IT’S THE AFTERNOON AFTER and I think my laptop also
went on a holiday break. I published this just a few more hours before
Christmas Eve and because daughter Ghiselle and I were rushing to attend Mass with
my sister Patty and her family at their subdivision’s chapel, I didn’t double
check whether it was really published. Well, it didn’t … An illiterate always
an illiterate … Ugh …
Well,
it still looks a lot like Christmas as I drive daughter Ghiselle to her meeting
place with friends at McDonald’s Tandang Sora. They are spending the last days
of 2013 in Coron to unwind and recharge before they go back to work early next
year. She’ll be back to spend New Year’s Eve with her family – that’s me and my
sister Maleck’s family; brother Abe might join us too.
But it is summer weather and I sort of miss the
early morning chill and the afternoon nippy air. It was perfect, however, for
the fun and games we had in yesterday’s traditional family Christmas
get-together.
Anyway,
for whatever it’s worth, I’m re-publishing my latest post – or to be more
accurate publishing – because it was never published in the first place.
______________________
NOVEMBER WAS GONE too soon but in such a quick time, it changed a lot of people’s lives forever.
I
don’t mean just the survivors of monster typhoon Yolanda. I’m sure you and I
have emerged different as a result of what has happened in the Visayan region.
Not different in a big way but there is some change, so to speak.
For
starters, final plans for celebrating Christmas had to be either cancelled,
tempered or refocused.
We have likewise learned to
be not simply sympathetic. Together with the rest of the world, we have gone up
to the next level, translating our sympathy into concrete assistance and genuine
aid. We have become a country of concerned citizens and not mere bystanders.
The
outpouring of love and support, notwithstanding, there is still too much to be
done but, thank God, the survivors – including those in Bohol after that major
quake; and in Zamboanga, after Nur Misuari’s nasty tantrum –are starting to
move on and unwrap their gift of a new life.
News reports are heartwarming as they show these
survivors welcoming the coming of Christmas. Damaged churches have failed to discourage
them from attending the traditional Simbang
Gabi as shown in these screen grabs from ABS-CBN’s Bandila taken in Palo, Leyte. Their faith unwavering, they say that
“kahit medyo walang handa ngayon, ang mahalaga sama-sama kami ngayo’ng Pasko.”
And then there’s this Christmas tree in a village
in Tacloban [photo credit: AP and published in mb.com.ph] set up by residents
as a sign that Yolanda won’t stop them from celebrating this season of seasons.
This is encouraging because they have gone past
the tag of disaster victims to real survivors, not allowing themselves to wallow
in their grief as they look outside their evacuation centers and farther away
from their tragic experience.
RIDICULOUS,
UNBECOMING
And then December came rushing in with so many
things happening at the same time.
In the aftermath of Janet Napoles showing up in
the Senate, Senators Miriam Defensor-Santiago and Juan Ponce Enrile gave a
sideshow that is ridiculous and totally unbecoming of the supposed-to-be
respectable positions they hold.
Miriam
even dubbed it as the Clash of the Titans but it didn’t look like a clash. When
Manong Johnny delivered his privilege
speech, Miriam was not around due to a chronic fatigue syndrome and so she
didn’t hear him call her a “cuckoo.”
When it was her turn at
the podium, Manong Johnny was seen
playing in his tablet while she rants. In a bid to get his attention, she faces
the grinning Manong Johnny and forms
a cross with her index fingers. [Photos from ph.news.yahoo.com by
NPPA/NPPA-NPPA]
What a laugh but then again, these are people we
call “honorable.” It’s weird that I find it amusing.
At the end of the day, the
self-proclaimed titans didn’t help any in shedding light to the Pork Barrel scam.
They didn’t have the incredible strength which titans possess to set aside
personal interests and differences and only managed an evasion collision.
Happening simultaneously
with this non-clash is a face-off between Kim Henares of the BIR (Bureau of
Internal Revenue) and boxing champ/TV-movie personality/congressman Manny
Pacquiao.
