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Monday, December 15, 2014

Beautiful Danger



If you don’t normally do this at home, then why are you doing it right now?” she asked herself for the third time.  She combed her hair to the side to keep it from whipping into a tangled mess, her eyes locked on the tattoo on his nape. Squinting her eyes, she remembered that back then, tattoos were a taboo, but tonight, she was not so sure. And as if entranced, she closed her eyes and chanted, “I don’t know. I don’t know anymore.”  Life is funny sometimes. For the most of your life you think about one thing only to be told one day that you were wrong.


Time says it was well beyond midnight but here she was, letting herself get drawn to somewhere else, with someone else. The roads were barely lit, but she liked it; the stars shone much brighter this way. Maybe not as bright as the stars she saw back home, but a lot brighter than usual.


It was dangerous. And she knew that, even before he started asking her out. But she only counted the stars to keep her sane for a while. “It’s lesser tonight,” she thought, wishing the ride wouldn’t end too soon. It did. And the next thing she knew, they were already in front of a playground – swings still, and slides dusty, patches of grass growing in between the cracks of the cemented road.



“Diane,” she heard him whisper. Ron has been staring at her for a while now, half of his face, covered by a nearby tree’s shadow.  “I’m glad you went out for a ride with me. I mean, it’s a little late now, but…” he trailed off. There was hesitation in his voice when he said it, as if he were scared it would come out wrong.

“It is late, but what else could we do? C’mon! Didn’t you say you were hungry?” Diane flashed him a grin in response. Maybe it was his stare that caught her off guard, but whatever it was that set her chest drumming, she didn’t want to know anymore. It was too risky. She skipped to the stall instead and grabbed a few sticks of barbecue after dropping a few coins and bills on the old man’s palm.



“I didn’t know you had a birthmark,” he said in between  mouthfuls of puso. “It’s cute.” He started to trace his fingers on the pink triangle shaped mark on her left shoulder but she swatted it away. He started doing it again but this time, she moved several inches away.

“What in the world is wrong with this guy? Doesn’t he know how much tingles I get each time he touches me?” It could’ve been loud had she not just thought about it. She pursed her lips instead and pretended she was alright.


He chuckled. “You know, you’re pretty even when you get mad.” She looked up and expected him to laugh and say he was kidding, but he didn’t. Instead, what she saw was so beautiful, it was painful, she had to look away and pretend her eyes hurt.


She wanted to hide. She wanted to get away, but at the same time, she didn’t. She hated getting drawn to every single word he says, but she wanted to get closer. To just feel what it is like to actually like somebody. Even if it were only for one night.





Except that it didn’t last for just one night. It lingered too much, her chest hurt. And it’s been weeks.




“I told you it was all a mistake,” she mumbled to herself under her sheets. “I told you he’d stop because you were never meant to be there in the first place.”



Diane rolled to her side to check her phone for the eighth time.


Sunday, December 7, 2014

Are you sure?



I’ve already told myself a couple of times to stop being the storm. To stop being the word of mouth before and after I subconsciously rip and tear everything apart. But I couldn’t help spinning and picking up pieces as if to mend them but only leave windows and doors open. Hearts and souls wounded.

I’ve already told myself a couple of times to stop being the scorching heat. To stop assuming that a little more brightness could help the darkened little corner. That it wouldn’t burn the whole place down like the arson that I truly am.


Perhaps I’ve told myself to stop being the feline as well. To stop purring for a hand to run over my fur, before I raise my claws to scratch it away.


But I am the feline. I am the flame, the storm, and I didn’t know. I come and leave a horrible mark we once thought was beautiful. A little like the scar you’d get from riding the bike with no hands.




No. I don’t think you should get scarred or burnt by me. 




Friday, November 28, 2014

The Trip to Simala




“I should’ve worn a gown instead,” I said when we were about to stop in front of the cathedral’s gate. 

I raised my head to marvel at the castle-like cathedral whilst dodging the vendors by the church gate trying to sell us the bottles of lana they were waving in front of our faces. I cringed remembering how Yahshua (Jesus Christ) abhors making the temple a market place (John 2:15). Not that a church is similar to a Jewish temple, but if a place is supposed to be sacred, should people not treat it as a sacred place? At the entrance of the church I read a framed post on the selling of ‘sacred’ objects: ‘Do not be offended when you see people selling you candles or oil. These things are also sold in malls and outside of the church.”




Although unfinished, it was a grand place, although a little too Gothic for my style. We were one of the few people still inside, including the watchman, the maintenance person, and the young nun who stood behind a stall to collect donations. I wonder how she decided to be a nun for the church’s patron, Mary. I wanted to talk to her, but I didn’t have the courage to ask. I wish I had.



While he was lighting up a candle to pray, I was reading the posts outside the church about why lighting a candle was necessary. Cocking my head to the side, I tried to read the hand painted reasons. What I remember reading was that it was what “God wants us to do”. I ran down the list of verses they’ve used as a reference but not one said anything about lighting up a candle, unless you consider “God’s word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path” a command to have Christians light up candles.


I proceeded to the recesses of the church where three statues stood behind a pane of glass. One for Mary and the child, one for Christ carrying the cross, and one for the newly ordained saint of the Roman Church. It only took a few seconds of staring at the different faces of Mary until I couldn’t take it any longer and went away to sit and talk to the Lord.


If you could see, at the topmost center portion is Mary's largest shrine, the devotees would have to access a different route, barefooted to kiss/touch her to receive her blessing.


