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Thursday, February 21, 2008

Powerbooks: Top 5 RR








Feb 21, '08 1:26 AM
for everyone

Today was another very busy day for me. However the day turned bright since I was able to buy some books which I have been looking for some time - and best of all, they were discounted at the ongoing sale in some prominent bookstores here in Manila.

I also got my hands on another journal. 
What makes this journal also special is that it seems to be a journal about  books. While I can jot/scribble/sketch/paste whatever it is I would like to in this journal, I am also tickled pink about the idea of having a journal of reviews about books.

Amongst its pages I can list down and explain what made a particular book or reading so dear to me..it is too bad though that some of the books I enjoyed very much before I cannot remember  the title or the author, nor can I even quote from the passages very reliably, but ...ahh! I will always hold in my heart and mind the idea spawned in those books and which have guided me in my daily life and dealings with my fellow beings.

As I smooth the pages of the journal and scrunch my shiny (albeit oily) nose against its pristine pages to sniff at the marvelous scent of paper, I notice that the entry on that once-clean page (now indelibly marked with a suspicious looking shiny spot) was asking me to list down the books I'd recommend to other people. 

Hmm...now, that is a tall order!! There are so many books, and all of a different category and which I would recommend based on a particular target market...the task daunts me! 

I am wondering now though, if I were to ask other people and limit them to just the top 5 books they would recommend, what the list would be? Say, even if we say its a series of books counting as one?

In my case (and with no lengthy explanation as of the moment since I am a drooping flower already at this time of night slash early morning), I would even forego the old favorites of The Bible or Koran or whatever other life-changing book that people might be scandalized to note that I have deliberately left out.


I would rather stick to a list of books wherein I can say that at this particular moment of writing, that I remember enjoying reading at one point or another - like a list I rattle off from the top of my head - it could be I did not have any lesson learned, or I just got eye-bags for my efforts (hey, don't knock those off till you get 'em!).


In any order now -




Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion by JRR Tolkien.


I was amazed and literally gawking at the brilliance of Tolkien's mind in creating a seriously, and I mean seriously, complex story, and all because of his constructed languages!


I could never hope to achieve that brilliance, but I certainly can enjoy the fruits of his labors. Mythology has always been one of my "most-favoritest" subjects.

I count this as one entry since these books are really a continuation of the tale, and if one were to be really strict about it, one should not also forget
The Hobbit.





The Little Prince by Antoine Saint-Exupéry.


I can still recall how I came by this book and read this by accident. As a young girl who got tagged to go with my parents when they visited old friends (or they didn't have any babysitter at that time) - as usual since I became bored with the long talk of grown-ups and drinking of alcoholic liquids, I drifted away from their little party.

I settled on my hosts' sofa and saw this book under one of their tables. I finished it and brought home of of the rabbits they had as pets. A simple
lesson, taught in a simple but moving tale: "On ne voit bien qu'avec le cœur, l'essentiel est invisible pour les yeux." Well, amongst other things as this book is packed chock-full of simple truths.






The Greatest Miracle in the World by Og Mandino.

When I read the chapter containing the God Memorandum, I cried. I felt  so ... blessed .. so empowered....especially when I read that part about I having the power of choice...the power that God did not even gave to his angels. I can hold my head up high and stick a tongue out at the devils in this world.



The Art of War by Sun Tzu or Sun Tzu's Military Strategy.

I heard of this before, but it was only when my then-officemate Roehl (the same Roehl whose family I stayed with in my first visit to Sanfo) brought it along when we tried setting up the computer systems in the Legaspi service center of the company we both worked for that I got to touch it and read a few passages. 


Later on, I came across this again, and read through it before I entered business school. Who can forget - "All warfare is based on deception"? *shivers*  It is  funny how the contents of this book have been aptly applied to business and management. When I think of this book, I remember The Books of Five Rings and The 48 Laws of Power. I still like this best though.



Hawaii by James Michener.

One of our high school terror teachers loved James Michener's works. Since that teacher was my class' homeroom teacher as well as the one in charge of my fourth-year high school's Library Club, of which I was a member - I was particularly challenged to choose this one for my book report which I was to present at one club meeting. I never thought I would be able to finish it, much less enjoy it, but surprisingly, I did.

I was half-petrified that I would be sliced and diced by that terror-teacher during my recital and analysis afterwards, however I don't remember that part now. I include this in my choices if only to point out that once in a while it is good to take a holiday from caution and to try something you might be afraid of.



What about you? What would you recommend?



Next time I expound on - Books I bought but haven't gotten around to reading. 

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Solitary Cat: (Un)happy Feet

Feb 13, '08 1:08 AM
for everyone
 A vague thought in my mind after Kaiyen and I saw each other on her recent trip to the Philippines was that living alone is.an adventure. Be it doing household chores or just plain living from day to day - it still is really just another adventure...with good and/or bad results.

What got me to thinking about writing about the mundane and not so mundane things which I have to put up with while living by myself is simply because I was unprepared for the probability that Kaiyen would manage to get a foot inside my living quarters here in Manila. As usual, since I was not expecting visitors at all, I could only describe the current appearance of my unit as cozily chaotic That is obviously a euphemism. Luckily, Kaiyen, Steve and Glenn managed to keep a deadpan expression on their faces when confronted by the piles of various things tottering dangerously all around my living area.

As for me, I was trying to be animated in a devious bid to distract them from the larger than life debris (luckily, I had a couple of minutes to throw some of them out before they arrived).

There are a lot of pros and cons to being by myself. But I lean heavily towards the pros. My personality and early upbringing is suited to this kind of lifestyle. Freedom and independence mean a lot to me and I cannot even begin to completely express how happy I was to find out that after living for so many years with my family, and as an only child of a sometimes protective, conservative father and an adventurous, free-spirited mother - being just by myself for the first time in Manila (1995) and a couple of times afterwards was something I took to like fish takes to water. I cooked, cleaned and looked after myself as if I was doing it my whole life. Some friends who knew how easy life for me was at home in Cebu City were quite surprised.

It has not been a bed of roses. One of the worst experiences I had involved physical pain and afterward even some not-so-copious tears (I do not like indulging on tears at all since they make my nose red and I have sniffles for the rest of the week, plus I have a tendency to develop tonsilitis after a good cry).

February of last year, I was due for a physical exam (PE) preparatory to joining my current company. I had only taken a half-day off due to the hectic schedule and duties to fulfill to the soon-to-be-ex-company before I resigned, as well as other things I had to prepare for the new company.Juggling all this meant that I had a very tight schedule to adhere to. I arrived at the clinic early in the morning as I was hoping to get ahead in line and finish everything instead of coming back another time.

Stepping out of the cab when I went for my PE had me putting my right foot onto a hidden hole beside a tree root in a sidewalk here in Makati. The cab had parked next to the curb and who would have expected that the tree on that area had some hidden danger for an unsuspecting, frazzled cat like me?

I abruptly sprawled down on the pavement like a drunken horse, my foot at an awkward angle and stuck inside the hole. After some maneuvering and discreet wincing, I stood up and patted my rump free of dust. Maybe the embarrassment I was feeling swept away the pain but I managed to saunter almost normally through the doors and into the elevator out of the prying and, I felt, somewhat amused eyes of other people who had seen me in an undignified heap on the normally busy sidewalk.

I went around the clinic being passed from one doctor, nurse and attendant to another  and I finished before 12 noon deadline I imposed on myself. Ironically, my injured foot wasn't part of the physical checkup at all. My right foot was now throbbing a bit since I had to zigzag from one end of the clinic to another with my various bottles of what-nots and exams.  I decided right there and then to use the HMO card of my company for the last time since I never used it much.

Makati Medical and the clinic for Caritas I could hobble to since they were about two blocks away and I did with some gracious slip and slide. I managed to grab an unappetizing sandwich and put some bottled water inside my stomach to get me fortified for the travails I had to face the rest of the day.

You have to get the Letter of Authorization (LOA) so that you could go to the doctor for a checkup and so I did a mixture of hopping and skipping to the Caritas clinic from the other clinic in good time. I was quite anxious since it was near lunch break, it was a safe bet the elevators would all be crowded, and there was going to be a long queue for the LOA.

This part was not so bad, since with some luck and good timing, I managed to cross to Makati Med from Caritas and again queued for the assigned doctor to examine me, after his lunch break of course.  He was astounded when he saw my poor right foot since by that time aside from the obvious swelling,  the big dark violet and bluish bruise could now be easily seen on the rightmost side of said appendage, almost stretching from my toes to the back near my heel.

