Archive for March, 2009

h1

In A Planet Far, Far Away…

March 22, 2009

There was once a place far, far away deep into the milkiness of the Milky Way galaxy. There was a planet dancing on the rings of the stars. The sun shone brightly everyday on this beautiful planet. The trees were lit with a bright green and yellow sun drops. The land was of a deep brown and filled with lush flora that swayed with the music of the birds. The sea was of a dark blue rich with fishes of all kinds. The wind blew in a breeze mixed with hot and cold molecules. The weather was just right ‘like living on Earth’ as one of the gods would say.

The inhabitants wore majestic robes that resembled the hues of the rainbow. The men and women were handsome and beautiful, the children were full of vigor and cheer. Everyone was in harmony with creation, their rhythmic movements chimed with the melody of the wind. There was food enough for everyone, no one was hungry. There was no pain and death, it was a land that time forgot. When it was time to pass, the lolo’s and the lola’s simply combined with the spirits of the trees and flowers. No one would notice they had left because they would be replaced by newborn babies every time. No one bothered to ask why, it was just the way things were like how white or black matches well with everything.

Everyone was assigned a task to follow. All the men were tasked to hunt for food, farm the land, take care of the animals, wash the dishes, wash the clothes, send the clothes to the dry cleaners, iron them afterwards, take the kids to school bring them home later, discipline the kids, look manly everytime the missus would arrive, and the list would go on and on, it took four rolls of toilet paper looking scrolls to get the list done. In short the man did everything.

On the other hand all the women took care of the kids and were assigned to look beautiful—which was a task in itself. The children were separated from the girls and the boys. The girls had everyday voice lessons so they can practice telling their future husbands what to do and tell them to tell them how beautiful they are all the time. The little boys had guided rough housing and lessons in poetry. They also had a few lessons in showing off in front of the mirror. An instructor would teach them the art of ‘showing off in front of a mirror.’ They would all suck in their bellies and flex their muscles in front of the mirror. The instructor would shout ‘I’m the handsomest man in the U-N-I-V-E-R-S-E!’ and all the little boys would say the same thing while looking in front of the mirror and flexing their muscles.

The skills of hunting and farming were engraved upon each boy like it was the very reason they had existed—which was actually true other than washing the dishes, washing the clothes, telling the missus she’s beautiful…Well you get the picture. Moving the story along, each boy was told that to act manly one should always pick a fight with another boy who was smaller than them or who had a funny green nose. All these rules and regulations were placed in a little blue handbook called “Book of Rules” a total lack of imagination on the part of its writers. Every family had this book under their pillows and over their heads.

No one bothered to ask why they were doing these things and why everyone was designated a task that was strictly followed like an ant’s training regiment under a VERY strict queen. They were just used to it since they’ve been following these rules for a long time. They were happy and satisfied with the way things were.

* * *

Then one day the gods were really mad, they were arguing in the skies up above. Well actually it was just between two of them but it was like a full scale war that involved the entire universe. They were married, which pretty much explains everything. Mr. god came home rather late into the night, he was out with his old friends playing bridge again. This was hard to do since they were all blind and no one knew how to read braille. They just went about chucking cards at each other till the opposing player raised a white flag and said surrender. Mrs. god was really mad as in M-A-D mad. She wanted to scream at him till his hair fell off and his face turn powder white, but she couldn’t because she was deaf-mute. The only thing you could see were the letters of what she wanted to say but this didn’t help either since Mr. god was blind in the first place. The letters were in all CAPS and had the colors of the rainbow. But you wouldn’t want to know what she was saying it wasn’t very nice it was something like this #@$#@%##@%(*&*^. It started with an ‘F’ and ended with an ‘R’ it sounded like father.

The neighbours Ms. Know-It-All and Mr. Disciplinarian got angry with the husband and wife saying that they don’t deserve to be in the village of the gods. They were always arguing they would say, but in fact all the gods quarelled who was to be worshipped the most by the people. The god with the most believers lived in the highest peak of Mt. Pridea and sat on a big throne that looked like a toilet bowl and had rolls of crepe paper wrapped around them as a robe. It didn’t matter to them that they looked like idiots it was the title and the bragging rights that came along with it was important to them.

Ms. Know-It-All and Mr. Disciplinarian planned to be rid of the blind and deaf-mute husband & wife. They concocted evil potions with the tiger skin rug and puppy dog tails. They took hairs from their nostrils, a door knob, a piece of raw meat which was redder than red, and a pair of teddy bear hands. After a few days they created a a little boy who was four feet tall and weighed sixty pounds. The little boy asked a lot of questions that completely annoyed the conspiring scoundrels. His big beady eyes darted words and questions before he finished asking the first one. When he opened his mouth the air molecules magically formed letters and words then turned into sentences that ran right to the ears of the listeners.

The duo of Ms. Know-It-All and Mr. Disciplinarian couldn’t wait to see the expression on Mr. and Mrs. god’s faces. They could all ready imagine the total anarchy this little boy would cause. If the whole universe were at war in their house, this boy would simply bombard them with so many questions that can eradicate all life forms except cockroaches of course.

One day the little boy was in his usual talkative mode, Mr. Disciplinarian wanted to teach him a lesson by throwing a rubber ball at him to shut him up. He threw the ball so hard when it missed it hit the wall and bounced back right at him and hit him clean on the nose. He screamed JESUS CHRIST! My nose uck, oh no! there’s blooddddd. Ms. Know-It-All suddenly had a light bulb turned on over her head. “That’s it!” she said triumphantly. “What? You found some ice?” Mr. Disciplinarian asked. “No! that’s what we’ll call him,” she said. “Call him ice?”

“We’ll call him — Bob!” she said with an evil glare in her eyes.

