Saturday, September 29, 2007

Silence, Please

For the past couple of weeks, I have been feeling the need to retreat inside my silent little mind-cave, away from the numbing cacophony of the outside world. What induced it, I can't be sure, but I think I have been craving for a chance to replenish my weakened and depleted self once again since I took on this job six months ago.

Work, for all its monotony and teeth-grating repetitiveness, has been no trouble at all. I have learned to distribute my tasks for the day in equal parts so I don't have to use up all my energy in the morning, or get too saturated in the afternoon. This gives me time to rest and read my books, or take a power nap if I need it.

I have also been meeting up with people whom I haven't been with in a long time (for which I am most definitely grateful) since their mere presence helps me a great deal in keeping a strong grasp of who and where I am, and what I should be doing. Among them were Aajao, who is the one and only lovey-dovey of my life; Valerie, my sister; Elmer, who slept over last weekend; and Barny, who nudged my lethargic self for booze and boy-talk last night.


Aajao, Valerie, and Elmer -- yes, we're always eating.

Tomorrow, our team will be going to La Luz in San Juan, Batangas. It will be very nostalgic for me since it was the first beach I've been to, and now, three years after, I will be seeing it again. Crossing my fingers the weather cooperates, and our long-delayed trip can finally push through. I reckon each of us needs some form of healing, one way or another. Here's to hoping the new week finds us with renewed life and vigor.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Getting Married!

Not me, but my friend June will be! And to think she was the quietest of the group when we were still in college. Life can really drum up some pretty neat surprises in just a few years, ne?

Within the group, it was usually the two of us who were almost always together. We agree on the same things, have the same interests -- anime and sketching to name just a few -- and we have the same fascination for the satirically dismal humor in things, only, June is able to take it to more... disturbingly morbid levels (Goddess knows where she gets her ideas from). Most of all, she's... different. A quality in which I pride my closest friends to be. And now our fragile little China doll is getting married!

I'm still a little hazy at believing, much less think of little June carbon copies bounding about in a room -- of which, if I envision too much, might promptly cause me to faint from the sheer kawaii-ness of it all. Still, amidst the pleasantly dizzying reality of everything, this is no doubt an in-your-face sign that we -- that is, the kids belonging in our generation -- are growing up, and that we are taking on Responsibilities the Universe unerringly, unceasingly throws our way. Scary, to say the least. But we have little choice in the matter, ne?


Me, stuffing my face at Hatsu Hana-Tei with June, lunchtime today. I love their lunch special! Anywhere I point my chopsticks to, there's something to poke at. It took us a whole hour -- maybe more -- to finish everything!

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Happy 18th Birthday, Mommy Dea!

Mommy Dea is one phenomenal woman. From alternative-rock music to soul-searing ballads, from Pinoy romance movies to American crime and suspense, and yes, even anime, she's someone who has yet to run out of things to surprise anyone.

When our team started working together, our initial team meeting had the requisite getting-to-know-you agenda. Our variation had every person in the group ask one question everyone should answer. My question was, "What makes you different from everyone else?" Because if there's one thing I look for in the people I meet, it's a distinctive quality that sets them apart from the rest of the herd. Mommy Dea shrugged, and said she couldn't think of any. I thought it might have been too soon for a question like that to be asked to people you've just met.

Now, six months later, I think I have an idea what sets Mommy Dea apart. There's no definitive word for it, but it's there, whenever you're with her. Something special, something encompassing. If I'd have to explain it, maybe it's something that compels you to be your true self -- an exceptional talent, by anyone's standards. What makes her even more endearing is the fact that she isn't even aware of how special that is, or how much warmth it gives to the people around her!

I'm thankful to the seven people who did not show up for the job orientation six months ago, because if they had, I wouldn't have met someone as magical, as true, and as loving as Mommy Dea. Please trust me when I say there is no reason to feel sad:

You are loved by many, many, many people. :-)


At Seafood Island in Eastwood, where San Mig Lai had lunch for Mommy Dea's advanced birthday celebration.



More shots of the vividly colored spherical lamps in Seafood Island.



Mommy Dea, by the glass window, and against the light.



Txting someone.



Apparently becoming obsessed with the spherical thingeos.



More of Seafood Island's interiors.



I love how the stretch of cloth is draped in waves to form a canopy.



An experimental shot which almost turned out the way I wanted it to.



Mommy Dea, with les garcons of San Mig Lai.



Close-up shot of the flower.



Mommy Dea with les filles of San Mig Lai.



Paris' solo shot.



Tabemashooooooouuuuu!



Surprise! Pips is here!



(Mitch)
Alam mo mommy kasi you're like vintage wine eh. You keep getting better with age. Kahit ba kinabog kita sa suot ko, this is nothing compared to the ageless wisdom you possess from all the years of experience which you have acquired! Imagine, looking young and fresh even at your age! Ilang taon ka na nga ba, mommy?

(Mommy)
Girl, sasaktan kita.



