The Awesomeness of an Unexpected Beauty

Anawangin, Zambales

The alarm turned on at 5 am... waking us up for an early trip to Capones Island. I was the one who woke up first and my first instinct was to unzip the tent and greet the morning sunshine...

But to my utter amazement, what i saw was the vast sky, proudly hanging like a chandelier lighted with thousands of stars...

"ANG GANDA!!!" (It's beautiful) i exclaimed and woke up Karl and Joanne. I can't stop saying ang ganda ang ganda over and over again while pointing to the sky....

The view was so amazing that I got up and went to sit on the nearby swing... with the cold morning breeze playing with my malong... i sat on the swing staring at the awesome wonder of the sky... not contented enough, i transferred to the hammock right beside our tent...

Lying there, the moon shines through the pine trees, stars lighted the sky... and even FIREFLIES danced around and appeared like floating gold dusts... with tears, I cuddled on the hammock and savoured that awesomeness until it was slowly engulfed by the brightness of the sun.

It was one of those moments that I'm thankful to be alive and see such awesome wonder... It was those moments that fuel me to explore more places and experience life abundantly.

I didn't attempt to take pictures of it and my descriptions is incomparable to its awesomeness...

It was a scenery that you must see and experience for yourself. :)

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The Warrior Between

The Warrior Between

By Gang Badoy


I am a warrior in my sleep. I gather people and lead armies to victory.
I protect women and children and calcify men with inspiration.
Awake, I worry about rent and the gears of my car.

I am a warrior in my sleep. I speak against corruption and stand fiercely steady upwind.
I feed the hungry and balm the hurting.
Awake, I fuss over cell phones and petty cash vouchers that need to be signed.

I am a warrior in my sleep. I draw my sword against those in power and make them do what is right. I calm the anxious and revive my people’s hopes.
Awake, I fret over fashion and what unimportant others perceive me to be.

I am a warrior in my sleep. I fight for this country and embrace it with my blood.
I breathe the air of my ocean and build my roots on its shores.
Awake, I line up for a foreign visa and envy the lucky who have left.

Asleep, I am truthful.
Awake, I deceive.

Now I stand at the split between.


Awake.

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Stallone-Pacquiao The Movie

Another laughtrip from Chico Garcia... hahaha :D

At the time, we did news that Sylvester Stallone wanted to do a movie with Manny Pacquiao. Looking back, I guess it might not push through, since we’ve never really heard anything about it since. But who knows, Hollywood has come up with some of the oddest pairings, so why not a Sly-Pacman movie?

January 15, 2009 → The Top Ten Titles For The Stallone-Pacquiao Movie – Jose de vengenge

1. Tomodache – “Pac You!”

2. Pancakes – “Buksingin Mo Ko, Lalaking Matapang (Akin Ka, Balboa)”

3. Pancakes – “Ilyen Birsus Pridator”

4. Alias Pusa – “Manny, Kicking Pinoy”

5. McMaki – “Mani At Rambo-tan (Para Sa Yo Ang Mubing Ito)”

6. Rodel – “Stop, Or Manny Will Talk”

7. Jesse Jude – “Rocky Sibin”

8. Lagendairy/McDenzel/Bobidax – “Hidden Soldiers” (Tungkol sa mga sundalong may balakubak)

9. Pendongs – “Si Rocky At Ang Taling Nagkapilipilipilitpit”

10. The Game – “My Quotes And I” (About Manny and Stallone who plays his coach)

11. Curt Smith/Danyel – “Blow By Blow (Brokeback Boxing)”

12. Simon Walker – Manny And Sylvester (Ay Towt Ay Tow A Putiket)”

13. Chelsi – “3rd Rocky From Gen San”

14. Draco’s Biatch/Ang Manunusok – “Toilet” (Manny and Sly as vampires)

15. Acer – “Let’s Get Ready To Rambo!”

16. Lyra – “Extreme Bok-Sing”

17. Specialist – “Pasko, Paksiw, Pacquiao”

18. PigDoctor – “Akin Ang Gen San, Yours Is Da L.A.!”

19. Mr. Perk – “Pacman Eats Talong”

20. Chito Resurreccion – “You, Me, & Jenky”

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Greatness

To achieve greatness
start where you are,
use what you have,
do what you can...