Exodus 20:1-4a says, “And God spoke all these words:

‘I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself an idol in the form of anything in heaven or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the LORD your God, am a jealous God…’”


It’s only just too painful to think that a mere human being, no matter how blessed she may be, is more exalted than the Creator of the universe. I sat a little more on the bench, wiping my cheeks and my runny nose, thinking how ironic it was that here I was, in a place of idolatry, being reminded that Yehovah, the God of Israel, the God of the Universe, is the one true God. I felt relieved for myself, but burdened for the people in ways more than one.


Until when would this go on? I’ve heard thousands of devotees visit the place yearly to worship and pray to the earthly mother of the Messiah. Since when did God have dead human intercessors? We could flip the Bible over and over and find not one reference for this. It’s sad how we stick to tradition than what God says is right. We all know there is no one true and perfectly Bible-based body of religion or doctrine today that we could follow alone, due to human interpretation. But despite this fact, we refuse to find the ancient path – the one God has been telling us to search for. That we seek Him, and nothing nor anyone else.



During the ride home, I only kept on thinking about how hurt and jealous the Lord might be right now. Not only are people diverting their devotion to a fellow human being and other saints, but so-called Christians like me are not doing anything to help it either.

The Lord is gracious and merciful, still. I am entirely blessed to have been reminded despite my stubbornness in this city.

Eventually, I shared my thoughts to him on the bus. He nodded. I still hope he understands. I hope he’d start placing his hope on the Rock I’ve placed mine on. The others, too. If not now, soon. May the Holy Spirit work in their hearts as He had worked in mine.





Thursday, November 13, 2014

Obscenity



I was working on a case earlier when I overheard a supervisor talking to my team mates in obscene language, describing their private parts and how they groomed it and how it should be. If I were to describe how to label the conversation, it’d be: inappropriate. A little after the conversation started, I supposed they noticed how my eyes were only wide open, my lips slightly apart, and my brows almost knitted, because one of them chuckled and said something about changing the topic for me. And the supervisor went on remarking in a mocking tone that people should “no longer act all innocent and virgin-like”.


I felt like somebody just took out a book and smacked it on my face.



But seriously. I do not mean to rant, but it seems that everybody is taking their bodies too lightly that describing to people how their private parts look like seems nothing different from describing what they’ve had for breakfast. Guys and girls talk to the opposite sex about their bodies in a brazen manner like nothing seems sacred anymore – nothing is held back.


Sometimes I wonder how I remain sane. Or how I still listen.


Perhaps I could only shake my head for a while…before I literally walk out.




Monday, August 25, 2014

Apologies for the Hiatus

To tell you honestly, although I have not been on this blog for quite some time, I still do not know what to write. Yes, I have a couple of writings left unpublished but I don't think I'd like to publish them now. Today, I'd just like to take in the fact that I will be going back to writing regularly now. (Praying to the Lord the internet connection wouldn't bail on me again.)

I know I might not even have a decent number of readers, but to those who faithfully check out this page, I'd still like to apologize for the unannounced hiatus. Aside from having to go through the adjustment process at work, my laptop just does not connect to the internet no matter how hard I try to troubleshoot it. Earlier, after a power nap, I was surprised to see the white WiFi bands at the lower right portion of my laptop screen. Finally. After weeks of waiting and praying, the internet is up and I could now go back to writing online. I hope you could sense that giddy feeling in my chest right now as I'm typing the words down on blogger.


I promise to give better, fuller posts after this. I just want to bask in the moment of telling you that I am fine and all is well here. Really well. I am currently attending church services at a local church here in Cebu, and I am also faithfully attending a small group for single ladies. New Christian friends are increasing by the number, praise the Lord, and even He has already started moving me closer to the ministry He has been desiring for me. The pacing is just so perfect, I could not ask for more.

Gah, there is so much more I want to tell you but I'd have to organize all my thoughts first and save them for future posts. I don't want to rush everything in on a single post. 


I pray all is well with you, too, my dear friends. You could just not imagine how much I have missed this.



Sunday, July 13, 2014

Missing You Too




Dear Aimae,

I, too, could not comprehend just how much my heart aches to see you and the rest of the team. The reason why I give so little updates of myself is the fear of having nothing good to tell. It’s a storm here. Although I am surrounded by good and fun people I now call my friends, I could also feel myself drowning in the waters polluted by the things of this world. It is difficult to swim upwards for a breath of air. It is difficult to remember I am here for a greater reason. And it is also now difficult to pray.

Let me wrestle with my flesh and do pray I come out triumphant. Even though I know Elohim will get me through this whirlpool, your prayers become my comfort, too. That I know great people back home include me in the prayers that never cease. Thank you for remembering me, Aims.

I miss you, too. Never could I find a person more joyful than you, here. I miss your smiles – that of the bubbly lady who steals the silence off the room. I hope I could visit you too, soon. Apparently, we are not given the privilege to request for a leave unless we become regularized, but I still do hope we’d meet someday. And there’s always skype. (Plugging my skype account: katherineaine ) Haha! I miss you guys a ton! :*



Monday, June 9, 2014

That Inner Struggle


The sting of loneliness makes no signs of moving towards that deep pit it had crawled from. I know. It would be too easy to say that all I have to do is focus on the Lord. But when you're in a big city, with no definite church and ministry yet, you begin to ponder on your singularity. You begin to ponder on the eerie space around you. You begin to think about how lovely it must be to have a permanent companion who could throw jokes at you, walk with you, and rescue you from the predating dull moments.