* * *

Bob was gagged and put in a basket right outside the gods’ place. The connivers rung the doorbell and scrammed as fast as their winged feet could take them. The little boy was such an eyesore in that basket one would get sore eyes just by looking at him. His arms stuck out the baby clothes he was wearing, his legs were far too big for the basket, and his blanket barely covered his midsection. Mr. god clumsily opened the door and looked for who was ringing, he tripped over the flinging feet of Bob and landed on his face on the lawn. Mrs. god rushed outside to berate her husband’s clumsiness but she saw little Bob struggling to break free from the gag and very small baby clothes. The inner mother in her took him in and left Mr. god outside. Mr. god had to climb through the window to get back in the house. Once Mrs. god took the gag out, Bob asked a lot of questions that disturbed the ever so quiet Mrs. god. Bob asked why she was dressed in an all white robe instead of a mix of blue and white which looked better. He the turned to the way the furniture was arranged before the words formed in Mrs. god’s mouth for an answer written in a thought bubble. He went to ask why they were always arguing but Mrs. god couldn’t say anything and Mr. god couldn’t show him why.

His questions frequently irritated the married couple because they couldn’t explain anything to him. One day when he was asleep they put him in a metal spaceship which they conveniently bought at a neabry spaceship dealer. It looked like an egg but it was silver plated and had rocket boosters. Even in his sleep little Bob still talked and asked questions, Mr. and Mrs. god were happy to be rid of him. They set the coordinates on the machine and watch it blast off with a big B-O-O-M. The red embers left an indelible mark on their skin that was toasted a golden brown because they stood too close to the launch.

* * *

The aircraft pierced through the Milky Way galaxy and made a detour through a traffic of meteors and stars. The spaceship made its usual stop at the corner blackhole so that the invading aliens can make a light speed trip to another dimension. It landed on the planet far, far away. It wasn’t much of a landing it looked like an egg falling head on splatting on the ground with the yolk spilling out only the red was left behind in outer space.

The inhabitants of the planet far, far away were startled to see a falling star which was different from their daily routine. They rushed head-on to where the star crashed and for no reason they were compelled to bring farm animals and gifts with them on their journey. A god appeared to them in an apparition and told them to bring a gag and lots of bottled water. The god said ‘YOU SHALT NEED THOU BOTTLED WATER AND GAGGGGG….’ And disappeared into the moonshine.

They arrived at the scene of the crash which conveniently happened near a stack of hay and a manger. The inhabitans of a planet far, far away stood aghast (more of a person who has to go the bathroom and hasn’t been there for two weeks) at what they saw. Little Bob finally awoke and the first thing he said was ‘does anybody have a bottled water?’ All of them reached out their hands and handed him a bottled water. They were amazed at how such a small boy could hold such command over them. They gave their gifts and offered their farm animals. The boy gave them a weird look like when a color blind man wears an orange shirt with green pants to a date. Everyone held their breath once the boy opened his mouth to say something.

“Who are you?” the boy said.

The inhabitants had a startled look on their face because they don’t know what a question was cause no one asked any. They wondered what that symbol meant (?) after they boy uttered those words.

“What are you doing here?” He said again. Before anyone reacted one of the inhabitants stuck the gag in his mouth to shut him up. A man with a grisly white beard, very typical of the wise man mold, said that it was written in the Book of Rules that a Bob would come from the heavens to ask a lot of questions and bother everyone’s brains off. So it was settled, since no one bothered to ask why it was written and because a man with a beard said so, they took Bob back to their village.

* * *

They knew Bob was different from them and Bob knew it too. Bob asked a lot of questions that the inhabitans of a planet far, far away never asked. He asked why men and women were separated and given specific tasks when both could just help each other out. He pestered the instructors on why little boys had to flex their muscles in front of the mirror and why they had to pick on the little fellas and people with green noses. He was often spotted helping the men in their chores and helping the women with the kids. He went back and forth between famrs and houses. He asked the men why they put up being pushed around and doing everything while the women sat at home and just looked pretty. He asked the women why they just stayed at home when they could help the men in their work and why they always had to put on too much make up that made them look REALLY OLD. He started asking why the old people suddenly disappeared and why know one bothered to even notice. “It must be really lonely dying alone…” Bob said. From then on, people didn’t want to die and feeling alone and left behind, they were very careful of being hurt and hurting others. Little Bob went from place to place carrying his huge head and beady eyes on his sixty pound frame. He looked like a flying egg that grew legs in its sleep while the wind carried him to his destination.

On top of being brutally annoying Little Bob was brutally honest. He told some of the women they had too much make up that they looked like they were going to be buried the next day. And told some of the men they were scrawny and looked like they weren’t eating. In plain english he said they were girly and on a side note this came from a boy who stood four feet tall and weighed sixty pounds. At first the inhabitants were dumbfounded by Bob’s different ways and totally honest comments they didn’t know what to think of it. The truth was so much harder to understand than when someone gave them compliments most of the time. He even questioned the authority of the white bearded man and why the man always followed the Book of Rules to the letter. He also badgered him about his eye-patch even if he wasn’t blind in the first place.

They were so used to following their old ways that Bob seemed foreign to them which was true in the first place but that’s besides the point. They couldn’t answer all his questions and sometimes they didn’t even understand the questions he was asking. Bob left them more confused than they were before he landed on their planet. They felt all sorts of emotions in them that weren’t there before. They didn’t even know what emotions were till Bob came along with all his questions.

The inhabitants of a planet far, far away got used to the questions and started asking questions themselves. They shared their work load amongst the women and the men and even the kids started helping. The old folks were taken cared of. Some of them were so happy the men started wearing girls’ clothes and some of the women started wearing men’s clothes. It seemed to them that all of their questions were finally answered and nothing new came about. The happiness of emotions and the new songs of the birds gave them life and color.

Then one day Bob stopped asking questions his usual annoying rants and raves disappeared. There were no more words dancing across his lips but he still had a smile on his face a kind of smile that would make granny do the swing. His silence bothered some of the inhabitants and the weird signs he put up near his house. One particular sign was (‘turn left to reach Bob’s house’) the inhabitants were left scratching their heads after looking at the sign. They asked Bob for an answer but all they got was silence and a weird smile that could bring back the dead. All questioned Bob about that sign outside his house except one. It was a fat man who couldn’t read or write and desperately needed to go to the bathroom he said he was going to drop a big one. No one bothered to tell him where because they thought he was crazy and he joked all the time. The fat man then sought out Bob for advice which was really strange since he only needed to go the bathroom. Then he saw the sign pointing to the right since he couldn’t read he just followed the sign and there he was in a bathroom! He relieved himself and thanked Bob, Bob gave him a smile and a pat on the fat man’s face.

* * *

The inhabitants of a planet far, far away got annoyed with Bob’s silence because they wanted answers from him. A lot of problems came once people started exchanging roles and multi-tasking. They started asking for raises and more free time, some people started to pretend to be women and others pretended to be men. The children started to rebel against their parents and the old people didn’t want to die without health insurance. All they got from Bob was another weird smile that could’ve put the living to their deaths and a sign which was (‘always look up’) . This infuriated the inhabitants cause it made them think. The bearded man with an eye-patch came and said it was written in the Book of Rules that Bob would be sent on vacation to somewhere sunny like California while being bombarded with a barrage of apple pies till it was time for him to come back again, the date that no one would ever know. The man with an eye-patch started to hand-out apple pies to each one, even little Bob was going around handing them like fruitcakes during Christmas, although no one liked fruitcakes anyway. The inhabitants just wanted to get rid of the apple pies quickly.

The apple pies were thrown in mid-air that blotted out the sky, Bob stretched out his hands and knew that this was meant to happen. The apple pies collided with the pavement and splattered all over the place making a huge mess that would piss of the street sweepers. The inhabitants looked for the body but couldn’t find it, they searched everywhere and ate all the apple pies but they couldn’t find Bob. Maybe he’s gone to California? A little boy asked. They looked at the Book of Rules to look for answers but upon turning the pages it was blank except for one page. The letters were written in all caps and in apple pie juice, it said: I’M STILL THERE BUT I’LL BE BACK SOON.

Each one looked at the message and all they could say was silence, this time no one asked any questions.

*END*

h1

Bayani

March 18, 2009

I’ve never been a staunch believer in heroes.” The echoes of silence bounce up and down against the penumbra of light in the room. “I think they’re cry babies who want all the attention for themselves.” The dim lit darkness painted the walls with words that moved out of his mouth. “They have this pre-conceived notion of heroism that they need to save others. When in fact, they start saving people once they know they can’t. They come up with all these grand schemes so that they can have their name in history. Fighting amongst themselves telling each other that their right and your wrong, an endless waltz that repeats itself throughout history…”

They said he was a hero. He fought against the Japanese in World War II. He fought with his brothers in arms in the cold mountains. The blood drenched rain covered their military uniforms after their skirmish. His sinewy arms and brown skin reflected the red of the sunlight across the battlefield. His masculine face was covered with a mustache and a goatee. This was the face every Japanese soldier feared and the last they would see. Each bullet dining in flesh and drinking of blood till there was none left—everyone was full. They took their valiant stand to protect the fleeing American troops, General Douglas MacArthur was among them. Out of the two hundred men in their regiment only forty lived after the bloodbath.

Bombs rained on the blood sodden streets of Manila threshing out every inch for Japanese flesh. Razing each mountain and green horizon to filter whatever was left of the enemy. D-day has come, Germany had fallen—Hitler was dead. The self-proclaimed German savior killed himself, he died beside his Mary Magdalene, Eva Braun. “I shall return,” reverberated in every wall, sky, teardrop and bloodstream. The much awaited return of the savior has finally come. Liberation from the tyrants.

They said he fought valiantly never leaving anyone behind, he was always in front of the charge. Glory. History was calling his name. When the blood stained air cleared he was one of the men left standing like Zeus staring down at Mount Olympus. He was awarded the Medal of Valor presented to him by then President, Sergio Osmena…

His trail of thought was suddenly disrupted by a voice from downstairs. “Honey are you up there brooding about life again?” Josephine said. “You’re food’s getting cold, the tilapia might swim back to the river where it came from.”

“I didn’t know why I got married in the first place. Maybe it was love. Maybe because I pitied her or it was the other way around. Maybe I wanted to save her. I don’t remember actually,” Jose said. He grabbed a photo album buried under the old newspapers. He scanned through the old photographs of a still amber hourglass. Each picture formed an incandescent memory stored in the back of his head. Telling him of his past, present, and future all in one turn.

“She was very beautiful then.”

“Are you still up there? We’re practically skin and bones down here.”

“She still is even now. Her mix of mestiza blood stood out in the still picture.”

“She was a beauty queen that dated the popular guys when we were in highschool but she realized that brainy people could actually draw a smile on her face.”

“Daddy we’re starrrrvvvvvinnnngggggggg,” little Jose II said.

A friend once told me, “you must’ve lost your mind when you walked down that aisle and said I do.”

“He was probably right.”

He put the photo album aside and went down the flight of stairs. “I’m coming dear.”

“Say your prayers first Jose,” Josephine said.

The food was passed around the table as hands reached out and got something to eat. The silence fills the damp air waiting for a voice to break into the sheets of molecules.

“Do you have something to say to your father Jose?”

“Ummm….”

“What is it little Jose?”

“I….I…I have to repeat grade 5 papa…”

“Why? You passed all your subjects this school year.”

“I failed history papa…”

“Oh.”

“Papa, mama look at my drawing of Jose Rizal, look look!!!” A scream shot through the darkness surrounding the walls. An echo reverberates around the white paint of the house engulfing the silence of a black and white picture. The muffled screams don’t enter his ears. They were swallowed by the door closed by the light.

“Honey are you all right? You suddenly zoned out.”

“What?”

“Your son just told you he had to repeat the 5th grade.”

“Oh…yeah. I just remembered something no worries.”

She gave me that look. Her brown eyes penetrating right through my skin and into the back of my head. The look that said your hiding something from me, you can tell me anything. I’m your wife.

“Don’t worry about it,” I tell her. I lied.

Jose II sits there twiddling with the food on his plate. “I find that rather strange since the father’s a renowned historian, don’t you think? Maybe you should have enrolled him for tutorials this school year,” Josephine said.

“I told you a couple of times all ready he doesn’t need to, he’s a bright boy. Isn’t that right Jose?”

“Of course I am papa, I’m named after you!” he said with utmost gusto that could knock a tree down.

The boy does have charm I tell myself, must’ve gotten it from his mother. “Atta boy Jose.”

Jose has always been a smart boy. He was your typical Einstein when it came to the different sciences and mathematics. I’m not saying this like any other parent who can’t find anything wrong with their kids—well not at least till they hit their teens. He really was talented, he had a peculiar way of doing things. He’d always have an answer in mind before the solution presented itself. He was moving backwards when he was solving problems. Most of the time, the teachers had a problem with this it bothered their way of doing things. They always had to adhere to a strict set of rules, they couldn’t see the order and beauty in chaos. The type of chaos that gave an answer at least not the one that spawns the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Accordingly, his true genius didn’t reflect in his grades he always got somewhere between 75-78.

The silence drifts for a while along the yellow brick road of unspoken words, waiting for its turn to come out at the right moment. Josephine put away the plates and put the leftovers inside the refrigerator.

“Jose why don’t you go upstairs and do your homework.”

“Ok mom.”

I know she wants to talk to me about something when she starts washing the dishes three times over. The way she puts her hair to her right side brow when something is on her mind. It’s amazing how women say so much without saying anything at all.

“Jose, I don’t want our child going to a tutor…”

“Meaning?”

“I want you to teach him.”

“You know I’m busy with work and all…I’ve made new discoveries regarding our national hero Jose Rizal…Well not just him as a matter of fact. I’m just really busy right now.”

“Is it more important than teaching our own son history?”

“No of course not! I’ll just finisht this particular assignment first. Then I’ll be more than willing to teach him.”

“That’s what you always say.” The words came to Jose’s mind before it came out of Josephine’s lips. Words wilted slowly across the red of her lips and into Jose’s ears. These words clung onto his skin like a rape victim that couldn’t wash the dirt off her body no matter how many times she tries.

“Come on honey not all the time,” as Jose swooped in for a kiss.

“I’ll make time, I promise.” His words bounced off the wall like a rubber ball before arriving in Josephine’s ears. Making sure that they gain enough momentum to make a forceful impact. The two shadows dance upon the brightly lit-room to the music of tap water running across dirty dishes. The night unwinds, the cold whispers of a December eve creeps beyond the skin.

The phone rings.

“Hello.”

“It’s your mother Jose,” Teodora said drearily.

“Hi mom…” I say uneasily matching the tone of her voice. It’s kind of late for her to be calling at this hour, I whisper in that little voice in the back of my head. The words slowly germinate in my mouth repeating the same lines I said to myself. It came out in bits and pieces before they were compelled to form into something more familiar.

“It’s kind of late for you to be calling at this hour? What’s on your mind?”

“It’s about your father…”

The dust has settled, the blood has dried. The war was over it was time to rebuild the broken shambles of of another country’s war fought in our own land. President Manuel Roxas was granted pardon by General Douglas MacArthur for serving under the Japanese regime in a puppet government. There was an outrage against his amnesty but what could he have done under the circumstances? He wanted no more bloodshed he did what had to be done. He had a daunting task ahead of him to fix the country or what was left of it with the help of our allies, the Americans. The same people who “liberated us” from the Spanish for a cool $20 million.

It’s been seven years since the war had ended, his name plate hung above the TV set while the music of Nat King Cole’s Unforgettable blared through the tube radio. I stared up at the name plate looking down on me. The swinging of the Medal of Valor mesmerized me as I watched it turn the hands of time. I breathed in every single letter on that name plate. “Unforgettable thats what you are…Unforgettable though near or far…” The bronze of each letter were slowly etched on my mind.

“Jose R. Mercado”

It was the same name as mine but only the “Jr.” was added at the end. I was named after my father to follow through on the tradition of great heroes in our family so they say. My brother Paciano and I used to sit on our lola’s lap and she would tell countless stories about our ancestors and our lolo. Our lolo’s name was Protacio Mercado. Our lola would go on in her best Lola Basyang impersonation of her fondest memories of our lolo Protacio. She’d start by saying he was a part of the Philippine Revolution headed by Emilio Aguinaldo’s army. They fought against the Spanish troops and the Americans during the late 1890’s to the early 1900’s. She’d also mention that frightful experience when she witnessed Jose Rizal’s execution in Bagumbayan. The gunshots roared through the muted silence, devouring every sound and the words that tried to escape the mouths of the spectators. She would go on-and-on tirelessly about our lolo’s bravery and valor. He was onced tasked to guard a special meeting between Gen. Antonio Luna and Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo in Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija. She said with utmost enthusiasm with a capital E as the word triumphantly danced across her lips. We never got to see Lolo Protacio, we only saw him encased in an old photograph and the frozen amber of our lola’s memories. Lolo Protacio died of Polio shortly after papa was born.

There were plenty of people visiting our house during those times. I didn’t really recognize any of them till much later. My brother and I used to peak between the legs of our staircase looking at the various people talking with papa. We’d laugh at the pilukas of various shapes and sizes on the heads of the fifty year old men in the living room. One looked like a dead racoon on top of his head, the other one was quite peculiar it looked like the Grand Canyon with hair sprouts growing in the middle. I was seven and Paciano was fourteen. Even though he was seven years older, he treated me like we were the same age. He always had that calming smile and pat on the back whenever we got into trouble.

Those were fond memories…

“What’s wrong?” I tried to sound concerned. My dad and I really haven’t been talking for quite some time now.

“He’s not getting any better…He can’t speak anymore…He can’t even move. He’s got little time left they say.” Her somber tone sent a chill down my spine.

“Why don’t you come visit…” It was more of a demand than a request.

“You haven’t been visiting often since your brother Paciano died…”

“Yes…I’ll make time.” I said half heartedly.

It’s amazing how I kept this a secret to my wife of more than ten years. I’ve hid behind work and more work to get it off my mind. I’ve tried to keep busy so that it won’t creep up to me. Once a lie has been told over and over again it becomes a truth to the person who says it. Or maybe the truth before is no longer the truth now, it changed over time and the different circumstances. It’s so much harder to confront the truth now since I’ve been accustomed to living a lie. Then this phone call comes. As the words walked into my ears. I heard that same Nat King Cole song again playing in my head back in ’53. “Unforgettable thats what you are…Unforgettable though near or far…” The image of that bronze nameplate hanging on the wall remains frozen in a black and white frame. The swinging of the Medal of Valor lingers in my head. The crooning voice of Nat King Cole lulled me into a daze that was broken by the sound of my mother on the other end of the receiver.

“I’ll tell him you’ll come and pay a visit.”

“Ok.” I hung up the phone.

Josephine walked out of the bathroom drying her hair with a towel. “Who was that?” she said.

“It was my mom.”

“Why did she call at such a late hour?”

“Nothing really, just wanted to check on things…” I forced a sly smile on my face, I couldn’t think of a better lie.

“Really?”

“Yes…really…” I had a feeling she could read my mind but I tried not thinking about it at all. I couldn’t look at her directly.

“It’s getting late…I think I’ll go on ahead and sleep. I have to be early tomorrow at the History convention.”

“Suit yourself…I’ll go and watch a re-run of John En’ Marsha tonight. Goodnight.”

“Don’t forget your promise to tutor Jose about history ok?”

“Ok…I won’t. Goodnight.”

I walked in the room and climbed up on the bed. I felt like I was laying down on a slate of rock with pebbles sandwiched in a pillowcase. The dense silence in the darkness made me feel all alone despite the heavy laughter coming from the downstairs television. I close my eyes to doze into sleep but that song back in ’53 kept on playing in my head over and over again. “Unforgettable thats what you are…Unforgettable though near or far…” The song creeps slowly into my dreams sending me to a sea of stillness. A vesper of thoughts seeps itself through the darkness.

I was suddenly awake walking through an alley towards our old house. Everything was in black and white, there was no sound, the faces of our old neighbours were in full detail but they carried no expression on their faces like a blank canvas waiting for its painter. Every movement was magnified in my eyes, the kargador threw the sack of rice with great gusto upon the pavement. The ripples in the air stream caressed my skin giving me a tiny pinch. The kids with their paper planes ran across the streets in slow motion. I ran my fingers across the wall that Protacio and I vandalized. We drew the face of Aling Nena on her newly painted backyard. The white paint dripped down from our lithe fingers as her croaky voice screamed out our names. The soundwaves of her voice screaming our names remained frozen in mid air as I walked on by. I could feel and touch every letter as I brushed my right hand upon them.

I was right in front of our house, the door of light opened itself. I was inside looking at the same bronze nameplate and swinging medal. But this time the nameplate was rusting it no longer had its former luster. It was decaying, the rust was slowly gorging the yellow backdrop till it was a shade of gray. The medal wilted away with each swing from left to right, leaving behind a trail of cinereal dew across the floor.

He sat there right in front of me, in his rocking chair. Staring blankly into my eyes he said something—no it was more of he slurred something. His arms were immobilized upon the arm rest of the chair. His legs hung limply upon the floor, paralyzed and immovable. I glance upon the nameplate once again to ask myself is this the same man?

I looked out the window and saw my brother Paciano running towards Senator Ferdinand Marcos. He saw an armed man carrying a hand grenade run towards the Sen. Marcos eating his lunch at a café in Manila Bay. The guards were surprised at what they saw and couldn’t respond there boots were suddenly made of concrete. Paciano struggled against the armed man while Sen. Marcos sat aghast he wasn’t even able to drop the spoonful of chicken he was about to put in his mouth. The pin was removed and dropped near the table. My brother had no other recourse, he put his body on top of the hand grenade. There was an explosion of flesh and blood that spilled onto the pavement. Gunshots were heard the man who brought the grenade was gunned down on the spot. They put fifteen new holes in his body. My brother lay there motionless as his pink entrails were scattered across the floor. The frantic shuffling of feet drowned out the silence of the screams of passers-by. His brown face was filled with palor, his brown and chinky eyes pale from the explosion. Sen. Marcos was swiftly whisked away by the police. Paciano’s body was brought to the morgue that day. My mother and I didn’t want to even look at it we knew it was him when the mortician described the body for us. My brother believed in that man. He had nothing bad to say about Ferdinand Marcos. He said that one day that man will lead this country out of the shambles that the Americans left it in. “He’s going to clean up this shit—the Americans left,” he would say passionately after downing a shot of tequilla. His red face would suddenly burst out laughing after saying his two cents. This was in stark contrast to our pro-American father, he was offered an American citizenship after the war but he declined, saying he would rather live and die a Filipino. Papa never held anything against the Americans like Kuya Protacio even though he himself didn’t agree with the war. He believed that it was necessary to fend off a greater evil in Adolf Hitler.

Kuya Protacio believed in Marcos’s cause and he was willing to die for it—which he ultimately did. In his own way he became a hero like papa and lolo. Papa was especially strict on him since he was the eldest son. He had high hopes for him, there was so much expectations to carry on the family tradition. He was enrolled in military school under papa’s former protégé Lt. Arnel Luna who was Gen. Antonio Luna’s grandson. Kuya Protacio was such a headcase they gave up on him, they said he was a lost cause, a bad apple of sorts. He brought different women into the army barracks and hid bottles of Jack Daniel’s under his bed. He was dismissed from military school after just one year and two months in training. As he walked out of the base he threw his cigarette on the steel doors and waved his finger at the soldiers on guard as he rode the bus home. It wasn’t the ring finger nor the thumb, the soldiers thought that it was probably his pinkie because he had a smile on his face. This did not fit well with papa he hit my brother so hard he hit the ground. This was no easy task my brother was a big man for his age he was eye to eye with papa, they had the same build in contrast to my smaller frame. He was so disappointed and told him when will he ever man up. His moment finally came on that fateful day in Manila Bay.

The light burst into the room, I saw a little boy carrying a drawing of Jose Rizal running to the other room right in front of me. There was a muted scream that shot through the room. The little boy went towards the open door carrying his picture with a smile on his face. The slap across my mother’s face was felt throughout the entire house. Paciano was not home then, he was in school I had to stay behind because I had a tummy ache. The boy started to cry once he saw mama on the floor in pain. She never told me why he was acting the way he did. I tried to draw near towards her but the more steps I take the farther I seemed from reality. It hit me—I was only in a dream.

I awoke startled at the time that passed in my dream. The pastiche of memories were so vivid I felt every detail in my body. I leaned to the side and felt jospehine right next to me. It was dark outside and the howling of our neighbours dog filled my ears. I looked at my watch and it was 2:00 A.M. I tried to sleep again but I just couldn’t. I was restless the whole night and I think Josephine felt it too.

“Honey, are you awake?”

“…” It’s funny how I can lie even in my sleep.

The alarm sounded exactly at 7:00 A.M. I wasn’t able to sleep since I woke up at two this morning. Josephine was all ready up and probably preparing breakfast downstairs.

“Call your father Jose. Tell him the food is ready.”

Before Jose got up the stairs I was all ready in the dining room, prim and proper. I kissed Josephine good morning and gave little Jose II a pat on the head.

“What’s for breakfast?” I said.

“Corned beef and eggs.”

I filled my plate with ulam and rice. I ate sparingly because I really needed to be going, I had to be early at work. I left shortly after Jose was picked up by Mang Jun their bus driver. I said the usual goodbyes to Josephine and drove out our backyard.

The road ahead was wider than usual. I expected traffic in EDSA during this time of day. I zipped through the empty road glancing at the faceless people going to work. I thought about my dream last night being my contemplative self when there’s no one else to talk to. I retreat back into my own world to try to solve problems like this one.

November 26, 1901 she lies in bed prostrate looking blankly at the ceiling muttering to herself. What is your name? he said. Auguste, she replied. Last name? Auguste. What is your husband’s name? Auguste, I think. Are you married? To Auguste. Mrs. D? Yes, yes Auguste D. What are you doing? Horse radish and potatoes. Asked to write her name, she couldn’t get past Mrs…If you buy 6 eggs at 7 dimes each how much is it? Differently…I have lost myself, I have lost myself! She was immobilzed and bed-ridden, she had to be helped to be cleaned and fed. She became restless, delusional, hostile, incongruous…Her name was Frau Auguste D. she died in 1906. Alois Alzheimer was her psychiatrist.

I parked my car right outside the national archives. A sidelong glance to the guard standing by the door, I gave him a little nod of greeting.

Alzheimer’s was incurable there was no escaping it once it takes hold. The degenerative disease slowly languishes memories stored in the brain. Eating each fragment till the shadows are left. You can’t even move, you can’t even talk, you won’t even remember the people you love. You won’t even know who you are. A cruel way to die, you’re all alone when the darkness comes. You’ll be nothing more than just a piece of paper written in textbooks. Once they see things in a different perspective you’d be revised and rehashed to fit the current truth. Once a hero, now a villain. Once a villain, now a hero.

I raced through the silence to my desk to get some work done. I gathered some colleagues so we could discuss new material we got regarding the history of the Philippines.

“Did you sleep last night Jose?” a colleague asked.

“Yes, why?” I said.

“You look like shit,” he said across the haze of cigarette smoke. His yellow tinted glasses reflected my image. I didn’t notice it when I left the house but I did look really bad in that reflection.

“Is there something we should know about?” another colleague asked.

“Don’t worry about it.”

“All right none of our business then anyway…”

“So what have we got?”

“It’s strange that the founder of the Katipunan was executed because of a power struggle within the upper levels of the organization. Aguinaldo was positioning himself because Bonifacio crossed his line of authority. They charged him with treason of all things!”

“There was a lot of unrest during those times, who would lead the war against the Spanish and eventually the Americans?”

“Everyone wanted to be a part of it. Each one wanted to lead, no one wanted to follow. It was not so much a matter of effort or passion, it was a lack of cohesion.”

“The Magdiwang and Magdalo factions comprised the Philippine Revolution against the Spanish both sides were reluctant to help each other. Hell, they even wanted Jose Rizal to take sides with either one of them.”

“Emilio Aguinaldo was bought by the Spanish for $800, 000.”

“And yes he eventually sided with the Americans when he was caught with his pants down in Isabela.”

“Pathetic, while people were dying he sold out. And he killed two guys who actually made sense in battle. He did it twice!!! Once during the Spanish Revoltuion the other against the Americans. Why fight in set-pieces when you could take the enemy to the mountains?” as my colleague said as he took another drag of Marlboro.

“He wanted glory more, fighting in the mountains was not glorious. He sent those men to their deaths. There’s a difference between stupidity and valor. Those deaths could have been avoided. Death was like poetry to them. It was beautiful. Dying in battle for your country when you could have lived another day and done something much more. They want to die heroes instead of living like one.”

“Gregorio del Pilar’s death was a waste of talent. He wanted to protect a man who he saw as a symbol of hope for this country. He wanted to protect the Revolution and its cause.”

“But in the end he was nothing more than just a corrupt politician…”

“Who could’ve foreseen it anyway? What if the people were informed of his cowardice would they still have contiuned the struggle? Would they have united? Or would they have eaten themselves up saying that this faction should take charge or their own faction should be the one leading?”

“It’s pick your poison and Russian roulette all in one.”

“How could they unite when they know someone is going to turn against them eventually? Aguinaldo had his use.”

“In that perspective if people knew Rizal signed that retraction his cause would have been totally lost.”

“We have no proof of that.”

“But the mere fact that this rumor came about would’ve changed how people have perceived him during that time. We have the benefit of retrospect to say things that people then didn’t know.”

“Would it really have mattered if he signed it or not? Would it have mattered if he became Protestant or remained a Catholic? Some lies are worth telling than revealing the truth.”

“Or maybe they were truths before we saw them as lies…”

“I think the real hero behind Rizal’s success is his brother Paciano. In my eyes he was the hero simply because he didn’t choose to become one. He ceded his rights for a better life so he can pay for that man’s education and to pay for his novels. He might’ve even convinced him to study in Europe and take up medicine. While Rizal was carousing with women all over the world and getting his ass drunk he was there in the farm trying to make money enough to support Rizal in Europe and help their family in Calamba. Paciano’s shadow lurks over Rizal in whatever he has accomplished. And who do people remember and talk about?” A silenced lurked before he said an answer. “Jose Rizal, because he was shot dead and martyred. He never had to deal with the questions of the living.”

