Friday, February 18, 2011

The New Yorker in Tondo

The New Yorker in Tondo : A Satiric Comedy Play

"New Yorker in Tondo" is a classic Filipino Play by Marcelino Agana, Jr. It is a satire written in the 50's. It is a story about a girl named Kikay who goes to New York and fell in love with it. She acquires all the New Yorkish things - style, looks, language and manners. These things are very obvious when she arrives in the Philippines specifically in Tondo.

Aling Atang, mother of Kikay, has been carried away by her daughters way of living. She tries to converse with everybody in broken English.

Tony, childhood sweetheart of Kikay, decides to visit and catch things up with her friend. He is a simple guy who got secretly engaged with their other childhood friend, Nena.

Nena is a tomboyish type of girl. On her visit in Kikay's house, she finds her friend different and weird. She gets irritated and even imitates Kikay's ways.

Totoy, the Tondo "canto boy" is their other friend who is funny and has a secret love for Nenan which has only been revealded when the two females had a clash.

Near the end, the secret love of the characters in the story is revealded. And the two pairs end up in each other's arms. Kikay is back to her old self -- simple and kind. Most of all, the Filipino value learned by the protagonist which is "there is no place like home", is a lesson on love of country and its culture.

ANOTHER INVITATION TO THE POPE TO VISIT TONDO (EmManuel TorRes)

ANOTHER INVITATION TO THE POPE TO VISIT TONDO (EmManuel TorRes)

Next time your Holiness slums through our lives,
we will try to make our poverty exemplary.
The best is a typhoon month. It never fails
To find us, like charity, knocking on
all sides of the rough arrangements we thrive in.
Mud shall be plenty for the feet of the pious.

We will show uoi how we pull things together
from nowhere, life after life,
prosper with children, whom you love. To be sure,
we shall have more for you to love.

We will show you where the sun leaks on
our sleep,
on the dailiness of piece meals and wages
with their habit of slipping away
from fists that have holes for pockets.

We will show you our latest child with a sore
that never sleeps. When he cries,
the dogs of the afternoon bark without stopping,
and evening darkens early on the mats.

Stay for supper of turnips on our table
since 1946 swollen with the same hard tears.
The buntings over our one and only window
shall welcome a short breeze.

And lead prayers for the family that starves
and stays together. If we wear roasries round
our nexks
it is not because they never bruise our fingers,
(Pardon if we doze on a dream of Amen.)

But remember to remember to reward us
with something . . . more lush, greener than all
the lawns of memorial parks singing together.
Our eyes shall belss the liveliness of dollars.

Shed no tears, please, for the brown multitudes
who thicken on chance and feast on leftovers
as the burning garbage smuts the sky of Manila
pile after pile after pile.

