Friday, March 24, 2017

On To Dreamland

Childhood Tales



A winged horse gallops towards the heavens,

Cutting a dusty path through a sky 

sprinkled with stars.

Eventide spreads its lengthening shadows 

over all,

Bidding the Child in us to drink deep 

but quiet draughts of inspiration

That we may conjure up 

brilliant visions of Tomorrow

In a mute and almost incommunicable luxury of thought.

Friday, March 17, 2017

A Holy Affair

Childhood Tales

Carpenter Islao built the home that I grew up in. It was an anomaly of a squarish chalet with a galvanized roof that sloped toward its entire frontage. No need for guterr, he alleged.

Indeed, on rainy days the water slid down - a delightful outdoor shower for us kids and a natural water irrigation besides for the mayana bushes below. 

It was a squattish mimic of a stilt house raised on posts about five feet up from the ground. Protekshun for flood. He had a rational explanation for everything when he was sober. Genius.

For most of the year, this space underneath became our kingdom for many hours of play. Along one side was a wood platform on which my brothers and I would unroll woven mats for an afternoon siesta. A choice corner was our indubitable supply of fighter spiders and millipiglets, captives in an empty match box until the next bug tournament. We scratched hopscotch lines with sticks in the dirt and dug holes for a game of marble djolens. We concocted potions from blackish alagao berries. 

Or we would climb onto the rattan hammock. 

From this Throne of Glory, we would swing boisterously while singing in our thin voices a maudlin song that was popular at the time. 

Or with sweet raggedness, we would belt out:

Jerusalem, Jerusalem!
Sing for the night is o'er.
Hosanna, in the highest
Hosanna forevermore!

In retrospect, I now understand my kinship with this place.

It was my guilty secret. In this private paradise I could relish the stupefying refusal of time to pass. It was as if I was caught in a never-ending multiplication of moments that was preposterously glorious. Here I could hide out for a very long time, and simply savor being on the brink of eternity and never get off. 

It was my New Jerusalem. 

My Holy Affair beside the tideless sea of my mind.


Saturday, March 11, 2017

Down The Wormhole

Childhood Tales


Enchantment begins between dusk and dark, generally after a light rain.

We tiptoe across the Room of Three Mats onto the slatted floor of the kitchen. Be sure to snag matches while the maid is not looking, Third Brother, relied upon for a successful venture, quickly cautions us.  You have the rubber bands? Eldest Brother, unchallenged leader of the troop, huskily barks the order.

We pull out a few sturdy reeds from the broomstick resting against the bathroom door. Intent upon learning the finer points of our undertaking, we huddle around while Eldest Brother wraps the rubber band across the tip of the reed. Match, please. The smell of burnt rubber make us pucker. That should be sticky enough, we solemnly pronounce.

Now we're on foot in pursuit of the backyard quarry. Stealthily but ever so gently, we draw the curtain of haze. We get engulfed within the fabric folds of space and time. We hunch over, keep still, and lie in wait. 

Finally, Clarity! 

We're peering into a wrinkle in time that has enshrined a Holy Conclave of myriad winged creatures.
Airplane Bugs screech, then land on damp loam. A pair of Praying Murmur remain poised on the willowy stalks of the wheat of grass. Four-Eyes with their strategic vision hover overhead before settling on a single blade of pandan leaf. Darning Needles congregate around the stump of carabao grass. A multitude of mythical-looking creatures fly by - their long svelte bodies skimming the unwieldy pampas.


I stealthily let out my crude harpoon, carefully quieting its swing. Then delicately reach out toward the prey - regaling at the fact that soon I will hold Infinity in the palm of my hand, and Eternity in an hour.

The Winged Bug Hunting Season has begun!

Saturday, March 4, 2017

A Not-So-Innocent Tale

Childhood Tales


March has put me in a cheery mood to emulate the writing style of some iconic writers, so for this Tale of Quasi-Innocence, be duly notified that dialect, phrases, and bits of dialogue will be liberally smouched from Twain’s delightful account of the adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Supposin’ this takes care of giving credit where credit is due.

First off, be assured that this adventure really occurred. Secondly, let me make it clear that this account serves no purpose – nuther to rashnalize an action or to plea for understanding. It is simply to remind adults of youth’s sometimes queer enterprises. Thirdly, guaranteed that you’ll find no motive in this narrative; none of a moral – or if there is one, you may reckon it yourself - and very little plot.

