2012 TO 2013 TRANSITION
Waiting … Waiting … Waited
AND NOW IT’S GOING, going and the first month is gone.
Twenty Thirteen
feels like trying out a new sofa, sizing it up whether it fits snugly or it
will leave some faint pain.
Twenty Twelve, for me, stayed soft as an easy chair even
in its remaining days. Despite the onslaught of typhoon Pablo down south, we
Filipinos were at our resilient, generous and loving best even in the worst of
times.
The year’s last
week proved to be a stroll down memory lane with an overload of the most, top, best,
and worst of everything, as analysed in all forms of media. I don’t have such
list because I will just round it off – no doubt, 2012 was a fantastic year for
me and my loved ones!
For purposes of yearend lists, I visited one of 2012’s Top
Destinations in Asia, Singapore [Travelers’Choice Awards 2012 by TripAdvisor]; and I wrote
about one of the Most Bankable Fashion Cover Girls of the year, Angelica
Panganiban. This was for MOD
magazine’s July issue. [PEP.ph listed 13 of them and to make
the list, these stars landed at least three covers from identified monthly
local fashion magazines, including – aside from MOD –Preview, Cosmopolitan, Mega, Meg, Metro and Chalk. Angelica also graced the covers of Cosmopolitan and Meg both in their August issues.]
And so 2013 has another set of 365 days and it won’t be
gone until the entire year is spent. It is my fervent prayer that the good
times and the positive vibes will continue.
It is my
intention to make sure each day will be really truly fully spent. Using that
famous line from the movie Dead Poets
Society – carpe diem –I will seize
the day ... I will seize each moment.
Whether I am
procrastinating or making sure everything gets done for the day. Even if I’m
just watching TV or watching earth and sky from my small frontyard.
[Two weeks after the New year started and while watering my plants, I saw a rainbow
and took some shots.
[Right after the holidays, I noticed a cocoon hanging from
my money tree and I stopped wondering why its leaves are full of holes – the caterpillar
in it has been feeding on them and I didn’t mind because it will become a
butterfly soon.]
Each activity or action, every mood or reflection will
matter. Notwithstanding the importance or triviality of what I am doing or what
is happening, I will make the most of it. I will make sure that when looking
back, I will merely look back and reminisce and not think or regret what might
have been.
But I wouldn’t
be so serious and, borrowing the words of an Anonymous, I will always take life
with a grain of salt … plus a slice of lemon and a shot of tequila.”
Carpe diem …
BOOB TUBE TIPS
Waiting for what the Chinese call
the Year of the Water Snake – although the said year officially starts this weekend -- begun right after Christmas Day or exactly seven days prior.
It was like the lull before the storm but in an exciting way because we were
then waiting for a brand new year to unfold.
Image from www.onlineastrology.com
These days were
quiet and uneventful but not necessarily boring. It was actually relaxing.
After all, there was Be Careful With My
Heart, ABS-CBN’s hit teleserye,
to perk up my mornings; and interesting movies and other shows on cable TV to
sort of brighten my nights.
And there are just too many memories from the recent holiday
parties and get-togethers that make me smile, laugh and misty-eyed, to keep me entertained
even if alone.
Twenty Twelve’s last few days saw me staying in front of
the TV too much. And I really mean too much because I have chosen taglines from
two TVCs to become my mantras –
Hooray for Today. This is from McDonald’s and I like the jingle’s
tempo which makes you think of sunshine and fresh air and green grass and it jibes
with my morning prayer that starts, “Heavenly Father, thank you for another day
…” I enjoy listening to the poetry in the jingle: Hooray for stop’s and go’s … hooray
for colors and quick hellos …
Open Happiness. I love drinking ice cold Coke and I believe its TVC that
you really open happiness when you uncap a bottle. At the risk of sounding like
an endorser, the softdrink is refreshing and it goes well with all my favorite
food. Just always open happiness – it’s like another version of good vibes
always; shun the negative, etcetera etcetera … As Mother Teresa has said, there is no key to happiness because the door
is always open.
