“…In doing so, a certain predicament on time is intimatedwhat Nixon (2011) calls an "attritional catastrophe," or that which "overspill[s] clear boundaries in time and space…that simplif[ies] violence and underestimate[s]…the human and environmental costs…smooth[ing] the way for amnesia…" (p.7). In this rehearsal of tropical imagining, I propose as well a reversal of the rhetoric flow described by Lundberg (2021), through bringing the discourse on climate change this time from "the specific, artistic and local," as concretized by Lacaba's poem, and back to the "general, scientific and global," as embodied in the juxtaposed Philippine historical moment (p.98). eTropic 20.2 (2021) Special Issue: Tropical Imaginaries and Climate Crisis eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics ultimately embody the Philippine notion of time in its etymological sense: panahon, from the obscure root nahon, which denotes adaptive labouring that entails a conscious turn to the most timely approach, including the possible movement to an entirely different place (Benitez, 2019b, pp.…”