He said I must have a high tolerance of pain, which was not really a surprise to me, since my dentist said the same thing during my root canals. Normally - sez the good ole doc, most people would be unable to walk around with that kind of swelling and bruising without any help from other people or from a cane at least, and not on the same day an injury like that would happen.

Well, what could I do?

It has been hours since I wrenched the foot, and I did not bring my umbrella to use as a makeshift cane since I did not foresee this little accident, and calling on an uncle of mine in Makati Med would still have me going through the same process..and it could take more minutes of hopping around, which I really didn't want to do. I was tired of being an urban bunny-wabbit by that time even if it sounded cute.

The next problem I could see was that he would want my foot to be x-rayed. Oh yes, right on schedule he did!  Ah, the advantages of thinking ahead...though it didn't lessen the pain. I tried to tell him it was more of muscle and probably torn ligaments or something and that there was no need for an x-ray but he wanted to make sure so there was nothing I could do except accede.  At the back of my mind I knew that if I waited for the next day, I could not be sure of being able to walk anymore so better to finish all that could be done that day while I was still partially mobile. Drat, this would be the perfect time for a tall, dark and handsome stranger to bump into me! But where in blazes was he?

This time, as I unsteadily and slowly limped back from Makati Med to Caritas Clinic (I felt it was for the nth time, but maybe it was just the second time). My HMO needed me to get the LOA from them before I could do it in Makati Med. Drat. I could feel shooting pains on my affected foot. I gritted my teeth as I went through the whole process again with the walking up the front stairs to the building, the guards giving visitors their id cards, the waiting for the elevator, the crowd, the queue for the processing, the explanations, and the LOA.

Thankfully, the X-ray room was just in the same building although on a different floor.  At least I did not have to hop like a kangaroo to another building since the pain worsened when I moved around - just from floor to floor. Small mercies were given, but I could not help but whimper softly when the attendant arranged my injured foot for the x-ray as it had to be flattened. This time I was just biting my lip and she must have seen my face since she gently patted me on the back and said it would be over soon. At last, a friendly, sympathetic face!

After this ordeal, I knew with bitter certainty that I just could not rest yet. I could not wait anymore for the x-ray results but I still would have to go to a drugstore to buy a bandage to wrap my foot in, or some athletes' gear which would support the foot so I could at least walk on it since I still had things to do afterwards. Life still went on even after this fiasco! 

The god of taxis was listening to my prayer and I was able to get one without waiting for too long on the side street. I would have screamed like a banshee if I had to do battle with other waiting passengers on that hectic afternoon. The taxi driver deposited me on Mercury Drug in Legaspi St,  which is the same street I live on  (albeit on the other end) and I again began the painful journey, but this time at least I knew I was more than halfway to the finish line.

I was only able to get the bandage since they did not have the foot support sock I wanted. I didn't buy any painkillers at all since I thought I would be too woozy and I still had work to do, even if it was going to be from home. This time, I suddenly felt hotness at the back of my eyes. I felt as if I would become teary-eyed and bawl out in less than 2 minutes if I did not get hold of myself. My stoicism faded for an instant.

It was a culmination of the pain, tiredness, irritation, some self-pity and hunger (what else? it was past 4 pm already) and my stomach was still functioning normally by noisily complaining about the lack of sustenance.  I think that walk towards a sporting goods store in Greenbelt 1 was the most painful and slowest one I had taken in the whole of my life.

Maybe the pain was aggravated by the cold air inside the mall. I had already wrapped the newly bought bandage tightly around my foot but this time, even with that, the pain was a steady throb, regardless if I moved or not. I felt like I was walking on a knife stuck in the middle of my aggrieved foot.

I berated myself silently. I could not afford to cry in the middle of Greenbelt and leaning against the wall would not do anything for me except make the whole ordeal drawn out. I said to myself - they say that giving birth is the most painful of all, so by Jove, this pain is nothing! - go in there and buy the darn thing on the double and no shilly-shallying about it!

After all, I still had to get home and that meant walking from Mercury Drug to my building. This time, I wished I had a genie who could at least give me a walking cane. I was tempted to buy an umbrella just to have some support, but that would mean more walking for me to Watson's or some other store.

