how to take a walk on a seawall

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  • 8/7/2019 How to take a walk on a seawall

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    How to take a walk on a seaw allMiro Capili

    We tried to write.

    We had positioned ourselves where our bodies would be able to cleave the wind, hoping perhaps

    to intercept what occult lore its salty tongues would carry; to entrap the utterances of the afternoon in free

    verse, realist fiction, villanelles, sci-fi, prose poetry. What precluded the wall, of course, was the pure verve

    of sea, that bladder of the warm earth, an unruly and irreducible reminder of timelessness. Everything else,

    among them the wispy periphery of sky, seemed simply to be what had happened to occur around at thetime of creation.

    From time to time one of our poets would offer to read aloud what she had written, only torealize that the sibilance around us silenced both sound and subterrain of her imagery. The wideness of the

    sea, she began, and the sea was wider still. Waves making love, she tried, and it became impossible to

    ignore the sultry impassioning of water folding into water.

    We had tried, as fools do who trust in the glib promises of syntax and metaphors and line cuts, to

    discipline the dance; the lissomeness of the water, into written entry. But no theory instructs the mastery

    of seas. Memory cannot temper a rolling patch of sky. A rogue splinter of peach dusk explodes with too

    much ebullience to hold the grace of a poem. An afternoon offers its own syntactic patterns and

    resonances.

    And how do you dilute a sea, the near painful clarity of day, a summer of literature and noise, to

    ease into a story?

    I imagine it would take the same pains required to grow old and confuse home with memory, as

    the wise are able to do whove culled their lives carefully. Keep in constant vigilance. Take long walks.

    Accept that falling spectator to the inaccessible rituals of waves, at times, comes at the expense of

    wordlessness. Grow a habit. Kick it after the second hour. Arrive at an awareness that a seawall inDumaguete city has more in common than you think with the lamppost at the corner of the next street

    it is a time, a place, an atmosphere, a parable, a tumor; a sweet kind of terror, something to despair over.

    Set store by William Stafford when he says, For the person who follows with trust and forgiveness what

    occurs to him, the world remains always ready and deep, an inexhaustible environment, with the

    combined vividness of an actuality and flexibility of a dream.

    You are surprised. How difficult it is to still the imperative of bodily experience, of wanderlust, of

    energy and movement, as you develop with age a skill for ordinary life. How rare now those images of

    brute, fervid illumination. You quit trying to make small talk in line for your passport application. The

    laundry waits in the hamper by the door. You find a quicker way to remove the dribbles of pumpkin soup

    from last nights dress. You find yourself most displaced in yourself. You wake up, wanting to follow the

    sounds of the morning.

    So you slip quietly out of the soul for some fresh air. Take a walk. Find a curious other Elsewhere,

    other Elsewhen, lying in the gutter, or warm in the outstretched hand of a beggar, or stowed away among

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    old tickets in the compartment of a bus bound for a place whose name you can pronounce but cant

    remember. Pick it up. You decide that this, what you have just found, could derail you. It could be a

    useless divergence youre afraid to admit you have all the time for. Youre afraid it will rain for a million

    years within you, forming new seas; sail you away to a purer shore. Could usher you back into the discrete

    homicides of squat, ordinary life.

    But lets say youve run into a profound enough moment of tendernessyour first awareness ofhow great of this world the Negros Sea seems to annex, for instance, when you reach a certain hilly point

    of Siquijor. You get wind of this possibility while top-loading a jeepney, and a year later you are still

    suspicious of where the ride had ended. You spend weekends at beaches within the proximity of Metro

    Manila, wondering why no one else notices that the white sand the ads were so proud of more closely

    resembles gravel, or that the milky waters have forgotten how they had themselves once seemed to dream

    up the color cerulean. You arrive home and greet your mothermaayong hapon(your family hails from

    Batangas). Obedient to a warning you once heard about vampires in Siquijor leading human lives by day,

    you avert your gaze from men wearing reflective shades on the way to school. And you have been

    breathless so often from the dressings of strange plants sprouting from the lawns of random neighbors, from

    the grain crackling all over the corners of old silent films, from the word decadenceand how it sounds like

    the butter melting in the cleavage of your morning pan de sal.You become difficult to please.

    Your wife, your lover, a classmate, will at some point harbor suspicion from your attachment to

    precious little instances of life. They will doubt the triumphs you find in a can of soup, a better edition of

    The Shipping News; of lying on a seawall, observing a lamppost. That they will declare your sanity

    upended and recommend a good psychiatrist is a possibility. Live with it.

    Stuff the new wonder in a place whose sound and silence only you understand. Often your thumb

    will seek it out and attempt to stroke it, reacquainting itself with the rough corners and willowy indents in

    reverent little gestures. Let it. A tacit smile, in turn, will find a way to seek out your face when this

    happens. Let it grow.

    Now begin the walk back to where you remember your old house was. Lose your way. Find it

    eventually, in a place between the tagline of a slimming tea ad you once read while taking a piss during a

    stopover, and the second name of the man who sold you your first harmonica. Try to act surprised whenyou find yourself unable to walk right back in.

    (March 2011)

    Miro Capili, slightly 18 (and only slightly tall), is an incoming junior studying BA Political Science at the University

    of the Philippines-Diliman. She has received three first-prize Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature for her

    essays, was a fellow for Creative Nonfiction at the 49 th Silliman University National Writers Workshop in

    Dumaguete, was a winner in 2011 for the annual National Bookstore-Philippine Star My Favorite Book Essay

    Writing Competition, and was recently named a Top National Youth Icon by Jollibee Foods, Inc. Her work has

    been published in UNOMagazine, The Philippine Star, The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Manila Bulletin, Homestyle

    Magazine, and is forthcoming in Rogue Magazine and The Philippine Graphic. She genuinely enjoys eating

    Yumburgers.