As you see, Third Brother and me have been sworn friends since the beginning, unlike the changing loyalties of the other brothers who in various pairings would either be pals or embattled enemies. We even managed to get the chicken pox together so that even in quarantine, we could prank our common Mortal Enemy, our spoiled Youngest Brother Number Six.

That’s how we ended up being partners in raising several pairs of breeding parakeets and selling them babies to Mistah Grouch, the ornery pet shop owner from whom we originally bought our birds. His business was booming, alright, but ours was not, for he would pay us only bottom-piso value for our colorful green, blue, and yellow chirpers.

If you gets an albino wid red eyes, I pay you most!  Better yet, he added quickly, if you gets me a speckled albino, top-piso will be a-comin’ you!
 
But we’d played along, reckoning that a small remuneration was better than being poverty-stricken all the time. We could buy chewing gum and spend the rest of the afternoon loafin’ around. For our own consolation, we devised a scheme to secretly “hook” a cuttlebone on the way out to augment our measly earning for the day. 

With a righteous huff, we’d declare, That’ll learn him to be more generous.

By and by, we always managed to get safely beyond the reach of capture and punishment. But that ain’t the wust of our scheming, as you’ll soon learn. The way this story winds up is this: Third Brother and me had cooked up a plan to trick Mistah Grouch that would fetch an awful sight of money when it was piled up.

It began that day when it was kind of lazy and jolly, and no books nor study. Third Brother and me lay off comfortable in the grass and the cool shade thinking about things, and feeling rested and ruther satisfied. Whilst we was waiting for something exciting to happen, an inspiration burst upon us.

If we gets albino chicks, we can get all creative and speckle them besides with a pentel pen.

I kid you not. After the idea struck, we didn’t lose time to lay out a plan. We’d wait out for the clutch of eggs to hatch and grow into feathered parakeets, then get on with the scheme. You see, if we get a notion in our head once, there warn’t no getting it out, regardless of what Deaconess Afrie would say about brotherly love, good works, free grace, and prefore-ordestination. To our credit, believing that our soul would be instantly destroyed once this plan comes to completion, we said good generous evening prayers that went into details list that would stretch out to the crack of doom.

How slow and still the time did drag along. Well, fer or five weeks run along, and it was time. That morning, I heard the neighbor’s rooster quiri, quiri, qui! and  knowed the day was coming.

Git up! Third Brother was all excited.

We got our vari-color chicks, then the prized albinos on whom with a pentel pen, we threw in fancy touches of speckles. We proudly eyed our creation. So fur, so good.

On the way to the store, we was so excited our hands shook. I listened to my heart thump and I reckon I din’t draw a breath while it thumped a hundred.

When all of a sudden, it began to thunder and lighten. Directly it began to rain; and it rained like all fury, too. Without as much as an old umbrella, except for a newspaper snagged from the outside of a corner tienda to shield our goods, we dashed to the pet store. We presently entered, with quickened pulses, muscles tense. We was afeared but there was no going back now. There Mistah Cranky was. I stood a-looking at him; he set there a-looking at us.

Wat you got? he said, a cautious note in his voice.

Our courage was up now, and well in hand. Thinks I, we figured we’d get paid, then be out of there as quickly as possible. He uncovered our babies. We waited. There was silence and an air of solemnity that struck a chill to our culprit’s heart - when squealing with delight, he blurted, Lookit! Such good-looking red-eyed albino babies - a little damp, but white and pure as snow!

My heart fell down amongst my lungs and livers and things. We knowed then what happened. It’s all jis’ as plain to us. There warn’t nothing to do now, but to git home.

For now, Third Brother and me figured out we didn’t want no more adventures. We counted our cash and passed by Missus Auring’s store for marshmallows. We didn’t say a word for a good while. We set down on the grass and had a long think about it. We reckoned we wouldn’t worry about it anymore but just let it go. It jest worked nobler that way.

By and by, we felt good and all washed clean of sin – thinking how near we came to being lost and going to hell. The sun beamed down upon us, like a benediction.

Sweet Holy Spirit, sweet heavenly Dove,
Stay right here with us, filling us with your love.
  





