Two poems by Gita Labrador

Nature’s Body
by Odette Nightsky

A Note on Erosion

A pill everyday: for half a decade, for a dormant pain.
Every paper-white kernel a promise to stay out of the sun.  
But I wanted to climb mountains—my doctor said maybe, 

counting each little pill. My body was the same as it had been 
for years—a mass of tender misguided tissue, threatening 
to self-destruct—thus the swelling in my ankles, the rabbit 

heart in my chest, the pills lined up like teeth on the table.
Looking out the window, I imagined the sun could chip away 
at my skin, unveiling a pillar of sand. But many bodies 

crumble with time, I’m told; over decades, even mountains 
may erode in the silent violence of footsteps, each sole 
upon the trail a tiny kiss of death. The doctor pressed 

her fingers to my ankle, felt the swell of my fear with one 
touch; elsewhere the sun had broken over the earth, spilling 
light upon every crumbling mountain. What could be done

for the world’s numbered days? I wanted to kneel outside
on the lawn, press my hands upon the grass, and feel
for the answer. I wanted to be well. I wanted to be 

on an outdoor trail, saying goodbye and hello to all 
the kind strangers, and to the mountain’s rabbit heart
rumbling under my feet. I could tread gently, given

the chance. I’d tiptoe along the trail, leaving little
to no trace: my ailing feet as kind as moonlight
and lighter than morning rain.


A Body is a Mountain

dear body, breath-starved 
            and burning up on the beaten
                        path to the summit, let me 
                                    remind you where you began:
            your tiny hands clasping 
                        a compass and your father 
                                    over your shoulder, tracing 
                                                river routes and ridge lines 
on a time worn map.
            there will come a time 
                        when the pain comes to pass,
                                    when all the stones in the river 
            become soft and lush 
                        with moss, and the leaves 
                                    bruising the forest floor
                                                give way to a boundless blue.
but until then imagine
            being at peace, knowing 
                        what you know:           that your bones 
                                    may someday snap beneath 
            the dawn’s thousand hands,
                        that the ash and aster 
                                    mountain of you 
                                                will stay alive until it won’t.
don’t be afraid, dear body.
            imagine one day
                        this could be enough:
                                    these knots of tender 
            muscle, these fists full 
                        of loose grass—all these 
                                    fevered hours that come 
                                                and go, right before love.


Gita Labrador studied Comparative Literature at the University of the Philippines Diliman. Her work can be found in The Brown Orient, Glass, and Scum Mag. She resides in Quezon City, teaching reading and creative writing classes for children.


Odette Nightsky. Shamanic Counsellor, Author, Educator. www.contemporaryshaman.net