I was scrolling down my pictures folder and I chanced up one that read “37 for 37”. And then I remembered- this was where I stored the photos that best represented each of the trip that were included in the travel challenge we started last year. The last photo I stored and labelled was a trip I took in September, 2013. I was at 30 places when I stopped counting.
(The Challenge was that we would need to visit 37 new places in the year leading up to our 37th birthday)
I had completely forgotten this because when Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) happened, it eclipsed everything else, made all non-Yolanda matters irrelevant.
In the new scheme of things, this is still not relevant, come to think of it. I decided to complete the folder anyway- add the pictures of the trips that made it to the cut (It is a welcome distraction when one is in yet another airport, waiting for another flight that is delayed). And belatedly, six months since the deadline in December, I realized that I had completed that challenge.
Yeheey. That sounded hollow even to my ears.
But I cannot deny that the experiences of that challenge were significant. I would have said life-changing, but now I only use that description for disasters like Yolanda.
So, from January 2013 until my 37th birthday in December, as part of this “37 trips for 37 years challenge” I:
• racked up 3 new countries to my world travel map ( UK, Germany , and Belgium); and visited 9 new cities outside of the Philippines (Brussels, Eindhoven, Njimegen, Kinderjdike, Hamburg, Manchester, London, Fujeira, Sharjah)
• went up and down a slippery, almost-90 degrees cliff in the dark caves of Sumaguing, Sagada and decided that I will do that only once in this lifetime
• Rode a roller coaster in Singapore
• watched my first musical on the West End (Billy Elliot)
• Watched a play starring Felicity Huffman & Ed Begley Jr. (November) at the Mark Taper Theater in LA, front row seats to boot
• Went on a road trip with my sister in UAE and watched an ancient bull fight in the Emirates of Fujeira.
• Went on another road trip closer to home with a friend, that took us around Laguna Bay
• Unrolled my banig on the desert and sat to watch the sun set.
• Watched Willie Nelson sing the standards in Hollywood Bowl one summer night
• Jumped into raging waters of the Ulot river in Paranas, Eastern Samar.
• Paid an exorbitant amount of money (in Pinoy standards) for a joint in a coffeeshop in Amsterdam
• Went sunset-hunting in California, UAE, Vietnam, in the local front (Batangas and Southern Leyte)
• Took many early walks to avoid the tourists in cities/places where it can get overwhelming
• Went to the many islands of my archipelago for a country on random weekends- Bohol, Anilao, Southern Leyte, Batangas, Kalanggaman
Dipped my toes where the Indian Ocean meets the Arabian Sea on a full moon, and again at day-break.
• Sang as part of the church choir in Belgium even when I don’t normally go to church (but I do know the church songs)
• Road many trains and drank too many variety of beers in beer capitals of Germany, UK, and Belgium
Trip no. 37 was the most special, it was in December, two days before the deadline. We went up to Tagaytay with my parents (who are Yolanda survivors), my sister (who came home from Dubai), and my Proj. 4 family to celebrate my birthday. Yes, I traveled a lot that year but I always know I have a family to come home to.
But 37 is just a number (borrowed from a tag line of a popular anti-aging commercial). It does not tell how these memories were made with old friends and family I traveled with or whom I visited during these trips, and friends who showed me these new places. It does not tell the stories of the friends I reconnected with. It does not tell the stories of the stories told during those long drives, train rides and quiet walks.
Yes, these are memories to last a lifetime even if it seemed like it all happened a lifetime ago.
HOROSCOPE JUNKY
constantly reading and misreading signs while making, finding, and losing my way
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
Monday, May 26, 2014
Anomalous Anawangin
Anawangin Cove is an anomaly. Pine trees grow on the beach. Volcanic white sand from Mt. Pinatubo’s eruption. Mountains that almost meet the sea. A marsh that is strikingly rust in color and clear blue waters. All in one island.
