Troy Cabida, London, UK Troy Cabida (he/him) is a Filipino poet from Las Piñas City, Metro Manila, currently based in Earls Court, London. An alumnus of the Barbican Young Poets, Troy’s recent poems appear in bath magg, fourteen poems, and 100 Queer Poems (Vintage, 2022). His poem “How to wear a Love Bracelet” was shortlisted for The Bridport Prize for Poetry 2022. His debut pamphlet, War Dove was published by Bad Betty Press. Troy has also served as a producer for Poetry and Shaah, an open mic night based in Brixton, London. Troy is currently undertaking a BA in Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck, University of London and works for the National Poetry Library, Southbank Centre. (Author photo by July Sumalde)



Three Poems


Issue No.3

Grade 1

           
One day, the girl who had hair pointing outwards
like horns growing out from behind her neck
looked at me with eyes blank with youth
and said she was proud of me. Sip orange juice.
 
It was during break time 
when she tells the class, huddling around us, that I 
was no longer a gay boy. That sure, I was one yesterday, 
but today she sees none of that softness

weighing down my shoulders, tingling her curiosity.
Nothing bent or fragrant standing out.
Today, she declared me void and for that, 
I’m worth a round of applause. Crumple juice box.

Later in class, we stand to recite to the letter P. 
I stand, get nipped at the ankle by classmates 
not to say P as in Pamaypay, as in Pink, as in Prim, 
but to say P as in Pako, as in Pain, as in Power.
           
           

Replica

           
The attention those gauntlets would catch
out in the streets. Shine full silver,
their outlines solar, framing
power muscular yet refined.
Imagine unboxing the delivery
through a flurry of excitement, 
donning the headband – sorry, tiara,
and seeing it as reconciliation
 
between the young man 
who wants to grow into full man 
by looking past tremors of his own hate,
studying the dullness in violence,
understanding that mercy is a constant task
and that the truth isn’t always as golden
as a one-word definition,
 
mixed with the plucky eight-year-old boy
wearing a mask from Toy Kingdom, 
a makeshift lasso made out of
shoestrings, ribbons and shorts strings 
latched at the garters of his basketball shorts,
who will only spin to transform
to fetch a remote or pour water into pitchers
at the right call for help: Wonder Woman!
           
           

Lemon juice

           
and here we might be having 
a love that knows about time
that doesn’t burrow in the chest
coming through smooth 
like the first inhale of a cool breeze
upon opening a door 
the kind of love that knows 
its place and circumstance
within the choice you must make 
between the bad event and 
the typical happy ending
because sticky situations 
do not transmute into good 
by themselves
you have to choose to wake up 
and contribute to the healing
until you bear a gift to reap 
which right now 
is the rest of central London 
all to ourselves

the city not noticing the swift landing 
of an arm around a shoulder

the back and forth of flirtation 
nimble on its feet