~~Arthur Ashe, Tennis Champion
(July 5, 1943 – February 6, 1993)

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HEARING vs LISTENING

To hear is to be able to perceive sounds.
To listen, on the other hand, is to hear with a PURPOSE.

Hearing is just physical. Listening enables you to understand that sound. Listening takes attention, to actively listen means that you encourages communication.

I love talking… BUT I love conversations more. Conversations with friends, families build relationships. It enables me to share my thoughts as well as listen to theirs. Conversations fuel relationships. Hence, we have all sorts of communication mediums. We spent a great deal conversing with people. It is in our life-blood.

The sad fact though is that sometimes other people forget to listen, actively listen. They are sooo engrossed with their own ideas and what’s happening in their life that they go on talking and talking and talking… Sure they listen” but even if the other person is not yet finish with what he is saying, they already have an idea in mind and blabber about it.

The sad fact is, it can be really tiring when you’re on the receiving end… It sucks out the life in you that you would rather choose to HEAR than to LISTEN. And that you would rather choose to shut up so that the conversation won’t turn into a debate. In debates, there are winners and losers. But in reality, there’s no point in being the winner because you lose the person on the process. (I’m discussing debate on the context of relationships).

Conversations fuel relationships. So do know how to listen and share.

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Ray of Hope

When frustrations cave in due to disgusting situations... you feel like you're in a deep sh*t that you can't be free off...

When frustrations cave in due to unmet expectations... you want to shout till the end of the world, how you hate it...

When frustrations cave in due to horrible people... you want to knock the hell out of them...

BUT there will always be a ray of hope... hope that eventually things will be better... IS BETTER...

AND hopefully be reminded of that RAY of HOPE when frustrations start to cave in again...

Until then, enjoy this moment and be thankful for it.

I just did.
all smiles for the exciting challenges/opportunities to come... :D

kampai!!!

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Slamdunk Those Oreos

OREOS dipped in fresh chilled MILK is heavenly...

Those two are inseparable.

but nothing beats taking chances on dipping oreos in... COFFEE.

I took that chance and the mixture of sweetness and bitterness gave me a whole lot of new experiences.

I also tried it with COKE, ICED TEA and just plain WATER.

Ain't that thrilling? The fact that you don't always have to do the same things over and over again even though you don't get the same results?

Though possibilities are endless, it's also good to know when you have that perfect combination that you can always go back to.

OREOS dipped in fresh chilled MILK is heavenly...

