Your Name is a poem written by April Pagaling about memory and the inadequacy of language to capture the depth of human emotion. It invites readers to reflect on the universal experience of love and loss, and the way we all, in our own way, are "cataloguing departures."

Table of Contents

after Kim So Wol

This is the grammar of breakage, how a name becomes not-name, becomes air.
When your fingers turn to leaves. There is that moment of is/is not.
There is that moment before petrification, when flesh remembers it is flesh.

Then there was the vase. Shapes for holding. Water, wine, oil. Or ashes. The final residue.

Full with flowers reaching heaven.
Then falling to the air’s invisible knife.
Blood pooling, trying to remember its vessel. The broken pieces reflecting
what was. Or wasn’t. It is getting harder to tell.
This one. Slipped. My fault. Fingers, you see, betray.

Carried. Like a letter blown across the monsoon rain. Containing, perhaps, a single, devastating word.
A fragment of pottery. Evidence. Of a certain kind of catastrophe. Emptiness.

Your name in my mouth, a broken vessel spilling ancient wine.
(Once, there was honey on the tongue.)

To carry something is to wound it gradually.
We are all, in our way, cataloguing departures.
Even the stars practice their slow letting-go.

In the space between syllables, I find pieces of you.

You. The pronoun is enough. The rest is just… debris. Or hubris.

I will call you forevermore. Forevermore. An adverb. Adverbium.
Modifying what? The past. The absence.

Is that the right word? Is there a right word.
For this. 

For you. 

For ever. 

More.

(Silence.)

Picture of April Pagaling
April Pagaling is a Filipino writer who embraced poetry at 45, bringing decades of lived experience to her craft. Born and raised in Marinduque, Philippines, she writes about environmental justice, cultural preservation, and the complex ways communities navigate ecological trauma. Her work draws from her island's history with mining disasters, weaving together personal narrative, environmental advocacy, and cultural memory. In addition to poetry, she maintains a food blog and is currently working on a Philippine historical novel. Her writing explores how traditional knowledge and community resilience persist despite environmental challenges. She focuses on documenting stories that might otherwise be lost to time and change.