Sunday, June 19, 2011

the father's day club

The idea came nonchalantly during that SSS (Say Something Substantial) prologue during my freshman religious studies course. One by one, all forty one of us stood in front of the class, our feet fixated on a one square foot marking the professor drew on the floor, intently warning not to let loose of a toe outside, and decanted fragments of ourselves to people who were merely strangers back then. One by one, the stories poured out and I found myself listening to some narrations that were as if mine, as I understood the chronicling which climaxed to that all too familiar throb and longing.

I lost my father when I was nine. He was the former chief of the local police when he was gunned down by a perpetrator still unknown to us until now.

As the sole breadwinner for a family of six children, the cupboard was turned upside down after he was gone. Difficult may not have been an exaggeration of the life we went through without Papang. I will not want another retelling.

During the course of that SSS, I came to know other classmates whose stories were closely allied with mine. We were four in the class. We met another one year the after although her story was a bit different from us while the sentiment was the same. I hope they would forgive my lack of authority to recount these fragments which my memory can conjure now:

Z's father died by accident; a land mine was detonated on the plantation he was working at. H's and R's succumbed to illness. T's is a complex storyline and I digress to even set a backdrop. Z, H, T and I became good friends, but then again, all in that class had been. But I suppose, we understood each other better because of that nexus that linked us. We exchanged stories about how things were when our fathers were still around (all of us lost our fathers when we were young). We smiled at bittersweet memories but the tears we left to dry on that SSS floor. I know that we were made different by our circumstances and losing our fathers early in our lives etched some sense of maturity early on in our minds. Although I know that those experiences fortified us, there are still times that we needed some ounces of strength that we know we could have gotten so easily from a father's love and encouragement. These times often hit a raw nerve. But we get to live by the strength of the love from the people who were left and given to us.

These experiences also made us more bonded with our Mamangs or Mamas. On several occasions, we talked of our wishes and plans, not only for ourselves but for our mothers, the only parent left to us who also took on the uneasy task of fathering. But I will devote another write-up for that. Too bad, a get-together with our mothers still did not happen but someday I hope it will.

Over the years, the paths of life have brought us to our spots under the sun. We seldom see each other, although some, I often do on a social networking site. We still struggle with other battles that life throw at us, but I know the lessons learned and stength gained from our experiences plus the love and guidance of our fathers, wherever they are, will pull us through.

When I joined a Catholic community, I met many others who share the same story. In my previous cell group, I used to have four brothers who tell the same tale of throb and longing. I know at one point or another, everyone will join us in this club. When that time comes, I know you can always come to us to shed some of the pain and we will not mind. We shed some of those many times ago. But for now, I'd say, hug your father tight while he can still hug you back. For when the time comes, all you can do is wish even for a short moment when you still can.

To all fathers out there, whether we see you or not, Happy Father's Day.

Friday, February 11, 2011

sidestepping the bucket

I am not about to make a review. The film was released sometime in 2007 and attempting to make one is already three years late at the very least. I am one of the late catchers of the movie (pardon me, but I have just seen Good Will Hunting) and since I'm a real sucker for melodramas (for one, Big Fish is now my favorite film), watching this flick somehow touched a raw vein.

What would you do if you only have three months to live? What would you do differently knowing that your hours are counted, your lease at life reaching termination?

The questions dawned on me as soon as John Mayer started blaring in the background. Suggestions like suddenly becoming benevolent and virtuous would be feigned responses and I'm afraid I'd be damned all the more.
There will always be that part that will tell you to start acting a little kinder and be a little bit more pious and it's perfectly okay. But if trying to earn a fast track access to the golden gate gives the reason to that action and not the drive to do good because it's something that I haven't tried and should do, then it only beats the crap out of me.

I'm the gravely-ill Carter (Morgan Freeman) now and since I probably won't meet an Edward Cole (Jack Nicholson) in my sickbay, I can only do things that are well within my measures: no exhilarating skydives and jet-setting voyage around the world. Not exactly around the world like around the world but a French villa, the Egyptian pyramids, an African safari, the Taj Mahal, the Tibetan alps (was that Tibet?) and the Hongkong skylines is pretty much it. But I'm more than sure that there'll be the drama. And no less potent.

Here's probably what I would do on a more pragmatic and palpable sense:

First, I'd finish my pending credit recommendations and file for an indefinite leave. This will take me a couple of weeks most probably plus the goodbyes. Seven years of your life is still seven years. Never mind that it's been less than perfect, but when you breathe the same puffs of the air-con machine and smell the same dead-rat stink, people around become tinges of the ugly and lovely, the gloomy and ecstatic, the despondent and optimistic blobs on my shirt. And the stain would probably remain unbleached beyond the passing of another seven years.

Then, I'd go home and hug my mother tight (aww!). I'd kiss her every morning and my sisters and niece. Hug my brother every morning and my nephews. Cook them breakfast, lunch and dinner. Clean their rooms, wash their clothes. I'd probably abandon my repugnance to ironing for one day. I'd be a very loving son, a tender brother and a gentle tito.

I probably can't spend time getting a girlfriend. Not that it's too late and desperate but I can't be sadistic to my grave. But I'd probably write down that love letter in my head and send it. It won't elicit for a reply. If that's deemed pathetic then I'd be pathetic to my grave.

I'd show up at community meetings, probably accept an invitation to lead opening worship or talk a talk. Show up at two-round sharings and reunions. Give hand to the charity works.

By that time, I'd probably be as poor as a rat so instead of a jet I'd travel on a frigate of a book like a poem from my primary years. I'd finish my copies of Milan Kundera, Chuck Palahniuk and Arundhati Roy which I still haven't touched after grabbing them from the 'sale' rack. I'd probably learn about the sensitivity of Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea in the after-life.

