| 1I was born from a failed rhythm method,
 at a time when the only other alternatives were abstinence and 
        coitus interruptus.
 Much later, my mother confessed: You were a mistake.
 I was much older then, my ego, id, and superego, all bonded and secured,
 able to bear the trauma and implications of such a revelation.
 Still, it was a burden. I came, unwanted, a mistake.
 Was it a mathematical error or a calendar mismark?
 An egg that ovulated too early?
 Or a hyperactive spermatozoon that survived longer than expected
 that screwed up the math of rhythm?
 Well, I'm pretty cool with it.
 The frenetic spermatozoon that won the race to the egg,
 in the   incredible serendipity of chromosomal 
        pairings,
 the one in a hundred trillion possibilities
        . . .      became moi.
 Another race, another cycle would have produced someone
 with a wholly different genetic blueprint and an entirely different 
        temperament.
 2
 I was the third of seven children.
 All the siblings' first names reflected the somewhat Spanish-rooted
 and provincially gentrified lineage on my mother side,
 the given names stretched out with bourgeoise embellishments
 of saintly trimmings or Virgin Mary-ness,
 thankfully balanced by nicknames extracted from American comic book characters.
 Jose Arturo, Sluggo, later sensibly dropped, changed to Arthur.
 Maria Theresa Eloisa, Nancy. She kept the name.
 Antonio Raoul, Rollie.
 Maria Lourdes Angela, Angie.
 Maria Concepcion, Baby, later changed to Babes.
 Luis Eduardo, Boy, later dropped, changed to Louie.
 3
 Moi? After my father, Godofredo. Ergo, the Jr.
 Godofredo 
            Umali Stuart Jr, Butch.
 Butch, taken from the burly and benign weekly cartoon character
 of the long-ago defunct Saturday Evening Post.
 Godofredo.
 Hey, that's the Spanish form of Godfrey, meaning "friend of God."
 And boys and girls, that's not bad company.
 But alas, although recognizable and phonetically agreeable
 to the vowel-laden language of
            my birthplace,
 later on, in the United States
 the Godofredo would suffer countless misspellings and mutilations.
 Godfred. Godfredo. Goodfred. Godfredd. Godredo. Gofrego.
 Godofred. Gofredo. Gotfried. Gofdredo. Gofodredo. Gopofordo.
 Gofopordo. Godolfredo
 Even a couple of Js. . . 
            Jodofredo. Jodofred. Jodredo.
 I lost count . . . and stopped counting long ago,
 thankful for the  virtue of patience, that comes from being "friend of God"
 when asked, those countless numbers of times, over the phone,
 Um. . . can you please spell that?
 And always thankful I was not made to  suffer the  nickname mediocrity  of "Junior."
 4
 The Stuart name, a lifelong burden,
 the disconnect between name and physiognomy.
 You spend a good time of your life explaining it.
 Once I imagined he was a English pirate,
            a black patch over one eye,
 expelled from the royal family of the Stuarts.
 Alas, the truth, nothing as inglorious as that.
 Rather, the origin is laced with a romantic detail.
 Bernard Stuart, an officer, actually, no pirate patch,
 who came with the British invasion of 1762.
 One day, chanced upon a native lass bathing in the river,  naked.
 Bernard came to the rescue, covering  her nakedness
 from the eyes of tempted, sex-starved, and deprived Englishmen,
 riding her off to the safety of her parents.
 A fortuitous encounter that led to rescue, courtship, and
 the subsequent generations of Stuarts in the Philippines.
 5
 The Umali name, my mother's.
 A productive progeny that sprouted from Batangas.
 Along the way, 
            from a social or political rifting,
 or perhaps, from a difference in color and complexion,
 the clan color-coded into black and white.
 Umaling-puti (white umali) and Umaling-itim (black Umali).
 We got the color black.
 6
 Maria was my yaya, or nanny.
 She took care of the goat that was always in tow
 during the sudden family departures in the hurry-scurry of the 
            last months of the Japanese occupation.
 The goat provided a supplement source of milk.
