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Thursday, December 29, 2016

Tell Me What To Name This Thing



Perhaps it was the way he draped his long arms around my shoulders that made me restless the whole night. Nothing has changed. It was as if I were back eight years ago, sharing my last dance with him. Only this time, I had more questions. How his stares began to deepen and linger. How he comes to me, to place a hand on my waist and whisper if I was enjoying the night. Or if I wanted more wine. I was sinking. Deeper. And I was not sure if I wanted to climb out the hole I was digging for myself. Again.

Before I left he came from behind, his breath crawling on the side of my cheek, my chest laboring for more air. And I remembered how he pulled me in for a dance a long time ago. Eight years ago he was breathing against my neck, and I dropped my hands from his shoulders to his arms, his fingers tracing my bare back up and down, down to the hem of the deep blue gown just below my waist. We swayed a little. He kept his hands on my waist – sometimes going up my back. “Thank you,” he said, and I smiled and asked what he was saying his thanks for. But he only answered me with his crazy grin, before moving closer, his nose brushing against my cheek.



Time was an ocean, and eight years later, I was still waiting for him to say more, but he only rubbed my shoulders with his warm hands before I felt him press his lips against my hair. 




P.S. Another flash fic to keep my mind off things for a while.

Monday, December 19, 2016

Closing a Roller Coaster Year



I MISS WRITING! AND I KNOW I OWE THIS DORMANT BLOG A POST.





There had been a lot of changes this year. Mostly, temporal. I haven’t really been in my best shape when I entered 2016 but I was hopeful that things will fall in their rightful places. I’m not entirely convinced my readers want to catch up on what has been happening lately, given I was not really a good blogger this year, but I find it most comforting to write down things. To make things at least more organized in letters, having such a crazy mess of a mind. So, here is a list of my crazy year, in chronological order.

1. I QUIT LAW SCHOOL
I finished one term, finally convinced, law really isn’t for me (although I did, and still do love a good argument). It was really out of respect (for my mom) that I started law school, thinking I might grow to love it if I try. Unfortunately, since I juggled it with work (teaching preschool), I barely had time to study. Also, I was having depressed nights where I just cry and loathe the thought of work and class the next day, having no clear vision of me in the court. In the end, I gave up, dreading the thought of 5 years of that, and a lifetime of regret.


2. I ENROLLED FOR A MASTERS DEGREE
I might have been more vocal about this on Facebook. I jumped on the first train in the Culture and Arts Studies masters program in the Philippines, being in the pioneering batch. I’ve always loved the folk. The culture. The Arts. And, I thought, “Finally, I have this niche to grow in!” And perfectly fit my dream of becoming a filmmaker. Soon, I was attending literature and theater seminars and conferences. I was collaborating with the indigenous and fellow artists, writing poems. It was a dream come true, but I guess things like these have their stop point, too.


3. I STARTED TEACHING IN COLLEGE
So from preschool, I skipped to the older generation and taught college. I’m having a grand time, so far, being in a bigger and more corporate setting, compared to the small school I have taught in previously. Benefits are more defined (although not as much as in public schools), and relationships with peers are less personal. I started teaching Oral Communication, Remedial English, Art Appreciation (Humanities), Philippine Literature, and World Literature in the first semester, and now I handle additional subjects in Writing in the Discipline (English 2), Intercultural Communications Studies, Argumentation and Debate, Preparation and Evaluation of Instructional Materials (English 111), and Introduction to Linguistics. I never thought I’d be able to handle major subjects, but here I am, reviewing like I’m back in college.

But things are beautiful with my students. I was able to meet people with struggles I didn’t know a college student could have. Although I have a lot of wealthy students, I’ve also had students who are working full-time while in school (imagine that!), students who have kids of their own, students who have taken drugs, and students who do not have a permanent home. I could only think of my position as a privilege. To be in a position to help is a privilege. I wouldn’t have it any other way.


4. I JOINED A PAGEANT
I have been open about this on my Facebook, too. After being requested by my long-time makeup artist, Ely Tagalog, to join the screening, I succumbed. Little did I know, I would garner the most awards (Alex Artistic Salon’s Choice Award, Tartilicious Darling Award, Best in Ororama Casual, Miss Pepsi-Cola, Best in Maranao-inspired Wear, Best in Talent, Miss Photogenic), win 1st runner-up, brush shoulders with the big wigs (city officials, big-time business people, national pageant coaches), and be selected to represent the city in this “other” national pageant. Plus, the monetary prize really helped ease the financial tension at home that time. I could only thank the Lord at how generous He’s been with me the whole time!


