Dear Mr.,
Wala lang. Yesterday, I was with 3 friends. We joined a run, Walk the World 2011, a fundraising event for projects of the United Nations World Food Programme.
Since we started joining runs last year, one of my friends and I somehow got a bit hooked, hoping to finish faster on the next run. The runs we would join, we told ourselves, would depend on the price (hehe) and the cause. When she saw the ad to this one, she forwarded it to us.
It was just a nice feeling to have joined and finished yesterday's 5k run. First, it was the first run of 2 of our friends. Secondly, we had been hearing about World Food in our research on the assistance received by communities after Tropical Storm Ondoy/Typhoon Pepeng hit Luzon in 2009. It felt good to know we are contributing to their projects too (particularly for the emergency school feeding program in areas in Central Mindanao).
Third, we were able to finish the run, though it took me and my friend longer to finish this time than before. With our schedules in the past weeks, and with the rainy weather, all of us were almost never able to do preparations. I also wasn't able to get enough sleep the night before, as I had to coordinate several things for two work-related activities the next day.
And last but not the least, we had fun taking photos!
So, why am I thanking you? You didn't run with us; you weren't even there to congratulate us; you didn't even know I was joining this event.
Because of you, what started as curiosity to runs/marathons, has gradually become an interest. But honestly, my interest in this still do not equal my love for research, reading, and writing, but I found it challenging, and when done with friends, fun too. I do not intend nor dream of ever being able to run long distances, the way you could. Gosh, I still can't picture myself running or even walking for more than an hour! 5 kilometers remains to be a challenge to me.
But if I didn't meet you, I can't imagine ever trying to join a fun run. Then, I wouldn't even know I can actually practice and run continuously for more than a kilometer. While I did jog, my jogs with my officemates were kinda "cute," I don't exert too much effort, and I stop quickly once I start feeling tired.
So yun, thank you. Sayang I do not have the courage, and it may not be appropriate, to let you know this. Pero salamat talaga. If I had not known it was possible for human beings to run for more than 4 hours straight, I would probably not be challenged to run for more than 10 minutes straight. Hehe.
Wala lang, whenever I would look back, I realize there are many people who come into my life ... several may not have become companions, but did leave their marks. I am happy about the mark you left, or at least the change that happened, with a few remarks of yours.
Yun lang. I hope wherever you may be, you are happy, you are successful, you are blessed.
Monday, May 30, 2011
Life: Maraming salamat!
Labels:
life,
mr.,
run,
walk the world,
world food programme
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Faith/Music: Pilgrim's Theme
I love the refrain, and the a capella rendering of this song by Hangad (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsmkpnpar_U).....
Pilgrim's Theme
Tired of weaving dreams too loose for me to wear
Tired of watching clouds repeat their dance on air
Tired of getting tied to doing what's required
Is life a mere routine in the greater scheme of things?
Through with taking roads someone else designed
Through with chasing stars that soon forget to shine
Through with going through one more day - what's new?
Does my life still mean a thing in the greater scheme of things?
REFRAIN 1:
I think I'll follow the voice that calls within
Dance to the silent song it sings
I hope to find my place
So my life can fall in place
I know in time I'll find my place
In the greater scheme of things
Each must go his way, but how can I decide?
Which path I should take, who will be my guide?
I need some kind of star to lead me somewhere far
To find a higher dream in the greater scheme of things
The road before me bends, I don't know what I'll find
Will I meet a friend or ghosts I left behind?
Should I even be surprised that You're with me in disguise?
For it's Your hand I have seen in the greater scheme of things (REFRAIN 1)
BRIDGE:
For Yours is the voice in my deepest dreams
You are the heart, the very heart
Of the greater scheme of things (REFRAIN 1)
REFRAIN 2:
Why don't we follow the voice that calls within
Dance to the silent song it sings
One day we'll find our place
For all things fall in place
For all things have a place
In the greater scheme of things
A view of the ceiling of the church in UP Diliman, a few weeks after Easter (May 2011)
Pilgrim's Theme
Tired of weaving dreams too loose for me to wear
Tired of watching clouds repeat their dance on air
Tired of getting tied to doing what's required
Is life a mere routine in the greater scheme of things?
