| "Into the Land of Forsaken Promises" by Filipino Artist Don Bryan Bunag (winner of Water Media on Paper Category 2015 MADE) |
and she was named after a typhoon -- to constantly remind her parents that yes, one night in the evacuation center they forgave wetness and braised, embraced. La Nina, El Nino. They held each other as violent as an infant's first fist. Close, Open, Close, Open. Their cry, the first wreckage that only broke breath, then broke nothing
because promises are meant to be broken. the local government unit consoled. as from afar they watched trucks lying on their sides, bellies ripped open. the herd growling against themselves, stuffing their mouths with whatever tin can and instant noodle they could find
and she had to beat her heart. and her mother craved. and together they learned the distance between omnivores and scavengers. between human and human.
because promises are meant to be broken. the local government unit consoled. as from afar they watched trucks lying on their sides, bellies ripped open. the herd growling against themselves, stuffing their mouths with whatever tin can and instant noodle they could find
and she had to beat her heart. and her mother craved. and together they learned the distance between omnivores and scavengers. between human and human.
ii.
tell me what it is like to be verbless.
tell me, what is it like to feed on the very umbilical that forced a mother to feed on another.
tell me it is for this alone and nothing else. tell me that she did not enjoy it. tell me that hunger is for everyone. tell me that there are no exceptions. tell me that there are no exceptions. tell me that there are no exceptions. tell me that there are noexceptionsnoexceptions. tell me. that everyone grows because of hunger alone.
iii.
and before she could speak. before syllable. before stretch-mark. before swollen before dilation before throughout before fall before cry before crawl before gender before names -- they called her 'parasite'.
iv.
in the stillness of rehabilitation, a shack grows from multiple donations. as though a homunculus, bred from organs given by country and country and country, never their own.
it had a ceiling that listened to the battle-cry of each raindrop. took its ripple and gossiped it across the single-room furnished only by three bodies. one body had yet to hear the sound of battering, but already learned how to keep one's eyes shut.
she could not see the sack of rice whose lips have begun to swell. has begun to swallow itself.
she could not see the makeshift pot encrusted by yesterday's rice-milk. breastfed on by rats who have lost their mothers.
she could not see the alibi her father would use time and time again. how it was too cold. how friction must. how it must. how it is just. and her mother knew it was just.
they say "habang maikli ang kumot, matutong mamaluktot" but her father must not have heard it well.
rather than mamaluktot he must've heard mamalikot.
and he mamalikot her mother. for friction. for heat. for everything he could not eat and drink. nourished. the way a tree allows its fruits to fall inches above its roots. distance enough for anything to rot, to give and give and hollow.
tell me, what is it like to feed on the very umbilical that forced a mother to feed on another.
tell me it is for this alone and nothing else. tell me that she did not enjoy it. tell me that hunger is for everyone. tell me that there are no exceptions. tell me that there are no exceptions. tell me that there are no exceptions. tell me that there are noexceptionsnoexceptions. tell me. that everyone grows because of hunger alone.
iii.
and before she could speak. before syllable. before stretch-mark. before swollen before dilation before throughout before fall before cry before crawl before gender before names -- they called her 'parasite'.
iv.
in the stillness of rehabilitation, a shack grows from multiple donations. as though a homunculus, bred from organs given by country and country and country, never their own.
it had a ceiling that listened to the battle-cry of each raindrop. took its ripple and gossiped it across the single-room furnished only by three bodies. one body had yet to hear the sound of battering, but already learned how to keep one's eyes shut.
she could not see the sack of rice whose lips have begun to swell. has begun to swallow itself.
she could not see the makeshift pot encrusted by yesterday's rice-milk. breastfed on by rats who have lost their mothers.
she could not see the alibi her father would use time and time again. how it was too cold. how friction must. how it must. how it is just. and her mother knew it was just.
they say "habang maikli ang kumot, matutong mamaluktot" but her father must not have heard it well.
rather than mamaluktot he must've heard mamalikot.
and he mamalikot her mother. for friction. for heat. for everything he could not eat and drink. nourished. the way a tree allows its fruits to fall inches above its roots. distance enough for anything to rot, to give and give and hollow.






0 comments: