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I'm as free as I want to be. Rantings, stories and useless poetry... that's what I write and I don't care if nobody reads them.

Counting 1-2-3

Monday, December 28, 2009

Hot n' Cold Christmas Eve

6 am.

On the way rushing back to Manila.

Had a fight with my mom.

Away from home.

Slept for 4 hours.




Went to Mall of Asia.

Ate my favorite Chicken Cordon Bleu @ iceburgs.

WATCHED AVATAR AT CENTER STAGE MOA.



TOOK OUT PASTA AND PIZZA AT SBARRO.


7 pm.

Dinner.

Novelino Sweet red wine



+

Sbarro cooked foods.


+

Movie marathon.



= Contented Christmas eve

YET

STILL

ALL

ALONE.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

A Christmas for the broken families

I arrived at home after a wholesome to goodness hangout with my high school friends only to find out that my mom has her own "party" going on at our house.

Based on my experience, any party within our house organized my mom will ALWAYS end up as a DISASTER...

DISASTER meaning she and my dad fighting in the end... with the screaming and the loud screeching of the tires of a car... doors slamming... my siblings silently crying.

and you know what, this time around...

I'M ALWAYS RIGHT...

Before the "bomb" exploded I already told my brother...

"Magtago ka na... malapit na umuwi ang mga bisita... may World War na uli mamaya"

And I sure was NOT wrong about it.

Just minutes ago I heard them screaming outside our house.

It was 2 in the morning.

They were as always fighting about my mom losing money to her greedy child of a demon sister ERNA (to hell with her!) and rumbling on and on and on how my dad "supposedly" have another woman... then with my dad taking over the company and stuffs from the past.

My dad emotionally beaten with the long history he had persevere to put the company back together... I know... unintentionally hurt my mom.

You know in the episodes that I had with my parents I never did once had the courage to face them while they're fighting...

the reasons:

THEY NEVER LISTEN...

THEY ALWAYS TELL "YOU ARE JUST MY DAUGHTER!"

THEY'VE HURT EACH OTHER SOOO MUCH THERE'S NO POINT OF FINDING THE REAL CAUSE OF THE FIGHT...

THEY SIMPLY CAN'T STAND TO BE WITH EACH OTHER

I'M SIMPLY TOO AFRAID...

TOO EMOTIONALLY TAKEN...

I'VE ALWAYS THOUGHT MYSELF STRONG...

I'VE ALWAYS HATED CRYING IN FRONT OF THEM.

I'VE BOTH HATED THEM.


I have no happy childhood memories of my family being together. There never was. I simply detached myself from them... ran away and hid in my room.

It has always been like that.

People would probably tell that this is just every teenager's problem.

Parents always believe that they know the best... that no matter what they do you'll forever have to respect them... respect them even if:

They drink themselves to insanity.

They don't fulfill promises.

They don't say "I love you"

When they really tried to KILL each other in front of you with your dad holding the knife to his neck...

When they always think maliciously of each other...

When everyone ELSE is at fault.

When they can't get over the past... always bringing up things that they know hurts you.

When they simply don't say anything after you worked your ass of to achieve an award...


I don't understand that why is it that I have the ever lasting obligation to show respect to these people... are parents under a monarchical position that just because they had sex and had you as their child you totally have to respect them?

People work so hard to the gain respect of another person... but as parents they could just do all that and they expect you to RESPECT them...

RESPECT is not something given...
It is gained... you work to earn it...
I don't believe that as parents you are excused for your behaviors and still demand a great utter respect despite of all...

You know the problem with my parents is that:

my mom is so malicious of everybody... of everything... she felt betrayed by her pig sister ERNA curse her to hell...

She always think that my dad's family is all against her... that actually my aunt whom she despises... asks every time I see her how my mom is... that every time I see this aunt... she'll always remind me to keep respecting my mom and be UNDERSTANDABLE...

And yet my mom says all the meanest things about her...
How could you believe your mom when you could really feel the sincerity of your aunt? How could you hate such a person? How do you choose who to believe and respect?

With my friends, I don't really respect those who talks all day long ill of another...

so why is it that such rule cannot apply to parents? When you have so high of a standard for friends and for other people... why is it that parents are infallible?

My dad... I confronted him years ago if he really has another... and he said "None" in front of me and my sister... and I believed him.

I try to.

I tried...

I do...

My mom made it so unbearable to make him stay at home...

but recently he went to Hong Kong and I called him... I didn't know he was there... and it was the first time... that I asked him where he was... that...

He HESITATED before answering my question.

I... Hate infidelity.
and yet...

I hate men leaving a woman for another. I cheaters. I hate adulterers. I hate mistresses. I hate "queridas". I hate 3rd parties.
and yet....
he always:

Fulfill his promises.

Supports my crazy projects and my studies.

provides everything I need.

and...

After all of the things that happened with him and my mom... he still reprimanded me for DISRESPECTING my mom the last time I did...

How in the hell will you hate a person who tries so hard to make things feel so good for you?

Is one mistake, if ever he really does, make all the good things seem unworthy?

"Till death do us apart" - SCREW IT!

Who will you believe?

Secrets. Past mistakes.

I don't know.

It's just that tonight... I really had it all... I'm so fed up with everything...

Tonight I finally spoke.

Tomorrow is Christmas day.

My birthday.

And it sucks.


Share yours....

Treat for special friends

This Christmas I decided to make my celebration for my birthday simple with just some friends...

I just realized that there really is no sense in celebrating too much...

I felt like something ought to change for my 19th birthday...


The first part of my celebration, I had my college friends of whom I treated at Pizza hut last Dec. 17 after our last day of Dipcor...

I would like to have my other friends come over but I just suddenly had the impulse to treat them then and there...

I never really planned it...


Days after, I planned a get together my treat again for my birthday with high school friends...

well... we initially planned to watch avatar then have our dinner... but we ended up eating dinner at Congo Grille and spending the rest of the night around seaside and having our chit-chat at starbucks....







Overall... it was great! We were fetched my dad and my sister...

Love this night....


Or so I thought it was.


Sunday, December 20, 2009

Sick... So Sick

Friday.

Saturday.

Sunday.

Three days and my STOMACH is still in pain!

Darn.

Rachel my friend asked his dad (doctor).

I have spasms according to him.


Man.

Darn it!

COMGOVT project....

*guh*

Gotta survive!


STOMACH = SICK

COMGOVT = HEADACHE


WEEKEND = SO SICK

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Drained the spirit of Christmas

Stressed.

Pressured.

Confused.




Drained.

Energy.

Lifeless.


Disillusioned.

Surreal.


Damn it!
I'm drained of Christmas Spirit.

