Lampin

Poetry by | March 5, 2022

Mialisbo ang baho sa labhunon
Sud sa karton nga gidan-ukan
Sa ubang sanina
Halapad kini, puti nga dunay puwa
Og mikaging na sa kadugayng han-ok
Imu dayun kining gihumol sa tubig

Sa katin-aw sa tubig, didto
Mingsalamin kanimo ang konsensiya
Misagpa kanimo ang bugnawng hangin
Nangurog og nanimbawt imong balahibo

Sa matag kusò, dunay pagbasol
Sa matag waswas, dunay paghinulsol
Gihayhay nimo ang tanang pagmahay
Naghinaot mauga kini sa panahon
Apan nagpabilin sa gihapon ang mantsa
Sa puti nga lampin nga
Gigamit pangputos sa batang
Naahat sa pag-utong tungod sa
Ahat nimo nga pagpangidaron

Niawas na ang tubig sa planggana
Way ondang sa pag-agas ang gripo.


Luis Bahay Jr. is a graduate of Bachelor degree in Elementary Education at Mindanao State University – General Santos City. He is currently seeving as a Sangguniang Kabataan Kagawad in his Barangay in Tampakan, South Cotabato.

Panamin usa, day!

Poetry by | March 5, 2022

Daghag klase-klase nga samin,
Adunay kuwadrado, adunay lingin.
Adunay dagko, adunay gagmay,
Apan mao ra man gihapon imong dagway.

Og mulakaw ka,
di gyud nimo kalimtan,
Atubangon ang samin,
kutob sa unsay mamatikdan.

Pila man diay ka oras
ang pagpamulbos?
Gikalimtan nimo ang sud-an
maong napan-os.

Ang pagpanudlay
usa ka oras sad tag inihapay.
Ang ulan ni bunok na day,
Wa gyud nahipos ang hinalay.

Usa ka manghinaway,
Panamin usa day.
Nag una-una kag panghimantay
Apan imong ngipon utro
wa nag pantay.

Ayaw paabota day
nga ikaw magmahay.
Ang pang panlibak,
Di gayud angay ikalipay.

Ug pwede, kana,
atubanga ang samin kanunay.
Ayaw lang gyud kalimte,
imong basa-basa
nga hinalay.


Krisha currently resides in Manikling, San Isidro, Davao Oriental for almost 10 years now, but was originally born at Davao City. Krisha is a first year student taking the course of Bachelor of Elementary Education in Davao Oriental State University-San Isidro Extension Campus.

When Nothingness Wrote for Me

Fiction by | March 5, 2022

It has been months since I was able to write again. I was subdued by vices and distracted by temporary earthly attachments. For a while, I wasn’t me. Each time I try to re-establish my good habits my phone would talk to me, “Open me for a bit”. Then the next thing I knew it was 5:38 in the morning and I haven’t caught drowsiness yet. Whenever I have something in mind and promise myself to write about it later, I often forget about it after a succession of “laters” that would eventually turn into tomorrow and lead to next month. The next thing I knew was my rank in Mobile Legends has become Mythic IV but my writing skills have dropped to Warrior I.

One night, I forced myself to write and open my laptop. I was thinking of what I was supposed to write, then after a couple of minutes I’ve come up with a decision of writing a poem, and so I did. As far as I could remember, I wrote about plants that night which metaphors my friends. In midst of it, I was meddled by a missing word that I felt I should’ve known but I couldn’t. It hindered the way I think, and I thought to myself that I have to relax – and one way of doing is browsing YouTube, and so I did. I scrolled and scrolled for interesting videos until I stumbled onto a documentary about Hannibal Barca’s greatness as a man who single-handedly conquered Rome. The channel was “HistoryMarshe”, and I’d tell you, it’s worth the watch. They’ve presented an animation of how Hannibal Barca planned his attacks and eventually outwitting the Romans on their own soil. And the coolest thing? The documentary was divided into twelve parts. I was hooked up. The next thing I knew was that I forgot the file name of the poem that I was writing and where I’ve saved it.

The next day, I overslept and wasn’t able to attend to my tutor. At 6 PM, I went to the bathroom. It wasn’t that usual bath. The moment I closed the door, I was alone. Free from the intervening distractions and woo of my phone. I undressed, pushed the shower lever, and stood at the raining warm evening water. I stood without moving nor blinked. I was staring with delimited vision, shrouded by the water that passes through my very eyes. Several minutes later, I shut the shower and stood still. I listened to the sound of the draining water for quite a while.