Rivulets of sweat beading my temples, I walked..or at least tried to. In the end, I did not care anymore if I looked like a drunkard (people were avoiding me since I was swaying a little bit sometimes and I was keeping to the walls). I found the sporting goods store and bought the support cover/sock for my foot.  I even managed to interview the store clerk on the different models and items they had which could suit my purpose.  

Afterward, I breathed a palpable sigh of relief. Even if I had to go to work tomorrow, I was optimistic it would not be as bad as today was! Well, barring the event that my foot would swell to a medium-sized cantaloupe of course.

So, I knew the drill and this time I ponderously began the long, slow and painful process of walking home alone. I could not help but think that if this had happened to me in Cebu, it would be so much easier since I could ask for atis leaves and get some "mananambal" (healer)  to massage the throbbing foot. 

I am not saying that I do not like the idea of my parents fussing over me even if my mom sometimes does - although they are pretty used to my scrapes and do not really howl about it. What irked me was the thought of having no access to the kind of good ole remedy I would have been given were I at home.

All these and other thoughts occupied my mind as I dragged my unhappy feet back to my abode. I stopped once in a while to get my breath back and to look as if I was enjoying the various scenes I passed by.

Upon arrival at the building I lived in, some of the guards exclaimed sympathetically and gave me some tips on what to do  -  like rolling my foot on a bottle to exercise it and make the blood flow. The OIC of the Security, who watches out for me, offered to help me to a "hilot" should I decide I wanted to have my feet massaged. Unfortunately, I didn't know any here in Manila.

I managed to smile wanly and thank them all graciously but said I must really go up and rest. Finally I went through my door, rooted around in my kitchen cupboard and rolled my right foot on an empty iced tea bottle. After a while, I ate some biscuits and stared at my injured foot for some time.  I felt like conversing with it if only to berate it for the unexpected trouble and pain I went through on its behalf, but by then the events of the day had caught up with me.

I promptly went to bed and propped my foot up on the footboard.

And I woke up the next day, and went to work.

Since I was walking almost normally,with nary a wince or frown,  did not use a cane, and with only a bandaged foot to show for the whole adventure, everything seemed almost normal at work that day, as if nothing untoward happened. I got asked if I was okay since I was practically absent the other day but I was not keen on retelling the painful tale so I just shrugged and said well, I am walking wounded but I am alive!

At the end of the week, I called home and told my parents what had happened.
By that time, they could not fuss anymore since I said I was on the way to recovery, there was no need for a "hilot" anymore, and I had an appointment with the doctor the next week following the results of the x-ray, the swelling had all but disappeared and the color of the bruise had now changed a bit to an ugly yellowish-green from the colourful eggplant it used to be and best of all, I survived hobbling by myself on that day and had a new company to look forward to working with. Just another day in the life of a solitary cat.


Postscript:
A friend saw my foot after I unwound the covers a few days after the accident..and he told me it was probably good that I walked on that day instead of babying my injured foot. It got it to heal faster and allowed the blood circulation to be forced to the injured area. I don't know how true that is, but at this time, I like to think that suffering was not for nothing. Life still throws you some sugarcane along with the lemons. *wink* 


Location: home in Makati City
Mood:  jaunty :-)
Music: guitar gods in YM


Solitary Cat: Street-walking


Feb 13, '08 4:29 PM
for everyone

I used “kit” since this happened way back when I was still in my little kitty years. *coughs up a hairball*

My work at one of my previous companies involved regular weekly traveling around Visayas and Mindanao, loads of stress, weird working hours,  being more familiar to the night watchman and desk clerk at hotels and….. on one eyebrow-raising occasion,  being picked up as a prostitute on the dark streets of Davao City.

Really, it was just a matter of time that something like this would happen. But I thought it would be more in the lines of the hotel loiterers thinking I was engaged in some nefarious orgy-related activities and pointing me out to prospective sex-inclined or at least myopic males who did not know any better, rather than having it out in the open on the chilly streets of pre-dawn Davao.

What could you expect from the pattern I presented?

I was almost without fail, out of the hotel/inn/pension house by night and came back only in the wee hours of the morning, or maybe 2 days afterwards.{because the work I do has to be done during the time the branches were closed so that operations and sales would not be interrupted}

I was in the company of different men on different occasions and at different times. It could be we arrived together in a taxi or car or it could be we came from different flights and just caught up with each other in the hotel lobby. {because managers and other co-employees would either be visiting the branch or staying at the hotel during my trips}

I was a regular customer of the various hotels and sometimes placed a “Do Not Disturb” sign on my door during the early half of the day. {because I needed to catch up on lost sleep}

Still, I shake my head and ruffle my standing fur indignantly when I think back on it.