Ogre from Hades,
give me back my Christmas!



Riki-Oh! Uh La La

Last Friday while hanging out with Bembie along with our handy dandy Laptops, our friend Demi with Kenneth and Mik tagged along.

And then....

Demi got hold of Bembie's laptop and everything went

RED.

Cause of....

Riki-Oh!!!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnhLtB3n25c&feature=PlayList&p=271890F56BE30F34&index=0&playnext=1

My god... this movie is one of the most gory, disgusting and dumb-kick-ass movie!

The scenes will make you feel nauseous.

The fight scenes are bloody, impossibly surreal, and outrageously disgusting.

Well... if you want a yucky laugh with friends...

try watching RIKI-OH!!! Ahahahha... Uhhhh La La!


Sunday, December 13, 2009

Wild After Party!

Of course after the nauseous eat-all-you-can we went to Harbor Square for a drinking session!

Me and the few others drank to our hearts content...








2 San Miguel Lights Towers.

4 drinkers.

1 is me.

EQUALS TO:

Me. Stomach. Aches.

Hangover = Upset Digestion.

Sated. Drinking. Thirst.


COD Officers Christmas Party!!

Ostentatious COD Christmas Party!
Last Dec. 12, 2009
@ YAKIMIX in Seaside Macapagal





Love the Eat-All-You-Can Japanese/Korean Food!
It's an Eat-All-You-Can so worthy of your money!


The food tastes great... And you get to cook for yourself...
*with some of their dishes*...





No wonder it's a favorite weekend restaurant for foreigners...

I'll definitely go back with my other friends...

*YakiMix is so in demand you have to make a reservation days or sometimes a week before your intended date*

After the nauseating fullness of our appetites we had our exchange gift.

Thanks to Lord for a very useful gift...


L-O-V-E C-O-D!!



Had a real great "Lamon" ~ lol


Chocolate Rush!!!

Yummy.

Chocolaty.

Moist.

Choco.

Birthday.

Cake.




I'm not a big fan of chocolates.

But this cake I don't know from what bakery just made my night w/out sleep.






CHOCOLATE RUSH!

NO SLEEP!

ENERGY RUSH!

Thursday, December 10, 2009

The 70 Most Memorable Lines in Philippine Movie History

Got this from a friend... n_n hehehehe.... Enjoy!
Damdamin niyo....

In The History of Philippine Cinema, There are lines that have marked in Our minds.



1. "You're nothing but a second rate trying hard copycat!"

- Cherie Gil in 'Bituing Walang NInging'


2. "Para kang karinderyang bukas sa lahat ng gustong kumain!"

-Vilma Santos in 'Palimos ng Pag-Ibig'


3. "Walang himala! Ang himala ay nasa puso ng tao! Nasapuso nating lahat!"

- Nora Aunor in 'Himala'


4. "My brother is not a pig! My brother is not a pig! Ang kapatid ko'y tao, hindi baboy damo!"

-Nora Aunor in 'Minsa'y Isang Gamo-Gamo'


5."Once, twice, thrice, Gaano ba kadalas ang Minsan?"

- Hilda Koronel in 'Gaano ba kadalas ang Minsan'


6. "Ayoko ng tinatapakan ako, ayoko ng masikip, ayoko ng mabaho, ayoko ng walang tubig, ayoko ng walang pagkain, ayoko ng putik"

- Maricel Soriano in 'kaya kong abutin ang Langit'


7. "Hayop... Hayuuup... Hayuuupppp!"

- Nora Aunor in 'Ina Ka ng Anak Mo'


8. "Trabaho lang ito, walang personalan."

- Rudy Fernandez in 'Markang Bungo'


9. "Si Val! Si Val! Puro na lang si Val! Si Val na walang malay!"

- Vilma Santos in 'Saan Nagtatago ang Pag-Ibig?'


10. "Ikaw pala. Ikaw pala ang sinasabi ng asawa ko, na asawa mo, na asawa ng bayan!"

- Laurice Guillen in 'Nagalit ang Buwan sa Haba ng Gabi''


11. "Akala mo lang wala.. pero meron!! meron!! meron!!"

- Carlo Aquino in 'Bata...Bata..Pa'no ka Ginawa?'


12."Gutay-gutay na ang katawan nyo... pati na ang kaluluwa nyo!"

- Sharon Cuneta in 'Pasan Ko ang Daigdig''


13. "Sabel! This must be love!"

- Carmi Martin in 'Working Girls'


14."FPJ: "Ang problema sa'yo maaga kang ipinanganak"

Sharon: "Ang problema naman sa'yo huli kang ipinanganak"

in The Movie'Kahit Konting Pag - Tingin'



15. "Wala akong pakialam..ibalik mo sa akin si Jun-jun. Ibalik mo sa akin ang anak ko!

Ibalik mo sa akin si Jun-jun. Ibalik mo ang...ahhhhh!"

- Vilma Santos in 'Paano ba ang Mangarap?'



16. "Kung saan, kailan, at paanong labanan, magpasabi ka lang. Hindi kita uurungan!"

- Sharon Cuneta in 'Dapat Ka bang Mahalin?'


17. Alice: "Mamamatay ako, Ate, pag kinuha mo sa akin si Alex!"

Lorna: "Ipalilibing kita."

in The Movie 'Nagbabagang Luha'


18. "Simple lang naman ang hinihingi ko. Kung hindi mo ako marespeto bilang asawa,

respetuhin mo naman ako bilang kaibigan. Kung hindi naman, respetuhin mo ako bilang

tao."

- Vilma Santos in 'Relasyon'


19. Rene: "cheetaehhh....ganda lalake!"

Echo: "ulol! Sinungaling! Panget! Panget!"

- Rene Requestas in 'Cheetaeh'


20."Kung hindi tayo kikilos sino ang kikilos? Kung hindi ngayon, kailan pa?"

- Vilma Santos in 'Sister Stella L.'


21. "I was never your partner, I'm just your Wife!"

-Sharon Cuneta in 'Madrasta'


22. "I, did not kill Anyboooddy!

-Nora Aunor in 'The Flor Contemplacion Story'


23. "Putang-ina! (Slaps doctor) Diyos ka ba? Diyos ka ba para diktahan ang buhay ko?

Ayoko nito! Ayoko nito!

- Vilma Santos in 'The Dolzura Cortez Story'


24. "Kung naigapos ko man ang puso mo ang sa akin ay pinatay ko!"

- Lorna Tolentino in 'Nakagapos na Puso'


25."Lahat ng ibinibigay ko sa pamilya ko ibinibigay ko rin sa iyo! lahat! lahat! lahat!
lahat lahat lahat!"

