Thursday, November 30, 2006

On Soap and Salt

Everybody has a story to tell. Sometimes, we just get so caught up in weaving the daily chapters of our own little autobiographies that everything else seems less imminent. But then again, sometimes life slows down a bit, and even the most adrenalin-addicted of us are forced to take a second glance at what used to seem so trivial that we just let it pass us by.

I left home for college almost eight years ago, and I’ve spent most of my life in this dingy and polluted urban jungle since then, only sparing a weekend or two every so often, in addition to the requisite vacations, to go home and spend time with the people I spent the first sixteen years of my life with. Back in college, when I had tons of free time to throw around, family time wasn’t so much of a problem. I could go home basically whenever I wanted. And I never got homesick. But lo and behold, four years later, I found myself longing for more quiet weekends away from anyone who’s ever heard of the SCRA. It’s not law school, mind you. I think it’s the realization that I’m getting older, and so are my grandmother, my aunts and my uncles, and I know little more about them today than I did when I was a little brat snooping on their afternoon coffee discussions. It’s one thing to know someone based on the labels he or she has been assigned since I was a child; it’s another to know someone as a person. For although they have their roles, they’re more than that. This is why I’ve been trying to get to know my grandmother, but not as Mama, but as Carmen Brown del Corro vda. De Yenko.

I’ve always known that my grandmother hates the Japanese and Koreans. When I was younger, I used to wonder why. Today, while I don’t share her sentiments, at least not in the same degree, I don’t blame her. She lived, and luckily survived without a scratch, through their pillage.

Mama was a young adolescent when World War 2 reached this part of the world with the bombing of Pearl Harbor. Rumors had been circulating Manila even before Pearl Harbor that the war was coming to the Philippines, that it was only a matter of time. My grandmother, as young adolescents were, and still are, wont to be, was essentially clueless about the realities that surrounded the dark cloud knocking at our borders. News of Pearl Harbor reached the residents of Manila on a Sunday morning. At Mama’s house, my great-grandfather was listening to the news on the radio while the rest of the family was getting ready to go to mass. Mama was wearing a green dress, she recalls. Sunday mass was a very important family event that nobody missed unless it was a matter of life or death. As this was. When my great-grandfather heard the news on the radio, he went to his family and told them they would not be going to mass that morning. Mama protested, but her father had the final say. Japanese bombs fell on the Philippines soon after that. The residents of Manila were rounded up in American army transport trucks for relocation to safer areas of the country. Mama and her family were forced to leave their home in Sta. Ana to seek refuge with wealthy landowning relatives up north in Cagayan. Like most people, they were able to bring clothes, and nothing more.

Up north, life went on, my grandmother says, though the scene was a far cry from what we would call normal. American and Japanese fighter planes roared through the otherwise pacific sky in what people called dogfights. Everyday, residents heard bombs exploding in the distance. Mama and her younger sister Angela, against the stern warnings of both their parents, would watch these fights in the sky while their mother screamed at them to follow her to the underground bomb shelter that had been dug for their safety. This went on for years. They would rush to the bomb shelters when sounds of danger approached, and then when the commotion subsided, they went about their household duties. Mama would do the laundry, her sister Angela manned the kitchen, while their sister Lulu would take care of their younger siblings, mostly rowdy young boys.

Towards the end of the war, soap and salt became extremely hard to find, and very expensive. My great-grandmother would take her son Jess on trips across the north in search of the elusive things which were previously so abundant people took them for granted. These trips took their toll on my grand-uncle Jess, who soon caught malaria, but luckily survived the ordeal.

When the Japanese were retreating to the North during Liberation, they ransacked everything in their path, raping, robbing and killing everything and everyone in their path. They bayoneted innocent babies and little children. Mama and her family fled to the mountains to escape the tragedy. Some of the relatives they sought shelter with were not as lucky. My grandmother recalled how a cousin of hers was tortured by the Japanese and Korean soldiers. Two sheets of galvanized iron were heated over a fire, and the young boy was made to lie down between the two excruciatingly hot sheets until he died. His sister, who was forced to bear witness to her brother’s torture and death, was gang raped by Japanese soldiers. She finally could not cope with the mental and physical torture, and sought refuge in insanity.

In the mountains, my grandmother’s family struggled to survive. They slept on damp earth, with only thin sheets of plastic and umbrellas to protect them from the elements. Their parents watched over them in shifts at night, cautious of all sounds that could warn of approaching Japanese soldiers. They ate fruits off the trees, to fight off hunger and disease. My great-grandmother traded in their clothes little by little to purchase food, soap and salt. Mama recalls that they had no drinking water then. Her father got water from wherever he could. Most of the time, it was the murky kind. They boiled and filtered the water several times to make sure it was safe to drink, but it still tasted of earth. But it was either drink the earthy water or die of dehydration.

My great-grandfather heard that Japanese troops were nearing the area where the family was hiding, so the whole family packed up what little they had and snuck down from the mountains to the shore during dawn. Mama was scared that the boat her father had arranged to transport them to Enrile Island would not arrive on time. They were in grave danger, especially since they were of Caucasian descent, my great-grandfather was Spanish-Filipino, and my great-grandmother American-Filipino. After what was probably the longest few minutes in their lives, the boat arrived, and they all crouched down under blankets as they headed for Enrile Island.

When the last of the Japanese troops, save for the occasional stragglers, had fled the country, Mama and her family retraced their steps back to Manila. Before they returned to Manila, my great-grandfather went back to the house where they lived in Cagayan, to gather up the rest of their belongings. He discovered that the Japanese had ransacked the place and bayoneted even their pillows.

The tragedy that had befallen the Philippines was overwhelming. Manila was left in ruins. The air smelled of death and anguish.