 Perhaps it is cause for my aversion for caldereta and, for that 
          matter, any goat dish.
 Back to Maria. . .My flirtatious yaya was called "Peaches" 
            by the liberating G.I. Joes.
 Alas, her young flirtatious life was ended by the ricochet of 
            an accidentally fired GI Joe rifle.
 Back to the goat.
 After Maria's death, the task of attending to the nanny goat went 
            to Adriana,
 an eight-year old from Tiaong, taking it  to the fields to graze, 
            moving its stake a few times daily.
 Oh, how she must have  hated the job.
 One day she hurried back, running, winded and flustered
 saying the goat was dead, bitten by a snake.
 My father, a physician, applied his medical skills for a veterinary postmortem.
 Examination of the dead ruminant easily revealed the 
            cause of death—
 not by a venomous bite, but by half a dozen ice-pick stab wounds.
 I heard Adriana returned to the bucolic rural life in Tiaong,
 raised a family, with no other known SPCA-related crimes.
 Nor did her single premeditated goat-killing progress to any known 
            homicidal tendencies.
 7
 Early on, I had lessons on trusting adults.
 I was three. I had really curly hair. Big curls.
 They thought that shaving it off clean would cause it to go straight 
            on regrowth.
 I overheard my father whispering the dastardly plot to the barber.
 But as long as I could keep awake, it wasn't going to happen.
 I was intent on fighting the barbershop sleepiness.
 z z z z z z z . . .
 Alas, I woke up bald as a ping pong.
 But the curls grew back.
 Oh. . . wilder and curlier.
 8
 My mother kept a 3-year old photo.
 It showed me with a big head, clean shaven,
 probably taken after the dastardly barber-father conspiracy.
 My mom said my head was really big, not hydrocephalic big,
 but big. . . 
            and they called me "Tommy Tomorrow."
 Merciless.
 My research revealed he was a DC comic book space hero that came out in 1947.
 Tommy T. is blond and blue eyed.
 I was ping-pong bald and brown-eyed.
 I think the Tommy Tomorrow had to do with my  head being as big and round
 as the space helmet he wore in some of his comic book adventures.
 You looked like Tommy Tomorrow.
 Merciless.
 9
 When I was four, I was abandoned by my parents on weekends.
 It must have been a time of bustling family life.
 There were the two older siblings, 
          Sluggo and Nancy.                I was third.
 My mother was probably pregnant.
 And there was another 
            brother, Rollie, between me and the pregnancy.
 I guess I was a  Monday-to-Friday burden to a bustling busy family life.
 Every Sunday afternoon, I was deposited at my father's sister 
            in Imus.
 The parents must have agonized over it.
 Maybe not.
 I remember the M&Ms and caramel corn bribes handed with the 
            goodbye kisses and hugs.
 It must have lessened their guilt.
 There was a cousin, Ted, about my age.
 They must have figured, hmm, the cousin
 a   playmate mental health cushion for my weekly abandonment
 and eased their guilt a little bit more.
 I was picked up Friday afternoon for weekend doses of family life.
 Then redeposited Sunday with more M&Ms, caramel corn, kisses 
            and hugs.
 10
 I must have suffered those separations.
 I remember the black bag  stuffed with my weekend clothes and stuff.
 Right after the kisses, hugs and good-byes, I would hurry to my 
            room,
 palm the kisses off my cheeks, trying to remember what parent 
            kissed what cheek-side
 and wipe my palms on the sides of the bag,
 a side for my father's kiss, the other side, my mother's.
 During the week, when I missed them
 I would go to the bag, and touch the kisses on each side.
 Many many years later, I told my mother about it, and she cried.
 She said I should have told them.
 Yeah, how does a four year-old argue
 the parental wisdom of weekend abandonment
 sugared with  bagfuls of God's wonderful inventions, caramel corn and M & Ms,
 mediating and mollifying, bullying and bribing me into sufferance.
 11
 I grew up with Dick and Jane. And, Spot.
 It was the age before television, before the Ninja turtles and 
              Barney and pals,
 and all those cartoon characters that now baby-sits the preschool 
              years.