-CLAUDINE BARRETO in 'MILAN'


26. "Hindi niyo maiintindihan dahil gusto niyong palabasin na masama akong babae!"

-CHIN-CHIN GUTIERREZ in 'IPAGLALABAN KO THE MOVIE'


27."You made me believe, you made me believe we had a

chance..."

-SHARON CUNETA in 'MINSAN MINAHAL KITA'


28."Pagmasdan mo ang mukhang ito! basahin mo sa mukhang ito ang di mabilang na

kasalanan ninyo at nang inyong ama sa akin at sa aking ina!"

-HILDA KORONEL in 'KUNG MAHAWI MAN ANG ULAP'



29."Bayaran mo ng buhay ng anak mo ang buhay ng anak ko!"

-SHARON CUNETA in ' MAGKAPATID'


30."Nagpanggap akong class dahil yun ang sinabi nila sa akin. eh ikaw sino ang nagsabi

sa iyong magpanggap kang tao?"

-JUDY ANN SANTOS in 'I'M SORRY MY LOVE'



31."Ang hirap sa iyo hindi mo na makuha ng tama ang order, hindi mo na maluto ng tama

ang sisig, hindi ka pa magkaanak!"

-DIETHER OCAMPO in 'GIMIK THE REUNION'


32."Pag-ibig?! putanginang pag-ibig yan!"

-NANNETE MEDVED in 'NARITO ANG PUSO KO'



33."Galit ako sa mga lalake dahil wala na silang ibang ginawa kundi iwan ang pamilya

ko! galit ako sa sarili ko dahil putangina! ikaw ang kauna-unahang lalaking minahal

ko!"

-REGINE VELASQUEZ in 'DAHIL MAY ISANG IKAW'



34."I never really believed in forever toni. but i think I found forever in you."

-RICO YAN in 'GOT TO BELIEVE'


35. "Hihintayin kita sa langit gabriel..."

'-DAWN ZULUETA in 'HIHINTAYIN KITA SA LANGIT'



36."Ligaya... ligaya ang itawag mo sa akin... yan ang trabaho ko, nagbibigay ng aliw..."

-ROSANNA ROCES in 'LIGAYA ANG ITAWAG MO SA AKIN'



37."Bukas, luluhod ang mga tala!"

- SHARON CUNETA in 'BUKAS LULUHOD ANG MGA TALA'



38."Mahal mo ba ako, dahil kailangan mo ako o kailangan mo ako kaya mahal mo ako?"

- CLAUDINE BARRETO in 'MILAN'



39."Sana sa bawat sigarilyomg hinihitit mo, sa bawat alak na iniinom mo, sana naisip mo

kung ilan pagkain ang tiniis kong hindi kainin para lang may ipadala sa inyo"

- VILMA SANTOS in 'ANAK'



40. "Ding...ang bato!"

- VILMA SANTOS in 'DARNA'



41. "Eddie Garcia: Marami ka pang bigas na kakainin!

FPJ: Hindi ako kumakain ng bigas, Major. Sinasaing ko muna bago kong kakainin.

Ikaw Major, palay palang, kinakain mo na.

EG: Shit!

FPJ: Shit ka rin!

- in The Movie 'KAPAG PUNO NA ANG SALOP II'



42."Ang hirap sa'yo, sala ka sa init, sala ka sa lamig. Isinusuka ka ng diyos, iniluluwa ka

ng langit."

-VILMA SANTOS in 'T-BIRD AT AKO'



43."Taas na nga kamay ko sayo eh, mahal na nga kita palagay ko eh, maging sino ka

man"

- ROBIN PADILLA in 'MAGING SINO KA MAN'



44. Maricel: "Wag kang makaarte-arte na 'kala mo kung sino ka dahil sampid ka lang

dito!"

Lorna: Hindi ba pareho lang tayo dito? Pinulot lang sa lupa?"

– Maricel Soriano and Lorna Tolentino in Pinulot Ka Lang sa Lupa



45."Noong una hinangaan kita. Pero nang makilala kita, sinabi ko sa sarili ko na hindi

lang kita papantayan, lalampasan pa kita!"

– Sharon Cuneta in Bituing Walang Ningning



46. "Si Belinda kabit 'yun. Ako legal wife."

-Zsa Zsa Padilla in Mano Po 2



47."Bakit ang ama, makapag-trabaho lang sya at maibigay ang pangangailangan ng anak

mabuti na sa paningin ng iba?!... pero bakit ang ina ginawa mo ng lahat... nagpakapagod

ka, masama parin sa paningin ng iba?!"

-VILMA SANTOS in 'ANAK'



48."Oo, bahay ko 'to!, dahil ako ang nagbabayad ng ilaw, ako ang nagbabayd ng

tubig! Get out of my house! I don't need a parasite!"

-MARICEL SORIANO in 'SEPARADA'



49. "Darating siya, alam ko darating siya at mamahalin niya

ako para sa mga taong hindi nagmahal sa akin..."

-MARICEL SORIANO in 'IKAW PA LANG ANG MINAHAL'



50.Vilma Santos:"Ako pa rin ang asawa, karugtong ng buhay, kasiping

sa kama!"

Maricel Soriano:"Ang anak hindi napapalitan pero ang asawa

nahihiwalayan!!!"

-VILMA SANTOS AND MARICEL SORIANO in 'YESTERDAY,

TODAY AND TOMORROW'



51."Walang hindi nakakakilala sa pangalang MAGNOLIA DELA CRUZ, ang hindi

nakakakilala sa pangalang ito ay ASO lamang!!!"

-NORA AUNOR in 'BILANGIN MO ANG BITUIN SA LANGIT'



52."Aryaaa"

- Cesar Montano in 'Muro-ami'



53. Aga Muhlach: "Did You even love me?"

Maricel Soriano: "Sobra!, kahit alam ko hindi na tama!"

- in The Movie "A Love Story"



54."Oh yes kaibigan mo ako, kaibigan mo lang ako... And I'm so stupid to make the

biggest mistake of falling in love with my bestfriend!!!"

-MS. JOLINA MAGDANGAL in 'Labs kita okey ka lang?"



55. "OO! Inaamin ko! Saging lang kami... Pero maghanap ka ng puno sa buong

Pilipinas... saging lang ang may puso! SAGING LANG ANG MAY PUSO!"

-Mark Lapid in 'Apoy sa Dibdib ng Samar'



56. "Ayoko nga ng number one. Syempre pag may number one, may number two.."?

-Sharon Cuneta in My Only Love



57. "Ang Pagmamahal walang nakikitang panahon, walang nakikitang wakas!"

