Friday, March 18, 2011

"Everybody Loves Susan!" : A Tribute To My Late Mother Susana Ocasla Ligutan


My Mother had a funny accent and just about everyone in town can mimic her. She was born and raised in Macaalan, Calbiga, Samar and for her many charms, the 'waray' accent that she couldn't shake off, without her knowing or realizing, was part of what endeared her to many people. When people mimicked her accent, she would sometimes think that they were talking her down. Once, Iyo Paquit Ganot made a passing remark, which he delivered in her accent, she got very upset and ranted on him: "Uno Paquit yakatamay kaw sa ako, basin pagtuo mo pobre kami, dapayun ta kaw gani ng kwarta kuman!" ("Are you looking down at me? Did you think we were poor? I could slap you with money!") She came home that day telling me how upset she was and she would retell this incident many times over. I cannot remember now what Iyo Paquit had said to her that day, I just remember how much his mimicking her accent has upset my Mom.

(Photo: Mama with Papa and my sister Shella, on a holiday trip to see the Taj Mahal in Agra, India before being diagnosed with kidney failure in 1998.)

Back in the days, parents spank their children to set them right. My Mom was no different than most mothers in town. I have many incidents where she had chased me all around town, to ensure I come home on time from school or that I did what I was asked to do. When she was convinced I wasn't doing right, like not arriving home before 6pm or taking too long while gathering water from the public well, she would search for me in all the usual places and she knows exactly where to find me. I can hear her from a mile away. I used to call my mother's mouth, an 'armalite', for my, she couldn't stop nagging when the occasion calls for it. Carrying a piece of firewood, a bamboo stick, a guava branch or even the broom, here she comes screaming my name and chasing after me until I reach home. But for all the dramatics my Mom has, she rarely ever uses her beating paraphernalia on me. But boy, I would most times wish for the beating than hearing her non-stop mouthing! Between me and my sister Shella, my sister got some of the spanking. My sister has a habit of secretly getting away from home at night to meet up with Malyn, Rosie, Bembem and Rey (Deligero, Acierto, Quijada and Quijada) when she was supposedly sleeping. Because I know there was nothing so harmful with my sister's night-flee, I couldn't be bothered to tell on her. Besides, I always thought there was something insane on how my Mom wants to keep us locked-up indoors all the time. That particular night that Shella escaped once again, my cousin Cerelina 'Inday' Betco (now Ernst) was sleeping over and we were already asleep in my bed, Inday took Shella's spot. All of a sudden, there was my Mom hovering by the bed, hitting Inday with the paddle (bugsay) on the butt. We were in a commotion, my Mom had apparently went out earlier with the paddle, in cohorts with Mana Nesya and Mana Ermie, looking for my sister and her friends (also her classmates and our close relatives), found her and thinking she had chased her up to the house, went straight into our room in an apparent effort to give her a spanking. But Shella was somewhere else leaving Inday to receive my mother's butt-paddling mood. At the time when most of us (in Bayabas) were being chased by our mothers, we were humiliated, but we would go into stitches when we got older recalling them. Mothers with broom chasing after their daughters is what motherhood in our town meant to all of us anyway, so there was no more shame in it after all.

My Mom has a reputation for telling exactly as she thought. Kuya Mai Quijada, my favorite uncle for his love of reading and his extra-ordinary talent in playing with both the spoken and written words, and I used to laugh about my Mother's famous or infamous encounters with the many town folks. He loves to jokingly call my Mom "Saning", and would always end up with one wrapping conclusion, "If you need to hear the most honest of opinion, you have to ask Mana Sana". But when I was younger, it would embarrass me to no end when my Mom could not be bothered to edit her tongue. She would blurt out exactly what she feels and it's both amazing and shocking how whatever she says would send everyone laughing and me frowning. But I must admit, while she was brutal and frank, there was not a meanness in her, I could not ever remember her talking anyone down. If anything, she puts humor on everything and laugh about herself and life in general.

