Friday, November 5, 2010

The Nueva Ecija Escapade

My weekend escapade last October 23 and 24 with my girlfriends Pia and Terry at Marie’s hometown in Nueva Ecija brought to mind a couple of lines from my all time favorite old song.

I see trees of green, red roses too
I see them bloom for me and you
And I think to myself what a wonderful world

I see skies of blue and clouds of white
The bright blessed day and the dark sacred night
And I think to myself what a wonderful world


It was like hearing Louis Armstrong singing the song as I see it through my eyes.

I literally saw skies of blue and clouds of white and trees and fields of green and occasionally golden yellow and believe me even the roads in Muñoz, Nueva Ecija are golden yellow.

For a moment while my beautiful friends and I were blissfully goofing around at the lush green hilltop over looking a pond under the bright sun, I did think to myself - what a wonderful world!


Villa Isla in Nueva Ecija may not be as scenic as what my friends and I have previously witnessed in Sagada and Ilocos or in Dubai – in Terry’s case but then for me it was simply lovely and refreshing.

It holds a certain charm for us who’ve been in the city most of our lives. It gives us that overwhelming feeling of tranquility.

Not minding the temperature of the morning sun the girls and I took our time as we frolic like children repeatedly jumping until we capture the perfect jump shot and in an attempt to capture something new we took turns in carrying each other behind our backs like wrestlers.

Terry, perhaps inspired by the blue sky and cotton like clouds, went as far as lying flat on her stomach in the green grass, where inches away lies a mound of dried cow dung, just so she can have her own take of our ever favorite jump shot.

After having enough of the invigorating greens and an ample supply of vitamin E courtesy of haring araw the Luciano siblings decided to visit one of their relatives nearby where we had our merienda of softdrinks and biscuit under a big old tree as we rested.

It was amusing to sit with them and listen to their stories in a surrounding where my eyes feasted in the simplicity of the country life, where I was stepping on plain earth and not of concrete, where the chicken and goat wander leisurely and where even the dog is friendly.

To hear Marie recall how their childhood was spent in the same place where Pia, Terry and I were gathered together made her story even more interesting and made our bonding moment even more special.

Back on the road we were undeniably having the times of our lives as we drove around town waving and smiling to strangers like the true blue bakasonistas aboard an “astig” looking 4x4 jeep and escorted by a motor bike alternately driven by the equally good looking Mar and Mac, Marie’s eldest and youngest brother respectively - both gentlemen were kind enough to give a free tour of their beautiful town.

Before heading back home we visited the resting place of the Luciano patriarch to pay our respect and to introduce Terry since it was her first time to “meet” Marie’s father.

Waiting for us back at what we jokingly refer to as the “hacienda de Luciano” was not only a warm reception but a steaming pinapaitan lovingly prepared by Marie’s mom whom we affectionately called Mader and cooked with pride by the family’s known kusinero, Mac.

Pia’s advertisement of the famed pinapaitan did live to our expectation. I had 3 servings of steamed rice despite my diet. It was just one the many busog moments we had during our stay.


When we arrived the day before , Jayson and Betchay, Marie’s brother-in-law and elder sister, prepared a healthy snack of vegetable salad fresh from Pangasinan for our merienda while we were resting and playing sungka in their bahay kubo with their cute tots JM and Terence.

And for dinner that night we were treated with sinampalukang native chicken and sinampalukang labong with saluyot which we heartily consumed despite nibbling on inihaw na dugo and paa ng manok minutes before hapunan.

That night didn’t just end with that dinner as the ladies with the exception of Mader and the gentlemen stayed up for a separate drinking session.

In less than an hour Pia finished one red horse mucho all by herself while Terry and Marie each had a bottle of Tanduay Ice and Betchay and I nibbled on the pulutan in the vast veranda.

Not to be outdone was Terence, Marie’s youngest nephew who also had a taste of Tanduay Ice which made him even more hyper and thus follow our every whim. You ask him to dance and sing and he will and you ask him a naughty question and he’ll readily answer.


Our 2-day stay in Nueva Ecija may not be as grand as our other travels around Luzon but it was definitely one of the most heartwarming vacations my friends and I have had for this year.

To be welcomed and taken cared for by your friend’s family in their own home is such a generous act and I can’t help but feel blessed for the perfect getaway my friends and I had.