-Iza Calzado in 'Moments of Love'



58. Regine: "Makakarating ka naman 'di ba?"

Piolo: "I'm getting there"

- Regine Velasquez and Piolo Pascual in 'Paano Kita IIbigin?'



59. "It's not enough to accept me for what I am, You also have to accept me for what I'm

not"

- Anne Curtis in 'When Love Begins'



60. "Akala ko mahirap mag-panggap na mahal kita, mas mahirap pala mag-panggap na hindi kita mahal"

- Marian Rivera in 'My Bestfriend's Girlfriend'



61. "Sir, Ga'no ka-close?"

- Sarah Geronimo in 'A Very Special Love'



62. "Bebe ko!!!"

- John Lloyd Cruz and Sarah Geronimo in 'You Changed My Life



63."Dahil nandito ka na, papa-baunan kita ng 'Powerhug'!"

- Sarah Geronimo in 'You Changed My Life


64. Iza Calzado: "Ako ang First Love, First Kiss, First Everything"

Marian Rivera: "I only Have Him"

Iza Calzado: "Diyan ka nagkakamali, You have the only thing I've ever wanted in My life"

in The Movie 'One True Love'



65. John Lloyd: bakit andito sya? bakita kasama mo sya?

Sarah: kasi wala ka... kasi sya yung nandito.. kasi wala ka!

John Lloyd: Laida, hindi mo alam ang mga pinagdaanan ko para makarating dito..

-in 'You Changed My Life


66. "Gusto mo talagang malaman problema ko? nasasaktan ako..kahet alam kong wala

na kong karapatan..dahil naisip kong ako naman ang may gusto nito..pero hanggang

ngayon umaasa pa rin ako.. na sana ako pa rin.. sana ako na lang.. sana ako na lang

ulit….."

-Bea Alonso in One More Chance



67. “She loved me at my worst, you had me at my best, but you chose to break my heart.”

-John Lloyd Cruz in One More Chance



68. "kung pwede lang sana, I had five more days, five more years, five more lifetimes

with Him! You may have loved Him longer, but that doesn't mean I loved Him any less!"

- Bea Alonzo in 'And I Love You So'



69. “Anak ko siya. Sakin siya nanggaling. Ako ang nagpalaki sa kanya. Kaya bawat

hininga’t utot niya alam ko ang ibig sabihin.

-Vilma Santos in In My Life



70. “Anak mo lang siya. Hindi mo sa pag-aari. At hindi lang ikaw ang may karapatang

magmahal sa kanya. Hindi lang sa yo umiikot ang mundo at hindi titigil ito kahit na

mawala ka pa. ”

-John Lloyd Cruz in In My Life


Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Summer Solstice by Nick Joaquin

This is my favorite short story by a Filipino. We discussed this piece during our Philippine Literature class two years ago.

There's a movie adaptation and a script version for this Summer Solstice. n_n I'm sharing the whole piece here in my blog to help people find its copy easier.... Enjoy!

Note: It's quite long...

__________________________



The Summer Solstice
Nick Joaquin


THE MORETAS WERE spending St. John’s Day with the children’s grandfather, whose feast day it was. Doña Lupeng awoke feeling faint with the heat, a sound of screaming in her ears. In the dining room the three boys already attired in their holiday suits, were at breakfast, and came crowding around her, talking all at once.

“How long you have slept, Mama!”

“We thought you were never getting up!”

“Do we leave at once, huh? Are we going now?”

“Hush, hush I implore you! Now look: your father has a headache, and so have I. So be quiet this instant—or no one goes to Grandfather.”

Though it was only seven by the clock the house was already a furnace, the windows dilating with the harsh light and the air already burning with the immense, intense fever of noon.

She found the children’s nurse working in the kitchen. “And why is it you who are preparing breakfast? Where is Amada?” But without waiting for an answer she went to the backdoor and opened it, and the screaming in her ears became wild screaming in the stables across the yard. “Oh my God!” she groaned and, grasping her skirts, hurried across the yard.

In the stables Entoy, the driver, apparently deaf to the screams, was hitching the pair of piebald ponies to the coach.

“Not the closed coach, Entoy! The open carriage!” shouted Doña Lupeng as she came up.

“But the dust, señora—“

“I know, but better to be dirty than to be boiled alive. And what ails your wife, eh? Have you been beating her again?”

“Oh no, señora: I have not touched her.”

“Then why is she screaming? Is she ill?”

“I do not think so. But how do I know? You can go and see for yourself, señora. She is up there.”

When Doña Lupeng entered the room, the big half-naked woman sprawled across the bamboo bed stopped screaming. Doña Lupeng was shocked.

“What is this Amada? Why are you still in bed at this hour? And in such a posture! Come, get up at once. You should be ashamed!”

But the woman on the bed merely stared. Her sweat-beaded brows contracted, as if in an effort to understand. Then her face relax her mouth sagged open humorously and, rolling over on her back and spreading out her big soft arms and legs, she began noiselessly quaking with laughter—the mute mirth jerking in her throat; the moist pile of her flesh quivering like brown jelly. Saliva dribbled from the corners of her mouth.

Doña Lupeng blushed, looking around helplessly, and seeing that Entoy had followed and was leaning in the doorway, watching stolidly, she blushed again. The room reeked hotly of intimate odors. She averted her eyes from the laughing woman on the bed, in whose nakedness she seemed so to participate that she was ashamed to look directly at the man in the doorway.

“Tell me, Entoy: has she had been to the Tadtarin?”

“Yes, señora. Last night.”

“But I forbade her to go! And I forbade you to let her go!”

“I could do nothing.”

“Why, you beat her at the least pretext!”

“But now I dare not touch her.”

“Oh, and why not?”

“It is the day of St. John: the spirit is in her.”

“But, man—“

“It is true, señora. The spirit is in her. She is the Tadtarin. She must do as she pleases. Otherwise, the grain would not grow, the trees would bear no fruit, the rivers would give no fish, and the animals would die.”

“Naku, I did no know your wife was so powerful, Entoy.”

“At such times she is not my wife: she is the wife of the river, she is the wife of the crocodile, she is the wife of the moon.”


“BUT HOW CAN they still believe such things?” demanded Doña Lupeng of her husband as they drove in the open carriage through the pastoral countryside that was the arrabal of Paco in the 1850’s.

Don Paeng darted a sidelong glance at his wife, by which he intimated that the subject was not a proper one for the children, who were sitting opposite, facing their parents.

Don Paeng, drowsily stroking his moustaches, his eyes closed against the hot light, merely shrugged.

“And you should have seen that Entoy,” continued his wife. “You know how the brute treats her: she cannot say a word but he thrashes her. But this morning he stood as meek as a lamb while she screamed and screamed. He seemed actually in awe of her, do you know—actually afraid of her!”