“Ang pera ko po ay hindi ko ninakaw at hindi
po eto galing sa PDAF … galing eto sa
mga bugbog, suntok, dugo at pawis na tiniis ko po sa itaas ng ring,” the
Pacman emotes [photo is a screen grab from ANC] as the taxman, in
perfect bad timing, freezes his bank accounts.
Guilty or not guilty, Manny goes where
politicians do not fear to tread when caught in a corner. He insinuates that
this is politically motivated.
Thank
God, the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA) has since intervened and gave a gag order
to both parties.
Continuing with the everyday political zarzuela are Tacloban City Mayor Alfred Romualdez and
DILG (Department of Interior and Local Government) Secretary Mar Roxas who carry
on with their tiff in public like a bickering married couple.
Caught Mar saying this on
ABS-CBN’s TV Patrol, “You have to
understand, you are a Romualdez and the President is an Aquino.” Now, it
doesn’t matter whether the rest was spliced or edited, this sentence is loaded
enough.
Affiliations
– familial or political – are out of the question in this time of great
rehabilitation and reconstruction. Government is faced with the challenge of
helping people who practically lost everything regain their happiness and
security. They don’t need this senseless exchange of words.
Both
Alfred and Mar should cut the dramatics and work together. That is the only way
they can really help Tacloban City. In a photo recently posted by my daughters’
friend, Jovi Villanueva Binalla in her Facebook page, Bro. Eddie Villanueva
is seen with other bishops and pastors upholding Alfred and wife, Tacloban City
Councilor Cristina Romualdez, in prayer at the Tacloban City Hall. With this, may the mayor be enlightened to
forget family names and political alignments and focus on his constituents’
total welfare.
We hope somebody’s praying for Mar’s
enlightenment as well. Or he – and Alfred, too – can read an article by Michael
Spohr – “37 Things You’ll Regret When You’re Old” – published in www.buzzfeed.com. Number 20 says “Getting
caught up in needless drama.”
Guys drop
it before it’s too late …
FUNNY,
CRAZY
Anyway, Master Showman
German Moreno ushered in the Christmas month with his grand act of making CNN reporter Anderson Cooper the first
non-Filipino in his Walk of Fame Philippines at Eastwood in Libis, Quezon City.
[That’s me at the said Walk of Fame posing beside Coco Martin’s star in a photo
taken by daughter Pee Ann in September last year.]
Of
course, he was teased, castigated, cajoled, oh common-ed and what the …’ed.
In a story published in PEP.ph, he defends
himself saying, “bago nila ako batikusin,
tingnan muna nila yung nagawa nung tao sa bansa natin bago sila magsalita.”
Well, we have too many
local heroes more deserving. I wonder what was Mr. Cooper’s reaction.
On the same day and on the
same online site, a story breaks out about a slapping incident starring Anne
Curtis and John Lloyd Cruz, among others. It actually happened about a couple
of weeks earlier and all parties involved have kissed, made up and moved on.
But haters will hate and
bashers will bash. So they lapped up the piece of news and once more, had a
field day exercising their “right” to say whatever they want as long as they
are logged on to their Facebook or Twitter accounts or to
their blogs. Never mind if the parties involved have conveniently put
everything behind them.
Anne was MOD’s cover girl in its October issue and I wrote the story. At
that time, E!, an entertainment news
channel on cable TV, has just launched the Anne
Curtis: E! News Asia Special, an in-depth look into the real Anne as shared
by some of her relatives and closest friends in the business.
Anne joins Katy Perry and Nicki Minaj, among others, in the list
of celebrities who has been featured in the cable channel’s special.
“It’s crazy, it’s
amazing,” she almost shrieked during the launch. “I’m getting to experience
life-changing moments that I never thought possible and I hope my life story
will be entertaining and inspiring to others.”