I look forward to our next visit with the rest of our gang next year to once again experience the simple life in “hacienda de luciano” and to witness the wonderful world in the town of Munoz, Nueva Ecija.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

pen and paper vs laptop

To celebrate the first year anniversary of my lappy toppy this coming October I am reposting this blog which i originally posted last 25NOV2009 in FB.

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One reason that convinced me to buy a laptop was a good friend’s generosity.

Her offer of the “charge it to friendship muna” payment scheme played a major role in wiping out my hesitation into plunging in this major expense.

Seventeen years of friendship entitles you to this kind of privilege, an overflowing supply of trust.

But behind the financial assistance the primary reason why I have, in the first place, considered having this piece of technology is my love of writing. Or is it love of typing?

I don’t know how I managed to convince myself that I can’t write good stuff unless my fingers are striking a keyboard!

It’s like there’s not enough surge of creative juice when you’re just using a pen and paper, the once upon a time very dependable tool I used whenever I feel like writing.

Unfortunately, the gush of the so called creative juice I have been expecting did not come. There was a complete absence of the “feel like typing”.

Blame it to Facebook and a friend’s enthusiasm in sharing her computer games, songs, movies and her discovery of her own laptop.

What would eventually stimulate my fingers to hit the keyboard is not the rush of creative juice brought about by the excitement of having this new toy but by an overwhelming feeling of melancholy.

But that's another story I wish to share when I can look back at what happened and just laugh at it.

Obviously, I have been bitten by a bug called realization. It's not the pen and paper or the laptop.

Emotion kindles my love for writing. It is my creative juice =)

Of Watching "Sa'yo Lamang".....

Being the jologs that we are and to somehow celebrate my best friend's birthday last Saturday, Lala, Jijet and I decided to watch "Sa'yo Lamang".

It was not a spur-of-the-moment decision as Lala and I have been planning to see the movie a week earlier but our busy schedules just wouldn't allow us.

I never thought I'll ever be grateful to boredom as it sets in while I waited for the doctor in Makati Med.

More than an hour of waiting my fingers started itching and it started texting on its own volition. I think I've texted at least a quarter of the people in my phone book - Lala, being one of them.

As she ranted via text of how full her schedule was on her birthday, I asked her if she was too busy too even see a movie......

In less than an hour, after a week of planning, we were already in the cold and dark nook in G4 with the jologs like us, the boyfriends and husbands who were forced to see the movie, the bored and the critics – together we we’re watching “Sa’yo Lamang”.

The movie was good but don’t be alarmed this is not an attempt to review a film.

This is just to share one particular scene in the movie which not only made me cry but made realize how powerful God is.

Again, don’t be alarmed. I promise not to be preachy =).

Though I know that this is going to be one hell of a tear-jerker it was still a surprise for me and Lala to see Jijet wiping tears off her eyes 20minutes after the movie started.

We were both giggling as I mimic the way Jijet weeps in silence in my left side while in Lala’s right side someone scandalously sniffed with all her/his might.

Though we were making fun of the people crying around us I was sure that soon it will be our turn.

What I was not expecting was the scene that will finally bring Lala and I to tears.

It was not a mushy and dramatic line in a confrontational scene that led to the falling of my tears in my right eye.

It was not even the scene. It was just one line………I believe in God.

It was what Bea in her role as the eldest in the family uttered when she finally recovers from her shock after seeing her mother (Lorna Tolentino) shaking in her bed.

And together they prayed, I believe in God, the father almighty, the creator of heaven and earth……….

Bea, as she stood in one corner watching her siblings gather around their mother to warm her and stop her from shaking, was a picture of each one of us every time we’re in a situation where we feel helpless.

At first we feel at a lost, we don’t know what to do and where to go for help then all of a sudden we realize we have God to help us through all our difficulties.

When all else fails, most of the times, that’s only when we turn to Him for mercy and once we do the feeling of relief comes in an instant.

I believe in God…………so short a line yet so powerful!

We’ll, that’s how far I’d go sharing my realization and sharing the movie.

As promised, I wont be preachy…………just sharing!

Monday, February 8, 2010

Chronicles of a 34-year old, sick, single lady.

There are days when getting up in the morning for work is such a struggle.

For someone like me who sleeps late, everyday is a struggle and during these "struggingling" times, i often wish that i am sick just so i'd have a reason to stay in bed.