At that moment, I thought to myself that I should’ve realized something but nothing was kicking in. I just felt – nothing. I reached for the towel and enveloped it in my lower body and went to the sink where I brushed my teeth.

When I came back into my room, I had nothing in mind and nearly grabbed my phone again, but luckily, I was able to stop myself. I opened my laptop instead and listened to some of my favorite playlists. There was still nothing kicking in, I felt no motivation nor interest in doing something except checking my phone, which I have successfully deprived myself of for hours. I opened Word instead and tried to write about anything. But it was futile, I couldn’t write about anything and always end up erasing what I have written. I gazed at the blank page for several seconds, and later I realized that it was like me – empty.

Maybe I have nothing to write about, but I badly wanted to write. Or maybe due to the days that I haven’t been writing, I subconsciously lost my eagerness and my mind just wouldn’t allow me to regain it. I scratched my drying hair and crouched at my desk. I closed my eyes and resigned to nothingness.

When I woke up, I was still at the same desk and the same room, but my laptop was closed. I opened it, it was still in the same Word but wasn’t empty. I looked around the room, tracing for evidence of who could’ve written on my laptop. I even went outside asking my sister if she went inside my room but she denied it, they didn’t even know that I have risen from my bed since last night.

I went back into my room, marveled at what has happened. I tied the curtain on my windowsill and stared at the melancholic stars, silently burning and watching me from below. They might know the truth behind this mystery or witness how this piece was written. The next thing I knew, was to think for a title in this piece that mysteriously appeared.

I pondered for quite a while and mumbled to myself “When nothingness wrote for me.”


Michael Jig L. Salvador is the eldest son in his family and has been writing for 2 years. He is currently taking up Bachelor of Arts in English Language in Ramon Magsaysay Memorial Colleges. He was also a ‘zinester’ in the 2019 Zinefest held in Tacurong, at Primart, wherein his poem The Ocean Made her Salty was featured in their zine Neflibata. He started reading novels, poems, and short stories at the latter part of his adolescence, and took literature seriously with the aid and guidance of his former creative writing teacher, Sir Adonis Z. Hornoz.

The Christmas Spirit

Fiction by | March 5, 2022

The rain was relentless with force almost denting the corrugated rooftops. Mud caked the city veins. It’s a tough monsoon season, he thought. Or whatever a kid’s approximation of what monsoon meant. He just knew that the rain almost never stops these days.

He sat in an alleyway; knees tucked close to his chest for warmth. This path was a shortcut between a mall chain and a well-known road. Usually, he would see countless feet shuffling. Some of them may even take pity and toss him a coin or two. But not today. His spot was a nook next to a wall with a foot worth of roofing overhang above him. His face was dry, or dry as it could be, and his toes were waterlogged.

Around this time of year, strangers would be wearing bright red hats (or none) and go around giving food. He can tell if the season was right when he can hear the bustling mall echo out a song talking about sleighs, snow, and gifts. He doesn’t know snow; he only knows that the sky gives water.

Mall employees decided to brighten this alley with lights. The tiny little bulbs would alternate between red, blue, orange, and green. They look like stars to him. Turbulent grey covered the sky, so he couldn’t see the real thing.

The food-giving people didn’t come. So, he sat there as his stomach whimpered. He thought of it as a companion, the metallic clang of raindrops it’s musical accompaniment. He passed the time admiring the technicolor performance in front of him.

After a while, the white noise he’s been steeping himself in has ended in a decrescendo. He looked to the skies. The rain was still present with the oppressive dark clouds it’s purveyor. It was soundless, the ripples and clangs it made were gone.

His gaze moved to the right where the alley led to the back of the mall. It was the same as normal, albeit devoid of people. And so, he looked left.

His view would be of a path leading to a road and a bright lamp post, which it still did. But a figure stood there. He mistook it as the pole at first, but his vision lied.

“People walk here. So why am I scared?”, he thought. This reassurance would’ve worked. But the figure stopped right ahead him. He looked at their feet. He always does. Folks don’t take kindly to him if he looks them in the eye.

Do not worry child, I mean no harm.

The boy knew that the figure never spoke out loud. Yet his head heard them still. He then heard a small, subdued giggle.

I will not hurt you. I swear on my own name. Look up, small child.