A few offers of companionship slyly make their way to me. And having been in conservative groups for the most of my life, these offers splash all over me so differently. Especially this one. It's not that I was entirely repelling it. No. In fact, it seems interesting enough. Although this thing seems too different from back home, it's ironic how I had experienced this chivalry only here. Here, in this supposedly insensitive, liberated city. Sometimes I catch myself shaking my head when I recall how more of a lady I am being treated here. In all honesty, I like it. But that...becomes a struggle in itself. Because I liked how it felt. Consequently, there are little things I have compromised and tolerated just to keep that chivalry and companionship. Whenever the air becomes static and the gospel whispers to be told, I hold my tongue. Not because I didn't want to, but it gets too overwhelmingly frightening to sow the Seed on cement-hard soil. Or maybe I'm only making excuses. I just have to be honest here, confess, and spill out the darkened oil in the jar. I didn't want to keep burning with cheap oil in the lamp in Elohim's presence.


I have been told (as if I didn't know already), that I have trouble explaining things, especially when emotions are swell in size, so I do not think I am able to describe this thoroughly. But one thing's clear. This struggle is still here, and I choose to confess because I do not want to pretend everything's alright. I do not want to act as if I am perfectly attack-proof. Because I'm not.


Earlier, I had a conference call with Aimae and Kuya Adyng. But although I was not able to tell them everything about this struggle, I'm glad I got to hear theirs. And with that, my hope in Rabbani Yeshua surged in again. We are still running, He says. But going to the darkening side or to the perpetual brightness, is a choice I had to make.


Tuesday, June 3, 2014

The Moon in the City



It is just so easy to not acknowledge Christ in our daily routine.


The other night, as Hannah and I were exploring the road to our new home in Cebu, we suddenly looked up to the sky as we had always done back home in Iligan. The moon was just right above us, hanging in a horizontal crescent, competing with the other lights in the city. Hannah said it was rather beautiful, but I frowned a little.



Photo taken from here. Too bad I think I might have deleted the photo I originally took. :(



“It looks…old,” I told her, eyes not leaving the moon. When she was about to ask what I meant, I said, “It looks rather old and sad. Like, for centuries, it had been looking down on Cebu and watched it grow; Cebu changed, but it didn’t. It was always there.”


We walked a few more hundred yards but we were still talking about the moon.


“It’s so easy to not notice the moon in a big city like Cebu,” I continued. “You see, its glow would always compete with the artificial lights, that you could even say…people no longer need the moon here.”


I stopped and thought about what I had just said. “Right,” I mumbled, agreeing to myself. “But if you take everything and live in the rural places for example, the moon IS the moon. You need it there; In simplicity and contentment that’s where it shines the brightest. Just…just like the Lord!”



How could a big and busy city find Christ in their lives when too much of its time is spent in its necessary routines? Like the moon against the bright city, the glory of the Lord seems to fade into an old and sad glow. And only a few would stop and see it, too.


These days I have been having terrible experiences in Cebu streets, having been almost run over several times. Even traffic signs for pedestrians only turn green for 3 seconds. How could anybody cross a wide road in 3 seconds? Even if we run, we could never reach the other side of the road on time. The people behind wheels seem to not see you. If you try to cross a road, they would never slow down. Really. Never. This is how busy people are here; they run after time, and never mind the people around them. I could not even count the number of times passengers try to get on the jeepney and the jeepney driver starts running the vehicle at full speed even though people are still crouching at the jeepney’s door, trying to look for a space to sit on. I could only click my tongue and shake my head. In a city too busy, fast, and loud, would the Lord’s Voice still be heard? I try to think about how the Lord (for Cebu, and the most of the nation) was so much like the moon that night.


The city (and the nation) better not be waiting for judgment and stripping off of everything before the Lord’s glory could shine brighter here. Earthly treasures try to compete with God, but they would eventually lead us to destruction anyway. Just when will we able to realize and acknowledge this?



Earlier this evening, as I was going home alone, I looked up at the sky again and found the moon glowing a little brighter than last night. In my head I was wondering if there was somebody else in the big city acknowledging the moon’s presence amidst the light pollution as I was. I wonder. I wonder.


Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Putting Aside Romance


A Pastor once told us a year ago, “You know what keeps the Lord from moving in your generation? Gugma. Love – that which is of and between humans.”

I thought about it for a moment. Who doesn’t want romance, anyway? Even in action movies, you’d find a chip of romance in the screenplay. Even in mystery novels, you’d find couples and a little of their love story. When I was just entering the puberty stage I used to linger at the young adult romance category in the bookstore. And even if I didn’t, I was bound to read love stories in any genre, too. Romance dominates songs and poems. It is as if romance was a legal drug that triggers all your senses. And people liked that. In fact, some like it too much that they spend their lives looking for that kind of love and that kind of romance that they wish would last.


Yes, I was born for you. It was written in the stars…

Because of you, my life has changed. Thank you for the love and the joy you bring…


Song lyrics like these have infiltrated into our philosophies and way of life that it has become perfectly normal. I could never forget our daily classroom discussions back in the day. When everybody in class gets bored and drowsy, the teacher immediately changes the subject and shifts to talking about love and romance, and everybody starts getting all attentive again. You mention romance, and the atmosphere changes. Magic, they always say.

But isn’t it too sad that the world now thinks the reason for their existence is another person somewhere in the world that they think they were meant to love? Isn’t it too sad that nowadays, you are only considered complete when you’ve finally settled down and raised a family of your own? What happened to our Ultimate Purpose?

Today, the Church’s youth is also facing the same struggle. I say struggle, because we are now blinded when we consciously or unconsciously let our hearts take over. Sure, we Christians say we love the Lord above all else. Sure, we say our purpose on earth is to glorify our Creator, but how much of what we say are we really living out?