Mama told me the story of Tita Cel, my grandfather’s sister-in-law, a pretty and smart young woman, she tells me, who, together with most of the Yenko family, opted to stay in Manila. She had recently given birth to her firstborn son. Carrying her young baby in her arms, she and her husband were running through the city for dear life. She clutched her baby to her chest, shielding him from shrapnel. Breathless and terrified, the young family finally got to a hospital where they would be safe, at least for a while. Tita Cel unraveled the blanket she had used to wrap her child as they fled…only to find out that the baby she had risked her life to protect was already dead. The young child had been hit by shrapnel while they were weaving through Manila, avoiding sure death from bombs and bullets. Tita Cel never recovered from the death of her first child, Mama said.

Back in Manila, Mama and her immediate family were reunited with her grandmother, who had opted to stay behind. She was alive, but had lost quite a lot of weight. Food was hard to come by, and she survived on the generosity of neighbors who had become their friends.

Political commentaries aside, to my grandmother, the arrival of the Americans was a welcome transition from the four-year onslaught of Japanese atrocities. To the common people who were just fed up with living like fugitives in their own country, it was a much-awaited breath of fresh air. And chocolate. And real baths, after having to but soap at such atrocious prices before liberation.

Years after the war, when my grandparents were already married, my grandfather met a Japanese businessman, whom he invited home for dinner. My grandmother protested, but my grandfather won that argument. Being the brat that she is, Mama provided the bare minimum required by common courtesy but refused to befriend the Japanese fellow, although she admitted that he was a gentleman. The issue ultimately surfaced one day that my grandparents had dinner with the Japanese man. He explained that most Japanese, especially the educated ones back in Japan, were civilized, and that the behavior of the Japanese in the Philippines during the war did not characterize them as a people. My grandmother told him that that may be the case, but one does not easily forget four years of witnessing such atrocities.

Mama still hates the Japanese and Koreans in general, and says it is an outrage that so-called Japayukis purposely marry and/or have children with those people after what they did during the war, and that Filipinos are so obsessed with Koreanovelas. Like I said, I don’t blame her. It’s easy for me to say that we should move on with our lives, that not all of them are butchers, and so on, because I didn’t live through the war. I didn’t have to witness the bloodshed, the tortured screams, and the sheer terror of getting slaughtered that my grandmother did. I don’t exactly share Mama’s sentiments. I have my own reasons for disliking certain races. But that’s an entirely different discourse.

Everybody has a story to tell. This is my grandmother’s story. Or at least part of it. It’s a glimpse of who she is, labels and requisite boxes aside. People want to be heard. Sometimes, we just have to learn listen to voices other than ours.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

My law school yearbook writeup

Phew. The past four years have gone by so fast in a blur of deadlines and whatnot. It seems so surreal that we’re submitting yearbook writeups and having our graduation pictures taken again. It seems like I just did that for college yesterday. Anyway, here's what I wrote. Tell me what you think.

I’ve always had this dream to write the next great novel, a revolutionary treatise on life or love or one of those abstract notions that I love to ponder about when I have more than a split-second between two or more impossible deadlines. Twenty-three years into my relatively very eventful life, and I have nothing to show for this dream, not even a blank piece of paper that I intend to be the canvas for my intended work of art. Well, not exactly. I just haven't had time to sit down and let the novel write itself. Something always gets in the way. So. Why am I in law school? Four years ago, if you’d asked me that question, I would have said that first, I don’t want to work yet, and second and more importantly, I can’t imagine myself doing anything else. Both still hold true, although the second I now say with a lot less conviction than I had back then. Let’s just say I’ve never wanted to run away and become a starving writer in Paris as much as I do now. I do love the pressure though. I relish the torture, in spite of all my whining and complaining. It's your classic love-hate relationship, which essentially sets apart everything and everyone I love from the rest of the smörgåsbord. Can't live with them (sometimes); can't live without them. And though I may not look back on my law school experience with such nostalgia as I do the years I spent in college, I bear no regrets about the choices I’ve made, even the inexplicably dim-witted ones. And I still cannot imagine myself doing anything else. Except maybe actually becoming a lawyer instead of just being in law school.

Member, UP Women in Law 2003 – present
Vice President for Finance, UP Women in Law, 2005 -2006

Sunday, October 22, 2006

3 days to vaykay!!!

I'm kinda on vacation na. Two hearings and Election Law finals to go. I'll be free as a bird by Wednesday afternoon. Woohoo!!! Hey, I have a question. What would you do if someone, itago na lang natin siya sa pangalang Grace =p told you, "Yeah, we can be friends. We just can't see each other." Hehe!

I finished Season 3 of One Tree Hill the night before my Partnership final. So if that turns out sucky, well, I'll know why. Anyhoo... Soundtrack is great. WAY better than the series itself. Lotta sappy lines there. And that whole slouching brooding Lucas look and his whole angsty intellectual crap and the mandatory opening "(Blah blah) once wrote..." is getting old. But I looove James Lafferty, so I'm good.

Ladida... Waiting for Nico's PubOff email. And dowloading a LOT of songs off the net. I discovered a lotta cool artists. Ladida...

Finally, happy days are back. Woopeedoo.

Monday, October 16, 2006

My life sucks.

My blog is beginning to resemble a blackhole. Hehe! There's more where that came from. After a terrific week off last week, I went spiraling down over the weekend. I hope it ends soon. I just made a lot of decisions that turned out to be really wrong. And the clincher is that I never learn. After ten million times of being faced with the same old dilemma, I always choose the easy (well, at first, anyway. Instant gratification.) road. And then I end up regretting having done so. Each and every time. My life sucks.

Monday, September 25, 2006

It's just another one of those days.

One. My favorite mistake. My worst addiction. I can come up with a million ways to describe my three-year (and counting) predicament. Three consecutive Monday lunches and I'm going insane! God help me. Further I sayeth naught.

