Sunday, November 30, 2008

"And I don't even know how I got off the track..."

I woke up early, considering it's Sunday. I have to go somewhere but I'm stalling.

I'm all ready to go. But I thought I'd surf first. There's an interesting blog  I found recently "about the successful integration of Humanity, Nature, and Technology". They find cool, non-uptight ways of saving the world. I found it from a link from Jason Mraz's official - whose journal I find amusing to read.

I'm all ready to go. But I thought I'd have a quick breakfast first. I reheated some leftover pizza and pasta that Luz and I kept in our ref. I microwaved the food, and - tadaah! Carbo-loaded breakfast. I discovered cheese and garlic pizza lose its appeal when you don't eat it straight from the box.

I'm all ready to go. But I thought I'd dry my hair first. It has gotten too long to be ignored but I STILL haven't had the time to get a haircut. Maybe during the Christmas break. They make fun of me at the office when I come to work with almost-dripping hair. I don't have a hair-dryer or anything so I turn on the fan and well - just sit around and listen to Weezer's The Good Life set on repeat mode in my Winamp. I love this song. It's been my LSS for most of the week. Except for that Wednesday when Paulo noticed that my status was from Sister Hazel's Your Winter. So senti, I know.

I'm all ready to go. But I though I'd write a quick blog on how I've been delaying the inevitable necessity of going home to an empty house in Antipolo. I'll make it quick. Dive right in. Do the errands, check if everything's ok. I'm hoping the silence won't be too loud. Damn, I really should get myself a portable music player. And bring Weezer with me wherever I go.

I'll be back in a few hours. Wish me luck. And all together now: "And I don't wanna be an old man anymore. It's been a year or two since I was out on the floor..."

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Life Snapshots (S01, E02)

Five o'clock. When early comers can already afford to slack off a bit since effort hours are complete and logout time is near. Dens, Paulo, EJ, and Lead Character are huddled around Dens's workstation.

DENS: Umamin ka na kasi sa kanya, Ate LC (LEAD CHARACTER).

PAULO: Oo nga, sabihan mo sya crush mo sya.


LEAD CHARACTER: Ano ba! Wala ako aaminin!

EJ: Is it the truth? Totoo yun! Is it fair to all concerned? Oo! Will it bring goodwill and better friendship? Oo naman! Is it beneficial to all concerned? Beneficial yun! Isipin mo. Pumasa lahat sa four-way test ng Rotary kaya umamin ka na. Baka magka-boyfriend ka pa at maimbitahan ka pa sa kasal ko.


DENS: Basta ako, EJ, imbitado na ako, ah.


PAULO: Ano ba ang conditions mo, EJ?


EJ: Magkaboyfriend si LC, o manalo ako Lotto, o manalo sya ng lotto.


DENS: O, ano ang easiest dun?


LEAD CHARACTER: Manalo ng lotto!


Peals of Laughter from the guys (succeeding occurrences of which will be referred to as: POLFTG).

Sir Roy overheard the whole conversation and couldn't stop himself from joining the POLFTG.

LEAD CHARACTER: Tingnan nyo, natatawa si Sir Roy sa inyo. Sir Roy, Di daw po kasi ako iimbitahan ni EJ sa kasal nya kung di ako manalo sa lotto or wala akong boyfriend.

DENS: Ayan, tamang-tama! Manghingi ka ng tips kay Sir Roy!


SIR ROY: Bibigyan kita tips - number 4, number 7, number 20... Lotto tips.


Uproarious POLFTG.

SIR ROY: Kailan ka ba ikakasal, EJ?

EJ: Medyo malayo pa naman po.


SIR ROY: Malayo pa pala, LC. May panahon ka pa.


LEAD CHARACTER: Opo, may panahon pa po ako. Tataya ako araw-araw.




Wednesday, November 19, 2008

The Breakfast Club

I’ve resolved to not skip breakfast anymore. So for the past few weeks since I came back from leave, I try to wake up early to get to the office before 9 and have breakfast before starting the day’s workload.

