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Welcome to my personal thoughts and opinions…travels and personal encounters…momentary acquaintances and lifetime connections as I view life through the pink-tinted spectacles of breast cancer.

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November 12, 2006

RETROSPECTION AND THE F WORD

The other day I was sitting pensive in the hospital room, waiting for that euphoric feeling of weightlessness to wash over me, as sleep slowly crept in. Recently, I started to look forward to these long and quiet afternoon hours of staying by Nanay’s bedside, alone and away from the bustle of work. Needless to say, it has been a guilt-free way of escaping the frequent power outages in the city these days.

There I was, dozing off and thinking of what must have been comfort food or some delightful thing of that sort. Banana split with pineapple bits, nuts and whipped cream…fields of green grass and dandelions with puffy white clouds overhead…my hair blowing in the wind while listening to the voice of Elton John in the background…Fly, pigeon fly...towards the dreams you left so very far behind..

I was just thinking of how old that song was and how old Elton John must now be when suddenly it dawned on me. If that song was old, and if he was old, then…I must be getting old, too. Carefully counting with my fingers so as not to make a mistake...one, two, three…in ten weeks I will be inevitably, unstoppably turning forty.

I really hadn’t given it much thought before that, but maybe due to the stress of recent days, the thought of being forty made me overwhelmingly sad. My stomach was caving in and I was actually feeling desolate. I realized that arguably half of my life had already passed me by. I wondered when it would be that I would start looking at the years ahead as the few remaining ones I had. When would I start to count down my high school classmates one by one as we all slowly passed away? It it going to be downhill from here?

Compulsively, I sat up and started to try to remember all that had transpired in my life so far, in an attempt to hold back time and to slow things down. I was trying to shake the sense of foreboding. I wanted to dig up as much memories as I could.

At six, I went to my first day of school in St. Paul’s Pasig. When my mother brought me to my classroom, all could worry about was where she would sit down so I told her she can go home…At ten, I stole some brandy from my father’s wine cart because my classmate had told me that brandy can help stop menstrual flow forever. The bleeding didn’t stop and all I had the day after was a whopping hangover…At fourteen, I become totally obsessed with John Lennon, his songs and his life to the point that I started thinking I was Yoko Ono…In college I joined the street rallies and overnight vigils. Walking down the streets of Colon with a shower of yellow confetti over my head, I felt that the world was mine to conquer. Going towards seventeen, I found myself one Sunday morning in what was called a church service, surrounded by crazy people who kept shouting Hallelujah and Praise God while lifting their hands in the air. The public display of emotion was just too much for me. That night, alone in my room I recalled the faces of those same people as they prayed. I decided I wanted the same thing and gave my life to God. When I was twenty, I sat in my regular chair one Sunday morning, waiting for the service to start. A dashing and lean young man in white shirt and a tie flew past by me as he led some thirty children to the stage for a special number. He's like the Pied Piper, I said, and my boyfriend who sat beside me told me, that guy was the Sunday school teacher and his name was Bong.


Now, twenty years later, I am happily married to that Sunday school teacher and we have four teen-agers, two who are ours by birth and two who are ours by circumstance. They are turning out to be people of character and tenacity despite all the odds and I am proud of them. Somewhere in between, I became a painter, a homebody, a teacher, a counselor for troubled youth and some sort of a showbiz insider. My husband and I have a school and a church to run, doing what we love to do best. Our staff are dedicated, loyal and hardworking. We have three Labradors who love us and countless friends and family who have touched our lives. And the list goes on.

Yes, I guess the first forty years had been quite good ones after all. The next forty ones should be even better.


Feeling much better, my thoughts naturally went back to banana split and Elton John.



September 24, 2006

WAITING FOR A MIRACLE

My mother is in the hospital again for the fourth time in recent months. Five days after the amputation, we gladly went home, filled with plans for the next few months. I thought that Nanay's most tragic episode was finally over. On the second morning after we got home, we tried to wake her up for breakfast but she was dead to the world. After several calls to the doctor, we found out that the nurse had made a mistake in the prescription given to us upon discharge from the hospital. Instead of the prescribed 14 units of insulin, the nurse wrote 34 units which we religiously followed.

Now, Nanay is in a coma, has been for the past eight days. Day by day, I sit by her bedside hoping against hope that she would wake up. I hold her hand as I battle with endless questions, endless regrets. The other day I let Gian come home for a couple of days and after staring at his lola for a long while he asked me, "Lola is a good person, why is this happening to her?" Sadly, I could not answer his question.