“All this philosophical meandering is giving me a headache…Are you sure your not smoking weed there my friend? Since you’ve been smoking that drag everyone’s been talking as if there was a speech writer handing out little note cards on what to say. HAHAHA!” my colleague said heartily.

“Don’t be like Jose here he takes things a little too seriously,” he said jokingly looking at me with his brown pimpled face.

“You should relax, you have such a pretty wife and you guys only have one kid HAHAHA!!!”

It’s funny how cynical and jaded people get once they find out weaknesses or flaws. Those same flaws stand out like sore limbs and they block our judgment and understanding. The truths we find out blunt our senses, its as if we preferred being lied to because it was easier to swallow. It was much easier to point out mistakes cause we all had them. Our perception changes once we know more and become more intelligent as they say. The veil of mystery relinquished, nothing really surprises us anymore. We become too self-assured as we grow older. Believing the truth we tell ourselves but its not the same truth that others believe in. It might even be a lie we confused as the truth, we’re just too afraid to ask ourselves that question. As a historian I found some things out about our family that were quite disturbing.

The white expanse of the setting sun across Manila Bay lighted the dark alleys and roads. The burgeoning number of people heading home were illuminated with the blotches of red coming from the sun. Their faces were a pale pink and the muted murmurs spread throughout the sea breeze. The monotonous yellow fade of the streetlights slowly lighted the path I was to take. The white light coming form overtime workers filled the skyline like a terrestrial show of the milky way.

Lolo Protacio was a hitman for Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo during the Philippine Revolution. He was one of the men who shot Gen. Antonio Luna and gave him a few new holes to breathe in. They weren’t satisfied with shooting him they cut him pretty badly. He was assassinated and my grandfather was a part of it. He had a hand in the killing of the only guy who made sense in battle. A general that even the Americans respected. It’s disappointing, I don’t think Lola ever knew or if she did would she ever tell us. She was so fond of him and she loved him. It wasn’t only Antonio Luna who was assigned to him but he also had a hand in Andres Bonifacio’s execution…

I wasn’t feeling hungry. I wasn’t cold. The heat didn’t touch my face. Time drifted by quickly as I stared through the windshield of my black Toyota. I didn’t go home that night…

I went to the Philippine General Hospital when they permitted visitors into the rooms. I didn’t call in to say I wouldn’t be going to work today, I just didn’t show up. It’s all ready been two days since the last time I went to work or went home. Walking through those halls made me shiver. I couldn’t hear the nurse talking to me the white walls were so daunting and laid heavily upon me. I saw the faces of the old men and women, they were muttering to themselves in their white overhauls. Most of them talked by themselves whispering to the reminiscent air. Conjuring up all sorts of memories that they thought they had. Saying names that bore no meaning. Another man was carried away in a stretcher, he was all curled up in the fetal position of a baby. He wasn’t moving, he wasn’t breathing. No one was around him to tell him who he was.

The room was 1201 the creaking door brought forth a familiar sound back from ’51. “Unforgettable that’s what you are…Unforgettable though near or far.” Papa hit brother so hard after he was kicked out of military school. “Like a song of love that clings to me…How the thought of you does things to me.” Papa and mama were always arguing after he spent most of our savings and educational funds on gambling and drink. “And forever more, thats how youll stay… Thats why, darling, its incredible.” He was never the same man again after 1960. His fellow military officers used him to get to the funds of the military school for scholarships and new uniforms. They embezzled the cash to fuel the resurrection of the Hukbalahap. He was used as a tool for power, his name was his calling card. They wanted to position themselves to overthrow the government, they wanted communism. They called it the progressive movement that can alleviate the poor of the Philippines. The Hukbalahap was formed to fight against the Japanese standing side-by-side with the allied forces to fend off the greater evil. The former allies turning into enemies. “That someone so unforgettable…Thinks that I am unforgettable too.” The music fades into black then dissipates in the muted air.

I walked into that room and saw mama slumped over the bed where papa lay. He was looking up at the ceiling blankly clutching his knees to his chest. He seemed restless and looked as if he hasn’t slept for days.

How could I love this man? Was he the same man? His memories are gone, he has lost himself. I looked at him he didn’t seem to recognize me, all he said was Mr. His decrepit state struck me. He was no longer Superman. He wasn’t the man who saved MacArthur. He wasn’t the man on that bronze nameplate or that encryption behind the medal. He was exposed, he was weak…

The skies were dark the people drank and spat and urinated. The soldiers were gambling and saying profanities. There were obscene words thrown at the prisoners crucified. The air was damp and filled with blood. Hate permeated through the pores of each individual at the foot of the crosses. There were three men suspended in mid-air for sins against society. The first criminal was not afraid of death, he yearned for it, he screamed at its face. There was no light for him death was his only recourse because it came upon all. He was alone and proud. The other criminal was not afraid of death but he was afraid of having lived a life of loneliness and solitude. He knew he was beyond salvation and there was nothing he could about it. He looked at that beaten man with a crown of thorns upon his head. He was almost naked and barely breathing crying out to the sky. He was suffering like them, he was not put above them but with them in pain. The criminal stretched forth his hand to the man in the middle—he was no longer alone.

I couldn’t forgive him for what he did to us. The blows he threw at mama and my older brother. His fits of drunken stupor in the middle of the night. How his gambling almost brought us to ruin. I admired my brother for never fighting back to the berating and beatings papa gave him. He did his best to pay for the things we needed, mama and him. They worked their asses off so we could pay our debt. Kuya Paciano paid for my tuition, for college and high school after he was kicked out of military school. To some extent he helped me pay for my wedding—he was gone, he died on that fateful day years ago. Mama never left his side despite all he had done to her and to us. She stayed loyal to him. She had every reason to leave him behind but she didn’t…

I admire her strength, she had to deal with the thoughts of the living and the memories of the dead. She had to carry these with her. The pain of battle is temporary it wears out then it heals, to those who die all the more liberation. The people who are left behind have to remain strong not only for themselves but also for the people around them.

“I wasn’t going to leave her, not this time…We weren’t going to leave him.”

