The words engaged and committed have always bothered me. I always felt the restriction in each, an almost tangible pull of a force coming from someplace else. When a person says he or she's engaged, I have this distinct need to ask, In what, exactly? And if someone says, he or she is committed to someone, my mind immediately summons an image of an asylum building -- cold, impersonal, prison-like.
Monday, June 30, 2008
The words engaged and committed have always bothered me. I always felt the restriction in each, an almost tangible pull of a force coming from someplace else. When a person says he or she's engaged, I have this distinct need to ask, In what, exactly? And if someone says, he or she is committed to someone, my mind immediately summons an image of an asylum building -- cold, impersonal, prison-like.
Hey, I never said I was a mind reader but I know you don't like me. I'm fine with that. Whenever I'm in a group, you look at all the other people and you skip me altogether. I'm fine with that. Whenever you take extra pains to not cross the paths I frequent, I'm fine with that, too. I guess after all those loser-ly years, now's your chance to make someone else feel invisible.
I've got a headache because it's Monday. Monday's not such a good day for most of the working class. I used to have this Oh-God-I-Am-So-Very-Different-From-You phase and decided that Monday would be my very favoritest day. Didn't work.
Some days, it's okay, really. But there are days when the fact that I'm trying my utmost to ignore hits me: I don't like what I'm doing. I'm not fit for what I'm doing. I should be grateful to the people who've put me here. Somehow , I am not.
Saturday, June 28, 2008
From a drinking spree that started on Saturday with my light o'love, a stormy night among new-found friends, going to and from work with P, Manong's and the difference between imagination and experience, heated discussions between wrong and right and laughing at the futility of such talk, waiting for 5pm to hit (already?), sudden smiles and the innocuousness of life, someone forgetting all about me ( which was a definite blow to my ego), someone forgetting about cats that purr and hiss -- my week was everything but uneventful. Thank you for making me realize that.
Isn't it atrocious, how people can get away with certain things? And what's even more fantastic is that we let them.
A good example is stated in Benjamin Pimentel's article on the recent White House dinner conversation between President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and George W. Bush.
I've read some comments in previous blogs about this but there's one that really struck a chord.
An excerpt from Ninotchka Rosca's entry, Bushwacking Gloria:
Because the Philippine government refuses to recognize and rely on the indomitable character of the people it purportedly governs and represents, because the Philippine government continues to be led by suck-ups, all who are of Philippine ancestry become vulnerable to ethnic stereotyping, public humiliation and the disgrace of being perpetual beggars even as the Philippines gives away all of its resources -- from human to natural. Sad, just too sad.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Caramel -- Suzanne Vega
Vienna -- Billy Joel
Stuck In the Middle With You and I Want You -- Bob Dylan
Cryin' and Crazy -- Aerosmith
This Year's Love -- David Gray
That's the Way -- Led Zeppelin
She Talks to Angels -- Black Crowes
To You I Bestow -- Mundy
Forget Myself -- Elbow
Everlong -- Foo Fighters
Real Love and Do You Want To Know A Secret -- Beatles
The More You Ignore Me, The Closer I Get and Tomorrow-- Morrissey
There's a Light And It Never Goes Out -- The Smiths
Hey and Here Comes Your Man -- Pixies
To Be With You -- Mr. Big
Perfect Drug -- Nine Inch Nails
Sour Girl -- STP
Patience -- Guns 'N Roses
Like a Friend -- Pulp
Beast of Burden -- Rolling Stones
Crazy Love -- Van Morrison
Sixth Avenue Heartache -- Wallflowers
Such Great Heights -- The Postal Service
Something Beautiful -- Tracy Bonham
Ghost and/or Mystery -- Indigo Girls
Strange Little Girl -- Tori Amos
After all of this, I listen to Ramones songs. Now THAT makes me happy. But that's another list altogether.
Monday, June 23, 2008
MSN.com says that it was heart failure that did him in.
I find it hilarious and dazzlingly ironic, the fact that he died on a Sunday. If you've watched one of his acts before, you'd know what I'm talking about.