When Papa broke his neck and spinal while 'lazying' the day away in the public market, my Mom had said jokingly: "Amu sa kay hinang paatbang kan Abet!" ("Serves you right, because you're always sitting in front of Abet") I think, it made her a little jealous that the only non-blood-related woman she would see talking to my dad was Mana Abet. Unknown to many, this funny (and in-fact baseless) jealousy kicked started our moving out of town to live where everyone now knows as "Beting's Fishpond'. The only real fight I saw my parents had in all my life was on that day when Papa had nailed-close the door to the sari-sari store and the pig fence, packed his bag and move to Kamanga, living in a shanty away from town and yes, away from the public market right across our home in town. Mama had said that Papa got offended when she accused him of being 'in-love' with Mana Abet and instead of helping her with the store and feeding the pigs, he would spend all his time sitting in the 'tyanggehan, gapadisplay kan Abet' (in the market, displaying himself to Abet). We waited for my father to come back to town, but he didn't. So a few days later, tired of waiting for her proud husband, my mother with all of us five children in tow, followed my father to Kamanga. By then, the fighting mood has subsided and with a decision I can only assume to be based on their common want not to repeat the fight, decided to stay on, build a bigger house and lived in Kamanga for many years to come.

Our house in Kamanga, has become the sentimental witness to many events, happy and sad, that has taken place in our family life. We have held countless gatherings with relations and friends and welcomed endless visitors, foreign and local, through the years. The images of bangus, lukon, alimango and lechon (milkfish, prawns, crabs and roast pig) have become the visual representation of our home around the hill that me and my classmates love to reunite at every so often.

My Mom used to say, "As soon as I die, you would die too, Beting!" Somehow, she was always right, for with all my father's pride and intelligence, he truly couldn't live without my Mother. He tried, but as soon as Mama died, I know he wants nothing else, but to be with her again and he did so in such short a time. And my father, for all his shortcomings, would always prove to her that he loves her more than anything and will do everything to make her happy, even if it meant giving up his 'world' -that little town of ours, to be with her instead in that small wooden and nipa house by the foot of the hill, away from anything that would make her feel insecure, even if it was only an imagined jealousy.

I've always known it then, and it's what I cried for mostly when she died, that she was the skin that held our family together. She was the source from where we get our strength. Without her, we all fell apart - our world was never the same for the only person we know who loves us all unconditionally, with all our meanness and uncaring selves, was gone. She was every bit what it meant to be a mother and beyond -the protector, the provider, the carer, the force that bound us all, whom we never sensitively acknowledged and appreciated while she was still alive.

My Mom had a baby before she met my dad. She was the eldest of 10 children and in her young mind, she thought a man could take her away from the chores at home to a better life. The man, she said, worked in public highways, and she only found out he was married when she told him she was pregnant. I know how much it made her sad to think of Ate Leonor and that when she eloped with my father, she had to leave her behind with my grandparents. For many years, she made plans to make it up to her, but she didn't quite know how. The years of my Mother's life was spent taking care of all of us, her husband, her children, grandchildren, and many others who needed caring. To a certain degree, I know my Mom has forgotten herself, all in favor of her family.

It was from my Mom that I got my entrepreneurial skills. Many thought that my father made most of the money in our family. But they're all wrong. My Mom made her own share of the family money, they were not a lot, but she would spend it on us. My father on the other hand, would mostly keep his in his wallet. Well, until my Mom nags him into spending whatever he's got for us. Before I reached my teens, during the summer, my Mom would send me here and there to barter her rice cakes (puto, bibingka) and siopao to farms/farmers with grains and we would make dozens sacks of rice to last us until the next summer. My favorite activity with her is when we cook the 'puto and bibingka' at dawn, for it meant eating the first bake -hot and deliciously delightful for me. Exercising the seed she's planted on me, I would venture into managing the canteen in high school with my friend Rhu Maquiling. The skill to make money out of hard work is something I got from her without a doubt and incidentally my love for sweet food started with all the desserts Mama has taught me to cook.

