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March, 2006

  1. The erotic vandal cannot write.

    March 26, 2006 by A.

    Argh. I can’t seem to continue this short story, which is supposed to be the first one in my collection for my thesis. I’ve tried working on the others already. But this one? I don’t know what my character wants (Omu as fictionalized character; not Omu, my friend okay?). Anyway, as I’ve said, I can’t seem to make her move. Perhaps it’s because I don’t seem to know what I want anymore.

    ***********************************************************************************************************************

     

    They call me Omu, short for Omalou. My parents broke down their names for me. I must explain this every time someone asks my name.

    They tease me. Not about my name, but about my height. I stand 5 feet flat, and the length of my hair shortens my torso because it covers my back. I do not wear heels. I like walking close to the ground. I do not retaliate in their terms. I cannot, because I find something attractive in each of them, in the slightest imperfection of their bodies: a body so thin, I could break it; a faux British accent that makes me observe the movement of mouth; tattered nails from too much biting; skin tone the color of dirt.

    I like my height. Short girls can have a lot of fun, I’d always tell them. I know my shortness emphasizes my large breasts. My full hips. And my face. When I stare at the full-length mirror, it is my face I see. I study my facial mannerisms well. I know I have a habit of licking my lips because I do not like them dry. And when I laugh, I know my big eyes sparkle because they hold more water. I am attractive, and this is how I retaliate, how I tease them back.

    I am talking about the boys, of course. Boys do that, tease the girls they like. And the girls they reject. I don’t care what motivates them to tease me, as long as they continue.

    One of them has stopped, though. The one with the broken front tooth. He used to be one of the best among them–when I’d talk ,he’d pretend to hear a voice from down under the table, or when I’d stoop to get something that had fallen, he’d tell me that I was so short, I need not stoop anymore. I looked forward to his jokes everyday, wondered what fresh banter he had for me, and slowly, carefully, he was getting worse at it. The day came when he suddenly stopped, fell silent with his jests. And we actually started talking. Sometimes I’d provoke him by appearing vulnerable to our friends’ jokes about short girls who want to have fun. Or make up anecdotes about how I struggled with my height, how it made me go unnoticed in a crowd of familiar faces, how I almost slipped on a chair I was standing on because I couldn’t reach the bookshelf. But he wouldn’t stir, and it was precisely what made me feel small. Weak. I do not know how to handle him, handle reciprocation. I am bold with my flirting, but what to do when a man responds? Expects. I don’t like it when they do.

    I rejected him. I reject the boys I like. Tease the boys I reject. He opened up, wanted me to be the home of his weakness. But I am too at home with mine. There is no room for him to rest.

    I am restless. I cannot stop myself from treating them all equally: my hand occasionally brushing against someone’s chest, my head resting on someone’s shoulder with my nose slightly touching neck, my leg on top of someone’s thigh, my finger in someone’s ear. It’s a sport for my singlehood, similar to hunting, except that I do not aim. I set a trap, open to everyone, assume a prey-like attitude, telling them of my failed past relationships. This is therapy for me, to speak of failure, the way speaking of trauma is both a gesture of recall and of healing. And these boys. They’re too nice. They do not know how to be indifferent. They do not know how to be straightforward.

    I look at myself in the mirror, notice how its full length seems to frame my body, as if measuring the hollowness I felt when I saw a former lover last week, asked him jokingly if the girl he was with moments ago was his new catch, and ever so boldly, because I was sure he wasn’t over me yet. One does not forget that easily. He must have retaliated with a yes. I lift my skirt in front of this mirror, to see if my legs are too short, or perhaps my torso is too long, wondering why the crotch is always a basis for proportion. I touch the crotch in the mirror, and for a brief moment, realize how it might not break, because the woman facing it is more likely to be broken.


  2. No such thing as loving in vain

    March 22, 2006 by A.

    Talked about the nature of Vanity in his car on the way to his house. It was fueled by this topic being discussed on the radio, about flirting while in a relationship, whether it was okay or not. As always, our conversation began with our disparate views on the topic, (me thinking it was normal and him saying it wasn’t), and eventually leading us to isms and other related things like perspective, religion, upbringing, then dichotomies, then strangely, patriarchy, colonization, and oppression.
    Our conversation outlasted the radio show.

    Then he asked me if I wanted to drink, in spite of the fact that we were both already very sleepy as we had only slept for two hours the night before because of… well, personal needs.
    Anyway, we were as heavy-eyed as we were light-hearted. Finished two pitchers of beer and spent the entire night sprawled on the carpet, holding each other with tipsy arms, laughing away to F.R.I.E.N.D.S. on DVD, and taking turns going to the restroom. I had always wanted this, to drink with him as if in celebration of our quotidian love, and letting him hold me as if I were the smallest tipsy creature crying over Joey and Chandler when they fought over a woman.

    We woke up at around 5 in the afternoon already. I am filled with the vanity of giving love.

    “And not a vanity is given in vain.” -Alexander Pope


  3. The edge as horizon

    March 19, 2006 by A.