I wish I had seen this cove before the beach cottages were constructed, before the hawkers came to ply souvenirs to boat-loads of tourists and before stalls selling souvenir items were set up, before it became so popular that the cove is like a tent city during the weekends. To find a tent city in a cove tucked away in the West Philippine Sea is another anomaly (sorry for the reference to the tent city, we are Post-Yolanda Taclobanons you know).
It must have been very beautiful in its isolation, without the people, the tents and all. But as much as I don’t like crowds, the dagat more than compensates for it. We were in the water for a long time (and our sun-burned faces and backs show those hours under the sun) and even with all the tourists there, the island is beautiful enough so you can shut every one off, and find your own little place of solitude amidst the boisterous barkadas. And our own little unit (D&P) was just right. Just right. So come to think of it, this cove is “perfect in its imperfections”, so goes the line of P’s current favorite song (hay, it was the soundtrack of our trip, it followed us everywhere!).
The usual itinerary that boatmen in Pundaquit suggest is to go island hopping first and lunch and a swim at Anawangin by noon until late afternoon. But we opted to go to Anawangin first, swim and do the island hopping after. The seas in the afternoon tend to get rough, very rough, so when we were on the way to Capones Island, I was second-guessing our decision to do island hopping in the afternoon. Then we saw a bird swoop down for his fish-merienda, and then everything, everything fell into place.
It was a case of a series of seemingly unfortunate events leading to one perfect moment. If my plane had not been delayed; if P’s dad did not forget his bag in the car then we would not have had to go back to Laguna to return it; and if we had left at 3am as originally planned, then we would have gotten to Anawangin at 6, and we may have left the cove to go island hopping earlier too. Or if the boatman was not double-booked and he had another pick-up at 2pm that’s why he scheduled us for pick-up at 3, or if we had agreed to be picked-up at 1pm instead. Or if D was successful in his first attempt to climb up the hill for a 180 degrees view of the island, or if he did not suddenly decide to try one more time to climb up 15 mins before our scheduled departure, then we would have left earlier. Instead, we left as we did, not one minute before or later or we would have missed the show that was meant only for us.
A few seconds after that bird swooped down, we saw the dolphins. And then the show began. We headed to where they were, the boatman just as excited as we were. And then they were there, beside our boat, the others just a few meters from us, and one even did that twirling thing not only once but thrice. For 5 minutes we were a captive audience of their show. We were in the middle of the rough sea, the only boat in that area at that moment (the only other boat at that time was a few hundred meters away, not close enough to witness what we were privileged to see). That’s why I am claiming this as the show that was exclusively for us. The boatman said that it was only the third time in his career ferrying tourists to and off the coves that he saw these dolphins.
The magic of that moment was not lost on all of us. It was a sign, P said. But for someone who has been feeling disoriented, not knowing where I am, and why I am where I am (oh, so existential!), it suddenly came to me, that ever fleeting moment, of knowing that I am exactly where I should be.
But that was Saturday. And now it’s Sunday and summer is over. We got there just in time. So long Anawangin, till we meet again, maybe next summer.
Saturday could wait, but Sunday’d be too late
-STING
I wish I had seen this cove before the beach cottages were constructed, before the hawkers came to ply souvenirs to boat-loads of tourists and before stalls selling souvenir items were set up, before it became so popular that the cove is like a tent city during the weekends. To find a tent city in a cove tucked away in the West Philippine Sea is another anomaly (sorry for the reference to the tent city, we are Post-Yolanda Taclobanons you know).
It must have been very beautiful in its isolation, without the people, the tents and all. But as much as I don’t like crowds, the dagat more than compensates for it. We were in the water for a long time (and our sun-burned faces and backs show those hours under the sun) and even with all the tourists there, the island is beautiful enough so you can shut every one off, and find your own little place of solitude amidst the boisterous barkadas. And our own little unit (D&P) was just right. Just right. So come to think of it, this cove is “perfect in its imperfections”, so goes the line of P’s current favorite song (hay, it was the soundtrack of our trip, it followed us everywhere!).
