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Friday, February 26, 2010

Chicken Soup for the Desperate

Friday.

For two days now, I have had a very annoying throat infection and I'm just glad it didn't develop into a fever.

So anyway, I was planning on having some chicken soup for dinner but unfortunately we've run out of ingredients. I was really hoping to have some. I like how the heat helps to ease the discomfort in my throat.

Out of desperation, here's what I did:

1. Boil two cups of water.

2. Throw in a chicken broth cube.

3. Wait 5 minutes.

4. ? ? ?

5. Profit!!!

Talk about eating something sad for dinner. But hey, at least I'm feeling a little better. =P

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Creeped Out with Some Normal Things

How do we know if something has gone beyond normal and is to be considered as creepy? For many of us, the line that divides creepy and normal is pretty thin and everyone sets his boundary in the normalcy spectrum at a different degree. What may be creepy to you is normal to me and vice-versa. But of course, there are things that are generally considered as normal by most people and there are others that are just downright weird and uncomfortable for everyone.

So in the interest of fun and hilarity, let me share some things (and people) that are usually considered as normal and mundane by others but nevertheless creep the hell out of me for reasons I can't really put my finger on. =(

Clowns and Mimes


I have already told several of my friends before that clowns, mimes, or pretty much any kind of performer who wears white make-up creep me out, no kidding. Of course, it's not like whenever I see one, I'd scream my lungs out and run like a sissy from the room. No, it's more like whenever I'm near one or when I see one on TV, things just feel very uncomfortable. Maybe it's how unnatural their painted smiles are? And in the case of mimes, the silence makes me feel really queasy. Can't you guys just say whatever it is you want to say?

Perfectionists


Martha Stewart, that obsessive-compulsive woman in Desperate Housewives, Monica from Friends... Just what the hell is up with these people and their desire to make everything around them perfect? I was channel surfing the other day when I chanced upon Martha's show and saw her showing off this really perfect bouquet of flowers. It's so perfect, it defies reality and the rest of the known universe. These people also seem to possess this certain air of aggressiveness that would rain fires from hell on you if you even dare go against what they say or do. I sometimes wonder if they and serial killers fall under the same Myers-Briggs personality category.

Religious Sculptures and Paintings


Being born and raised Catholic, the decorations and atmosphere inside a church are to me very familiar. But having seen and experienced them for the longest time, can you really blame me if some of the things I see inside a church scare me? Sculptures and pictures of holy beings bleeding or crying, triumphant angels standing on top of defeated demons with the most horrible faces, sometimes thinking that that statue is staring at you when you're not looking. Add to all these that eerie Latin song I can't understand. And for the record, I'm not an evil hellspawn who's just afraid to enter a church. =P

*shrugs*

Thinking about these things stressed me out. I need to do some meditating and deep breathing.

Photos from sciencefictionfantasyhorror.com, cbc.ca, and lostseouls.com

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

EDSA Remembered

I was browsing through the cable channels tonight and as I passed by Cinema One, I was really pleased that they were showing A Dangerous Life, the old Australian-produced English language film about Ninoy Aquino's assassination and the EDSA Revolution. The film's main star was Gary Busey who portrayed the role of an American journalist covering the events. The rest of the cast however were mostly Filipinos such as Laurice Guillen (Cory Aquino), the late great Ruben Rustia (Ferdinand Marcos), and Tessie Tomas (Imelda Marcos). It was really eerie how they managed to capture the mannerisms and character of the people they were portraying, some of their scenes actually sent shivers down my spine. And although I might be a little disappointed that the movie is mostly in English, I am actually glad that the movie captured very well the spirit of those times including minute details of history that are now famous, like the government choppers landing in Crame to join the rebels or Cory's first salute to newly appointed Chief-of-Staff FVR. Yes, I had fun. Yes, I will shamelessly admit that there were several times when I just felt tears welling up in my eyes.



Watching this movie made me contemplate about several things.

First, that the EDSA Revolution is a unique social phenomenon. That no matter how many similar street actions and peaceful revolutions take place, there will only be one and only one EDSA. Call me old school, but somehow, I'll never be able to call EDSA as EDSA 1, EDSA One, or EDSA Uno. I find it quite absurd really and probably a little ridiculous and insulting when people compare movements of the recent past like EDSA 2 or 3 with the EDSA of 1986. EDSA will always be unique and one of a kind. Can anything equal something that has, supposedly, inspired the downfall of Communism in the Soviet bloc? People in the succeeding decades may have tried to replicate what happened in EDSA - the romanticism, the idealism, the patriotic songs. But sadly for the future generation, what has happened then will never happen again. It is really up for the later decades to bring about something that is uniquely its own and not copy something that it will never have the chance to equal.

Second, that power, once acquired, is truly a hard thing to give up. One scene from the movie that really got stuck in my mind was when Marcos was about to flee and went to his office to say his goodbyes. He went to his presidential table, kissed it, and sobbed. Now trying to imagine who might be sitting in front of that table in the next few months made me think of the prospects of whether that new person would respect the true power behind the table or would rather spend his days in power kissing it.

And third, that behind all the confetti and the cheers, what is happening in reality - poverty, corruption, political division - these things can never and will never be resolved by revolutions alone. The movie ended with Cory giving her speech before the US Congress, proudly proclaiming to the world that the Philippines is a democracy once more. The epilogue, however, was clear in pointing out that after all the celebrations, most of the country's problems still remained and there were still a lot of things that need to be done.

Nevertheless, I'm happy that somehow the spirit of EDSA has been renewed amongst Filipinos once more, when for years it has been forgotten and only remembered when Cory died half a year ago. I am just hoping that whether in the coming years we forgot about EDSA or not, we would still continue to move forward as a people and try our best to solve the myriad problems that we still have despite twenty-four years of restored freedom.

EDSA may have signaled the end of a dictatorship and the rebirth of democracy, but we should also remember that it was only a keystone around which we should have rebuilt our pride and dignity as a people. EDSA was only a process. The real solution is in our hands.

Photo from wikipedia.org

- - - - -

long P.S.

Later this morning after I woke up, I was mulling over the idea of how some people nowadays think that they would rather that martial rule continued and that the EDSA revolution never happened.

The strongest argument to this point has always been that during the Marcos regime, at least things were stable. Communism was subdued, the Philippines received a lot of financial backing from the US, the arts flourished, yada yada. While during the Aquino administration, the country was beset by several coup attempts, the NPA became stronger, the economy continued to languish, and people remained poor.

But then again, I wouldn't be surprised if the people who say these things are the same people who would put every blame they can on the government. I suppose it stems from the local culture of not having any collective responsibility towards anything this country suffers. Yeah that's right - if something goes wrong, blame the government.

Only thing is, the people don't realize that the very reason the government exists is because it is elected into power by them in the first place. Marcos became President because we voted for him. EDSA failed (as some naysayers, which does not include this writer, prefer to describe it) because we chose to let things degenerate from then. The country continues to mire in poverty and corruption because we'd rather dump the responsibility on someone else than taking some of the responsibility ourselves.

We have always chosen the easy way out. It is truly a shame that a lot of people would rather live an easy life under a repressive regime than choose to live a responsible, challenging existence under a democracy.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Love Songs from the 80's

Alright, so it's Sunday morning and there's just nothing decent to do. So I thought, hey why not subject people to some really corny love songs from the 80's?

Enjoy!





















Having fun? Why, you're welcome!