Sunday, November 28
tatlong bagay.
UNO
una, natuwa ako nang tinanong ako ng ermat ko na: "dodong claudio, ang daming tira na sopdrinks at beer nung pyesta. kelangang isafekeeping. pwede ba sa kwarto mo?"
ako naman, pasimple lang ang sagot: evil grin.
naaaninag ko na ang pag-aalmusal ko ng pale pilsen. pero leche, bakit kailangang pale pilsen talaga ang poison of choice? efren bata reyes? bakit hindi pwedeng jagermeister o di kaya yung mga mamahaling wines? sayang naman ang investment ko sa aking social image. chos!
DOS
pangalawa, mega super duper over ultra windang lang ang eksena nung ginising ako ng aking erpat kaninang umaga para magsimba.
ganito kasi yun, si chuva ek ek, yung friend ko, ay nalasing kagabi. tapos naabutan siya ng shit na curfew ng boarding house nya, kaya hindi siya pwedeng umuwi doon. iiwanan ko lang dapat siya sa beerhouse kagabi, kaso ginawa ko sa kanya yan nung isang linggo, at muntik na siyang magahasa ng mga hampas lupang mga horndogs na gustong makatikim sa mga galit na galit nyang boobs.
kaya ayun, i had to budge and offer my room, kasi nga, my mom raised me in a well. hihihi. at dahil likas na matulungin ang puso ni claudiopoi at busilak ang aking budhi, ay inalay ko ang aking malalambot na mga kutchon, pillows, at blanket kai chuva ek ek.
kaya ayun, nung ginising ako ni erpat kanina, sobrang na iskandalo siya. shit. patay.
sumigaw siya at the top of his lungs: sino yang potang yan?
sabi ko naman: dad, wag masyadong malakas kasi natutulog pa ang potang tinutukoy mo.
umalis siya na umuusok ang nguso, but after 32 seconds, bitbit na nya yung nanay ko. at ganun din ang naging tanong.
syempre, deadma deadmahan nalang ako, kasi nga mahirap makipagtalo pag may hangover. sinabi ko nalang: wag muna ngayon, kasi may hangover pa ako. balik kayo after 7 hours para mag sober up muna ako. hihihi. syemre sa isip ko lang yun, kasi kahindik-hundik na panghahambalos ang aabutin ko, if ever.
ginising ko nalang si chuva ek ek at pinauwi sa kanyang boarding house na di ko maintindihan kung seminaryo, mongha, or asylum ba dahil sa kahigpitang taglay nito. pero alam kong hindi ko mapipigilan ang tatay ko na mag isip ng 69 sex positions na ginawa namin ni chuva ek ek kagabi. na parang diring-diri sa anak nyang pinag aral nya sa isang private catholic insitution. chos!
TRES
at pangatlo, super excited na akong pumunta ng manela nekswik.
danggit, check.
patola, check.
kalabaw, check.
dried mangoes, check.
liver, pending. hihihi.
excited na akong makameet sina YJ, andy, citybuoy, ahmer, glentot, victor, at madaming madami pang iba.
at dahil napahaba na naman tong pamababalahura ko, magtatapos na ako dito.
bow.
Wednesday, November 24
because my mom raised me in a well.
Monday, November 15
when i think of you.
Saturday, November 13
because it took me nine years to finish college.
(a repost of a sanitized essay that got published three years ago)
i have always dreaded the first day of class for the past three years or so – not because I am concerned with how likeable my classmates will turn out to be, or how horrendous my teacher will be for the entire semester.
my reservation, as a matter of outright concession, actually comes from answering this question during the first day: what is your year, and how old are you?
the first part of the question, I have an easy time answering – as a matter of fact, I have mastered the art of confidently telling people that I am in my senior year, that I am expecting to graduate soon. but the second part of the query, the part where I divulge my age, I get anxious – because as I have managed to do so in past introductions, I often get mixed reactions, from people who try to feign their curiosity and say that I don’t look my age, to those who are less subtle and instantly insinuate that I am a school junkie, a degenerate who has managed to extend his college years unreasonably longer when I should be out in the real world milking big companies dry and, as my good friend RJ put it, doing damage to the world.
i do realize that there is something glaringly odd with the fact that I am aging inelegantly in school while my classmates are getting younger (most of them now were born in the 90s, sheesh, talk about being a dinosaur in college), but if only they ask me why this came to be, I am more than willing to let them in on my life and share snippets of my life story so they will understand, so they will know, and so they will, hopefully, come up with better decisions in their own lives.
fact is, I am not alone – there is a good number of students who have also extended in college, and if only you spare them a moment to ask what their life story is, I guarantee you that there is a story behind the seeming delinquency and the assumption of them being fatalistically destined for mediocrity – for it is never easy to, day by day, face people who have given up on you and are convinced beyond reason that you will never change and that you will inevitably spend the rest of your life wallowing in misery.
but is it not that life and life decisions are enmeshed in a context where there is constant struggle? is it not that college affords you that extra shot, that extra chance, when every dream you have starts to fade into obscurity and you desperately try to guard your sanity from slowly dissipating?
i have not always been like this.
in high school, I was considered as one of those who were destined for greatness, and I was convinced as well that I was meant for greater things – but in retrospect, I was not a child of the universe back then. I was confined within a world that was so comfortable and familiar, the kind that was so hard to let go.
life, back then, was all about getting good grades, adhering to an early evening curfew, and condemning those who did not conform to what was acceptable behavior in society.
now, I can only cringe in shame for being so sheltered and unquestioning back then, for being so fatally submissive and dismissive, for feeling contented over being a mere observer when I can possibly initiate ripples of change to a society that is plagued by hypocrisy and undiscerned exclusivism.
