Tuesday, December 27, 2005
Happy Holidays!
Literally, it has been a fast-paced holiday slash vacation for me. I barely could hold of the events and happenings unfolding as each day passes by. Yes, a lot of boozing. It was only on the eve of Christmas that I can recall that I really had a rest -- I slept early that night only to wake up the following day, Christmas, with coffee and cigarette morning ritual that lasted until I had my second stick before a neighbor set up a beach umbrella and several chairs in front of his store and, grinning, challenged me already for a morning Christmas boozing.
The 26th was the birthday of my father, and, as expected, another bout with boozing.
Yet, it is already the 27th and the exhilarating atmosphere of Christmas still lingers in the air much stronger.
Happy Holidays to all! Hehe
Friday, December 23, 2005
Possibility of Being Published
Thursday, December 22, 2005
Assumption
This process of journey to mysticism can start when he is in his twenties, and by the time that he gets to be thirty, everything about this world – and the marvelous worlds within it – has already beginning to take shape in his mind.
This is the reason why, for some reasons, I treat everybody around me with mutual trust that they are moving towards this end. And, frustratingly, all I come across are people who got stuck somewhere along the way.
What I mean is it is like listening to music. Most generations usually are tied down to the music of their hey-days. They no longer continue their then juvenile adventurousness towards discovering new sounds, new music. And by the time when their children grow up and have their own ‘generational’ music, the ‘stuck’ old man could only grumpily berate the youngs as people with no real appreciation for music. So the gap and misunderstanding. If only the old man continued his growth in music, then this gap is bridged.
People only mature in terms of age. Not in terms of wisdom.
Usually, I can spot people who have stopped growing. These people usually are those people who have already built a fortified assumption of the world; they don’t and would not care to listen to new ideas. When you say something new or beyond their understanding, they grimace to rebut you that what you have just said is stupid.
Their map of reality works for them, and they no longer care to revise it. They stick to what they already know, or appear to know. The only danger these people pose is when they are in power – and usually those in power or those enjoying a relative success are the ones who exhibit this kind of trait.
Probably, one short-cut for acquiring wisdom, far beyond what a doctorate in humanities can give, is deprivation, distress, depression and the likes. There is nothing that can give the soul or the spirit a test to bring forth a better perception of the world than these havocs thrown on him.
Yet, sometimes, especially when these tests are still being endured, the person under duress cannot dispense the wisdom that is already growing within him.
Being for a while in this world, I only have met a number of people who are conscious of the growing up that they continually have to undergo to be a better person – yes, until they inhale their last breath.
Pertaining on my assumption that old age equates on the acquisition of mystical wisdom, there is nobody so far whom I have met who fulfills this assumption. Though, there are some people whom I read on books.
But crossing path with them in flesh and blood? None.
Thursday, December 15, 2005
Not My Magazine
I must admit that I created a lot of enmity in the hearts of my peers as I stubbornly ventured to accomplish this personal mission. Not once did I make 'enemies' among them -- though this enmity as my superiors would soon say to me was a product of a misunderstood man like me.
I heard this several times: "Ern, the magazine is not yours."
It meant I should not slave myself or fight everybody and go against them hard just to create a 'visionary magazine' that I thought of.
Now, after several months of working on it, I learned to let go and get some people have a say on how the magazine would look like. It even came to a point when I no longer care. I just let them do the job on the magazine, totally distancing myself or if possible severing my relationship with the magazine.
I don't know whether my interest has already waned, or I just got tired of my don Quixote's mission to produce a magazine according to my vision.
Anyway, I'm just a green horned 'editor.' There are still a lot of things that I have to learn in producing a good magazine.
Now, I barely hear anybody calling the magazine as mine. Which is something good. All I have to do now is focus on my articles and write-ups, and not getting my job complicated with post-production and everything else when in the first place I don't know anything about. I stepped back a little and let myself learn from the people around me. I'm not a god in the first place to know everything.
Tomorrow, the fresh hot copies of The Edge will be out. And usually, my boss give the credit to the editor if the final product of the magazine is very good.
Will I take the credit for it?
I doubt it. It is appropriate to pass the credit to those people who really worked on the post-production of the magazine. And, certainly, my participation in that aspect is at the minimum.
If there is something that I would be happy or proud about the magazine is the write-ups that I did for it, the good damage controlled that I applied so the magazine would look and exude as a political magazine, plus the line-up of articles that I conceptualized for it. The looks, the design, the details beyond the text of the articles are for my peers to take credit for.
Ah, it has been a long road on The Edge's production. And, I hope, all the mistakes and lessons to be learned has been noted and hopefully will not be repeated in the succeeding issues.
Romantizing about my own magazine, at last, is finally over. The Edge is simply not my magazine. I am only working for the magazine.
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
Skipped Work
"Tired," I mumbled on the mobile. "I need to get a rest."
So it was already past one in the afternoon when I got off the bed. Had my ritual of coffee and dose of nicotine, smoking several Winstons without letup under the tree under the heat of a noonday sun. It felt fine, felt nice not to worry anything, just letting my head clear up, though I could not help my mind stray on the pending works I had to do in the office. There were a lot of things I still I had to write, articles, essays, and my column.
But what I was really looking forward for was a time to finally take time to read On Road by Jack Kerouac which I bought a couple of months ago but work hindered me to do. Plus I also had a book by the late St. Nick History and Culture.
Now, it is already early evening and I haven't done anything.
I spent my whole waking hours, loitering and talking shit with the young people in our street. Drat! There was no good convo that went on, just talking about nothing, doing nothing.... the young people in our street just whiling time goofing around, not the kind of an intelligent goofing around, but the kind which people do when they had nothing to do or say or talk about something important. They were just plain letting the hours fly by, staring at the passersby. Good God! They even tried to drown an ant out of nothing to do.
Things just got interesting when the Deo arrived, though still talking about shit, a subject more shit but interesting though.
Together, we roamed the subdivision looking for some actions. The damned Deo wanted to do nothing but walk, and the jerk kept us both walking under the drizzle, not wanting to take a cover.
The man only left me when I went to this net cafe to check my blog and email. He could not understand anything that had to do with computers.
Drat! I still have to write at least an essay for our mags before this day is over.
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
The Edge on the Printers Already
Sunday, December 04, 2005
Midnoon Journal
Saturday, December 03, 2005
A Couple
The young lady, in spectacles, looked classy in her black tee and pants, and you don’t have to stare too long at her to notice that she was pretty. The young man on the other hand had his long hair tied.
I could have forgotten about them after the train arrived and I waded through the throng of passengers to get a seat. But they happened, by chance, to stray on their way before me. The couple stood before me who by then had a seat already. They continued displaying their sweet embracing. They were in love.
I could not help took furtive glances at the young lady. She was pretty indeed; but not that kind of prettiness that you get tired of staring at after sometime.
I heard her soft voice, and I knew then that this lady belonged to those who can do her shopping anytime in Hong Kong or Singapore or even New York. And throughout the duration that they stood before they alighted at Ayala Station, I knew then that I saw and experienced magic.
Their movements had magic. Everything they did was magic. Not because they were in love. There was just magic in all their moves. It’s like the way when you see a famous genius or an artist. Every move has magic in it; beauty. This couple by their very person alone exudes beauty. They were young, confident, and simple but astonishingly stand taller than the rest.