Fear not. Now there are only surreal assassins
about who dream of your death in the shape
of a flowering kris.
May Day Eve
By Nick Joaquin
The old people had ordered that the dancing should stop at ten o’clock but it was almost midnight before the carriages came filing up the departing guests, while the girls who were staying were promptly herded upstairs to the bedrooms, the young men gathering around to wish them a good night and lamenting their ascent with mock signs and moaning, proclaiming themselves disconsolate but straightway going off to finish the punch and the brandy though they were quite drunk already and simply bursting with wild spirits, merriment, arrogance and audacity, for they were young bucks newly arrived from Europe; the ball had been in their honor; and they had waltzed and polka-ed and bragged and swaggered and flirted all night and where in no mood to sleep yet--no, caramba, not on this moist tropic eve! not on this mystic May eve! --with the night still young and so seductive that it was madness not to go out, not to go forth---and serenade the neighbors! cried one; and swim in the Pasid! cried another; and gather fireflies! cried a third—whereupon there arose a great clamor for coats and capes, for hats and canes, and they were a couple of street-lamps flickered and a last carriage rattled away upon the cobbles while the blind black houses muttered hush-hush, their tile roofs looming like sinister chessboards against a wile sky murky with clouds, save where an evil young moon prowled about in a corner or where a murderous wind whirled, whistling and whining, smelling now of the sea and now of the summer orchards and wafting unbearable childhood fragrances or ripe guavas to the young men trooping so uproariously down the street that the girls who were desiring upstairs in the bedrooms catered screaming to the windows, crowded giggling at the windows, but were soon sighing amorously over those young men bawling below; over those wicked young men and their handsome apparel, their proud flashing eyes, and their elegant mustaches so black and vivid in the moonlight that the girls were quite ravished with love, and began crying to one another how carefree were men but how awful to be a girl and what a horrid, horrid world it was, till old Anastasia plucked them off by the ear or the pigtail and chases them off to bed---while from up the street came the clackety-clack of the watchman’s boots on the cobble and the clang-clang of his lantern against his knee, and the mighty roll of his great voice booming through the night, "Guardia serno-o-o! A las doce han dado-o-o.
And it was May again, said the old Anastasia. It was the first day of May and witches were abroad in the night, she said--for it was a night of divination, and night of lovers, and those who cared might peer into a mirror and would there behold the face of whoever it was they were fated to marry, said the old Anastasia as she hobble about picking up the piled crinolines and folding up shawls and raking slippers in corner while the girls climbing into four great poster-beds that overwhelmed the room began shrieking with terror, scrambling over each other and imploring the old woman not to frighten them.
"Enough, enough, Anastasia! We want to sleep!"
"Go scare the boys instead, you old witch!"
"She is not a witch, she is a maga. She is a maga. She was born of Christmas Eve!"
"St. Anastasia, virgin and martyr."
"Huh? Impossible! She has conquered seven husbands! Are you a virgin, Anastasia?"
"No, but I am seven times a martyr because of you girls!"
"Let her prophesy, let her prophesy! Whom will I marry, old gypsy? Come, tell me."
"You may learn in a mirror if you are not afraid."
"I am not afraid, I will go," cried the young cousin Agueda, jumping up in bed.
"Girls, girls---we are making too much noise! My mother will hear and will come and pinch us all. Agueda, lie down! And you Anastasia, I command you to shut your mouth and go away!""Your mother told me to stay here all night, my grand lady!"
"And I will not lie down!" cried the rebellious Agueda, leaping to the floor. "Stay, old woman. Tell me what I have to do."
"Tell her! Tell her!" chimed the other girls.
The old woman dropped the clothes she had gathered and approached and fixed her eyes on the girl. "You must take a candle," she instructed, "and go into a room that is dark and that has a mirror in it and you must be alone in the room. Go up to the mirror and close your eyes and shy:
Mirror, mirror, show to me him whose woman I will be. If all goes right, just above your left shoulder will appear the face of the man you will marry." A silence. Then: "And hat if all does not go right?" asked Agueda. "Ah, then the Lord have mercy on you!" "Why." "Because you may see--the Devil!"
The girls screamed and clutched one another, shivering. "But what nonsense!" cried Agueda. "This is the year 1847. There are no devil anymore!" Nevertheless she had turned pale. "But where could I go, hugh? Yes, I know! Down to the sala. It has that big mirror and no one is there now." "No, Agueda, no! It is a mortal sin! You will see the devil!" "I do not care! I am not afraid! I will go!" "Oh, you wicked girl! Oh, you mad girl!" "If you do not come to bed, Agueda, I will call my mother." "And if you do I will tell her who came to visit you at the convent last March. Come, old woman---give me that candle. I go." "Oh girls---give me that candle, I go."
But Agueda had already slipped outside; was already tiptoeing across the hall; her feet bare and her dark hair falling down her shoulders and streaming in the wind as she fled down the stairs, the lighted candle sputtering in one hand while with the other she pulled up her white gown from her ankles. She paused breathless in the doorway to the sala and her heart failed her. She tried to imagine the room filled again with lights, laughter, whirling couples, and the jolly jerky music of the fiddlers. But, oh, it was a dark den, a weird cavern for the windows had been closed and the furniture stacked up against the walls. She crossed herself and stepped inside.
The mirror hung on the wall before her; a big antique mirror with a gold frame carved into leaves and flowers and mysterious curlicues. She saw herself approaching fearfully in it: a small while ghost that the darkness bodied forth---but not willingly, not completely, for her eyes and hair were so dark that the face approaching in the mirror seemed only a mask that floated forward; a bright mask with two holes gaping in it, blown forward by the white cloud of her gown. But when she stood before the mirror she lifted the candle level with her chin and the dead mask bloomed into her living face.