The usual itinerary that boatmen in Pundaquit suggest is to go island hopping first and lunch and a swim at Anawangin by noon until late afternoon. But we opted to go to Anawangin first, swim and do the island hopping after. The seas in the afternoon tend to get rough, very rough, so when we were on the way to Capones Island, I was second-guessing our decision to do island hopping in the afternoon. Then we saw a bird swoop down for his fish-merienda, and then everything, everything fell into place.
It was a case of a series of seemingly unfortunate events leading to one perfect moment. If my plane had not been delayed; if P’s dad did not forget his bag in the car then we would not have had to go back to Laguna to return it; and if we had left at 3am as originally planned, then we would have gotten to Anawangin at 6, and we may have left the cove to go island hopping earlier too. Or if the boatman was not double-booked and he had another pick-up at 2pm that’s why he scheduled us for pick-up at 3, or if we had agreed to be picked-up at 1pm instead. Or if D was successful in his first attempt to climb up the hill for a 180 degrees view of the island, or if he did not suddenly decide to try one more time to climb up 15 mins before our scheduled departure, then we would have left earlier. Instead, we left as we did, not one minute before or later or we would have missed the show that was meant only for us.
A few seconds after that bird swooped down, we saw the dolphins. And then the show began. We headed to where they were, the boatman just as excited as we were. And then they were there, beside our boat, the others just a few meters from us, and one even did that twirling thing not only once but thrice. For 5 minutes we were a captive audience of their show. We were in the middle of the rough sea, the only boat in that area at that moment (the only other boat at that time was a few hundred meters away, not close enough to witness what we were privileged to see). That’s why I am claiming this as the show that was exclusively for us. The boatman said that it was only the third time in his career ferrying tourists to and off the coves that he saw these dolphins.
The magic of that moment was not lost on all of us. It was a sign, P said. But for someone who has been feeling disoriented, not knowing where I am, and why I am where I am (oh, so existential!), it suddenly came to me, that ever fleeting moment, of knowing that I am exactly where I should be.
But that was Saturday. And now it’s Sunday and summer is over. We got there just in time. So long Anawangin, till we meet again, maybe next summer.
Saturday could wait, but Sunday’d be too late
-STING
Friday, May 23, 2014
Postcards from the Edge: Sunset-hunting in Manila Bay
It was an ordinary Wednesday afternoon. I was up to my neck with work but I cut my meeting short to give a very short talk to Tanghalang Pilipino about the current situation in Tacloban. Of course, in the new-normal-post-yolanda-reality, work on and for Tcaloban is my second full-time job. So at 2pm, A and I drove to far-away CCP on Roxas Blvd. It was hot, the traffic was bad, but this sunset was our reward. We spent our honorarium for that talk (A did the talking more and I must have said 3 sentences but we got the same fee haha!) on coffee by the bay. It's a rare treat because I hardly find myself in this area, and on an ordinary Wednesday at that.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Tacloban on my mind
Someday soon, we all will be together
If the fates allow
Until then, we'll have to muddle through somehow
So have yourself a merry little Christmas now
My taxi driver was making small talk as we crawled through unexpected midnight traffic in Singapore. We were discussing Christmas and how it is a big thing in the Philippines. I said, it’s similar to the Chinese New Year- we have parties all week-long. And like China, all domestic migrants in big cities make that trek back to the provinces/hometowns to celebrate Christmas. “What about you,” he asked, “where are you going to spend Christmas?”
All my life I spent Christmas in Tacloban. My mother’s siblings and their families would spend Christmas eve at home. Even when we were in college in Manila or Cebu, or when we were already working outside of Tacloban, it was a crime if we did not come home for the holidays. But there was one time in 2008 when we said that we’d try spending it in the big city, where Christmas lights and decorations were grander and fireworks bigger. It was fun but it was not home. After that, we said, never again. We still prefer the lights display of DPWH than Ayala Triangle or that Christmas tree in Balyuan than the Christmas tree in Cubao.
