Downpour

Poetry by | December 11, 2016

Sway the leaves while you breathe
And your mind rests after long days
Keeping watch from your marbled walls
Are memories, stolen as polaroids
You wait for the night storm to pass
But realize the magic in the air

Like a wave, rain crashes
As angels’ wings beat for drumline
A musical surge on your roof
Transmitted straight towards your apex beat
And as you lay there, wondering
Will this beautiful downpour ever end?

Yes, if you wanted to
But tears of heaven have calmed you
Never was any soothing sound
That your own ears enjoyed and learned to love
Your own pleasure of symphony
While you drown yourself in rain’s
Orchestrated confessions


Monique graduated from UP Mindanao.

Should the Stars Return

Fiction by | December 11, 2016

It was the night that the stars returned and the first person to see them was Oskar Abebi. From his vantage point on the pavement, lying with his back flat on the street called Yoruba, he recognized the constellation. “The Hunter…” he whispered to no one in particular. The name escaped his bloodied lips as by compulsion. The giveaway was the line of three stars that made up the Hunter’s belt. From there he could trace the stars that hinted at the legs, then the outstretched arm and the club.

It was a Friday night and the traffic of shoppers and passers-by on Temple Market was starting to pick up. Oskar desperately wished one of them would stop by to help him up so he could share his discovery. But they all avoided him and each other studiously. They walked around him as they zipped past in all directions. One or two even stepped over his legs when they found no other path through.

Oskar wobbled to his feet. All the while his gaze remained up, his jaw slack as more pinpoints of light appeared in the sky. Over there: the Hero. And over there: the Twins. And over there: the Bear. And over there: the Lover. Despite himself, despite his cracked skull, Oskar laughed.

“Do you see? Do you see?” He pointed a crooked finger up at the sky. When no one paid him any heed, he broke taboo and grabbed the nearest passer-by the sleeve of her pleather coat. She yelped, then hissed and glared at him. “Look!” he insisted, jabbing his finger upwards. “Stars!”

The last time he had seen stars he was a boy. How long ago was that? Forty years? Fifty? It was on Ye-Ye’s farm, where they had electric lights only three hours each night and so there was nothing to do but look up at the sky and tell stories. Then came the city, and the stars were drowned in neon, glass, and steel, stabbing at the heavens as if to keep them at bay.

“Stars!” he repeated to the woman. His insistence finally made her look up. A few others, puzzled by the commotion, paused in their steps and did the same.

The stars were growing brighter by the minute. They pierced through the haze of artificial light of the city. More and more constellations became apparent. Oskar laughed giddily. “The Bull!” “The Lion!” “The Maiden!” “Look! Don’t you see?” “There! The Sisters!”

Those who paused followed his finger as he pointed, trying to make out the shapes. Then one of them, a young man wearing a rebreather cowl, broke the spell when he shrugged and walked on, disappeared into the crowd flowing into Yoruba East. The others followed suit, one by one at first, then in staggered groups, until the bustle was as it was before.

The woman wrenched her arm free and called Oskar a rude name as she walked hurriedly away.

“Stars…” the old man said again, but weakly. They were very bright now, so bright, you could almost feel their heat. The soup of humanity that gathered around Temple Market on Friday evening continued to thicken, and now people were jostling each other at the elbows and occasionally stepping on each other’s toes.

“Stars…” the old man said, one last time. Then he too was swallowed by the market.


Dom is a project manager of a small software development team in Davao.

The Double Bind in Writing

Nonfiction by | December 4, 2016

Friends, lovers of literature, dreamers in writing and in life, good morning.

When I left Davao years ago, I left in tears. My students gave me a truly memorable despedida – I felt that I was already dead, and their testimonies were eulogies for someone who had reached the end of his tether. Davao will always hold a special place in my heart, and I feel no different from Pres. Digong when he sighs in a special way and always yearns to come back here, to the consternation of a lot of people in Manila. “The city of my last breath,” the poet Ricardo de Ungria calls this place, and I always heave that same sigh when I utter the name of this beloved city.

I came here in 1999 thinking of myself as a literary missionary. After 15 years in Dumaguete City where the first writers workshop in the country was established in Silliman University by the Tiempos, I arrived here at the turn of the 21st century thinking that it would be a literary desert. But I was immediately embraced upon arrival by the founding members of the Davao Writers Guild – Aida Rivera-Ford, TIta Lacambra-Ayala, Ricardo de Ungria, Macario Tiu, and many others who like me, seemed to have idealized and romanticized their experience of the writers workshop in Dumaguete and wanted to establish one here, too.