Two. This semester is the worst I've ever been through by far. As J.M. so aptly described it, I've never felt so out of control in my entire life. Academics-wise, it's not so heavy, but with OLA and whatnot, dude! I've never said "I either want to die or kill someone" more than I have this sem! Most days, I just want to bury my head under my pillow and disappear. But the heat and the persistent voice in my head that says "OLA OLA OLA OLA" pushes me, quite unwillingly, to drag my ass out of my comfort zone, bust my allowance on cab fare to venture into the godawful courts and prosecutors' offices and end up filthy as hell from commuting to and from places I'd rather not be. Breathe, Grace, breathe. Arggh!!!

Three. As I said, this whole "Death to indigents!" phase really defeats the whole social justice ideal. It's one thing to say, yeah, the world is not fair. It's another to be FORCED and REQUIRED to deal with their issues and to have to take time away from how I feel I should be living my life in order to be able to cope with these impositions!

Do I really have to say it? I hate OLA.

Friday, August 11, 2006

More fucked up shit

For the first time in my entire life, I absolutely seriously hate everything I'm doing (except for Rem). I hate OLA. The very thought of it makes me want to kill myself. I hate it with a vengeance. And then I feel guilty for saying so when I meet with clients na kawawa. Which makes me hate it even more. With the exception of Rem, which I really like, and Pub Off which I'm neutral about, I hate law school. Maybe I'm not cut out for this. I'm the epitome of mediocrity. I purposely avoid any law-related conversations like the plague. Well, those that I don't hae to engage in, anyway. I'm not interested in the intricacies of the law and shit. It makes me want to puke my guts out. But then again, it's too late to quit. Duh, 4th year na. And quitting is not an option for me. There's too much at stake, my ego and my self esteem first and foremost. Yes, I admit I'm very selfish. But hey, that's me. Guess I'll just slug it out for the next couple of months (and then the bar) and figure out where I'll go from there. Always works.

Also, in addition to the minor irritation of a long overdue explosion of a domestic peace and order situation, I'm in this cold war a.k.a. minor tiff a.k.a. I think he hates me sort of fucked up misunderstanding and blown way out of proportion little shitty sonofabitch situation with one of my closest guy friends. Arggh. I hate my life. My life sucks.

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Still in denial

I've been sitting here surfing the net and downloading stuff for a bit over 2 hours. Last night, I watched 5 or so hours' worth of Judging Amy then slept for 11 hours straight. Bad case of depression? Nope. Just rebelling. OLA is killing me. This is one case when the anticipation really isn't worse than the thing anticipated. If anything, the anticipation was a walk in the park compared to really dealing with OLA. And at this rate, not all of my 19 cases are active, and I haven't even reviewed everything. I've just been working on the imminent, i.e. the ones that are driving me crazy. What the hell do I know? I have issues, but these people have PROBLEMS. Real ones. Real BIG ones. Man! I almost feel guilty getting reimbursed for the photocopying I did for this one guy whose brother is in jail for a crime he didn't commit. But then again, I'm kinda broke right now, courtesy of that stupid hard drive I had to buy. Cost me a good P5,200. FROM MY ALLOWANCE. Hah. Well, at least the laptop's working na. Yipee.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Monday, May 15, 2006

Ladida... (The nth installment)

Two more weeks of internship to go and then I'm off to Baguio. People have been raising their eyebrows at the fact that I'm going there sometime around the beginning of the rainy season, when, well, it starts raining, and all you can see is fog. Well, I like it that way. I love gloomy weather, rain, fog, Baguio when all the tourists are safely tucked away in their urban abodes and lashing away or getting whipped by their corporate superiors. It's so peaceful there when only the locals sip coffee serenely in the coffee shops trying to ward off the chill. Baguio is always at its best without tourists around. Just like when we were kids. When Burnham Park wasn't the dingy place it is now. When we would walk to church on Sunday morning and then stroll casually into town to have ice cream and cotton candy at Coney Island somewhere in the middle of Session Road or hike from the John Hay gate to the Clubhouse where you had to exchange your pesos for American bills or coins because the vendos were, well, American.

(To be continued. Partners are coming this way.)

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Side thought before yosi break

Only in law school:

"If you're feeling naughty... file a motion to dismiss or a bill of particulars to the pleading you are answering." - Atty. Maria Celina Fado (2006 OLA Seminar)

Bwahaha! Mag-yosi na ako. Ewan ko na lang ha. =p

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Tales from here and the hereafter

It's another slow day at the office. I just had lunch in the pantry amidst incessant partner talk. I'm trying my best to keep a low profile, i.e. to remain basically inconspicuous, as to both wardrobe and demeanor... I wonder if I'll get accepted here (or anywhere else, for that matter) after law school... Anyway, it's not like I want to work already. It's so different from law school. At least in law school, I can fuck up a recit and survive, get over it with a beer or two (or a really long jog). At work, I don't think people are allowed to fuck up. You have to be on your toes all the time. These are real finances and real people they deal with. Fuck one up, you're out. Or you at least get a reputation for being the one who fucked up. Gawd!

Anyway, the new lawyers take their oath today. Roll signing is a couple of days after the oath, I think. And that reminds me, WE'RE TAKING THE BAR NEXT YEAR!!! Holy crap. Hell fire and brimstone. I'm so not ready. For the life of me, I can't seem to remember what evil twist of fate made me decide to go law school. All I wanted was to write. But then again, writers, most of them, anyway, end up homeless and hungry, neither of which I want to be. All my idealism seems to have vanished into thin air. Law school sucked it all out. All it's done so far is to mar my perfect picture of the future with blotches of inadequacy. I don't think I've ever felt so goddamned stupid in my entire life. Well, at least now I know I don't know anything. That's a good thing, I think. No delusions of grandeur here. Not that I ever had any. I never had a superiority complex or whatnot. I just knew I was above average. Above average here meaning in comparison with the rest of the population, not my contemporaries in law school or all the others seeking a slot in the legal profession. I can't see how a UP Law education and/or degree gives me an edge of some sort. By the way, that statement is not supposed to reflect what I think of the College as an institution. It's really more of how I rate myself as a "law student", whatever THAT is.