for in the course of my genuine college exposure, I have learned that sometimes, it’s not about sleeping early at night and savoring scrumptious breakfast meals with your doting and uberly-proud parents, but it is about drinking heavily with your friends after the midterm exams and nursing a head-splitting hangover the next day; that it’s not just about memorizing the prophets and reciting all the virtues in your religion class, but it is about joining an outreach program and extending assistance to those who are marginalized in society; that it’s not just about being safe and foolishly submitting to your teacher’s every whim, but it is about asserting for what is rightfully yours and ensuring that those who belong to the upper echelons of power do not remain unchecked nor unmitigated in their propensity for abuse.
college breaks you and thrusts you into the world in the hopes of altering your predispositions and situating you in a world that throbs with life; it introduces a reality that digresses significantly from the lethargic and oftentimes dehumanizing worldview of resumé-whores who perceive it as trivial and easy.
fact is, living is not rosy all the time and loving is not always exhilarating – both can scathe you, sometimes irreparably, and college is where you accept this bitter and disconcerting truth.
and, no matter how some people might take this against me, I am thankful that I have been broken to the world, its intricacies and complications included.
and I am convinced, beyond reason, that no grade can ever quantify my painful acceptance of this gut-wrenching and palpably painful version of what is real – for even if I may have overextended in college, I know that I now have, more or less, what it takes to battle it out in the real world when, hopefully, my formal schooling officially commences this October.
i am clyde – I am twenty-four, and I am proud of being twenty-four.
Tuesday, November 9
bakit kinailangan mong maging adik pagkatanda mo?
Saturday, November 6
Thursday, November 4
because will called me a writer one lazy october afternoon.
Wednesday, November 3
Tuesday, November 2
an ode to the voyager who broke my heart three years ago.
every morning when I was about seven or eight years old, my parents would take us all to rizal boulevard for early morning walks.
as they would briskly walk along the endless stretch of cemented pavement, my siblings and I would try, with little success, to keep up with their pace while pointing out the differences of those who also take refuge in the boulevard’s allure – we would see old people who barely move an inch every time they walk, athletes with earphones who breeze past everyone else, dog-walkers who are wary of those who are afraid of dogs, and lovers who seem oblivious to everyone else around them.
back then, this was the early morning ritual which jumpstarted the day and, young as I was, I did not complain each time my father had to shrug us off from slumber and make us prepare for our early morning itinerary. i remember that as a young boy, I was enthralled and totally captivated by the beauty of the first few streaks of light of the breaking sunrise and the cool gusts of wind which greeted us each time.
the rizal boulevard beckoned everyone to momentarily escape from the trappings of a stress-filled day and bask in the soothing monotony of rural living. the chilling morning breeze, which permeated with the raw scent of early morning dew, was always relaxing to my senses, making me face the new day with much zest and optimism.
when I had my first girlfriend in high school, I remember that the boulevard was the first place that we went to for our first date. no matter how young we were during that time, we were convinced that what we had was for keeps – that no matter how cheesy or cliché, we would inevitably spend the rest of our lives together.
the boulevard then, provided for the most picturesque setting to a love story that was slowly unfolding. I remember the golden silhouette of dusk hovering over our heads while we talked about how our life together would be. she would be a doctor and I would be a lawyer in paris or new zealand perhaps and, back then, we sincerely believed that this was our absolute destiny. perhaps it was the unraveling of newfound emotion which led us to believe in the folly of a perfect relationship, or probably, it was the boulevard’s touch which made us hopeless romantics and believe that our love would transcend the physical plane – that what we had was ethereal and, more than that, magical.
it did not, however, take a long time for me to realize that we were just blinded by the rawness of our emotions. we were broken, as sooner or later we would have been, to the simplistic truth that the ideal partner does not exist. after successive bouts of petty quarreling and endless disputes over the most trivial things, we finally decided to end our relationship.
fresh from the bitter pangs of my first heart break, I invited my close friends to a drinking spree in the boulevard. save for the momentary euphoria of alcohol intoxication, the boulevard then, was cold and lifeless for me. it conformed to my cluttered state of mind, and the dizzying sodium lights only exacerbated the dreadful feeling of desperation that brewed inside me.
the solace of our young dreams and unadulterated love was also where I learned that life and love are never constant – and that we are oftentimes broken rather than complete.
just november of last year, the boulevard was where I spent most of my pensive moments with only my thoughts and a couple of marlboro lights. much has happened since that fateful night of heavy drinking when a group of young boys foolishly believed that tanduay 65 was a comforting respite from the onslaught of solitary pain.
this time, i had been broken to the world and to the reality that life is what you make of it.
as I basked in the poetic allure of the last few traces of light giving in to darkness, I was contemplating on what I had done with my life: i had squandered three years of it in a university which taught me that although academic and personal freedom are essential, too much of the latter can actually make you lose your focus and direction in life.
the boulevard was my place of consolation when I felt that my life had lost all semblance of meaning; it was where I chose to collect the fragments of my broken self and consolidate my resolve to start anew; it was where I realized that change is never too late, and that yes, failures exist to solidify our perception of how our lives ought to be.
the boulevard for me, as with everyone else who grew up in this city, has been a constant source of comfort. people come here to take a breather from the intricacies of everyday living, they celebrate happy occasions with family members and friends, and at times, it is where love stories unfold.
but more than anything else, it taught me that although life is a constant struggle, the turbulence is never permanent – that although we occasionally succumb to the complexities of living, it merely serves to redefine our perspectives and make us see the grander scheme of things.
that although life and love are besieged with constant torment, we can, through our own ways, make ourselves complete – because life, as with everything else, goes on.