Through with taking roads someone else designed
Through with chasing stars that soon forget to shine
Through with going through one more day - what's new?
Does my life still mean a thing in the greater scheme of things?
REFRAIN 1:
I think I'll follow the voice that calls within
Dance to the silent song it sings
I hope to find my place
So my life can fall in place
I know in time I'll find my place
In the greater scheme of things
Each must go his way, but how can I decide?
Which path I should take, who will be my guide?
I need some kind of star to lead me somewhere far
To find a higher dream in the greater scheme of things
The road before me bends, I don't know what I'll find
Will I meet a friend or ghosts I left behind?
Should I even be surprised that You're with me in disguise?
For it's Your hand I have seen in the greater scheme of things (REFRAIN 1)
BRIDGE:
For Yours is the voice in my deepest dreams
You are the heart, the very heart
Of the greater scheme of things (REFRAIN 1)
REFRAIN 2:
Why don't we follow the voice that calls within
Dance to the silent song it sings
One day we'll find our place
For all things fall in place
For all things have a place
In the greater scheme of things
A view of the ceiling of the church in UP Diliman, a few weeks after Easter (May 2011)
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Life: I am a Researcher
I woke up early today to start preparing for our fieldwork. I forced myself to get up at around 530am. We finished with the courtesy calls, meetings, discussions, and drivethroughs in our study sites in Caloocan and Valenzuela at around 6pm. I arrived at the boarding house at 7pm. It was a long, tiring, yet fun day.
This is one aspect of my work life. Let me give you a broader glimpse of what my life is like, and some of the reasons why since I graduated in 2005, I have never left the social development and research world.
I am a researcher in a research institution of a university in the Philippines. Most of the researches I have been involved in were related to urban and social development concerns.
Several times, people have asked me whether I’m happy in my job. I graduated from this university in 2005, and have been in this kind of job, and within the same campus, albeit with two employers, ever since. As a researcher, I am project-based, and thus would not become a permanent employee of the university. There are other ways of becoming one, but that would also depend on my finishing my masters thesis, and a slot for a permanent position opening up in the department I’d like to be part of.
My employers have always tried to give me the best pay they could give, given the salary grade of the university. I have quite a simple lifestyle, so my pay should have been more than enough, except that I did have other responsibilities right after I graduated. I took sidelines on top of my day job—and those helped pay the bills and other responsibilities I had, my masters tuition and fees, plus a few things to spoil myself, such as a bit of travel. But compared with some of my batchmates, I am earning less, and with no tenure security, I actually do find myself at times with financial woes.
But let me now tell you why, even with all these, I chose to stay in this kind of work. Let me share with you what my everyday is like.
As a field researcher, I can go to the office any time I choose. I don’t get paid for overtime, but that’s okay. Hawak ko ang oras ko. I own my time, and I am in control of how I spend it. Being a night person, and being someone who resists rigid structures and rules, this setup is heaven for me.
There are days, weeks, and even months, when all you’d do is read, type, and write. When you’d have to go through papers, reports, over and over and over again, looking for this or that, making sure you understood things correctly, editing the report until it is as close to perfect as you can make it.
But each project is in itself a new challenge. There’s always something new to learn, a new place to go to, new people to deal with. Another aspect of society you could know, another aspect of yourself you’d have to enhance.
Some days are hell. You’d work your butt off to meet deadlines. At times, you’d get lectures for not being able to meet standards, or just failing to deliver. But some days are light. You can work at your own pace.
When you’re in the office, you’d have time to have lunch with your officemates. Many times during the day, you can share bits of stories, and food, or simply tease each other, or provide moral support when one feels burdened by life’s many complications and even one’s workload. Most of the time, you own your evenings and can spend it with family, friends, or you can spend the night reflecting or sleeping. Or you can take graduate studies.
Our office is located in a campus sprawling several hectares. The campus’ main road is lined with big trees. There are lots of open spaces. It’s a peaceful place. You can jog when you want to. You can take a walk. You can go to the church.
In many ways, research has opened my eyes to the realities of life beyond my comfort zone, beyond what I see everyday. My understanding of social problems deepened. It has at times further ignited my hope to be of help to others. There’s always that wish that while you can’t implement programs, the research that you do will one day be used to help other communities, or at least to testify to the resilience and the good will and perseverance of urban poor communities and individuals and groups involved in social development work.