That
slapping incident could pass for another life-changing moment but people who
truly know her wouldn’t let it define her. I am not condoning what Anne did. It is not also
fair to say that other celebrities have done worse. Nothing justifies her
action that fateful night but as she has twitted: “I’m
just like any other person that (who) makes mistakes in life … lesson learned.”
Interestingly,
Star Cinema has in the blueprint a movie teaming her up with – surprise! – John
Lloyd Cruz.
Talking about slapping, it
does happen in real life and is not the monopoly of lady villains in a typical teleserye.
This brings to mind an episode of Teddytorial aired a couple of months
back on ANC that tackled slapping for a living. Teddy Locsin, Jr. specifically
suggested this to politicians when they leave politics. He says, “What do you
do after leaving politics? What are you good for? What does politics teach that
is of any use to you or the world?”
He
cited a news story from CNN Travel which
featured a person in Bangkok – Khemmikka Na Songkhla – who slaps breasts,
buttocks and faces for a living.
In
conclusion, Mr. Locsin advised, “To inspire you to slap harder, may I humbly
suggest you paint the face of the guy who beat you in the last election, or the
face of the president who did not release your pork and cost you the last
election, or the face of the TV newscaster who exposed what you did with your
pork and cost you the last election.”
Anyway, I got curious and when you get curious,
you Google it. I learned that Khemikka is a 44-year old Bangkok beautician whose
procedures she inherited from her grandmother which she has been practising for
the past 20 years. According to odditycentral.com, she is the only one in the
world who knows the secrets of breast, face and buttock slapping.
And she’s legit because her
techniques were approved by the Thai Health Ministry after conducting a
six-month study on her and “acknowledged her technique as a viable alternative
to plastic surgery.”
[Photo
by rastreadordenoticias.com shows her in one of her slapping sessions]
Still on
slapping, I remember a feature on Miriam in People
Asia wherein she was asked by the magazine’s photographer, “Do you use your
hands often, Senator?”
Her answer was quick, the article
revealed, and was given with a mischievous smile: “Yes, I slap people.”
GOOD, BAD
With all these things happening, we are indeed
sooooooo back to normal. Last month, we couldn’t think of or talk about
anything else but Yolanda and her onslaught.
I’m
not sure if this is good or bad but a gun-cocking incident with the convoy of
Makati City Mayor Junjun Binay is bad, really bad. Arrogance of people in power
is dangerous to us ordinary citizens. This should be a warning to us voters to
choose wisely in the next elections. But then again, we never learn …
Worse is the shooting
incident at the NAIA (Ninoy Aquino International Airport) Terminal 3 killing a
mayor and three others without a CCTV to show for it. [Photo from mb.com.ph
shows police operatives gathering evidence in the crime scene.]
And then there’s the sad discovery that funds of
the Philippine National Red Cross have been mismanaged or misused with Red
Cross Governor Rosa Rosal filing a complaint.
Sadder is Vice President
Jejomar Binay’s reaction to his son’s so-called detractors: “My son deserves
respect.” Only if you respect rules and you do not let your security cock a gun
…
If I may digress, remember this Batman and Robin
peg of the father-and-son tandem as they went around Makati in an amphibious
vehicle to help stranded commuters and motorists during the habagat middle of this year? [Photo
credit: dzmm.abs-cbn.com]
But there is some good in the statement of United
Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon who encouraged the people of Tacloban
City to “never despair … the UN is behind you, the world is behind you.”
He was
in town a couple of days ago to personally check on Yolanda’s survivors in
Tacloban City. In a news report published in inquirer.net, he stressed that “we
must not allow this to be another forgotten crisis.”
He also told the children
who welcomed him with Christmas songs to “hold on, we have come to help you.”
The UN
official was accompanied during his tour of the city by former Senator Panfilo
“Ping” Lacson, now presidential assistant for rehabilitation and recovery,
among other government executives and those from the UN. [Photo credit:
AP/AchmadIbrahim]
Talking about Ping, it is also good that President
Noynoy chose him as the new rehab czar.