5. I QUIT MY MASTERS
I’m not saying I’m not going back. Just a cease-fire from everything, I guess. After three lovely semesters of being in the program, I have decided to take a break unless I want to compromise my performance. Having juggled this with my schedule with work and pageantry, I have reached the point of realizing I couldn’t do it all. So, I pause for a moment, and choose a more practical load.


6. I TOOK PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION UNITS
This is only for one semester. 18 units, where I only have after my work in the college ends. I know it’s not easy, but it is more realistic. More practical for somebody who wants to work for the government. So, I take the Licensure exam for Teachers next year, although I am still unsure where the Lord will place me after my contract with the school I am now working in.


7. I MOVED OUT
Along with the changes this year, I decided to move out from home for independence, although I am also in the stage of contemplating whether or not I go back home (because I just moved 10 minutes closer to my work place). I did calculations and decided it would be financially more practical to go back home and use my rent (and food) money to help with some bills, so I would probably be back in my old bed early next year.



BUT YEAH. You probably aren’t interested in all these things, but I just thought this would clear my head a bit, especially now that I’m facing a lot more work this week with all the papers to check and the exams to take. But, man, I knew I had a crazy year, but I never realized I had this much change going on!


2016 really has been a year of transition. I wonder how other people do it: settling right after graduation like making a decision is so easy for them. I was always tempted to want to live the way they do, but, I believe everybody has a crazy life like mine, I just don’t see it right. I still am happy to have gone through several changes though. No regrets, and no “what ifs”. I’ve had a roller coaster ride this year and I wouldn’t have it any other way. Although, of course, I hope I’d have a smoother course next year.


Hugs and Kisses,
Aine


P.S. OMG this is so rushed, did I just write my year as a bland post? I felt I had a lot of mistakes in this post. I'll go over it for the editing but I just had to post this before my internet connection goes nasty on me again.

Friday, August 19, 2016

To More Trying...


As promised, I'm back after I submitted my students' grades to the registrar. There is a new pile of papers to check this time for midterm though, and I am currently trying to absorb my new schedule. Because MSU-IIT is following a new school calendar now, our semester for masters class starts right in the middle of St. Peter's College's first semester. I'm still trying to figure out how to adjust to the time frames of both schools, WHILE trying to adjust to the shifting of roles (student-to-teacher-and-teacher-to-student).



Here's an angle of my natural, working habitat. (Well, 1/5 of the time, anyway.)




I do love my job, however, and I'm still trying (or hoping) to squeeze in my activities and responsibilities in my short days. September is only a few sleeps away, and, not sure if I'm allowed to tell already but, I'm entering this annual city pageant after much urging from my mom (and my dad, sort of) and our decade-long makeup artist who happened to have handled my mom's sister (Miss Iligan 2007) and several other pageant queens in the past.

Sometimes I wonder if all these are actually happening to me right now. Not only is my schedule jam-packed, I also am not sure if I could truly handle this with grace. 

Things are slipping as I am catching other things. So slowly...slower than you, maybe, I try to take several steps backward, and probably pick up the pieces that have fallen in my blinded busyness.


Thank You for Your new mercies every day, dear Lord.


Thursday, July 28, 2016

Learning Teaching: 2-in-1



Juggling a dual life has never been this difficult! Now a college instructor and a masters student in Culture and Arts Studies, I barely have time to write a decent post. To make up, I am posting a rough draft of a short story I submitted as part of the compilation of works for my Creative Writing class. And oh, if we're friends on Facebook, you'd probably know why I chose the Subanen people as the main characters in this story. (My final thesis + project would be on the Subanen people, their unrecorded tales, and their balians, shamans and their traces in the contemporary Juan, Filipino.) Enjoy, you guys! I'll be back after I submit all my requirements (both for my masters and my students' grades)!



