Uncolonial this shelter, home my skin, bring me ocean & a song of tangling limbs
“Luzon’s coastlines are receding.” – Lois Calderon, “Philippine coastline receding because of Chinese mining black sand,” CNN Philippines, May 27, 2021
Your brows
reveal untapped
coast, fresh
ores, endless archives. Listen
as your marrow
seeds a winged
spell.
Listen
for carapace
stroking new waters. Listen
to ocean as it murmurs to black
sand. Listen to all the secrets
of your ancestors’ survivals. You are for communal
nourishment, not soul-theft. Listen –
my neck lusters. I chime
across your waist, shallow
of your cheek. Attest: eight
valves, one heart. Search again
for sea. Search again for melody. Discover:
search again. When you have sung, open
your eyes. My hair rests
in a bun – your palms pitched
to praise. You may bring
chocolates but a comb
of capiz will do. If you crave
lips, fetch a bright
rambutan. If you seek the fellowship
of a shared bed, bring warm hands willing
to seed a root-filled back. Somewhere
above Mindanao & below Luzon, a shore
quickens. You amass legends.
You mine
renewed inheritances.
Braid
as if your hands
were an anthem
rising from my spine. Smell
unknown adolescence as
you etch
the canopy of shoulder blade.
You share memories. I give consent:
replenish. I give
consent: adorn. In your bucket, bones
of incandescence.
In a fossil
below skin & above bone
resides perfume. Come,
caress
bones – Come,
caress
homes – Come,
come
for me: scraped &
repaired
archipelago
of incantations.
Purvi Shah seeds healing through anti-violence advocacy and creating art. She won a South Asian Social Service Excellence Award for her leadership fighting violence against women. During the 10th anniversary of 9/11, she directed Together We Are New York, a community-based poetry project amplifying Asian American voices.