I have the pleasure of sharing the “most important meal of the day” with three guys: EJ, Paulo, and Dens. They are the ones who arrive at the office earlier than me. Sometimes, I eat with only one or two of them. But whenever they’re in “full force”, my mornings start out with a good jolt.

These guys have made it a sport to find amusement in most things I do. They think it’s funny when I get startled, when I don’t get jokes, or when I yell “Let’s cross na!” when we go from Tektite to Pearl Drive. I let them have their fun, because honestly, I don’t really get annoyed with their wisecracks. And they know it.

It actually feels a little like having brothers with you all the time. Rambunctious and sarcastic brothers who never tire of teasing.

Breakfast is usually a rotation of McDo Sausage McMuffins, Jollibee longganisa meals, Dell’s tapsilog, or Hungry Hippo burgers. They’re not very healthy food, but the easy conversation and laughter we share over those couple of minutes equip me with good humor - or hope for good humor - for the rest of the day. That makes any greasy food healthy – emotionally, at least.

Although when they call me “girlaloo” – they know this gets my goat – I want to conk their heads.


Saturday, November 08, 2008

Childhood Dusks

I’m looking out the window and I’m reminded how I love dusks.

we were kids, we used to play patintero outside our old house in Pampanga. We’d start when the afternoon sun was not too hot anymore and we’d end just after dusk, when the sun had already set. Some days, we rode our bikes back and forth our quiet street.

There’s an old schoolteacher who lived right across us and whenever she came home and we’re playing outside, I’d yell her name at the top of my voice, “Dang Deeeeee!” She was very tolerant of us since she knew us as the polite kids in the neighborhood, despite my tendency of over-exuberant greetings.

My sister improvised this game of making molds out of muddy soil. She called it “bigak-bigak”. It has no etymology whatsoever. Its name was the least of our problems. We had worse problems of muddy hands, faces, and clothes after we played.

Our grandmother spent her afternoons playing a card game called kwaho with some of the other elderly people a couple of blocks away. They played for money – just loose change, yes – but still money. She came home usually when we were wrapping up our games or parking our bikes. We’d each have a balot whenever she had good winnings from the game. Yes, as a kid, I used to eat unhatched duck eggs. Because whenever Lola gave them, we’d be asked to eat them right then and there, when the sun was already down and we had no idea what we were eating.

A couple of years later, I’d have the misfortune of being too curious about the balot eggs and scrutinized them under the glare of a 40 watt fluorescent light. I didn’t care for the Pinoy delicacy too much after that.

When it got too dark, Mama would call us to come inside the house and prepare for dinner. We’d enter through the kitchen door and I’d make a little hop so I could reach the faucet and wash my hands. They’d be finishing cooking dinner by then. I distinctly remember the smell of sautéed garlic at dusk. Even now, whenever I come across that smell, I am taken back to those countless afternoons when I came home from playing and dinner was being cooked in our kitchen.

We’ve always helped out with chores. The menial task of setting the table seemed to have been always assigned to me. I think it was because I was too young to handle hot pots and pans. Although I remember being told that only by handling breakable plates more often will I ever be less clumsy and more careful. That didn’t work out too well. We ended up dining with mismatched plates and glasses because I usually broke one or two in every set. And until now, I’m still clumsy as hell.

Around dinnertime, TV Patrol would be on the television. It was not the TV Patrol World as it is today. Just TV Patrol. With now-Vice President de Castro leading the panel of newscasters with Mel Tiangco, the late Frankie Evangelista, and Angelique Lazo for the showbiz news. The news bored me then. Who would’ve thought that years later I’d be bored because I couldn’t have television news.

It’s officially nighttime now. I look out the window again and the lights of the buildings around Shaw Boulevard and the Ortigas Center are now lit up. Soon, I have to decide what I’ll have for dinner: fast food, reheated food, or instant food.

I suddenly miss eating balot.