Runaway

Nonfiction by | February 28, 2016

Slowly, the knob turned followed by the click of the lock. On the fifth of November, a familiar voice shouted, “happy monthsary”, but in front of me was nothing but a wall. When I took a peek at who was on the other side, the first thing I saw was your red leather shoelace, and my reality dawned: my phone never rang and the fifth was never ours to celebrate.

It all started when we swapped messages while I was on a weekend trip with my friends. Nothing was ever completely realized until we went on a date a week later to validate what we felt for each other. After two days, we became a couple. It was the tenth of August.

Fast forward to a month after a slew of cloud nine’s: you affirmed your love to me with the admission of falling for someone else. It happened on your birthday, but the surprise was on me. Anything unexpected catches your attention and just like a boy given a present on Christmas day, I believed great things would still unfold. Truly great it was because immeasurable pain after another plagued the relationship.

Continue reading Runaway

Before

Poetry by | February 28, 2016

Before
we had the words
We had the
letters
To speak,
to devour
To learn,
to earn
Before we
had the world
We had each other
To say those
words
to speak,
to devour
To earn each other
Before we had
Justin Bieber
We had
Shakespeare
To tell us to love ourselves
Away
from vanity
And so before
We had
each other
I had
mine
Before we had the
city lights
We had the
stars
To umbrella us
From the falling
dreams
feelings
And before we forget
Before we have
tomorrow
We had this
night
to speak the
words
to dance with
the city lights
to be with
ourselves
to be with
love
to devour,
to earn,
to learn
Once again
before


Brad is a graduating student of Bachelor of Secondary Education-English at Xavier University-Ateneo de Cagayan.

Looking for Words

Nonfiction by | February 21, 2016

  1. Mother (noun) – Ina

Growing up amidst small hills was a gift flipping pages of books and getting wrapped with orchestras of words each time.  My mother told me once that she placed a souvenir of my first haircut inside an English- Tagalog dictionary, the sole book in the house three years before the world hit the millennium mark. A friend suggested that to her, so the baby would love books.

I remembered Papa in his school uniform, standing by the door. My brothers, Brandon and Patrick, ended their Pokemon card battle. The three of us raced toward him, placed his right hand on our foreheads one by one, and grabbed the bag of candies from his left hand.

“Let us eat first,” Mama said, gazing at us from the kitchen.

 

  1. abide (verb) – umalinsunod

Mama enrolled me at Calinan Central Elementary School since she worked there as a teacher in Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan and Musika, Sining at Edukasyong Pampalakas. The class adviser greeted us with her kindly smile. She placed a Manila paper on the blackboard and asked us to repeat after her, pointing the stick on the first word, “ab-ide”.

“Make sure you’re at the top of the class.” Papa was kind and patient, but he expected much from us in terms of our studies. Despite the hardships he faced , he was an honor student all his academic life in Surigao del Sur. During meals, he would narrate how they needed to wake up at three in the morning, do chores and prepare for school, otherwise they would be forced to kneel on the floor with outstretched arms.  He also shared how fishing helped him with his studies until he became an educator. “You are provided with almost everything. All you have to do is to ask and study,” he would frequently tell us.

When the teacher posted the class ranking, I didn’t know what to say. I was second.

 

  1. page (noun) – pahina

“I’m disappointed. Your mother told me. ” Papa said.

“I’m sorry. I did what I could. But Troy was proficient in all subjects. I kept struggling with Math.”

“But the school sent both of you to the Math contest, right?”

“They did, because they knew you were my father.”

“What’s not to understand?”

“I tried. I was second.”

“You could’ve just asked for my help.”

“You were busy. ”

“Why were you afraid to approach me?”

“I asked you once about a word problem Papa. You taught me how, but I wasn’t able to get it. You got angry.”

“What? You know… all that I did and said was for your own good. I hoped you will see that one day.”

Papa went out of the room. I cried. It wasn’t 65 or 75 but having the grade made me feel like I was falling from a cliff. The fog blurred my sight.  The rocks pierced my back.

I opened the notebook and let fear and sadness scribble themselves. In writing, I never had to ace all tests.

