Pages

Saturday, November 24, 2012

A Story That Won An Award











I Exist Today, Unmarried, in Mimi’s Wedding Dress
1:03 AM February 1, 2012





































To Richie,

            A crazy cousin,
            A weird drinker,
            A great artist,
            A lousy lover,
                        A marveling connoisseur of mixed ethnicity.



















I trotted behind my Father’s back and tried to walk faster in my stiletto heels as he rushed to leave for Alaska. He called me an hour ago telling me I should get ready to leave. I left the office in a blink and sped home to get my stuff prepared for our trip. It was my first time to finally meet our business partners in the Arctic Circle and just the thought tickled my rather excited nerves. My luggage was all set. I heard Dad’s car honk outside so I went to meet him. He surprised me to death when he told me something that we hadn’t talked about when he called me awhile back.

“What? But I’m supposed to come with you. You promised to introduce me to our Alaskan stockholders. Why did you suddenly change your mind?”

“Your Grandmother needs an attendant.”

“Nana is here and so are our seven maids. The house boy and girl are available, too. Why do I have to do this? And you always say she’s very much aware of everything going on around her that she doesn’t need to be tended! You keep saying she’s mighty strong she can’t be abducted! She’s too old to need a baby sitter.”

“Don’t say that about your Grandmother! You have no right.” His index finger was barely an inch away from my nose.

“But you said you’d bring me with you so I could meet the other international stockholders! Besides, Mimi is better off without me.”

“No. You are staying here whether you like it or not. Remember, you can never be where you are now if not for your Grandma. Plus, your sister needs you.”

“Oh, please Dad. Why do we have to discuss about this again? You know I ‘do’ appreciate that Mimi chose me among all her grandchildren and you know I’m never good at attending to Shiza’s needs. Nurse Pia is around. I can’t Papa. I just can’t.”

            Before I could add more, Dad walked away with his K-9, nine huge, muscle-engulfed men who made sure he wouldn’t get abducted or assassinated. I watched him get in passenger seat of his black Explorer 2011 edition. He waved, blew me a kiss, and rolled up his black, tinted, one-way glass window before the Explorer drove off. I was left musing, at the front garden, in awe of my firm and disciplinarian half-Chinese father. Being a rich kid is not so much fun at times, not for me.

            Some years ago, I was but a teen. I loved hockey, ice skating, and golf. Before that, I was the best musician in the family. At six, I perfected Beethoven’s 6th Symphony in C# on the piano, composed 29 melodies, and won eight violin competitions. I cared not for the family’s livelihood. My life revolved in my simple way of living: my music, my sports, and my friends. On my 18th birthday, however, Mimi dropped the bomb. In front of the entire clan, she proclaimed me as the heiress and soon-to-be largest stockholder of the Chiyawan-Huang Group of Companies. My cousins, Aunts, and Uncles shot me stares that ran down my spine. Though I failed to understand what being a progeny meant at that time, I knew I would never be the same. For two years, I had gone through a lot of tough training. One of which is keeping my voice down when I laugh while watching comedies on theater with Papa, Mama, and my Governess.

            “Keep it down, keep it down.”

            “Why? This is so funny Teacher. I’ve never seen anything like…”

            “Your Papa is looking this way. Stop laughing too loud.”

            I glanced on the seat opposite ours and avoided Papa’s cold stare. My Governess touched my hand to comfort me-she knew I would get some scolding when we got home after the show.

 On one occasion, while I tumbled on my seat upon hearing 1Bottom’s words of praise for himself after he’d been turned into an ass, I noticed I alone expressed much amusement. Isn’t this Shakespeare’s legendary “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” that’s supposed to tickle the audience’s minds?  I wondered why Mama had to cover her mouth whenever she laughed and only let out high-pitched giggles when I knew she really wanted to chuckle her intestines out like I did a minute ago. Moreover, this was a comedy, isn’t it?  I sunk in my place as the show ended; my lower lip spurted fresh blood; I kept myself from laughing too loud again when my eyes met Dad’s steady and dense gaze so I bit my lip.

            Before I had been chosen by Mimi to be her successor, Papa and Mama were different. I remember how they had called her “Lula” and ate the salted pork she especially made on holidays; when I was declared to take her spot in the company, they called her 2“Mimi” and gave her special 3‘etag’ to the maids and Cordilleran employees.

Before the declaration changed simple lifestyle, Mom and Dad were simple parents. They watched each and every show I was involved in, as much as possible. In the mall, we walked and laughed like normal people. At the park, Papa pushed the swing and Mama helped me hang on to the monkey bars like normal people…but that was way back when we weren’t so occupied in the family business and that was way back when Mimi was strong she needed nobody’s help (she only began to deteriorate when Grampi passed away). Papa and Mama took over her position and Papa became the Acting CEO. Mama managed the hotel chains. They seemed to forget about the walks at the mall and picnics at the park with me and my born-lame sister, Shi Za.


