That Thursday morning, I went to their soon-to-be former home with a couple of my own househelp ready to pack. I surveyed their area married for barely three years and already so much stuff accumulated. Many of the items were unused wedding gifts in their original boxes, while others were personal purchases. Breakables, a heavy dresser, a much heavier bed, a three-storey apartment... I move furniture every time, its my therapy but I had to be realistic here. I thought we needed professional movers so, I let my fingers do the walking...
I probably called six companies to compare prices. They offered full service. Thats packing, moving and unpacking. All said they had to survey the apartment first to know the volume of stuff to be moved. They measured them either per piece or per cubic meter. I set the appointment that afternoon my inaanaks lease was expiring in a couple of days. Three companies couldnt send people that afternoon; one company didnt show up while two surveyors managed to come. That trimmed down my choices to two. Their estimates were almost the same and each haggled to underbid the other. Of course, the contract went to the lowest bidder. We agreed to move on a Saturday. Better that the couple would be home so I could now sit and direct.
A day before the scheduled move, the elderly mother of my inaanak called to say that the eighth of day of the month was not a good time to change home. It was the last quarter of the month and the new moon phase was going to be on the 11th. So we changed our plans of the date to the 11th. Then came another frantic call that there was going to be a solar eclipse on the 11th... not a good time to move either. So how about the 12th? I was scheduled to go on a medical checkup. They were faced with a dilemma. It was out of that dilemma of tradition and superstition versus convenience. The latter won. "Our fate is in our hands," they concluded. No new moon could influence their luck. Besides, the eighth is always a good day, they tried to convince themselves, the stroke of eight goes up.
That Saturday, I was there promptly at 8. The movers arrived on the dot with boxes, packing tapes, corrugated boards and bubble wraps. There were five packers and an additional six movers. Two trucks were on standby. We were an organized lot.
In the middle of the organized chaos, one packer lifted the bubble wrap high that he hit a chandelier breaking three glasses. As the contract stipulated they were liable for damages caused by negligence, so immediately, this packer was sent out to find the right replacements. But the job went on with four professional packers and four others that were not.
When the last item was wrapped and all the boxes were labeled carefully, we were ready to haul. A supervisor was beside the truck counting the boxes being hoisted. I assigned one of our people to make our own inventory for check and balance. Then, we were ready to roll.
Arriving and unloading, we re-checked our inventory as the boxes were brought down from the trucks. We went on the reverse now. Everything we packed we unpacked again. Because the boxes were properly labeled, the movers knew exactly where to put them down. They positioned the furniture where we wanted them. Some of the furniture that needed disassembling, they assembled again. The books were set in the bookshelf as the movers saw it in the apartment, including the little candles that would adorn the house. The plates, they carefully arranged in the cupboards, the pots and pans in the kitchen cabinet. When all the boxes were emptied, the haulers cleaned up their trash and left after a hard days work. All in all, the move was done in 14 hours and 32 minutes.
I remember that years ago I went through hauling furniture from Manila to Zamboanga City to bring to Tawi-Tawi. If not for Beng of the Sakaluran clan of Zamboanga, Id never have gotten them intact and on time to my favorite island. When indecisions arose, the reverse was undertaken. The furniture was shipped back to Zamboanga. Unable to find a warehouse to accommodate them, my cousin Raul stored them in his ice plant inside giant walk-in freezers. The sight of antique beds, lamps, chairs inside freezers was hilarious.