Friday, December 02, 2005
I don’t know. I just cannot find time now to pause doing my job, settle before the computer and write something to post on this blog.
Umm… just cannot feel the juice pumping in my head.
Sunday, November 27, 2005
Gonna go to Mexico
Friday, November 18, 2005
Remembering the Now
Relative silence has already set in, the air getting colder, and there’s a palpable stillness among the rows of computer monitors around me.
Then, it hits me. Actually, it comes when Rivermaya’s hitsong 214 first notes seeped out of my earphones. I know it already. The stillness and silence of the place add even to this strange feeling of nostalgia for the 'now' – a now that eventually will become the past.
So right now, as I sit before my monitor, I know already that sooner or later, my presence in this place, this job that I have now will end; that this space in the universe will soon be out of the trajectory of my orbit.
To start, five people whom I come to know in this company have already left for various reasons. So this fact only reinforces my anticipation for my inevitable departure in this company.
I’m trying to recall when this feeling of ‘endless wandering in space and time’ started. For sure, when I was in college down to my nursery days, I felt everything would stay forever as it was; that there would be no parting of ways, the place and everything that came with it will stay forever with me.
Was it when I first dropped out of college? Probably.
Right now, everything is ephemeral. Nothing last long.
And while the people who walk and move around me, busy with their work, and even the interior of this office, I would watch and stare at them with distant, dreamy eyes of one reliving a past; everything that is happening right now around me is a past already.
It is as if I’m already in my senile life, staying in some cramped place, and remembering the days of my youth.
And right now, I’m experiencing with all my senses, the memory of the ‘past’.
Thursday, November 17, 2005
Sentimental Yakking
I still tried to goof around, fishing a candy out of my pocket and stealthily, as if she would not notice it, I held her hand and gave the candy, smirking. Or did I winked. Or grinned sheepishly at our own little joke about my perennial need for it.
How did she take it? She said she would keep the candy. A souvenir. A token of our tempestuous short professional relationship replete with everyday argument of my pestering whines to raise the bar a little notch higher than what we could do. But when she said she would keep the candy, it came to me as if she said: "I'll wait for you." Or something like "You mean a lot to me. I care also about you."
But thinking about it now, I sure had mesmerized myself with her charming civility. Interpreted something that had no meaning as a reciprocation of my implicit attraction to her.
Didn't I react with great surprise upon hearing her leaving, or rather the news that she had left already. I got my worn-out cell phone and sent her my disappointment and feeling of lost. I asked her arduously where she was then. I got to see her. If not, my heart would stop as if freezed by cryogenic liquid; the too heart brittle to the point that another beat would break it into pieces.
Haven't I said that I rushed down the building, walked/ran the street to find the place where she said she was having a lunch with her best friend. Rushed of blood in my head, panting, I longed to see her for the last time.
Nevertheless, that is over. There is no point delving too much on the details of that overwhelming sad day.
She defined my several later after she left when we chanced our selves on the net; E for Endearingly annoying; R for romanticizing about my magazine; N for Naughty but deep, like a raging ocean. She should have said raging in furious explosion of gaseous elements forming a huge galactic nebula in the universe.
Yeah. I gave some parts of my soul to her. As if she would really know me. Dig me. (Though she said it didn't mean that if she did not care that she could not understand me. But my question was if she understood too, why the clash between our professional relationship.)
Ah, nonsense.
She is gone. For good.
The promise! So what about it? That we would find time to share our soul over bottles of light beers. Nah! It would never happen. T'was the trick created by a peek (or a show off) of an old battered sould to an an excited young one trying to find her place under the sun.
I tried didn't I. But I ended up a pesty bugger under her nose. "Pasensya na po. Don't worry, I will never bother you again. Pasensya na po uli."
Probably, I denied the obvious fact that there had been/was/is never been a natural common ground by which we can call ourselves really close.
To yak about it is really senseless. People come and go, didn't I say?
Right now, there is nothing better for me to do than try to take off, being a young writer.
Ah, what did Jack Kerouac said?
Somewhere along the line I knew there'd be girls, visions, everything; somewhere along the line the pearl would be handed down to me.
Nice said. Indeed, nicely said.
Friday, November 04, 2005
Goodbye Ruby Tuesday
Yesterday don’t matter if it’s gone
While the sun is bright
Or in the darkest night
No one knows
She comes and goes
Goodbye, ruby tuesday
Who could hang a name on you?
When you change with every new day
Still I’m gonna miss you...
Don’t question why she needs to be so free
She’ll tell you it’s the only way to be
She just can’t be chained
To a life where nothing’s gained
And nothing’s lostAt such a cost
There’s no time to lose, I heard her say
Catch your dreams before they slip away
Dying all the timeLose your dreams
And you will lose your mind.
Ain’t life unkind?
Goodbye, ruby tuesday
Who could hang a name on you?
When you change with every new day
Still I’m gonna miss you...
No really sure if this song catches or holds the essence of someone who flitted by before me. Anyway, would I drink a Red Horse or a San Migs Lights after posting this... not sure... but probably not better to but just move on.
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Stressed Out but Not Out
The primary concern is how could I apply the vision that I see for the mag, since as planned I would take over on the next issue not in the maiden. I thought of giving the whole line-up of articles a complete overhaul, since when it was conceived, the magazine would tackle the success people in every fields, so for the scratched title Success Today.
The first night was horrible. And even the brainstorming that came the next morning totally made my face haggard at the great responsibility of what I thought I should do to the magazine to make it politically and corporately themed mag.
My co-writers failed to see the great load bringing my shoulder literally down the floor. Worse, I could not tell them what my vision for the magazine was.
In the end, I compromised and let go of some of the obvious flaws I see in the line-up. Let it pass, they implied.
Nevertheless, the stress is not the thing that I avoid. It's is welcome. I had been just used in bumming around. So, I just have to adjust to a more active life, or in short having a job.
What I'm frustrated at and dread about is how will the magazine look, content included, when it hit the magazine racks.
I promise the next issue will be better. And, for sure, have the semblance of the vision that I have in mind.
Saturday, October 15, 2005
A Thank You
Thursday, October 13, 2005
Some Passing Thought
It seems day are fast passing by without any writing production from my part. Those pieces I finished, I've marked as 'draft', considering that I wrote them all in haste or just to fulfill the publication's quota of written work.
*****
If I would have my way, I would buy an ice-cold san Migs lights right now, stare at its beauty and cherish gulfing down the universe that it can offer. Can't help it. I know the ground beneath my feet cracked and its maw is slowing pulling me downward in spiral plummet down the abyss of eventual death of somebody cherished for so long and the immediate happeniness of just seeing somebody close to you with something between her ears. Life. Yes, life's intricacies. But every moves she makes is magic, no doubt about it.
Wednesday, October 12, 2005
The Journey Continues
Though, I can say that I write everyday, I say that those written productions are really not the product of the soul by rather the product brought about by the necessity to perform to continue call myself as one who is employed.
So far, my language, inch by inch, is evolving (I think). Compliments come from my peers about my prose, though, of course, as they say, there are still some slight adjustments that I have to do, especially on my choice of words. On this matter, I recall what Dean Alfar commented on my rejected entry for his speculative fiction anthology that I had a bad choice in picking words or to that effect.
Well, what can you do. The journey still continues. Everyday, I hope, and see to it, that one way or another, I'm learning something new.