So here I go again, wandering about, trying not to step on anybody's toes, lest I lose one employment opportunity. The whole being nice to everybody thing is exhausting. I mean, I'm basically a nice person. I'm just not used to consciously forcing myself to be nice. I can be such a snob, see. I can do smalltalk, but I choose the people I associate with. Who ever said I had to be friends with everybody? I like people who are genuinely nice but are honest enough to show their evil side (e.g. Chi, Nico, Sands, et.al., my fellow interns (Haha! What a term!) Cara, Kaye and Jelo, etcetera etcetera), but I thorougly despise people who obviously have so much angst that they end up hating everybody.

Hah. And thus the plot thickens.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Minutes away from our next coffee break...

I will never complain that I'm bored at work. To myself, I mean. I don't have to abstain from complaining out loud about not being given enough work, as I have NEVER (Read: N-E-V-E-R) done that. Duh. That would be suicide pure and simple. Anyway, I got to the office a bit later than usual today. As it turns out, Ayala Ave.'s closed. Thus the horrendous traffic. It took us an hour and a half to get from Katipunan to Salcedo. Half of that we spent staring at the Volvo next to us on the Kalayaan to Buendia flyover. Can't all the firms just transfer to Eastwood? Wishful thinking. Anyhoo, Cara, Kaye, Jelo and I are traipsing over to the nearest Starbucks in a bit for a coffee break. We've been basking in our lethargy for the past three working days, but none of us are about to start complaining. When it rains, it pours. The first two weeks here, I was so swamped with work I ended up working through Saturday AND Sunday. All this sans a computer. Translation: EXPENSIVE. And I'm not even getting paid that much. Oh well. All my hard-earned wages from this second summer internship (which, incidentally, is not required =p) are going into suits. I planned everything out. One set = blazer, skirt, pants. I'm getting two sets made, one in khaki and one in gray. And white pants. =p My white pants suck. I either look like I have a wedgie (when I really do not) OR like my ass suddenly vanished into thin air. Anyway, I can't wait to get my scholarship money so I can go shoe-shopping. My feet are just about ready to die from wearing stilettos to work everyday. My flats aren't exactly meant for the corporate world. Hahaha!

Hmmm... I've been telling my fellow interns (Yauck, feeling! It's not half as grand as it sounds. =p) that I've been getting anxiety attacks (not the real thing ha.) due to the fact that I haven't done anything since that trademark application thing. Was my work not up to par, thus the hesitation to give me more work? Are they just waiting for me to get the hell out of here? Man. I worked my ass off naman the first couple of days, and I think I delivered naman. Well, except for that memo I did for B.A. (not his real name). Now that was one PIECE OF CRAP. Seriously. Oh, and I'm getting used to the three-letter initials. If and when I become a lawyer, I'll be called MGT. Sounds a lot more lawyerly than GYT. Well, at least I think so. Comment on this.

Anyhoo, we're off to Starbucks. We'll be back in, um, an hour? Hehe! Feed me!!! I'm hungry. AGAIN. My stomach is a bottomless bit, I swear to God.

Sunday, April 23, 2006

Working on a Sunday afternoon...

Yun lang. No time to write anything substantial. I have to finish this na so I can get started on my next memo due Tuesday morning.

Friday, April 07, 2006

A commentary on "Trial Practice: The Art of Survival" (by Atty. Theodore O. Te)

CAVEAT: Because people tend to take everything I say or write seriously, I'll state right here that this is not a critique of any sort. These are just the comments that popped into my head during the OLA Seminar. Nuff said.

(1)
Never do anything pro forma, i.e. Make it your own.

Wow, parang American Idol. Sure, sir. I'll be Mrs. Chris Daughtry. =p Hotttt.

(2) Take the hard case.

No problem. I'm a self-confessed masochist. I like stress. I just lose hair over it. And complain a lot. But I like it. Diff is, OLA involves other people too. Now that's the clincher.

(3) Try the case you love.

Meron ba nun.

(4) Do not take the case home.

Literally or figuratively? Either way, is it possible not to? OLA hasn't even started but it's already giving me nightmares.

(5) Never lie or cheat.

Teddy Te: Come to think of it, that's an irony.

No comment. I invoke my right to remain silent.

(6) Beware of young lawyers. (They're excited and they "overprepare".)

Note that this refers to young LAWYERS. Therefore, not to me. I'm a mere pheasant. (Yes, with an H. As in feather creature.) Duh. I'm an incoming senior with absolutely ZERO knowledge of anything law-related. Sheeeyet!!! Pwede mamatay na ako ngayon pa lang?!!

(7) Do not drink before 5.

A.M. or P.M.? In any case, any time is arguably after 5 (pm or am) of the previous day. Bwahaha! I need a beer. Or five. Or "5 beers and half a bottle of wine". For those not in the know, that's from Teddy Te's exercise.

(8) Do not take yourself too seriously.

Oh, I really don't. I'm a complete and utter fool. Honest. I know I know nothing.

(9) Do not read advance sheets only.
(10) But read the advance sheets as well.

I'll worry about it when I have to.

(11) Keep fit.

I did 5k last night. Yipeedoo. At least I burned .000001% of my food intake. It was fun though. I was supposed to play basketball with Sands, but I was too sweaty and sticky to even consider any physical activity aside from walking home and taking a long shower.

(12) Enjoy other interests.

(Copied from Friendster) Hobbies and Interests:
Apparently, law. =p Hmmm... movies (just not local teeny bopper flicks), music (just not country music), food (Filipino, Thai, JAPANESE!!!), shopping, my friends' (and other people's) lives, sharks (I'm not kidding.), good books, the intricacies of the remote control, new stuff, new people, stuff, people =p, highlighters, power staplers and other gadgets, people-watching, talking, taking long walks (preferably in the rain), procrastinating

(13) Talk to civilians. (Get other friends.)

Almost all my friends went to law school... And when we meet up with those who didn't, they inevitably end up asking us for legal advice and the like. Which I despise to infinity and beyond.