“I
want to do the job with flying colors. I want to do the best for the job,” he
was quoted in news reports.
Of
course, P-Noy’s critics feel Ping is not the right choice because he is neither
an engineer or architect. He’s more of a crimebuster, they say.
My say is that he
performs as expected of him and he doesn’t get distracted by money or lots of
it.
CREATIVE, CUTE
Complementary to Ping’s
work and that of government efforts is the private sector’s eagerness to
continue helping.
Philanthropy is indeed alive and the ultimate
love of mankind as expressed through benevolent or charitable actions has never
been more creative or cute.
The
magazine, Cosmopolitan, organized Hug A
Hunk to benefit Yolanda’s survivors last November 30th at
the Bonifacio High Street Activity Center.
PEP.ph reported that Marc Nelson
said yes right away. He was quoted as saying, “It’s little bit of no-brainer.
Just takes a little bit of our time, give out a few hugs, and hey, everyone
feels better.”
The
athlete host is seen during the event in a photo taken by Nikko Tuazon and
published in PEP.ph.
And I’d like to share some fun moments with him
during our shoot when we featured him and friend Rovilson Fernandez in MOD’s
Male Section a couple of years ago. This was after they finished second in
the Asian edition of The Amazing Race. With me are
editorial assistant Jackie; and fashion stylist Zusette.
And there’s just a lot of volunteerism going on
as well. Going back to that article, “37 Things You’ll Regret When You’re Old,”
Number 20 says, “Not volunteering enough.”
Well, looks like many of us will not live with
this regret and that includes a bunch of artists, led by photographer Alex
Baluyut, who set up the Art Relief Mobile Kitchen. They
initially operated at the Villamor Air Base and provided hot comfort food to those
arriving at the base’s airport after leaving their towns or cities which
Yolanda ravaged. They likewise fed other volunteers in the area as well as the
soldiers assigned there. Photo (by AC Dimatatac of InterAksyon.com) shows
Alex preparing the hot arroz caldo.
Today, they have moved to where they are needed
the most – at Ground Zero in Leyte. They have set up a new page on Facebook
for this: https://www.facebook.com/artreliefmobilekitchen.
In one
of their latest posts in their Facebook page, Art Relief served
food from the back of a van and visited one of the communities in Tacloban City
for both brunch and dinner. This photo by Che Ma shows long lines as they give
out about more 700 servings of adobo with
rice.
From the simple idea of giving the ultimate
relief to a hungry Pinoy – the hot and tasty arroz caldo – the group now prepares other Filipino comfort food
that include adobo, daing na bangus, ginisang monggo and tinolang
manok.
Volunteers have likewise
increased to include students from culinary schools and other sectors of
society.
And there are more groups
out there who are as creative in giving out help. Commercial establishments refuse
to be left behind. The Ayala Triangle Gardens Lights & Sounds Show has made
available donation boxes around the area to make it easy for people to drop
their assistance in cash for Yolanda’s survivors. Showtime is every 30 minutes
from 6pm to 9pm until January 5, 2014.
Same thing with the Riverbanks Mall which has Donation
Boxes at its entrance. Ongoing at this Marikina City mall is Belenity, a competition
on the best Belen or Nativity scene
in diorama format. Most of the entries are inspired by lessons learned after Yolanda’s
fury – like keeping the faith despite
the destruction of churches.
According to high school batchmate Fe Ureta of
the Riverbanks Development Corporation, this is the first time they are holding
such competition and winners will be awarded on December 30th at the
mall’s Ampitheater.
Still
at the said mall is The Spirit of Bethlehem, an exhibit of a private Belen collection mounted at the E-Com
inside the mall compound. It features a miniature museum of more than a hundred
Belens from all over the world. The
exhibit is open from 8am to 5pm, Tuesdays to Sundays and will run until
February 2, 2014.