There are times, especially when I’m asked to rewrite chapters of what I have written, when I just feel down, even incompetent. If I had a white flag with me, and my boss were in front of me, I would have waved it several times already. Unfortunately, if I wanted to be a good researcher, I have to seize the opportunity to learn how to do things well. Therefore, I have not yet bought a white flag, nor started making one. During such times, honestly, I drag myself to get the report done, knowing that most likely my boss will ask me to redo parts of the report again. (Sigh!)
Going on fieldwork means being on jeans and a shirt and rubber shoes—a far cry from the corporate attire. It means going where the people are—whether that be a government office at the heart of the city or one in the less developed areas of the country, a slum area in the city, or one located near a dead river, or in an area once used as a dump site. When you have to be out there, you’d be out there—whether or not the sun is shining, stepping either on dusty roads or muddy ones, walking both on concrete roads and narrow, winding alleys, or crossing bridges, whether these be concrete or makeshift. When you’re lucky, you’ll have a van to bring you to these places. But most of the time, you’ll have to take public transport: jeepneys, buses, tricycles, bikes.
This may all sound inconvenient. But this is a life I love. I am a researcher, and (supposedly) a social scientist. The world and the people I need to understand are out there. So I have to go there. Reading about the world is so different from learning and seeing things on your own. And after every project, you realize so much more, and you feel that you are able to learn so much more than what you have shared.
At times, I do dream of the corporate life. That dream has never completely left me. I wanted to often wear a corporate attire, even a coat, walk in heels, enter one of those skyscrapers or well-known offices in Ayala or Ortigas. Just wanted to know what it’s like to be sosyal most of the time. I guess I just wanted to know what else I can do, or can be, what else life can offer.
But for now, I am happy where I am. I need to write this down first, to explain myself to those who do not understand why I keep doing what I do, and second, to remind myself of the many perks of my job.
There are many things I have not mentioned here. Many people—colleagues, acquaintances, coworkers, friends, mentors, bosses—who make my stay worthwhile.
I do remember earlier this year, during a job interview (yes, when my previous contract was about to end, I did start looking for a new job), something I told the interviewer. It was also something I repeated to my sister today. Importante sakin na araw-araw, masaya ako sa ginagawa ko. Many would think of financial security first. To me, that’s okay, especially for those who have more responsibilities than I have. But financial security is only second in my list of priorities. I know what I want to do. I’d like to wake up each morning and feel happy, knowing that I am where I wanted to be. I’d like to stay in a path I believe in, one that matches my skills and my passion, because I believe this is also where I can contribute the most and have the highest chances of succeeding. And if life ends suddenly, I have less regrets, because I simply did not invest in a good future; I, at the same time, did enjoy the present.
To the reader, whoever you are, wherever you may be, I hope that you’d also know this kind of feeling and sense of fulfillment, if not in all aspects of life, at least on those that mean the most to you.
And if you think I am able to stay where I am because I am lucky, let me tell you that many times, there was no path immediately ahead of me. But when I chose to stay and keep walking (and kept praying), paths appeared where there used to be none. At times, you'd bump into people who would help open doors of opportunities for you. I did gamble. I did risk. I did cry. I did feel like I already wanted to give up. I do at times still feel frustrated.
To quote Paulo Coelho: “Dreamers cannot be tamed.” Well, at least not too easily. So let us be dreamers. And doers. Open yourself to the blessings that are yet to come.
Stay hopeful. Stay faithful. Stay blessed.
This is one aspect of my work life. Let me give you a broader glimpse of what my life is like, and some of the reasons why since I graduated in 2005, I have never left the social development and research world.
I am a researcher in a research institution of a university in the Philippines. Most of the researches I have been involved in were related to urban and social development concerns.
Several times, people have asked me whether I’m happy in my job. I graduated from this university in 2005, and have been in this kind of job, and within the same campus, albeit with two employers, ever since. As a researcher, I am project-based, and thus would not become a permanent employee of the university. There are other ways of becoming one, but that would also depend on my finishing my masters thesis, and a slot for a permanent position opening up in the department I’d like to be part of.