Are we more excited with our future partner than our future with just the Lord? When a special person finally arrives, does he/she drown our vision for God’s kingdom? When we have no vision for the Lord’s work, we could not expect to hear what the Master wants us to do, could we? When our hearts are only partly committed to him, we could not expect His movement through us, could we?


2 Chronicles 16:9 says, “For the eyes of the LORD range throughout the earth to strengthen those whose hearts are fully committed to Him.”


I am not writing all this because I am immune to romance. On the contrary. I am writing this because I have been in the stage when I felt what it was like to be consumed with thoughts of romance. I am writing this because I have experienced being deceived by my own heart and emotions. They have said it was alright as long as the other person was godly and in the same faith, but they didn’t tell me to stop when I forgot to assess if my thoughts about that person started getting greater than my thoughts about God and His kingdom. The process of reprioritizing is not a painless process. In fact, it would be one of the hardest and most painful. When the Lord tells us to give up even the dreams of finding somebody to grow old with, it would not be without pain. But if we say we love the Lord and want to live it, are we willing to surrender everything and submit to His Perfect Will, even when we could not comprehend it yet?

Romance is a gift from God. But just as how money is a gift too, when we are not careful and wise with the way we handle it, it becomes an ugly idol in the eyes of our Master. What was meant to give glory to Him has now replaced His position in our lives.


There is a right time for everything, Ecclesiastes 3 says. And we could give way to His right timing when our hearts are set on the Lord and His Perfect Will in surrender. When it is time, we would see that the great Elohim Himself has placed all things in proper order.


People all over the globe hunger for love that they have to use up their lifetime looking for another person to love perfectly. But has not the Father in heaven already done the greatest expression of love for us 2000 years ago through His Son, the Anointed One? Was Jesus Christ’s sacrifice on the cross not enough for us to realize that He is True Love? And would it not take just a taste of His perfect love for us to understand that we have been made complete in Him?


He might or might not grant us this gift of romance, but He wants us to know that the only romance He wants us to chase after, is romance with Rabanni Yahshua ha Mashiyach, the Lord Jesus Christ – our Bridegroom, and our First Love. Are we, like Mary, willing to pour out everything – desires and affections – into the feet of Jesus?


People will wonder why we are willing to forsake everything – even the supposedly good things – for the sake of Jesus. Let them wonder. People will laugh at you for being illogical and foolish enough to miss out on the fun. Let them laugh. But His glory would then shine in your set-apart life if you allow Him to move in you, and then the world will see Him there. Let them see.



Thursday, May 8, 2014

Through The Needle's Eye


There is a difficulty recently whenever I get asked of my plans in life. You might have not yet known, but, through the grace of God, I finally graduated last April with an AB English degree. Praise God!

Most say I should proceed to Law School, and some who have the same passion for writing as I do, say taking a Master’s degree is better. My relatives on the other hand, I could tell, are desperate to have me find a job so I could help my family right away. It seems as if everybody around me is fussing about, pouring out suggestions, encouragements, and insults, but here I am, not moving an inch towards the direction they are telling me to go. At least not yet. The still, small voice is still telling me to stay, and to not make any rash decisions. And so I obeyed.


What was I to say? That I was waiting on God? I tried giving that answer when the most concerned people approached me. And for self-professed Christians, the responses I had received were pretty much not what I have expected.


               “No. You become a lawyer. You’d provide your future family well with that. You could still be a good Christian…just don’t do the really bad stuff.”

                “So you’re going to wait. There are countless fresh graduates in the country fighting over limited jobs and here you are, staying still. I don’t think the Bible tells you to do that. You’re interpreting it wrongly.”


It seems as if we are already trying to make Jesus fit in our lives, in ways we find convenient, rather than fitting our lives in Jesus, no matter how we find it inconvenient. There is a huge difference. Why, even in the Church, is Christ – the Bridegroom – fitted into our daily lives, rather than our lives wrapped solely around Him? Why do we deliberately choose through deceitful hearts, before we claim through “prayers” for blessing, rather than praying and waiting for whatever the Lord chooses for us?


I am reminded of a story in the gospels when a rich young man came to ask Jesus about eternal life. He followed all commandments the Torah tells them to follow, but he still found it incomplete. When Jesus answered, “Sell all your possessions, give it to the poor, and follow me,” the young man sadly turned around and left. It was too painful for him to give up everything he possessed. How was he supposed to eat and live as comfortably as before? How was he supposed to help provide his family if ever they needed anything? Couldn’t he still be this comfortable and be saved? After all, he follows the commandments. He would still be morally upright, wouldn’t he?

When he left, Jesus told his disciples that it was more difficult for a camel to enter a needle’s eye than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God. When I was younger, I used to think it would be impossible then to get in God’s kingdom if I were rich. That was that. It still confused me however, as I knew a lot of Christians who were financially well-off. Finally however, I have learned through Kuya Randy, a missionary I have gotten acquainted to, that that was not the case after all.

In the olden days, camels had to get through a narrow gate they all called needle’s eye. For a camel to pass through the entrance, its burden on its back and those dangling by its sides are to be removed. After the camel has been free from the baggage, it has to kneel to be able to pass through the narrow door. Unless it kneels and unless its baggage has been lifted off, the camel could not get in.


We might not be as rich as this young man, but I still believe we still have to take off the baggage, and kneel before our Master. The rest – the jobs, the opportunities to receive – should follow, depending on the Father’s will. Even the tiniest detail, like choosing a job you’d do for the most of the rest of your life, should be surrendered to the Lord's will, if we want to step up in the Christian faith. A baby should never remain a baby. The more we push ourselves into that narrow gate, the more we have to take off. It’s hard. I could never even count how many times I have cried myself to sleep, feeling the pain of subjecting everything to the Master’s will.