The Appointed

Katherine Aine Codas



“I saw an angel at the swamp today,” Gido whispered. His eyes were on my hands clutched around the wooden pestle. I was pounding the burnt rice father brought home from the harvest before the sun rose and my shirt has already started sticking to my torso, and my damp hair to my forehead. In a few days Bae Neneng will be asking for her share of grain for the pangasi, the rice wine, for the next moon’s wedding. Today is not a good day to be bothered if I do not want to get the promised two pesos so I rolled my eyes and continued pounding the remaining grain. 



“He is very strange,” he continued in his high-pitched, goat-like voice, disturbing the rhythm of the pounding and the thrusting of my pestle. We used to kid around him, teasing him that he really came from the goat’s belly. But when he starts crying “Baaaaa!” Nanay would stop preparing all meals and lumber down to the kwarto with her heavy calves to pick up the dried up guava branch she saves for our squabbles and whip our legs.



“I didn’t know they glowed, like carabao milk. Or that they do not have wings.”

I stopped pounding, wiped the sweat that had trickled down my chin, and gave him an incredulous look, my hand finding its way to my hip.

“Did you notice I’m not listening?” I whipped back at him. But he was too busy tracing his finger on the damp sand beside his foot; he did not notice the irritation in my voice. 



“He also talked about God. That’s when I said, ‘Ayo, my suspicions were right!’” Gido was now engrossed in his own story, he started flapping his arms up and down to keep my attention. “So I asked him about paradise and he answered in detail! Gold everywhere, he said. And shiny stones. And a lot of singing.”



“How did he tell you? Does an angel really speak our tongue?” Nothing seemed to deter him so, defeated, I sat down on a stump and rested the pestle on my lap, watching the sun rise behind the bentud – the hill across the Konakon, the collector’s house. I wanted to test him. How come a young boy who only plays with his bird traps in the swamp gets to see a diwata and I don’t?



I waited for him to raise his chin. He nodded.



“He does. Although they sounded magical. Different,” he replied in a sudden, hushed tone, as if he were sharing a secret. “At first they sounded odd, like he were stretching his mouth, and he messes with the words. But I understood him. I understood him. Could I be…”

“Could be what?”

“The next, you know…”

Balian?”

He shrugged, digging his sole into the ground, eyes darting from one jar of wine to another. They were stacked in a corner beside the kamalig. “I mean, perhaps, that’s why I can talk to angels.”

I looked at my younger brother and sighed. He’s only been around a few harvests and I’m not sure if someone as young as him could be the chosen one. Besides, the pintow has stopped being a school for priest way before the day I was born. The last time I’ve been there, the men were stacking sacks of rice on top of each other. Beside it now stood our church the big people over the seas have built for us. I watched Gido’s stringy hair stick upwards like dried grass – brown from playing too much under the sun. He couldn’t possibly be one, could he?





That afternoon I found myself wandering around the swamp, thinking about Gido, and thinking about the foolishness of someone of marrying age believing a little boy’s stories. The swamp was right behind the bentud – the hill where we gathered for our weddings and funerals. And although sacred, as the elders have told me, nothing would tell one it is, until the day we actually meet.



Careful with the traps, I reminded myself, remembering the last time I got caught in one of Benito’s traps sitting between the bushful of pako, as I tarried around the edges of the swamp, avoiding the tied twigs. I was half-hoping to meet an angel myself. Perhaps if I turn around the other corner…



Baes Gendow!” a golden head peeked from a short molave tree. I stared at him, wide-eyed. At his white shirt wrapping his upper body. One of his hands is raised, wrapped around the neck of a wild heron. He grinned, showing a row of white pearls. I nod, still confused if Gido would still be the balian now that I have seen the angel with my own eyes too. His head was shiny like it was covered in gugo, and his hair twirled right above his eyebrows like they never move.



Eventually, I found myself visiting the swamp every day as soon as I finished my chores, trying to talk to the angel, but I always found myself just sitting behind the rubber tree, feeling the cuts beneath my fingers, chewing betel nut, and staring at the angel walking around the bentud, looking at the small caves or the fringes of the swamp. Sometimes he glances at me before he flashes his pearls again. I nod. Again – that’s all I do. Because when he tries to speak he stretches the words like he forgot to adjust his speech when he fell from the skies. To that, I cannot speak back.