My employers have always tried to give me the best pay they could give, given the salary grade of the university. I have quite a simple lifestyle, so my pay should have been more than enough, except that I did have other responsibilities right after I graduated. I took sidelines on top of my day job—and those helped pay the bills and other responsibilities I had, my masters tuition and fees, plus a few things to spoil myself, such as a bit of travel. But compared with some of my batchmates, I am earning less, and with no tenure security, I actually do find myself at times with financial woes.
But let me now tell you why, even with all these, I chose to stay in this kind of work. Let me share with you what my everyday is like.
As a field researcher, I can go to the office any time I choose. I don’t get paid for overtime, but that’s okay. Hawak ko ang oras ko. I own my time, and I am in control of how I spend it. Being a night person, and being someone who resists rigid structures and rules, this setup is heaven for me.
There are days, weeks, and even months, when all you’d do is read, type, and write. When you’d have to go through papers, reports, over and over and over again, looking for this or that, making sure you understood things correctly, editing the report until it is as close to perfect as you can make it.
But each project is in itself a new challenge. There’s always something new to learn, a new place to go to, new people to deal with. Another aspect of society you could know, another aspect of yourself you’d have to enhance.
Some days are hell. You’d work your butt off to meet deadlines. At times, you’d get lectures for not being able to meet standards, or just failing to deliver. But some days are light. You can work at your own pace.
When you’re in the office, you’d have time to have lunch with your officemates. Many times during the day, you can share bits of stories, and food, or simply tease each other, or provide moral support when one feels burdened by life’s many complications and even one’s workload. Most of the time, you own your evenings and can spend it with family, friends, or you can spend the night reflecting or sleeping. Or you can take graduate studies.
Our office is located in a campus sprawling several hectares. The campus’ main road is lined with big trees. There are lots of open spaces. It’s a peaceful place. You can jog when you want to. You can take a walk. You can go to the church.
In many ways, research has opened my eyes to the realities of life beyond my comfort zone, beyond what I see everyday. My understanding of social problems deepened. It has at times further ignited my hope to be of help to others. There’s always that wish that while you can’t implement programs, the research that you do will one day be used to help other communities, or at least to testify to the resilience and the good will and perseverance of urban poor communities and individuals and groups involved in social development work.
There are times, especially when I’m asked to rewrite chapters of what I have written, when I just feel down, even incompetent. If I had a white flag with me, and my boss were in front of me, I would have waved it several times already. Unfortunately, if I wanted to be a good researcher, I have to seize the opportunity to learn how to do things well. Therefore, I have not yet bought a white flag, nor started making one. During such times, honestly, I drag myself to get the report done, knowing that most likely my boss will ask me to redo parts of the report again. (Sigh!)
Going on fieldwork means being on jeans and a shirt and rubber shoes—a far cry from the corporate attire. It means going where the people are—whether that be a government office at the heart of the city or one in the less developed areas of the country, a slum area in the city, or one located near a dead river, or in an area once used as a dump site. When you have to be out there, you’d be out there—whether or not the sun is shining, stepping either on dusty roads or muddy ones, walking both on concrete roads and narrow, winding alleys, or crossing bridges, whether these be concrete or makeshift. When you’re lucky, you’ll have a van to bring you to these places. But most of the time, you’ll have to take public transport: jeepneys, buses, tricycles, bikes.
This may all sound inconvenient. But this is a life I love. I am a researcher, and (supposedly) a social scientist. The world and the people I need to understand are out there. So I have to go there. Reading about the world is so different from learning and seeing things on your own. And after every project, you realize so much more, and you feel that you are able to learn so much more than what you have shared.
At times, I do dream of the corporate life. That dream has never completely left me. I wanted to often wear a corporate attire, even a coat, walk in heels, enter one of those skyscrapers or well-known offices in Ayala or Ortigas. Just wanted to know what it’s like to be sosyal most of the time. I guess I just wanted to know what else I can do, or can be, what else life can offer.
But for now, I am happy where I am. I need to write this down first, to explain myself to those who do not understand why I keep doing what I do, and second, to remind myself of the many perks of my job.
There are many things I have not mentioned here. Many people—colleagues, acquaintances, coworkers, friends, mentors, bosses—who make my stay worthwhile.