As I mentioned to one of my officemate here, I'm not really working for the money. What I can't say to him is I'm doing an apprentice job of learning the basics of the language.
Concerning about money, that will come sooner. Or probably not. But the beauty of it all is knowing why you are here in the world in the first place. Knowing the vocation that God or fate has bestowed on you.
And so the journey continues.......
Friday, October 07, 2005
Still a Tropical Paradise
Yet, if this country is would turn into one big television show and the main actors are the whole population of the archipelago, the show can aptly given the title The Withering Banana Republic. Every actor's scripted lines will express nothing but how pitiful and miserable it is to live in this country. It basically no redemption on its continuous spiral plummet down the abyss of national destitiution.
Indeed, wherever one goes, at a small street caucus of grumpy old men, inside the transport vehicle one rides to go to work and back home, along the street where on the newstand scream the stark headlines on the country's abject political state, and even in your own home where the radio blares the voices of news commentators, the general outlook of the Filipinos leans toward a pessimistic attitude and hopelessness about the country.
I never cease to hear from the mouths of old people their feeling of nostalgia for the "good old days." They would harp like out of tuned violin that 'those days were better compared to now.'
They complain about the bad social and health services of the government; the rampant and increasing rate of crime; the unbridled corruption done by politicians; the blatant abuse of power by the police authorities; and with a stark, fearful belief that the government exists only to rip them off.
I have no recourse than keep my silence and bear listening to their complains since I have nothing to offer as a salvation to their deluded life-enforced perception about the country, and even about the world.
They are, in a way, the products of the messy mismanagemet done by the leaders of the past generations.
But the worse, for me, that you can hear from them is: "Buti pa sa America mas maganda buhay." Then begins another litany of how good American life is.
If only these people have seen the documentaries done by the filmaker Michael Moore about the true state of the streets in the States, probably they would reconsider their paens to the global empire that has a role in their hard, miserable lot.
There is one modern social wisdom appropriate on this case; every citizen of a country almost always complains about his own country. True, indeed.
For I rarely hear any good thing about a certain country unless the ones who are speaking are the diplomats and ambassadors or their advertising work force under the payroll of their department of tourisms.
Methinks, if you cannot bear the shortcomings of this country, and you really feel the urge and passionate about what you see as wrong, and you want a change, get your butt off the couch and do something about it. Go on a hunger strike along the middle of Ayala Ave. if need be to drive your viewpoint. (But that is already an exaggeration.)
Warts and all, this country is still, and is, a beatiful tropical country. Just consider the prevalent weather throughout they year.
Hey, every day is almost summer here. You can just go around in comfortable t-shirt and jeans. If that is ot a paradise of a country, I don't know what is.
Sunday, October 02, 2005
Nothing to Write, Just the Urge to Read
Saturday, October 01, 2005
Need for a Good Rest
All I need right now is rest and a long time of sleep to get myself recharged.
Ahh, I want to post something longer but I think this is what happen when you have the resources to post on your blog for free.
Friday, September 30, 2005
Simple Blabber
I never thought, or rather expected, that after languishing in our subdivision's streets loitering without end, playing billiards and cards, getting drunk and just plainly bumming around for more than a year, a job has finally occupied my time at last.
Nevertheless, this new writing job seems something fate has designed for me. I knew then, even when I was still desperate to land on a good job, that there is something good that awaits for me. The only question that preoccupied my time then was when would it come. But fate really works in mysterious way. Here am I now, one of the numbers in the statistics of those employed.
Going back on the fast-paced, hectic week that was, I mostly spent my time infront of the computer, researching and writing for hours. Since the company which I work in now is not a legitimate publishing house in nature, our (us writers) work and worth as writers is gauged by the output that we produce at the end of the day. So our managing editor, on his suggestion to appease our demanding business-oriented boss, is to type-away/speed-write any article that has the possibility of being included as articles for future issues of our line-up of magazines.
Well, I don't have any problem with that. I can yak and pound on the keyboard without end (though the quality of the text is expected to be replete with grammar and syntax errors.)
The only time when I felt down was when the article I wrote with all seriousness and with the critical eye of a pretending veteran writer returned to me with lots of corrections -- murdered to use another term. It seems, I still have not learned my lessons in writing well.
But that can be dismissed easily with an alibi that I'm still warming up, still finding my groove in writing.
The only thing that I can brag about my attitude on this new writing job is my willingness -- longevity can aptly be used -- in working for twelve hours straight. For several working days now, I would stay till the office is about to close, using all my time to write a rush article and going home just to sleep. Then when I wake up the following day, I would just take a bath, take a sip of coffee and probably even a couple of cigarettes and off I go again to work.
It is, indeed, hectic working days with this kind of working style. But I cannot find myself getting tried or grumpy during the past days that I have been doing this. I can even say that everything I do in the office is a respite from the lack of nothing to do I suffered during the previous year.
Probably, I'm just compensating for the time I lost and wasted then. Can be.
Well, I just want to say that I feel good that I am being paid to write, and can call myself employed.
Wednesday, September 28, 2005
Some Changes
For two days now, I've been working -- yup, working, as in employed and being paid -- for a writing position. (Though, pessimist as I am when it comes on having a job, I've programmed my mind on anticipating any moment of notice for my termination -- I guess, that's what past experiences do on your psyche, especially if those experiences are similar to mine.)
What made this new circumstances finally sink in in my consciousness is when I visited a blogsite where I frequently drop by to update myself on local the literary scene. I was looking for list of books which I could write prodding me to check the previous months' postings.
Then, like a cold wind that breezes on your skin to trigger the recollection of the recent past, I chanced to read a blog post that told me nothing, nothing, nothing but the total change of my circumstances; that, hey, you're writing, yet somebody is paying you to do it.
Saturday, September 24, 2005
Definitely Not a Writer's Block
The force driving me almost mad is so intense that I rush to my chaotic room, where books, piles of papers in which unfinished stories, stories needed for revisions, draft essays, scratch copies of my blog postings lay splayed on everywhere. I rummage for the pen and papers. I got a couple of used papers but there is still free white space to write on on the back so I take it. I pay no attention on the computer at the corner which is basically dead and useless for several months now. It's harddisk bogged down and I have no extra cash to purchase a new one.
And then I promptly sit before the table, raring to write, something. But, wait. I fidget for several seconds and strare at the white space of the paper, holding the pen in the stance of writing: I HAVE NOTHING IN MY MIND TO WRITE ABOUT.
My mind runs fast and I cannot get hold of something, any idea for a subject to write about. There is nothing in my head. Nada. There is only the urge to write. The terrible, frustrating feeling to write. I can hear myself saying: You can write. But there is nothing; there is only a meaningless transparent air around me, and that desperate urge to write.
I have been in this situation before. The realization is like a deja vu, and I know very well that I could sit and think and force myself to write something for hours on end on the blank papers staring mockingly at me and, still, nothing will come out of it. Nada. I would still produce nothing.
I don't know what I should call this experience, but it definitely is not a writer's block. For how can I call it as such, when I am NOT even a writer in the first place.