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Fully Alive

"The Glory of God is man fully alive."
~~~St. Irenaues

I was waiting for Nikon at Powerbooks last friday when I read this on the page preceding the table of contents in John Eldregde's latest book, "Waking The Dead".

"The Glory of God is man fully alive."

I was quite trembling when I run my fingers into those text... I felt goosebumps just by thinking what does this mean and what does this imply. I remembered my recent conversation w/ Kythe and Vida that was somehow related to this. For our BS, we had a series of questions that we answered and one of them is: Our picture of living life to the fullest.

My answer: Living passionately by doing the things I love.

But it seems that I was still searching for my passion these days... Actually I somehow got lost along the way when i started out in my career. I was always looking for that job that equates into passion. Sure, I do know the things I am passionate about but i am having a hard time finding the place that allows me to grow and cultivate that. It is really frustrating.

"The Glory of God is man fully alive."

What does it mean to be fully alive? To answer that, I have to go back to the One who created me because only in Him will I know my creative design. By knowing my creative design and actually live it, I essentially glorify God. This in itself is a big one for me to process. *gulp*.

My answer "Living passionately by doing the things I love" oughts to have a continuation that I am still in search for... and the answer lies in my relationship with My Creator... so help me God... :)

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A Love that Transcends

* below is an excerpt from my friend's blog. I cried a lot while reading this and I want to share to you a story of love. To follow Katrina and Sam's unconventional love story click HERE.

Today, I mourn the death of my first love. He said, I was God sent to him to make it easier for him to fight his battle and to surrender unto His will. We could have built a family together. He left me here on Earth, wondering what to do next. But I remembered, he promised to wait for me. Like Abu said, life is too short no matter how long we live; we’ll see each other soon. Love is not measured how frequent you see each other in person, not by how many kisses and hugs you exchange, not how compatible you are in bed but how you inspire each other to become a better person. Love is despite and in spite of all things. Love is what remains when you have exhausted all the excuses/ reasons not to be together and still choose to be in that same position that you are with him/her.

Too many promises, sweet words and declaration of love were exchanged. I told him to write a book about his life to inspire people. He told me that to inspire people; you have to start one at a time. It is not an overnight agenda. He indeed started with me. And I am sharing you this because I wanted to inspire the next person who will find his story moving.

IN MEMORY OF MY SAM MCDEER (1980-2009).
WHO WAS A PRODIGAL SON, WHO CAME BACK HOME TO HIS FATHER’S EMBRACE.

Much Love,
Katrina Ann

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Making My Move

I am taking a risk… indeed, when it comes to this, there are no guarantees… Who knows this is the “defining moment” that I have been waiting for… OR this could not be it… Either way, I am still taking that opportunity wherein I am growing, learning, making huge decisions for my life. I know it’s gonna be a challenging one… and with the way things are going, I am up for challenges…

There are no guarantees in life… a wise man told me that… But I hold on to one guarantee… that however things will work out, My Creator was/is/will always be beside me.

AJAH CHA! AJAH!

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Love

There’s no perfect formula for love…

It just happens. Who are we to say what love is and what love is not?

People have different views/expressions/takes about love… Love can happen in a blink of an eye or in light years… time is not a determinant for love… but time allows love to grow (or in sad cases diminish) – so let us hope for the first one.

Love will not always be about sunshine… it also needs rainy weathers and brave raging storms for it to grow.

There’s a note though… Be who you are when it comes to love… because being true to yourself is the only time wherein you can truly experience it.

There’s no perfect formula for love…

And if ever people will come out with one… then that’s the death of love itself…

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Snapped for a Moment

Even youths grow tired and weary,
and young men stumble and fall;but those who hope in the LORD
will renew their strength.They will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary,
they will walk and not be faint.

~Isaiah 40:30-31 (NIV)

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Selfish or Selfless Love?

I stumbled upon this book in tikayiyay site entitled "is love selfish or selfless?". --wondering about the nature of love in Norwegian Wood and The Reunion.

Now, I am again on a hunt for my next book. I already read Norwegian Wood and my copy of The Confessions of Max Tivoli will arrive by next week (yey!!! thanks to Ate Macky!)

Next on the list is The Reunion by Alan Lightman.

*****
In crystalline prose at once precise and mysterious, Reunion explores the pain of self-examination, the clay-like nature of memory, and the impossible hopefulness of youth.

Charles is a middle-aged professor at a minor liberal-arts college, a once promising poet, admiring of passion but without passion himself. Without knowing why, he decides to attend his thirtieth college reunion. And there, he magically witnesses a replay of his senior year.

