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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