Showing posts with label Happiness is Free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Happiness is Free. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 April 2020

Farewell, My Home

I have grown up in the shadows of Mt. Matutum, looming imposingly in the horizon while I played hide and seek with my younger siblings and visiting cousins in the vast playground of our childhood, through a maze of corn stalks with the sound of livestock in the background.



My parents were tenants of a farm owned by distant relations and for the first eight years of my life, my home was an iconic Filipino stilt house, with walls made of bamboo mats and a thatched nipa roof, which extended gradually until we had cemented flooring that felt cold to our little feet but felt better than the dry dusty soil that surrounded our humble abode.

Before they had me, my parents were well-read intellectuals who had excellent prospects for their future until personal circumstances got them trapped in a cycle of poverty. But my father loves to tell a tale of how when I was a preschooler I have asked him, "Is this all we're going to be?" which prompted him to go back to night school to become a teacher and eventually a school head.

When both my parents secured a public teaching job, we moved up a notch on the social ladder by securing a residence in one of the earliest housing developments that would turn agricultural lands close to the city centre into sprawling family homes: Sarangani Homes Phase 1, the neighbourhood that built me.

Our house was a duplex in a narrow unpaved street with open sewage and no regular garbage collection. In the many years we have lived there, it would take different forms, extended in all sides, little by little, when extra money becomes available, which wasn't often. We had two bedrooms in the back extension but one of them was used as a storage and the other I shared with my younger sister. Like most traditional families, my parents and younger brother would sleep in a folded mat in the open space that doubled as a living room and a dining area.

Throughout my youth, I have often wished for a different home, one with a roof that doesn't leak during the rainy season, with windows that don't get covered in thick dust and plastered walls where I could stick pretty posters, in a neighborhood without mice playing by themselves freely in the open sewage.

When I was growing up, I nursed a deep desire to escape the house that to me represented a tree that despite my parent's hard toil, couldn't bear fruit because the weeds surrounding them had eaten away the nutrients before the leaves can grow. I resented the weeds that kept our family from moving forward.
My mother has a treasure glass display of our academic achievements in the wall of our house.
My sister called me detached, perhaps she was right. For most of my teenage years, I have locked myself up in my room to do nothing but studying. For all intents and purposes, except for the first two years of my adolescent life when I gave my parents grief, I had been nothing but the perfect child who would do them proud in my academic studies and co-curricular activities, as evidenced by the trophies and medals that my mother carefully collected in a glass display along with my siblings'. I have decided that my hard work will not be like that of my parents so when I left home to embrace the bigger world, I never looked back.

But when we look at the past as if it's nothing then what becomes of our memories?

Of the many summers that my younger siblings and I would make ice lollies and set up a stall at the bottom of the road to sell to neighbourhood kids. Of the Christmas carols we sang with our friends around the subdivision for pocket money. Of the times I have spent hanging out at my best friend Aubrey's house only a few blocks away until both our parents would come home. Of the neighbors who have become like family, whose personal business, including financial difficulties have become ours but whose good fortunes we have also shared.

Because despite the shabbiness of our surroundings our home had always been filled with warmth and laughter and love that have turned us into well-rounded individuals with successful careers and many travel stories.

When both my parents retired last year, they have decided to move away from the city to a farm where they could grow vegetables in the garden and feed livestock that freely roam around. When Isaac first went into the kitchen, he looked at the part of the wall that has not completely been covered by coconut lumber and declared "This house is broken." My parents, unlike me, would perhaps always prefer a traditional Filipino house and many years later I realised that there was nothing wrong with that.
Isaac said: "This house is broken". But because of the open wall, Santa was able to get in last Christmas.


I said my final goodbye to Sarangani Homes on our visit last Christmas. The neighborhood has aged, the houses now looked smaller than I could remember, the streets have become narrower. Few of our old neighbors are still around but a lot more have moved on. For John it was a surreal visit, a peek to a part of myself we have not shared in what always felt like a lifetime we have been together.



"What did it feel like when you finally left?"

It was not a question he had asked of me but of my mother and for which she had been very grateful for because nobody has thought to ask her. For while it was to me an escape, for my mother it meant leaving behind the cherished memories she has lurking in every corner of that little house, of her three children who have now flown the nest, to far off places she can only pin on the map she keeps on the wall with our photos as any proud parent would.

It was only then that I realised what leaving that house meant for all of us. That there will no longer be a place we could call 'our family home', one that would flood us with happy recollections in the rare times that we would visit.

But perhaps home is more than a house of memories. It is a place where we are loved and it will always be with us.