More surprises! That Mommy Dea didn't like the ice cream! Hehehehe.



The spherical lamps yet again.



Mommy Dea and Pips, part un.



Mommy Dea and Pips, part deux.



Strike a pose!



Emotionally tired from the barrage of surprises the day ushered.



Dinner at Jack's Loft! Mitch, defending herself from something berating, probably, said by Paris.



Mommy Dea, pretending not to notice the cacophony around her.



Kimmy: Fierce!



Paris: Farce!



The requisite self-pic.



Les Filles, sans alcohol.



Les Filles, post alcohol.



My accomplishment for the night! I was able to knot the stem of a cherry using my tongue! (With a little help from my teeth.) LOL!

Friday, September 07, 2007

Sleep? What Sleep?

Three hours. That's the average duration of sleep I've been getting everyday this week. More than once I've told myself, 'I will sleep early today,' but various forces of nature have conspired to take that particular wish of mine constantly out of reach. Besides, I've always been the willing victim. Story of my life. (Uuuuuy, drama!)

Last night, for instance, I was with the Bunnies and two other friends at mag:net cafe in Katipunan for Girl On Girl Action Night by the hilarious female cast of SPIT, or Silly People's Improv Theater. It was my first time to watch them, and the theme made me think I stepped into another lesbian time-space warp (it's LaDiDa all over again), but I had an absolutely wonderful time! The actors were amazingly smart and very funny, as I imagine one should be to pull off something as mentally demanding as improv theater. It was really impressive the way they let random things flow from their minds, bouncing off ideas from the audience and each other, and then creating something insanely hilarious out of them in a heartbeat.

Anywhoo, a few picachures from the evening below:


The butterfly cascade at Gateway Mall. Also, experimenting with photos by changing phone-cam settings. Unfortch, this was one of those 'change something else' shots.



We got to mag:net first. Show's about to start. Hono'o-chan, calling up Fire.



Asia, in the middle, trying to figure out what she really is through the clues the other girls are giving her -- that she's a Twister Fry.



Beer and nachitos in platitos.



Almost midnight, show's almost over. :-( Tired Hono'o-chan, but happy happy happy.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Limot

sa mga pagkakataong
nalilimutan kong huminga
o nalilimutan
ng puso kong tumibok

sa mga pagkakataong
malamig ang hangin sa hapon
o nawawalan
ng ilaw ang poste sa umaga

sa mga pagkakataong
tumatahimik ang sansinukob
o dumidilim
ang langit at ulan

alam kong nakalimot ka na
at ako

ako'y hindi pa



(para kay R)

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Intangibility

Although it may sound otherwise, this is fictional. It has my voice, and some elements may have been real, but in its entirety, this piece was a difficult vision to flesh out. Initially, I wanted to communicate how it felt like, having sex with someone you've just met. But, as with most things, it became slightly different from what I'd planned as the words began unfolding from my mind and onto the keyboard. Be that as it may, the weight of words lacking which I'd felt as I was writing it was still the same as when I started it. I would ask to be forgiven for these inadequacies.

This was triggered by a song, Hain't It Funny. My deepest gratitude to kd lang for singing such an intensely sad, unexpectedly ironic song.


"Made love last night --
wasn't good, wasn't bad.
Intimate strangers
made meek and sad."

Hain't It Funny, kd lang


"You know, my mother wakes up at four," he whispered as he nuzzled my hair. I checked my watch. 1:15 AM. Plenty more time for snuggling. "I'll leave before then. I won't fall asleep," I whispered back. He held me tighter and pressed his face to my hair. I felt him take a deep breath, his chest rising at the effort. I rested my palm on its warm surface. Closing my eyes, I imagined seeing the rush of air filling every crevice in his lungs. He exhaled, and all the air rushed back out, diffusing into the amber glow of his room. It was silent and involuntary, but a peaceful thing to witness, his breathing. Like Earth revolving around the sun, or gravity holding one down to the ground. Being with him felt safe. Being with him felt sure.

o O o

I talk like we've been lovers for a long time, but we'd only just met. A couple of hours ago, as a matter of fact. We met online, through a chatroom. I felt like looking for company, he wanted a hook-up. We exchanged details and photos, and agreed to meet at a fast food near our place. It was a quick, clean transaction, if one could call it that.

I was there first, as it was a mere three-minute walk from my house. I got a soda and sat near a window with a clear view of the door to see who's coming in and leaving. I rested my head on the cool glass wall and watched the view outside. It was almost midnight but the city was still bustling with movement. It felt unnerving to think I could be one of these people moving around -- another sheep in the herd, another cog in the machine -- that is, until evening comes and I become someone entirely different. I looked at my hands. By day these fingers are designing websites, coding scripts, and writing reports and proposals. All endeavors geared towards the betterment of mankind, if one prefers to see it that way. A seemingly outstanding individual. One harmless drone in the vastly hollow field of existence. But midnight, and these hands are doing something else. I feel like a super hero assassin. Or a monster.