Ate Gaying?” Gido gasped when he found me squatting behind the rubber tree one quiet afternoon. The sun was hitting the other side of the bentud so it was a little cooler where we were and Gido was just about to lay another bird trap on a mossy rock on the swamp. His fingers fumbled for a loose knot for one of the twigs. “So you found the angel too?” His smile was mischievous but there was satisfaction in his eyes like I owed him something.



“Hello!” the angel interrupted us. “Do you not live on this hill?”

I shook my head while Gido started explaining where the people’s houses were, naming them one by one.

“And, we live right over there!” Gido beamed, pointing at our home, raised a little higher than the other houses with taller stilts – our pigs, tied below our bamboo floor.

The angel hummed in response, sounding happier than usual. “So no one on this hill?”

Gido and I shook our heads. A swell feeling has immediately filled our chests, happy for making the angel happy with our answers.



Every afternoon, we found ourselves sitting together by the swamp to look at the angel cutting a few branches and drawing lines on paper. Sometimes we chew betel nut while watching, and sometimes, Gido would crack a fallen durian open to share with the angel.

“Is he writing instructions from God?” Gido whispered. I wanted to ask the angel but I was too distracted with his golden hair gleaming under the sun, and the glowing skin as white as carabao milk. Gido was right about that, while our own skin had darkened by staying too long outside, like roasted corn.



Gido and I started walking home one evening with the same questions in mind. A gush of wind rustled the bamboo leaves that had been sleeping since morning, and my brother was unusually silent.

“Do you think two can be balians?” he blurted out, kicking the rocks beneath his feet, a disappointed look brooding on his face now. His arms were hugging a bundle of firewood we were supposed to bring back for the wedding. Four days from now, our bentud would be filled with people again, gathering for the Timuay’s daughter’s wedding, Aya. Next harvest, I hope it would be my turn. I accidentally overheard mother and father talking about Benito last night and his showing of interest. Perhaps it was my turn to count the moons now.

Baes gobi!” Gido and I greeted everyone when we came home, shaking the dust from our feet. The elders were sitting on our floor, sharing a few panyalam pieces like somebody just died, but they were not talking. Instead, the older ones were wiping their eyes and the rest were downing on glasses of tuba.



I lay in bed that night wondering if a balian should wed first before the actual appointment. The confusion of roles between me and my brother has not stopped gnawing at my head like a stubborn field rat that I ended up just staring at the roof, popping pieces of lanzones lazily in my mouth. I watched the small bats fly in and out of the house, perching at the farthest corner of the kitchen.



“We should ask the angel, Ate Gaying,” Gido whispered from the other mat. Surprised to see him wide awake, I twisted my body to the right to look at his face better. The nearly full moon has conveniently stopped right outside our open window, hitting Gido’s face with a golden glow. I was almost convinced he looked like somebody the spirits could call. 



“I’m not sure about that,” I faintly replied, reaching for another piece of lanzones. “We’re not even sure if we still need balians here.”

“But you saw the angel too. We can’t just pretend he wasn’t there. We could die, right?”



There was a hint of excitement in his voice, but so was uncertainty. Sometimes I regret having told too many stories about our grandfather to my brother. Although he had been the last balian in our place, he died a Christian, shedding off what remains of his role as a shaman. Gido seemed to have listened only to the portions when our grandfather talked to angels and spirits for powers.



I nod. “Okay.”



But the angel was no longer by the swamp the next day, nor the day after that. And Gido had stopped finishing his meals, worried he would miss the angel’s short-lived visit. He would sprint to the swamp still with food in his mouth but it was the same every day. There was no angel walking around the hill. There was no angel writing lines on paper. It was now back to the same hill before we started seeing him. Except on the third sunrise. We woke up to a huge booming sound, setting off a series of cries from the houses beside us. Gido and I ran outside to see what happened. The bentud was no longer the bentud. There was no more grass. There were no more flowers and weeds. But there were people starting to gather around what was left of the hill. Whispering. Crying. Praying.




“It’s scraped away,” I heard the older children whisper in disbelief. The brown lump of soil has replaced our view of green. I looked around, confused, and saw more angels, climbing on the large trucks that were taking more and more of our bentud. And one of them, still in white, was our angel.


_________________________________________________________________________________


Author’s Notes:


This short story is an attempt to capture a moment from the years of exploitation of the mining companies to the Subanen people who are still fighting for the rights of their own ancestral domain. 