 

  1. sea (noun) – dagat

Summer arrived in a flash. I woke up at seven, drank milk, and walked toward the living room, avoiding to create a sound.

“Good morning Ate,” Patrick said, holding the remote control, eyes glued on the scene where Batman was chasing a thief. I wanted to watch fairytales.  Should I exercise my power as the eldest child?  I thought.

Brandon came out of the bedroom, grabbed the object from Patrick and raised it in the air.  Patrick reached for it but he couldn’t, so he covered the television button instead.

“I want to watch Sineskwela, “ Brandon said.

“You too, stop. Brothers should not quarrel with each other. Give me that,” I said.

“But…”

“I’ll tell Mama and Papa about this.”

Brandon gave me the remote control.  He went back to bed. The show ended, and Patrick decided to play basketball next.

I watched Grimm’s fairytales on television. The episode was based on Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm’s Little Mermaid. Sirenetta exchanged her voice for a pair of legs since she wanted to be with the prince whom she  had rescued from a shipwreck. When the prince took her to the palace, she found out that he was already engaged. In her sorrow, she went to the shore, and there she heard her sisters’ voices, urging her to kill the prince with the dagger so she could return to her old self.  However, love and pity conquered her. She ran and let herself be one with the sea once more. Fairies saw her and they carried her body as they flew to the skies.

Tears formed bubbles around.  I wanted to give Sirenetta a happy ending she deserved.  Writing gave me power to change and create, to make the impossible possible.

 

  1. walk (verb) – maglakad

My parents enrolled me at Daniel R. Aguinaldo National High School under the Engineering and Science Education Program (ESEP). I didn’t know of schools here in the city that offered Writing curriculums, so I obeyed my parents’ wishes. The first few weeks were fine, but learning science required the skill and precision in doing laboratory experiments, which I lacked.

“Class, I will divide you into five groups. You will present a chapter of Ibong Adarna,” the Filipino teacher said. That was the sweetest news I heard for the day. The teacher assigned the last chapters to us the part where Don Juan chose Maria to be his wife and queen of Berbanya.

Writing helped me fare in the program.

 

  1. candle (noun) – kandila

I was confined at Brokenshire Hospital, the only place with vacant rooms during the outbreak of dengue around July 2010.  Every now and then, medical technologists would get blood samples. None of my fingers were spared.

“You were being prayed for. But you should also pray for yourself,” Papa said.

“But who could pray at this state?” I said in a low voice.

The next day, Mama left for home since my brother had a fever also. I was scheduled for a heart examination that afternoon. A medical technologist came into the room two hours earlier than he was supposed to.

“Her platelet count dropped to four and we need to get a blood sample right now.

We said our prayers. The schedule for blood transfusion was cancelled. People never had the ultimate control of their lives, I thought. No one knew when would death break in or knock on the door. I realized I had to make the most of every minute, and make the right choice.

 

  1. rose (noun) – rosas

The classroom seat plan changed by the time I came back to school. I was transferred to the fifth row. Ian, a tall lean guy who I met last year in a spelling bee contest, greeted  all of us at the back.

Antoine de Saint Exupery’s The Little Prince was the next reading material for our English class. The teacher tasked us to read and perform a scene from the excerpt. Christine and Ann already had their partners, so I asked my seatmate Marie instead.

What is essential is invisible to the eye. I pondered on those words. This world needed peace, I thought.

“That was good,” Ian said.  He was a literary writer from the school paper. The way he used mundane objects — the leaves, for instance as metaphors for his thoughts fascinated us.

Ian would share his poems to me every lunch break. That started the bond only the two of us had then.

 

  1. detour (noun) – magditur

Classes in ESEP ended at six in the evening. Almost all jeepneys were filled with passengers. By the time I reached home, my family was already in their bedrooms.

“Are you all right?” Mama asked.

“We were thinking of transferring you to a nearer school.” Papa said.

 

  1. gift (noun) – regalo

Adjusting to a new environment in Davao City Special National High School was not that difficult since I had known some of my classmates there from elementary.

I joined the school publication in Filipino, and worked as a News writer. It paved the way for more writing opportunities for me. My Filipino teacher sent me as the school’s representative for the University of the Philippines Mindanao Communicator’s Guild First Mindanao-wide On-The-Spot-Essay-Writing-Competition in Filipino.

