Just before the countdown could begin, the fireworks’ smoke

already had the city’s lung choking. There in his room upstairs, I saw

my nephew thumbing through the pages of a poetry book. He is

quite geekish at eight; the book, half-wrecked, is two years old.

“Uncle, uncle”, he exclaimed. “Don’t you have a New Year poem?”

“I have of course, it isn’t there,” I quipped.

The year has turned, he kept insisting: “Uncle, uncle, show me one!”

As if a New Year poem is something like a coke-cum-mentos bomb,

or something as spectacular as anti-gravity. But still, any poem

is better than levitation. And so on his palm I wrote the URL of

an old, abandoned blog of mine. “Do a rummage on the archive,

little boy.” I tapped his shoulder gently. Alas, after some thundery,

trumpety minutes he came back and showed me a poem he has just

printed, entitled: ‘Listen to the King’s Dying Words’. “I like this one

uncle, you have such a New Year poem,” he yelled smiling.

I smiled back thinking how in the hell he did get to discern it

and how he learned, at an early age, that a New Year poem

doesn’t necessarily have to be written late December, nor January.

Si Lolito Go ay isang professional bum at ordained Dudeist Priest sa Olongapo City. Siya ay kasapi ng KM64 Poetry Collective, isang aktibo at progresibong samahan ng mga kabataang makata na may layuning...

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