Now it feels that that dreaming has borne fruit. My former students have taken the helm of the Writers Guild and I see a vibrant literary culture among the young people here in Mindanao. It takes time to cultivate a literary generation, in the same way that a single writer has to know how to make his writing, his life, and his environment merge into a confluence of what the French call “belle lettres” (beautiful writing). Continue reading The Double Bind in Writing

ANNOUNCEMENT: Best of Dagmay 2 Book Launch on December 4, at The Big House

Editor's Note | November 30, 2016

dagmay-cover-finally-it-has-happened-to-me-my-feelings-cant-describe-it

The Davao Writers Guild cordially invites you to the launching of “The Best of Dagmay 2” on December 4, 2016, Sunday, 4 PM, at The Big House: A Heritage Home, Juna Subdivision, Matina, Davao City.

“The Best of Dagmay 2” is an anthology of the best poems, short stories, plays, and essays in Dagmay from 2010 to 2012. The anthology is edited by Don Pagusara, Jhoanna Lynn B. Cruz, John B. Bengan, and Dominique Gerald Cimafranca.

This book compiles pieces from the following Mindanawon writers: Paul Randy Gumanao, Raul Moldez, Al Ponciano Datu, Jayson Parba, Romel Villaflor, Arifah Jamil, Freeda Ko, Alpha Khristine Fortun, Khareen Culajara, Rolly Jude Ortega, Rogelio Garcia, Hazel Meghan Hamile, Melona Mascariñas, Darylle Rubino, Jeffrey B. Javier, Maureen Ronquillo, Riza Racho, Erika Navaja, Vangie Dimla-Algabre, RedRose Serrano, Iryne Kaamino, Ric Bastasa, Gratian Paul Tidor, JM Cortes Acut, Gino Dolorzo, Telesforo Sungkit, Jr., Tala Alexander, Lyda May Sual, Edgar Bacong, Mark Daposala, Zola Macarambon, Glyd Jun Arañes, Karla Stefan Singson, Maiq Bonghanoy, Djamyla Millona, Reymond Pepito, Margaux Denice Garcia, Jetro Eco Anta, Christian Cabagnot, Karlo David, Arian Tejano, Ruel Soriano, Aimee Rosal, Seneca Pellano, Vida Valverde, Fritz Gerald M. Melodi, and Sergei Reyes.

Copies of “The Best of Dagmay 2” will be available during the launch at a special discounted price of P250.

Invitation to Book Launch of 'The Bohol We Love'

Events by | November 29, 2016

Book Launch PosterMarj Evasco, esteemed writer and friend of the Davao Writers Guild, sends this invitation for the launching of the essay anthology, The Bohol We Love:

The 25 Boholano writers included in the anthology and I cordially invite you to the book launch of THE BOHOL WE LOVE. It is the 7th in the “Place and Memory” series of Anvil Publishing, Inc.

In keeping with the spirit of the times, we are trying to keep our carbon footprint low with this electronic invitation.

Please feel free to share it with family, friends and extended relations who may be interested to come to Bohol and join the celebration, and get a copy of the book.

It will be carried by National Bookstore branches in the Visayas, Mindanao and Manila next year. On the Dec. 3 event, the book will be available at a special launching price.

Also please feel free to post the invitation on your social network platforms.

Thank You!

Padayon,
Marj

Launch of the book will be at The Governor’s Mansion, Tagbilaran City on Dec. 3, 2016 at 3PM. Book launches for Visayas and Mindanao are slated for 2017.

Iyang Agik-ik ug Pahiyom

Poetry by | November 27, 2016

Ang agik-ik aning bataa
maka-buak niining samin
diin ko ginahanduraw
ang akong mga kaagi.

Sa matag tan-aw ko
sa akong kaugalingon
niining samina,

Iyang matag pahiyom
makahanap sa akong panglantaw;
akong nawong nagkaguol,
nagkatiguwang.


Krishna Mie graduated with a Masters Degree in Applied Social Research and a Bachelors Degree on Secondary Education Major in Social Studies. She is currently working as a faculty of the Humanities Division at Philippine Science High School – Southern Mindanao Campus where she teaches Social Science Courses.

