TREE OF LOVE
If and when does come that season
My leaves have dropped, just clouds to don
And someone asks where have I gone
My love for you shall speak, lives on.
209 · Jul 2019
Beyond Genetics
Jun Lit Jul 2019
(To Dr. Adelina A. Barrion,
September 9, 1954-July 10, 2010)

You expertly explained to me
sources of variation,
and the role of mutation,
much of the raw material
for the mighty driver - selection
and along the way
I also learned acceptance.
Everything, everyone
can be the same and unique
at the same time
And it’s perfectly alright
to be different.

You demonstrated
how encoded messages
for passing on traits
within populations
change in frequencies
and distributions,
how nature makes blind choices
how the fittest survives
and I learned deeper
my evolution.

Unconsciously, you made
aspiring for genuine honor
and excellence
more deeply rooted
in the loci of the heart
and the helices of the mind.

You taught me genetics
but you made me learn
Life is to be enjoyed,
much, much greater
than its four letters.

You proved -
great teachers never die,
they always live
in the lessons they give.
207 · Nov 2017
Thank You
Jun Lit Nov 2017
Ages indeed are not bases
To gauge or judge a friend's closeness
Through thick and thin, through more and less
We've been through them, we've passed the test.
Translated from my original poem "Salamat"
206 · Nov 2020
Riverine Symphonies
Jun Lit Nov 2020
Clear waters running
Playing notes, percussion stones
Nature’s symphonies.
inspired by a river flowing through a forest
200 · Nov 2020
A Tree That Loved
Jun Lit Nov 2020
See clouds through branches  
No leaves block the clear blue sky
Once there loved a tree.
196 · Sep 2018
Why do I write poems?
Jun Lit Sep 2018
[musings on a frustrated submission]

Were they “really saddened,”
as much as I was,
when they informed me
“that my works (hmm not I)
were not selected
for the current issue?
And did, they say to me,
apologetically,
perhaps to appease me,
(as if it were necessary):
“We have read
so many promising pieces
that we are unable to publish,
but that does not lessen
their beauty and worth.”
And then, tell to my aging face:
“However, we encourage you
to refine your writing
by joining campus/community-based
writers groups that foster
constructive critiquing
and applying for regional
and national writers workshops.”
The hell! I am too old
and too busy to attend those,
And there is no special session,
for seniors and late bloomers,
And I do not intend to win
the Nobel for Literature
nor the Philippines’ Palanca.

Take my pick?
“The piece didn't "grab" the editor.”
- We’ll I never intended it to.
“Some (or all) of the lines were too long for the site's formatting.”
- So Walt Whitman’s won’t be a thing.
“The poem read too much like a prose paragraph.”
- Much like the best free verse the ancients mocked.
“The piece had numerous simple grammar errors.”
- and Percy Bysshe Shelley will not pass your course.
“The piece was overly derivative or unoriginal.”
- you mean somebody else was thinking for me?
“The piece contained copyrighted material not owned by the author.”
- Of course, my poems are mine! I’m quite sure of that.
“Limited space in the schedule.”
- so, why then call for so many entries?

Appease myself?
Why do I write poems?
To win awards? No!
Put my thoughts into words? Yes!
Express my feelings? Yes!
Happiness? Mine? Of others? Yes!

Are these poems? Is this a poem?
I don’t need you or anyone to call me a poet
but this is my poem.
Who defines what a poem is?

Many a box
                         can
                         inspire
                         poems . . .
                         But
A poem is not

a box.

Poetry

is

freedom.

Freedom is

Poetry.

Poems are free.

My thoughts are

free –

f

r

e

e –

free.
194 · Nov 2018
Shooting Stars
Jun Lit Nov 2018
Meteor showers hang
Pink, red, yellow royal crowns
Scent enchants the swarm
dedicated to Hoya Lovers & Enthusiasts
Jun Lit Dec 2019
Huh!?
Come again!?
What were you
asking me?
Ahh . . .
ummm . . .
English version of Kumusta naman ang Karapatang Pantao sa Pilipinas?
Next page