As Eric Ludy puts it, I believed! I believed that two thousand years ago, this guy named Jesus was nailed to a tree. And that He took all my sin upon himself and that I can now know for certain I won’t end up in hell. I believed it, okay? But then, if that’s all there was in Christianity, why was my life really no different than anyone else’s who had good morals, grades, manners, and hygiene?


I have always wondered how different a Christian is from the non-believers who were practically “good” and never broke the law.

It’s surrender.

Because we are living in an age where the world has so entangled itself with our spirits, the act of surrendering rarely comes into a man’s mind…even a Christian man’s. We live and earn a living separately from our supposed devotion. Like oil and water together. Coming to think of it, is that God’s ultimate desire for us? I don’t think so.


We do not separate God from anything. Career, human relationships, and money are too petty to be placed separately or before God. And so we decide. Who do we really please with our plans and actions?



Monday, April 28, 2014

Just Remembering



I cleared off my plate of rice, dried fish, monggo bean soup, lutya meat balls, and banana-avocado salad quickly before slipping into their kitchenette to help Gaying wash the dishes. The rest of the group has just arrived from a quick swim in the river and has only started wolfing down on the food on the table. I glanced at them and saw their smiles plastered on their faces as if they had nothing in the world to worry about. Ben was soaking wet, leaning on the old wooden bench, laughing, teasing me I made the wrong decision to not take a dip in the pool they made in the river. I tried to comment jokingly on the already muddy water they had been swimming in, but he just chuckled and told me I was sour-graping. It was a fine day. Too fine in fact, that I thought this day had been one of the best I have had this year. I pushed back my frames up the bridge of my nose. Eventually, I left the rest to their late lunch and proceeded to the dirty dishes.

“They sure had a lot of fun,” I thought, noticing Gaying staring at me all the while. I turned to her and grinned.

“I could’ve gone after you at the Olivette, the mountain.” she said, washing the soap suds off the plates. Her hair was kept neatly tied behind her red sakak, the head covering. I raised my eyebrows before going back to rubbing soap on the dish cloth.

“Really? Why didn’t you come up? It would have been nice of you did.” I replied, surprised that she even started a full conversation with me.

“Oh, I was cooking your meal,” she said, though I was not sure if she was sad or completely happy with it.
I did a quick evaluation of her, starting from her dimpled cheeks to her long skirt that almost reached her ankles. She was only twelve years old, I realized, but she had seemed more responsible than I am then. It would be impossible for me to, like her, stay at the guest house, forgo the games, and cook lunch for everybody. As I have been told a thousand times before, I was too carefree; I never started working at home until last year when my mom told us keeping a housemaid was too high maintenance.


“You did?” I exclaimed, baffled at her confession. I couldn’t even fry a fish right until this year. And I’m nineteen. “Which dish did you cook?”

“Your monggo beans.”

There was a timid smile that followed, as I gazed at her, humbly putting the washed plates on a little basin. Maybe it was the way her smile brightens her face. Or her eyes. I couldn’t tell which. Her innocence radiated wherever she went, I wish I could trap little sparks of it all in a little jar and bring it home with me. They would have looked so beautiful in a tainted city.


She was watching me curiously as I washed the remaining dishes. There weren’t any girls my age in the camp. There weren’t any girls Gaying could really call “Ate”. If there were, I’d make a guess and say they’ve gone down the city. She remained silent and let her observe me until I kept the last dishes.



“Kuya Kenmore always makes me laugh,” she suddenly blurted out, trying to stop her giggles.

“Why?” I asked her, half-laughing. “Does he look funny?”

I observed her cupping her mouth, though her palms failed her and her giggles escaped in betrayal to her effort to be formal around me. Back home, girls her age would have bellowed in laughter, slap anyone nearby, and not bother the noise and informality. Gaying was different, I began to take interest in her peculiar modest behavior I was not used to.

“Every time I look at him,” she said, “I just laugh. I always remember that time he told Ate Aimae he doesn’t need to wash his feet. He said they weren’t even dirty!”

I looked at her in sheer amusement.

“But,” she went on, “when he raised his foot, it was covered with mud!”
Our laughter rang across the kitchenette, we had to cover our mouths when we realized how much noise we were making. I didn’t find her story funny at all, really. But her sweet laughter was too contagious. It was as if I was meant to laugh along with her. I shook my head, half-grinning.


“Do you have to go?” she suddenly switched her tone. Trying to open my mouth, the words didn’t come. I just stood there, rummaging through my head for the right words to say. We had been here for only two days and a half but it was already too difficult to detach myself from the place. From them. I looked down and realized I was no longer wearing a long skirt. Even my head feels strange without a sakak on. I almost looked completely back to normal.


“Please don’t go, Ate Aine” she managed to squeak. “Please?”


What should I say? That we couldn’t? I could already feel her heart breaking as soon as I opened my mouth again. The words found it after all. I quickly raised the corners of my mouth, trying to convince the two of us that everything would be fine.

“I’m sorry, Gaying,” I whispered, resting my palm on her shoulder. “I’m afraid we have to. Their homes are still so far away. They have to ride buses and travel for hours.”

“How about you? You could stay.”

I paused and gave her a half hug, wrapping my arm around her.

“Don’t worry,” I assured her. “We’ll come back. I promise you. In Elohim’s time. We will be.”

She beamed, looking comforted, though I was not exactly sure what was going on at the back of her mind. I only smiled back.


