thepoetslizard Full Member
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Joined: Jul 2008 Gender: Female  Posts: 104 Karma: 0 |  | Aileen Ibardaloza « Thread Started on Oct 10, 2008, 3:57pm » | |
Aileen Ibardaloza has two passions—science and poetry. She is a molecular biologist who, according to her sister Cecile, "manages to string words like DNA sequences." Aileen lived in Manila and England, and is now based in the US.
"From the Book of Beginnings" Eve moaned in childbirth tearing life from life the unmothered mothering offsprings born of desire and dispensation.
The raft carried them east across the Red Sea to Yemen, and from Yemen to four continents cradling the daughters of Eve through parabolic days
marked by beginnings and endings. From glaciers, a desert, a fertile crescent human lines diverging, changing eyes, skin, memories
keeping sacred the mitochondrial blueprint for the women through seven thousand generations.
And from Ramah, lamentation Rachel weeping for her children because they were not.
The women called out to their God across eighty thousand years out of ice, waters, deserts, islands craving screaming immortality. A line was drawn for the women direct, unbroken and sacred between them, one great grandmother and not much difference.
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"Interlude" Tread the line so you can get to her. she sits waiting for passion that sits waiting in the vortex of three cities. a bit of grey, a bit of brown, the last bit in between.
*
Excerpt from "Manileñas"
Waiting on walls that were white and then endless restless waiting for something for a dream for a man piano keys and dog dresses to stop the knitting in the shallow dark
Cecilia and Ysabel their croon years and mosaic lives built on rice cakes and red dresses penumbral islands from grass-filled flower beds and ponytailed strangers Piano fingers tapping yellowed keys sewing dog dresses weaving water dreams Lips that mouth forever hands hammering twin-lettered gates pink walls gossamer vows not a dance not a love not for women unasked unvowed
Old Manila blowing bubbles dirty cobbles a river rumbling for the First-Quarter Storm Two women raised in a convent eyes down on mystery beads Half a day in the kitchen for the yellow-green leaves on the floor for tomato thoughts and pepper talks for the sun and their place at the end of the day.
web source: Our Own Voice, October 2004, and April 2003 http://www.ourownvoice.com/poems/poems2003b-ibardaloza.shtml
![[image] [image]](http://shayepoet.com/conference/authors/AmbahanonBambooslide1c.jpg)
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