September 17, 2006

MY MOTHER, MYSELF

It is true what they say, that scenes in our lives are like passing towns as we speed down a highway.

I am about four years old and in a bus with my mother. We are on our way to Pasig for an errand. I fall asleep on her lap as we bounce through the dusty road. The bus stops and we get ready to disembark. My mother gets down first and before she could turn around to carry me down, the bus moves away. She runs after the bus shouting at the driver to stop. As soon as I get down and grab her hand, I feel secure.

That was some thirty-five years ago.

Almost all my life I felt that my mission was to take care of my mother, to make sure that she would not have a difficult time. Most times she did not even notice my help and it became an endless cycle of conflict and guilt. I would often wonder why I even bothered to watch her back and to gain her favor. We just could not get along, and yet I could not help myself from worrying about her.

Four nights ago Nanay had to undergo surgery, to amputate her left leg below the knee. She now suffers from Diabetes and Alzheimer’s Disease. I stayed with her in the recovery room right after the operation because the nurses could not hold her down. She was trashing about, her eyes glassy as she stared at me, crying in pain as I held her hand. I could not help but be overwhelmed with sadness over a life that has not been so rosy. She was orphaned at four and was raised by a grandmother along with her brother and sister. She found herself in an unhappy, at times violent marriage that lasted for some thirty years. She had to forego retirement as she cared for two young grandsons left to her by an erring daughter. And now in her twilight years, a woman who always took pains to look beautiful and enjoy life loses a limb as she also loses her memory.

Today I sit by her hospital bedside, as I watch my daughter Angela meticulously make her lola’s face up with an eyebrow pencil and lipstick. She is groggy but smiling at herself in the compact mirror as she holds a Patrick Starfish toy in her other hand.

Hopefully, later in the day she will remember who we are. I am glad I am here to wait. In the meantime, I have not yet gotten a surgery to remove my lump. As soon as this is all over, that is what I need to take care of next.

Exodus 20:12:
Honor your father and mother, so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you.

March 16, 2006

GOOD NEWS

Thankfully, the results of my biopsy has come. My tumor is benign and what a relief. The doctor said I have about a year to take it out and so I will have to do that. I am still in Manila setting up the new place for Gian to stay in while he pursues his showbiz career. At least, Starstruck is now over and we can all go back to our normal lives.

March 10, 2006

A NEW JOURNEY

A week or so ago, I accompanied my nephew on Starstruck 3 's nationwide tour. I was taking a quick shower at around 4:00 a.m. in some hotel in Davao when I accidentally felt a lump on my breast. Fear immediately came over me and my knees started to buckle. It was an effort to get past the shock and finish the many things I was yet to do. Of all times, I was practically alone, away from my husband and kids, and I had to muster all courage to get through the days until I could go home to them.

As soon as I got back to Iloilo a few days ago, Bong and I went to a surgeon for a check up. After a physical exam, the doctor asked us to sit down and she started telling us about possibilities and chances until the most dreaded word came up...cancer. It felt as if I died a thousand deaths, watching her lips move and yet not really wanting to understand all the things she said. It was as if I was watching a movie scene. Never in a million things did I ever think that, watching all those melodramatic movies, hearing the stories of many friends, listening to the news about this or that celebrity, this terrible monster would come knocking at my door.

On the way home from the doctor's clinic, I could not stop the tears from flowing as a million thoughts ran through my mind. Will I see Angela walk down the aisle? Will I ever get to see Kiko become the great influencer that everyone says he will be? Will I be able to also launch Shane into his own showbiz career? Who will remind Gian that girls will always be there, but opportunity is golden? Who will tease Bong, defend him, nag him and budget his money for him, comfort him and encourage him when the going gets tough? As soon as we got home, Bong gathered Kiko and Angela and told them what the doctor said. All I could do was hold the three of them tightly as we all cried in fear.

In a while, I an off to the hospital for an incision biopsy to see if the tumor is benign. Meanwhile, God has been a faithful comforter and friend. I know that God is the one who delivers us. He is the one who determines our steps. He is our loving Father who will give us all He could, even if we don’t deserve it. All we need to do is ask. Just as Gian reached his dreams not because of his looks, personality or talent but because he earnestly asked God for it and walked in faith and obedience to His Word, I now claim God’s healing.

Yes, God's promises are true. I stand on His Word that I am healed.