Home has always been and will always be Tacloban. I have been based in Manila for the last 20 years and been a transient in many cities for half of that. Friends would say: “the hotel room is your home, the airplane is your home, your home is where your head rests at night, you live out of a suitcase.” But I know where home really is. In fact, I am very particular with the words I use when I refer to my frequent travels between Manila and Tacloban- I say, “mabalik” ako ha manila (I am going back to Manila) and “mauli” ako ha Tacloban ( I am going home to Tacloban) and I never use these words interchangeably (I remember that it was another Waray friend, Bubbles, who made that distinction). I still dream in Waray, think in Waray. I tell all my friends that Tacloban is the center of the Philippines.
But my home will never be the same again. The first time I said that was in 2004 when we brought my brother’s body from Manila to Tacloban for the wake and funeral. It was also close to Christmas, that trip. I had been able to keep it together because I told myself at that time, my own grief can wait, I need to take care of my parents first. But when I saw Tacloban from the plane’s window, I started to cry. Because I knew then that coming home would never be the same again- there would always be this permanence of absence to deal with, my family will be completely changed and I, I myself, will not be the same again. A line of a poem goes: “For all the history of grief/An empty doorway and a maple leaf.” To our family, grief is an empty seat at the dinner table for a son and a brother who is never coming home for Christmas.
And that exact same feeling of profound loss came over me when I looked at Tacloban from the plane window when I came home on week 2. It has been a habit of mine to trace the way to our house from up above when there is a break in the clouds and the plane starts to descend,. I would zero in on a marker (the Astrodome) and then trace the roads home, looking for more markers along the way. I would look out for RTR hospital, then the V&G church, then I’d guess which among the similar-looking bungalows closer to the mountain side is our house. The plane would then make a u-turn in Tanauan, right where my friend lives (by Sol Oil in Brgy. San Roque). My marker is the wooden pier. And then I would start looking for certain landmarks again- the Palo Cathedral, that house on Maharlika Highway with that big ugly eagle or rooster or whatever. I would look out for the beach-goers in McArthur Beach, Baluarte and Sandy Beach Resorts (I remember how, as kids or even when we were older, we would vigorously wave at planes overhead). Soon after that would be the airport. (Once, my brother brought my sister and me to the edge of the runway so we could see the planes up close as they landed).
Now, my usual markers were gone. My friend’s house in Tanauan was crushed by the big oil tank of Sol Oil. Astrodome was still there but the surrounding areas were unrecognizable. The “ Shed”, where we went for sabaw after pa-morningan inuman in Magsaysay Blvd, was washed out. There was a boat in the middle of Magsaysay corner Real Street. And there were no roofs for me to be able to tell my house from the others. When the plane was almost on the ground, I looked to my left and I could almost see all the way through to Real Street, on the other side of the airport; hardly any houses were left standing to block the view.
I had been to ground zero before this. I came by bus that my friends and I chartered to get our families out on week 1. I came when everything was still chaotic; when one still had to be escorted by a military truck to get into the city safely; when bodies were still on the side of the road; when there was hardly any food or water getting to the people. I had already seen San Jose or what was left of it, and truckloads of bodies in body bags and in my mind, one of them could be people on my list that friends, who could not come home immediately, asked me to find. But I did not cry then. I had so much to do and so little time and I could not allow myself to break down. It was too overwhelming that there was no room for tears, no room for my own melodrama.
But this second trip home on week 2 was different. Maybe because I knew my family was finally safe that I finally let my guard down and saw, again, like it was the first time, the city that I love. And I finally allowed myself to cry.
Yes, it was the same feeling I had in 2004, that feeling that nothing is going to be the same again. But it was magnified many times over now because it was not just me-- it’s the feeling shared by my family, my friends, my friend’s family and friends. A whole city was grieving.