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
The Little Mystic Indian Inside My Red Horse
I could not sleep then; the socket of my eyes were tired begging for that final snap of my consciousness, the letting go to arrive at the dreamland, and my head also throbbed in intense stream of pain and jadedness. So I decided to haul myself up from my bed, go straight passed the living room into our small store and get a couple of Red Horse. If I could get myself drunk, then probably I could sleep. Cut the waiting period for my consciousness to snap so I can finally sleep. When my head hit the pillow, I expected that I would quickly black-out.
I was on my second bottle, smoking without letup as I sat before the cases of SMB and Red Horse stacked in our kitchen, when I saw a little mystic Indian smoke signalling inside my bottle of Red Horse. The smokes of bubbles rose upward in the liquid space of the strong beer, and there at the top, the smoke formed into white benevolent clouds of galactic universe of suds.
I smiled, drew my face near the bottle and trained my eyes at the world of the little mystic Indian inside the bottle of my Red Horse. I smirked and drank the liquid universe with dreamy eyes.
After a while, I knew already that I was tipsy. I was wading amidst the jungle of this world's dreamscape, steadily pushing my legs ahead, groggily tearing the heavy growth of grass and accumulation of dried leaves. I was about to stumble and fall to the ground yet I kept on with the direction in my head, from where I could feel the invisible vibration and stream of radiating flow of oneness came from -- the One. And I was heading towards His direction, to finally, at long last, rest my tired soul in his presence.
What Time is It?
Farewell
I had to lean forward, resting my chin on my palm, attracted by the clear, rhythmic voice of the speaker resounding inside the chapel -- I could not recall whether she was using a microphone or not but the voice came clear and lean.
The subject of the talk dealt with then on-going peace process between the Ramos regime and the moro Islamic secessionist groups; an urgent, important subject to tackle upon, without doubt. Yet, my person could not deny the presence of a much more important factor of the talk: the speaker herself.
Her wiry hair, dropping eyelids which says as if she had a sleeplessness night reading tomes, would shine in a matter-on-fact mien as she untangled the intricate knots of the subjects into simple thread of ordinary man's terminologies; her benevolent professorial voice would pause to give way for full absorption of her statements. But her delivery was not the sum importance I could tangibly felt then. Rather, her delivery showed the tip of the iceberg of her real nature, the essence of her importance.
Her fragile, sage-like physiogonomy cland in flower-designed loose blouse -- her presence alone, so to speak -- could fill the whole chapel with strong positive energy of Intergrity. It was so strong that the audience could feel the invisible stream of grace and bliss running and seeping into the pores of their skin deep into the marrow of their tingling souls.
As I raptly listened to her, I had no doubt that I crossed path with one of the extraordinary persons this country had ever produced. Being with her at a same place, breathing the same universe as hers for a short time, listening and seeing her talked, it was the secular version of blissful experience of having a glimpse of the Pope.
That was more than a decade ago. Now the speaker left this earth to where she could be close to God. On her journey to this place, I bid her Godspeed.
You had walked upon this world Ms Haydee Yorac radiating with the power of inherent Integrity, and many have learned and been inspired by your example. Thank you. And farewell.
Thursday, September 08, 2005
Invitation for Story Tellers
Open Call for Submissions - A Time for Dragons: An Anthology of Philippine Draconic Fiction
Specifics:
1. Word Count. For fiction, anywhere from 2500 to 6000 words. For poetry, short or long form is acceptable. Englsh language only.
2. Language & Setting. English language. Can be set in original imaginary worlds or the "real" world, not necessarily the Philippines (as Dragons are "universal"). Absolutely no fan fic.
3. Number of Entries. Each author may submit up to two (2) submissions.
4. Format. Only via email. Attach as a Word Document - just make sure your submission is virus-free. Please email all submissions to: viniquest(at)yahoo(dot)com
5. Cover Letter. Kindly include a cover letter that includes the title of your submission, the word count, your full name, contact details including contact numbers, as well as a list of your previously published work, if any. New unpublished authors are more than welcome to submit.
6. Compensation. Each author whose work becomes part of the anthology will receive two (2) author's copies of the final publication. Similar to Dean's anthology, the Dragon antho is completely self-funded - except that selected authors may also avail of special discounts at Comic Quest and Petty Pets (right, Dean?) ;)
7. Deadline & Publication Schedule. All submissions must be received before midnight of January 4, 2006. Authors of selected pieces will be informed thereafter. The book will be released by the first quarter of 2006.
So there you go.
Tuesday, September 06, 2005
On 'Complimenting' Our Own
Methinks, this is a blatant self-deprecating act of putting ourselves inferior and relegating ourselves as mere copycats of those of the West. Worse is, those people in the media who should know better are the ones guilty of propagating this style of 'complimenting' our own talents.
One must understand that, for example, a painter from Italy or Spain or from any other Western country is no different from the painter from our local shores. The Westerners may be popular and famous but you must consider that this fact is brought about mostly by the supplementary benefits of their economic power. Same thing applies to other disciplines.
One instance when this issue is put on its rightful place and perspective, though through a corollary matter, was when in an Asian Pacific Economic Cooperation (APE C) conference, question regarding the Asian consumer purchasing power was deemed be gauged by the price of a McDonalds burger. Then Prime Minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Mohamad stood up and said that the question is better answered not by the price of a McDonalds, BUT rather by a Jolibbe burger.
Monday, September 05, 2005
I've Read It Already
Who cannot tell the circumstances, motivations and aspirations behind the full text that smacks of a familiarity and path over-trudged upon by aspiring writers with nascent writing talent. I can even smell concretely the pervading atmosphere that brought the text into its final form and substance.
It cannot escape my proving eyes used to these kind of babblings. I did brushed elbows and mingled with my contemporaries during my college campus days who had the same artistic pursuits and goals (me included). I know exactly the crux of the matter regarding these attempts to 'feel.'
So what precisely is the thing that I'm discussing here?
I'm making my point on the usual practice of novice writers on their attempt to delude themselves that they are cut to be writers on the basis of their pretensions of suffering from some turmoil of social or self alienation or spiritual distress. (Of course they wont admit to it, and they may even be probably not aware of what they are really doing.)
They desperately, upon realizing that they want to be writers or poets, try to rummage amidst the chaos of their memories for something painful experiencesor circumstances that they can claim themselves to be in duress. Worse, others create an imagined crisis of their spirits besieging their existence day in and day out. And when you read the text of the latter case: it reeks of phoniness and pretensions as can be seen on his obvious attempt to be literary and writerly in his delivery of his 'pain.'
Usually these are the young aspiring writers and poets you would bump into in college and university campuses; mostly those who are staff writers for their college papers and those hangers-on who surround them.
They assume this gibberish on spiritual alienation and destitution or on whatever suffering it might be, as a shortcut on opening their pores and sensibilities to human sufferings and conditions. Another reason is to give justification for them to continue to write; since they are in pain and suffering then they have something important to share to humanity.
Sadly, they even assume that the more and deeper their pains are, the greater the possibility of writing a better piece -- as if their present endeavor, if done in a state of misery can keep par as far as quality vis-a-vis for example Slyvia Plath's Bell Jar.
Don't get the impression that I deny the ability of young writers to experience and understand true human conditions. I would say these kind of writers are usually the ones who don't subcribe to the tactics mentioned above. I met several of writers of this kind, and all I can say is when you read their prose or poems is was as if they were old souls in young men's body.