    Rarely is the artist capable of going both ways on two journeys, into the self and into the world […]. It is a combination of the Romantic I and the Classical they . It is subjective and it is objective. It navigates between the real and the imagined […].

    -Deena Metzger on Anais Nin

     

    I’ve always felt my place in the liminal space. As if I were constantly hanging in suspension, finding myself afloat just when I have alighted on ground. There is always a distance that intimates nearness as if constantly postponing pleasure. Please: both a command and a plea. I oscillate between its two connotations like a tidal wave. The deluge of desiring. And I have always been afraid of deep water.
    The true nature of a person is best discovered in bed. I have discovered much about other people — often hurtful revelations, but very suitable material for my writing. As for me, I’ve grown to love the edge of the bed, the way it poses the danger of falling off and perhaps hitting my head on the floor. It is an exaggeration, but sometimes I imagine it, its worst scenario, perhaps a landing that would make my head bleed. And it arouses me. Some might think me sick. But there really are times in the night, in the morning, when I feel a coldness in my chest that cannot be allayed by the one next to me. And so I turn away, find myself drawn to that which is beyond the bed, beyond the space of true nature, half-dreaming in my wake. This is how to desire what is close to you, knowing you cannot hold it any closer. You must move away.

     

    Pardon me for the incoherence of this entry, for I just woke up.


  4. I’m full of ______.

    March 16, 2006 by A.

    There’s something wrong with me. I’ve been extra irritable. Extra lethargic. Extra sarcastic. And extra emotional. No, I am not ovulating/having my period. And because I can’t seem to identify the cause, I shall blame it on the crossword puzzle. Yes, I spent the afternoon filling in little boxes with answers to: Yearbook sec. or Essence (var.) or Actress, ______ Barrymore (and mind you, it ain’t Drew) or Bubbly band leader, to name a very few. Funny how desperation figures in trying to identify answers to cetain far-fetched clues, like What’s in _____, in which… or personalities alien to me like Aunt Millie’s rival. I tried answering aname (“a name”) to the former but it doesn’t make sense in relation to the other boxes surrounding it. As for the latter, I only had one clue, which was a mere N as its second to the last letter. So the permutations follow, Edna, Anne, Arni, Jane, Mona… who could have possibly been Aunt Millie’s rival?! And over what? Cooking? Hair-dos? The children? A man? So after how many hours of relying on stock knowledge, counting squares, going through the entire alphabet and trying to mentally fit each possible letter into items with clues that are really beyond me, I did get very close to finishing  the crossword-f____ing-puzzle. I was left with two items. Fancy dance and Meeting. I wanted to kick myself for not knowing what word was synonymous to meeting, (to think I frequent such gatherings) and ends with the letters irn.
    And why the hell am I so irritable? Is it because of the place where one waits? Or maybe because of a dairy tubful? Or perhaps it is out of the desire to propel, as a shot. There must be something amiss in my soul, according to Sartre.

     

    What a corny blog entry.


  5. Burnout

    March 13, 2006 by A.

    I should have heeded the cards a year ago when they showed me the unpleasant outcome of my decision to stay in service — that it would turn out to be anti-climactic: The Tower. It is futile to cling to past accomplishments, and I’ve always wanted them then to remain unseen. But no matter how MUCH I’ve invested in the past five years, surviving politics and maintaining balance while nurturing relationships to see our collective effort to fruition, they will never suffice for my inefficiency at present. I never knew that staying would exhaust me this soon (even if a friend who is a co-worker did tell me that it’s about time I got exhausted). Because I did not, do not want to get tired of it. I have always been used to denying my bodily complaints, like postponing hunger, for instance, or overlooking sickness and sleep… what more exhaustion?

    To think I used to thrive in this, used to consider it the world and I used to move in it gracefully, used to take joy and derive strength from encouraging all of them to grow and not to lose heart in art. And so many of them looked up to me for answers. I used to have all the energy for management, and all the energy to listen to what they had to say about their lives.

    Now I have lost heart. And I’m just waiting for it all to end. For the meantime, I will just finish what I have to finish, it won’t be a very long wait.

    The Tower:
    “As a warning light-house The Tower announces cliffs and shoals. Its essence is change without participation. Long term planning and cautious preparation prove useless.

    Regard The Tower as a messenger of blind fortune. Stay calm you have done what you can. Do not cling to the past. Simply watch the fall of debris, accept that there really are things out of your control.”
    I did not listen.


  6. Penguin for your thoughts?

    March 12, 2006 by A.

    Another long, insightful conversation with him at Penguin Bar, Malate. As a matter of fact, we seemed to have created a world of our own again, where everone and everything around us seemed to have receded in the background (my apologies to Jenny, who celebrated her birthday, and the rest of the lit barkada). It makes me so happy to see him open himself to me, like watching a lion unfurl its glorious mass after an afternoon slumber. Talked about the nuances in initiation and response, gestures and passivity, love and fondness. He admitted things that were quite surprising to me as they were relieving. Like the real subtexts behind his responses to certain people if only for them not to get hurt, the inability to reject in the name of courtesy. Then he asked me about my honest take on such things. I answered, even with the risk of momentarily breaking him with stories of genuine generosity, the things I’ve done in the light of my I-want-to-make-love-to-the-world philosophy. And I fall in love over and over again with the fragility of his strength.