Woe, woe to the laughing world.
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Monday, June 9, 2008
Check them out if you want to. Toodles.
Hi. As you can see, I've changed my Blogger Template yet again. I guess it's an understatement when you say I get bored easily. Anyway, I'm not ready to edit the links section yet, since I may still change this template this week. Harhar.
Did I really have to explain all that?
Sunday, June 8, 2008
Friday, June 6, 2008
Today is April 20, 2005. I am waiting in a mall. It is a Saturday, there're a lot of people milling about. I am fidgety, as if this is the first time I'll be doing this.
You are not here yet and I am waiting by the bookstore. I decide to go to the restroom to freshen up. I hope you won't arrive yet, I need some minutes to myself. I reach the restroom and check how I look in the mirror. There are circles and fine, thin lines around my eyes. My mother just died five days ago. I am unsure about how I look.
I remember asking someone restroom directions. I realize that I need someone to guide me to places.
I enter the bookstore only because you say that you're coming, that you're almost here. I imagine that I could smell you in this place. This is true. In the insanity of these passing minutes, I pretend that I know what scent you wear. When you asked where we'd be meeting, I said The Fiction Section, please. I thought I was being smart, that there was something decidedly poetic about strangers meeting in a section where only the surreal survive.
Someone in the Fiction Section knows me. He was a college classmate of mine. He speaks to me as if we are intimate friends. It always strikes me as funny how people who are on nodding terms get chummy when they meet in strange and new places. I try to look out for you but I don't know exactly what kind of face I am looking for.
Then you appear. The details blur into each other. I remember coming home for the first time.
*******
It is September 20, 2005. I am breaking up with you. I had one beer too many and other drinks besides. I have plans to go to Singapore. I am sitting on the mattress when I open the topic. You came in and out of the room afterwards, occasionally texting some anonymous person and smiling.
Tomorrow, I have an interview downtown. I have to sleep, have to get some rest.
*******
Today is November 14, 2005. I look her up, research stuff about her with the same detached feeling that I used to exert in dissecting frogs for Biology class. I ask my officemate to walk me to the terminal because my legs feel wobbly. Truth is, I feel like collapsing.
When my officemate is gone and I am safely inside the rental van, I cry slow, silent tears. Once, I sobbed out loud. I hope the driver didn't hear me.
*******
It is April 2006. I give a quick glance at the room that I'll be sharing indefinitely with my officemate. This is her family's house. I get the top bunk. I strongly suspect this is because I am not a real part of the family. My officemate and her sister shares the bottom bunk.
I eat with her Chinese/ Japanese family. Her mother gives me an orange bathing suit. She hands it to me after our first meal. I accept it, I am at a loss for words. I am at a loss, period.
*******
It is May 2006. We meet at another mall. We were supposed to watch a movie but decided to veto it at the last minute.
*******
It is October 2006. I've brought you fruit and am staying the night. Almost everyone is here. They are visiting you. Your platelet count has gone down the day before and everyone wants to see you, to know how you are. I like acting as hostess; I do it seldom.
By 10pm, everyone has vacated the area. Only I am left and your cousin, who also got inflicted with Dengue. His mother is accompanying him at the other area; we assume that they are sleeping. I am sitting on a small stool. You look at me and say, You are my hero. You feel a bit emotional because a lot of people dropped by today. I smile softly and do not look at you. It is nothing, I say. Don't mention it, it is nothing.
*******
It is May 7, 2007. It is my birthday and we are on our way home. You aren't in the van; we dropped you off somewhere because you had to go to work. I feel down and am not talking much. Besides, I am nursing a hangover. The hotel was beautiful. I wish I were rich enough to be able to spend every summer there.
I arrive home and take a nap. I wake up after some time, I hear you come in the room. You sigh and seem tired. Turns out that your student wasn't at school. You seem so heavy, like a lot of weight is on your shoulders. You hug me half-heartedly. I have a present for you, you say, handing me a plastic bag. In it is a book. It is a book of short stories by an author I do not know. I stare at it, trying to find some meaning in it. Sadly, it had none.