She closed her eyes and whispered the incantation. When she had finished such a terror took hold of her that she felt unable to move, unable to open her eyes and thought she would stand there forever, enchanted. But she heard a step behind her, and a smothered giggle, and instantly opened her eyes.
"And what did you see, Mama? Oh, what was it?" But Dona Agueda had forgotten the little girl on her lap: she was staring pass the curly head nestling at her breast and seeing herself in the big mirror hanging in the room. It was the same room and the same mirror out the face she now saw in it was an old face---a hard, bitter, vengeful face, framed in graying hair, and so sadly altered, so sadly different from that other face like a white mask, that fresh young face like a pure mask than she had brought before this mirror one wild May Day midnight years and years ago.... "But what was it Mama? Oh please go on! What did you see?" Dona Agueda looked down at her daughter but her face did not soften though her eyes filled with tears. "I saw the devil." she said bitterly. The child blanched. "The devil, Mama? Oh... Oh..." "Yes, my love. I opened my eyes and there in the mirror, smiling at me over my left shoulder, was the face of the devil." "Oh, my poor little Mama! And were you very frightened?" "You can imagine. And that is why good little girls do not look into mirrors except when their mothers tell them. You must stop this naughty habit, darling, of admiring yourself in every mirror you pass- or you may see something frightful some day." "But the devil, Mama---what did he look like?" "Well, let me see... he has curly hair and a scar on his cheek---" "Like the scar of Papa?" "Well, yes. But this of the devil was a scar of sin, while that of your Papa is a scar of honor. Or so he says." "Go on about the devil." "Well, he had mustaches." "Like those of Papa?" "Oh, no. Those of your Papa are dirty and graying and smell horribly of tobacco, while these of the devil were very black and elegant--oh, how elegant!" "And did he speak to you, Mama?" "Yes… Yes, he spoke to me," said Dona Agueda. And bowing her graying head; she wept.
"Charms like yours have no need for a candle, fair one," he had said, smiling at her in the mirror and stepping back to give her a low mocking bow. She had whirled around and glared at him and he had burst into laughter. "But I remember you!" he cried. "You are Agueda, whom I left a mere infant and came home to find a tremendous beauty, and I danced a waltz with you but you would not give me the polka." "Let me pass," she muttered fiercely, for he was barring the way. "But I want to dance the polka with you, fair one," he said. So they stood before the mirror; their panting breath the only sound in the dark room; the candle shining between them and flinging their shadows to the wall. And young Badoy Montiya (who had crept home very drunk to pass out quietly in bed) suddenly found himself cold sober and very much awake and ready for anything. His eyes sparkled and the scar on his face gleamed scarlet. "Let me pass!" she cried again, in a voice of fury, but he grasped her by the wrist. "No," he smiled. "Not until we have danced." "Go to the devil!" "What a temper has my serrana!" "I am not your serrana!" "Whose, then? Someone I know? Someone I have offended grievously? Because you treat me, you treat all my friends like your mortal enemies." "And why not?" she demanded, jerking her wrist away and flashing her teeth in his face. "Oh, how I detest you, you pompous young men! You go to Europe and you come back elegant lords and we poor girls are too tame to please you. We have no grace like the Parisiennes, we have no fire like the Sevillians, and we have no salt, no salt, no salt! Aie, how you weary me, how you bore me, you fastidious men!" "Come, come---how do you know about us?"
"I was not admiring myself, sir!" "You were admiring the moon perhaps?" "Oh!" she gasped, and burst into tears. The candle dropped from her hand and she covered her face and sobbed piteously. The candle had gone out and they stood in darkness, and young Badoy was conscience-stricken. "Oh, do not cry, little one!" Oh, please forgive me! Please do not cry! But what a brute I am! I was drunk, little one, I was drunk and knew not what I said." He groped and found her hand and touched it to his lips. She shuddered in her white gown. "Let me go," she moaned, and tugged feebly. "No. Say you forgive me first. Say you forgive me, Agueda." But instead she pulled his hand to her mouth and bit it - bit so sharply in the knuckles that he cried with pain and lashed cut with his other hand--lashed out and hit the air, for she was gone, she had fled, and he heard the rustling of her skirts up the stairs as he furiously sucked his bleeding fingers. Cruel thoughts raced through his head: he would go and tell his mother and make her turn the savage girl out of the house--or he would go himself to the girl’s room and drag her out of bed and slap, slap, slap her silly face! But at the same time he was thinking that they were all going to Antipolo in the morning and was already planning how he would maneuver himself into the same boat with her. Oh, he would have his revenge, he would make her pay, that little harlot! She should suffer for this, he thought greedily, licking his bleeding knuckles. But---Judas! He remembered her bare shoulders: gold in her candlelight and delicately furred. He saw the mobile insolence of her neck, and her taut breasts steady in the fluid gown. Son of a Turk, but she was quite enchanting! How could she think she had no fire or grace? And no salt? An arroba she had of it!
"... No lack of salt in the chrism At the moment of thy baptism!" He sang aloud in the dark room and suddenly realized that he had fallen madly in love with her. He ached intensely to see her again---at once! ---to touch her hands and her hair; to hear her harsh voice. He ran to the window and flung open the casements and the beauty of the night struck him back like a blow. It was May, it was summer, and he was young---young! ---and deliriously in love. Such a happiness welled up within him that the tears spurted from his eyes. But he did not forgive her--no! He would still make her pay, he would still have his revenge, he thought viciously, and kissed his wounded fingers. But what a night it had been! "I will never forge this night! he thought aloud in an awed voice, standing by the window in the dark room, the tears in his eyes and the wind in his hair and his bleeding knuckles pressed to his mouth.