I think the sea always figures in most activities of Taclobanons: we do our early or late afternoon jog along Magsaysay Blvd, all the way up to Leyte Park, while enjoying the view of the bay; we’d spend late afternoons just hanging out in Bal-yuan. At night, we’d park our cars along the stretch of Magsaysay and have a beer or two (or more) and bbq from the stalls in Balyuan for pulutan. But how can we again spend full-moon nights along Magsaysay without remembering that at one point during this ordeal Bal-yuan was littered with hundreds of body bags? We would have breakfast or lunch at Yolanda’s (yes, there was a carenderia by the sea named Yolanda, very popular because they served the freshest catch of that morning) and then coffee at CafĂ© Lucia, pizza at Canto Fresco or buko juice at Manlurip while enjoying the cool sea breeze. We would take drives along the coast and end up in Brgy. Bislig Tolosa for a masag breakfast. On Sundays or holidays, families would go to the beach resorts for a picnic; picnic lunch is lechon, tuba, gaway, tinuon na saging. Personally, I prefer early morning dips on weekdays, when hardly anyone is on the beach. Sometimes, I’d go straight to the beach straight from the airport, coming from an early morning flight. Now, would we still look at the same sea without remembering how it once claimed so many lives? Would there ever come a time when we won’t tremble in fear at the sound of the rain or gust of the December wind? Didits said it best, “imagine, a whole generation of children would be afraid of the rain, would be afraid of the sea.”
And that is sad because what made this city beautiful is that bay that wraps around the city. And now, every single time we marvel at its beauty, it would always be bittersweet.
It took me a while to respond to the question of the taxi driver. I could have told him all these but maybe it would be a little bit too much for a late night ride. So I said, not this year, but oh, how I’d miss spending the holidays in Tacloban.
Christmas in Tacloban pre-Yolanda is a frenzy- everyone who is studying or working elsewhere is home, home from Manila, from Cebu, from abroad. And every day there’s a party- mini-reunions with friends from grade school, high school, college and then the never-ending family gatherings all throughout the season. But how do we do that post-yolanda knowing there will always be one or two, or even more, or entire families, who will be missing from these reunions? I imagine how our laughter would always be punctuated by silences- silences to remember those who are no longer there and how our stories will now be interspersed with accounts of the struggles to survive, or stories on the agony of waiting to hear from family during those days when Tacloban was shut off from the world, or stories of how they lost everything- homes, businesses and of the challenges of getting back on our feet from zero.
If I could have it my way, I’d be in Tacloban right now for Christmas, for my birthday, for the New Year, post-Yolanda conditions and all. My father is 79 years old, with a pacemaker and an anxiety disorder and his doctors said it would be better for him to be in a place where he would have access to a steady supply of medicines and hospitals with the equipment to be able to handle his kind of medical condition. So for the second time in my life, I spent Christmas away from home. And for the first time in my small unit in Quezon City, I hang a parol, borrowed a Belen, bought a very small Christmas tree, and my sister decorated my place so it would at least feel like Christmas at home. It’s not the same but we are all together and for now, I think that’s enough. Home for now, is where my family is.
If the fates allow
Until then, we'll have to muddle through somehow
So have yourself a merry little Christmas now
My taxi driver was making small talk as we crawled through unexpected midnight traffic in Singapore. We were discussing Christmas and how it is a big thing in the Philippines. I said, it’s similar to the Chinese New Year- we have parties all week-long. And like China, all domestic migrants in big cities make that trek back to the provinces/hometowns to celebrate Christmas. “What about you,” he asked, “where are you going to spend Christmas?”
All my life I spent Christmas in Tacloban. My mother’s siblings and their families would spend Christmas eve at home. Even when we were in college in Manila or Cebu, or when we were already working outside of Tacloban, it was a crime if we did not come home for the holidays. But there was one time in 2008 when we said that we’d try spending it in the big city, where Christmas lights and decorations were grander and fireworks bigger. It was fun but it was not home. After that, we said, never again. We still prefer the lights display of DPWH than Ayala Triangle or that Christmas tree in Balyuan than the Christmas tree in Cubao.