Sunday, 7 May 2017

I Never Wrote You a Love Poem


We do not sing each other love songs
Or write poems or prose on Hallmark cards
We never bother with red roses
Or give surprises on special days
We do not go to fancy places
Or lock our hearts on lover's bridges

Instead,
We listen to birds sing to our hearts
Speak with fondness that need not be penned
We plant seeds that grow with seasons
Make memories on just normal days
We take long walks on the countrysides
And leave our shoe prints on the dirt tracks

No,
We do not speak of love, not really
But tonight, the moon was beautiful
The flowers in the garden have bloomed
The scent in the air carries longing
That I thought of you, quite far away
And finally wrote you a love poem.

Wednesday, 2 July 2014

The Comforts of Saturdays

Happy Families

John has a recurring nightmare, one with an effect so disturbing it comes to him while he has his eyes wide open. It involves an unlikely situation that we might find ourselves one day contentedly lounging inside an English conservatory in a quiet suburban neighbourhood with its perfectly trimmed hedges, hosting dinner parties for the same set of friends over the years and heading off to the same holiday destination annually. This is not inverted snobbery, there is nothing wrong with this kind of life of course. At the end of the day, we all seek to find our own comfortable place in this world and the sense of security that comes with it. But his unfounded horrors stem from his fears that we might get too cosy with the happy conventions of middle class Britain and its affluent predictability that we might forget our dreams of the more romantic lifestyle of less wealthy Southern Europe where one day is different from the next, or so it's supposed to be.

Occasionally though I remind him that there is something joyful about the rituals that we impose upon ourselves. Even the simple habit of sipping a cup of tea brewed from the same brand of dried black leaves first thing every morning, taking time to rouse ourselves from an evening's rest, can set the course of the day. Not unlike the way we look forward to our weekends, spent in the easy company of the people we so dearly love, doing the same hardly exciting and yet comforting things that gives us immeasurable pleasure.

Our Saturdays are sacred, whiled away in a pattern that is close to being called a tradition. Having a baby meant we have to some extent become creatures of habit in our attempt to help the little one slowly understand this world that we have borne him into. Not that he was ever allowed to dictate his terms, no it is our fundamental duty as parents to teach our children the right way to do things. Starting for example with the importance of having a good night's sleep, which as adults we require at least eight hours of and for children should not be less than ten hours at night. This is a lesson we have successfully imparted in the last few months although occasionally it does require reinforcement. So our human alarm clock, brought up in customised controlled crying, knows that any time before six o'clock is not a good time to break the silence of the night and that during weekends it is better to let his parents have a lie in for an hour longer.

The early part of the morning is my 'me-time', spent sweating in the treadmill at the nearby Hillsborough Leisure Centre, my mere attempt at maintaining fitness. Two hours later, I emerge from the double sliding doors with a healthier glow on my cheeks, ready to meet my boys at the park just across the double carriageway. I usually find them by the lake, with the little one happily squealing at the sight of his feathered friends, the team of ducks and the flock of geese which were racing each other for the feast of crumbs that his dad is throwing in the water.

This hearty commune with nature is followed by a leisurely stroll in the park, sharing smiles with the now familiar faces of dog walkers, pram pushers, cyclists and runners, turning towards the direction of the shops along Middlewood Road already busy with weekend shoppers who keep the local traders and charity shops in business.

We pick up a copy of the Saturday Times from the news agents and sit ourselves comfortably by the fireplace inside Rawson Springs, a Wetherspoons pub housed inside a Neo-baroque stone building built in 1926 that was once known as Walkley and Hillsborough District Baths. This is a popular retreat amongst the locals, it is always packed and the high roof and wide open space meant that the frustrated whimpering of a child would hardly be noticed. We always order two cups of bean-to-cup Lavazza (100% Rainforest-Alliance-certified) coffee and a plate of toast with preserves to share, all for £2.89, less than what we would normally pay for a small latte in the Costa cafe right across the road.

With my weekly dose of Caitlin Moran satisfied over a warm cup of coffee, we are ready to tackle our weekly shopping which includes a trip to the green grocer's who greets us 'Kumusta ka?' or 'Magandang umaga' (the owner having worked with Filipinos 20 odd years ago in the Middle East), the butchers whose faces light up at the sight of us and the Polish bakers who happily tell us about a new artisan loaf that we should try out, along with piece of delectable cake for our afternoon tea.

By midday we are back home, left to spend the rest of the afternoon on more leisurely endeavours. So yes, sometimes the things that bring us exuberant happiness do not have to be grand or exciting, but they are still enough to make us feel blessed nonetheless. 

Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Because Tomorrow I Turn Thirty



When paying for a bottle of wine at Morrisons over the weekend, I was asked for an ID. Although it is legal in the UK for anyone over 18 to purchase alcohol, many retailers follow the Challenge 25 protocol which requires anyone who looks under 25 to show proof of age. I thought the cashier was having a laugh but her face said otherwise so I brought out my driving licence and commented that I will be 30 in a few days. Not that I felt like it, or what I thought I was supposed to feel like. But given that Isaac's great grandmother who will be 90 this year still drives a car and lives on her own, age is but a number.

Still, it is always good to take stock of your life occasionally and the last day in your twenties seem to be a good chance to celebrate what you have managed to achieve in what could be a third of your lifetime (if you are lucky). I could not boast of what most of my 'Facebook friends' have already accomplished in three decades when it was their time to publicly count their (material) blessings (yes, I have seen this posted in my news feed!): a four-wheel drive, a home ownership and a high-flying career, standards by which my old culture measure success by, for I have none of them. But my substandard existence, as defined by social media, is filled with a lot of ordinary and unexceptional things to cherish.

Like pushing a second hand smart trike in the park on a warm Friday morning when the sun is out and watching the glee in my little boy's face as we approached the glittering pond where a noisy congregation of birds are waiting for our crumbs. Did I imagine, as a 20-year-old University student in a busy fishing town in the southern tip of the Philippines, that ten years later I would be in this other side of the world, trapped in an intoxicating state of domestic bliss?

It's not always bright and cheerful of course, for this simple way of life comes with a price. When I was younger and quite idealistic with an inflated sense of importance (err...purpose), I actually thought I was meant to do great things that would make a big difference to a lot of lives. I have prepared well - with Latin honours and Leadership awards at university, an accountancy qualification and a job at a Big Four audit firm - it looked like I was primed for a successful career in the financial industry. But somewhere along the way, while most of my peers have carried on the path that I too was meant to take, I took a U-turn and could no longer find my way back. This meant that I would have to start from scratch, in a job I have very little experience and in a country suffering badly from the damaging effects of government bailouts and overspending.

But when life gives you lemons, you must learn to make a lemon drizzle cake. They taste sweet and refreshing and smells lovely when freshly taken out of the oven. Without business meetings to prepare for or late hours to meet deadlines, I was able to spend a lot of time doing things that give me childlike pleasure. Cooking up something new and delightful everyday. Taking up photography. Writing blogs. Learning a new language. Things that wouldn't take me far in life but that which makes my everyday existence a rich experience.

I may not be flying the banner for feminism but I am living my life with as much passion and purpose as I could. It didn't take me long to realise that most of us are not likely to do anything remarkable in our lifetime, that we are destined to live a life on a relatively modest scale. But we should not resent the apparent smallness of our lives because they are, in their way, as great and as exciting as the lives of those caught up in great events.

Yet there are times when I have wondered whether this carefree wantoning is good enough, moments when I am gripped with jealousy about the "exciting" lives everyone else seems to be living, especially when I look at Facebook. It would have been nice to visit families living abroad, to afford to buy our own home or to live in a place of seemingly perpetual sunshine. But there are things you couldn't have that you learn to live without and only then will you learn to be grateful for what you have. If not having a bulky bank balance meant I could kiss my child goodnight instead of blowing him kisses in Skype or Facetime, I would choose that any time. Happiness does not have to cost a lot and keeping my family intact mean more to me than the luxuries we couldn't afford.

So by worldly terms, I have not really amounted to much and it would certainly seem like I have nothing tangible to show for my efforts. I have always found the interview question: "Where do you see yourself in 5 years?" a tough one to answer and something you couldn't be perfectly honest about. Five years ago, I was single and working as an accountant in Gibraltar who, aside from the country where I grew up in and where I then lived, have never been anywhere else in the world. Five years later, I have married, set up home in another country, travelled widely, took up a new occupation, obtained a new nationality and started a family in that order. If my life has changed that much in five years, who knows where I will find myself in the next thirty?

Tuesday, 20 May 2014

A Child's Garden in May



Many works of arts and literature have been inspired by beholding the enchantment in the eyes of a young child set free in a lush and colourful garden. That beautiful sight of the soft and gentle skin rubbing against the blossoming flowers along the footpath is always sure to spark the imagination and bring delight to any lucky observer. 

Last Sunday, on our weekend walk to the park, we went inside the Walled Garden in Hillsborough, a lush oasis that is one of the city's best kept secrets. The late spring flowers are bursting with life, splashing vibrant colours against the mid-morning sun looking like an artist's landscape in canvas. I know very few flowers by their first names, but that does not stop me from being in awe. And the little one, he was in paradise. 


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