As the eldest daughter and one whose got an endless order of suitors and wannabe suitors, my Mom had a formula for sidestepping the boys during my teens. In those days, I am literally not allowed outside the house without as much as my younger brother Silver and the puppy totting me around or worst my Mom hounding me every bit I am not within sight. There was no other way then to woo or court me, but pay me a visit at home and go through the inevitable: get pass my Mom. I always attributed my being conservative to my Mom's protectiveness -which I may say, she guarded me like Michael Jordan! I can proudly declare that I remained 'pure' way until I was old enough and ready. She was a friendly and easy person to deal with for most of the boys, and at worst, aloof to those she didn't feel quite right. She would jokingly tell them: "Uno say ipakaun nimu kang Susil kung paminyuon nimu pagsayo?" ("What will you feed Susil if she marries you this young?") I recall her saying to Pio Murillo, "Tiguwang na kaw Pio, ayaw na panguyaba yaun si Susil!". ("You're so old for Susil, you shouldn't be courting her!") Pio would laugh at her and say: "Ay-ay sab ni Mana Susan, di sa kita kaporma!" In all my recollection, it was Harry Luna that she mostly feared I would get near to or even fall for. Harry was handsome and dashing in his own right and had always made his intentions clear. My parents demeanor would change when he is nearby, cards and chocolates that Harry sends were put under scrutiny. I was puzzled why they would react to him so differently than the other boys -my Mom would always tell me to stay away from the windows when she sees him out nearby the house trying to catch a glimpse of me. Many years later, I finally understood what was it all about. My mother told me that years after I had been away, Harry patted her in the back saying, "Hello, Ma!" and when she turned around seeing it was him, said: "Nanga sa ga Mama sa kaw, wara sa kamu magkadayun ni Susil!". ("Why are you calling me Mama, Susil and you were never on.") I had to laugh when I heard this. Of course, I never told my Mom who my boyfriends were, to her they were all just suitors who never got the 'yes' -a little denial that keeps her sane. In not so many words, she told me how much she liked Harry after all and (I finally understood that) at that time, she and Papa were scared because Harry was so eligible and I was so young.

My Mom would react the same way to all the more matured suitors I have and setting modesty aside, she have had to handle many of them. As early as the age of nine, I would have suitors that would come from far and wide, the bulk of them even before I could graduate high school. But for those that were in town, she has particularly made an effort talking Jorge Quijada out of whatever she sensed I felt for him. I have a fondness for Jorge's wits and likeable rugged ways and she doesn't like seeing him hang out with my brothers at home while I am around. When my Mom doesn't agree with the boy, she tended to hate the mother too. The things she would tell me about Maa'm Alice made me roll my eyes! Of all my male friends, it was only Prescillano 'Joy' Lozada who could enter our home without reproach, and would even be allowed to literally nap beside me in our bed without being censured. My Mom loves Joy because he was respectful, unassumingly funny, and his tiny frame made him ineligible to my parents eyes. Up to this day, many male friends who has confessed to having a crush on me back then said they couldn't even try for fear of my parents. My Mom would even scold those who would serenade me at night, I particularly recall her telling Lolong Quijada and Eugene Exclamador to stop singing, go home and let us sleep. My sister Shella and I think it was hilarious for my Mom to be so dismissing of the boys. But in all these, the boys only have fond recollection of my Mother, after all they know that only a mother's love can render one so protective.

What I learned from my Mother was mothers dread the right guy coming into their daughter's life when she is not ready and fear the wrong man coming when she is.

For all the things that I love about my Mother, the ability to not depend on anyone is what I am happy to have gotten from her. She cared and gave love more than any person I know. She was so generous to a fault, she would give away her clothes, towels, food and anything to anyone who wants them. When I got older, sometimes I would reprimand her for her ways and at times, I would make her cry. I would be mean to her in telling her off when my naive mind then made myself believe she was wrong. And for all my superior attitude towards her, she never fought back or say a mean thing to me. She never did learn to say 'I love you' to any of her children, but in the silence and in her many other ways, I always know she loves us all to no end.