But never had i wished to be so sick that i'd end up bed-ridden for three days.

Wednesday, I was already diagnosed by Doc E, our company doctor with acute tonsillopharingitis with slight fever.

According to Doc E,my right tonsil is inflamed and has a pus. As i leave the office that night i was already suffering from terrible headache.

That night i still managed to log on to my facebook account and mock myself for my FB addiction.

The next morning, still feeling sick, i announced to my room mate that i wont report for work but as soon i a closed my eyes to resume sleep I got up without delay, determined to work instead.

As it was already, 7:30am I showered without heating the water, primarily to avoid being late, secondly, i was hoping that cold shower would relieve me off my feverish feeling.

For a while i thought it did for despite my coughing I was able to handle a number of calls, walk around the office and sing along a couple of songs in my playlist.

But when i started feeling feverish inside, started catching my breathe after each cough and when I can't seem to pinpoint what muscle or which joint aches and when I felt unexplainably tired, i went up to the clinic.

With another slight fever and an abnormal heartbeat of 120 from the normal count of 80, Jane - our company nurse suggested I go home but only after my heartbeat had normalize.

And so she made me lie down and rest in one of the rooms in our modest clinic. How nurse Jane cared for me that day is another story I'd soon share.

By 1pm I was sent home.

Despite the nagging feeling that I should pay Makati Med a visit for another check-up, atleast before I head home, just to confirm what Jane and I believed to be a flu. The scorching heat of the mid after noon convinced me that I better go home instead.

Lying in my bed alone in the boarding house, didn't give me much comfort. I was soon feeling sorry and crying from self-pity.

Being away from home and being sick is unbelievably depressing and so after I've cried a river and after hours of battling the idea of asking my father to have one of my brothers fetch me at the boarding house, i finally gave in.

By 11pm thursday, I was already home in Bulacan. As soon as Papa saw me not in my usual bubbly self, he was a picture of worry.

And while he was combing my hair with his bare hands asking me how i was feeling and what i wanted to eat he did not fail to inject a father's typical lecture.

Mama on the other hand was busy preparing my bed. She was the one who was up during the night checking if i have fever and made me take my meds.

As soon as I was in bed Papa turned off my cellphone to which I could not protest. Papa doesn't like seeing us texting when we are already in bed.

The following day, Friday, i forced myself to eat atleast two spoonful of lugaw for breakfast so i can take my meds and before lunch Mama gave me sliced apples and peeled ponkan in my bed which took me until Saturday morning to finish.

Normally, two spoonful of lugaw is equivalent to two and sometimes two and a half cup of rice and an apple and ponkan wouldn't take a minutes to disappear before me.

By luchtime of the same day, I was again served with lugaw wich I have drowned with the sabaw of nilagang buto-buto.

Since my bowl was almost full, my father who's beside me didn't notice that i am only sipping the soup and not really eating the lugaw.

The soup made me sweat a great deal though and atlast i felt better and so i thought. After a couple of minutes, i was back in my bed feeling restless once again.

Dry cough, head-splitting-ache, weakening muscle and joint pains did not leave me until Saturday afternoon so I until then i was not allowed to watch TV and use my cellphone.

I was behaved enough not to watch TV and I was clever enough to put my phone in silent mode for two days and so I was able to reply to a couple of messages even when texting is too much of an effort for me.

Today, I did not only have my shower after two long days, I am also free to use my laptop.

But this doesn't mean that I am ready to get back to work.

Unfortunately, I am far from being well. I still have cough and I still tire easily from walking from one point of our house to another albeit the insignificant size of our humble abode.

I was not allowed to leave home just yet and so while I'm here I'd have to bear my Papa dear's lectures:

1st: STOP my travels. He blames over fatigue due to my two recent out of town trips last January for my being sick.

2nd: Leave the boarding house and come home to Bulacan everyday so they can look after me, my food etc.

My two recent south-to-north-trips-in-one-day may have contributed in weakening my immune system which eventually gave up when i caught a colleagues' virus but of course i couldn't admit that to my father.

And there is no doubt that here at home I will have all the TLC I usually missed during weekdays but then
being home everyday doesn't guarantee that I'll be healthy and will never again get sick.

I know that He's just concern with my welfare and I am glad for despite my age, I still feel like a child with the way he takes care of me and i also feel like a teenager with the way her lectures me.