Dawn filters through a dense Philippine canopy, damp earth and ginger scent thick in the air, cicadas shrilling overhead. At the center of a mossy clearing, an anthill breathes quiet like a sleeping thing—an ordinary mound with an extraordinary warning: pass without respect, and unseen guardians may answer with pain.
Forest Beginnings
In the heart of the archipelago, ancient trees stand like patient sentinels, their trunks knotted with vines and their leaves murmuring secrets to wind and rain. Sunlight moves like a slow tide across the forest floor, pooling in clearings and slipping between roots. The air carries the cool, loamy smell of moss, the sharp tang of crushed leaves, and a sweetness from distant ylang-ylang flowers. Villagers learn early that the land is stitched with other presences. Where the earth swells into small mounds—punso—one must step lightly, murmur a greeting, and leave small tokens of thanks. For within those hummocks dwell the Nuno sa Punso, small, ancient spirits who keep a watchful hush over their domain.
The Nuno sa Punso is not a being of spectacle. He does not howl like an aswang nor stride the roads like a tikbalang. He is spare and secretive: a squat figure with bark-furrowed skin, beard of lichen, and eyes that glint like river stones. People do not tell stories of him to frighten children for fun; they pass down cautions like seeds—simple rituals of respect meant to keep balance. A forgotten greeting, a scuffed mound, or a tossed aside offering can invite sickness or a streak of bad luck whose cause no healer can unpick. Yet the Nuno is not merely punitive. He can be placated, even generous, when humility guides a person’s hands. His legend is a living instruction about reciprocity between people and the land.
The Forbidden Mound
Datu was the youngest son of the village potter, lean and quick, more at home on narrow paths than in stilled rooms. He grew up on stories: flickers of shape-shifters, warnings about the dark, and elders’ low-voiced tales of spirits that kept the forest from being taken apart. He wore skepticism like a second shirt, comfortable and stubborn. Spirits, he thought, were for bedtime; they did not belong in the measured business of planting, mending pots, or racing along riverbanks. Still, Datu had never set out to be disrespectful—only curious about what lay beneath the stories.
One humid afternoon, cicadas shrilling in the heavy heat, Datu wandered deeper than his mother had allowed, seeking the best wood where lanzones trees grew and shade stayed cool. He came upon a clearing shaped by soft green light, and at its center sat a punso taller than any he had seen, dressed in moss and ringed with ferns. The air there felt different—thicker, quieter, as if sound slowed to listen. A prickle rose along his arms. His mother’s voice threaded through his memory: “Always say tabi-tabi po when you pass a punso.” Instead of a murmured greeting, curiosity won. Datu prodded the mound with a stick, watching a ribbon of red ants spill out and scatter. He laughed at himself for being timid.
A wind stirred then, though the trees held still, bringing a damp, metallic hint as if the earth itself had shifted. Datu felt numbness creep up his left foot like cold water. He shrugged and continued gathering wood, but by evening his step was uneven and his skin began to burn with a prickling heat. That night he tossed in fevered sleep, visions crowding his head: low-voiced chanting, a shadow hunkered atop the mound with ember-bright eyes. When dawn came, his foot had swelled into a painful, angry red.
The village albularyo came, muttering and burning herbs until their hut filled with acrid smoke. Incantations soothed nothing. On the second day whispers threaded the air outside the family’s door—tales of children stricken for offending spirits, of farmers who met a long run of misfortune after disturbing punso. Datu, feverish and humiliated, learned that stories were not only old women’s counsel but maps of how the land kept its own measure.


