“Oh, look, boys—here comes the St. John!” cried Doña Lupeng, and she sprang up in the swaying carriage, propping one hand on her husband’s shoulder wile the other she held up her silk parasol.

And “Here come the men with their St. John!” cried voices up and down the countryside. People in wet clothes dripping with well-water, ditch-water and river-water came running across the hot woods and fields and meadows, brandishing cans of water, wetting each other uproariously, and shouting San Juan! San Juan! as they ran to meet the procession.

Up the road, stirring a cloud of dust, and gaily bedrenched by the crowds gathered along the wayside, a concourse of young men clad only in soggy trousers were carrying aloft an image of the Precursor. Their teeth flashed white in their laughing faces and their hot bodies glowed crimson as they pranced past, shrouded in fiery dust, singing and shouting and waving their arms: the St. John riding swiftly above the sea of dark heads and glittering in the noon sun—a fine, blonde, heroic St. John: very male, very arrogant: the Lord of Summer indeed; the Lord of Light and Heat—erect and godly virile above the prone and female earth—while the worshippers danced and the dust thickened and the animals reared and roared and the merciless fires came raining down form the skies—the relentlessly upon field and river and town and winding road, and upon the joyous throng of young men against whose uproar a couple of seminarians in muddy cassocks vainly intoned the hymn of the noon god:

That we, thy servants, in chorus
May praise thee, our tongues restore us…

But Doña Lupeng, standing in the stopped carriage, looking very young and elegant in her white frock, under the twirling parasol, stared down on the passing male horde with increasing annoyance. The insolent man-smell of their bodies rose all about her—wave upon wave of it—enveloping her, assaulting her senses, till she felt faint with it and pressed a handkerchief to her nose. And as she glanced at her husband and saw with what a smug smile he was watching the revelers, her annoyance deepened. When he bade her sit down because all eyes were turned on her, she pretended not to hear; stood up even straighter, as if to defy those rude creatures flaunting their manhood in the sun.

And she wondered peevishly what the braggarts were being so cocky about? For this arrogance, this pride, this bluff male health of theirs was (she told herself) founded on the impregnable virtue of generations of good women. The boobies were so sure of themselves because they had always been sure of their wives. “All the sisters being virtuous, all the brothers are brave,” thought Doña Lupeng, with a bitterness that rather surprised her. Women had built it up: this poise of the male. Ah, and women could destroy it, too! She recalled, vindictively, this morning’s scene at the stables: Amada naked and screaming in bed whiled from the doorway her lord and master looked on in meek silence. And was it not the mystery of a woman in her flowers that had restored the tongue of that old Hebrew prophet?

“Look, Lupeng, they have all passed now,” Don Paeng was saying, “Do you mean to stand all the way?”

She looked around in surprise and hastily sat down. The children tittered, and the carriage started.

“Has the heat gone to your head, woman?” asked Don Paeng, smiling. The children burst frankly into laughter.

Their mother colored and hung her head. She was beginning to feel ashamed of the thoughts that had filled her mind. They seemed improper—almost obscene—and the discovery of such depths of wickedness in herself appalled her. She moved closer to her husband to share the parasol with him.

“And did you see our young cousin Guido?” he asked.

“Oh, was he in that crowd?”

“A European education does not seem to have spoiled his taste for country pleasures.”

“I did not see him.”

“He waved and waved.”

“The poor boy. He will feel hurt. But truly, Paeng. I did not see him.”

“Well, that is always a woman’s privilege.”


BUT WHEN THAT afternoon, at the grandfather’s, the young Guido presented himself, properly attired and brushed and scented, Doña Lupeng was so charming and gracious with him that he was enchanted and gazed after her all afternoon with enamored eyes.

This was the time when our young men were all going to Europe and bringing back with them, not the Age of Victoria, but the Age of Byron. The young Guido knew nothing of Darwin and evolution; he knew everything about Napoleon and the Revolution. When Doña Lupeng expressed surprise at his presence that morning in the St. John’s crowd, he laughed in her face.

“But I adore these old fiestas of ours! They are so romantic! Last night, do you know, we walked all the way through the woods, I and some boys, to see the procession of the Tadtarin.”

“And was that romantic too?” asked Doña Lupeng.

“It was weird. It made my flesh crawl. All those women in such a mystic frenzy! And she who was the Tadtarin last night—she was a figure right out of a flamenco!”

“I fear to disenchant you, Guido—but that woman happens to be our cook.”

“She is beautiful.”

“Our Amada beautiful? But she is old and fat!”

“She is beautiful—as that old tree you are leaning on is beautiful,” calmly insisted the young man, mocking her with his eyes.

They were out in the buzzing orchard, among the ripe mangoes; Doña Lupeng seated on the grass, her legs tucked beneath her, and the young man sprawled flat on his belly, gazing up at her, his face moist with sweat. The children were chasing dragonflies. The sun stood still in the west. The long day refused to end. From the house came the sudden roaring laughter of the men playing cards.

“Beautiful! Romantic! Adorable! Are those the only words you learned in Europe?” cried Doña Lupeng, feeling very annoyed with this young man whose eyes adored her one moment and mocked her the next.

“Ah, I also learned to open my eyes over there—to see the holiness and the mystery of what is vulgar.”

“And what is so holy and mysterious about—about the Tadtarin, for instance?”

“I do not know. I can only feel it. And it frightens me. Those rituals come to us from the earliest dawn of the world. And the dominant figure is not the male but the female.”

“But they are in honor of St. John.”

“What has your St. John to do with them? Those women worship a more ancient lord. Why, do you know that no man may join those rites unless he first puts on some article of women’s apparel and—“

“And what did you put on, Guido?”

“How sharp you are! Oh, I made such love to a toothless old hag there that she pulled off her stocking for me. And I pulled it on, over my arm, like a glove. How your husband would have despised me!”

“But what on earth does it mean?”

“I think it is to remind us men that once upon a time you women were supreme and we men were the slaves.”

“But surely there have always been kings?”

“Oh, no. The queen came before the king, and the priestess before the priest, and the moon before the sun.”

“The moon?”

“—who is the Lord of the women.”

“Why?”

“Because the tides of women, like the tides of the sea, are tides of the moon. Because the first blood -But what is the matter, Lupe? Oh, have I offended you?”

“Is this how they talk to decent women in Europe?”

“They do not talk to women, they pray to them—as men did in the dawn of the world.”

“Oh, you are mad! mad!”

“Why are you so afraid, Lupe?”

“I afraid? And of whom? My dear boy, you still have your mother’s milk in your mouth. I only wish you to remember that I am a married woman.”