1 the famed character created by Shakespeare who thought he was “all that”, whose head was turned into a donkey’s, loved by a goddess only because of a potion, and still thought of himself highly than others
2 a term of endearment for old women in China
3 a salted and smoked piece of pork, either buried underground or dried in the sun for a few months until the salt has penetrated
           

 I shook my head and snapped out of it. I’m 21 now. I had a disabled and “special” sister to tend to and an old lady to care for while my parents were away for two weeks. I grumbled as I made my way into the Italian-inspired mansion my Dad had bought and renovated for my Mom’s advantage, as they said it. Living in a foreign blue printed manor seemed to weaken my Filipino and Chinese blood.

            Two days after my bitter confrontation with Dad, I stood at our garden again and waited for Mimi to get out of the car. Nana, our Mayordoma for as long as I can remember, a lady from our province who was widowed at a very young age and immediately served our family, signaled for our house boy to help her take Mimi’s stuff inside the house. The car beeped and when the door opened, I was amazed at what I saw. Mimi was elegant even in her straw hat, blue plaid shirt, black 60’s trousers, and plain black sandals.

            “Keilah Ysabela 4Akayya Chiyawan-Huang.”

            “Yeah, Mimi. Nice to see you again. What? Did you just drop by the fields?” She only laughed at my sarcastic remark.

            She hugged me so tight I almost lost my breath. My goodness, this old lady! How could she still have such strength? I wondered why she always called me by my complete name. Mimi had at all times been out of the ordinary. She was aged but mesmerizingly gorgeous. She spoke seven languages, including Chinese. She’s a proud full-blooded Igorota, yet she learned the Chinese language when Mama said she would marry Papa.

            5“Piao liang, ne?”

            “Ah, 6xie xie Mimi. You look more beautiful than me and you seem amazingly strong.”

            “Ah…ah…no. I will expire soon, my dear, and you, you shall take my place.”

            She was smiling. I wasn’t. That was something I never imagined to be ready for. Also, she was telling me I was pretty. Well, her vision has probably worsened, too that’s why she sees me differently. Mimi had always been odd for me. We talked and talked about her trip to the North Pole, from the Arctic to the plains of Texas, and from the deserts back to the Philippine mountains where she had originally come from. I didn’t care much. I only pretended to listen. She babbled and babbled on while I led her to the room Dad especially had constructed for her so she would have her own place of solitude allotted for her mysteriousness each time she decided to visit.





4 a tribal Igorot name which meant “black beauty”
5 You’re beautiful, huh?
6 Thank you.



            “You know Akayya, I’ve travelled around the world. I’ve seen it all-the famed pyramids of Egypt, the hanging gardens of ancient Babylonia, the ruins of Athena’s temple, the flower of youth inside African jungles, the walled castles of Britania, the seaside of Milan, the Pope in Vatican, the giant gods of Thailand, and even Via Dolorosa where it was sworn to have been Jesus’ passage from His place of condemnation within Pilate’s territory to the hill of Golgotha where He finally finished His mission-all of it my dear, all of it. Nothing compares, nevertheless, to what I see when I enter the realms of my father’s abode-the landmark where I dreamed, strived, and began to make a name---

            “Watch out, Mimi! That vase you almost hit is a gift from my best girlfriend. That’s expensive and something you’ll never see back home.”

            I was lucky to grab a hold of the vase that Mimi’s huge Cordilleran bag touched and luckier to have made her shut up. The vase is special to me and I would probably grieve a thousand years over its loss if it got broken by that green and red tainted shoulder bag. It was a present from my friend who brought in much of Roman ancestry and antiques into my home.

            “Akayya, just like your mother, you have become someone else. You hear but do not listen.”

            “Mimi, you are such a vague person.” I didn’t understand her statement.

            “I shall go and see your sister.”

            “Okay, Mimi. Do you want me to go with you?”

            “No need. I can manage.”

            I watched my strange and still astonishing Grandmother climb the carpeted stairway. Her words lingered on my confused mind. What did she want me to grasp? I just shook my head and headed towards the kitchen to check what Chef Boy was preparing for lunch.

            “Mimi, let’s go. Time to eat.”

            “Okay, 7Apok. I’m coming. I just got done changing your sister’s diapers.”

            “Let Nurse Pia do the changing next time, Mimi. Where is she anyway? I can fire her for letting you do that.”