    He accuses me of being too understanding. That such an attitude makes me susceptible to others’ abuse, men and women alike.

    Perhaps I am. But it is what keeps me from thinking ill of others.

    Besides, without my understanding, I would have left long before we could have reached this state of pleasant transparency.

    I am happy now. He makes me so happy.


  7. “Heaven help me for the way I am…” -Criminal, Fiona

    March 10, 2006 by A.

    “I’ve been a bad, bad girl. I’ve been careless with a delicate man. And it’s a sad, sad world…”

    Oh, Intellectual Vanity, Curiosity — the things you make me do!
    Am nearly done dissecting and thus completely understanding the nature of jealousy. It’s been a productive (painful) 4 years of exploring, experiencing, and ruminating.

    “And I need to be redeemed to the one I’ve sinned against because he was all I ever knew of love…”

    But I’m giving this one, the one I’m with now, a chance. Despite everything.
    I owe him, for having made me realize the last and final thread of my discovery through our conversation the other night about past lovers and present selves, a conversation that robbed us of our sleep and of our eyes (mine were quite puffy in the morning).

    I would like to believe everything he told me, despite my acquired pessimism about him, about our relationship over the past months. And so I shall stay.


  8. The erotic vandal writes—-

    March 8, 2006 by A.

    I touch myself in his room when he is away, imagining us, recreating the scene of our lovemaking, modifying it, if only to be able to say I have come here, in this space, with him. This is how I’ve been in love: Feigning pleasure when all I feel is dissatisfaction; feeling my self, my presence, when I know I am secondary; so that I can say yes, I have a meaningful relationship. And so I often wonder how long I could keep up with this performance. I was born a performer this way, and I never forget to perform my sadness with style—it is only when I find myself losing it that I question myself and my place here with him. Sometimes I see myself in another place, a place of tenderness, kindness. Otherwise, I lose myself to his treatment and oftentimes, believe it to be tender. I am very good at believing in things. I enjoy being his, if only for a good performance’s sake. Yes, enjoy. Because joy, from the Greek word juoy, means to come. And I never come with him when we make love. I only know to come to him.


  9. I am not going to entitle this The Persistence of Memory

    March 7, 2006 by A.

    Strange how I remember the very moment I gained consciousness. I’m not being all “figurative” here. Neither am I attempting philosophical discourse. I mean it very simply. The moment I was born, I remember it: from hearing a long, muffled humdrum………………..then suddenly SOUND. And that account of how things appear blurry at first, only to gain clarity eventually? It’s true.

    I could not answer to the memory of my first tactile and olfactory experiences, though.

    But still. Isn’t that so strange? To remember such things?

    You don’t believe me, don’t you?

    Then pay attention. To the moment you first became conscious. Do not willingly invoke the memory, just be silent. It’ll come in flashes. I am bringing this up now because it just happened to me a few minutes ago. It was the nth time I experienced my birth in the landscape of my memory.

    No but really, they’re linked — the memory leads to certain thoughts, like wondering why you view things in first person, why you seem to be the “main character” of the frame of your vision as if you were the “camera,” thus not being able to see your own face without looking on a reflective surface, thus being the main person of this lifetime, as if your life were the main connective to other, if not everyone else’s, lives? And thinking, because of that, that perhaps the gods must have been biased in creating humankind because only you feel yourself the way no other person can ever feel you. Because if not, then why do you experience first hand?

    I’m not being narcissistic, thank you very much. I’m being selfish. Self-ish? I’m paying attention to myself paying attention to its Self.

    Funny how I remember something as early as my first consciousness and not be able to recall where I placed my phone I set aside just SECONDS AGO. So frustrating.

    I probably should turn in for the night already before I give birth to myself again.


  10. I must’ve been a nomad in a past life — No, mad?

    March 5, 2006 by A.

    I’m home. It’s been a week since I was last here. The last time was marked by a profound expression in my little sister’s face when, upon coming home from school, she found me in the room, in front of the mirror, indiscriminately cutting off my hair with a pair of scissors I had found in one of my old purses. She must have thought me crazy with the way she asked: “Ate… are you– alright?”

    And I couldn’t help but laugh. Such a comic little girl. I must have laughed too appreciatively, for she seemed to have given me an even more concerned look.

    But really, I was alright. Maybe it was just the irony of the scene, or better yet, the cycle of homing that transpired that afternoon: she comes home, finds me home after being severed from home for days, however finds me engaged in an act of severing as well, using a pair of scissors I found where? At home.

    My hair will grow back. The way I believe most severed things do. Severed selves, severed backbones, severed perception. Nomadic feet are free, they manage to grace old paths without knowing. And how often, you may ask? I will answer most confidently: I do not know.