The topic was about our stand on the government’s decision to pardon suspects of the Maguindanao massacre . I said in the essay that I was against it because it was unjust, and I showed how the youth could take part in this issue by raising awareness, for instance. Results came out after a couple of days. I received a medal and a cash prize.  Being the champion made my parents happier, and proud of me once more.  God willed it, I was certain.

 

  1. face (verb)- harapin

“Take up Architecture.” Papa’s words made me think.  I sketched a little but I still doubted whether I could do it.  I feared contradicting him.

They enrolled me at the University of the Philippines Mindanao. From a distance, the building looked like an unfolded scroll. This was the start of my new journey  the road to the future.

Being in the Architecture program made me feel like I was a fish out of the water. Orthographic projections, for instance, tormented me. Analyzing how a three-dimensional object’s top, front and side view would look like in two-dimension was hard for me.  The rest of my classmates were receiving A+s in their plates. My usual grades were B-s.

 

  1. zone (noun)- sona

It was about seven in the evening when I came home. The T-square, triangles and tracing papers waited for me. I stared at the  Bachelor’s pad plan for almost an hour. Perhaps I could add spaces like a bar or a library. I was crying inside. I lifted the technical pen and sketched a zoning diagram — similar to an outline of a piece.

Mama entered the room, bringing a cup of hot chocolate, biscuits, and storybooks. She placed these on the table by the bed.  The warmth of her palm soothed my shoulders.

“You should rest.”

“I just have to finish this.”

“Okay then. Please read this in your free time and write additional questions. I will give this as an activity to my pupils.”

I left the tracing paper by itself. I picked up the book Why the Town Is Sleepy. Reading it reminded me who I was, what I could and could not do.

 

  1. shift (noun) – turno

I gathered my courage and opened the door to my parent’s room. My chest was pounding. Mama was lying in bed, watching a television show.

“Mama, I have something to tell you. ”

“Yes?”

“Ma, you have seen the days when I am almost sleepless. I cannot draft fast and accurately at the same time. I want to shift.”

“You are already there. Your father would not want you to do that. Try to work faster, do not mind the pressure.”

“I can’t. I tried.”

“Did they fail you?”

“I did in Math. Almost in Drafting.”

“Why would you give up? All courses are difficult.”

“I know Ma and it seems harder for me because I lack the skills.”

“Did they kick you out?”

“No, Ma.”

“The expenses.”

“I cannot go on like this”

“What course are you planning to shift to?”

“Creative Writing.”

“I’ll tell your father about that.”

 

  1. voice (noun) – boses

“Why?” Papa asked.

“I’m sorry Papa. I did what I could.”

“I’m sorry I did not ask you.”

“I’m sorry I did not tell you. I was afraid to go against you.”

He embraced me tight. I felt I was a young girl once again.

 

  1. force (noun) – pwersa

I remembered making Newton’s cradle for our final project in Integrated Science in my first year in highschool. I asked Papa to buy me a piece of styrofoam and string. I picked up thin pieces of wood in the backyard and borrowed marbles from my brothers.

I attached the thread of the string on the hook at the top of the marble. Then, I glued it on the wooden horizontal bars, and placed it on the styrofoam. I pulled the first string and released it. The last ball was supposed to move but it did not. For several hours, I modified the length of the string and tried until the last ball swung, moving at least an inch. “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction,” Isaac Newton once said. The cradle taught me that one’s decisions lead to more of it, pulling and then releasing three balls meant that three balls would swing forward in return.

 

  1. flow (verb) – dumaloy

Carlos Angeles’s “Gabu” was one of the literary works that struck me most.  The poem depicted an image of a wave coming back to the sea as soon as it reached the shore. It reminded me of the moments when I had to return to where I came from, and to face, examine, and conquer the pains of the past, in order to find purpose in this life, and to move forward.


Joanna Paula M. Cagape majors in creative writing at the University of the Philippines Mindanao.

Asteroid B-329

Nonfiction by | February 13, 2016

I

“And I saw a most extraordinary small person,
who stood there examining me with great seriousness.”