 It was a time when parents still found time and great delight 
              in guiding their children
 through their first musical ABCDEFG and ten little indians,
 in their first reading adventures, stumbling through those silly 
              and simple first lines:
 See Dick run. See Jane run. See Dick and Jane run.
 And the many nursery rhymes and fairy tales -
 Cinderella, the Three Little Pigs, Humpty-Dumpty,
 Little Red Riding Hood,  Jack n' Jill, and company,
 providing allegorical elements to life's later nasty realities.
 12
 When I was five or six, I was black for a day.
 There was a children's costume party.
 My father wanted me to go as Little Black Sambo. I refused.
 He bought my resistance, promised me one peso.
 Merciless.
 I was painted black with tintang intsik (Chinese ink).
 Face, neck, hands and whatever showed out the edges of the colorful 
                  costume.
 Red pants and yellow umbrella
 There is a picture, the white of the eyes and the teeth grinning 
                  out of the blackened face.
 The costume won a prize, second or third.
 My father never gave me the peso.
 Many many years later, I reminded him of the unpaid peso.
 He just smiled, and still didn't pay the peso,
 which must have depreciated to ten cents of its original bargaining 
            value.
 13
 I was a sleepwalker.
 That is why I never got beyond Cub-Scouting.
 I really wanted to become a Boy Scout.
 But Boy Scouts went camping and my parents were afraid I'd sleepwalk
 and fall off a cliff or go ker-crushing down some gully.
 There wasn't much to remember of my cub-scouting days,
 except my pretty den-mother in her blue uniform—I had a 
                precocious crush on her.
 14
 During the elementary school years, we lived in Manila,
 moving from place to place, rental houses just blocks away from each other,
 until a house was bought at the end of Don Pedro Street
 abutting a side stream of the Pasig River,
 often stagnant with stench,  water lilies and essential river detritus.
 The river swelled with the rains and the typhoons,
 sometimes overflowing to the first floor,
 bringing fish and an assortment of river debris.
 Across the street was a cluster of squatter houses
 which for  many years would provide a 101 on the poor,
 providing early lessons and insight to last a lifetime.
 While my mother grew up in gentrified provincial privilege
 where she was early on forbidden to talk with the servants,
 in Don Pedro we lived in proximity to the poor,
 developing a familiarity and closeness with them,
 with nary a forbidding word from my parents.
 I played with them, shared  stories, entered their homes
 and peeked at their lives and rituals.
 Once, they slaughtered a dog, hanging on hind legs,
 slitting the throat, the blood dripping on glasses
 and drank for asthma and sundry other uses.
 15
 My parents never prohibited me from mingling with the squatter folk.
 In fact, I remember their helping them out many times.
 It became easy and natural to talk to the street people,
 to know the street mongers and local toughies by name,
 to befriend vagrant  kids and help out whenever,
 lending them my father's well-appointed shoe-shine box
 for their day's commerce of shining shoes,
 afraid they might not return it at day's end. . . but they always did.
 I remember my father frowning and pondering
 the rapidly diminishing contents of the cans of shoe wax.
 Surprisingly, the  precocious street culture was not marred by delinquency,
 other than the few street-roaming nights,  throwing stones up the rooftops,
 scampering away in juvenile glee as  stones rattled down the metal roofs.
 16
 When I was 11 or 12, I was asked by one of the squatter folk
 to be godfather, ninong, to their newborn.
 I was so bothered and anguished, how I would be
                     berated by my parents,
 straying into their destitute lives, to be asked to be godparent.
 I decline to be ninong, with some lame excuse.
 Years later when I mentioned the story to my mother,
 I was gently chided for refusing, that it was some kind of honor
 that one should never refuse.
 17
 I was a La Sallite, kindergarten through high school.
 True Green.
 At that time, one in a short list of what may be considered "Ivy 
                        League" schools.
 The school icon was the Green Archer: a guy with a funny green 
      hat
 and a matching green costume, the color of fresh spinach,
 kneeling on one knee, bow and arrow drawn, its aim frozen at an 
              imaginary target.