(14) Take vacations.

But lethargy bores me to tears... Well, more than 2 weeks anyway.

(15) Do not worry about just winning.

More worried about how not to appear like the fool that I am.

(16) Laugh a lot.

I did a lot of that today. Cf. Direct examination of Mr. Tahong who was subsequently cited in contempt, or alternatively declared a hostile witness and imprisoned in a tub of water inside the court room, for refusing to respond to counsel's questions.

(17) Always prepare.

Well, I've started buying clothes... Does THAT count?

(18) Take time to look good, you'll feel good too.

What if that's the only thing one's got going...a good outfit. Can you move for postponement on the ground that your outfit's too good to be sweated into in a steaming courtroom?

(19) Pray!

Oh, I intend to do a lot of that.

Hay OLA OLA OLA... Now I understand my friends' misery... Kill me kill me kill me.

Officially on vacation

Yep, I am. I have so much to do though. Tomorrow, I'm off to get a CBC and a thyroid test. Suspected case of hypo (or is it hyper) thyroidism, my doctor tells me. And then I have to go drop by the tailor's for slacks. Gawd, OLA's looming over our heads. I wish I could just drop dead right now. Only good thing about it is that I get to shop. For clothes I can't really use everyday!!! Darn. I wanted to buy so many things in Eastwood earlier but I couldn't because I was saving my moolah for the "more important" stuff. I just got three blouses for my summer internship. I scoured through the Eastwood shops and found THREE that I liked.

Hay nako. That weird guy sent me another mushy email. Duh. Ano ba.

OLA OLA OLA... The new bane of my existence. We just spent 2 and a half days in loooooong lectures on what to do, what not to do, how exciting it is, how absolutely horrifying it is... It's mortifying having to handle cases for real people. It's their life and property dear. It's not like we can turn back time if we fuck it up. Good thing I didn't apply for summer OLA. If I had, I'd be dead by now. Charles has a direct examination set for Monday afternoon. Oggs has mediation on the 18th, direct examination on the 19th, and another hearing of some sort on the 27th. Holy crap. How am I going to survive senior year?!!!

Saturday, April 01, 2006

=)


Somebody already broke my heart 5:01

you came along when i
needed a saviour
someone to pull me
through somehow
i've been torn apart so
many times
i've been hurt so many
times before
so i'm counting on you now

somebody already
broke my heart
somebody already
broke my heart

here i am
so don't leave me stranded
on the end of a line
hanging on the edge of a lie
i've been torn apart so
many times
i've been hurt so many
times before
so be careful and be kind

somebody already
broke my heart
if someone has to lose
i don't want to play
somebody already
broke my heart
no no i can't go there again

you came along when i
needed a saviour
someone to pull me
through somehow
i've been torn apart so
many times
i've been hurt so many
times before
so i'm counting on you now

somebody already
broke my heart
if someone has to lose
i don't want to play
somebody already
broke my heart
no no i can't go there again

(Adu/Denman/Matthewman)

More Sade


Lovers Rock 4:14

i am in the wilderness
you are in the music in the man's car next to me
somewhere in my sadness
i know i won't fall apart
completely

when i need to be rescued
and i need a place to swim
i have a rock to cling to
in the storm
when no-one can hear
me calling
i have you i can sing to

and in all this
and in all my life

you are the lovers rock
the rock that i cling to
you're the one
the one i swim to in a storm
like a lovers rock

i am in the wilderness
you are in the music in the man's car next to me
somewhere in my sadness
i know i won't fall apart
completely
and in all this
and in all my life

you are the lovers rock
the rock that i cling to
you're the one
the one i swim to in a storm
like a lovers rock

you are the lovers rock
the rock that i cling to
you're the one
the one i swim to in a storm
like a lovers rock

when i need to be rescued
you're there
when i need a place to swim to
in the storm
i think of you
and in all my life
and in all my life

you are the lovers rock
the rock that i cling to
you're the one
the one i swim to in a storm
like a lovers rockcoming from where he did
he was turned away from
every door like joseph
to even the toughest among us
that would be too much
he didn't know what it was
to be black
'til they gave him his change but didn't want to touch
his hand
to even the toughest among us
that would be too much

isn't it just enough
how hard it is to live
isn't it hard enough
just to make it through a day

the secret of their fear
and their suspicion
standing there looking
like an angel
in his brown shoes
his short suit
his white shirt
and his cuffs a little frayed
coming from where he did
he was such a dignified child
to even the toughest among us
that would be too much


isn't it just enough
how hard it is to live
isn't it hard enough
just to make it through a day

coming from where he did
he was turned away from
every door like joseph
to even the toughest among us
that would be too much
he didn't know what it
was to be black
'til they gave him his change but didn't want to touch
his hand
to even the toughest among us
that would be too much

(Adu/Denman/Matthewman)

My song


King of Sorrow 4:52

i'm crying everyone's tears
and there inside our private war i died the night before
and all of these remnants
of joy and disaster
what am i supposed to do
i want to cook you a soup that warms your soul
but nothing would change nothing would change at all
it's just a day that brings
it all about
just another day
and nothing's any good

the dj's playing the
same song
i have so much to do
i have to carry on
i wonder if this grief will
ever let me go
i feel like
i am the king
of sorrow
the king of sorrow

i suppose i could just walk away
will i disappoint my future
if i stay
it's just a day that brings
it all about
just another day
and nothing's any good
the dj's playing the
same song
i have so much to do
i have to carry on
i wonder will this grief
ever be gone
will it ever go
i'm the king
of sorrow
the king of sorrow

i'm crying everyone's tears
i have already paid for all
my future sins
there's nothing anyone
can say to take this away
it's just another day
and nothing's any good

i'm the king
of sorrow
king of sorrow

(Adu/Denman/Matthewman)

Don't you just love her?