Nine years ago to this month, as my Mom lay dying on her bed, in a small apartment we rented in Dacudao, Davao City, she was asking us to bring a doctor to her side. She could not move what was left of her body -so lean it was almost skin and bone- anymore and I could hardly understand what she was saying. Our dearest cousin Beverly Maquiling, whose become witness and a great help in the years of my Mom's battle against end-stage renal failure, was there talking to her. Mama must have forgotten the million of times she has been in and out of the hospital and clinics, and just a few days before that the doctors had already refused to treat her. She was barely breathing and as I sat beside her telling her if is it okay for us to take her home to Kamanga so we could 'wait' there. She nodded and tiny tears formed wet circles in her eyes. Shella was counting her pulse and said, that the 'wait' could not be for more than 24 hours. Silver was upset, "We still have money, Mana," he said, "Why can't we take Mama back to the hospital?". Amongst all of us, Silver was the most in denial about our mother's condition. Following her kidney transplant, my Mom developed 'brittle bone disease', a side effect associated with prolonged use of Prednisone and Prednisolone, just two of the 50 plus drugs she has to take on a daily basis to help her recover post-transplant. She died at about 1am, between Trento and San Frans, a few hours before we reached Bayabas. Shella and I watched her as she draw her last breathe. Our other brother Dodoy (Silvestre II) cried silently, we couldn't announce that she has passed away because we did not want to upset Coco who was driving the van. Silver was sitting in the front seat with Coco and we had to keep the news from him until we reached Bayabas. I had to whisper to Papa when we got to San Frans. By the time we reached Bayabas, our eldest brother Dodo (Silvestre Jr.) was inconsolable, he too mourned a physical part of him -his kidney which he donated to our mother- that died with her.

For weeks following my Mother's death I could not cry. I needed to immediately fly back to work -go back to my life- after years of trying to cope with the disease that has affected the whole of my family and trying to make sense why the center of our universe -even when it was a realization that came too late- has been taken away from us too soon. It would be on Mother's Day that year that I would first cry and breakdown for her like I never did before , followed by so many more occasions where the wishing for her to be around is so bad -like not knowing what to do with my father when he complained that he is always alone at home with no one to take care of or not knowing how to deal with my angry brother who brought and poke a gun to us or with nephews and niece who keeps running away from home-, until today and the many more days to come in my life where the family drama is overwhelmingly difficult to deal with.

For all the things that I love about her, the capability to keep on forgiving and accepting is something I am sad not to have acquired from her. Mama would not have left when things in her marriage becomes rough. Or she wouldn't have gotten so unhappy like the way I did with my relationships, because she was simply incapable of asking more than what the other person can give. She wasn't so idealistic and as perfectionist as I am ... she would have worked on a relationship with a neglectful husband or forgiven and accepted back a partner who has committed infidelity -something that I never learned to do. Mama would have known how to talk and listen to Gagang, where I or anyone else couldn't. Gagang has asked me once, "Do you think your Mom would approve of me?" For all my so called 'perfection', she was the perfect one in loving and accepting the people around her. Sadly, my perfect skill was in rejecting -indifferent and detached, un-mattering everyone who should have mattered- incapable of truly forgiving and accepting back into my life those who have hurt me.

How I wish she is still alive, so I can share with her all my anguish and pain and that she would have comforted me. How I wish she is still alive so she can make right my misplaced pride and ideals in life -and show me what it really meant to love for better or for worse. How I wish she is still alive so she can regather our family and envelope us with the skin that she's kept our family together when she was still here. Mostly, I want her alive for that selfish reason that I will have children if she could be here to be the grandmother I so badly want her to be for them.


On the 9th Year Death Anniversary of My Mother Susana Ocasla Ligutan
19 March 2011
Hong Kong















Saturday, July 3, 2010

Dreams

27 January 2005
12:17am, Sai Kung

Something that I dreamed over a month ago happened today. It was both amazing and strange. If we really have the ability to foresee the future in our dreams, then is it not possible that all our life is predestined? If not, then how can we ever really see, no matter what level of awareness, something that is still to happen. Dreams are not all memories or longings or undisguised desires then. But what if dreams are the planning stage of human life? What if dreams were where we plot our life, like a strategic planning session? I have quite a few dreams that I can recall.