 Or maybe, aimed at the rival icons: blue eagles, red lions or 
              knights.
 Later on you became aware of the rivalries, academics and sports,
 the most intense, with the Blue Eagles.
 The cheer that still reverberates in my memory bank.
 Animo La Salle, beat Ateneo.
 Animo La Salle, beat Ateneo.
 The rivalry still lingers on, albeit, just in the hard courts of 
              basketball.
 18
 It was a great twelve years, punctuated early on by a first-in-class 
                gold medal in Prep year.
 Alas, it was my only flash of academic potential, as it became 
                clear early on
 that education was too long an effort to focus solely on academic 
                achievements,
 to the detriment of education and experiences in the University of Life,
 its wonder years on the fringe with its doses of delinquent joys.
 This early choice for juvenile anomie and academic underachievement
 reflected  on report cards, with the color-coded ABCD of deportment.
 There were a lot of red-penciled Cs and Ds for bad behavior,
 often dramatically circled or asterisked.
 My mother kept those report cards, providing recorded memento
 of an educational odyssey that was focused on just passing,
 going for 75s, and shucking the pursuit for  academic accolades.
 Still, I was always a section-A student, except for a short-lived 
                demotion to section-B
 once in elementary school, whereupon, I was, soon enough, promoted 
                back to section A.
 19
 My archer days were punctuated by appearances before the Board 
                  of Education.
 This is a fearsome and threatening piece of wood, you feel pain just by looking at it,
 about two feet long, six inches wide, an inch thick, with a good 
                  gripping handle,
 that dispensed its brand of corrective and corporeal   punishment,
 with the rhythmic repetitive whapping of the palms.
 It was torturous but short-lived enough to endure without tears.
 And infrequent enough to put into the chapter of Rite of Passage,
 with lessons that lasted only as long as the redness and stinging 
                  of the chosen palm.
 There were a number of whappings.
 From after-school Breaking-and-Entering of the bookstore,
 distributing the proceeds—school pins, pens and pencils—to 
                            kindred spirits.
 Being caught entering the  gym metal grillworks for "free" 
                admission to Friday night movies.
 Minor infractions and blips in the journey of enlightenment and 
                  edification
 that did not merit being brought to the attention of my parents.
 20
 There were many other times of educational misconducts,
 misdemeanors that  did not merit corporeal whappings,
 instead, kinder and gentler namby-pamby punishments,
 like being made to kneel in front of the class,
 (so flugging  Christian-medieval)
 like writing your full name a hundred or a thousand times,
 suffering through  those callus-inducing efforts
 muttering a grievance of inequity, those times wishing
 I was Chinese with a last name like Ty or Uy, a first name like Wu or Li.
 But I devised a special writing tool, speeding through the punishment
 with 
                  two pens tied together.
 21
 Sometimes, there were punishments meted out after class.
 When the teacher tells you to pull down your pants.
 Then you get two or three mild plastic ruler pattings on the bare butt.
 Many years later, older and wiser, I remember and realize those times
 as pseudo-punishments done for the sexually gratifying tush-viewings.
 Oh, the ruler-wielding teacher was gay.
 22
 At home, corrective educational measures were also carried out.
 Rarely, I brought home a report card with failing grades
 when underachievement missed the safety zone of 75.
 The failing marks were  highlighted in bold red pencil.
 This would be met with the  Belt of Education.
 delivered with three- or four-whapping strikes
 always meted out by my father,
 and always preceded with the short parental apology disclaimer:
 I hate doing this, but I am doing so for your own good.
 Sometimes, it's bare-butt, sometimes, it's notebook-padded butt-covered 
                      whappings.
 My father must have known about the notebook-padding
 as padded-whappings made a different sound.
 And the  whippings were remedial and rehabilitative,
 invariably followed by a short period of overachievement,
 the next report cards going north.
 Soon after, corporeal punishment went out of vogue,
 and the younger siblings were fortunately freed from the threat and welt of 
                      the belt
 23
 In fifth or sixth grade, perhaps, even a year earlier
 i had my first taste of a nicotine buzz.