When I was younger, I came upon a small book in one those huge plastic boxes my mother used for storage. It was when my mother called for a general cleaning of the house. In the morning we pulled all the boxes from under the sofas, moved the chairs aside for the sweeping, waxed the floor, then took a break after lunch. The rest of the afternoon was lazy; my mother retired to her room, as did my Ate, who was the only one of my siblings who was in the house that day. My father, my brother and my sister were out. I picked through the storage boxes, searching for nothing in particular, just anything that would pique my interest. And then I found the book. It was thin, small, with messy, child-like illustrations. There was what looked like a hat, a sheep, a rose, and more importantly, a boy, alone on a small rocky planet.

The book belonged to my Ate, who told me, when I asked about it, that it was something I wouldn’t understand at my age, that it was ‘philosophical’. It was the word that made me think twice upon reading it. Words like that were heavy—incomprehensible, and adult. I tried to take her advice. But eventually, I found myself immersed in the book, lying on the abaca chair in the sala, dust floating in the air, exposed, as the afternoon light poured in from the open jalousies.

 

II

“I admire you,” said the little prince, shrugging his shoulders slightly,
“but what is there in that to interest you so much?”

The first story I ever wrote was a fruit of an envious me.  When I was ten years old, my seat mate in school wrote a story, about a gothic girl who started dating this rich, good-looking guy. The most vivid scene I remember was the first date, held in a romantic restaurant named Virgo.

It was not the story really that enticed me to start writing my own; it was because of the restaurants’ name, how it fit so well, how someone would make use of a zodiac sign’s classic  name to match the seemingly sophisticated image of a restaurant.

I wanted to create my own Virgo, wanted to name something that would sound, and feel so accurate to what I would create. That night, I started writing my own story. It was romantic still, but fantastic, largely based on an online anime-role playing game my Ate and I were playing at that time. The first chapter was hot among my female classmates—they told me how kilig it was, how good, and their excited squeals and spasms inspired me to write more. And I did.

Meanwhile, this seat mate of mine started spreading rumors of how unoriginal I was for copying what she had started. I never asked her why. I merely ignored her, and avoided speaking with her, until one day she tried back-stabbing me with a purposefully elevated volume in the school gymnasium, for everyone, including me, to hear. When we marched back into the classroom, I slammed my P.E notebook down on my armchair, faced her and told her what a bitch she was. Everyone in the classroom stopped to watch the show. I cried, like I usually do when I’m uncontrollably angry, and spoke every word through a yell.

“KA-BITCH MO GUD TALAGA!”

She looked surprised with my outburst, and apologized to put the issue to rest and save her from my embarrassing fit.

“Lagi, lagi sorry na. Jeez.”

She put it an amused demeanor, however, like it was nothing, and she was above it all.

The next day, we were civil. We did not speak to each other as we used to. Soon the seating plan was rearranged, grade five was concluded, and the next year, we were sections apart.

My story did not survive as well. Soon I came upon a dead end; I could not think of anything else to add, to keep the momentum of romance going, so I stopped. My classmates soon forgot about it as well, and the story dissipated into memory.

 

III

“…I have serious reason to believe that the planet
from which the little prince came is the asteroid B-612.”

Our house was not that big; there were three rooms, two bedrooms and a joint kitchen and sala. It didn’t give much space for playing, really. But I was small, and thin. Every nook and cranny in the house—the underside of tables, inside closets, under chairs—was big enough for me. The old zipper-locked closet we had in our bedroom used be my secret base, when I pretended to be a robo-cop with laser guns. In the space our sala had to offer, I ran around, riding dragons, doing impromptu dialogues to my enemies before I blast them to death. I make a special effort, however, to keep in mind that people don’t always win to keep it realistic. So from time to time, I do a dramatic death, my imaginary allies mourning their friend, lost to the hands of Lady Death.

This behavior—my “hyperactivity” as my mother would put it, in addition to my frequent interaction with invisible friends—led my parents to think I had ADHD. My Ate, the eldest in the family, and my brother after her, never acted like I did. My little sister was the closest I had to an accomplice in delving into the imagination, although her main interest was on playing house, and barbie. She indulged my crazy ventures, and in return, I played with her and her barbie dolls. Our play was not entirely confined to her idea of playing doll, though—I stripped her dolls naked, made them do fighting stunts, pretending they were Charlie’s Angels.