The first time I recognised that I have dreamed of something even before it happened was when Iyo Crispin Larena’s home at checkpoint burned down. After seeing what remained of the house, I realised that I have seen that exact scene somewhere before. Now, I am remembering the one dream that has stuck in my mind. I am inside a huge house in the middle of nowhere – looking out from a huge open window with white curtains being blown by the wind. And all I see outside is a large white sky with a hint of blue. The strangest thing about this dream is I am looking at myself from the sky. I don’t know what it means, but it seems so sad. It makes me weep even now. I used to think that it is something that I was in my previous life -that all the sadness that comes to take over me every so often is something that my heart has come to feel and learn so well in my past life. But what if it is something that is still to happen in the future? Is it someone’s pre-designed life for me? If so, who is it? Or is it something that I plotted in my dreams? Then how, why haven’t we discovered that there is a way to plan our life ahead?

I looked at my palm today and saw something that has never appeared before or if it did, it was something that I have never seen. Bing said that it means a “breaking-up of a relationship”. This year seems to be a heart breaker for me with so many strange lines appearing in my heart line. But if there is any consolation, lots of stars are connecting and shaping in my career line. Bing remembered that this very line seems to show a lot of promise since the last time she saw my palm and that I can expect more success to come this year. It’s another perplexing thing for me, to have my life written in symbols in my palm. Who does it and how is it done? Is it someone else or do I do it in a level of awareness that I could never be aware of?

There And Back Again

October 2007
Davao City

I entered my parking space wrongly, I was too close to the left side and I can’t open the door wide enough to be able to get out. I switch gear to reverse and release the brake gently, but I steered my wheels to the wrong side that the car’s rear end got even closer to the car parked next on the left. Oh, my God! One look and I know I need a miracle to squeeze my car out without scratching the other and another miracle to keep me alive as I feel I am suffocating and dying fast of my mounting anxiety attack. Take control! I paused and breathe. Breathe once more. Breathe again. Another careful look on the rear left … No shit, I will not be able to get out of this unharmed!

I just dropped Gabriel to his basketball game a few blocks from the mall where I am to shop for groceries. I told him I do not think I can already manage to park the CRV on my own. You will, you’re a fast learner. I learned to drive the minute I took the wheel. It took me five minutes to listen to the basic instructions, the next five trying out the gears and the last five mastering the highway. After that, I was zooming the roads with humongous twelve wheeler trucks covering the fifty kilometers distance away and back to where I started in an hour. My driving lesson went by without a hitch.

But learning to park is another story. Here I am already traumatized. I hate to have to make the call to Gabriel who is now on his way to rescue me, abandoning his basketball game and jumping into a motorbike. The driver to my right was on a wait and see mode, watching me through his window mirror. But someone, thank God, from the back lane came forward and signaled me on how to turn the steer to give my car’s wheels the proper position to back out of disaster. As Gabriel and the Good Samaritan pointed out, I am bad in reversing. I found a way out of my parking dilemma, now I look for a parking space with vacancies on each side or at-least on one side before I make the turn and park and each time I am careful not to miss the enclosing lines and learn to retrace my way in to get out gracefully.

Most people live their lives figuring their place under the sun. I did the very thing and found out most people will find their place under the sun, but as soon as we do, we’ll just go to find another thing. Sometimes, we never even realized that we are really just trying to find back what we’ve already thrown. Maybe not away, but rather things we’ve somewhat archived, set aside, somehow forgotten, but at the right moment, something always sets us to find the very thing we need and always when we most need it, either in the archives of our life, dusting in the corners of our secret life library, but not totally forgotten and still waiting to be found.

We don’t always know it, but we do have all the answers to our life questions, the funny thing or ironic if you will is they never come after the questions. Life plays us back in reverse, why else would they say that the only way to embrace our future is by understanding the past and yes, living the present.

I feel as though I am an old person trying out a new life for the last sixteen months. I brought myself to a new place, found new things to do, look at new people, dressed in new fashions, a new lifestyle. A tropical province, a new course in a new school, new neighbors in a new apartment block, half dozens new flip flops and new denim skirts, a new car, which I drove myself everywhere to. But after all these new things, I still feel the same old me, wanting back my old things, my old apartment, my old friends, my old clothes… my old life.