As usual, it was too dark to see anything that night. There was no electricity, and the only sources of light were solar flashlights, oil lamps, and the bright moon behind the clouds. The darkness was comforting, however, and brought us all in a different level of intimacy, I almost always catch myself smiling at nothing in particular. It was just too good to be true, if only life in the city could be this simple. Ate Saidah, Ate Connie, Ate Lanie, Ma’am Jung, Kenmore, and Ate Annie were busy making palapa around the wooden table, mashing chili peppers and loads of sibujing, laughing and, occasionally, sneezing. I had originally wanted to learn how to make this side dish, but after getting my nose tired and sore from the smell, I decided to leave the table and go somewhere else.


“Why aren’t there any stars?” I mumbled, disappointed that just when I was in the highlands, the stars were held back by clouds.  Stars were one of my sources of comfort back home as they always remind me of the Lord’s comforting promises, just like how He made a covenant with Abraham, then Abram. There weren’t any in the camp, but I remained in my spot. I was at the end of the wooden staircase that faced the forest. I didn’t move. Not until I noticed flickers of light around the highest tree.

Shooting stars? I thought. Squinting my eyes, I stared at the tree. I let a giggle break out when I realized they were not stars. In fact, they were nothing near stars.

“Fireflies!” I excitedly whispered to myself. They were so beautiful, flickers of light danced around the distant forest, I couldn’t take the grin off my face.

“Gaying!” I called out. “Come, quick. You should see this.”



“Oh. There always are a lot of that here,” Gaying beamed when I showed her the bright insects fluttering from tree to tree. “Don’t you have these down in the city?”

I shook my head. “I never saw this many. These must be hundreds!”


There was a string of familiarity whenever I talked with this girl, I noticed. It was refreshing. I could not imagine going home the next day. To leave such place was illogical – painful, too. Life could be funny sometimes. You take a dip in the waters only to be tossed to the mud in the next second. But life is beautiful this way. To not experience a little twitch in the muscle once in a while would be plain and stagnant.


Gaying and I went on, from singing one of her favorite songs to talking about her family.


“Do you have a Papa, Ate Aine?” she whispered after a moment of silence.

“Yes, I do.” I knew her dad was shot years ago so I kept my answer brief. I didn’t want to stir any hurt she still might have. Instead, I hummed an indefinite melody to fill in the gap in the atmosphere. You know that moment you rack through your memory for something else to talk about but fail, so you resort to humming a tune.

“I no longer have my Papa,” she said.

“Hmm. But you still have your Mama, don’t you?”

She paused before looking out to the open. Fumbling with her fingers, she cocked her head to the side. I waited, letting the cold breeze bite my skin.

“She’s in Manila. She married again.”

“Haven’t you ever thought of going with her?”

She smiled. “My brother and I like it here. Besides, Mama told us it was better for us to stay here, too. She says there are a lot of bad people out there.”

I nodded, having nothing else to say. I let another tune slip out my lips once again, waiting for her to share more of her mysteries.

“Ate Aine,” she mumbled. “Do you like to read?”

“Yes, I do!” I exclaimed, feeling my eyes light up. “In fact, I read all the time. I love it. Do you, too?”
She grinned and nodded her head once. “Very much. I also love to draw.”

“That’s amazing, Gaying.”

The night and our conversation drew on until Ate Lanie eventually told Gaying it was past her bedtime. There was so much I have learned about Gaying and the camp that night, it felt right. Soon, I wondered when we’d have our next conversation. Although we were supposed to go home the next day, I didn’t want the feeling of leaving sink in so I decided to stay up a little longer – to make the most of our remaining hours. We talked with David, the Hebrew, and ate a bunch of boiled bananas. Ma’am Jung even cracked a durian open, I had to cover my nose the entire time to ward off the sharp smell, refusing to taste even a small portion of it.
It was as if we had no mountains to say goodbye to. We laughed and talked and laughed some more. We teased David who doesn’t understand Sebuano, when he tried durian for the first time.

“You have to finish your durian seed clean, David,” Ate Connie instructed him in between sucking her own durian. David only grinned and inspected her seed.

“Like this,” she raised her durian seed for everyone to see. “See? No more flesh. Now, you clean your seed.”

We waited for him to take his seed to his mouth, but when he gave his to Ate Connie to have her clean it for him, we all burst in laughter.


Every once in a while I had to feel the stiffness of my abdomen. Having no break to relieve ourselves from too much laughing has hurt it so much, I could almost feel my abs building up. When I told them this, they only laughed some more and told me we were on the same boat.



The next day, Gaying refused to smile. In fact, she stayed away from us. When I rushed to hug her, she only buried her face under her sakak when I noticed her tears about to give in.

“Hey,” I whispered as I embraced her. “It’s alright. We’ll come back. I’ll come back.”

She remained silent and forced a smile. The rest of our goodbyes went to everyone else. To the kids. To the elders. Occasionally I’d steal a glance at Gaying and catch her looking at us, absent-mindedly wiping the dishes with a dish cloth. I wonder what she was thinking.


“Bye!” I hollered. “Bye, Gaying!” I waited for her to wave her hand and say goodbye, but she only continued washing the dishes, staring soberly at us. Her lips were pursed, and strands of her hair escaped from her sakak. She refused to say anything back.


Tala, Aine,” I heard Ben call out to me. He was ready to get on the habal-habal, a high-leveled motorcycle for the rough roads of the highlands. I inspected the wheels, white from dried mud. The last time I rode one, I had sore muscles for two days. I heaved a sigh and proceeded to our special transport.
As agreed, Ate Allen sat behind the driver. She was smaller so I easily squeezed in my place before Ben sat behind me. I took one last look at the camp before the driver maneuvered the motorcycle towards the stream we had to cross. If we were to come back, I’m not yet sure when. I might as well breathe in all the fresh air I could while I can.