            “Don’t Akayya. I asked her to go out and buy more tissue paper; there’s nothing left on the drawers.”



7 my grandchild
            “You should have just told the other maids to do it. My goodness Mimi! Why do you have to do this? You can’t always be everyone’s hero!”

            Mimi shook her head, fixed Shi Za’s blanket, kissed her on the forehead and walked past by me. This weird, old lady was beginning to get into my last nerves and she’s only been here for a few hours!

            “I’d like to request something else to eat please.”

            “Mimi! Chef Boy had taken all the time to cook this for your arrival!”

            “Honey, I had ceased from eating meat. Please grant my request.”

            I had no choice. I beckoned the maids away and signaled for Chef Boy to approach Mimi. When Chef Boy was beside her, she whispered something into the chef’s ear and he cackled. They were whispering and I looked like a fish out of water in there. I made a noise with my spoon and fork that made them realize I was there.

            “Yes, Madame. I shall cook it for you.”

            “Oh, thank you very much Boy. And if you don’t mind, you can come eat with us on the table. Call all the other maids, Nana, the house boy and girl, and the driver so we could all dine together.”

            Unbelievable! Mimi was defying the rules of the house! I wasn’t going to let this insanity take over. She had to know that she was ‘just’ a guest and I was still among the owners of the house. So, when all the maids and servants of the house had moved towards the table and Mimi was waving her hands at them, as if telling them to sit down, I made a commotion.

            “Out. All of you, get out.” I was shooing them away.

            “What are you doing?”

            “I’m making them realize that there is no space for them in the table.”

            “But the table is 15 feet long.”

            “Mimi, whether the table is just a feet long, it is never a custom in this house to let the maids feast with us.” This time, my voice was served with a pinch of harshness and firmness.

            “In the mounts, when your Mother was a kid, we all ate together-the servants, the boss, the workers, the tenants, the landowners-all of us in one, long, wooden table especially made to promote unity and a sense of equality among us. You see, they have a huge contribution to who I am today and what I was able to build.”

            “This is not 8Natonin, Mountain Province, Mimi…and Mom isn’t a kid anymore.”

            Somehow, I felt a pang of guilt as Mimi’s face painted with pallor. I didn’t know how to apologize though, for in the house, apologies were not given much attention. In the house, there was no room for mistakes. All decisions and actions were either make or break.

            “I’m going upstairs. Tell Chef Boy to bring the food in my room.”

            “Mimi…I…”

            There was no speech that came out of my lips. It was so difficult to spell out the word ‘sorry’. Something inside urged me to go after her and tell her I didn’t mean to say what I had just uttered. I wanted so bad to knock on her door as I stood outside and placed my ear on the wood to check if she was okay. No courage seemed to come out that moment. I walked out in dismay.

            The next few days, Mimi’s actions had become unusual. She only talked to me about business and administration matters. Besides the family ventures, there was nothing more to chat about. She avoided me. I felt it. At times, I heard her talk to Shi Za, as if my sister understood. She also became the maids and servants of the house’s ultimate favorite.

            “She is so nice. Ms. Shi Za has become more energetic and responsive ever since she came.”

            “Nana had calmed down, too. She’s not so hot tempered anymore.”

            “Chef Boy feeds us good food now-not just the remains of our boss’ main courses.”

            Those were just a few of the servants’ conversations about Mimi. Every time I overheard their discussions, it made me think what was so special in Mimi that they could see and I couldn’t. It was difficult to guess and as the days passed by, I didn’t recognize that Mimi was leaving the following day.

            An hour before dinner, on her last day with us, she summoned me into her room. I knocked on the door softly though it was slightly open. Hesitation very much kept me from getting near her. She was fumbling over a piece of clothing when she noticed I was standing behind her.

            “You see this? This was my wedding dress. When I married your Grampi, we weren’t very rich then. I had to wear the Cordilleran custom dress and I loved it; Grampi and everyone who attended our wedding said I was lovely. Beautiful, isn’t it?” She raised the colorful woven dress for me to see.

8 a village in Mountain Province where rice planting and hog raising are the most common means of livelihood
            “Yes, Mimi.” For the first time in my whole life, I appreciated the striking colors of the 9petay that Mimi had worn on her wedding. It embodied my origin, my ancestors, my blood.

            “I’m giving it to you.”

            “Mimi…I…” I was speechless and embarrassed.

            “Everything I gave you is something you deserve. There is a bright future I see in you-if you just look and see, hear and listen, Apok.” She held my hands into hers.

            “Mimi, thank you.” I was already in tears.

            “Don’t cry, Akayya. There is nothing I regret. From choosing you to be my heiress, to giving you this precious clothing that makes me reminisce all that’s left of what your Grampi and I have shared, I do not lament over it.” She wiped my tears and held me in her arms for a long time as I was shaken by my own tears.