This feminine play, and my flamboyant attitude as a child, did not make my father happy. Once, he tried scaring me into becoming a “man”, or at least to his idea of it. It happened one afternoon, when I was playing superheroes with my sister in the bedroom. Fists clenched and hands outstretched, we screamed their names at the top our lungs.

“SUPERMAN, SUPERMAN!”

“HAWKGIRL, HAWKGIRL!”

“BATMAN, BATMAN!”

We took our play to the sala, our voices resounding inside the house. The door to my parents’ bedroom eventually opened, and out came my father, wearing his classic wife-beater, and a pair of shorts. By that time, I had in my lips, the name of the most prominent hero in Philippine TV:

“DARNA, DARNA!”

I reverted to yelling “BATMAN,” at the sight of him but the attempt was too late. He took me by my shoulders, shook me and said, “ Wala akong anak na bakla! Magpalalaki ka kung ayaw mong palayasin kita!”

A decent, yet naïve person would ask, how could anyone say such thing to a child? And a smart, educated answer would be, in this country, how couldn’t they?

At least, despite the fact that my parents couldn’t relate to how my mind works, they never really made it a problem, and just accepted the fact I was different. This however they just can’t seem to take.

 

IV

“You know—one loves the sunset, when one is so sad.”

I grew up scared. I had this fear in my head that just kept on growing and growing. By high school, my imagined universes stopped existing, at least, outside the house. If my parents could not understand, how could I expect any one else to?

Sophomore year, I was in transition. I conformed to the majority’s idea of a “grown up” little by little. Hair thick with styling wax, khakis customized to fit (no baggies allowed). I tried to find an identity that was acceptable, invisible, an identity that didn’t demand any attention, positive or negative. I needed to be in the background of things.

I knew I did a good job of it when one of my female acquaintances told me I was a happy-go-lucky kind of guy. And in retrospect, I was. I make it a point to smile as much as possible, to act like I’m riding along high school on a rainbow unicorn. Laughing was my thing, everyone knew, and ironically, it was the only thing that felt real.

I remember  my classmates threw jokes at me in turns, just to see how low my standards were for humor. He asked me, “Anong fish ang palaging dumidikit?”

The  joke was not even finished yet, but I was already chuckling by myself. I shrugged, and he brought down the punchline:

“Eh di, fish pilit!”

I enjoyed that fleeting pleasure, and laughed myself to tears.

 

V

“Don’t linger like this. You have decided to go away. Now go!”
For she did not want him to see her crying. She was such a proud flower…

I stopped playing with my friends in school. That had to go, if I wanted to blend in. I stopped picking up thin branches from the field and waving them, yelling spells from Harry Potter. I stopped doing scavenger hunts looking for invisible monsters, and stopped chasing cats. Instead, I channeled all those imaginative energy into something else.

Pre-school years, I was awarded Best in Drawing. I remember what got me that award was a drawing of a boy with uneven arms, one thin, and the other as thick as a tree. It was an ugly drawing, but I didn’t know that. I came up that stage and received that paper medal with pride. That award led me to think I had talent—sketching, painting, and the like.

 

I based my future on that. I would become an artist of some kind, a painter, or a landscape architect, designing gardens and backyards (buildings were too dull—plants and flowers seemed more interesting; I even thought of becoming a botanist).

All those adventures I couldn’t act out, all the play I repressed, I put them all into paper. And by that, I mean sketching comics; a teenage boy living in a world where superhuman powers were normal, a world with witches distinguished by the animals they turn into, or just a re-imagination of Digimon, giving more emphasis on the characters I favored. The attempt lasted for a long while, but even after successfully finishing a whole scene, I was never really satisfied. They never really seemed alive to me, despite all those lines, and shadings. That, and there was also the fact that my sketches were not entirely great. I believed I was good because everyone else in high school seemed worse.

I kept working on it, telling myself that after two years, I would be so much better than I was. One day, I decided to put the pencil down and told myself, this is hopeless. From time to time, I would still sketch a scene I think is worth sketching–an imagined sunset view of an ocean, a thick old tree overlooking a quiet creek, or a desolate desert under a starry night sky–and for a moment, I would convince myself all over again that I could sketch. And I honestly could…just not stories.