I say, aspiring writers should not mind if they don't suffer from any obvious pain. Or if they don't feel such kind of pain stated above means they are not cut for a writer. Everybody can be a writer. It only takes a decision to be so. Going back to the subject of pain: Pain will come along on every writer's path. That's for sure.
Note: The experience that pushed me to write the above piece comes from reading a blog posted by a young, intelligent college student who tries to force or pretend that he suffers from spiritual alienation and he fears for the future, yet it is obvious from her credentials and achievements that he is highly a functional young adult. Well, the blog's text betrays him of his intention... Though I may add, that young student writes better than me. Hehehe
Dragon Tales
The story I did sent to Dean Alfar got the rejection slip, but this does not daunt me on participating in any upcoming anthology. So, I'm bracing myself now for putting an entry, no, probably two entries (as it is the allowed submission per contributor) on Vin's planned anthology.
There's already a good story brewing in my mind right now about dragons, and I hope, come January 4 next year my entries will be ready for submission.
Yeah, another writing assignment adding up on my to-do writing list.
Sunday, September 04, 2005
Bilog ang Mundo
Well, who could have thought Ignacio Guevarra was groomed for something greater than they ever had thought. They never paid attention to him as he burned the streets, day in and day out, in his tribike delivering softdrinks and beers to the stores in the subdivision. For them, Ignacio was merely another man breaking his back and stubborn against the elements to put food in his grumbling stomach.
They were times when they heard Ignacio talked about who he really was, or what the future that awaited him. A new customer asked him once if he had skipped going to work as he put the cases of softdrinks at the back of the store. His reply was: "I'm a writer. I don't work."
"Oh, what do you drive then?"
"No, sir," Ignacio said. "I'm a writer that's why I just stay at home."
Yet, nobody really took his pronouncements seriously. Ignacio, afterall, had been a delivery boy for several years now, and this kind of pronouncement coming from a person such as he, could only be attributed to delusion of grandeur.
Probably, if someone who had known his for the first time his claims would be given thought and consideration. But it was inevitable that after weeks he would be seen sweating under the noonday sun paddling desperately to carry the load of his tribike. Then they would eventually gauge him as another nobody dreaming for an unreachable social importance.
So during those times when they found themselves sitting beside Ignacio in some neigjhborhood yard boozing, they would let him put himself a little higher from his social status as a delivery boy, listening halfheartedly to his style of wisdom.
At first, they usually would mock his statements by sarcastic rejoinders to put him to his right place: "Then how can you explain your life?" they would ask and convulsed in a fit of laughters. But Ignacio was quick to parry these blows by enigmatic counter-rejoinders such as: "I dont have to explain myself because nobody can understand somebody who understands everybody."
So they let him be with his sense of grandeur. Anyway, they thought, he's harmless. What can little grandstanding done by a dregs of society do to them. Nothing. The fact is he is still a delivery boy no matter how hard he tries to claim as somebody, their collective judgment concluded.
Then one day, a couple of sleek cars began to pull over by the front of Ignacio's house. Neighbors would see well-dressed and groomed individuals came and went out of his house, and one neighbor even spotted a television personality he could not put anywhere in his map of showbiz people. Probably, somebody important, the neighbor thought.
These were the times when Ignacio's presence in the streets paddling his tribike diminished until nobody could no longer see him delivering softdrinks and beers. They thought Ignacio went bankrupt.
It took sometime before somebody could give explaination as to what Ignacio was up to those days. A neighbor reading a national broadsheet chanced him on its pages. There on the glorious pages of a national broadsheet, Ignacio had written a column, with a picture of his darkened face brought by too much sun, smiling pedantically beside his byline.
It was then when everybody in the neighborhood started treating him differently, and with seriousness now. They were all, in fact, would do anything even if it meant forsaking their lives just for their names to land on the pages of a newspaper. And, Ignacio had done it without doing something as imaginable as that.
Then Ignacio moved out of their neighborhood. The last thing that they heard about him was he had published six books, three of them novels which some of their children in college read for book reviews, and had been jet-setting around the world as a respective writer lecturing on modern human conditions and literature.
Well, nobody among them had seen it coming until it happened.
Now, when they drink during weekends and talk about the past years, they never forget to mention in their conversation about the delivery boy who used to claim himself as a writer. Twist of fate, they would say. One of them aptly put it: "Kunsabay, bilog ang mundo."
Thursday, September 01, 2005
Toothache
During the onset of the pain in my molar on the first night, I had taken 1,500 ml of Ponstan yet without any relief. I must attribute the failure of the painkiller on the Red Horse that I had prior to the attack; drinking an ice-cold beer when you've already a controlled toothache will set off the pain again with an intensity no painkiller could neutralize.
Well, tootaches are one of the pains of living. Anyway, this kind of pain rarely falls on me so I just have to bear it.
But when swollen is gone I go directly to the barangay health clinic and get the pesky molar pulled out. The only problem while I wait for it is the throbbing pain that runs up to my temple.
Ah, this pesky toothache
Monday, August 29, 2005
On Guerrilla Writing
Later on, I encountered again the term in the Charles Tan’s blog, and obviously he adapted the term of Dean (well, bloggers in this country, especially those who write are each his own readers, so the terminologies they use becomes homogeneous.)
When I read the term, what popped up in my mind was Rage Against the Machine’s Guerrilla Radio mixed with the name and image of Che Guevarra in his green beret hat. It was as if someone hollered: “Hey, we are on a war here!”
We are, indeed.
Writers in this country have to fight their own wars to survive writing without suffering an early demise because of hunger. The shower of mortars and zipping of 50 caliber bullets relentlessly released by the enemy (practical reality) don’t give creative writers a minute of peace and rest to go on with their real work. The mortars and bullets are in the guise of jobs to earn money and put food on the dining table so the stomach can churn something other than air.
Ah, guerrilla writing. It seems it is the only viable way to sneak time to write and, for several minutes, breathe as a real human being expressing his state of soul and mock the stark countenance of practical reality.
Sunday, August 21, 2005
It has to happen, no doubt about it. Unfortunately, its realization had been delayed until recently when what was at stake was my financial well-being.
The issue: aptitude on my English grammar.
As a backgrounder, this problem first crept in as a serious disability on my last writing stint in a small publication house. My editors there burned me with their surreptitious gazes, loaded with enmity and loathing, as I speed-wrote every assignment they gave me, witless on the gruesome grammatical errors with which I murdered my articles. Before I finished my two-month training period, they kicked me out to their relief.
Still stubborn on claiming and acknowledging my deficiency, more than a year went with the winds and here I am again getting a crack on another writing job.
As a requirement prior to hiring, this organization is asking for a sample 250-word article. Brazen and my old self getting the better of me, I write the article as if a hyaena were chasing me. Written in haste, and even ignoring to do a proofread of the text, I send the article with blind confidence of having done a good job.
When the verdict comes, it spells a resounding and embrassing implicit question: You consider yourself a writer with this kind of article?
I am devastated. The pain of rejection spills on an argument with the writer-friend, who referred me to the company, through text.
Grammatical errors are unavoidable even to the best of writers. A couple or three errors, yes, but on the whole article near of beingpainted in red ink? I know I have mistakes, but I'm open for somebody to tell me what are those. You don't need anybody. Correct grammar is basic in every writer.... and by the way, FYI, your messages are full of grammatical errors.
The cudgel landed right on my face.