Home has always been and will always be Tacloban. I have been based in Manila for the last 20 years and been a transient in many cities for half of that. Friends would say: “the hotel room is your home, the airplane is your home, your home is where your head rests at night, you live out of a suitcase.” But I know where home really is. In fact, I am very particular with the words I use when I refer to my frequent travels between Manila and Tacloban- I say, “mabalik” ako ha manila (I am going back to Manila) and “mauli” ako ha Tacloban ( I am going home to Tacloban) and I never use these words interchangeably (I remember that it was another Waray friend, Bubbles, who made that distinction). I still dream in Waray, think in Waray. I tell all my friends that Tacloban is the center of the Philippines.
But my home will never be the same again. The first time I said that was in 2004 when we brought my brother’s body from Manila to Tacloban for the wake and funeral. It was also close to Christmas, that trip. I had been able to keep it together because I told myself at that time, my own grief can wait, I need to take care of my parents first. But when I saw Tacloban from the plane’s window, I started to cry. Because I knew then that coming home would never be the same again- there would always be this permanence of absence to deal with, my family will be completely changed and I, I myself, will not be the same again. A line of a poem goes: “For all the history of grief/An empty doorway and a maple leaf.” To our family, grief is an empty seat at the dinner table for a son and a brother who is never coming home for Christmas.
And that exact same feeling of profound loss came over me when I looked at Tacloban from the plane window when I came home on week 2. It has been a habit of mine to trace the way to our house from up above when there is a break in the clouds and the plane starts to descend,. I would zero in on a marker (the Astrodome) and then trace the roads home, looking for more markers along the way. I would look out for RTR hospital, then the V&G church, then I’d guess which among the similar-looking bungalows closer to the mountain side is our house. The plane would then make a u-turn in Tanauan, right where my friend lives (by Sol Oil in Brgy. San Roque). My marker is the wooden pier. And then I would start looking for certain landmarks again- the Palo Cathedral, that house on Maharlika Highway with that big ugly eagle or rooster or whatever. I would look out for the beach-goers in McArthur Beach, Baluarte and Sandy Beach Resorts (I remember how, as kids or even when we were older, we would vigorously wave at planes overhead). Soon after that would be the airport. (Once, my brother brought my sister and me to the edge of the runway so we could see the planes up close as they landed).
Now, my usual markers were gone. My friend’s house in Tanauan was crushed by the big oil tank of Sol Oil. Astrodome was still there but the surrounding areas were unrecognizable. The “ Shed”, where we went for sabaw after pa-morningan inuman in Magsaysay Blvd, was washed out. There was a boat in the middle of Magsaysay corner Real Street. And there were no roofs for me to be able to tell my house from the others. When the plane was almost on the ground, I looked to my left and I could almost see all the way through to Real Street, on the other side of the airport; hardly any houses were left standing to block the view.
I had been to ground zero before this. I came by bus that my friends and I chartered to get our families out on week 1. I came when everything was still chaotic; when one still had to be escorted by a military truck to get into the city safely; when bodies were still on the side of the road; when there was hardly any food or water getting to the people. I had already seen San Jose or what was left of it, and truckloads of bodies in body bags and in my mind, one of them could be people on my list that friends, who could not come home immediately, asked me to find. But I did not cry then. I had so much to do and so little time and I could not allow myself to break down. It was too overwhelming that there was no room for tears, no room for my own melodrama.
But this second trip home on week 2 was different. Maybe because I knew my family was finally safe that I finally let my guard down and saw, again, like it was the first time, the city that I love. And I finally allowed myself to cry.
Yes, it was the same feeling I had in 2004, that feeling that nothing is going to be the same again. But it was magnified many times over now because it was not just me-- it’s the feeling shared by my family, my friends, my friend’s family and friends. A whole city was grieving.