Saturday, February 25, 2017

Love's Home

Under a watchful sky, I gaze frowning at the Pacific. For the moment, the friendly hour has lost its voice. With a straight stare, I scan the waters gradually capitulating its prison walls of separation.

                               One more dawn

                               One more day

                               One day more –


I will be home. A fresh discovery of assurance comes upon me: that home is where I’ve left my heart to hang.

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Love's Tears

In my tropical island home, rain is aseasonal. Without warning, it can fall on the sunniest day – an anomaly that is both dazzling and confusing for its absurdity.

It trickles down the kuapa fishpond walls, forming a translucent curtain of crystalline thread daintily obscuring daytime's brilliance. Then it settles like a scattering of a thousand lustrous pearls on the sun-drenched philodendron and muddied earth.

This incongruent display always rouses my melancholia, for although rain is a paean to jubilation, I believe what local lore tells me - that it is the lament of separation.

Legend says that the volcano goddess fell in love with a handsome warrior and asked to marry him. When he refused because he had already pledged his love to Lehua, the goddess fell into a destructive jealous rage and turned him into a twisted tree


Taking pity on the heartbroken Lehua, the gods turned her into a flower on the tree. 

It is said that if this flower is plucked, it will rain on that day because of the lovers' anguish over the breakup.


Alas! Undoubtedly someone, perhaps unknowingly or on a whim, has plucked a flower off its lover tree, so on this sunny day, it rains. 

It is rain that gathers into a puddle, then runs off into ocean waters that separate mountains. It is the sorrow of rupture. It is the misery of rain falling in one’s heart.

It is the kind of rain that makes me cry.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

A Love Missive

If you don’t think of me in a thousand years,
I will think of you a thousand times in an hour.
- Christina Lamb

Memories can easily go by me in a blur, but there are those that have insistently grown more powerful with passing time because they have enabled me to overcome the disjunction of a seriously literal life.

Here is a litany of some of those moments. Hopefully you’ll remember and recognize yourself in them.

1.
You cried upon seeing a photo of yourself with a walrus at the zoo – because you thought you were a walrus. You said my teeth were yellow, so I got them professionally whitened, pronto! I was late going back home from school one day and was speeding, knowing that you would have arrived already from kindergarten class. All the while, I was distressed, certain that you would be wandering the streets like the tear-stained waif from Les Miserables. To my relief, I found you waiting, nonchalantly sprawled on the daisies in the front garden. I was petrified when I spotted you sharing popsicle licks with White Paw. Pawie, as you called him, was a bunny. We smelled perfumes at Smitty’s and ran after the ice cream man.

2.
You said my face was heart-shaped and my mouth was small. You compared me to a dandelion that blew where the wind would blow. We got spectacularly lost on the streets of London, but made a pact to not tell anyone about it. You often invited me on a shopping spree at Ross, but you never brought your wallet. You were mad at me one time, so you wrote a letter - my first name on the envelope - alleging that you were adopted. You said we lived on the edge of the world because of the view of a chasm and an endless sky from the bend on the road.

3.
You both laughed when I said, Bring down stuff from the car – wrong idiom! - and at my mispronunciation of Cheezwhiz. You left the crust off your chicken pot pies because you knew that I loved to eat crusts. We went through cycles of gerbils, goldfish, and bunnies – delighting in their little lives and mourning their demise in a wee graveyard marked with popsicle sticks.

4.
You’re a master humorist. I laughed even when the joke was on me – like that time when you announced that Mother’s Day had been canceled. I wanted a mink coat for Christmas. Alleging your support of non-cruelty to animals, you bought instead a faux fur one from Price Club. You surprised me with a fancy bedroom set – all oak and mirrors, and lit like a Las Vegas marquee. You let me take the only cell phone in the house when I first drove to a synagogue for my Hebrew class. The place was only seven miles away. You let me copy your answers to the Disciple class homework because I couldn’t figure out the answers to the life application questions. You cleaned our toilets because you knew that I hated doing that. On Christmas and New Year’s Eve and sundry wine parties, you’d get me Moscato or Asti Spumanti because alcohol made me incoherent. You’re goofy despite the smarts; vulnerable behind the stoic stance.



Need I say more?

You have each filled the displacements and absurdities of my life with joyful, sometimes silly, distractions. 

You have given substance to my otherwise meaningless moments. 

You have given me salvation. 

You are the memory that makes me smile.