Throughout high school, I attempted writing novels in unused notebooks. It was on my third year when I actually finished one, a story about a boy who died, and woke up in a morgue, only to find out that he was resurrected by a princess from an another dimension. I planned it to be the first installation to my trilogy, inspired by an anime called Kaibutso Oujo, or Princess Resurrection. But by college, I decided to discard the project—I realized, after all the seminars our professors urged us to attend, what I wrote was pretty much plagiarized.

But by then, I had already written several other short stories, and I made sure they were products out of my own head. Writing, I discovered thanks to that seat mate of mine, isn’t far from sketching. When I write, I still sketch, I still shade, and erase, only I don’t deal with lines and figures—I deal with words. The best thing about that is, I think, that when I write, I find mobility, that movement I never found in sketching. The images, the people I sketch using the medium of language, move in sync with the flow of the words I write. It was the perfect channel, the perfect manifestation of the child-like eccentricity everyone seemed so bothered of.

 

VI

“When the little prince arrive on the Earth,
 he was very surprised not to see other people.”

I cried often as a child, but never because of a book. I did not know books were capable of making readers cry when I found myself silently sobbing in the sala, sitting on the woven abaca seat that one afternoon. I was confused.  How could a book make me feel so sad? I got my answer as I grew older, when books became my bread, and writing my goal.

Being alone is a constant upon living. Whether you are eccentric, or different. Whether you assimilate yourself into that odd concept of “growing up”, whether you are rich or poor, girl or boy, you will always be in your own planet, with your volcanoes and your own rose.

It was from that learning that I understood what writing really is. It is more than mere escapism. Wounded as we are, we tend to crawl under the protection of the literature, looking for solace, for signs that we aren’t alone in feeling lonely. From there we choose; do we hide behind the veiled truths of fantasy, as we fester in fear of confronting the demons that keep us from removing our masks? Or do we mend ourselves, use literature as armor and arms, instead of a bunker to hide behind?

I write because I am different, because I have a story to tell. But at the same time, I am different because I write. The two feed off each other like a snake eating its own tail. These things has set me apart from my family, my friends, preventing them to fully understand me, or even accept me. But at the same time, it is my redemption. One day I will write something that will move them the way the little prince’s story moved me. And one day, they will understand.


Nero Oleta Fulgar is taking up BA English (Creative Writing) at UP Mindanao.

Pabitin

Poetry by | February 13, 2016

Between earth and sky,
I am a small child.
I cannot reach the skies.
I see clouds of cotton candy,
crispy snacks, stuff toys
and bags of candies
hanging near the ceiling
which I try to grab,
along with other children.
It is a silly game of catch:
everytime the frame is lowered
a little above our heads
only to be lifted again
while we dance around in circles.
I push myself to heights,
but the things I want
are taken by other hands.
(The cord puller should give in
to my demands!)
I wish father is here to carry me
in his strong arms, to a height
where I could simply reach
for the things left
in the wooden lattice-framed ceiling.
If I can’t get
a single snack, stuff toy
or cotton candy
I would leave
to where I am free to eat
the ripe fruits I can reach
from my favorite guava tree.


Luisa Pasilan is finishing her thesis, a collection of poems, to complete a BA English (Creative Writing) at UP Mindanao.

Cagayan de Oro Writers Group Call for Applications

Events by | February 7, 2016

The Nagkahiusang Magsusulat sa Cagayan de Oro (NAGMAC), a community of literary writers and literature enthusiasts that aims to revitalize the local literary scene, is now open for applications. Applicant must be a native of Northern Mindanao and/or currently based in the region.

Minimum qualifications:
(1) Willingness and availability to go to official activities such as spoken word events, writing workshops, etc.
(2) Sincere passion for and interest in writing and regional literature
(3) Openness to sharing and learning from community fellows, mentors, and invited speakers
(4) High effort and quality of outputs in workshops and others

Membership categories:
(1) Category A – writers who have publication history and have received fellowships from regional and/or national writers workshops organized by reputed writing centers and institutes
(2) Category B – writers whose works have already been published in literary anthologies, journals, and books
(3) Category C – beginning writers
(4) Category D – general members
(Please see application form for required manuscripts to be submitted per category.)

