There’s tradition between a border and self.

Between the sea and the aging birds.

Between a people who exist in the space between

confinement and devotion, and what awaits us at

the shores—the invasion on board. Everything is

coming alive—the vines in the graveyards, the roots

on the mountains. There’s a stack of salt twirling out

of mangroves. Snarls of mockery, surges of tendrils

emerging from the ground, wrapping my body, binding

me into vegetation. These spirals—it began when the

fishes lost their scales to the oils. When the rubber

patches on the boats met softness at the kiss of water

and there were not many hands to bail the leak back into

the rivers. It began when we waited at the riverbank for

return and from afar we saw the paths covered with

overgrown trees weeping into the creeks, hyacinths

stumbling in the way of home. It mattered not to the heavens,

when the sadness in our eyes layered over the sizzling sunset.

Or when the ports fractured into the coastlines and our legs,

in constraint, folded into the bowels of ships.

The lands have borrowed our becoming; and we have latched

onto their essence, leeching their sap and evoking droughts,

wildfire, altering their waves when the winds wheel into them.

We have nothing left to offer the sea, and we have been humming

our prayers into a land that reverences sacrifice. The earth is

a mangrove of solitude, and we are nothing but buzzes enacting

into the core of what needs abundance to unstrap the ruins we created.