It's obvious, my responsibilities as a writer was not taken seriously, if not altogether taken for granted. I failed to do my assignments, and laziness has breed a lousy writer like me.
And now, I know where I rightly belong; my self-importance shrunk to its true size.
Thursday, August 18, 2005
The Rejection Letter Finally Comes
Dear Ern,
Thank you for your submission. I'm sorry to say that I am passing on the story. While "...Mariano Torres" had much merit, it is not the type of story I'm looking for. The story could also use some polishing up for grammar and choice of words, and the latter bits could use revision.
I hope this doesn't discourage you. As writers, we all have to keep on trying and writing. I honestly think that you have great potential. I'd be doing you a terrible disservice if I told you otherwise. I look forward to reading more from your imagination in the future.
Thanks and regards,
Dean Francis Alfar
EditorPhilippine Speculative Fiction
Wednesday, August 17, 2005
Regarding My Short Story aka Speculative Fic Kuno
Yet, after a couple or months or so, and after attempting to beat the deadline for the anthology of speculative fictions Dean Alfar plans to publish, I am not sure anymore whether the first vision I had on the story could be seen on the last metamorphosis of its text. I even forgot altogether what the first vision was. I just hacked on the story during the last remaining days prior to the deadline; my head swirling in giddiness, with blurred vision and pumped up adrenalin.
Honestly speaking, I don't know whether I wrote the story enough for it to be merited as a well-written one. I even doubt, yet hope, that Dean Alfar would accept it in his anthology. The opening paragraph alone is below par compared with my standard, yet I could not do anything about it as I had limited prowess of putting it the right way.
Nevertheless, the story is already in the hands of Dean Alfar. He's the one who will tell me if I did a good job or not. I hope I did.
Thursday, July 28, 2005
Amid the Cloud of Crisis
There is no doubt that President Macapagal-Arroyo no longer enjoys the moral ascendancy to lead this country. Assuming that she won the presidency last 2004, her mere actuation of trying to rig the election as revealed by the ‘Gloria-gate’ tapes is enough reason for her to resign. Her resignation is the only ethical way of giving back the lost trust this country has on the highest office of the land.
A lot has been said about forming a new leadership after her. A lot has proposed ways on how the government should be by the time she steps down. These are all garbage talk.
The Constitution has an installed crisis resolution program for an event such as this. The Constitution, obviously, gives the mandate to the Vice President to succeed if the President resigns. It is very clear.
Yet, we hear the Opposition, muddling the crisis even more by acting like a pack of wolves by trying to dictate who among on their likings should come next into power. They are nothing but power-hungry low-lifes that deserves the stake so as they could be burn.
The Opposition might have done the good deed of exposing the ‘Gloria-gate’ tapes, but choosing or dictating who should lead next, as if the revelation mandated them to be in power, is an absolute delusion on their part, a delusion that the likes of Rep. Escudero has been indulging himself throughout this crisis.
When asked whether Vice President Noli De Castro can succeed in the event of the President’s resignation, this holier-than-thou pretender brazenly replied: ‘Hindi pa sa amin nagpapakilala si Noli de Castro… We still don’t know his kind of government…etc.” What strong stomach he got there, eh. Rep. Escudero manifesting his presumptuousness to reveal the tail of power-lust demon he and his colleagues has within them.
Of course, this argument rest on the assumption that the President will resign. Something that she strongly denies she would ever do (as of press time). She thinks she can survive this storm with imperturbable indifference to the clamor of the people. Yet, can’t she see that her office has been buried without salvation by the catastrophic avalanche brought by the thunder of her own ‘lapse of judgment’?
This writer hopes that self-sacrifice wins in the heart of the President soon, and gives her the courage to let go. I hope it happens before this crisis is forced to end in an ugly resolution with the absolute certainty that it would be on the expense of the Filipinos in general.
Note: This should have been posted in the midst of the crisis besieging the Arroyo regime. Though it might sound passe since the Arroyo has survived the onslaught of calls for her resignation over the Gloria-gate tapes, this writer thinks it is still revelant on the issue of her damaged moral ascendancy over the Filipino people.
Saturday, July 23, 2005
The Adventure of the Man They Called Mariano Torres
His confusion began after less than an hour of marvelous experience of observing the changing of the sky’s hue during the last faltering glow of the sun as it crashed with thundering silence at the horizon. He stared at it with astonished eyes of an adolescent boy terrorized by ecstasy of the anatomy of the opposite sex slowly being stripped of garments before him. He would crane his neck in half-circle, from one end toward the opposite, to contain in one sweep the whole vista of heaven in outburst of colors, only to let out a deep sigh of resignation in the end due to his inability to put logic into it. And, probably, due also on his failure to contain it maddening beauty.
It was only when dusk had set in and the slithering tentacles of darkness crawled with inevitable certainty when he snapped back to his senses, as if waking from a wet dream. He realized he had been squatting on a breakwater, his feet dangling over the rhythmic onslaught of waves against the boulders beneath him. He looked with squinting confused eyes at the boulevard that ran behind him. His head throbbed in pain, like that of a drunkard’s hangover, not knowing what he was doing here or of what circumstances precipitated his being here, void of notion of the preceding night’s eventuality after drowning in the deluge of alcohol.
He must have sleepwalked, he thought. And behind his trail left the debris of memory of his personal history. Though this thought passed like a wisp of wind that had no shadow thus he was more concern on the possibility of having sleepwalked. So his reaction took the form an idiot looking again at his feet to check whether he had his shoes on. He had, as he found out; a black leather pair polished and glinting above the splash of waves. But the realization only aggravated the issue.
He must be dreaming then, so the reason for the indefiniteness of everything within and around him. He paused to think, as if to catch his breath, then stared at his hand that loomed before him, concrete and palpable. It did not change into a misshapen cactus or into an iguana or into wriggling worms. The hand remained the same; the knuckles were covered by dark coarse skin and the nails harboring specks of damped dust. He knew then that success at staring at it was enough proof that he was wide-awake. The remaining recourse for him then, in this hour of complete confusion, was to pray and rely for a providential appararition of an entity to lay the answers on the puzzle right on his lap.
As he deliberated on these issues, the street lamps had been switched on. The throng of promenaders that moved in perpetual flux along the boulevard had grown thicker by then.
He stood up with a blind effort. Standing amid the stream of strollers, he let himself drift without definite destination, guided only by the vague desperate hope of stumbling into lucidity.
He noticed most promenaders ambled without preoccupied thoughts and malicious intentions about the others. They were engulfed in their own stray thoughts caressed by the evening’s gentle sea breeze. Overwhelmed, he walked with adapting their behavior, a tactic he employed to hide the tremor of perturbation of his soul.
Then a group of young people walked towards his direction. They were laughing in their shared camaraderie replete with guffaws that nobody paid attention to except him.
Contrary to the others with whom he found sympathy in the solitude of their universes, his affinity as promenader to this group was a murderous enmity. Their naĂŻve cheerfulness struck him with the monstrosity of alienation, though the venom of this reaction diminished as he observed that a company or a small group joined most of the strollers, something that he failed to notice earlier. It became obvious to him since those who were involved in casual chitchat on the benches along the side of the pavement knew each other and those who strolled had someone whom they talk to as they ambled forward.