 A cousin
 and I salvaged my father's  Banker's Club cigarette butts,
 scavenging off small mountains of stubs off ashtrays,
 picking up  butts from the ground,
                        celebrating the 
                        long butts,
 straightening the stubs, flicking off the ashes from the burnt tips,
 A two-incher was nicotine heaven.
 We coughed and gagged silly at first,
 fast getting used to   bitter and bronchially irritating draws.
 Afterwards, we would dry-wash the telltale smell of smoking,
 swirling  teaspoonfuls of Nescafe coffee grounds.
 By the time I quit at age 33, I was chain-smoking two to three packs a day.
 24
 These were the days of radio and comic books,
 long before television consumed the idle moments.
 Radio was king, a big wooden box, pre-transistorization,
 monolithic on the counter top, the whole family huddled around,
 enthralled and mesmerized with the half-hour episodes
 of action / drama serials, that ends, always, hanging in suspense,
 to be continued, same time tomorrow.
 Years later, I saw  how the magic was delivered,
 with as great a fascination, watched radio-actors
 reading scripts and emoting before their mikes,
 while the  sound-effects guy produced from sundry objects
 of coconut shells, ordinary pieces of everyday refuse,
 reproducing the magic of sounds that gave resonance to the stories.
 25
 And there were the  comic books, providing graphics the radio couldn't.
 Weekly doses of Tagalog comics, filled with black-and-white pen and ink art,
 from which I endlessly copied, sketching, learning the ways of the drawing pen.
 And the colorful American comic books, filling our worlds with action heroes,
 the Lone Ranger, Tonto, Silver, Tommy Tomorrow and Buck Rogers,
 and the Classics Illustrated series that  provided a bridge into literature
 laden with heroes and adventures, with more cowboys and indians,
 Boone and Bowie, Custer and Sitting Bull,
 and the English contributing in their colorful cast              of King Arthur and his Knights
 and their tragic Shakespearean heroes.
 26
 And the yard games and street games we played – piko, patintero, touch, slap-hands.
 Tex, flicking cards in the air, hoping for face-pairs as it lands on the ground.
 Jolens, rolling marbles on holes in the ground.
 Inventing  and betting on games, with rubber bands and bottle caps.
 Making spinning tops from scratch,
 slingshots from Bayabas branches,
 toys from discards of strings, rubber and wood,
 delighting in the magic of origami,
 making wooden guns to load with powder caps,
 kites that barely managed to fly,
 Collecting insects, pitting spiders, and catching dragonflies.
 Yes, those were the days, before television and computers,
 when children found delight in their inventions
 and the simple adventures of their days.
 when boredom never visited the days,
 when a hard rain was a great occasion for alfresco showers.
 27
 I think I started dabbling in art when I was four.
 My mother also 
                                kept those early works.
 This artistic flare was recognized early in my Archer days.
 And 
                                I put it to good use.
 I was charged with the task of calligraphing the bimonthly achievement 
                                certificates in old-English.
 Done during school hours, I was freed from the classroom boredom 
                                and lethargy.
 And of course, this required masterful and unhurried attention.
 Of course, a euphemism for milking the hours of freedom.
 28
 My art must have carried merit.
 Often, teachers never return my school projects.
 Elaborate pen-and-ink drawings of biblical scenes to accompany Religion subject assignments.
 While the rest of the classmates' works were returned, mine somehow always mysteriously gets lost.
 And sometimes, art serves a more devious purpose.
 Once, I painstakingly produced a series of one-inch square sketches of priestly vestments,
 neatly stacked and stapled together as an exam reference, a codigo, a cheating-tool.
 Brother F. sneaked up from behind, caught me riffling through the pages.
 Appreciating the artistic effort in the work of miniature art,
 he
                          asked how many hours I spent on it.
 Four.
 He said You could have spent that time studying, like everyone else.
 So true.
 But art is the medium, and the medium, art.
 And alas, this one, another I never got back.
 29
 Art also brought economic opportunities.