“I remember that you are a woman, yes. A beautiful woman. And why not? Did you turn into some dreadful monster when you married? Did you stop being a woman? Did you stop being beautiful? Then why should my eyes not tell you what you are—just because you are married?”

“Ah, this is too much now!” cried Doña Lupeng, and she rose to her feet.

“Do not go, I implore you! Have pity on me!”

“No more of your comedy, Guido! And besides—where have those children gone to! I must go after them.”

As she lifted her skirts to walk away, the young man, propping up his elbows, dragged himself forward on the ground and solemnly kissed the tips of her shoes. She stared down in sudden horror, transfixed—and he felt her violent shudder. She backed away slowly, still staring; then turned and fled toward the house.


ON THE WAY home that evening Don Paeng noticed that his wife was in a mood. They were alone in the carriage: the children were staying overnight at their grandfather’s. The heat had not subsided. It was heat without gradations: that knew no twilights and no dawns; that was still there, after the sun had set; that would be there already, before the sun had risen.

“Has young Guido been annoying you?” asked Don Paeng.

“Yes! All afternoon.”

“These young men today—what a disgrace they are! I felt embarrassed as a man to see him following you about with those eyes of a whipped dog.”

She glanced at him coldly. “And was that all you felt, Paeng? embarrassed—as a man?”

“A good husband has constant confidence in the good sense of his wife,” he pronounced grandly, and smiled at her.

But she drew away; huddled herself in the other corner. “He kissed my feet,” she told him disdainfully, her eyes on his face.

He frowned and made a gesture of distaste. “Do you see? They have the instincts, the style of the canalla! To kiss a woman’s feet, to follow her like a dog, to adore her like a slave –”

“Is it so shameful for a man to adore women?”

“A gentleman loves and respects Woman. The cads and lunatics—they ‘adore’ the women.”

“But maybe we do not want to be loved and respected—but to be adored.”

But when they reached home she did not lie down but wandered listlessly through the empty house. When Don Paeng, having bathed and changed, came down from the bedroom, he found her in the dark parlour seated at the harp and plucking out a tune, still in her white frock and shoes.

“How can you bear those hot clothes, Lupeng? And why the darkness? Order someone to bring light in here.”

“There is no one, they have all gone to see the Tadtarin.”

“A pack of loafers we are feeding!”

She had risen and gone to the window. He approached and stood behind her, grasped her elbows and, stooping, kissed the nape of her neck. But she stood still, not responding, and he released her sulkily. She turned around to face him.

“Listen, Paeng. I want to see it, too. The Tadtarin, I mean. I have not seen it since I was a little girl. And tonight is the last night.”

“You must be crazy! Only low people go there. And I thought you had a headache?” He was still sulking.

“But I want to go! My head aches worse in the house. For a favor, Paeng.”

“I told you: No! go and take those clothes off. But, woman, whatever has got into you!” he strode off to the table, opened the box of cigars, took one, banged the lid shut, bit off an end of the cigar, and glared about for a light.

She was still standing by the window and her chin was up.

“Very well, if you do want to come, do not come—but I am going.”

“I warn you, Lupe; do not provoke me!”

“I will go with Amada. Entoy can take us. You cannot forbid me, Paeng. There is nothing wrong with it. I am not a child.”

But standing very straight in her white frock, her eyes shining in the dark and her chin thrust up, she looked so young, so fragile, that his heart was touched. He sighed, smiled ruefully, and shrugged his shoulders.

“Yes, the heat ahs touched you in the head, Lupeng. And since you are so set on it—very well, let us go. Come, have the coach ordered!”


THE CULT OF the Tadtarin is celebrated on three days: the feast of St. John and the two preceding days. On the first night, a young girl heads the procession; on the second, a mature woman; and on the third, a very old woman who dies and comes to life again. In these processions, as in those of Pakil and Obando, everyone dances.

Around the tiny plaza in front of the barrio chapel, quite a stream of carriages was flowing leisurely. The Moretas were constantly being hailed from the other vehicles. The plaza itself and the sidewalks were filled with chattering, strolling, profusely sweating people. More people were crowded on the balconies and windows of the houses. The moon had not yet risen; the black night smoldered; in the windless sky the lightning’s abruptly branching fire seemed the nerves of the tortured air made visible.

“Here they come now!” cried the people on the balconies.

And “Here come the women with their St. John!” cried the people on the sidewalks, surging forth on the street. The carriages halted and their occupants descended. The plaza rang with the shouts of people and the neighing of horses—and with another keener sound: a sound as of sea-waves steadily rolling nearer.

The crowd parted, and up the street came the prancing, screaming, writhing women, their eyes wild, black shawls flying around their shoulders, and their long hair streaming and covered with leaves and flowers. But the Tadtarin, a small old woman with white hair, walked with calm dignity in the midst of the female tumult, a wand in one hand, a bunch of seedling in the other. Behind her, a group of girls bore aloft a little black image of the Baptist—a crude, primitive, grotesque image, its big-eyed head too big for its puny naked torso, bobbing and swaying above the hysterical female horde and looking at once so comical and so pathetic that Don Paeng, watching with his wife on the sidewalk, was outraged. The image seemed to be crying for help, to be struggling to escape—a St. John indeed in the hands of the Herodias; a doomed captive these witches were subjecting first to their derision; a gross and brutal caricature of his sex.

Don Paeng flushed hotly: he felt that all those women had personally insulted him. He turned to his wife, to take her away—but she was watching greedily, taut and breathless, her head thrust forward and her eyes bulging, the teeth bared in the slack mouth, and the sweat gleaning on her face. Don Paeng was horrified. He grasped her arm—but just then a flash of lightning blazed and the screaming women fell silent: the Tadtarin was about to die.

The old woman closed her eyes and bowed her head and sank slowly to her knees. A pallet was brought and set on the ground and she was laid in it and her face covered with a shroud. Her hands still clutched the wand and the seedlings. The women drew away, leaving her in a cleared space. They covered their heads with their black shawls and began wailing softly, unhumanly—a hushed, animal keening.

Overhead the sky was brightening, silver light defined the rooftops. When the moon rose and flooded with hot brilliance the moveless crowded square, the black-shawled women stopped wailing and a girl approached and unshrouded the Tadtarin, who opened her eyes and sat up, her face lifted to the moonlight. She rose to her feet and extended the wand and the seedlings and the women joined in a mighty shout. They pulled off and waved their shawls and whirled and began dancing again—laughing and dancing with such joyous exciting abandon that the people in the square and on the sidewalk, and even those on the balconies, were soon laughing and dancing, too. Girls broke away from their parents and wives from their husbands to join in the orgy.