A profound terrifying comprehension with so strong its tectonic shifting in his thoughts stirred his guts. The wisdom popped up in him like an introduction to some complex mathematical equation reserved to a handful of reclusive physicists: promenaders almost always knew someone here. The realization freed that he was able to paddle to the surface of his ocean of solipsistic solitude and breathe the fresh idea that it would not be far that someone among this throng knew him.
All he had to do was to make himself as visible as possible to most strollers. He followed this scheme by keeping a modest distance from the strollers in front of him, good enough for those who walked towards his direction to have a good look at him. Though he also had to ignore the push of those behind him who urged 0him to walk faster.
And there he walked for the first time content and happy with a purpose. He would look farther ahead of him, gauging as by what side he could come across the more strollers. He would veer to the left, then center, then right as he walked on. He would scan the faces of the strollers in an attempt to get an eye contact.
He had covered a good distance yet he seemed to have become invisible the more he tried to be noticed. Gaining no favorable result, he was prompted to walk on his toes to create an elevation so that his head would protrude above the crowd and could be seen from any vantage point.
He reached the end of the boulevard, where beyond led to the city proper and the perpetual noise of insomniac establishments and where from this point the promenaders would turned back to continue their walk. Frustrated by his failure, he went on with his walk toward the direction he had come from. Resigned, he was more concerned now on reaching clarity through pondering than being chanced by someone who knew him. He walked with stoop head, contrary to his earlier posture of putting his face before every strollers he crossed path with.
He had been mesmerized by his empty meditation that only led his thoughts groping in the depths of incomprehension on his journey within when somebody patted him from behind. He turned, enough to catch the passing feature of a lanky man, lugging a leather brief case under his arm, who made a quick greetings to him: “Mariano Torres, it’s already time to be with your family.”
He could have had stalled the man, trap him in a short conversation, or make a rejoinder that had the necessity of a reply revealing added information about him. But the man strode in hurried wide steps, and dissolved in the flow of the crowd before him.
Left again in his solitude, he repeated the name by which he had been addressed. Several times the name came out loud from his mouth and heard by passing strollers who would look at him, certain that they had been called and mistaken for another person, and would contort their faces at him in surprise. But he was no longer aware of these. His focus of was the name. For him, it had the nature of a stranger who was introduced to him for the first time. The name adhered to him as misrepresentation of who he thought he really was, and too difficult to fit to himself.
He might as well have had the same confused reaction and contorted faces of the strollers who thought they had been called for somebody. But he could not afford to do that. For, simultaneously it was during these repetitions when the void of not knowing how he was called opened its hole before him. Each invocation supplied the pieces of a dormant puzzle he was not aware of until he got the glimpse of the wide picture.
Then a voice speaking to him cut his thoughts. The crowd of promenaders materialized again from the haze of his vision.
“Mariano, I’m glad to see you here.”
He looked at the person talking to him. It was a lady protected from the cold breeze by a blazer, and panting with suppressed heaving of her bosom.
“It’s the same way for me,” he pretended.
“How’s your family,” the lady said.
“They’re fine.”
“Anyway, I wish I could talk to you longer,” the lady said. “But I have to rush back to the office. I forgot something.”
Then the lady hopped onward opposite his direction, and left on her trail the clatter of her footsteps and a fading remark:
“Just give my regards to Mercedes and the rest of your family.”
The weight of how the world knew him as who was reinforced with greater certainty now. Its gravity rested on the quiet pronouncement that everything that had something to do with the name Mariano Torres all winded down as attribution and definition of him. The name was him.
He could not escape from it now, what more with the sly contraption of fate that he had a family. The first one mentioned he had. And now, the second validated it. “But where are they?” he asked.
He continued his walk clad now with an identity and definition.
By then he was used already to the smell of the liquid taste of ocean salt carried by the breeze along the boulevard. As he progressed, the throng started to thin out, until he reached the part where the brick pavement was cut by the penumbra of a grassy field, and where farther ahead, the expanse of the sea lay with its steady waves in the dark, deep and mysterious.
It was only then when he noticed the cluster of houses across the road. There must have gone the man who greeted him earlier, he thought. Probably, the fine lady lived there too. He crossed the road in dazed intention and motive, for he did not know where to go from here.
He followed without pattern the maze-liked streets, looking furtively at windows that revealed the well-lit interior of houses and the souls residing inside. Along narrow alleys, he listened to the voices carried by the wind that seeped through thin ply-boards walls. On several occasions, he found himself facing dead-ends, only to retreat in embarrassment to where he had entered, avoiding the eyes of loiterers to parry attentions.
During this time of aimless wanderings, each street’s and alley’s blind corner presented the horror of finding himself on the precipice of the end of the earth; pitch black in darkness and bottomless in depth.
Then, someone hollered out his name as he trudged along another unfamiliar street. He found the origin of the voice coming from the bungalow house he had just passed. A woman on the veranda was waving her hand at him. He forced a smile loaded with the intuition that she could be his wife and drew toward her. But the impression lasted until she uttered her rejoinder to his soft statement: “Mercedes.”
“Mercedes is not here,” the woman said. “But mother will be happy to see you.”
The woman then grabbed his arm and led him inside the house where an old, fat woman, hunched like a meditating Buddha on the sofa, welcomed him with a smile of surprise. He tried to reciprocate it with cordiality as genuine as he could display, without the tinge of hesitation that restricted his movements into nervous jerks. Around the heavy presence of the old, fat woman a young man and a girl occupied the space offered by the couch and divan. They looked up from the television set and greeted him.
When the old fat woman stretched her flabby arms at him, he stooped toward her in suspended animation, as if for a century, not knowing whether a hug or a kiss was necessary, but the latter had captured her by then in her arms and supplanted a kiss on his cheek, and told him, as if he were a boy:
“Where the hell have you been? You’re soiled and stinking like a street dog.”
“He’s looking for Mercedes, Mama,” said the woman who had led him.
“Did you two had a fight?” asked the old fat woman.
“No,” he said as the only honest reply he could think of.
The old fat woman said then to the woman:
“Give your brother some fresh clothes. And could someone call Mercedes and tell that Mariano is here.”
to be continued.......
Note: This is partial of the story I'm trying to write now. I hope stray blogger in this site would appreciate it.
Monday, June 13, 2005
Underneath the Tectonic Movements as I Plod Writing a Story
Sunday, June 12, 2005
Busy Days
The Fifth Estate
Friday, June 03, 2005
Today is Sunday
But what he plays in his head is of no great consequence to the world or to the public that passes along the corridor this early morning. Nobody in fact gives the old man a merit of their attention. They must have seen him sitting on the bench, but nothing than a familiar, dull ornamental sight of no value.
So the old man sits still on the bench with his own alcoholic thoughts, drunk with ideas that he himself could no longer instigate the power to put order in the stream of chaos in his reason. A concrete structured philosophy is totally absent, leaving behind his peripatetic mind an invisible trail. Though the old man could feel sporadic pain and twitches in his guts, as he anticipates the millisecond interval of the clock until it ticks, concluding that a second has elapsed.
With difficulty, he tries to navigate his thoughts to separate the days, those that have past and that of this day, yet he cannot distinguish them with difference. For a long time his mind plods on the miasma of identical events, the same well-lighted lenght of the corridor, the white walls, and faces, that only heightens the pang of pain of his confusion.