Drawn back into his memories, Charles watches his tender and romantic twenty-two-year-old self embark on an all-consuming love affair with a beautiful dancer. As the two young people struggle to find themselves amidst the social and political chaos of late 1960s, the older Charles recalls contradictory versions of his past, ultimately confronting for the second time a series of devastating events that would forever change his life.

Excerpt:

Unconditional love. That’s what he wants to give her and what he wants from her. People should give without wanting anything in return. All other giving is selfish. But he is being selfish a little, isn’t he, by wanting her to love him in return? He hopes that she loves him in return. Is it possible for a person to love without wanting love back? Is anything so pure? Or is love, by its nature, a reciprocity, like oceans and clouds, an evaporating of seawater and a replenishing of rain?

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Weird in a Crazy Beautiful Way

There’s a certain weirdness on how things work…

You know the person but you can only “SEE” him once you started a conversation followed by another and another… building up into moments etched in you.

In reality, he can be just like the others whom you know… He can just be filed in your memory bank as a person who crossed your life…

BUT those conversations [moments] made him not just one of the many stored memories you have… He is and will always be a part of your life…

There’s a certain weirdness on how things work… BUT weird can be a good thing… in a crazy beautiful way…

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100% Perfect Girl

On seeing the 100% perfect girl

one beautiful April morning

By Haruki Murakami

One beautiful April morning, on a narrow side street in Tokyo's fashionable Harujuku neighborhood, I walked past the 100% perfect girl.

Tell you the truth, she's not that good-looking. She doesn't stand out in any way. Her clothes are nothing special. The back of her hair is still bent out of shape from sleep. She isn't young, either - must be near thirty, not even close to a "girl," properly speaking. But still, I know from fifty yards away: She's the 100% perfect girl for me. The moment I see her, there's a rumbling in my chest, and my mouth is as dry as a desert.

Maybe you have your own particular favorite type of girl - one with slim ankles, say, or big eyes, or graceful fingers, or you're drawn for no good reason to girls who take their time with every meal. I have my own preferences, of course. Sometimes in a restaurant I'll catch myself staring at the girl at the next table to mine because I like the shape of her nose.

But no one can insist that his 100% perfect girl correspond to some preconceived type. Much as I like noses, I can't recall the shape of hers - or even if she had one. All I can remember for sure is that she was no great beauty. It's weird.

"Yesterday on the street I passed the 100% girl," I tell someone.

"Yeah?" he says. "Good-looking?"

"Not really."

"Your favorite type, then?"

"I don't know. I can't seem to remember anything about her - the shape of her eyes or the size of her breasts."

"Strange."

"Yeah. Strange."

"So anyhow," he says, already bored, "what did you do? Talk to her? Follow her?"

"Nah. Just passed her on the street."

She's walking east to west, and I west to east. It's a really nice April morning.

Wish I could talk to her. Half an hour would be plenty: just ask her about herself, tell her about myself, and - what I'd really like to do - explain to her the complexities of fate that have led to our passing each other on a side street in Harajuku on a beautiful April morning in 1981. This was something sure to be crammed full of warm secrets, like an antique clock build when peace filled the world.

After talking, we'd have lunch somewhere, maybe see a Woody Allen movie, stop by a hotel bar for cocktails. With any kind of luck, we might end up in bed.

Potentiality knocks on the door of my heart.

Now the distance between us has narrowed to fifteen yards.

How can I approach her? What should I say?

"Good morning, miss. Do you think you could spare half an hour for a little conversation?"

Ridiculous. I'd sound like an insurance salesman.

"Pardon me, but would you happen to know if there is an all-night cleaners in the neighborhood?"

No, this is just as ridiculous. I'm not carrying any laundry, for one thing. Who's going to buy a line like that?

Maybe the simple truth would do. "Good morning. You are the 100% perfect girl for me."

No, she wouldn't believe it. Or even if she did, she might not want to talk to me. Sorry, she could say, I might be the 100% perfect girl for you, but you're not the 100% boy for me. It could happen. And if I found myself in that situation, I'd probably go to pieces. I'd never recover from the shock. I'm thirty-two, and that's what growing older is all about.

We pass in front of a flower shop. A small, warm air mass touches my skin. The asphalt is damp, and I catch the scent of roses. I can't bring myself to speak to her. She wears a white sweater, and in her right hand she holds a crisp white envelope lacking only a stamp. So: She's written somebody a letter, maybe spent the whole night writing, to judge from the sleepy look in her eyes. The envelope could contain every secret she's ever had.

I take a few more strides and turn: She's lost in the crowd.

Now, of course, I know exactly what I should have said to her. It would have been a long speech, though, far too long for me to have delivered it properly. The ideas I come up with are never very practical.

Oh, well. It would have started "Once upon a time" and ended "A sad story, don't you think?"