 By sophomore year, I had a little business on the side.
 Quite opportune, for I have started playing billiards and the 
                                    pin-ball.
 Expensive pastimes on a meager allowance.
 I have started doing nude sketches to occupy myself
 through the interminable hours of boredom and lectures.
 Soon enough, the nudes caught the attention of some classmates.
 And an art service-enterprise was born, sketching their daydreams 
                                    and fantasies.
 Classmates brought me black-and-white photographs of faces which 
                                    I sketch into some likeness.
 When some degree of facial likeness was achieved or approved,
 I would proceed to draw the rest of the  anatomy in resplendent 
                                    nudity.
 In whatever pose or contortion they wished or dared to imagine.
 It wasn't much, but the extra income was godsend.
 It allowed for a more gastronomically filling recess time indulgence 
                                    of a coke and a sandwich.
 with residual jingles in the pocket that supported after-school recreational indulgences
 of billiards and pinball.
 I had a "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy
 but could not refrain from contemplating the whence of these needs 
                                    and fantasies
 from what photo albums these photographs were borrowed from.
 and strongly suspected the Oedipal roots of their desires,
 and of course, was quite aware of their eventual sinful palmar use.
 I was merely the purveyor of pleasure.
 30
 Alas, the enterprise did not last long enough to contribute to 
                                      the nest egg.
 Catholic remorse caught up with my creativity.
 One day, I was approached by Brother C. who told me that a classmate,
 despondent and overwhelmed with guilt, came to him with a portfolio 
                                      of my nude sketches
 confessing that every time he looked at them, he was overcome 
                                      with sin.
 I Kid you not!
 Thankless horny bastard with his callused palms!
 Brother C. then demanded that I hand over all my sketches of sin.
 He would not believe there were no others,
 that the sketches were  on-demand, commissioned sketches.
 I would have liked to call them "art."
 But at that time, I had neither depth of art philosophy
 or the polished arguments for the art of nudity.
 Despite my repeated and imploring avowals that there was no cache 
                                      of naked sketches
 Brother C. gave me twenty-four hours to hand over the rest of 
                                      the sinful collection.
 He threatened to inform my parents if I failed to do so
 And so. . .
 Deep into  the night and into the hours of morning,
 I sketched with a frenzied pen, page after page of women
 in varying degrees of undress and wanton nakedness.
 The next morning, bleary-eyed, I handed him my Portfolio-of-Sin.
 And. . .
 A few days later my parents were summoned to the principal's 
                                      office
 to discuss the grievousness of my sins and the threatening possibility 
                                      of expulsion.
 31
 My mother came out of the principal's office at the tail-end of 
                                        her tears.
 I am not sure if she was shown the contents of the art-portfolio.
 She never told me.
 Perhaps she was told of the sins my work generated.
 She never told me.
 But she told the principal of my precocious penchant for art,
 of the unavoidable nudity in the gifts of art books.
 And she told me, too: Godofredo! Do you know how much 
                                                    I had to beg for you?
 (My mother only used "Godofredo" in states of extreme 
                                                  exasperation and frustration.)
 And in the end, the sentence was dispensed with Christian Brother 
                                        compassion.
 Suspension instead of expulsion.
 And I was not allowed to return to Religion class, resulting 
                                        in my first ever "Failed" grade
 and for which I had to suffer making up with summer school.
 What was the lesson? None.
 Or, maybe, some.
 Looking back, I should have done and sold the art with a disclaimer:
 Sin at your own expense.
 Or, since they were unsigned works of sin, I could have said:
 Not mine!
 Or. . . Prove it!
 And I know who sold me out, and karma has dealt him 
                                                  appropriate vengeance.
 And Brother C? I suffered and sacrificed a sleepless night of 
                                        sketching nudity,
 with his reassurance that my parents would not be called in.
 And in the end, my mother still suffered the ignominy of pleading 
                                        for my academic survival.
 It is his good fortune that I lived and practiced the expectations of my given name,
 Friend of God,
 and embraced the teachings of Christian 
                                        forgiveness and Gandhi's nonviolence.