Please download the application form via https://goo.gl/mz9jm8. Fill out, print, and enclose it in a short brown envelope together with the required manuscripts. Hand-deliver it (and the Php 200 registration fee) to our secretariat during or after the spoken word event on 12 February, 6 to 9 PM, at Chingkee Tea.

Membership perks include a chance to be mentored by established local writers, regular peer critiquing of literary outputs, first-hand information on the latest creative writing opportunities (regional, national, and international writers workshops, literary contests, among others), book exchange, discounts on spoken word events, and merchandise.

Tequila Sunrise

Fiction by | February 6, 2016

“Wa ko kasabot sa akong gibati,” akong gihunhong sa akong kaugalingon. Naglingkod ko sa tunga-tunga sa simbahan sa San Pedro. Wala kaayo ko gasimba o unsa. Wala gani ko naghunahuna nga muadto diria apan kalit ra ko nilingkod ug nagtan-aw sa mga pagbag-o sa sulod sa simbahan. Wa ko kasabot sa akong gibati. Ako na usab nahunahunaan. Nagtutok nalang ko sa suga sa luyo sa krus sa may altar. Ako nalang gilingaw akong kaugalingon sa kaanyag sa altar aron modugay akong paglingkod. Wala man pod koy laing gibuhat.

Lipay ba ko sa akong kinabuhi? Hangtod karon di nako mahunahunaan kon unsa ko kasuwerte isip usa ka indibidwal. Di man maingon nga pangit ko ug dili gyod kaayo ko hitsuraan. Wala man kaayo ko galisod sa kwarta kay makapangita man gyod ko ug paagi para makakuha ug ikagasto sa mga kinahanglanon nako. Utukan ko, kabalo ko. Madiskarte, alangan. Kontento? Dili. “Ang tao dili gyod makuntento,” ingon sa pari sa atubangan. Wa na nako mabantayi nga ning-apil na ko sa misa. Ug kay kabalo naman ko nga madugayan pa ni, ug wala koy interes mangalawat, nitindog ko ug nilakaw. Sakmit dayon sa cellphone aron ingnun naay nanawag. Para dili kayo ulaw.

Wa gihapon ko kasabot sa akong gibati. Naguol ko sa usa ka butang nga wala ko kabalo. Maayo nalang nakasabot ko gamay nga naguol ko. Naa koy sugdan sa paghunahuna unya. Ningbaktas napud ko nga walay destinasyon. Di ko sigurado asa ko padulong, basta magbaktas lang ko. “Sir, ikaw ra o naa kay kauban?” pangutana sa lalaki atubangan sa usa ka imnanan. Sosyalon siya nga imnanan sa Rizal. Kanang mahal ang ilimnun. Ningsulod ra ko dayon nga wala gitubag ang lalaki ug ningdiretso sa mismong bar. Gihatagan dayon ko og baso nga naay ice ug gipuno ni ug murag Tanduay pero dili mao ang humot. “Para sa imong bug-at nga gihunahuna sir. Sa imong kaguol. Libre nang whiskey sir basta mo-order pa ka og laing cocktails.” Ningtando ra ko ug ningisi. Plastic kaayo nga ngisi, kay kabalo ko nga wala ko nalipay karon. Ningtan-aw ra ko sa gipasalida sa ilang TV. Kataw-anan dapat siya nga salida apan wala jud ko nakangisi sa tanang pakatawa o panghitabo. Usa ka whiskey ug grape margarita na ko. Wala man nuon koy nahunahuna nga solusyon, o kinahanglan ba gyod ni sulusyonan nga kaguol. Ningbayad na ko og 300, sobra kaysa sa akong mga nainom, wa pay apil ang libreng whiskey. “Sir salamat sa sobra nga tip, huwat ra sir hatagan ta ka og pantiwas.” Nagandam siya ug duha ka shot glass ug nagduwa na sa iyang mga gamit. Gihatagan ko niya ug shot sa Daquiri daw. “Pampatulog sir, cheers.” Gisabyan ko niya og shot ato. Ningisi ra ko pagkahuman. Di na siya plastic. Ninglakaw nasad ko, apan karon kahibalo ko nga naa koy gusto adtuan.

