Home
I walk with my grandfather
through
      a thousand shades of green
      plants dressed in dew
      flowers flooded in light
 as birds fill the trees with their
wild loud songs.
 Our garden 
comes alive 
in mornings.
Lolo drags a hose
 the water trickling slow. 
We pause at a planter of
Jasmine
      Sampaguita.
Weeks ago when I found 
out I’d have to say goodbye
 he made me plant it 
So when you return you’ll see how it’s grown, he said.
Jasmine
      Sampaguita
 takes up most of this space. 
Rows of shrubs like fences 
small white flowers
perfuming the air with their 
sweet lush musk.
 But we hover over mine 
concerned
 leaves wilted
 brittle brown stems. 
No blossoms here.
I crouch down. 
     What’s wrong, little Jazzy?      I ask, almost expecting a reply.
Plants respond to humans 
our voice, our love.
 It’s why I name and talk to some of ours: 
Elvis Parsley and Vincent van Grow,
 my favorite, the Spice Girls
 (a cluster of herbs named after 
a music group my friends and I
 dance to when we play our CDs). 
     Should I have grown it in the ground? 
      Or in a different pot?      Or . . . something?      I ask my grandfather.
      I don’t know what to do. 
You should trust. It’s just a little thirsty.Jasmine
      Sampaguita
 has gifted 
my family
 our livelihood
 by learning the art
 of growing and selling.
 Its blooms are our survival.
I know its petals 
soft and white. 
I know its smell 
without it near
 but I don’t know 
why this one looks 
how I feel
 —homesick 
heartsick—
 when I haven’t even 
left for California yet.
I sigh.   
Feeling nervous for your trip, Isabel? 
      If I don’t like it there, can I come home?To my surprise he nods. 
But only for visits.Tricked!  
 Lolo raises my chin 
so our eyes meet.  
Sumpa kita sounds like sampaguita. 
It stands for I promise you. 
And I promise 
you will do fine in your new home.He lays the hose 
slips it a drip 
saying something 
I’ve already heard
 many times, my whole life. 
We bloom 
where we 
are planted.   Don’t Want to Say It
Goodbyes look like 
summer in my small town 
green hills and rice fields
 my best friends and I strolling toward home.
Goodbyes sound like
 chattering about school and friends 
how next year we all turn thirteen
 —though they’ll be here and I’ll be elsewhere.
Goodbyes taste like
 tart calamansi from Lolo’s tree 
round, small, and green that Lola’s 
slicing and squeezing into drinks
for me, Cristina, and Rosamie.  
 Ice clinks 
glasses sweat
 we take slow sips 
and our lips pucker
 from the sweet and the sour.
Goodbyes smell like 
sampaguita flowers 
Lola’s picked and strung
 piled high on the table in soft pearly mounds. 
Bye, Lola! See you tomorrow, Isabel! my friends say.
 Lola waves back and drapes 
a single jasmine garland
 around my neck the way she does 
with each fresh batch.
Goodbye is 
Lola’s sad smile 
the waning sun
 that citrus still on my tongue 
these white blooms near my heart 
her warm hand on my cheek 
knowing how much
I already hate saying 
goodbye.      
Me, Isabel Ligaya, Age Twelve 
      I’ve never lived in a city
I’ve never seen snow
      I’ve never been rich
I’ve never had a mother take me to a mall.
      I’ve never left the Philippines 
or ridden in an airplane
      or wanted to make new best friends 
because
      I love the ones I already have.								
									 Copyright © 2024 by Mae Respicio. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.