 32
 Catholicism  packages sin like no other religion.
 What can be more original than Original Sin.
 Adam and Eve, the  Serpent and a tree,
 fruits plump with promises and possibilities.
 Serpent catches Eve at a vulnerable time of the month,
 Eve bites the apple, passes it to Adam boy,
 telling him, as he hesitates: You'd better! Or you don't get any.
 Adam knew Eve wasn't talking apple.
 So Adam 
                                    gives it a bite,
 and God screamed "What the hell happened?"
 Adam pointing blame on Eve who was pointing at the snake who couldn't really point.
 And from this sorry scene that caused the sorry fall of man came the innateness 
                                        of sin.
 Jesus H. Christ! That is mother-fluggin' deep.
 And Adam tried to mitigate his guilt: I didn't even swallow it!
 Yeah. 
It got stuck, became known as the 
                                        Adam's apple.
 Ergo, banished from Eden.
 Then second-son Cain killed first-son Abel.
 But when asked, his hands still bloody, Cain exclaimed in histrionic 
                                        incredulity:
 Am I my brother's keeper?
 Adam, the apple biter.
 Eve, abettor and co-biter.
 Abel, murdered.
 Cain, murderer.
 Original sin and all, don't ponder why we are what we are.
 That biblical first family didn't make  good role models.
 33
 So we grew up in theological fear,
 constantly threatened by eternal damnation.
 We were taught the complexities, consequences,
 and categories of sin—venial sins and mortal sins.
 Directed the   moral and carnal guidelines of adolescent existence,
 perhaps even the pre-teen years.
 Venial sin was graphically depicted as a dotted white heart.
 The dots represent minor sins, like minor misdemeanors.
 You can have a thousand dots or venial sins, it will not deprive 
                                          the soul of divine grace.
 You can still make it to heaven, but not straight to heaven,
 you might have to pass 
                                          through purgatory and serve time.
 Examples of venial sin: lying, cursing. Cheating, maybe.
 Mortal sin fills your graphic white heart with black, even just 
                                          one silly mortal sin.
 A mortal sin is deep shit serious.
 Whether you have one or twenty, dying with a heart blackened with 
                                          mortal sin,
 takes you straight to hell.
 That's right. Straight to fluggin' hell.
 No pit stops to the fires of eternal damnation.
 No ifs or buts, no plea bargainings.
 Examples of mortal sin:
 Breaking any of the ten commandments.
 Missing mass on the Lord's day.
 Adultery. Killing.
 Even masturbation, the priest told me.
 I guess it's includes  coveting your neighbor's wife or daughter.
 God damn!
 Hell must be a crowded place.
 34
 I was hoping masturbation could be reclassified into a venial sin.
 Imagine a thousand masturbatory venial dots.
 And still make it to heaven!
 Alas, I was told an ecumenical edict canceled venial sin and purgatory.
 and canceled St Christopher's sainthood.
 I hoped not. It would make for a tougher time for sinners.
 Venial sin, peccato veniale, is a great concept.
 It allowed the idea of heaven despite a profusion of minor sins.
 Purgatory, another wonderful Catholic conception—
 a flaming expiatory pit stop on the way to heaven's eternal bliss.
 35
 Still, original sin and sins from messenger Moses's stone tablets
 with ten don't-break but sure-to-be-broken commandments weren't enough
 to burden   our lives with the threat of fiery destinations,
 a pit-stop in purgatory or eternal damnation in hell.
 Sometime, way  post-Calvary, new sins were laid down.
 The Cardinal Sins, aka, the Seven Deadly Sins.
 Wrath, greed, sloth, pride, lust, envy and gluttony.
 Human-Nature sins.
 Sins I have been guilty of at one time or another,
 one of them, alas, too often, a daily transgression.
 Fortunately, along with making sin out of human frailties,
 seven Sacraments were formulated – baptism, confirmation, the Eucharist,
 penance, ordination, matrimony and extreme unction –
 many of them sin-erasing and grace-imbuing.