It took a lot of explaining to Josephine what I actually did when I disappeared for two days without much of a phonecall or even a note in the office. She called the police, she looked in the national archives, she looked everywhere for me. She never told Jose I was gone for two days. She just told him I was out on a business trip, the most convenient of lies so as not to worry him. She gave me slap so hard when I arrived at home she took the words right out of my mouth. And I saw them lie there on the floor turning red. She huggedf and kissed me so much I couldn’t breathe.

“You look like shit and smell like it too, I’ll give you a bath,” she said.

It was a Sunday afternoon we were all gathered in front of the TV to witness a turning point in Philippine history. I sat there with Little Jose II and Josephine waiting for Pres. Ferdinand Marcos to make his huge announcement that can turn this country around.

“Hey Jose we should study history after this announcement .”

“Sure papa, I’ve read ahead. I know a bit about Jose Rizal all ready. I know he was a very good student when he was my age!”

“Good!”

“Maybe one day when you get older we should write a history of our family, what do you thnk?” I added.

“That would be cool!” His eyes grew wide with excitement.

“Want to hear a neat story on how I met your mother?”

“Just leave out the kissing part papa.” Jose II snickered with mischievous delight.

“Your mother was the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen. One day she was walking down a dark alley she was followed by goons and thugs who wanted to rob her. She screamed her lungs out when they got her cornered but no one came to her rescue. Then suddenly a man with very big muscles and very strong arms came ut of nowhere. The man said halt! You shall not touch her for I will bring you to justice! He swooped down on all of them with one hit they all fell down and couldn’t move. The man asked her if she was all right all she could do was nod her head. The knight in shining armor introduced himself and the rest as they say was history…”

“Yea right papa…”

The television set started to show Pres. Ferdinand Marcos’s face. The much awaited announcement was finally upon us. “Kailangan natin ng disiplina upang marating ang kaunlaran ng ating bayan. Tulong-tulong tayong lahat upang maingat ang bawat Pilipino. Disiplina at kaayusan patungong kaunlaran!”

Josephine looked at me with a sly grin and warm eyes. With my eyes I told her come on father’s can tell tall tales to their sons, so we can look good to them. So we can be a manly example to them. We both laughed after that exchange because we both knew that was far from reality. I remember that day, I couldn’t talk, I was muttering to myself. I finally got the courage to talk to her I tripped and fell. I hit my nose on the chair she was sitting on and she ended up bringing me to the infirmary.

I tried to create an image for Little Jose to look up to even with just a fairy tale. The society I’d want to build may have been different from the way he’d see it. But I’ll always fall short or it’ll never turn out the way we want it to. One way or another he’ll figure me out, he’ll figure things out. He’ll see his own truth and may not believe in mine but it doesn’t matter anymore.

…Sa pagtatag ng Martial Law makakamit natin ang ninanais nating disiplina patungong kaunlaran. Malalabanan ang pagrerebelde ng mga nais lumaban sa demokrasya! Kailiangan natin ng isang panatag na bansa upang makasulong sa kinabukasan!”

I believe in this man, his vision for our country as much as Kuya Paciano believed in him. With discipline and order we could go places. But who am I to dabble in politics? I’ve got all I wanted and all I hoped for. I looked at Little Jose and the baby Josephine was carrying.

“I’ve got my future right here.”

h1

Memory

March 8, 2009

I hold your picture in my hand

as I watch time turn into sand.

The image of you preserved in

the amber of a heart shaped box.

For that time

For that place

To see you once again

face-to-face.

The tears

the fears

through all these years.

The joys

the sorrow

that formed tomorrow.

Imagine that kiss

Imagine the bliss.

Imagine what could

have been forever.

h1

Madhouse

March 6, 2009

The pink clouds explode in a stained looking glass

overseeing the white skies across the barrier.

The white straight jacket holds together

the grandiloquent thoughts wanting to break free.

The bars that surround the white effigy

symbolize a concocted vision of gray.

Time sits still when one is dreaming.

The deep brown eyes look on as time drifts by

through a seamless milk of river.

No past silhouette emblazoned on the shadows.

The endless dance of light lingers

on the scent of an angel’s whisper.

The drizzling of the amorphous sunset

slips through the hazy hands.

Wanting, longing

to touch reality before

the dream siphons into the mist.

As free as a bird flying across

the endless blue of sky.

“She told me she loved me”

I thought she was crazy.

What is there to love?

I was an alcoholic

a chain smoker

a womanizer.

She was never impressed with what I’ve done

or what I’ve accomplished.

She just looked at me with her brown eyes

and her ardent smile.

Piercing through the sentinels of shade.

I was exposed.

I was naked.

I stayed away from the gaze.

Running through the hazy halls

of meandering thoughts.

I tried to push her away

into the crevasse of my dreams.

But she was still there

she always was…

As I open my eyes to the light of day.

I indulged in nightly trips

from body to body, coming and going.

I return home to the same brown eyes

and whitewashed smile.

“She told me she loved me”

I thought she was crazy.

She told me she believed in God.

I was always skeptical even though

my parents were staunch believers.

They thought they could save the world.

They dubbed themselves superman and wonder woman

to an imaginary world of light.

They always had to look good

didn’t want to get their hands dirty.

They kept on trying to change me

to suit their mold.

She was different.

She was very simple.

She took things as they were

the pink in the sun,

a cat’s whisper through a looking glass.

The death of memory etched on a gray moon.

She took me as I was.

From the strange way I tie my shoes

to the nights of endless folly.

“She told me she loved me”

I thought she was crazy.

A phone call from a friend

told me about her condition.

“It runs in the family ,” she says.

“She’s been that way since she was a child.”

The news of a death foretold

trickled down the night.

I told her about the news from a friend.

She held my hand and gave me a warm smile

with her brown eyes she told me everything.

We rode the car to the white house of thoughts

bringing our five year-old son.

The road is slowly eaten away

as the pale gates draw near.

“We’ve been expecting you,” said the doctor.

She walks through the door

her image sheathed in an amber of air.

I looked out the window and saw

the hues of the rainbow

dancing on the clear blue sky.

I walked out the door and into the car.

The clear brown eyes of the boy

reflected at me the way her mother does.

As we drove away in the black sedan

I looked out the window

the pale gates and the white

hospital building stared back

under a somber breath and dark eyes.

“I just might be the crazy one,” he whispered.