Could we be slaves of our homes? This question enters my mind. Many women may at some point have had the same thoughts "We wouldnt be worrisome if we had fewer times."
Closing another shutter I say to myself: Goodbye to my yellow sunflowers, the purple and orange bouganvillas and tall green twigs picked from a jungle like garden all in the usual crystal pitcher Ive used as my flower vase for years. The sunflowers and orange suntan are now turning color black-gray as they begin to droop. Goodbye to my beautiful view of the mighty mountains that seem almost reachable. Its so beautiful, it makes me sad and brings flashbacks. I recall the PMA 83 mommies sitting on my flower-printed cushions. Agnes, Arlene and Jane asking their teen daughters, "Where do you want to go?" and threatening their sons "Eat or no pasyal." Am I glad my children are all grown up.
On the landing steps I can actually hear Lulu, my friend and secretary, "Pang laundry ba ito?" On another evening, I remember Atty. Ruben fanning himself in the living room perspiring that cold evening saying, "Its hot in the room." Because hed been sleeping by the wall behind the brick fireplace. Then I can see Baby Antonio holding her dryer, "Is this plug 220 or 110?" "Dont," Lito Juliano says, "our cell phones are still plugged," coming in from the outside after smoking a cigarette. No one is allowed to smoke inside the house.
But the serene days can produce some naggings. "Robert! The fireplace is stuck. The sala is full of black smoke." "Bakit pundido itong ilaw?" "Hiramin natin ang hagdanan ng kapitbahay." We even get to use the ladder to trim the tall intertwining plants.
As children wed drive to the last lap of the zigzag where my grandma Lucias sister Tita Moning made us wait with her to welcome her husband Tito Mandy as he ascended upward into view from the zigzag. Always with his camera on hand hed record another safe trip up.
For many, Baguio is their parents very special mountain resort, where they first met as teens during summertime and became a couple spending their honeymoon there. My brain is overflowing with memories interrupted by the aircrafts that shutter my thoughts with their roaring sounds. You see, I live beside the airport.
This tiny eatery is where the waitresses are excused from all sophistication and are allowed to shout across the main highway at Jeazels Eatery "bagong sangin nga." This whole row of canteens is owned by relatives who have became competitors. Any canteen here is a very far cry from the cafes where the Fitzgeralds or the Hemingways wrote their own pieces, but its very Filipino.
By the side of Baguios Loakan Airport, on an early morning stroll, I saw soldiers vigilant around the airport area. President Gloria was in the city and security was tight. Some soldiers were lying in hammocks tied to pine trees. Yes, more pine trees are finally growing, but Baguio still doesnt smell the way it used to. Some hammocks with soldiers on them were tied between two tanks. Thats the way the soldiers slept under the dark night instead of sleeping on the ground sprinkled with dew. I saw another bunch chatting around a bonfire to keep them warm from the biting Baguio air. A group of these soldiers was either tasked to guard the presidential plane or augment security measures for our President, away from their families during the holiday season just like they have always been.
Doctors and nurses are always dear to us. I do not have the statistics but I would not be surprised if emergency cases were higher during this holiday season. From the stress alone, instances of hypertension attacks could have risen! We met relatives and friends and everybody seemed to have a cold, a cough, a sore throat or an asthma attack candidates for a doctors visit.
Tricie and Louie Sisons cook went up to Baguio with them to bake the turkey for their traditional December 29th lunch. Their guests for the past years have been Zita Feliciano, Lorna Laurel, Ronnie Concepcion, Lourdes Montinola, Rico Agcaoili, Maxi and Cristy Ilusorio, Helen Small, Adrian and Millette Ocampo, Ben Cabrera and Annie, OV and Marilen Espiritu, Tatti Licuanan, Ambassador Isabel Wilson and more wonderful friends of many years ago.
I know my maids stayed home to wrap more gifts and pick up crumpled gift wrappers on the floor. Two drivers, Mang Ben and Frank (I have to mention their names, theyre going to read this), remained delivering the gifts, from Quezon City to Alabang and it seemed like they werent going to come home until midnight. That required patience amid the Christmas traffic.
It is in the nature of some peoples jobs to be away from their families during the holiday season by force of circumstances or by choice. Resigned to their fate? Well, if they have complaints, they dont show it. Or in sweet revenge, they dont show up ever again after the holiday season!