But, alas, the heart forgets; the heart is distracted; and May time passes; summer lends; the storms break over the rot-tipe orchards and the heart grows old; while the hours, the days, the months, and the years pile up and pile up, till the mind becomes too crowded, too confused: dust gathers in it; cobwebs multiply; the walls darken and fall into ruin and decay; the memory perished...and there came a time when Don Badoy Montiya walked home through a May Day midnight without remembering, without even caring to remember; being merely concerned in feeling his way across the street with his cane; his eyes having grown quite dim and his legs uncertain--for he was old; he was over sixty; he was a very stopped and shivered old man with white hair and mustaches coming home from a secret meeting of conspirators; his mind still resounding with the speeches and his patriot heart still exultant as he picked his way up the steps to the front door and inside into the slumbering darkness of the house; wholly unconscious of the May night, till on his way down the hall, chancing to glance into the sala, he shuddered, he stopped, his blood ran cold-- for he had seen a face in the mirror there---a ghostly candlelight face with the eyes closed and the lips moving, a face that he suddenly felt he had been there before though it was a full minutes before the lost memory came flowing, came tiding back, so overflooding the actual moment and so swiftly washing away the piled hours and days and months and years that he was left suddenly young again; he was a gay young buck again, lately came from Europe; he had been dancing all night; he was very drunk; he s stepped in the doorway; he saw a face in the dark; he called out...and the lad standing before the mirror (for it was a lad in a night go jumped with fright and almost dropped his candle, but looking around and seeing the old man, laughed out with relief and came running.
"Oh Grandpa, how you frightened me. Don Badoy had turned very pale. "So it was you, you young bandit! And what is all this, hey? What are you doing down here at this hour?" "Nothing, Grandpa. I was only... I am only ..." "Yes, you are the great Señor only and how delighted I am to make your acquaintance, Señor Only! But if I break this cane on your head you maga wish you were someone else, Sir!" "It was just foolishness, Grandpa. They told me I would see my wife."
"Wife? What wife?" "Mine. The boys at school said I would see her if I looked in a mirror tonight and said: Mirror, mirror show to me her whose lover I will be.
Don Badoy cackled ruefully. He took the boy by the hair, pulled him along into the room, sat down on a chair, and drew the boy between his knees. "Now, put your cane down the floor, son, and let us talk this over. So you want your wife already, hey? You want to see her in advance, hey? But so you know that these are wicked games and that wicked boys who play them are in danger of seeing horrors?"
"Well, the boys did warn me I might see a witch instead."
"Exactly! A witch so horrible you may die of fright. And she will be witch you, she will torture you, she will eat
your heart and drink your blood!"
"Oh, come now Grandpa. This is 1890. There are no witches anymore."
"Oh-ho, my young Voltaire! And what if I tell you that I myself have seen a witch.
"You? Where?
"Right in this room land right in that mirror," said the old man, and his playful voice had turned savage.
"When, Grandpa?"
"Not so long ago. When I was a bit older than you. Oh, I was a vain fellow and though I was feeling very sick that night and merely wanted to lie down somewhere and die I could not pass that doorway of course without stopping to see in the mirror what I looked like when dying. But when I poked my head in what should I see in the mirror but...but..."
"The witch?"
"Exactly!"
"And then she bewitch you, Grandpa!"
"She bewitched me and she tortured me. l She ate my heart and drank my blood." said the old man bitterly.
"Oh, my poor little Grandpa! Why have you never told me! And she very horrible?
"Horrible? God, no--- she was the most beautiful creature I have ever seen! Her eyes were somewhat like yours but her hair was like black waters and her golden shoulders were bare. My God, she was enchanting! But I should have known---I should have known even then---the dark and fatal creature she was!"
A silence. Then: "What a horrid mirror this is, Grandpa," whispered the boy.
"What makes you slay that, hey?"
"Well, you saw this witch in it. And Mama once told me that Grandma once told her that Grandma once saw the devil in this mirror. Was it of the scare that Grandma died?"
Don Badoy started. For a moment he had forgotten that she was dead, that she had perished---the poor Agueda; that they were at peace at last, the two of them, her tired body at rest; her broken body set free at last from the brutal pranks of the earth---from the trap of a May night; from the snare of summer; from the terrible silver nets of the moon. She had been a mere heap of white hair and bones in the end: a whimpering withered consumptive, lashing out with her cruel tongue; her eye like live coals; her face like ashes... Now, nothing--- nothing save a name on a stone; save a stone in a graveyard---nothing! was left of the young girl who had flamed so vividly in a mirror one wild May Day midnight, long, long ago.
And remembering how she had sobbed so piteously; remembering how she had bitten his hand and fled and how he had sung aloud in the dark room and surprised his heart in the instant of falling in love: such a grief tore up his throat and eyes that he felt ashamed before the boy; pushed the boy away; stood up and looked out----looked out upon the medieval shadows of the foul street where a couple of street-lamps flickered and a last carriage was rattling away upon the cobbles, while the blind black houses muttered hush-hush, their tiled roofs looming like sinister chessboards against a wild sky murky with clouds, save where an evil old moon prowled about in a corner or where a murderous wind whirled, whistling and whining, smelling now of the sea and now of the summer orchards and wafting unbearable the window; the bowed old man sobbing so bitterly at the window; the tears streaming down his cheeks and the wind in his hair and one hand pressed to his mouth---while from up the street came the clackety-clack of the watchman’s boots on the cobbles, and the clang-clang of his lantern against his knee, and the mighty roll of his voice booming through the night:
"Guardia sereno-o-o! A las doce han dado-o-o!"
Isang Dipang Langit - Amado Hernandez