Sunday, April 3, 2016

2 AM



Hey, guys. I think I started writing this short sometime in January and if I had not discovered the draft last night, I would not have remembered finishing it. And, well, I got impatient so I tried to wrap it up today. I might edit it somewhere sometime so consider this a work in progress (including my lazy title). But I hope this is decent enough. Enjoy! And, oh! Tell me what you think.





Fourth Part.


She sucks in her breath again and feels the folds of her sheets in the dark, letting the coolness rub on her burning skin. Her ready-made blue satin dress has covered her up after all, just like what the sales attendant said, except for a few areas where it starts to skimp – the tear from the slit showing right above her left thigh. She presses her thumb over the purple spot on her knee and winces. She forgets where she got the bruise, although she does have a slight memory of her driving Paul’s minivan.


Paul. Her mouth twitches sourly as she remembers the name.


“It’s two in the morning.” Lara stands by the door frame, her right hand coming to her hip, and her other clutching several sheets of paper. Nicole stares at her, blinking slowly as if she were fighting the urge to close her eyes. As if her ears are not burning and her chest isn’t too tight to breathe. She blinks slowly, trying to recall how her roommate suddenly appeared in front of her.
“I know,” she whispers, half-wondering how she got home.


She rolls off from the bed before sprinting to the bathroom to throw up for the third time in the last two hours.


“You think you could get away with this because I always let you in the gate even though it’s way past curfew. I have a life too, you know. I’m not studying every night so you can come in whenever you want to.” She pauses tentatively, eyes hovering at her roommate’s black bra strap dangling loose from her right shoulder. “You look like a mess, by the way.”

“I know,” Nicole manages to squeak out before another gurgling sound from her throat and into the toilet. The smell of booze and vomit clings to the atmosphere. Lara pinches her nose in annoyance.


“You’re gross.”

She blinks back hot tears. “I know.”

Her head spins for a moment before she actually drops her head back on her pillow, and her roommate’s voice slur into nothing. The tear on her blue satin slit zips an inch higher.



First Part.


“Hey,” his sweet deep voice rings through her ear. She sometimes makes mental comparisons of it with their favorite hot chocolate Paul's mom used to make. She bites her lips.

“It’s two in the morning.” She reaches for her bedside clock just to make sure. She wants to sound annoyed but she couldn’t help smiling. She misses him; two in the morning doesn’t bother her at all.


“I know,” he whispers. “Open up. I’m outside.”


“Say what again?” Nicole rubs her eyes and starts clambering down the hall towards the bathroom to brush her teeth. The last thing she wants lover boy to remember this hour is her morning breath. She grabs the nearly finished tube of toothpaste and squeezes in panic.


The bun she had on the whole day has made her hair wavier than usual, she realizes; she presses the fringes to her forehead and sighs. Perhaps it wouldn’t bother him. Perhaps he’d overlook the uncoordinated purple tank top and blue pajamas. Perhaps he wouldn’t even notice.


“Paul,” she calls out to him who is conveniently leaning on a silver minivan, both his hands occupied with a few bags. She checks her hair with the car window for the last time.


“McDonald’s. I remember it wakes you up the fastest. So which one’s first? Fries?”

“I love you.”


He winks before scooping her into the minivan’s roof, her long and wavy hair brushing against his cheeks.



Second Part.


Nicole slumps herself into the mountain of pillows on her carpet – the ones she’d missile-thrown five minutes ago. It has been four days since her disastrous date with Paul. To her, anyway. The picture of the disinterested look on his face that day does not leave her head. What was wrong with her? She wanted to ask. It appears to her that the longer they spend time with each other, the more she notices him glancing at his phone; his “Huh’s” increased by a third. She looks at the mirror and makes mental notes on her appearance: a stubborn dot of acne bore itself on her chin like a shiny bead, and her hair falls flat with grease.


“For the nth time, you look fine, Nicole,” Lara putters, exasperated, her eyes half-leaving the stack of books on her study desk.

“Fine. Okay. Just fine. Probably why he scooted over to the next hot girl in his class. Because I was just fine.” Nicole presents herself to her roommate and frowns. She can feel the grease on her face now, too.