The ride back home had been more comfortable than the previous one. Having been squeezed between Ate Allen and Ben had granted me human seatbelts, though I’m not sure if they could say the same. Ate Allen’s face was nearly buried at the driver’s back and I could feel Ben’s body bouncing against the hard grill extension of the motorcycle, I had to ask him in regular intervals if he could still endure the rest of the ride. I smiled. Ben was telling me about the place and he was starting to stick out both his arms to feel the wind whip against him. I followed suit, and there we were, acting like mountain versions of Jack and Rose on the accident-proof habal-habal, although the moment felt more melancholic than romantic. Soon, Ate Allen, who, even though was silent the whole ride, started sticking out her arms, too. Ate Saidah and Ma’am Jung’s habal-habal zipped pass us and I chuckled when I realized their arms were sticking out as ours were.

“It’s so beautiful!” I exclaimed when Ben pointed out the mountain range beyond the cliff. He had been talking about how the roads before were so much rougher than they were now, when we took a turn and were now at the edge of the hill. Trees which names I could not identify blanketed the hills in the near horizon.

“Isn’t it?” he grinned back, his eyes squinting into tiny slits, I wonder if he could still see anything.
Although the sun was blazing hot, I refused to wear my jacket in the attempt to feel for the last time the cool breeze on my skin. I let my sunglasses slip down the bridge of my nose when the wheels bumped against the rough rocks for the umpteenth time. “I already have dark skin anyway,” I told Ben when he said I should be wearing my jacket to keep my skin from the sun.


I tried to stay happy throughout the ride. After all, I am. Ben and I kept talking about the place, his family, his faith, and our fun times in high school, and I simultaneously amused myself with the view. Of course, while sticking our arms out. However, my thoughts seemed to drift back to the camp. I wonder if the kids would still remember us when we get back. I wonder if they’d still recognize us. I wonder what Gaying was doing now. If she was still sad about our departure. Or if she was thinking of us like how we were thinking of them.


And then I thought about what Grandma and the rest of the elders had told us before we left. That no matter what we do, and no matter where we go, we should always follow what Christ, Rabbani Yahshua ha Mashiyach tells us to do. That we should put ahead service for the Lord’s kingdom before our own desires. That we are no longer living for ourselves but for our Lord. Our Master.


I shook my head to relieve the jam of thoughts, breathed in the mountain air, and sighed.


“I really pray we could come again,” I whispered to Ben, though I’m not entirely sure he heard me. The rough bumps on the road had drowned my voice, and I let my thoughts drown along with it, too, hoping my heart could rest for a moment.




Monday, April 21, 2014

For Gaying

April 17, 2014


Dear Gaying,


I miss you so much. I haven’t seen you for almost 12 hours now and my heart is grieving to see your smile. I miss your sweet voice. I miss your gentleness. I miss how you say my name. And I could never forget how you told me to stay in the camp and be with you. I wish I could stay a little longer, but I have other promises to keep, too. I have to go home. But as I’ve promised, I will be back. Perhaps I’d be there on your birthday, or even better, during the Feast of Ruach HaKodesh. May Elohim hear the desires of my heart.


You see, you remind me of myself. When you told me you loved to read and draw, I just knew you were special to me. I just knew I could feel your heart just then. I just knew. Do you remember the talk we had when we watched the fireflies playing around the trees? You asked me if I preferred loud or peaceful places. Then we ended up singing “Lead Me Lord” and talking about your beautiful gift from Elohim. Sigh. That was too beautiful to be ever thought of forgetting.

I’ve been crying ever since I came back home, Gaying. My spirit longs to be with you there. Coming back to the world only has reminded me that I do not belong here at all. I hate the discreet selfishness in just about everything. I have already been used to your sweet voices there, and now, the nagging noises in Iligan that I have been used to before seem a whole lot strange to me. If only you were just a three-minute walk away, I’d be there in a flash to hug you, and talk with you.

I’ll try my best to not be sad for a long time over our departure, so please promise me you’d smile too. Always remember that we will be back, in His time. Do not forget us. Do not forget our moments of victory. Always remember Ate Allen and Ate Annie, who you thought to be already 30 and 28. Always remember Ate Aimae’s loud laughter and beautiful tambourine dancing. Maybe she’ll teach you to dance for Abba YHWH’s glory, too if you’d like. Always remember Kuya Kenmore for making you laugh all the time. Do not forget his dirty slippers nor his dancing. And, always remember Ate Aine.  Remember our conversations and our shared love for using Elohim’s gift of knowledge for His glory. You are still young, Gaying, but I do know that our Elohim has already set you apart for His kingdom to come.

The lump on my throat while writing this letter makes no plans of disappearing just yet. But I’ll leave the rest of what I’d like to say, for my future visit to the camp. I miss you, Gaying: Abegayel of Rabbani Yahshua ha Mashiyach. I pray to see you soon.


The Lord, Rabbani Yahshua, keep you and bless you. The Lord make His face shine upon you.


Love,

Ate Aine

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

He Cares


Restless. That is probably what you'd like to describe me right now. Number one, I am nowhere near thesis completion (and the defense is two weeks away!). Number two, deadline for the application for graduation would be on Friday and I still have an incomplete grade from last semester. Number three, there are other trivial things that insist to infest my sensitive side. Number four, I am a naturally-restless girl for no apparent reason and I know I should stop.