By your side 4:34

you think i'd leave your side baby
you know me better than that
you think i'd leave you down when you're down on your knees
i wouldn't do that
i'll tell you you're right when you want
and if only you could see into me
ha ah ah ah ah ah

oh when you're cold
i'll be there
hold you tight to me

when you're on the outside baby and you can`t get in
i will show you you're so much better than you know
when you're lost and you're alone and you cant get back again
i will find you darling and i will bring you home

and if you want to cry
i am here to dry your eyes
and in no time
you'll be fine

you think i'd leave your side baby
you know me better than that
you think id leave you down when you're down on your knees
i wouldn't do that
i'll tell you you're right when you want
and if only you could see into me
ha ah ah ah ah ah

oh when you're cold
i'll be there
hold you tight to me
when you're low
i'll be there
by your side baby

oh when you're cold
i'll be there
hold you tight to me
oh when you're low
i'll be there
by your side baby

(Adu/Denman/Matthewman)


Brainless

I seem to be hovering about without a brain. Honest. I've been floating through the past couple of days on the built-up momentum of 23 years. I do everything out of habit, and the rest out of necessity. Whee...

Anyhoo, I'm supposed to be working on my the Law & Economics final. The thing is, my so-called brain, or that void where that mass of gray matter is supposed to be, is not working. I need a good fine-tuning here...

It's been pretty gloomy Thursday. Don't get me wrong, I love this sort of weather, especially now that finals are over and I don't really have to go out. All I really have to do is snuggle in bed with my pillows (Thanks Nico! =) My pillows are a wonderland. Nico gave them to me Christmas of our freshman year in law school kasi inggit na inggit ako sa pillows niya nung college. I had this whole pillow-napping plan thing pa nga. Hehe!) and one of the books I bought myself as 23rd birthday presents. Anyway, that AND my Law & Economics final. What ever possessed me to take an elective this sem? It's not like I'm delayed or whatever.

Oh yeah, I'll be working again this summer. I get bored after 2 weeks of nothing to do except sleep and watch tv. It gets old eventually, and as I'm as broke as hell, travelling's out of the question. I'd much rather stress over legal memos for 6 weeks than stare out of the window and watch the trees or something. Sucks! Sad thing is I'll have to commute to work and back here. My comrades are both out of commission, it seems. Oh well. Word of advice, when taking the bar, do NOT underline your answers. You could get disqualified for marking. Sayang talaga.

Anyway, if I could just get this exam over and done with...

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Ladida...

A.R.'s right. I do trust people too easily. I really have to be more careful as to what I say and who I hang out with. I mean, duh, I know not everybody gets along, and there are mean evil people (like myself) but who said they had to pretend to be otherwise? It's irritating AND disappointing. Hay. Some people talaga.

Anyway, I'll be hitting the books in a bit after I have dinner. I just came back from the 6pm mass at della Strada. Today would have been my mom's 51st birthday.

Love Tax!

Sunday, March 26, 2006

New URL =p

Bwahaha! I'm now hidden, though not so inconspicuous. I can think of half a dozen ways to find my blog. Seems I've attracted some of the EWWW crowd. Though this isn't exactly the best prose around, I still cringe at the thought of THOSE people reading it.

First off, this is not meant to be a bulletin of sorts nor a comprehensive account of the not-so-exciting life I lead. Duh. If I wanted to tell people EVERYTHING, I'd get into so much trouble I'd rather die. I write what I want to write, and when I leave stuff out, that's because I don't want to write about them HERE.

Anyhoo, I'm working on that f%^&* Tinga dissent to the October 18 resolution. Darn. Akala ko same lang yun as the one Ms.Mills worked on. And I quote, "Fucking A!!!"

Oh, and I had an interesting VERRRY early breakfast with a friend of mine Wednesday morning. I won't say na lang who. People assume way too many things. And then they spread nasty rumors. Anyway, this guy called me up like five times from 1am to 3am. He was tipsy the first time. As for the last 4, let's just say he couldn't quite figure out how he was able to drive to Eastwood. Duh. I told him nga, "(Bleep), ayoko pa mamatay ha. May finals pa ako kay Danny Con." Actually, he's a lot more likable when he's drunk. Nagiging gentleman eh. Hehe! Nag-oopen ng car door, nag-aalalay going down the stairs (escalator, actually. But they don't work at 3am.), nanglilibre ng breakfast and other stuff... Oh well. But when he was sober na, gawd. What's up with THAT?!! After breakfast, we took an early morning stroll around Eastwood, which would have been fun, if it weren't for the fact that (bleep) was trying to convince me that I was a guy. Anyway, nice pala sunrise from that alley somewhere in Eastwood right next to the river. Medyo stinky nga lang if you get too close. To the river. Not to him. Mabango naman siya. Well, the lingering scent of alcohol aside. Mukha namang naliligo siya. I think we spent around an hour or two pa in Eastwood after that. Looking back, sana nga pala we waited na lang for the mall to open at nagmovie na lang kami. Di rin naman ako nakaaral na after that eh. Anyhoo, we ended up walking around the high school field after that. Medyo mahirap tumakbo in (white) sandals ha. Kainis. Nakasimba pa kami sa Wednesday morning mass. O diba, good girl. Hehe!

So anyway, back to the wonderful world of Tax 2. Tax is a BOYET.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Bored...

Handwriting Analysis
What Your Writing Reveals About You

Grace, your handwriting reveals that you are Trustworthy

Your writing style reflects that you're reliable, and it communicates to others that they can depend on you to see things through to the end. Is it the legibility of your writing, your baseline, or your letter spacing that gives you away?

Your personalized, 12-page Handwriting Analysis will reveal the unique trait that shows your Trustworthy spirit. It's ready right now!

Makasalanan talaga akong tao.

Greed:High

Gluttony:High

Wrath:Medium

Sloth:Medium

Envy:Medium

Lust:Medium

Pride:Medium


I got this off Lianne's Blog. Grabe, I'm going straight to hell at this rate. =p

The Seven Deadly Sins Quiz on 4degreez.com

Uh, happy March 1st...?