            “Mimi, I don’t deserve this. I had been rude and I treated you with disdain. I’m sorry Mimi.”

            “It’s okay. It’s okay. Stop crying now.”

            When Mimi’s car left, I knew that I didn’t change her life when she stayed with me at our alien house-she changed mine.

            Mimi had passed away a few months later. Mom and Dad still didn’t allow the maids to dine with us. Shi Za refused to smile ever since we told her Mimi was never coming back. Chef Boy’s cuisine seemed to lessen in quality-there was always something missing in its overall flavor (it was probably Mimi’s words of praise). Nana became a stern Mayordoma again. The house boy and girl quit. Nurse Pia was often distressed because Shi Za didn’t want to cooperate. The family driver frequently got caught in accidents. After some time of dealing with all the chaos that Mimi’s loss had brought, I decided to live in a separate house.

            I am now 30 years old, present CEO of Chiyawan-Huang Group of Companies, and unmarried, wearing Mimi’s remarkable tribal dress on our company’s 45th year anniversary party. There were guys-sharp, handsome, and educated-all around the Chiyawan Towers, a skyscraper founded on my Grandmother’s hard work, but I couldn’t seem to find the happiness in binding ties for eternity with any of them…or I just never felt worthy enough to wear this red and green inter-woven ethnic dress down the aisle.




9 an ethnic woven cloth worn by Igorot ladies on special occasions, usually in colors of green, red, and black, sometimes adorned with feathers and old coins hanging about

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Poet on Strike
































Hell!




.





.




.




.
.
.
.
.

Fall.

Silence of the Pen






























Technical Difficulties









                                                --

                ,                                                                                ?!




                                                                                                                              ...



                             ,                    _

Silent Poems: A Tribute to One of My Heroes-Jose Garcia Villa

Recently, I went back to my college literary pieces and I flipped through Jose Garcia Villa's "silent poems". These poems technically lack lyrics and are full of imagery. The only thing is, there are no words to read. Usually, it's only the title to be seen and a few or no punctuation marks are present. I am not aware if he has written more of these poems since I've only come across two. My favorite is "The Bashful One" (wow, as if I've read a million hehe). The other one is "The Emperor's New Sonnet. 

In "The Bashful One", the reader is somewhat forced into thinking what imagery has to do with the kind of poetry the author is establishing. The reader will then be required to check (if ever he does not know what bashful means) the dictionary. He will soon find out that bashful means 'shy'. Thus (if he is a fan of poetry), he will realize the speaker is too 'shy' to express feelings-therefore, no words were able to come out.

As for "The Emperor's New Sonnet", the reader will have to look back into classical fairy tales. Almost every child knows of the famous Emperor who fooled himself, making himself believe he had clothes on. In relation to JGV's silent poem, the reader should have the idea that the poem is a reflection of the Emperor's foolishness. "The Emperor's New Sonnet" in a way, "fooled" the speaker.

To follow up on this topic, here are my college days silent poems...

I hope you enjoy them.



>>Dilean Bass

Friday, November 9, 2012

The Unjust Judge(s)


"It's the way people judge other people."
A line from one who had been judged,
Trampled upon, and rejected of many.

A statement so true, so frank
And yet so powerful a blow
To me, a total skank...

Looks deceive, and words,
From a wicked tongue
Weaken the absurds.

We often see the other side
And fail to look, look deep
To what's wrapped inside.

Then when we finally meet
The shadow of the invisible
It's then we find our feet

For the fool we've made
Of ourselves in the moment
A word we've unfairly laid.

If this be not justly true,
Then forever in silence I'd stay
And look down on what an unjust judge would do.

-for people who've been wronged and labeled without justice.

>>Dilean Bass

THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT

The moaning winds blow
In accordance to the dying
Sun, soon to permeate into the horizon.
Down, down the pine-sheltered mountain
Lies an Aphroditean meadow.
Dancing poppies around Goliath's ancestry
Of woody trunks and branches cover
The heaven-sketched iridescent plain.
Serenity engulfs this remarkable cradle
Of such an innocuous Destroyer.
Unknowing of intensive destruction She brings
Comes this tiny gift of creation,
Fluttering over the humbling reeds.
Woe to the towering works of man adore,
To his love for fabled beings,
To his thoughts so alike King Solomon,
To his olden hands of innumerable deeds,
To the whole of his ill-fated wealth for
In one soft flap of Her bright, yellow wings,
A hundred,
A thousand,
A million, she kills.


-I edited it a few times to come up with this final output.



>>>Dilean Bass