Landing and Take Off

24 March 2010
HK Airport

I’m on the move again. I cannot remember the number of times I find myself sitting on the departure area waiting for my flight. Always going and coming, such is life that it has become blurry which way is going and which way is coming. No real place to call home, to call my home. Everything is imagined, hoped, wished for. Whatever reality there is I hang on to it, like it’s the only shred and thread of life that keeps me breathing, living, going, it doesn’t matter whether it’s towards or away. The plane now boards …

25 March 2010
Manila Centennial Airport Terminal 3

It’s past midnight and I am wide-awake listening to seas of conversations by people, strangers around me. There is something unusual in the way people behave in the company of strangers at airports. The stories are always the same, told in different ways, in different tones, in different attempts by the teller to place a certain degree of importance to the stories he or she is telling. But why, why do people have this insane urge to tell the story of their lives to strangers whom they have just met? We all know that the person telling the story is lying half the time, we know it because we do the same. We tell a version of our stories half imagined or wishing it is the way we tell it. We allow ourselves the delusion that our truth can be told without being wrong, because who is there to oppose our thoughts, our wish how things could have turned out. There is a universal understanding amongst strangers meeting in airports, to allow everyone their own version of a larger story that might have been told differently. And after we tell all the lies, we sigh an air of feeling right, justified within our rights to tell it the way we do. It doesn’t make sense, but there is certain pleasure being given that 15-minute of sunshine being right. And when that warmth and privilege is gone, we carry our baggage and get on our respective planes.

I go back to my original thoughts about not knowing whether I am coming or going. It’s not fair to ask where my home is, because I know where my heart belongs. It is sad, that most of us spend our lives away from the place we call home. I look at the faces of the men around me, quiet, I don’t know what they are thinking. They all seem sad to me. I wonder why and yet I know. It’s the same question of coming or going. Each time you land, you know that you’re bound to take off soon. Living on borrowed times is sad, nothing could be sadder than having to live under one sky, yet unable to touch your loved-ones faces or look in their eyes as you hear their laughter.
The man to my right wearing a red crew neck shirt has an amazing similarity to Silver. He was older, perhaps in his mid forties or perhaps early, it’s hard to tell with Filipino men since they always appear older than their age. I imagine my brother to look like him when he is older. I miss him suddenly. I always felt sorry about not being able to experience what I hoped would have been happy shared moments between brother and sister. All the things I imagined and wished for a big sister should share in feeling with her younger brother. How happy I imagine it would have been if he got married properly, I would have been there walking him to the altar in the absence of our parents. How excited I would have been to share the news of him becoming a father. How doting an aunt I would have been to my nephew and niece. But life didn’t turn out to be how much you perfectly dreamt it to be. It would seem to me now that all the world has conspired to make everything sad and regrettable for me and my family. All the wits and sense of humor that I’ve acquired or born with didn’t guarantee a well thought of happy and perfect life. It’s all in the thinking, but when it goes down to living the life I so perfectly plot, everything fell apart.

He looks sad, tired, calm. I feel the same way. I don’t know whether I am coming or going.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Magsaysay Park Melting

I don’t suppose it is strange to have a song playing in ones head every time one walks along a beach, a city street, a park or even a mall.

Sunday was the first time I ever set foot inside Magsaysay Park. I don’t think I would have been there this early in time of my being in Davao City if it were not part of my school assignment. “The park is just for the maids spending their day off, nothing worth seeing inside there”, Gabriel has said more than once when I ask him if anything special to see inside. Of course, I’d laugh and tell him, maybe he’s got some memories to avoid. But he did come with me when to see the Kalimudan Exhibit that Sunday. I was surprised to find out that one can see the view of Samal Island from a certain point inside the park. I wouldn’t have guessed. Who ever designed the park did a very bad job concealing such magnificent sight. And the park, oh my, it’s grisly! Even Magsaysay standing in his monument looks unhappy. What statue wouldn’t be?

Gabriel and I had fun walking through the exhibit and thought the large trampoline-like structure was a lot of fun. But I kept hearing that song in my head … “McArthur Park is melting in the dark….” And I’ve thought of that still unnamed park in another part of the city that I passed by just the previous week. Why are they making another park when they haven’t done anything good with this one that I can see holds great promise of being a wonderful park.