Once upon a time, there lived a boy and a girl. The boy was eighteen and the girl sixteen. He was not unusually handsome, and she was not especially beautiful. They were just an ordinary lonely boy and an ordinary lonely girl, like all the others. But they believed with their whole hearts that somewhere in the world there lived the 100% perfect boy and the 100% perfect girl for them. Yes, they believed in a miracle. And that miracle actually happened.

One day the two came upon each other on the corner of a street.

"This is amazing," he said. "I've been looking for you all my life. You may not believe this, but you're the 100% perfect girl for me."

"And you," she said to him, "are the 100% perfect boy for me, exactly as I'd pictured you in every detail. It's like a dream."

They sat on a park bench, held hands, and told each other their stories hour after hour. They were not lonely anymore. They had found and been found by their 100% perfect other. What a wonderful thing it is to find and be found by your 100% perfect other. It's a miracle, a cosmic miracle.

As they sat and talked, however, a tiny, tiny sliver of doubt took root in their hearts: Was it really all right for one's dreams to come true so easily?

And so, when there came a momentary lull in their conversation, the boy said to the girl, "Let's test ourselves - just once. If we really are each other's 100% perfect lovers, then sometime, somewhere, we will meet again without fail. And when that happens, and we know that we are the 100% perfect ones, we'll marry then and there. What do you think?"

"Yes," she said, "that is exactly what we should do."

And so they parted, she to the east, and he to the west.

The test they had agreed upon, however, was utterly unnecessary. They should never have undertaken it, because they really and truly were each other's 100% perfect lovers, and it was a miracle that they had ever met. But it was impossible for them to know this, young as they were. The cold, indifferent waves of fate proceeded to toss them unmercifully.

One winter, both the boy and the girl came down with the season's terrible inluenza, and after drifting for weeks between life and death they lost all memory of their earlier years. When they awoke, their heads were as empty as the young D. H. Lawrence's piggy bank.

They were two bright, determined young people, however, and through their unremitting efforts they were able to acquire once again the knowledge and feeling that qualified them to return as full-fledged members of society. Heaven be praised, they became truly upstanding citizens who knew how to transfer from one subway line to another, who were fully capable of sending a special-delivery letter at the post office. Indeed, they even experienced love again, sometimes as much as 75% or even 85% love.

Time passed with shocking swiftness, and soon the boy was thirty-two, the girl thirty.

One beautiful April morning, in search of a cup of coffee to start the day, the boy was walking from west to east, while the girl, intending to send a special-delivery letter, was walking from east to west, but along the same narrow street in the Harajuku neighborhood of Tokyo. They passed each other in the very center of the street. The faintest gleam of their lost memories glimmered for the briefest moment in their hearts. Each felt a rumbling in their chest. And they knew:

She is the 100% perfect girl for me.

He is the 100% perfect boy for me.

But the glow of their memories was far too weak, and their thoughts no longer had the clarity of fourteen years earlier. Without a word, they passed each other, disappearing into the crowd. Forever.

A sad story, don't you think?

Yes, that's it, that is what I should have said to her.

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Random Thoughts @ 23

My random thoughts... but still, I got a lot of unspoken and unwritten things in my head that can't form into words yet.

* Regret[s] is a waste of time and energy.

* Don't take God at face-value... Seek, question, challenge, do anything, just be sure that you process it within you and not rely on what others tell you about Him. -- which resulted on my faith in Him.

* Don't be afraid to go out of your hole. There's a big playground called EARTH for you.

* You don't have to put up with people who just "takes"... zapping all of your energy.

* Life is NOT a box of chocolates, sometimes, there are Skittles, too... and even Nerds.

* Hindi porket pinagpapawisan ang kamay, eh kinakabahan na... minsan pasma lang yan... [or pwede ring kinakabahan lang talaga].

* Don't settle for anything less than what you can really have.

* Innovate. Strive for new things, whether on skills, learning, talents... just go beyond what you are now.

* Family will ALWAYS be FAMILY... even if they [sometimes] pisses you off.

* Hindi ka pa lubos na nagmahal kung di ka pa naging tanga... but there are limits... pag di mo binigyan ng limitasyon, malala na yan at wala ng patutunguhan.

* Thus, respect and love yourself.

* Nothing beats conversations with friends.

* Live a life that resonates even after death.

* You are entitled to your own foolishness.

* Time is ticking, life is moving, live it like a child playing in the rain.

* Solitude can also be a good thing. Never be afraid of silence, of being alone. Sometimes, that's the only way you can truly listen.



*Michael Jordan is one of my idols and I'm glad i'm wearing his number...

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Norwegian Wood

You left me hanging...
shattered...
Your characters chained me...
I was trapped in their world...
You're one hell of a book,
so addictive that I can't help but read you again...

*This is not a typical mushy love story that would make your heart cringe with delight. If you want an e-book, just pm me. I'm more than glad to share.