I do remember earlier this year, during a job interview (yes, when my previous contract was about to end, I did start looking for a new job), something I told the interviewer. It was also something I repeated to my sister today. Importante sakin na araw-araw, masaya ako sa ginagawa ko. Many would think of financial security first. To me, that’s okay, especially for those who have more responsibilities than I have. But financial security is only second in my list of priorities. I know what I want to do. I’d like to wake up each morning and feel happy, knowing that I am where I wanted to be. I’d like to stay in a path I believe in, one that matches my skills and my passion, because I believe this is also where I can contribute the most and have the highest chances of succeeding. And if life ends suddenly, I have less regrets, because I simply did not invest in a good future; I, at the same time, did enjoy the present.
To the reader, whoever you are, wherever you may be, I hope that you’d also know this kind of feeling and sense of fulfillment, if not in all aspects of life, at least on those that mean the most to you.
And if you think I am able to stay where I am because I am lucky, let me tell you that many times, there was no path immediately ahead of me. But when I chose to stay and keep walking (and kept praying), paths appeared where there used to be none. At times, you'd bump into people who would help open doors of opportunities for you. I did gamble. I did risk. I did cry. I did feel like I already wanted to give up. I do at times still feel frustrated.
To quote Paulo Coelho: “Dreamers cannot be tamed.” Well, at least not too easily. So let us be dreamers. And doers. Open yourself to the blessings that are yet to come.
Stay hopeful. Stay faithful. Stay blessed.
Sunday, May 1, 2011
Bohol: Cathedral of St. Joseph and the Plaza
1 May 2011
I'm at home. It's a hot, listless afternoon. I wanted to sleep, but the file I had to upload and send is taking forever to be uploaded.
So while waiting, let me share with you another part of our visit in Bohol last February. Another favorite.
On our last day in Bohol, we decided to visit the church in Tagbilaran. We couldn't go too far from the city as we need to be at the airport before noon.
We entered the Cathedral of St. Joseph. It was a big church, and also quite old. A sign placed by the National Historical Commission says that the original church was built by the Jesuits on this site in the 1500s.
After saying a short prayer, we went around the church for a while, then walked to the plaza right across the cathedral. It was still early when we got there, and a few people were sitting at the benches at the sides of the plaza. On one end of the plaza is a gazebo. The gazebo, to my surprise, was filled with doves. Doves were flying around the plaza. I find this an unusual site--to see doves flocking in places where humans also are.
Amused by such a sight, my friend and I took photos. Then, a mother decided to feed the doves, who immediately flocked at her feet and around her children.
Later on, my friend and I sat on one of the benches. I bought two pandesal from a nearby store. We then fed the doves, who gathered close to our feet, stayed on the bench next to us, and came as close as the armrest of the bench we were sitting on.
That made my day. I love animals, and I love the fact that these doves felt safe in this place.
I'm at home. It's a hot, listless afternoon. I wanted to sleep, but the file I had to upload and send is taking forever to be uploaded.
So while waiting, let me share with you another part of our visit in Bohol last February. Another favorite.
On our last day in Bohol, we decided to visit the church in Tagbilaran. We couldn't go too far from the city as we need to be at the airport before noon.
We entered the Cathedral of St. Joseph. It was a big church, and also quite old. A sign placed by the National Historical Commission says that the original church was built by the Jesuits on this site in the 1500s.
After saying a short prayer, we went around the church for a while, then walked to the plaza right across the cathedral. It was still early when we got there, and a few people were sitting at the benches at the sides of the plaza. On one end of the plaza is a gazebo. The gazebo, to my surprise, was filled with doves. Doves were flying around the plaza. I find this an unusual site--to see doves flocking in places where humans also are.
Amused by such a sight, my friend and I took photos. Then, a mother decided to feed the doves, who immediately flocked at her feet and around her children.
Later on, my friend and I sat on one of the benches. I bought two pandesal from a nearby store. We then fed the doves, who gathered close to our feet, stayed on the bench next to us, and came as close as the armrest of the bench we were sitting on.
That made my day. I love animals, and I love the fact that these doves felt safe in this place.
Life: A Pilgrim on Another Journey
30 April 2011
Ok. This is my second entry on dying.