On a closer inspection, one could see that I was loaded down with various paraphernalia such as big boxes of servers or printers or tool-kits or on days when it was a rush trip - luggage which had clothes good for one week of travel. {I try to travel light but I got stuck once in Zamboanga for more than a week with just 2 days worth of clothes} 

One could see that I was dressed very casually in dust-covered jeans and wrinkled shirts and the obligatory rubber shoes and jacket. {if you are to travel around Visayas and Mindanao at anytime on any vehicle at a moment's notice, the more comfortable clothes the better}

One could see that my hair was uncombed, my face was solemn and I had eye bags for accessories instead of necklaces and bracelets. {that is what you get when you are in IT}

Who in their right mind would think I was out looking for a romp in the hay? Or whatever surface available to do the horizontal tango?

Still, after all that is said and done, I really could only attribute it to the darkness – that and the undiscerning eye of the taxi driver and his customer. Either that or the guy was just plain horny that anybody would do.

It was before 4 am, and I had just finished ensuring that the server could be up and normal operations would go on that day for the employees. No doubt the security guard was eager to go back to snoring on the comfy sofa as after he closed the door and locked it, he disappeared quicker than I could walk towards the road. I crossed the street to wait for a passing taxi on the other side as that would be the direction of my hotel.

I waited and after a few minutes, I noticed that a taxi was parked on the side I had left, near the darkened corner of the neighboring bank. I waved languidly for the taxi to come over. I was tired, a bit hungry and travel-sore since I had just arrived the other day via a bus ride from General Santos City.  I had not even gotten out of my rumpled clothes I traveled in yet, since I just dumped my bag at the hotel and rushed to our office upon arrival less than 8 hours ago.

I hoisted my bag of tools, smoothed my hair and bent down to the taxi driver to ask if he could take me to XYZ----- hotel. Before I could even open my mouth -

My jaw dropped to the road when he propositioned me blatantly. It was 3 seconds before I could react to ask dazedly as to what he was talking about. I incoherently mumbled “Pwe…pwe-de? A…aaah-nong pwede… sa ano?!! kayo!!...”  {translation: Can? Can what.... On what?!! You two!!}

The last word was squealed in a high-pitched tone. I frantically looked around the area (darn, no other humans in sight!)  and tightened my fingers on my bag. I was mentally preparing myself to skewer the guy with either my screwdriver or soldering iron if I could just open my bag quickly enough. Then run as if all the hounds of hell were after me back to the branch and pound on the door. That plan flashed in my mind in the next half-second. Plan B was to scream..but unfortunately on that side of the road, it was only a mental hospital facility which was at my back and I didn't think it would do any good at all.
  
The driver looked at my bugged-out eyes and my bared teeth. After a long second, he said “Never mind,” and made a u-turn to park again at where I had first seen him. If he had waited a few more seconds I'm sure saliva would have dropped from the side of my mouth the way it would from a rabid dog. Remember that this was the time that you hear all kinds of stories in Davao.

I still had adrenalin pumping in my veins two minutes after when I was comfortably ensconced in another taxi and on my way back to the hotel. The driver this time glanced at me sympathetically and made conforting noises when I blurted out in a series of fast sentences what had just happened. Upon arrival, I ordered room service and promptly fell asleep.

The next week, I was back in my Cebu home. I eagerly told my parents over dinner what had happened, complete with gestures and even acting it out for them.

There I was expecting my dear dad have his protective instincts come to the fore and to loudly lament on how his beloved, precious daughter was almost thrown into the jaws of a hormone-addled wolf if not for her quick wits and daring (glaring eyes are still daring), and to give me a sermon on how I was to be careful and to make sure I was in bed before 9 pm so I could be protected from the evils of the big, bad men.

What was my protective, conservative  let-me-shoot-that-guy dad’s reaction?  

He laughed.
And he laughed some more.

My mom smiled sympathetically.

My jaw dropped to the floor…and it was a long time before I could pick it up.

Welcome to the mysterious world of ...men!



Location: Makati City
Mood:  pouty thoughts
Music: drilling noise below my floor