That night, I asked Gabriel if it would be a good idea to write the governor and tell him we can create a much better Baywalk in Davao City if he’d let me takeover managing Magsaysay Park. Gabriel laughed, he knows I’m serious, but he also knows that my passion will melt away as soon as my passiveness kicks in.

But I am still thinking of the park even after three days later. I imagine how beautiful it would be to drive or walk along Magsaysay Boulevard with the view of the Samal Island. I imagine how much tastier the durians will be in my mouth when my eyes are feasting with the bubbly waves and the dancing skies that would only separate Samal and me.

We have planned to eat durian after going through the exhibit, but I suddenly feel I need to pee first. I can’t eat durian with a full bladder. Gabriel glanced at the park toilet and said, “You wouldn’t be able to pee in there”. Suddenly, we don’t feel like eating durian anymore and off we went to Agdao Market to face the huge rats of the city.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Why I Am Where I Am

I heard a lot about creative accounting practises before I did of a creative writing course. There’s a thought of certain freedom that comes with the word creative, whether it be in accounting or writing. Being creative has become to mean not having to submit oneself to an absolute rule or at the very least, the permission to bend whatever rule there is. Creative works, that especially in the realm of the art, can almost always get away with anything, nothing is ever considered really bad as bad is as long as it is a creative work and criticisms becomes just matter of opinion.

Now, getting away with almost anything is something to have, not that I think I am a bad creative writer nor do I mind negative criticisms. I cannot decide whether the lack of need of others approval is a good thing or not. But for now, I know it cannot be bad for me. Doing things for myself has been my living motto for the last two years and it took me across one country to another, one region to another and one course to another, sort of one life to another, really. If one has felt lost for most of life, a new labyrinth will not scare, but rather presents a fresh path in one’s hope to discover something of life that is different from that of what has come before.

The question that begets an answer now is why did I choose to be where I am, and why creative writing? It’s not an easy question to brilliantly answer for one who is where she is now only because everywhere she’s been was a disappointment. Am I an escapee of my own life? Maybe. When one’s life is preceded with years of over-enthusiasms about the world that only yielded too much disenchantment, one takes the blows with learning to level off expectations. No, I am not yet a cynical old fool. I know I still hold within me my hopes of an ideal life. And I now realized that I am still shopping for the best buy of life.

Having chosen UP Mindanao and deciding I want to be in her Creative Writing course, I came without expectations. Don’t really know why for sure, except perhaps I have underestimated from the very start what anything in life might still teach me. I came to my first week in school with nothing but my own peace, I have nothing to give, but I will take whatever I will find I need.

I was sitting by the tables outside the classrooms between the registrar’s office and CHSS buildings, during one of my breaks –which I found to be plenty in the first week of school- it was so quiet and there was no one to talk to, and then was the first time I have thought to myself of why am I here? I remember sending a text- message to my friend Jon: “pare, was sup? studying in UP Min is like being in a religious retreat hehehe so quiet here, pare, close to nature, no shopping mall, can’t get a donut hehehe”. Jon’s reply made me smile: “Pare, running my own restaurant is a religious experience too- penitential! Just move (back) to Manila.”

Most of my friends thought of me as very brave, having left my “successes” behind to rediscover life. Who has that luxury, really, nowadays? Some friends are sceptical for me though. They’ve seen me journey from one place to another, literally and figuratively, that they do not think I can last long living in Mindanao. The truth is I don’t know for sure, either. There is too much irony in life, I’ve learned too. Taking control of my own life has also mean letting go of it –letting what has to happen, happen.

And I am here now, doing the very thing I want to do now, in the place where I want to be now. That’s what matters to me now. Things will change, it’s an absolute certainty I’ve, too, learned to expect with life, but when and how, not even my smartest self can say.

My professor asks what level and what genre of creative writing I think I am in now. I don’t know, really. Everything is relative to where I am in my life right now. I am okay to be unsure yet, but I am discovering.
November 19, 2007
Davao City