I think the sea always figures in most activities of Taclobanons: we do our early or late afternoon jog along Magsaysay Blvd, all the way up to Leyte Park, while enjoying the view of the bay; we’d spend late afternoons just hanging out in Bal-yuan. At night, we’d park our cars along the stretch of Magsaysay and have a beer or two (or more) and bbq from the stalls in Balyuan for pulutan. But how can we again spend full-moon nights along Magsaysay without remembering that at one point during this ordeal Bal-yuan was littered with hundreds of body bags? We would have breakfast or lunch at Yolanda’s (yes, there was a carenderia by the sea named Yolanda, very popular because they served the freshest catch of that morning) and then coffee at CafĂ© Lucia, pizza at Canto Fresco or buko juice at Manlurip while enjoying the cool sea breeze. We would take drives along the coast and end up in Brgy. Bislig Tolosa for a masag breakfast. On Sundays or holidays, families would go to the beach resorts for a picnic; picnic lunch is lechon, tuba, gaway, tinuon na saging. Personally, I prefer early morning dips on weekdays, when hardly anyone is on the beach. Sometimes, I’d go straight to the beach straight from the airport, coming from an early morning flight. Now, would we still look at the same sea without remembering how it once claimed so many lives? Would there ever come a time when we won’t tremble in fear at the sound of the rain or gust of the December wind? Didits said it best, “imagine, a whole generation of children would be afraid of the rain, would be afraid of the sea.”
And that is sad because what made this city beautiful is that bay that wraps around the city. And now, every single time we marvel at its beauty, it would always be bittersweet.
It took me a while to respond to the question of the taxi driver. I could have told him all these but maybe it would be a little bit too much for a late night ride. So I said, not this year, but oh, how I’d miss spending the holidays in Tacloban.
Christmas in Tacloban pre-Yolanda is a frenzy- everyone who is studying or working elsewhere is home, home from Manila, from Cebu, from abroad. And every day there’s a party- mini-reunions with friends from grade school, high school, college and then the never-ending family gatherings all throughout the season. But how do we do that post-yolanda knowing there will always be one or two, or even more, or entire families, who will be missing from these reunions? I imagine how our laughter would always be punctuated by silences- silences to remember those who are no longer there and how our stories will now be interspersed with accounts of the struggles to survive, or stories on the agony of waiting to hear from family during those days when Tacloban was shut off from the world, or stories of how they lost everything- homes, businesses and of the challenges of getting back on our feet from zero.
If I could have it my way, I’d be in Tacloban right now for Christmas, for my birthday, for the New Year, post-Yolanda conditions and all. My father is 79 years old, with a pacemaker and an anxiety disorder and his doctors said it would be better for him to be in a place where he would have access to a steady supply of medicines and hospitals with the equipment to be able to handle his kind of medical condition. So for the second time in my life, I spent Christmas away from home. And for the first time in my small unit in Quezon City, I hang a parol, borrowed a Belen, bought a very small Christmas tree, and my sister decorated my place so it would at least feel like Christmas at home. It’s not the same but we are all together and for now, I think that’s enough. Home for now, is where my family is.
Friday, May 31, 2013
Postcards from the edge: Sunset-hunting in Dubai
My sister is an OFW (overseas Filipino worker) in Dubai. She left late 2011 and she was back home last December for her first vacation after finishing a year of her contract. Actually there is another story here, one that I will write about in another post.
Anyway...one time, while driving along one of the provincial roads on our way home from somewhere, I stopped to point out the sunset. My sister looked at it and said, "oh, in Dubai,the sunset is enormous."
Yes, I remember. I was there in March 2012 for a short meeting and one thing I remember vividly were the sunsets. It was so near, so heavy, so big. It was breathtaking. I still have to read up on why it seems closer and much bigger in that side of the world.
My sunset-hunting has taken me to so many places, or I would always sunset-hunt in the places I find myself in. One place sunset-hunters should not miss then is Dubai (or the middle east).
Anyway...one time, while driving along one of the provincial roads on our way home from somewhere, I stopped to point out the sunset. My sister looked at it and said, "oh, in Dubai,the sunset is enormous."
Yes, I remember. I was there in March 2012 for a short meeting and one thing I remember vividly were the sunsets. It was so near, so heavy, so big. It was breathtaking. I still have to read up on why it seems closer and much bigger in that side of the world.
My sunset-hunting has taken me to so many places, or I would always sunset-hunt in the places I find myself in. One place sunset-hunters should not miss then is Dubai (or the middle east).
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