Isang Dipang Langit
Amado V. Hernandez

Ako'y ipiniit ng linsil na puno
hangad palibhasang diwa ko'y piitin,
katawang marupok, aniya'y pagsuko,
damdami'y supil na't mithiin ay supil.

Ikinulong ako sa kutang malupit:
bato, bakal, punlo, balasik ng bantay;
lubos na tiwalag sa buong daigdig
at inaring kahit buhay man ay patay.

Sa munting dungawan, tanging abot-malas
ay sandipang langit na puno ng luha,
maramot na birang ng pusong may sugat,
watawat ng aking pagkapariwara.

Sintalim ng kidlat ang mata ng tanod,
sa pintong may susi't walang makalapit;
sigaw ng bilanggo sa katabing moog,
anaki'y atungal ng hayop sa yungib.

Ang maghapo'y tila isang tanikala
na kala-kaladkad ng paang madugo
ang buong magdamag ay kulambong luksa
ng kabaong waring lungga ng bilanggo.

Kung minsa'y magdaan ang payak na yabag,
kawil ng kadena ang kumakalanding;
sa maputlang araw saglit ibibilad,
sanlibong aninong iniluwa ng dilim.

Kung minsan, ang gabi'y biglang magulantang
sa hudyat - may takas! - at asod ng punlo;
kung minsa'y tumangis ang lumang batingaw,
sa bitayang moog, may naghihingalo.

At ito ang tanging daigdig ko ngayon -
bilangguang mandi'y libingan ng buhay;
sampu, dalawampu, at lahat ng taon
ng buong buhay ko'y dito mapipigtal.

Nguni't yaring diwa'y walang takot-hirap
at batis pa rin itong aking puso:
piita'y bahagi ng pakikilamas,
mapiit ay tanda ng di pagsuko.

Ang tao't Bathala ay di natutulog
at di habang araw ang api ay api,
tanang paniniil ay may pagtutuos,
habang may Bastilya'y may bayang gaganti.

At bukas, diyan din, aking matatanaw
sa sandipang langit na wala nang luha,
sisikat ang gintong araw ng tagumpay...
layang sasalubong ako sa paglaya!