About ten minutes into my reverie, I saw him enter. He was wearing a grey sweater on a white shirt, jeans, and he had a red cap on just like he said he would. He took out his mobile phone, but I called out his name before he could dial. He smiled as he walked over to where I was seated. "Hey," he said. I studied him without hiding it. He was doing the same to me, anyway. He has a pleasant face, easy to look at. Although if one would see him on the streets, he might look like just another pedestrian. He had a sleepy look in his eyes, almost feigning disinterest, but the childish smirk on his lips belied his expression. In all, he had the kind of face I found attractive -- casual, but smart. I offered him a sip from my soda. He shook his head no. A heartbeat, and then he said, "Let's go." I stood as he did and we left the restaurant, saying nothing else until we got to his house.

o O o

"Is that your real name?" he asked as he took off his sweater. I sat on the edge of the bed and started untying my shoelaces. I nodded and asked him the same thing. He smiled and said, "No." I chuckled. "That's good," I murmured, avoiding his eyes, "easier to pretend." I felt him move, pinning me with his weight gently on the bed, planting a kiss on my lips. Fuck if he heard. And before I knew it, every breath became a memory.

o O o

It might seem impossible, having a real memory of an encounter being unreal at the same time. I can feel him, his solid form lying beside me, touch every inch of skin, every pore, taste every glimmer of sweat on his neck. We talk, and I hear him, just as he listens when I talk. His scent -- that of dusk and closed rooms -- fills the air. All these things are real enough for me, and I will remember them when this is over. But memories are tricky in a way that they are not simply remembering things one has touched, seen, or heard. Memories are made up of the intangible as well. What did it mean when he kissed me on the lips? His smile when I told him, "Go slow" -- did it mean, "I won't hurt you"? When he pulled me closer to him afterwards, did he mean to say, "Be with me"? This space between us, intangible and without form, does it have something real my mind can count on to remember? It breaks my heart to know the answer but not acknowledge it. To be drawn into a false sense of intemperance his presence infuses into me. Like Earth revolving around the sun, like gravity? No, I tell myself. I am not safe, and I am not sure.

o O o

I feel his form stir from beside me. My hand reaches to touch his hand. He is becoming hard again, and so am I. All at once, the errant thoughts in my mind become meaningless, and all that matters is what I can touch, see, and hear. "You can't fuck brains," someone once said. And tomorrow, when I go to work, none of this will be real. His name will mean nothing to me, and I will mean nothing to him. And the shadow of his taste left clinging to my skin will be an illusion desire conjured from my waking fantasies. I will once again be a drone, a sheep, a cog in the silently hollow and subtly malevolent machine of existence.

That is, until another night.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

No Room for Rain Today!

I just got home from a book-themed day with the Bunnies! They picked me up for lunch at Mongolian Quick Stop in Walter Mart, and then straight to the 28th Annual Book Fair we went. It was a more colorful and festive affair than last I remember it (which was years ago, to be honest), and my heart was overflowing with genki being surrounded with books and book lovers all Sunday afternoon!

The Fair also had wonderful, wonderful cosplayers roaming around, making my heart leap each time a familiar flurry of costumes came into view. The more famous ones I saw were several Gotei 13 Captains from Bleach (and maybe one Arrancar), students from Alice Academy, and Queen Amidala. There was also a Cat ahead of me when I was lining up to pay for my books, and she was talking to a Rabbit who was standing at the line beside ours.

Also, many happy dances of joy to me for gifting myself a copy of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials Trilogy! Although I was a bit miffed that the first book was of a different edition from the other two, I promised myself to be on constant lookout for the same. When I do find one, the copy I currently have will be given to anyone who may want it. :-)

Oh, I wish I'd taken more pictures to document the fantastic time I had at the Fair, but my heart has yet to develop the photographer's instincts to have my camera always on the ready to point and shoot whenever a random photo-op presented itself. Ah well. I think I made up for it during dinner when I shot this video of the Bunnies singing:


And a bonus after the jump! (The Bunnies will kill me for posting this second one, but I couldn't resist!)


PS: On our way out from the Book Fair, there were bins marked "Books for Donation" near the exit. While waiting for Hono'o-chan to return from a last quick purchase inside the Fair grounds, I approached one of the bins to see what's inside. I was wounded at what I saw. Three volumes of X lay almost lifeless amongst discarded books and magazines! I picked them up and cradled them to my chest, bemoaning their fate and telling them I shall bring them home, but the magnetic force of my moral compass took over and I was compelled (albeit quite painfully) to place them back into the bin. Fire said I should just take them with me since not a lot of people will be able to appreciate them anyway, and besides, the guard was not looking, but I just couldn't do it! After much high-pitched weeping which irked Fire to the high heavens, I finally had to say sayounara to the books and we made our way out into the cold, cold night, leaving the sad and lonely things hurtling into their dark and dismal fate.

PPS: And nope, it didn't rain today. :-)