Other tips picked up on the boob tube are –
Kapit bisig by Maya in Be Careful …, putting emphasis on teamwork and a sense of “we’re all in this
together”among family members and even friends; not to mention her good vibes [again]
philosophy.
“Maybe we could
express ourselves more fully if we say it without words.” – The Darjeeling Limited on Star Movies …
This is not so original and we’ve heard several versions of this but it’s true.
As one of my favorite songs goes, “you say it best when you say nothing at
all.”And this one, again by Anonymous, “silence is never misquoted.”
“How hard can it be if you set your mind to it?” … This is
Alvin telling his buddies in a Chipmunks movie
[seen on Star Movies] after they were stranded in some deep forest. Again, this
is something we’ve heard before but I liked the way the cute chipmunk delivered
it – full of spunk.
And then there
were other interesting quotables –
“I think
divorce should be made available to people who become homicidal at the sight of
each other.” – Senator Miriam Defensor-Santiago when asked to comment about the
Divorce Bill currently making the bishops go short to ballistics [seen on
ABS-CBN’s TV Patrol].
“You have to love yourself tapos kumuha ka pa ng isa pa o madami para magmahal sa sarili mo.” – Singer/Former Makati Councilor Rico
Puno in response to ABS-CBN’s game show Minute
to Win It host Luis Manzano’s question on how he stays young, when he
guested in the said show.
LESSONS FROM THE
CLUTTER
With daughter Ghiselle back at
work right after Christmas Day and then going to Boracay for a pre-New Year getaway
with friends, I occupied myself cleaning the house but more of clearing it of
my clutter and other oddments.
I took a second look at our veranda which has become a
mini repository of old and current stuff and possessions – including an
electric fan that slightly fans and my dad’s rocking chair that needs repair –
and I found a lot of press kits, reference materials, paper placemats (?),
loose photos and notebooks filled with quotations, and other printed material
which have been occupying much-needed space.
I also found a
bunch of my cross-stitched work – some still to be completed, others waiting to
be framed. One of them is a quotation – Live Well . Laugh Often . Love Much – I myself designed by
buying cross stitch letter patterns and chose the country colors I came to love
since I started cross-stitching, as influenced by my sister Patty whose work
adorns her house walls beautifully.
One interesting thing I liked about cross-stitching back
then was all those beautiful colors. I learned that there’s more to pink than
just baby pink because there’s salmon and coral and they are all beautiful
shades. I discovered another favorite color – aside from orange and green – and
it’s called periwinkle, which is not just blue or violet or bluish violet but a
mix of both colors wherein it’s not too blue nor too violet, just right and
it’s beautiful.
Okay, I don’t
do descriptions well …
Anyway, I was happy to find the old notebook of quotations
because there were a lot of such notebooks which were Ondoy-ed and gone forever. I started collecting quotations and
short anecdotes way back in high school and I would copy them to a notebook –
from my dad’s monthly Reader’s Digest to
my mom’s magazines and from almost everywhere, even framed sayings in restaurants.
Opening the old
notebook, the first quotation goes –
ONE OUGHT, every day at least, to hear a
little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to
speak a few reasonable words.
This was by
author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Next were some one-liners
I copied from an old calendar in Nini’s desk during my F. Jacinto Group days –
·
Start each day with a blank sheet.
·
Never let the urgent crowd out the
important.
·
Take care of your relationships.
·
Life does not stand still for you.
·
Take the road less travelled.
·
Fill your life with good memories.
And then there’s more –
·
All of us could take a lesson from
the weather. It pays no attention to criticism.
·
Life may not be the party we hoped
for, but while we’re here, we might as well dance.
·
Life is a journey, not a guided
tour.
·
Life is what happens while you are
making plans.
Here are two by Bill Gates –
·
Life is not fair – get used to it.
·
The world won’t care about your
self-esteem. The world will expect you to accomplish something before you feel
good about yourself.