I blew my Winlaw Ball fund on non-related stuff last Friday. I bought 2 pairs of sandals and 2 C.S. Lewis books (The Screwtape Letters and The Four Loves), oh and my beloved tea tree oil. So now I'm broke yet again. Oh well. And L.A. won't be able to make it to the ball... =( He has this out-of-town office thing this weekend kasi. Darn. But Tito Ron's coming over from Bacolod tomorrow. Yipee! He'll be staying at Mama's place til he leaves for the States on the 18th. And I hope Tita Susan finally moves here. I miss Jem.

As for the long weekend, I spent it in front of the tv, learning how to cook. It was a fun albeit VERY unproductive weekend. Not much to tell.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

In response to comments, among other things...

First of all, I'd really appreciate it if you guys would sign your names. It's not like you write offensive or controversial stuff anyway.

In any case, here's my new thing: NO ASSUMPTIONS, i.e. nagpapaka-dense ako ngayon. Case in point is the case at bar. No matter what other people say, until the whole thing slaps me in the face, I will not acknowledge. And yes, there ARE innocent gestures. Like Nico's happy birthday text, which Sands is making such a big deal out of. Duh. It's Nico. Nuff said.

I'm just passing time until Corpo class comes along...

I had a GREAT birthday, by the way. I woke up at 8, took a shower then went over to David's to get a haircut. First trip with my new 'do was Rustan's and Mercury to go toiletries-shopping. My favorite pasttime. =) And then it was back to the condo to arrange stuff. He hadn't texted yet about lunch, so I went back to David's for a foot spa treatment. He and I had lunch at World Chicken, dessert and coffee at Cravings, then we went to his house to watch The Longest Yard with his older brother. First time in eons that I've visited. I was a bit uneasy about the idea of going there, but he told me it was no problem at all, since his family likes me anyway. (Kilig!!!) Anyway, I think his mom was happy to see me. Hehe! Oh, and his sister got her hair cut short too. And then it was 4pm, so I had to head back to school for Corpo, so he drove me to Malcolm na. I haven't had that much of that kind of fun in I don't know how long. I'd forgotten how it felt to have someone I sincerely care about hold my hand and watch a movie with me and all that. Hay... I'm still floating right now. Natural high again.

BUT I am not making any assumptions. Kinikilig lang ako on my own. Wherever he intends to go with this, sige lang. I'm fine with being friends. I have fun with him, and that's all that really matters, right? If I end up crying over this again, well, it's worth it.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Valentine's Day and all that

A short description of how I spent Valentine's day: I slept at 8am after spending hours fixing my Corpo notes. (My insomnia is on a killing spree again.) Woke up at 1pm. Started cleaning everything in sight til 5pm. Took a shower. Ate breakfast / lunch / dinner. Watched the news. Now checking my mail. Yipeedooyay. =p

P.S. I think the elements of my grand plan are slowly coming together. I hope it works.

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Tax? What's THAT?!!

Loc Gov finals are OVERRRRR!!!!!!!!!

Bwahahahaha!!!!!!!

Hay. So there. Now I can get on with my life again.

In any case, I've been going out this guy (an old friend from college) lately. I don't know what exactly his intentions are, but it's comfortable, and we have fun together. That's all that really matters. I don't want to assume anything, although he's been dropping quite a lotta hints since he dropped by Friday morning last week... Wonder when our dinner thing will push through. Well, que sera sera.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Goodbyes and a new sense of solitude

On Goodbyes...

I hate goodbyes. "Goodbye" is just such a sad word. Losing someone is such painful ordeal to have to go through. It's a shock that manifests itself more tangibly than any other emotion, and much stronger than even the deepest sense of failure or regret. And when there are no tears left to cry, the loneliness sets in.

I'm a self-raising child, but sometimes, I still feel the impact of losing my mom so early. Mid-Christmas break, I had a long conversation with Tita Susan about my mom. I'm reliving an ominous sense of loss now that I can't seem to remember her anymore. Her face, her voice, how it felt to be hugged in the morning, to be dropped off at school, to be welcomed literally with open arms after a long day, to be tucked into bed and kissed goodnight... After 13 years of going through life without her, it seems like she was never really there, that she only exists in my dreams and in old photographs, in those little messages she scribbled on the insides of the storybooks she bought for me and my brother. Juxtapose that with the knowledge that I would have never become who I am without her, it all amounts to reliving the saddest goodbye I ever said. I'm still in the process of trying to reconstruct a tangible memory of her, attempting to draw myself a picture from a distant memory here and there.

If you've ever lost a parent, you'll know that when people tell you that they know how you feel, they really don't. And though they tell you they're sorry for your loss, it really doesn't make dealing with the sudden sense of emptiness any easier. The morning I woke up to find that my mom was gone was the worst morning of my life. After the the funeral, I found myself alone, a 9-year-old trying to figure out how to manage a household, how to take care of my younger brother, and how to deal with myself. Difficult times that still haunt me sometimes. I'm just lucky I'm more resilient than most people. Everyone has problems. Everyone has issues to deal with. And they all are proportionately equal burdens to bear. But losing a loved one, losing a parent, and later on losing your memory of him / her is a different story altogether. Trust me, when you lose a parent, you lose part of yourself forever.

A new sense of solitude

So far, I've been "single" for two and a half years now. I remember describing myself after the big breakup as having just gotten out of a two year +++ relationship and getting used to a new sense of freedom. Well, it's one thing getting used to a new sense of freedom. It's quite another to be facing a blank wall or an endless tunnel (not necessarily dark) most of the time. These are the sort of days when I feel like I've lost my sense of direction in life. I mean, I know where I'm generally headed, it's just that it's all so abstract. Well, yes, that's generally how it is, but... I don't know. Maybe it's because Tito Ron's migrating to the States mid-March. I've just gotten used to having him around, or at least in the country.