“Come, let us go now,” said Don Paeng to his wife. She was shaking with fascination; tears trembled on her lashes; but she nodded meekly and allowed herself to be led away. But suddenly she pulled free from his grasp, darted off, and ran into the crowd of dancing women.

She flung her hands to her hair and whirled and her hair came undone. Then, planting her arms akimbo, she began to trip a nimble measure, an indistinctive folk-movement. She tossed her head back and her arched throat bloomed whitely. Her eyes brimmed with moonlight, and her mouth with laughter.

Don Paeng ran after her, shouting her name, but she laughed and shook her head and darted deeper into the dense maze of procession, which was moving again, towards the chapel. He followed her, shouting; she eluded him, laughing—and through the thick of the female horde they lost and found and lost each other again—she, dancing and he pursuing—till, carried along by the tide, they were both swallowed up into the hot, packed, turbulent darkness of the chapel. Inside poured the entire procession, and Don Paeng, finding himself trapped tight among milling female bodies, struggled with sudden panic to fight his way out. Angry voices rose all about him in the stifling darkness.

“Hoy you are crushing my feet!”

“And let go of my shawl, my shawl!”

“Stop pushing, shameless one, or I kick you!”

“Let me pass, let me pass, you harlots!” cried Don Paeng.

“Abah, it is a man!”

“How dare he come in here?”

“Break his head!”

“Throw the animal out!”

”Throw him out! Throw him out!” shrieked the voices, and Don Paeng found himself surrounded by a swarm of gleaming eyes.

Terror possessed him and he struck out savagely with both fists, with all his strength—but they closed in as savagely: solid walls of flesh that crushed upon him and pinned his arms helpless, while unseen hands struck and struck his face, and ravaged his hair and clothes, and clawed at his flesh, as—kicked and buffeted, his eyes blind and his torn mouth salty with blood—he was pushed down, down to his knees, and half-shoved, half-dragged to the doorway and rolled out to the street. He picked himself up at once and walked away with a dignity that forbade the crowd gathered outside to laugh or to pity. Entoy came running to meet him.

“But what has happened to you, Don Paeng?”

“Nothing. Where is the coach?”

“Just over there, sir. But you are wounded in the face!”

“No, these are only scratches. Go and get the señora. We are going home.”

When she entered the coach and saw his bruised face and torn clothing, she smiled coolly.

“What a sight you are, man! What have you done with yourself?”

And when he did not answer: “Why, have they pulled out his tongue too?” she wondered aloud.


AND WHEN THEY are home and stood facing each other in the bedroom, she was still as light-hearted.

“What are you going to do, Rafael?”

“I am going to give you a whipping.”

“But why?”

“Because you have behaved tonight like a lewd woman.”

“How I behaved tonight is what I am. If you call that lewd, then I was always a lewd woman and a whipping will not change me—though you whipped me till I died.”

“I want this madness to die in you.”

“No, you want me to pay for your bruises.”

He flushed darkly. “How can you say that, Lupe?”

“Because it is true. You have been whipped by the women and now you think to avenge yourself by whipping me.”

His shoulders sagged and his face dulled. “If you can think that of me –”

“You could think me a lewd woman!”

“Oh, how do I know what to think of you? I was sure I knew you as I knew myself. But now you are as distant and strange to me as a female Turk in Africa.”

“Yet you would dare whip me –”

“Because I love you, because I respect you.”

“And because if you ceased to respect me you would cease to respect yourself?”

“Ah, I did not say that!”

“Then why not say it? It is true. And you want to say it, you want to say it!”

But he struggled against her power. “Why should I want to?” he demanded peevishly.

“Because, either you must say it—or you must whip me,” she taunted.

Her eyes were upon him and the shameful fear that had unmanned him in the dark chapel possessed him again. His legs had turned to water; it was a monstrous agony to remain standing.

But she was waiting for him to speak, forcing him to speak.

“No, I cannot whip you!” he confessed miserably.

“Then say it! Say it!” she cried, pounding her clenched fists together. “Why suffer and suffer? And in the end you would only submit.”

But he still struggled stubbornly. “Is it not enough that you have me helpless? Is it not enough that I feel what you want me feel?”

But she shook her head furiously. “Until you have said to me, there can be no peace between us.”

He was exhausted at last; he sank heavily to his knees, breathing hard and streaming with sweat, his fine body curiously diminished now in its ravaged apparel.

“I adore you, Lupe,” he said tonelessly.

She strained forward avidly, “What? What did you say?” she screamed.

And he, in his dead voice: “That I adore you. That I adore you. That I worship you. That the air you breathe and the ground you tread is so holy to me. That I am your dog, your slave...”

But it was still not enough. Her fists were still clenched, and she cried: “Then come, crawl on the floor, and kiss my feet!”

Without moment’s hesitation, he sprawled down flat and, working his arms and legs, gaspingly clawed his way across the floor, like a great agonized lizard, the woman steadily backing away as he approached, her eyes watching him avidly, her nostrils dilating, till behind her loomed the open window, the huge glittering moon, the rapid flashes of lightning. she stopped, panting, and leaned against the sill. He lay exhausted at her feet, his face flat on the floor.

She raised her skirts and contemptuously thrust out a naked foot. He lifted his dripping face and touched his bruised lips to her toes; lifted his hands and grasped the white foot and kiss it savagely - kissed the step, the sole, the frail ankle - while she bit her lips and clutched in pain at the whole windowsill her body and her loose hair streaming out the window - streaming fluid and black in the white night where the huge moon glowed like a sun and the dry air flamed into lightning and the pure heat burned with the immense intense fever of noon.


Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Monday classes - quotable quotes

COMGOVT:

"Of course, I already know someone is really happy today, di ba dear? (Bembie)" - Binay, 2009

"Huwag mo akong sagutin ng parang lasing. Nang parang nagiinuman lang tayo ha..." - Binay, 2009



SPECIRD:

"Hindi ako nandito para matuto!" - Listana, 2009

"Ang gusto ko ang masusunod! Magmamaldita ako ngayon!" - Listana, 2009

"Sasagutin niyo lang ang gusto kong sagutin niyo!" - Listana, 2009

"What is the continuity of life of the Senate?" - Listana, 2009

"Papaunta kang Baclaran nasa Buendia ka pa lang." - Listana, 2009

"Moment niya daw!" - Ramos, 2009

"Magquiquiz kayo ng 30mins.! 6 questions! I agreed with your demand. We start at 7pm... BUT I DEMAND we END at 7:30!" - Listana, 2009

"There are so many bitches! I can be a bitch!" - Tolentino, 2009
"Yes, there are sooo many bitches (beaches) in the Philippines!" - Seguban, 2009

We had the quiz for less than 30 mins. We had an oral recitation on the topics and issues we haven't discussed for 2hrs. Some stood for almost an hour for not being able to answer questions not taught nor was asked to be researched by us.