AKO ANG DAIGDIG(ni Alejandro G. Abadilla)

I
ako
ang daigdig
ako
ang tula
ako
ang daigdig
ng tula
ang tula
ng daigdig
ako
ang walang maliw na ako
ang walang kamatayang ako
ang tula ng daigdig
II
ako
ang daigdig ng tula
ako
ang tula ng daigdig
ako ang malayang ako
matapat sa sarili
sa aking daigdig
ng tula
ako
ang tula
sa daidig
ako
ang daigdig
ng tula
ako
III
ako
ang damdaming
malaya
ako
ang larawang
buhay
ako
ang buhay
na walang hanggan
ako
ang damdamin
ang larawan
ang buhay
damdamin
larawan
buhay
tula
ako
IV
ako
ang daigdig
sa tula
ako
ang tula
sa daigdig
ako
ang daigdig
ako
ang tula
daigdig
tula
ako….
————————————————
















HAPPY HOI POLOI

me: steve
Location: 34.609N -92.486W

Saturday, February 07, 2009

Turning Point

I got bamboozzled into starting a Facebook page a month or two ago. Since then, I found a cousin I hadn't seen or heard of in almost 30 years. I've connected with several old friends and maybe found a few new friends (who knows?).

I can blog from Facebook and reach a much larger readership of people I care for.

Don't look to see much from me here in the future. Find me on Facebook.

Adios, TaTa, See ya............

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Ice Storm

Yesterday morning as I navigated the fifteen minute drive to work, the temperature was 37 degrees and it was raining. By 9:30 am the temperature had dropped five degrees and the rain had not abated. By 10:00 am there was a thin coat of ice on everything. An informal parking lot survey indicated people were starting to leave the office.

The cafeteria in the basement of the building was packed at lunch; very few of us were willing to hit the roads. By 4:00 pm about 80% of the parking lot was empty. My normal 20 minute return trip in the evening had turned into a 150 minute white-knuckled ordeal. I made it home safely but really stressed out.

Knowing that the weather was going to be dicey, the dog got to stay in the house. At 5:30 pm he was more than ready to get out and ‘find his spot’. He barely made it of the front porch before he looked up and darted back to its shelter. Upon an exhortation from me to, “find your spot!” he tiptoed into the azalea planter at the edge of the porch and did his duty. No romp in the yard for him.

No trip to the gym for me. Unnecessary trips are out of the question. Most of the people who bugged out at the office stopped at the grocery store on the way home and purchased: every loaf of bread and package of crackers in sight, every single package of hamburger, every can of tomatoes or tomato sauce on the shelf, all the kidney beans, all the milk, and most of the Little Debbie snack cakes. Chili and Little Debbies is the ice storm meal of choice around here. Lots of batteries get sold as well.

I made a trip out to the deck to fill the bird feeders. They had completely drained two of the tube feeders and had made a real dent in the third. It was a little difficult getting the feeders unclipped from their hangers. The clips were full of and covered in ice. A few well aimed whacks with a piece of aluminum pipe removed the ice and loosened the clips enough to open them up. I filled the feeders with black-oil sunflower seeds, beat the ice off the perches, and clipped them back into place. I also removed the ice from the tray I put water in and refilled it. I’m sure it refroze quickly, but I also know that a few of the birds got a drink beforehand.

I love standing on my deck and listening during these winter weather events. The sounds are oddly amplified and muffled at the same time. Many of the normal sounds are almost gone. The constant dull roar of the interstate is almost completely mute. It’s 4,500 feet away and its sound only diminishes when all but the most raging fools amongst us try to keep moving. The birds are silent; they’ve all found a place to hunker down under some form of shelter. I’ve seen a dozen titmice and juncos clutching fast to the edge of the siding trim up under the eave on my front porch. If I didn’t mind the bird poop so much, I’d build them a decent perch or two in sheltered spots. Maybe that’s something I should put my mind to: poop friendly bird perches.

As the layer of ice builds, I hear new sounds. Tree branches in the woods behind the house begin breaking. Some of them sound like rifle shots followed by a tinkling shower of ice falling through other branches and the crash of the broken limb as it careens to the ground. I’ve seen Bradford pear trees after these storms that are nothing more than a short, stubby trunk rising three or four feet from the ground with all of their limbs arrayed on the ground around them. Magnolia trees are particularly susceptible to this damage. Their broad leaves collect a massive amount of weight as the ice builds on them. The long, thin needles of pine trees quickly become too heavy for their limbs to hold them up. Some falling limbs crash onto power lines as they fall, darkening whole neighborhoods in their descent. I hear power transformers explode and portable generators power up.

Before going to bed, I set my cell phone’s alarm to wake me up in case my power went out. I put an old heavy cotton sleeping bag next to the bed in case the electric fan on my gas heater became incapacitated during the night: no electricity – no fan, no fan – no flame, no flame – no heat, no heat – brrrr. I made sure my flashlight had good batteries and placed it on the nightstand next to my bed where it would be easy to find with groping fingertips.