This one shared
by Atty. Pompey [may he rest in peace], again from my F. Jacinto Group days –
LOOK FOR the humor in the serious; joy in
the sad; strength in the weak; and the best in the bad.
And here’s something to comfort me when household chores,
most especially dirty dishes, start to pile up –
THANK GOD for dirty dishes, they have a tale
to tell. While other folks go hungry, we’re eating pretty well. With home and
health and happiness, we shouldn’t want to fuss, for by this stack of evidence,
God’s very good to us.
Finally, I found
my Desiderata, another Ondoy victim. I will ask my brother Abe
to fix it so that it can be hanged again. I like the entire piece but I
especially like the following –
Be yourself. Especially, do not feign
affection. Neither be cynical about love; for in the face of all aridity &
disenchantment it is perennial as the grass.
There is one important lesson these clearing operations
taught me and that is I should have learned a long time ago what to let go and
when to let go. [Paper placemats, seriously?]
BOOK REVIEWS
Next, I checked out the pile of books
and photo albums at the foot of the stairs and in rearranging them, I came upon
some of my favorites – The Little Prince by
Antoine de Saint-Exupery; Hope For The
Flowers by Trina Paulus; I Know Why
The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou; The
Prophet by Kahlil Gibran; The God Of
Small Things by Indian writer Arundhati Roy; A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain by Robert Olen Butler; Enough Rope by Dorothy Parker; and The Velveteen Rabbit by Margerry
Williams.
The last book is
an adaptation and I gave this to my daughters on Christmas 1994. There was also
Tamar and the Tiger by Susan Jeschke,
a prize daughter Ghiselle got during a coloring contest sponsored by Wendy’s at
Greenbelt when she was only five years old.
On impulse, I picked up The Little Prince and started browsing through the pages. I have
read this book a lot of times and it never fails to touch my heart. My favorite
line – and I’m sure everyone who has read it share this – is “It is only with
the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”
I scanned
through the pages of Hope for the Flowers
and I remember what happened to my money tree.
Hope for the Flowers
is a simple story
of two caterpillars – one, named Stripe,
sets out in the outside world feeling there must be something more than eating
leaves, only to get disappointed; while the other, Yellow, stays and let nature
takes its course while eating leaves and spinning her own cocoon, until she was
transformed into a beautiful butterfly.
Of course, it is a happy ending as Yellow waits for Stripe who realizes in the
end that he must spin his own cocoon to become a butterfly and get the chance
to reach the sky.
I am not a good
storyteller but this book is highly recommended to those who have no patience in
reaching their goals and, most especially, those who cannot be satisfied as
well as those who give up easily.
The Velveteen Rabbit
is a beautiful
story about being real. I gave this book to my daughters when they were in
their pre-teens.
My favorite excerpt –
“Real isn’t how
you are made. It’s a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a
long, long time, not just to play with,
but really loves, then you become Real.”
“Does it hurt?
“Sometimes.
When you are Real you don’t mind being hurt.”
It has been a long time since I read a book – a printed one
I mean. My daughters Ghiselle and Pee Ann gifted me with an iPad and they
seemed to have uploaded a whole library in its iBooks for me. There's even a stack of Archie comic in it. I don’t really
miss the feel of a paperback because I think it’s more like what you are
reading – whether you are turning the pages made of paper or touching an iPad screen. I have
hugged my iPad a couple of times when carried away with a passage or an excerpt
– like those, among others, from Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat Pray Love: “People think a soul mate is your perfect fit, and
that’s what everyone wants. But a true soul mate is a mirror, the person who
shows you everything that is holding you back, the person who brings you to
your own attention so you can change your life.”; and Stieg Larsson’s The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo: “Love
was that moment when your heart was about to burst.” – the way I did with a
paperback and it feels just as good. Again, it’s the book not the medium used.