“He’s good for nothing, okay? And stop making your world revolve around him. I mean, look at you!” Lara clutches her wrist and starts fixing her hair that has hopelessly stuck on her tear-stained cheeks. “You are so much better off without him. Sometimes I wonder what you see in him.”

“I wonder, too,” she half smiles, although it doesn’t hide her bloodshot eyes and the swollen, purple spot just below her chin.



Third Part.



The tension on her jaw and the tightness of her hands wrapped around the steering wheel turns her knuckles white. A streak of mascara stains her cheek, and in her head is a waging battle of ramming the minivan to the nearest tree and driving forever. Her phone beeps for the seventeenth time now. She’s always liked the details, he had said. Like remembering how many times he tapped his leg before he finally asked her out to the movies. Like how many times he said I love you the day they first fought. Sixty-seven. Or, like how many times he called the day after their last fight. Zero.


Her phone beeps again as she hurriedly pulls over the driveway. Eighteen now. She finally picks it up and decides to read the message. “Give me the car back,” she grunts before sweeping the back of her hand up her cheek to wipe another tear that escapes. How long has it been this way?


She stumbles over the bag of trash graciously blocking the entrance to their apartment. Her eyes have failed her yet again. It was difficult to try to find the way home with a bucketful of tears spilling from her ducts after all. Her knees sting so bad, but not as bad as how her chest feels. Burning. Perhaps it was all a mistake. Perhaps if she had believed him when he said they were just friends even after she caught them making out in his minivan, everything would still be alright. Perhaps she was too dramatic for this. Perhaps there was nothing to worry about. Perhaps it was all in her head. She gasps for air before turning the knob.



Fifth Part.



“Thank God for cafes that open overnight. Macchiato!” Nicole announces, waving two cups in front of her roommate after she pushes the door open with her foot. The room is cool like the air conditioning has been turned on for hours. She shakes her head, remembering she used to have a miser of a roommate.

“Careful. I don’t want that spilling on my desk,” Lara says, not looking up, but grinning. She is hunched over a stack of papers. Again. Her hair swept up in a clean bun. “And thank you! I’ve been dying to go get coffee but I just cannot not finish this first.”

“Wow, what’s with you?” Nicole asks, putting down the coffee. “No exams?”

She shakes her head. “Sketching time.”

“Good idea. About time I did something too, you know. Clay modeling? Whittling?”

Lara hums her response and the silence continues to hang in the air. Not painfully, though. Peacefully, like when you walk into a room with a mother lulling her child to sleep. Peacefully, like when you finally rouse from your bed and realize you’re off for the day. Nicole smiles at herself. At the childishness of the recent months. At her foolish spirit. At her roommate finally getting her nose off her books for one night. She picks up her coffee to her lips and makes a little sip. More cream than usual. She doesn’t like cream, but this time she doesn’t mind.


“You forgot the muffins you said you’d buy?” Lara asks, breaking the silence in the room. “Do you want me to get some? I think I’m done. What time is it?”


Her head still wants to float with her thoughts for a few more minutes but her roommate is looking at her. Like she is getting impatient. Like she is suddenly into time and clocks but does not want to read one. Like she is concerned her roommate has gone deaf.


“It’s two in the morning,” Nicole whispers and she feels a buzz in her pocket. A faint one.


Half-wondering but half-hoping, she digs into her pocket and takes out her phone. Maybe she should blame her phone for dying, but she chuckles at her own silliness and at the blank screen – turned off and useless. To her, anyway. For now. Or tomorrow too, who knows? She slips it back before checking the time again. It’s 2:01 in the morning.




Sunday, March 6, 2016

To the Independent Man: You Are Not Christ



In a world of hustle and vision boards for success, perhaps one of the most celebrated words in the 21st century is independence.




Nothing’s wrong with the word, really. In a competitive society, you’ve always been encouraged to strive, compete, excel, and work, else you’d fall behind the billions who’ve been trying to make through life longer than you’ve been. And that’s true. You don’t sit around waiting for the fish to flip from the water and land on your lap. That does not happen in real life (unless you’re going boating on a river teeming with ADHD fish waiting to be fired up).