Nevertheless, a vague realization, like that of a man who wakes up from a dream that he could not define with concrete shape, that what he searches for is the tacit sign that today is a different day, or for the simple act ofr naming it, that he can tell with certainty whawt day is today.
The old man has been still in that position, staring with animal attention at the wall clock, when he catches the cool, feminine voice of the nurse inside the station, bearing in its message the only clue he finds out as what he has been searching for all this time. He hears the nurse tell the doctor on duty that Father Almanzares will arrive late because the good priest would have to drop by first at the sixth floor where one of his relatives had been rushed late last night because of a stroke.
The creases on the old man's countenance grow deeper caused by an electrifying excitement, his aura of destituteness turns into that of a genius who suddenly discovers a resolution and answer to the question he has pursued for a lifetime.
Then the old man stands up, closes his white robe, ties it in a hurry and runs towards the first ward at the end of the corridor, careful that his steps, as his slippers land on the floor, not to create noise, a clown's comical gait with the impression of keeping a great surprise he is about to bestow and reveal to his audience.
As the old man stands at the door of the first ward, where inside several patients fight in their dreams their own solipsism and personal demons, he yells with gusto and glee:
"Today is Sunday. Mass at ten." Then he proceeds to the next ward hollering the same sentence repeatedly.
A nurse cuts the old man's round, pacifies him, explaining to him that he needs to be quiet because the tenants inside the wards are still asleep. But the old man cannot contain his enthusiasm. He looks at the nurse and says to her: "Today is Sunday. Mass at ten," as if the fact is the most marvelous discovery he has ever found. And for the long time that the old man can recall, this is the first time that he felt an absolute happiness.
Wednesday, May 25, 2005
A Short Essay
Unknowingly, these opposite qualities of my younger years would merge to define and mold me as to what I would want myself to be. Probably, the first time I wailed was not for the reason that my lampin soaked in urine made me uncomfortable, but my pristine effort to narrate the story I had dreamt of. While the silence I practiced learning how to wear my slippers foretold of the virtue I would need in order to pursue my goal of self-actualization.
Still the perception of a chaotic universe around me prevails. It remains unchanged by time, though instead of tacit wailings brought by this overwhelming observation, the need to put an order and form to this so as to appease my senses has pushed me to grab a pen and there on the blank sheet of paper I would attempt to construct an ordered universe through words, by which as a baby I wailed due to my inability to perform the task. It is during those first tries that occurred the formation of my dreams.
Though the initial concrete steps I made happened years ago during my grade-school years when instead of staring at the idiot box, like the rest of my family, I would slouch in a corner and devour reading The Reader’s Digest, illustrated Gospel books, and the book Science in Everyday Living.
These efforts, unfortunately, would come to a grinding halt when I reached my secondary schooling, putting more importance on gaining an actual experience on my immediate world by hanging out most of the time with my school buddies.
Tracing the path that I used to tread would only happen during college days. Though by that time, the previous four years that had been wasted wantonly took a heavy toll on my ability to deliver on what I should by then had learned to do: write.
It was a humbling experience then to see my contemporaries composing several pages of essays and articles while I miserably struggled to avoid getting stuck with my first sentence. Like the quiet tot I used to be then, silently discerning which is which among the pair of slippers belonged to what foot, I played low-profile, diligent and with the determination of ten bulls reading contemporary works of master storytellers like those from Latin America who grow dinosaurs from iguanas.
Now, a decade after I left the university, the education continues, excruciatingly slow at some point in time but not as slow as a snail in tranquilizers. That path is rough and a challenging one which I expected from the very start.
Nevertheless, my wailings has metamorphosed into a decent reconstruction of the universe around me with deft combination of words. The wailing I only have to do now is how to find someone who would be willing to pay me work on something I love to do.
Friday, May 20, 2005
A Short Unfinished Autobiography of a Writer in Oblivion
I was in the middle of my college studies then. I would spend most of my time browsing and scanning the books on the shelves of Humanity Section of our library and would read for hours. And usually during the afternoons, I hung around with writers and poets classmates in the campus field, talking about books, stories, writers and about life until the sky changed hues from psychedelic orange to dark blue and the guards had to tell us that the campus was already closed.
My best buddies Alex Capiz and Emmanuel Edu, who shocked our innocent and devout Catholic classmates with his introduction of himself during our first day in class with his audacious pronouncement that he was not a religious person with a religious name, helped me see what fate had destined of what I should be. Alex, as a brotherly act, taught me the lesson of investing in books, an inevitable part of pursuing what the future had stored for us as wannabe writers. They introduced me to the best and basic writers one ought to read: James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Jorge Luis Borges and other slew of masters in literature.
So, it was James Joyce Dubliners that I would devour in solitude, dissecting and studying the narrative mechanisms of his prose. Then came the powerful, simple prose of Hemingway overwhelming me. Though years later, when the English language remained a monster I could not tame, I spotted the cause of the infantilization of my dream short of killing the individual writer in me; it was the wrong way how to work as an apprentice under the tutelage of Hemingway. There hangs a thin line in knowing the distinction between a teacher that would address your needs from the one that could hurt you in the end.
I failed to notice that Hemingway knocked me out in my attempt to assume my fate. Hemingway is the lone writer who can send every writer of this modern time straight on the canvas during the first round. It would take several years before I could shake the beatings that I received and spar again, and undo the wrong lessons I learned.
I should have had taken a serious look on my deficiency at its first apparition so I could have had avoided the trap I walked into when Hemingway overwhelmed me with his prose. When I uttered “I also want to won” in fighting gesture to equal the feat Alex achieved in winning the top prize of Ustetika, University of Santo Tomas’ university-wide literary competition, I should by then realized that basic English grammar was on the frontline of tasks I ought to work on.
I consider this my first failure as a writer. The assumption that I was already a writer by mere wanting to be one but not taking the responsibility that the language with which I would use as the vehicle for my work was as foreign as what Chinese language is to me started the history of my writerly journey straight to the Dark Age.
The exorcism of Hemingway’s ghost from my fledging writing wisdom happened with my introduction to the works of Thomas Pynchon, and later of Italo Calvino and the Beat prose of Jack Kerouac.
The stories I wrote after my acquaintance with these writers, though mediocre and peppered with literary flaws, seemed to have opened the reservoir of creative juice I had been trying to control, and in a way set loose the rein that tied my narrative voice, freeing it to become gregarious, free-flowing, experimental and inhibited.
When I realized I wanted to be a writer, I barely knew how to write, or pour into the blank sheet of paper my thoughts.
I remember during those early days when I struggled learning how to write when I would spend long time staring at the first unfinished sentence, stuck and stammering and groping how to continue. Those days were also trying times to stay awake and avoid succumbing to the languor creeping from my feet and calves upward as the lethargy of intense staring at the white sheet of paper hypnotized me.
Several years later, with nothing to show as a proof that I had become the writer I wanted to be, I stood among young people like myself discussing during that time community organization in our place when I looked passed them, into the darkness of the evening and tried to denounce that I wanted to be one. The illusion of becoming a writer was a product of my association with those who wanted to be one, I said to myself.
A void suddenly swirled centrifugally in my chest, consuming the meaning and purpose of everything around me. I muttered: “So, what I am now?”
Then there came the quick realization, more fix and surer than before, concrete and the only thing I knew with absolute certainty. This is no more an illusion, I said to myself. There is only one thing I know what I want to be. And it is to become a writer.