The other day, I was worried about being very ill that I cried.
The day after that (if I remember it correctly), I borrowed a book, Like a Flowing River by Paulo Coelho. It contained short stories and essays. One of them was on death. Below are some parts from two of the short stories.
“People do not think very much about death. They spend their life worrying about absurdities; they put things off, and fail to notice important moments. They don’t take risks, because they think it’s dangerous. They complain a lot, but are afraid to take action. They want everything to change, but they themselves refuse to change.
If they thought a little more about death, they would never forget to make that much-postponed phone call. They would be a little crazier. They would not be afraid of this incarnation coming to an end because you cannot fear something that is going to happen anyway.
The Indians say: ‘Today is as good a day as any to leave this world. And a wise man once said: ‘Death is always sitting by your side so that, when you need to do something important, it will give you the strength and the courage that you need.’
I hope that you, dear reader, have got this far. It would be foolish to be frightened by death, because all of us, sooner or later, are going to die. And only those who accept this fact are prepared for life.”
“I know it’s not a topic anyone likes to think about, but I have a duty to my readers – to make them think about the important things in life. And death is possibly the most important thing. We are all walking towards death, but we never know when death will touch us and it is our duty, therefore, to look around us, to be grateful for each minute. But we should also be grateful to death, because it makes us think about the importance of each decision we take, or fail to take; it makes us stop doing anything that keeps us stuck in the category of the ‘living dead’ and, instead, urges us to risk everything, to bet everything on those things we always dreamed of doing, because, whether we like it or not, the angel of death is waiting for us.”
--- Like the Flowing River, Paulo Coelho
I felt like I was being reassured by God that things will be alright. Life ends. That’s a fact everyone has to live with.
In my previous entry, I wrote that I am happy with where I am and the things I have done. I will not describe my life as adventurous. It may actually appear boring and plain to many. It was simple, quiet, content in many ways. It was filled with pain and fear, but also peace and contentment that I rarely spoke of, but manifested itself in the way I lived my life. While parts of it had been too “safe” as I had deliberately avoided risks, others showed my resilience, my determination to pursue some of my dreams.
While I have not always been an expressive person, I tried to show my love and concern through my actions. As such, my love has been, for much of my life, lived but unspoken. And it was not demonstrated through hugs or kisses, although I have been trying to do more of both. My love is expressed in my trying to shield people from more pain, in trying to provide for others’ needs, in listening, in giving advices. I loved, but not in ways many would recognize as expressions of love. I show my love through those things I do best. I am now trying to be a bit bit more expressive, though that will take time. But I will keep on trying. It’s worth the effort.
Now, with one of my biggest goals achieved, which was keeping a promise I made to my family and myself after college, I told myself it is time to focus more on my life. I sometimes look back at life, and try to see what I had missed and can still do or make up for. I also try to imagine the future, and the kind of life I wanted to give to myself. In between these, I try to remain conscious of the opportunities that the present offers.
And while I continue to get a bit more excited about life, I have also become more aware of death. Soon, I’d like to start making my last will and testament. Right now, I have no treasures to pass on, hehe. But I was quite worried about what would happen to my journals and diaries! I was also thinking about my funeral photo. I think I ought to choose one now, one where I really looked good. Yes, I know I’m being vain but I’d like to look pretty till the end. :P
I thought about where I wanted my books, clothes, and other belongings to go. They aren’t many, but I’d like them to go to a worthy cause.
And I thought of the people who had made a big impact in my life and the people I love. I wanted to start making letters for them. There is so much love and gratitude, though shown, were left unsaid. I would like to put them into words. On days when they feel down and discouraged, I just hope they would open the letter and feel that their life meant a lot, it saved or inspired someone—me. On days when they just feel unloved, I wanted the letter to remind them that someone had appreciated who they are and the things they did.
I’d like my ashes to be carried by the waves and the wind. I’d like to travel to places I’ve never been to, and even those I never knew existed. But more than this, I’d like my departure to symbolize something I held dearly---remaining free … to dream, to live as I believed, to follow my heart. Breaking free from past hurts and failures. Free to start all over again.
The end will also be a beginning. I shall be a pilgrim on another journey.