*******
Today is October 16, 2007. I am looking for scissors to cut out the tags from the clothes I just bought. I have draped them all over the mattress. I know that I shouldn't but I look in your drawers. I know that I shouldn't but here it is, something else. Not what I was looking for.
*******
Today is May 7, 2008. It is my birthday. You are home; you kiss me and tell me you love me. I believe you.
******
Today is June 6, 2008. I am trying to remember everything. I won't pretend that I've always understood you. I have to admit that there are some days when I don't even try.
Remembering is good. Remembering makes me realize how much I have changed. How much we'll continue changing in the coming years. Here is something true: I am not less afraid now. I am not stronger. There are even days when I wish that our relationship consisted wholly of days reliving that first day, the day we met. Imagine, twenty-six months of going to the mall, meeting in the Fiction Section, then coming home. There are many things that I still feel ambivalent toward, many questions that I do not ask. I want to say, I need to touch you. But I do not. I don't know why.
Both of them tell me that it's important for me to keep a journal. Not the moleskin ones because that would be too expensive for someone with as tight a budget as I have. Both of them have said, at separate times, of course, that it would be better if I kept one of those small ones that can fit easily in the tiny purses I carry. That way, whenever an idea pops up, I would be able to reach in any inane purse I was carrying and speedily jot down what I've thought of, else, it will be lost. One of them said it is possible for these thoughts, these magical phrases to be lost forever.
I've been home for almost a week now and have experienced those rarities flittering in and out, as if they were guests that were too busy. I took too much of their delightful time. There was one moment yesterday afternoon when I thought up a fabulous beginning for an insanely romantic story about a woman with long hair, coming in from the rain. I find the occurence of rain romantic. Once, I imagined a whole stanza for a song. There were, of course, the lilting voices of phrases, keen on maintaining the distance between me and the rest of the text that I was supposed to make them fit in.
People like me --- people who don't keep notebooks within reach, who easily forget the occasional key in certain locks, who neglect turning out the lights --- have it easy. We say, Oh, I've forgotten, when the truth of it is we're believers in the temporariness of things. Seeing a part of some vast and incomprehensible whole doesn't mean that you'll understand eventually. Being the sole witness to a singularly spectacular phrase doesn't mean that it is yours to write about. People like me do not get to own anything or anyone and in return, we flounder; we go through life mostly by ourselves. What we want are witnesses, like the two people I mentioned earlier, companions who will remind me what the essentials are, what things should be accomplished today. I always maintain that each day is vastly different from the day before it. I'm talking Mars and Bigfoot. I'm talking eggs and rainbows. The morning light goes loom and you're different from who you were at 11:59pm.
Everything is so extraordinarily transient. Don't you see? Tomorrow, I can say that I've decided to be a tiger. And that's what I'll be for the day. I'll prowl and hunt and roll around under the sun. I'll talk with my fellow tigers with short but persuasive growls. Then tomorrow, it'll all be different. Tomorrow, I'll be a vase. Then you can put daffodils in me. You can water the daffodils, even put some plant vitamins with it. It's always easier to imagine that you can be something completely different, that simple things like daffodils, water, and vitamins are all you're really allowed to contain.
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
by Sid Gomez Hildawa
If this were not love,
I wouldn’t kiss you.
My head would turn
the instant your head
would rise to meet
mine, allowing
our cheeks to console
each other as I distract
you with a tight
embrace. My fingers
would comb your hair
the way mangrove
roots sift through mud
to anchor at the swampy
edge of the bay, extending
the land but not
sailing away. My legs
would entwine around
your legs, with my feet
locked on to yours, as though
we were one immortal
creature with many arms
and many legs, but with many
hearts as well. And my body
will rub against your
body, like millstone
to the mill, skin
on smooth skin, grinding
watered grains
into milk, but only
for spilling.
I wouldn’t kiss you
If this were not love.