I woke up several times during the night. I could hear the drizzling rain. I know my gutters are getting extremely heavy. I had a little trouble getting back to sleep each time over fretting about the house. A few years ago I had fourteen or fifteen large trees cut out of the yard. Last night I didn’t have to worry about their limbs falling and taking my power line or my deck or my truck or anything else with them on their gravity driven race to the ground. I didn’t have all the trees cut; there are still several that could cause bad problems.

Suddenly, NPR wakes me up with news about senate controversies in Illinois and Minnesota. The power had not gone out during the night! It’s still drizzling. Get out of bed, into the shower, and into my clothes. A quick window survey shows a few small limbs in the yard but no damage to any of the good stuff.

I know that if the roads are bad, I need to leave early for work. This is something I seem to be the only one around here to have realized over the years. If I leave early there is less traffic to deal with; 99% of the people I normally share the roads with do not know this and will walk out of their doors at their normal times and drive like they normally do when the weather is good. Their driving skills are poor enough when conditions are ideal. Put a little ice on the roads and it’s sheer pandemonium! This morning’s commute is only forty minutes.

I noticed many large limbs in yards, on cars, on houses, and in the road on my way in. I see a few power lines lying on the ground underneath ice covered limbs. A couple of the neighborhoods look eerily dark as I drive past. I drive past four or five emergency vehicles parked close to one another. The reflections of their flashing lights hit the ice on the trees and the world is turned into a spectacular vision of red and blue and yellow sparkles. I hope no one’s hurt. People sometimes do very foolish things in the dark of a power outage to keep themselves warm.

I am at the office warmly making coffee when most of the idiots are warming up their vehicles in preparation for what they are glibly thinking will be their normal commute. I wish I had money invested in a wrecker service. Our power is coming from the huge diesel generators installed shortly after the twin ice storms of late 2000.

The parking lot is bare. People with kids whose schools are closed are staying home. People scared of driving in these conditions are wisely hunkered down at home fixing chili and eyeing packages of Little Debbie snack cakes. A few poor idiots are walking home after realizing they won’t be able to get their vehicles out of the ditches they’ve slid into. A few other poor souls are waiting for backlogged wreckers to come get them.

It’s 10:10 am and it’s still drizzling. The temperature is 34 degrees. They’re predicting a high today of 43 degrees. Fresh, cold rain will freeze to existing ice until it reaches 36 or 37 degrees. We’re not out of the woods yet, but things are looking better.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New Years Eve Resolution

Friendship...

I vow to be the best friend you ever had or will have; to be a much better friend than I’ve been in the past!

If you need something, consider it done. If it’s grunt labor, I can do it. I'm a fair carpenter, a good electrician, and an excellent plumber. If it’s as simple as an open ear and a soft shoulder, mine will be there for you.

It doesn't matter if you're standing in front of me, across town, three counties away, or five states away. I'll be the best friend I can be.

If you're in the neighborhood, call. If I'm close to yours, I promise to call.

I am a better man for the influence of my friends, and hope to be able to return the favor soon.

Here's wishing you and yours an excellent new year and a happy pot of black eyed peas.

Best Wishes,
Steve

Monday, December 29, 2008

Orchids


I’ve got one dendrobium blooming (photo) and two pots of phalaenopsis with long, well established bloom stalks. One of the phalaenopsis has two different types of orchid in the same pot. The buds on one are as big around as a dime. After it blooms, I’ll separate and repot it. I post photos of these after they bloom

One of my phalaenopsis died this fall. The birthday orchid had a problem with its roots and basically died of neglect. It was truly beautiful and I will miss it.

One of the two “babies” my sister-in-law gave me in April seems to be alive. I’ve never tried to establish one of these, so this is an experiment. It’s a dendrobium and the cane looks healthy and the roots looked good when I potted it. Time will tell.

No new purchases lately. What with all the deck reconstruction last summer, and the orchids’ banishment to the shade of the dogwood trees, it didn’t seem wise to expand the nursery. I’m already plotting how I’ll fix the deck to house them come spring.

The vanda is healthy but showing no signs of blooming. I was told it was a miracle that I was able to get it to bloom once at all. They need an extremely humid environment. After I win the lottery, I will build a greenhouse into my mansion.