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To Read or Die

Below are excerpts from two books that I REALLY AM DYING TO READ.

1. The Confessions of Max Tivoli By Andrew Sean Greer
[I learned about this through Ate Abi when I was telling her how i love The Curious Case of Benjamin Button because I had a dream almost similar to it 4years ago. Urgh! I am really in search of Max Tivoli, and he's giving me a hard time. I already emailed NationalBookstore, Powerbooks and FullyBooked to let me know if they have the book in any of their branches.]
We are each the love of someone's life.

I wanted to put that down in case I am discovered and unable to complete these pages, in case you become so disturbed by the facts of my confession that you throw it into the fire before I get to tell you of great love and murder. I would not blame you. So many things stand in the way of anyone ever hearing my story. There is a dead body to explain. A woman three times loved. A friend betrayed. And a boy long sought for. So I will get to the end first and tell you we are each the love of someone's life.

I sit here on a lovely April day. It keeps changing all around me; the sun alternates between throwing deep shadows behind the children and trees and then sweeping them back up again the moment a cloud crosses the sky. The grass fills with gold, then falls to nothing. The whole school yard is being inked with sun and blotted, glowing and reaching a point of great beauty, and I am breathless to be in the audience. No one else notices. The little girls sit in a circle, dresses crackling with starch and conspiracy, and the boys are on the baseball field or in the trees, hanging upside down. Above, an airplane astounds me with its roar and school-marm line of chalk. An airplane; it's not the sky I once knew.

And I sit in a sandbox, a man of almost sixty. The chill air has made the sand a bit too tough for the smaller kids to dig; besides, the field's changing sunlight is too tempting, so everyone else is out there charging at shadows, and I'm left to myself.

We begin with apologies:

For the soft notebook pages you hold in your hands, a sad reliquary for my story and apt to rip, but the best I could steal. For stealing, both the notebooks and the beautiful lever-fed pen I'm writing with, which I have admired for so many months on my teacher's desk and simply had to take. For the sand stuck between the pages, something I could not avoid. There are more serious sins, of course, a lost family, a betrayal, and all the lies that have brought me to this sandbox, but I ask you to forgive me one last thing: my childish handwriting.

We all hate what we become. I'm not the only one; I have seen women staring at themselves in restaurant mirrors while their husbands are away, women under their own spell as they see someone they do not recognize. I have seen men back from war, squinting at themselves in shopwindows as they feel their skull beneath their skin. They thought they would shed the worst of youth and gain the best of age, but time drifted over them, sand-burying their old hopes. Mine is a very different story, but it all turns out the same.

One of the reasons I sit here in the sand, hating what I've become, is the boy. Such a long time, such a long search, lying to clerks and parish priests to get the names of children living in the town and suburbs, making up ridiculous aliases, then crying in a motel room and wondering if I would ever find you. You were so well hidden. The way the young prince in fairy tales is hidden from the ogre: in a trunk, in a thorny grove, in a dull place of meager enchantment. Little hidden Sammy. But the ogre always finds the child, doesn't he? For here you are.

If you are reading this, dear Sammy, don't despise me. I am a poor old man; I never meant you any harm. Don't remember me just as a childhood demon, though I have been that. I have lain in your room at night and heard your breathing roughen the air. I have whispered in your ear when you were dreaming. I am what my father always said I was--I am a freak, a monster--and even as I write this (forgive me) I am watching you.

You are the one playing baseball with your friends as the sunlight comes and goes through your golden hair. The sunburned one, clearly the boss, the one the other boys resent but love; it's good to see how much they love you. You are up to bat but hold out your hand because something has annoyed you; an itch, perhaps, as just now your hand scratches wildly at the base of your blond skull, and after this sudden dervish, you shout and return to the game. Boys, you don't mean to be wonders, but you are.

You haven't noticed me. Why would you? To you I am just the friend in the sandbox, scribbling away. Let's try an experiment: I'll wave my hand to you. There, see, you just put down your bat to wave back at me, a smile cocked across your freckled face, arrogant but innocent of everything around you. All the years and trouble it took for me to be here. You know nothing, fear nothing. When you look at me, you see another little boy like you.

A boy, yes, that's me. I have so much to explain, but first you must believe:

Inside this wretched body, I grow old. But outside--in every part of me but my mind and soul--I grow young.

There is no name for what I am. Doctors do not understand me; my very cells wriggle the wrong way in the slides, divide and echo back their ignorance. But I think of myself as having an ancient curse. The one that Hamlet put upon Polonius before he punctured the old man like a balloon:

That, like a crab, I go backwards.

For even now as I write, I look to be a boy of twelve. At nearly sixty, there is sand in my knickers and mud across the brim of my cap. I have a smile like the core of an apple. Yet once I seemed a handsome man of twenty-two with a gun and a gas mask. And before that, a man in his thirties, trying to find his lover in an earthquake. And a hardworking forty, and a terrified fifty, and older and older as we approach my birth.