Peace. I've been craving for peace since 2014. Schedules are messed up; the once quiet river now has surges of strong currents brought about by storms. Whenever I pause to think about letting Christ's peace wash over me, the next storm comes at me like they have come from a bottomless pit of worries. It's a cycle, I tell myself, feeling the exhaustion of battling the circumstances seeping into my bones.


But times like this only bring me back to a memory of God's extraordinary workings. Last year, right before our second semester started, I was devastated when I knew I still did not have a grade for my Thesis proposal. And it was already enrollment time! Finally feeling defeated, I cried so hard at the back of the department, so sure of my extension and the disappointment on my parents' faces. "Lord," I managed to blurt out. "Why?" I could barely breathe, let alone speak.


Then suddenly, somebody from behind began stroking my head gently. It was somebody's palm and I only absorbed the comforting warmth, refusing to glance up. This lasted for a few seconds. The hand was a little heavy, continuously stroking my head like a mother strokes her child, or a master pets his cat. Then out of reflex, I think, I glanced up to see who this comforter was. I saw nobody. I stood up and looked for whoever it was but found nobody near. When I asked a classmate a few feet in front of me if somebody was behind me earlier, she only gave me a puzzled look and shook her head. I could almost not believe in the incident. Maybe I was hallucinating. Maybe I was only too washed with grief. So I ran my hand over my head and tested if what I felt was truly a hand. It was a hand as they felt exactly the same.



I only smiled then. Sure that it was my Lord coming to my rescue. Sure that it was His comfort and assurance. Sure that He has reminded me again of His ways that transcend mine.  "Ikaw to, Lord?" I asked in a grin. There was silence. But, there was peace starting to run towards my soul, I no longer needed another hand to prove anything. "Thank You, Lord!" I giggled.


I almost always forget that, so I quickly give in to restlessness. But now I choose to hold on to what He said by remembering this. That all I have to do is hold on and never let go. That He is my only source of strength and order. That His ways are perfect.


I have shared this because I do not want to hoard God's mysterious workings, nor do I want to keep encouragement to myself. It is time to let go of things no matter how important they seem to us. Maybe they've bothered you too much already, like how my problems stole my joy lately. Jesus requires us to take them off our shoulders and start noticing Him instead. That His yoke is light. That He will do the hard stuff for You by His grace. That He cares about you so much that's why He's doing this.


I needed this reminder myself. I know you do, too.



Tuesday, January 28, 2014

If You're Wondering...




Hi, everyone!



I know I haven't been posting much lately. But I assure you, I am still alive! Maybe just a little bit busier until the next few months, but still alive! I just realized that my blogger posts required more time to arrange and write, so I have not really set aside special time just for this site yet. However, please stay with me. I have a pending post and a short story related to it to be uploaded soon. For the mean time, we could still keep in touch in between posts! If you have a Tumblr account (or an internet connection), you could go check out my personal/semi-photo blog, Bucket of Smiles. I only created the blog a few weeks ago for no reason, then eventually, turned it into a semi-photo blog. In here would be photographs I have taken, and a glimpse into my personal life. More like a real blog blog, if I'm allowed to say it. And if you're wondering, the reason why I chose Tumblr, was because of its convenience. I also do not have to write especially long articles, so I seem more alive there.


But I promise I would still be active here, posting regularly. But most likely not as often as I did last year. I am, God-willing, graduating this end of the school year, thus my schedule would be much crazier.


I would be definitely honored if you follow my Tumblr blog, too! And maybe I could follow you back if you have a Tumblr account. That would be awesome.


Thank you so much for sticking with me. I love you with the love of the Lord. :)


You could also click on the screenshot of my Tumblr blog and be directed there!







Saturday, January 11, 2014

Before I Turn Nineteen



This is my last night as an eighteen-year-old! Hurray! Toss the confetti and strike the gongs! Haha.

I was thinking of something fun to do while waiting for midnight (which had been a romanticized tradition), so there we were with my sisters, sprawled on their bed, having our own session of photo shoot. Being too tired to set up a DSLR camera in the room, we decided to use our mom's iPad instead. It was, after all, just a fun shoot to kill the time. So brace yourselves for a ton of photos of me and my sisters I'd shamelessly display on this blog. These are unedited, by the way. I'm catching up with the time, you see; it's almost midnight.






This is my pretty sister, Kaye. She's four years younger than I am, so that makes her 14, turning 15. I did her make up, but unfortunately we didn't manage to take a decent photo. In fact, I'm posting a lot of selfies here as they were the only ones that seem to work. Haha. This is what you get when you compromise on camera quality. But hello, it was almost midnight anyway.







And this is my other pretty sister, Anne. She just turned 11 a week ago. Despite her fascination for games for the guys, she was more thrilled than any of us when she knew I was going to put make up on her.








And this is me. I know, these are just selfies. But I couldn't do anything with the horrible lighting. Haha. Maybe soon, I'd have a more formal shoot with these girls. Actually, I was supposed to have a pre-birthday shoot a while ago, but my dad was too busy with a documentary film he's working on. And it was raining hard. So this happened.


This had been fun, but I really have to wash my face now. I still have a ton of make up on, and after having denied makeup since a couple of months ago, my face seems to have forgotten now how it feels like on my skin. Plus my eyes are getting dry as I still have my contacts on. Besides, it is almost midnight. The Lord and I still have a date, so...good night, loves! See you when I've turned 19! :))








P.S. I'm supposed to write something deeper tonight. And I shall, but only after the talk I'd be having with the Lord in a few. I know I used to be emotional at nights like this. And I will be...again. But not until I get this posted. There is a time for everything. :)