 

Alas otso na katong nakasakay ko og barge padulong Samal. Ningpalit sa ko ug isa ka kaha nga sigarilyo sa Convi didto sa pantalan, human nisakay dayon kog habal-habal diretso sa may resort sa San Remigio. Pag-abot didto kay alas nuybe na kapin. Kasiplat kog usa ka motor didto sa may parking; basig panag-iya kini sa tag-iya o tigbantay didto. Mahuman og bayad sa entrance nilingkod ko dayon sa may lingkuranan atbang sa dagat ug nagsindi og yosi.

“Ikaw ra usa?”

Nalagpot ang yosi sa akong kakurat. Ningtando nalang ko ug nakatawa. Wa ko kasabot apan nahanaw kadali ang bug-at sa akong dughan. “Sorry brad,” ingon niya, apan nakatawa pod siya sa akonng kakurat. “Problemado ka no? Ikaw ra man isa.”

Ningtando ko utro ug nagdagkot usab og yosi. Ninglakaw siya dayon samtang gibilin ang cellphone sa akong tapad. Pagbalik niya kay nagdala siya og icebox. Dala kuha sa usa ka botelya sa Tequila. “Para sa atong mga problema ug aron mostorya ka, karon kay magkauban naman gyod tang duha, mag-inom ug storya nalang ta e.”

Nagstorya mi sa among mga problema. Nangatik ra ko sa tibuok panahon nagstorya mi. Wala man pud god ko kabalo unsa gyud akong problema. Mahuman sa problema kay puro na kinabuhi namong duha among giistoryahan. Namakak nasad ko. Mahumag hisgot kabahin sa among kinabuhi kay mga politiko nasad among naistoryahan, unya ang ideyolohiya sa NPA, ug ang relihiyon. Maayo nalang halos pareho ra ming duha ug tan-aw sa maong mga butang. Nahurot na namo ang sulod sa botelya apan murag wala gyod mi nahubog ato. Nagyosi nalang ming duha ug gihuwat ang paggawas sa adlaw. Gugma na among nastoryahan ato.

“Naa koy nabasahan ba. Kabalo ka ang halok daw bug-at na og pasabot, dili na siya palami lang, o para sa gugma lang. Usahay makahipos na sa mga butang nga kun-ot, sama sa kinabuhi,” ingon niya sako dungan tan-aw sa nagabag-o nga langit.

Ningtando ra ko kay hanap sa ako iya ginapasabot. Naglutaw na guro akong hunahuna tungod sa yosi, ilimnon, ug pinulaw namo. Katpng nakit-an na namo nga naa nay hayag sa kapunawpunawan, ningtindog ko ug niadto dapit sa may tubig. Kanang igo ra maigo sa dagat ako tiil kada bagnos ani sa baybay. Ningsabay siya.

Nitindog mi didto hangtod mihayag na gypd ang langit.

“Bakakon kayo ka.”

Nakalingi ko ug nakuratan sa iyang pag-ingon ato.

“Tan-awa, namakak gyud ka.”

Gigunitan niya akong kamot ug gibira ko kalit hangtod duol na kaayo amo mga nawong.

“Mokun-ot man god imong agtang inig mangatik ka.”

Gihalukan ko dayon niya ug wala ko kasabot ngano pod nga nibalos ko. Lami siya m-halok, ug wala ko namakak sa pagbalos sa iyang halok. Ningisi siya ug diretsong nilakaw padung sa among gamit, samtang ako nagpabiling gabarog.

“Bakakon pod ka. Wala may nahipos sa mga kun-ot sa akong kinabuhi,” akong ingon sa iya.

“Wala ko namakak. Tan-awa, taod-taod mahipos na nang kun-ot sa imung agtang.”

Nakangisi ko sa iyang giingon. Kanang tinood na ngisi. Samtang gasaka ang adlaw sa hilayong dapit, nawala akong kaguol. Bakakon lage siya, dungan kun-ot sa akong aping.


Reyl is a 5th year BS Architecture student from University of the Philippines Mindanao