Ako din "Magmamaldita" - by laughing at everything that had happened! *As long as that freaking test don't affect my grade.... I'll be amiable...."

~ just stating what happened... quoting the quotable quotes... almost 40 students bear witness.


Monday, December 7, 2009

Sunday dinner? Tension haywire

I hate Sunday dinners.

I hate having both my parents at home.

I hate sitting on the dining table.

I hate the pretense.

I hate the fake amusement.

I hate Sunday.

Most especially when the 'family' is together.


Why have a family dinner when the "family" does not exist?

Tension is in the air.

Just right after dinner.

Ex-lovers gone haywire.

On loose.

Dumb folded.

Hearts all ripped apart.


Saturday, December 5, 2009

A Very Special Christmas Vol. 7 (2009)


I haven't feel the Christmas Spirit yet- That's why I decided to listen to some Christmas songs...






I was listening to some Taylor Swift rendition of some Christmas songs and somehow ended up checking Leighton Meester's Christmas song as well that lead me to this Album "A Very Special Christmas Volume 7" on which her song was one of the tracks.

It was then that I found out that the said album is actually a fund raising activity that started way back 1987 in support of the Special Olympics.

Oh by the way, our very own Charice also has a song on this album... n_n

For the 7th Volume here's the track list:

1. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas by Colbie Caillat
2. Let It Snow by Carter Twins
3. Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree by Miley Cyrus
4. Winter Wonderland by Vanessa Hudgens
5. Little Drummer Boy by Sean Kingston
6. The Christmas Song by Charice
7. Do You Hear What I Hear by Kristinia Debarge
8. Jingle Bell Rock by Mitchel Musso
9. Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) by Leighton Meester
10. Santa Baby by Kellie Pickler
11. Hark! The Herald Angels Sing by Carrie Underwood
12. Last Christmas by Ashley Tisdale
13. Silent Night by Gloriana

Now that really sets me up in a VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS MOOD.... *listening to the album right now*

P.S I really like the Carter Twins! lols.... :)

Here's the torrent if you'd like to download the whole album:

http://www.torrentreactor.to/torrents/view_2200476/VA_A_Very_Special_Christmas_7_2009_wWw.html






Friday, December 4, 2009

Bloody hell!!


Bloody Hell! Ninja Assassin is a movie within a bloodbath!




Last night, me and the gang (Manet, Bembie, Rachel, Jayson and Lord) decided to spend our free time at the Mall of Asia and watch a movie...

Supposedly we ought to watch New Moon for the sake of our friendship with Bembie (lolz....) but due to some time conflicts, we decided to ditch New Moon.

Me and Lord, not wanting to waste our MOA trip decided to watch "Ninja Assassin" instead... I've planned to watched it last week but due to laziness, I ended up sulking at home instead.

The movie is indeed a bloody hellish one! I mean if it was aired three years ago I might have really loved it... but as my taste in movies changed lately, it was an utterly reddish frown stipulating hour and a half of my life.

I mean, action scenes at itself is great... truly from the makers of "matrix" and all... and I do understand the necessity to show body parts flying all over the scenes and blood oh so red and yucky splattering all over the place - to show some real brutality to the very sense of killing and ASSASSINATING.

Though I'd say it's too much for my taste. The story is very Asian on the context and dialogue wise. Well.. you know what I mean - the poetic per se Confucius... martial arts type. SM cuts most of the scenes - something I'm not sure whether I approve of or not....

Well for the consolation... at least for Rain fanatics he's there all yummy smokin' hot... though I wonder if he's really the one delivering the dialogues.... His english is on a passable mark....

Overall it's quite disappointing with all the IMMORTALITY stuffs and the EUROPOLIS or so versus the Japanese hidden assassin's clan. Utterly tragic...

To add up to the tragedy of the film... there were some 4 or so guys sitting behind us who keeps on commenting on EVERYTHING that's happening on screen!

Here are some of their comments:

Guy 1:Bakit kaya 'yan 'yung bidang babae? Pangit... pwede namang european...
(I wonder why she's the leading actress.... it could have been a European)
Guy 2: Oo nga! Pwede namang si Paris Hilton!
(yeah, right! It could have been Paris Hilton instead!)
------------

Guy 1: Ang tahimik naman ng mga taong nanunuod dito
(The people watching this movie is so quiet...)
Guy 2: Siyempre hindi naman New Moon 'to eh!
(Of course! This isn't New Moon)

-----------
Guy 1: Tang-ina! Tinadtad na buhay pa!
(45839g8fg89f8e98s34h545h45j4h ~ lol)
------------

Tsk...... see what I mean?
Oh man!
Bloody Hell! Amen!




Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Secretary General speech: 12th DLS-CSB MUN (in short my speech)




______________________________
November 11, 2009
SDA amphitheater
Opening Plenary



Dr. Christina Saldivar, Dean of the School of Multidisciplinary studies; Mr. Gary Ador-Dionisio, COD adviser; distinguished and respected faculties,; friends from De La Salle University - Manila and Ateneo de Manila University; and most of all, fellow Benildeans... a pleasant morning to you all!

Over the years, our Model United Nations (MUN) gets better, bigger and grander. It has become unstoppable on its evolution and improvements. This year's theme: "Consolidating Collective Response towards Economic Rights, Human Rights and World Peace in the Energy Climate era" - is indeed complex and dynamic. As each words denotes their meaning individually, an interlaced web of topics and issues could be weaved from them.

But given as such, we ought to still start somewhere and that is NOW. In our four-day conference surely we know that we cannot change and save the world as it is through our MUN. But that should not limit us on trying whether it's just a simulation to expound on these pressing matters. As students of diplomacy we can do things to serve our time in this lifetime.

We can study, learn and talk about issues, think of innovative, creative and preventive measures on our given agenda without any ties attach to it - those are the beauty of our MUN! It's an epitome of intellectual intercourse. There will be ideas on how we could adhere to resolve conflicts and address world issues. Every actions, decisions and beliefs start from ideas and thoughts.

Just think about this, as young and inexperienced we may be - the train of thoughts that we could have, someday sooner or later become the real case scenario. Never underestimate ideas and thoughts; they drove men to believe what we now call as reality. As early as now, to exercise ourselves to think what normal teens or adults would not is one thing to be proud of.

And as I always say to people, in our MUN it is NOT ITS PERFECTION that we strive for - what we want is EXCELLENCE. I want everyone to believe that what we do here is not a waste of time, it is taking the lead of having two steps ahead for the future when others cannot or would not.

And most of all... enjoy!