Many too often we find ourselves forgetting the essence of the good news we have received about God’s kingdom (we are saved by grace). Even Paul was perplexed with the Galatians who seemed to have forgotten how they were saved, going back to the law to “add justification” through works – and it had only been less than a century since Jesus Christ’s ascension! It’s human nature, isn’t it? No matter the situation, we are constantly driven by our proud nature to do something about our life concerns, to make it work, etc. We take things into our own hands. Perhaps you get back at that guy who cut in line. Maybe you do the whole job yourself when your team doesn’t do anything. Maybe you jump on a job offer without waiting for consultation because it’s a crazy world out there and it might be too late when you try to take the time to think it over. Or, maybe, when you get (or don’t get) caught in sin, you try to patch things up yourself  work harder though good deeds to eliminate the sin.


But of course, you won’t admit it. You most likely won’t even notice it.


My head says I was saved by grace – by the blood of Jesus Christ shed on the cross – but after deep thought, I realized I don’t really practice what I say I knew. When I do a good deed, I feel more saved than I’ve been before. I feel closer to heaven the more I engage in service than when I haven’t. When I fail in the good deeds department or fall into sin, I don’t feel forgiven until I’ve done a greater good – more time in service, extended Bible studies, etc. And when the guilt makes it harder to believe God would not get tired of my apologies, I drift into a stagnant phase – not doing anything about it at all. Have you ever felt the same way?


My dear reader, do not mistake joy in bearing fruits with salvation.


Peter, who was so sure he loved Jesus there was no way he’d deny Him, denied Jesus three times just as predicted! After Christ’s death, he went back to fishing, disheartened and discouraged at his denial and of the death of his Lord. This is normal; you’d probably run into this point a few times in your life. And that is fine. Just because you’re a Christian does not mean you would no longer disappoint God. This is no excuse to cling on to sin, however. In fact, this truth should motor us towards Jesus – in humility. For what are we but believers in our earth suits?


After Christ’s resurrection, He went to the disciples who were fishing all night and when John told Peter, “It is the Lord!” Peter wrapped his outer garment around him and jumped (threw himself) into the water. (John 21:7)


Imagine having denied your Lord and Friend three times after you swore you wouldn’t and He shows up in front of you, smiling – resurrected. Every time I read this portion of the passage I start tearing up, thinking how Peter must’ve felt when his Lord comes back after he denies their relationship. How he must have been so excited to fall to Christ’s feet. How he must have felt a little miserable inside, wondering what could happen next.

Peter was a leader, having leader-tendencies – leading, initiating, working with his hands, etc. But there really are things you could not do on your own. Peter’s own grace (or efforts) could not vindicate himself. Neither do yours.




You are not Christ. You could follow the thousands of religious rituals known to mankind and still be lost. Just because you feel better after doing something good does not mean you are forgiven through it. Grace is not earned. Why act like it is? Again, it goes unnoticed most of the time. After all, are not good deeds, well, good?




“Are you so foolish? After beginning with the Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort?” Galatians 3:3

“Does God give you His Spirit and work miracles among you because you observe the law, or because you believe what you heard?” Galatians 3:5



This strikes me hard and deep because my subconscious gets confused sometimes. Of course I knew good deeds are and should only be consequences of my faith and that’s what I tell people when I share the gospel. But the selfish in me still thinks there’s no such thing as free lunch; hence, it gets a little restless when not driven by effort.




“You mean, we can’t work for grace and mercy? Isn’t it too much to receive? What do we do?”




Isn’t that why we call it grace and mercy? Because no matter how much we try, our efforts could not afford the value of His Grace. But the good thing is this: the God we serve – the Great I AM – is good. He is full of grace and mercy – generous to those who seek His face.



Good deeds, fruits, are good, yes. But remember, independent reader, that they do not cause our righteousness. They are merely responses to it. The quantity of works does not add up to nor take away God’s love or your righteousness. One does not bear fruits apart from Christ.


It is a difficult battle with your sinful nature. It is tempting to think you had a share in this blessed life. It is tempting to think you are favored because you did good or because you spent more time serving or reading the Bible. But remember, independent reader, that there is nothing much better than depending on the Lord. His favors are at His disposal. His gift of salvation is not earned, and our efforts – big or small – could not discount its greatness.



Look to Him, my friend. Yes, look at Jesus. You are only a branch living off the living vine. You are not Christ.