Right now, I am reading – alternately – The Wedding by Nicholas Sparks and The Cardinal of the Kremlin by Tom
Clancy. And as early as page 26 of The
Wedding, I already placed my iPad near my chest when touched by a romantic
passage … Surely, you know how Mr. Sparks writes – as in The Notebook and A Walk To
Remember, among others.
‘GREEN’ LEARNINGS
Then it was time to attend to our small garden …
In between the
holiday rush, Ghiselle and I went to Manila Seedling to buy garden soil and
some pebbles to make our garden a real garden again instead of a mini forest,
which it has become.
My brother Abe,
who has a green thumb, volunteered to beautify my garden again as his Christmas
gift and he did this on the 30th. It was fun having him around the
house as we laughed, looked forward to the New Year, talked about family and
common friends, and anything under the sun, including those crazy politicians.
He also danced with a group of senior ladies who came to
visit the neighborhood in a yearend carolling. Upon request – even if it was
meant to be a joke – the graceful ladies, who reminded me of our mom, obliged
to dance Gangnam Style.
In giving my
garden a makeover, my brother got rid of all those overgrowing plants and I
sort of worried that they may not grow back. He assured me they will and right
now new plants are sprouting once more, including the weeds. But they’re
beautiful … anything green is beautiful.
This brings me
to that episode in The Voice – caught
it in its replay on AXN also during the week of waiting for 2013 – when one
of the hosts, CeeLo Green, sang Bein’
Green with Kermit the Frog [as seen in the photo below from www.nbc.com/the voice/]. I especially liked the following lyrics –
It’s not easy being green
It seems you blend in with so many
other ordinary things …
But green’s the color of Spring
and green can be cool and
friendly-like …
And green can be big like an
ocean,
or important like a mountain,
or tall like a tree …
Green is indeed cool, being the color of nature and life
itself. I find it relaxing to just sit in my monoblock chair – soon it’ll be my
dad’s rocking chair because I’ll have it repaired shortly – and look at my small
garden and appreciate every leaf, stem, stalk and sometimes, every flower that
grows in it.
Thank God for small gardens for
they signify growth and the green colors mean that life is always fresh and
flourishing.
And so 2012 is history
and we’re done waiting for 2013. The New Year is not so new anymore and it’s
the Chinese’s turn to wait for their Year of the Water Snake.
Ghiselle and I, together with Abe, waited
for the New Year at Eastwood City, and welcomed it with fireworks, some
noisemakers and confetti and drinking and dancing and simply enjoying the
festive atmosphere.
The last time we spent New Year’s Eve in
the streets and with strangers was in 1999 along Ayala Avenue and the three of us
were joined by Pee Ann, niece Rica, and cousin Robert.
The first day of 2013
started for us with a buffet breakfast still at Richmonde Hotel Eastwood and
then off to St. Peter Parish along Commonwealth Avenue for my thanksgiving
mass. I had a lot to thank God for in 2012 … actually, I thanked Him for the
entire 2012 and requested Him that all the good things will continue in 2013.
My clearing operations continue as there are just too many
in the apartment that must go. Too many memories but these are just the
physical part so it’s time for us to part ways.
In ending, I’d like
to go back to that episode of The Voice with
the celebrity hosts – Christina Aguillera, Blake Shelton, CeeLo and Adam Levine [I just love this guy
and he is the reason why I watch the reality singing contest; and the photo
below from www.nbc.com/the
voice/
showing him sitting comfortably in his chair with one leg resting on the
chair’s edge is one of my favorite among his many positions while watching the
contestants perform]– singing Time of
Your Life by Green Day. I think its lyrics are a fitting Auld Lang Syne to a great 2012 –
It’s something unpredictable but
in the end
It’s right, I hope you’ve had the
time of your life
So take the photographs and steel
frames in your mind
Hang it on a shelf in good health
and good time
Tattoos and memories and dead skin
on trial
For what it’s worth it was worth the while.
For what it’s worth it was worth the while.
Indeed it’s a wrap for 2012 … and 2013 is rolling forward –
and fast!
No comments:
Post a Comment