As for my relationship blues, or better yet, my no-relationship blues, mainly due to the fast-approaching Valentine's Day on the 14th, my birthday on the 17th, and the Winlaw Ball on March 4th... I just miss those days when I had a regular date, someone to hang out to watch the sunset from the football field, or to be with until the wee hours of the morning or until sunrise just sitting somewhere with good intelligent conversation, with or without a beer. Without anybody getting jealous and minus the risk of getting teased about it. It's such a hassle having really close guy friends who are otherwise engaged or committed. I inevitably get rumored to be trying to pry them apart, or to be the other woman. Duh? They were my friends even before they got together with their so-called significant others. If we had something going, then that something would have inevitably manifested itself by now. If it's my guy friends who are not otherwise "in a relationship", I get all these gooey looks that say "Is there something going on with the two of you?" or worse, "He's mine, back off." Why can't people believe a girl can just be friends with a guy and not have anything else going for him? Gawd, what a goddamned hassle.

Well, when there IS something there, that's a different story altogether. But that "thing" happens to be something special. It's not something I feel for every guy who comes along. Like I always say, if I don't care for someone, that means I wouldn't bat an eyelash even if you jumped off the tallest building in Manila. BUT if I do give a shit, i.e. I care-slash-love-slash-(whatever people call it nowadays), I'm very protective, and I'm fiercely loyal. That having being said, well, sometimes, things just don't work out the way I wish them to. Sometimes, it starts out well, develops into something beautiful, and then ends in sobs and tears and drunk nights crying my eyes out with my girlfriends. Sometimes, it doesn't start at all. But somewhere along the line, something wonderful is bound to happen and last. At least I hope so. God, I hope so. It's not about being alone or not being loved, because I feel neither. It's just about having something else. Something different. Something exclusive, for lack of a better word. Something special. It's like having a special little secret that only he and I share. It's just...comfortable, but with that oomph.

This entire tirade about relationships is actually a teeny bit peculiar, given the fact that when certain events lead me to the reasonable belief that X or Y or Z or A or B (or whichever letter in the alphabet one would like to use to substitute for his real name) is makin' moves, I freeze. I get scared. I run. I did it before, and I think I'll never get over my fears. It's easy to flirt when I'm just being playful, and both of us just engage in harmless pseudo-flirtatious conversation which we both know doesn't mean anything significant and will not lead to anything more than a funny exchange of words. Otherwise, i.e. when I like someone, I inevitably get tongue-tied. Yep. I do. And I hate myself for it. Gawd, he thinks I'm such an idiot who can't keep up with him. Kainis. I end up censoring and sanitizing and rethinking and rewording everything in my head, prejudging everything I want to say, that I end up either not saying anything at all and just giving him this retarded look, or saying something incomprehensible. I'm not exactly a genius, but I'm not a moron either. And I hate coming across as a retard. Man.

Anyway, I think I'll end this splay of words right here. I'm going upstairs to berate myself for my inability to carry on an intelligent conversation. Sometimes, I really get the feeling that I'm losing 10 IQ points everyday. I think I'll just hide under my pillow until the sun comes up. At least my pillow won't judge me.

Two weeks before I turn 23

I turn 23 in two weeks!!! Dammit. Oh well. I'm old.

Anyway, I've been pretty busy lately with the paperwork for Tita Susan and law school and all. Loc Gov finals next week... Bummer. Very relaxing weekends though. I spent half my Christmas break in Laguna with my maternals (the first half in Lipa with my dad), and I had a FANTASTIC New Year's. The best EVER. Almost everyone was there. We crowded ourselves into our teeny weeny place, but it was fun fun fun. I was in EK with Tita Susan, Tito Efren, Jem and Kev December 31st. The rest I spent just enjoying everyone's company.

I've been going home pretty regularly since. I go home Friday night after Corpo with Danny Con. It's sort of a long trip. Jeep to the Q Ave MRT station, MRT to Ayala, walk to the Landmark / Park Square bus terminal, bus ride to Biñan, tric home. Phew. That's roughly 2 to 3 hours' worth of idle mindwork. You can just imagine what weird thoughts I come up with. I spend the weekend chowing down everything in sight. Which is A LOT. Mama and Tito Ricky cook like there's no tomorrow when I'm there. It's just so relaxing to be home, even if it just means 2 days or so every week. I get to see my two nephews, Stephen Nathan (3) and Josef Nikolaus (2). Both VERRRRY rowdy little boys. But they're as sweet as they are pains in the you-know-what. So it's all well and good. Of course, there's Mama, the brattiest grandmother in the whole world. Who lets me smoke. And my cousins Shirley and Cheryl, and Tito Ricky. Sometimes Tita Nita drops by. And Tito Ron's been coming over a lot from Bacolod. Can't wait to go home. Manila (well, Quezon City, technically speaking...) is just too much sometimes. Monday mornings are always still the worst. It's just hell trying to pry myself out of my sanctuary. But then it won't do to just stay there and relax everyday. No can do.

Oh yeah, a certain boy and a certain girl I know are pseudo-dating, according to this little bird who flew by my window the other day. Visuals have proven that much. No descriptions. People make too many assumptions.

I just got in touch with Tito Mike. Actually, he's actually more like an older brother, since he's just 3 years older. Apparently, he works in Eastwood lang pala, so we're meeting up sometime soon.

And that little tiff with Ngangi and Lorraine is over, thank God. It's inevitable to have those little arguments once in a while. Basta it doesn't figure much in the long run, it's fine.

Hay... I just missed Only You for the nth time. And tomorrow's the last episode. Darn. Oh well. Guess I'll just have to catch THAT on DVD.

On another note, L.A. and I are friends na again after our early morning texting pseudo-fight. I think he kinda got offended when I gave him a rundown of all the reasons why he's getting into a relationship that's SO not proper or advisable. Well, at least he has my points in mind na. We're meeting up sometime next week, probably after I have breakfast with Tito Iggy.

Two months of not writing anything has come to this.