At the Power Plant Mall,
a cookout was held – Cook Out to Help Out – on the first weekend of December to
help rebuild Visayas through the Habitat for Humanity. Their tagline was “buy a
burger, build a home."
I’m not sure if there’s a repeat for this but if
donuts appeal more to your palette, Krispy Kreme has Hope, an ongoing fund-raiser wherein a sizeable amount of sales goes
to the Red Cross “to help rebuild lives.”
And surely you have heard, attended or
participated in many a fund-raising activity but we’re not about to declare an
overload. There is so much more to be done, so much more people to be helped.
Besides,
it’s amazing how each and every one of us wants to be counted on.
My high school batch at
UST opted for a Kiddie Party at McDonald’s Centris. Inspired by that common
adage that Christmas is for children, we decided to be kids all over again as
there isn’t any rule that exempts child-like adults to have a party. And, of
course, it was fun and we were a riot!
We also had a special guest, a real angel and a
Christmas miracle baby in the person of little Baby Elise, batchmate Ruby’s
granddaughter. Both were pretty in pink.
We
call her a miracle baby because she was born the size of Ruby’s palm or maybe
even smaller. And look at her now, she turned one year old this month.
Of course, the event was highlighted with the
spirit of giving. In lieu of the exchange gift, we asked each one to donate
cash or an item for the survivors of Yolanda.
Batchmate
Yolly, who attended the high school gathering for the first time introduced
herself saying her real name, Yolanda, is quite negative these days. She was
quick to add, however, that Yolanda brought the best in everyone by helping
out.
Ruby
volunteered that when she was born, there was also a strong typhoon named
Lorna. “My real name is Ruby Lorna,” she revealed.
No matter, these girls
and the rest of the 23 who attended have cooked up a storm of a party and we
were able to raise P10,000. And there’s more, other batchmates gave mats,
blankets and toiletry items.
INSPIRING, UPLIFTING
Number 17 of the “37 Things You’ll Regret When
You’re Old” is “Not moving on fast enough.”
One inspiring story is about the Reo Brothers –
Raymart, Ron, Reno and Ralph – of Tacloban City, who moved on fast enough. They
performed on ABS-CBN’s Solidarity Concert two weeks ago at
the Araneta Coliseum and I was able to catch the concert and their story on
Channel 2’s Sunday’s Big Event. They sang a medley of Beatles songs,
notably Here Comes The Sun and they
really sounded so good. The crowd even requested for one more song and they
obliged with Hey Jude.
As soon as they were called to the stage, I started
to cry. I cried some more when one of them said, “sa lahat ng tumulong at sa mga patuloy na tumutulong, maraming salamat.”
And my tears simply flowed when at the end of their performance, another one of
them, shouted, “bangon Tacloban!”
They
were given a standing ovation. Why
not? These young men know that life doesn’t stop for anyone, much less wait for
any person to recover from a heartache or disappointment. They also didn’t
waste time and made the most of what they had at the moment – in their case, a
guitar and a soaked business card.
With their father,
Reynaldo, the brothers decided to relocate in Manila and try their luck after
Yolanda. Their decision paid off and bless the owner of the business card who
willingly helped them out.
But
making all this possible are the brothers themselves and their father. May the
rest of Yolanda’s survivors not only get help but start by helping themselves
as well.
CHEESY, ROMANTIC
“Melissa, you know I love
you like a love song baby,” Jason rattles off his vows during his wedding to
Melai Cantiveros on December 9th in General Santos City. I saw that
part on ABS-CBN’s TV Patrol and I laughed but he was so cute. [The following
photo is from ABS-CBNnews.com]
I laughed again when it was Melai’s turn saying,
“right from the start, you were a thief, you stole my heart, and I, your
willing victim.”
At the
risk of getting the ire of MelaSon fans, Melai used the right word for I think
that in this relationship, she is really a victim. But, with no less than Kris
Aquino and Manny Pacquiao as principal sponsors, I hope their union will be
successful.