"Anyone can grow old," my father always said through the bouquet of his cigar smoke. But I burst into the world as if from the other end of life, and the days since then have been ones of physical reversion, of erasing the wrinkles around my eyes, darkening the white and then the gray in my hair, bringing younger muscle to my arms and dew to my skin, growing tall and then shrinking into the hairless, harmless boy who scrawls this pale confession.

A mooncalf, a changeling; a thing so out of joint with the human race that I have stood in the street and hated every man in love, every widow in her long weeds, every child dragged along by a loving dog. Drunk on gin, I have sworn and spat at passing strangers who took me for the opposite of what I was inside--an adult when I was a child, a boy now that I am an old man. I have learned compassion since then, and pity passersby a little, as I, more than anyone, know what they have yet to live through.

2. Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami
[I was reading through Ping Medina's blog when I stumbled upon this and I fell in love right away with Murakami's words (or at least the translation of Jay Rubin) and characters.]

“… So I made up my mind I was going to find someone who would love me unconditionally three hundred and sixty-five days a year. I was still in elementary school at that time — fifth or sixth grade — but I made up my mind once and for all.”

“Wow,” I said. “And did your search pay off?”

“That’s the hard part,” said Midori. She watched the rising smoke for a while, thinking. “I guess I’ve been waiting so long I’m looking for perfection. That makes it tough.

“Waiting for the perfect love?”

“No, even I know better than that. I’m looking for selfishness. Perfect selfishness. Like, say I tell you I want to eat strawberry shortcake. And you stop everything you’re doing and run out and buy it for me. And you come back out of breath and get down on your knees and hold this strawberry shortcake out to me. And I say I don’t want it anymore and throw it out the window. That’s what I’m looking for.”

“I’m not sure that has anything to do with love,” I said with some amazement.

“It does,” she said. “You just don’t know it. There are times in a girl’s life when things like that are incredibly important.”

“Things like throwing strawberry shortcake out the window?”

“Exactly. And when I do it, I want the man to apologize to me. ‘Now I see, Midori. What a fool I’ve been! I should have known that you would lose your desire for strawberry shortcake. I have all the intelligence and sensitivity of a piece of donkey shit. To make it up to you, I’ll go out and buy you something else. What would you like? Chocolate mousse? Cheesecake?’”

“So then what”

“So then I’d give him all the love he deserves for what he’s done.”

“Sounds crazy to me.”

“Well, to me, that’s what love is. Not that anyone can understand me, though.” Midori gave her head a little shake against my shoulder. “For a certain kind of person, love begins from something tiny or silly. From something like that or it doesn’t begin at all.

Murakami ends the book with this line: Again and again, I called out for Midori from the dead center of this place that was no place.

*Special thanks to powells.com, ping and tikayiyay

Note: If you have any of these two books, can I borrow or buy it from you??? :)

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A Very Curious Case

Warning: May contain spoilers.

I just watched "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" with Kuya Chito. We both enjoyed the film.Two-thumbs up . I didn't even feel that the film was almost three hours in length (I'm glad that it was that long because there's just so much to take in).

For me, it is more than just a movie worthy of accolades... it held a special memory of mine...

I had a dream before that has the same premise like that of the film... the difference though is that I'm the one who is getting younger...

*back page of my journal entry, dated September 10, 2004. Do forgive my scrawny drawing and the "cheesiness" of my writing because I wrote it when I was just 18 years old My regret though was that my journal entry wasn't as detailed as it should have been.

Excerpts from my journal entry:

"I dreamt of meeting "The One", as in the guy meant for me... Ours was a perfect love story that no one can destroy, ours was just pure love. We had a fun time together: just laughing, hanging around, doing goofy things..."

"Eventually we got married. Ours was a marriage made in heaven. The twist of the dream was [that] when I reached a certain age, I will get younger. [My partner will just go through the normal ageing process]."

I often wondered how my dream would end... how our love story would end. For more than four years, I never dreamt of it again or anything related to it. That was why I was sooo excited when I saw the trailer of the film because it was like that of my dream (having Brad Pitt play the role of Benjamin Button is a huge plus )

The film gave me one of the possible endings of my dream.

It also made me realize that in the end, all I ever wanted was for someone who will look at me and will be able to remember the life and love we've shared before he closes his eyes...

Note: I also wrote in my journal that if ever I have lots of money, I'll make our love story into a movie because I'm sure it will be a blockbuster. Now, my wish came true because it is now made into a film with very high ratings except that I still don't have lots of money hahaha

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