Ok. This is my second entry on dying.
The other day, I was worried about being very ill that I cried.
The day after that (if I remember it correctly), I borrowed a book, Like a Flowing River by Paulo Coelho. It contained short stories and essays. One of them was on death. Below are some parts from two of the short stories.
“People do not think very much about death. They spend their life worrying about absurdities; they put things off, and fail to notice important moments. They don’t take risks, because they think it’s dangerous. They complain a lot, but are afraid to take action. They want everything to change, but they themselves refuse to change.
If they thought a little more about death, they would never forget to make that much-postponed phone call. They would be a little crazier. They would not be afraid of this incarnation coming to an end because you cannot fear something that is going to happen anyway.
The Indians say: ‘Today is as good a day as any to leave this world. And a wise man once said: ‘Death is always sitting by your side so that, when you need to do something important, it will give you the strength and the courage that you need.’
I hope that you, dear reader, have got this far. It would be foolish to be frightened by death, because all of us, sooner or later, are going to die. And only those who accept this fact are prepared for life.”
“I know it’s not a topic anyone likes to think about, but I have a duty to my readers – to make them think about the important things in life. And death is possibly the most important thing. We are all walking towards death, but we never know when death will touch us and it is our duty, therefore, to look around us, to be grateful for each minute. But we should also be grateful to death, because it makes us think about the importance of each decision we take, or fail to take; it makes us stop doing anything that keeps us stuck in the category of the ‘living dead’ and, instead, urges us to risk everything, to bet everything on those things we always dreamed of doing, because, whether we like it or not, the angel of death is waiting for us.”
--- Like the Flowing River, Paulo Coelho
I felt like I was being reassured by God that things will be alright. Life ends. That’s a fact everyone has to live with.
In my previous entry, I wrote that I am happy with where I am and the things I have done. I will not describe my life as adventurous. It may actually appear boring and plain to many. It was simple, quiet, content in many ways. It was filled with pain and fear, but also peace and contentment that I rarely spoke of, but manifested itself in the way I lived my life. While parts of it had been too “safe” as I had deliberately avoided risks, others showed my resilience, my determination to pursue some of my dreams.
While I have not always been an expressive person, I tried to show my love and concern through my actions. As such, my love has been, for much of my life, lived but unspoken. And it was not demonstrated through hugs or kisses, although I have been trying to do more of both. My love is expressed in my trying to shield people from more pain, in trying to provide for others’ needs, in listening, in giving advices. I loved, but not in ways many would recognize as expressions of love. I show my love through those things I do best. I am now trying to be a bit bit more expressive, though that will take time. But I will keep on trying. It’s worth the effort.
Now, with one of my biggest goals achieved, which was keeping a promise I made to my family and myself after college, I told myself it is time to focus more on my life. I sometimes look back at life, and try to see what I had missed and can still do or make up for. I also try to imagine the future, and the kind of life I wanted to give to myself. In between these, I try to remain conscious of the opportunities that the present offers.
And while I continue to get a bit more excited about life, I have also become more aware of death. Soon, I’d like to start making my last will and testament. Right now, I have no treasures to pass on, hehe. But I was quite worried about what would happen to my journals and diaries! I was also thinking about my funeral photo. I think I ought to choose one now, one where I really looked good. Yes, I know I’m being vain but I’d like to look pretty till the end. :P
I thought about where I wanted my books, clothes, and other belongings to go. They aren’t many, but I’d like them to go to a worthy cause.
And I thought of the people who had made a big impact in my life and the people I love. I wanted to start making letters for them. There is so much love and gratitude, though shown, were left unsaid. I would like to put them into words. On days when they feel down and discouraged, I just hope they would open the letter and feel that their life meant a lot, it saved or inspired someone—me. On days when they just feel unloved, I wanted the letter to remind them that someone had appreciated who they are and the things they did.
I’d like my ashes to be carried by the waves and the wind. I’d like to travel to places I’ve never been to, and even those I never knew existed. But more than this, I’d like my departure to symbolize something I held dearly---remaining free … to dream, to live as I believed, to follow my heart. Breaking free from past hurts and failures. Free to start all over again.
The end will also be a beginning. I shall be a pilgrim on another journey.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)