In a photo
posted on KrisTV’s Facebook page on December 19th, Kris
Aquino and the rest of the Kris TV team holds a baby shower for
the Jason and Melai.
And then there’s the love team of Daniel Padilla
and Kathryn Bernardo whose fans have a Happy KathNiel Day every 26th
of every month. The number 26 represents the duo’s birthdays: Daniel, April 26th
while Kathryn, March of the same day. They will be seen Pagpag, an entry in the
Metro Manila Film Festival (photo by Mark Atienza and published in
www.philstar.com shows them during the Parade of Stars held the other day to
usher in the filmfest).
And here’s something true-to-life – a story
published in inquirer.net about Houssam Hammoudi, a Canadian Muslim based in
Montreal, and his girlfriend, Mary Grace Acojedo of Ormoc City in Leyte.
Yolanda almost blew their blooming online love affair.
As the story goes, the
lovers lost contact and Grace was hospitalized after she was hurt during the
monster typhoon. Houssam decided to come to the country and went through
“jampacked airports and seaports” and made “his way through rubble and debris”
just so he could reach Leyte and look for Grace.
It has
a happy ending as he finds her, moves her to a hospital in Cebu with better
facilities because she would need to undergo surgery.
Talk about true love at a
time of Yolanda.
But the ultimate romantic relief for me is –
cheesy as it may be – I’m sure you know it already – the ABS-CBN’s long-running
morning soap Be Careful With My Heart.
It is just so relate-able …
Focus is not just on Ser
Chief and Maya, who are now enjoying wedded bliss, but also the cornball
relationship of Maya’s reconciling parents, Mang
Arturo and Aling Teresita.
Their episode depicting
Christmas Day [the following are my screen grabs from the soap] was really
touching. It reminded me of my own family – we exchange gifts and everybody
participates, including the kasambahay.
I am excited for tomorrow’s usual grand family
reunion. It will surely be fun.
***
The clock goes tick-tocking quietly as I cram to
wrap our Christmas gifts and prepare the props for tomorrow’s fun and games.
Sister Patty prepared a pabitin while
I came up with a couple of parlor games, some of which are inspired by that
Luis Manzano game show on ABS-CBN, Minute
to Win It.
It’s just a few hours before the birthday of
Jesus Christ and all the four candles in the Advent Wreath have been lit (photo
taken at St. Peter Parish along Commonwealth Avenue; the other one at the Our
Lady of Angels Chapel at the Riverbanks Mall). I completed nine days attending
Mass as my way of thanking the Heavenly Father for His blessings to me and my
daughters as well as family and close friends.
It will soon be over but for now, I am excited, I
am thrilled for another grand reunion with my family tomorrow. I read this
quote at the entrance of a shop in Trinoma and it is so right: Christmas is
love with all the trimmings.
In two
hours, we go to my sister Patty’s house and hear Mass at their subdivision’s
chapel and share a pizza-pasta Noche
Buena. Brother Boyet whose family is based in Isabela is joining us later and
I’m happy to see them after being absent in two Christmas reunions.
May
the entire Filipino nation really have a merry Christmas. As that song goes,
let our hearts be light and (that) from now on, our troubles will be out of
sight …
______________________
Christmas has been spent and, as expected, I had
a blast with the family. Daughter Pee Ann joined us through Skype and missing
her wasn’t so bad. She’ll be here next year anyway …
The
Christmas Eve mass was beautiful and I enjoyed singing Adeste Fidelis and Silent
Night, among other carols, after
the Communion and in ending the Mass. We also took pictures by the Belen with the Baby Jesus. Marcus and
Amos, my brother Boyet’s youngest son, enjoyed posing beside it.
And so December is running out of days and 2014
is about to start. I have the same message for the new year – may our hearts
continue to be light. Let us welcome 2014 by leaving behind the heaviness and the
tediousness we have experienced in 2013.
It was
a good year considering the fact that we survived it despite disasters,
corruption in government, and street crimes.