What greeted him was a tall thin frame of a pale feminine figure. She was clad in a black veil and a flowing gown reaching the muddy ground. In her hand was a long, forked branch she used as a staff. A lantern hung on top of it, unlit.

See, I am not a scary person.

Her voice was confusing to him. It’s almost as if all the voices the boy has heard in his life were speaking at the same time. Or was it his own voice he used inside his head? But as unusual as it was, he never felt scared. Why was he not scared?

“Who are you?”, his voice should’ve been drowned by the downpour.

Who do you think I am?

“Are you one of them food people? Those who wear bright red hats?”

She didn’t respond.

“Are you Santa? Probably not because you have no beard…” , he quipped.

Uhh-

“…The Christmas spirit? I can overhear the mall sometimes singing about them. But I never knew what they really looked like.”

The figure produced a stifled chuckle in the same vein as if one would try to seem more professional in the face of a kid’s inquiry. There was a long pause, almost too long, before she spoke again.

Would you like to come with me?

Her ivory hand appeared before the boy. It looked as if it was a porcelain doll’s yet lithe and elongated, skeletal almost. They stayed there. Time marched on like they were its left-behind passengers. But the figure stood still, unbothered.

“Will there be food?”, the boy looked up after much deliberation.

The shade could not contain her laughter now. She covered her mouth, a semblance of courtesy even if there was no face to look at. His head turned at the response; eyes squinted in confusion.

It’s just…

She sat a few feet next to him. Her movement flowed like smoke; a thin frame reflected by the rising water level in the alley. The puddles below left no trace that she even stepped on them.

Most of the people who meet me do not ask me that.

The ankle-high floodwater didn’t interfere with the Christmas lights’ rhythmic illumination. Yet they remained seated despite what would be fluid now soaking the both of them. The boy didn’t feel cold since the shadowy woman appeared.

“Will it be a good place?”, his voice rose, almost in excitement.

As the storm weathered out the path calmed into a flat mirror, reflecting the Christmas lights all around them. Raindrop ripples grew tired and echoed out. It turns out the evening crept in long before the boy noticed.

I do not know. I can only guide you there.

For once in these past few weeks, he was able to see the stars vividly as if the city lights were not there to snuff them out. Were they always this big? This close?

In one swift motion, the woman stood up and offered her hand again. He felt nothing but comfort, almost a yearning, as his tiny palms reached towards it. It was not freezing cold as he assumed from its appearance. All his concerns washed away as he moved closer to the veiled lady; akin to being with a friend he had always known for a long time.

“How do I look?” The rusty lantern sparked to life as they both walked. In the dim light, he tried to clean off his tattered threadbare clothes. The path they followed was almost carpeted by the night sky. Every step he took never left a single footprint.

That will not matter at all, child. You look just fine.


Currently in the trenches of his studies as a University of Mindanao B.A. Communications Student, Panabo-born Benjamin Caspillo III does his best to write whenever he can spare a bit of himself.

Bulawan

Poetry by | March 5, 2022

Ganito ko lagi sinasariwa ang alahas ni Mamang kapag nasa lungsod siya:
Kumikinang ito nang maringal kapag nakapulupot sa kaniyang leeg tuwing may piging;
Kung may seremonya ng pag-iisandibdib; kung may pagbinyag na makabig;
Kung may kainan sa nagmamagarang restoran; kahit pa aniya’y sa pagsisiping,
Supling niya kung ituring ang hardin ng bulawan sa kinang ng kaniyang tagóng daing.
Ikinalulugod niya kapag naglalandas ang paningin ng mga dayo sa kaniyang tinghas
Habang pumapasok sa kaniyang pag-uulinig ang matarling na bulong ng paghanga.
Nasok ang matitinis na nagsasagutang usapan ang ipinupukol ukol sa kaniyang lawas,
Tinititigan siya nang maigi mula sa hédres niyang anyong bagwis hanggang may ekstraksiyon
Ng kung anong pilit ipasiwalat at ipalabas ng madla na bulawan sa mina ng kaniyang katawan.


Si Adrian Medina Pregonir ay nagsusulat sa wikang Filipino at Hiligaynon mula sa Banga, South Cotabato. Siya ay Fellow sa Davao Writers Workshop, Palihang Rogelio Sicat, TAHAD Hiligaynon CNF Workshop, San Agustin Writers Workshop at Kahirupan Bantugan sa Pagsulat sa Kinaray-a.