"If You Were Closer I Could Touch You"

Justin Timbol

Justin Timbol (he/him) is a Filipino-Canadian writer from Mississauga, Ontario. His work has been longlisted for the 2021 CBC Poetry Prize and shortlisted for CV2′s Foster Poetry Prize. His poems have appeared most recently in VallumCV2, Ricepaper Magazine, and The Maynard. He has recently graduated from the Humber School for Writers.

“‘If You Were Closer I Could Touch You’ gets its title and inspiration from Stan Rogal’s ‘Postcard from Home’ (appearing in Imaginary Museum, 1993), with an additional reference to the Alexander Biggs’ song ‘Tidal Wave.'”

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     Sunset splits your windshield
     divides your gaze               into halves of the horizon.
     Above glimmers like golden hour
     while Alexander Biggs sings
     the pull of a distant             coming moon.
     Below, you left the water with
     a prayer in your mother tongue
     and what’s left of your aunt.

     I hold a palm of water in the ocean
     and all I see is you
     your chest rising full and empty
                 full once more.
     I press an ear to the ocean
     and all I hear is the ocean.

     …

     Language is too imperfect
     to hold on to,     beautifully so
     I wish only to hear you
     speak it again and again
     into my chest your ngai
     my sharp breath pulls
     you closer     further from
     your homeland
     where the english pains
     your mother to swallow,
     your father’s accent
     playing gatekeeper
     to westernization.

     I pour a palm of you into the ocean
     if you were closer I could touch you
     there is nothing here for me
     I press my ear to the ocean
     and all I hear is the cries
     of our ancestors
     lost to me             briefly
     between white noise and cresting water.

     At dinner your mother plays
     critic to my attempts at speaking
     deu ne lou fing
     your father laughs, wants to say more
     but mostly just smiles and nods.

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