Laundry Problems

Nonfiction by | November 27, 2016

What could be more mundane than doing laundry? You wear clothes because you have to. They get dirty. You wash them. Day after day. Rinse. Repeat.

Sometimes, a full life is measured by how large a pile of laundry one accumulates.

I am rushing to and fro, ignoring the growing pile. There are just too many busy days. There are children to take care of and a house to clean. There are canvases to fill up, deadlines to meet, and mountains to climb.

One day it happens. The pile of laundry refuses to be ignored much longer. So I make time, pushing everyone’s schedules around. I need an afternoon, a day, maybe three days at the most because that’s how much laundry my family has sometimes.

I inspect this growing monster with equal measure of determination and despair. There is no running away from it. It has to be done.

  Continue reading Laundry Problems

Hindi Muna Ako Tutula Hangga’t Mahal Pa Kita

Poetry by | November 27, 2016

Kaya kong magkuwento tungkol sa simula
Noong manipis na foam lang ang pumapagitan sa sahig at mga likod natin
Dahil minimum wage lang ang kinikita mo bilang
Saleslady sa isa sa libo libong tindahan ni Henry Sy
At pa-raket-raket lang ako bilang tutor ng mga anak-mayaman sa Iloilo.
Kaya kong punuin ang magdamag ng mga sugilanon ng pagtitiis mo
Sa pagkain ng sardinas dahil ito ang paborito ko,
At ng paggising mo sa madaling araw upang ipag-igib ako ng tubig
Mula sa poso, ipag-init ng pampaligo’t pang-kape,
Ipagluto ng baon at ipagplantsa ng palda at blusa noong, sa wakas,
Ay natanggap ako bilang guro sa pribadong eskwelahang laging sanhi
Ng trapik sa General Luna. Marami tayong mga kuwentong
Kagaya nito, at pwedeng parisan ng metapora ang bawat alaala, ngunit
Hindi muna ako tutula hangga’t mahal pa kita.

Maaari kong awitin ang mga napagkasunduan nating
Maging theme song noong mga panahong ginagabi tayo
Sa pagtatrabaho nang parehong walang overtime pay:
Sana’y Wala Nang Wakas dahil Sharonian ako, at Head Over Feet
Dahil adik ka kay Alanis kahit hindi mo makabisa ang spelling ng apelyido niya,
Kagaya ng palagi mong paglimot sa petsa ng birthday ko.
Maaari kong awitin ang mga naka-loop sa playlist ko
Noong paulit-ulit mo akong sinuyo para lamang muling iwanan,
Na para bang paulit-ulit mo akong ini-endo para pag-aplayin
Sa parehong posisyon. Iba’t ibang himig at titik
Ang kaya kong ilapat sa aking pag-iyak, hagulgol, at pag-ngawa
Sa tuwing pinili mo akong saktan. Aking sasabayan ang ritmo
Ng bawat isa hanggang marindi ka sa sintunado kong pagkanta; ngunit
Hindi muna ako tutula hangga’t mahal pa kita.

Papayag akong sumayaw kahit pa nga walang tugtog
Basta’t maiyugyog ko lang ang katawan kong pagod na pagod na
Sa pagluhod at pagsusumamo sa mga novena ko kay St. Jude
Dahil ayoko nang umasang titino ka pa, kagaya ng
Hindi ko na pag-asang mare-regular pa ako o tataas ang sweldo.
Papayag akong sumayaw, umindak, at maglupasay
Bilang tanda ng pagbitaw sa nag-uumapaw na poot at galit
Na dala ng panghihinayang sa labintatlong taong sinayang
Nating dalawa. Hahataw sa galaw ang aking mga paa ngunit
Hindi muna ako tutula hangga’t mahal pa kita.
Dahil hangga’t may natitira pang katiting na pag-ibig sa kasingkasing
Ay hindi magiging sapat ang ritmo o tugma; walang saysay
Ang mga metapora. Ang bawat salita ay mananatiling kabalintunaan
Ng kabiguan nitong aking akda kaya’t ipagpaumanhin mo sana kung
Hindi muna ako tutula hangga’t mahal pa kita.


Early Sol won second place in the Hiligaynon Short Story Category of the 2016 Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature. She has been a fellow in several National Writers Workshop. She currently teaches Mathematics, Education, and Statistics courses at the University of the Philippines Visayas.