I'd pen down an entry to the Palanca. I know I will not win, but the mere thought of having sent one is already a prize far bigger than me. I was sorry I didn't get enough of confidence to e-mail that article to the Youngblood until Inquirer thinks I'm no longer 'young' enough to send one.

I'll send long e-mails to pals far and wide. In it, I'd apologize about my failure to reciprocate or even deserve the brand of friendship I have been accorded. It will be brimming of gratitude.

By the time I finish crashing out these items, the sands may have been emptying the upper bulb fast. But before I get all corners covered, I'll stand in front of my father's grave as a tough guy who filled his cup full.

Then, I won't be able to try the world's highest bungee in New Zealand or witness the majesty of Sagrada Familia for myself. But it's okay. I'd probably can't write a book and talk to Paulo Coelho in person and it would be alright. I'd probably bring my cavities to my grave with the warts on my back and I can't give a damn. I'll be the tough guy who filled his cup full.

The movie talked about a survey with 94% responding that they wouldn't want to know when they would kick the bucket. If I'd be Carter and gravely-ill, I'd probably list myself among the 6%, but it would be a different tape if I'm my ass-kicking self right now. I'd probably spend half of my last ninety days calling on to the heavens why me and why now.

I woke up this morning reminded that the visit to the dentist would be over the weekend. I'm glad I can still lay out plans for travel in August and never mind that I'd be hitting the storm (because there'll be a long weekend in August and on no other periods after P-noy became a spoiler of the holiday economics). I'm looking forward to watching the many movies I missed and finding the classics on the 'sale' rack in the bookstores. We don't know what will happen tomorrow but still we wake up and make plans – that's hope. Some of these plans may seem out of our league but still we continue to believe that someday we'll get them – that's faith. While not achieving those plans may wound and break us but still we find reasons to lick the cuts and bruises and be swathed in the strappings of love. These fill my cup.

Then my list will probably be longer than the seven items or so spelled out above. Like Edward Cole, I'd probably get a tattoo. Or do a Carter's extremely weak 'laugh until I cry, help a complete stranger for the good or witness something 'majestic'. Good or nasty, I couldn't care less.

There would be many things that I'd do differently. To add to John Mayer's refrain, I'do what I need to do and change what I need to change. And then when I'm a tad better, I probably won't use 'probably' so often again in a write-up.



"Say"

Take all of your wasted honor
Every little past frustration
Take all of your so-called problems,
Better put 'em in quotations

Say what you need to say ...

Walking like a one man army
Fighting with the shadows in your head
Living out the same old moment
Knowing you'd be better off instead,
If you could only . . .

Say what you need to say...

Have no fear for giving in
Have no fear for giving over
You'd better know that in the end
It's better to say too much
Than never say what you need to say again

Even if your hands are shaking
And your faith is broken
Even as the eyes are closing
Do it with a heart wide open

Say what you need to say...

Thursday, January 27, 2011

like a bottle of wine

I imagined celebrating my birthday this year with the zest of making it as a milestone. Nothing really grand, just something that will sort of leave an impression similar to a rite of passage. Like maybe conquering my fear of heights by dominating Singapore's reverse bungee. Aside from the idea of thrill, it would be a reunion of sorts with college buddies who I haven't seen in what seemed like ages. If not, it would also be a nice idea to 'commune with myself' while on a bike along the slopes of Batanes. This 'communing-with-myself' thing is actually already long overdue to those who figured that I should already be finishing my novitiate by this time. Quite romantic actually. But like many things that were not quite intended to be, I was homebound on that day with a cluttered room that needs cleaning and a mountain of soiled clothes to wash. So much for a milestone celebration.

This day used to be a little and a few things to me and rambling from tradition (office people are good at reminding you that traditions ought to survive), I don't normally open wine for cheers. Like leaves that grow green and fall, birthdays come and go, leaving only additional lines in the forehead and probably a few gray hairs sprouting now and then.

The passing of time brings with it a certain awkwardness about recollection and anticipation, evoking anxiety at gunshot starts and rousing excitement at racing to the finish line.

While my accomplishments remain humble, what three decades in this world means to me is a milestone in itself and in hues of experiences and lessons: I experienced losing a parent but finding many others along the path. No one is truly alone. I struggled for the sake of ambition only to find the meaning of achievement in tranquility. No one is truly a failure. I searched places for convenience and comfort only to find it lying under my nose – the convenience of home and simplicity and the comfort of family and community. No one is truly poor.

In my first thirty years, I made many mistakes and several wrong choices, followed wrong directions and trekked along crooked paths. I thought ill, spewed curse, articulated lies and mastered pretense. I was foolhardy. I was coward. I digressed and complained, became lazy and procrastrinated. I learned evil while others took on my righteousness.

I learned to surrender my petty concerns to a greater Force. I sought forgiveness for my transgressions. I don't expect to be beatified.

I 've been blessed more than I am worthy of. Often, I am not appreciative but I am starting to look at things differently now. I am no longer the center of the universe. I learned to take things as they are, as they come.

Unlike the past ones that came and went, there's something about this turn of year that both agitates and animates me. Here is looking forward to the next thirty years while hoping that the numbers will indeed roll. Here's to life, love and laughter. Here's to experiences to go through and lessons to learn, places to go and people to meet. Here's to ambitions and milestone celebrations that will probably be another room full of clutter. Here's to faith, peace and freedom. Here's to growing old and growing up. And just like a bottle of wine, I wish to get better with time.

Pass the goblets now. Cheers!