I read somewhere that night blooming cereus needs to be fed well before they bloom. I’ll try that this year. The plant is healthy so it seems possible I can get it to bloom. It’s not really an orchid, it’s a cactus. I lump it in with my orchids because it seems to grow the same. Once again, time will tell.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Christmas 2008

My participation in the annual rush of gross consumerism disguised as a religious celebration has officially come to a close. All purchases have been made, wrapped, and prepared for transport. I’ll take some packages to the post office today and carry a couple to Missouri for Christmas morning.

My Christmas shopping budget was pretty recession resistant. Luckily, I’m pretty secure in my employment and I’ve been able to build up a healthy discretionary income reserve over the last three or four months. I chalk it up to a small pay raise and some changes to my spending habits. I have a friend who calls me cheap. I argue that I’m frugal.

I didn’t shop for as many people this year as I have in the past. There will be people whose faces I won’t enjoy seeing as they unwrap presents. Life goes on and we move on. Shopping for a smaller group however, didn’t reduce the funds expended. It just modified the distribution.

Every year I participate in a modest philanthropic donation. The last couple of years I donated to Heifer International. Their mission is poverty reduction and providing family and village oriented support by helping to establish sustainable animal husbandry operations. A neat thing they do is allow donors to buy a specific animal: water buffalo, camel, goat, sheep, chicken, duck, llama, etc... I’ve bought hives of bees and flocks of ducks in the past. You can also buy the animal in a friend or loved one’s name; I’ve done this. I can only imagine the look on my niece’s face one Christmas when she opened the envelope and discovered I had bought a flock of ducks in her name for a family in Africa. Heifer does good work all over the world. Lately however, they’ve been doing a lot of bricks and mortar expansion so I wanted to switch.

This year I donated to the Arkansas Rice Depot. Their mission is to feed hungry people right here in Arkansas. We hear on the news every day that major companies are laying people off or firing them outright. We hear weekly that state and national unemployment rates are climbing. With this news in mind, I think it’s important to keep our giving close to home.

Give what you can without busting the budget. If you wind up in trouble yourself, you really haven’t helped anybody. A little pocket change in the Salvation Army’s red bucket will help. Also, give to a group who provides comparatively more service to their client base than they provide for staff and bricks and mortar. There are several on-line sources to compare them. Try Charity Navigator.

Or, if donating money isn’t realistic for you, try donating time. Roll up your sleeves and pitch in.

It’s never too late to give, and a very merry Christmas to you and yours.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Be Careful What You Ask For

A couple of years ago I made a decision I have come to regret. The decision brought about two results. Neither of which I'm real proud of.


One result was that I disappointed a close friend. Although seldom brought up in conversation, I am often reminded of the disappointment I caused. I will regret this until the day I die and I'm sure my soul will be bothered as well.


The other result was the loss of an old friend. We talked often before the decision was made . We don't talk any more. I really miss our talks.


I want my do over. I desperately want the post card offering me the opportunity to make the appointment. I wish I could go back and make things right.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Just Change the Channel

I’m guilty of something I would normally rail against. I’ve succumbed to censorship in the content of this blog. I’ve deleted two posts in the last five or six months. It was my decision to delete them, but the impetus came from others.

The first was something I wrote in 2007 because I had had a wonderful experience. I was elated. I’ll never forget it. When I got home I wrote about it and posted it. Someone was offended and I’ll admit it was a little personal. The offended party told a mutual friend and the mutual friend told me. In an effort to ruffle no ones feathers I thought about it for a few days and deleted the post. It’s gone forever. The memories of the experience are still with me, but the words I used to express my joy are no more. I allowed myself to be censored.

The second was something I wrote because I was truly disgusted at the actions of an individual as related to me in confidence by a friend. The individual had taken a convenient shortcut that I thought was ethically abhorrent and I wrote of my outrage. No names were used. The facts were exposed and the reasoning behind my disappointment was expressed. My friend was afraid others who knew the individual involved would see the post and be upset. Although, I can’t imagine any intelligent person not being upset that the shortcut took place at all. My “punishment” was that my friend would no longer read this blog. I caved. The post was deleted; I succumbed to censorship once again. What happened still pisses me off to this day, but the words I used to express my outrage are no more.

Here’s the new rule regarding the content of this blog. I write for me. I will only write the truth. My truth, but the truth just the same. If someone wants to read what I have to say, then great. If someone is offended by what I say, then too bad. At least have the guts to tell me you’re offended.

It’s like the content of television programs. If you don’t like what you see, change the frickin’ channel! But don’t forget, you’ll never know what’s here unless you look. As Monty Hall said so often, “Lets see what’s behind curtain number three!”

THE SMALL KEY BY PAZ LATORENA