 Extreme unction . . .  the 'Last Rites,' the anointing of the dying,
 if you're lucky to have the padre around,
 he can tag your soul with a straight-to-heaven VIP pass.
 Thank God for Sacraments.
 Some of them instant sin cleansers.
 Jeepers creepers!
 Without them, Hell would be  a hell of a  crowded place.
 36
 So we grew up waging a war on sin.
 Daily doses of Religion class, from kindergarten to fourth-year 
                                                high.
 Teachings that included sainthood and martyrdom.
 There was this classic hypothetical test for martyrdom,
 instant salvation
 the Saracen blade on your neck.
 Denounce your faith, and you live.
 Admit to your Catholicism, and die.
 Whoa! that's a no-brainer.
 No bloody  neck wounds for me.
 Not even for a 100 virgins.
 37
 Hell is a construct of mythology, folklore, and religion.
 Catholicism didn't invent it—but saw the potential in it.
 Which spawned a business of salvation.
 In high school, there were  extracurricular salvation-focused activities.
 Like learning to serve mass, an endeavor that required the memorization 
                                                of the mass in Latin.
 But more important, becoming an acolyte was a hedge on Religion 
                                                grade,
 an automatic extra five points added.
 Then, there was the plenary indulgence.
 For non-Catholics this might be incomprehensible.
 Plenary indulgences are like "salvation coupons" acquired 
                                                            through prayer and sacrifice.
 It gives an assurance of an opportunity to die in a "state 
                                                            of grace."
 I accumulated a good number of them, a reassuring number to take 
                                                  me to heaven's gate.
 But I have no idea if they might have been canceled
 together with 
                                                venial sin, purgatory, and St. Christopher.
 Holy gazoonkas! Salvation coupons with expiry dates.
 38
 There was a once-a-month sacramental cleansing.
 Confession, one day, and communion, the following day.
 Classes were interrupted one at a time, and the students, en bloc, 
                                                    would march to the chapel.
 There were confessionals on both sides,
 Sin-cleansing boxes invented by  the religion that invented original sin.
 Forbidding dark-varnished Gothic wooden movable 
                                                    structures
 with padded kneeling spaces on opposite sides, with tiny grilled and 
                                                    thickly curtained windows
 that opened to a darkened cubicle in the middle, where sits the 
                                                    confessor
 to whom you spill out in whispered guilt, the day's, week's or month's 
                                                    accumulation of sins.
 And in a boy's school raging with new-found testosterone,
 the sins were most likely mortal sins of palmar self-abuse, fueled 
                                                    or aided by generic sexual fantasies.
 Or, at the least: Bless me father, for I have sinned. . 
                                                                . I had impure thoughts. . . again.
 For a long time, my sins were fueled by black and whites of Kim 
                                                    Novak's cleavage,
 Jane Russell sprawled in the barn hay, and of course, Marylyn 
                                                    Monroe's Seven-Year-Itch pic.
 39
 After absolution comes penance, usually Our Fathers and Hail Marys,
 in a number determined by the gravity of sin, with which we are 
                                                      dispatched to the altar rail
 where we kneel in quiet penitence, hurrying through the silent 
                                                      recitation of penance,
 not wanting to take conspicuously long, lest it causes conjecture 
                                                      on your sins' gravity.
 Sometimes I am forced to finish the recitation of penance in the privacy of home.
 The following morning, the student body assembles in the chapel for mass and 
                                                      communion.
 A monthly congregation of young boys, souls  white with temporary post-confessional grace.
 As the pews empty in hushed shuffling,
 the communicants holding their hands in prayer.
 Once, or twice, I was left  sitting alone,  dreadfully conspicuous
 in the middle of rows of emptied benches, suffering the 
                                                      knowing glare
 of the cleansed and pious on their way to the altar rail to receive 
                                                      the communion host.
 Sinner!  What sin hast thou committed? The penance still fresh 
                                                                  from thy lips!
 A venial sin still allowed you to take communion.
 But at an age raging with testosterone and bedeviled by generic temptations
 the twenty four hours between penance and communion
 is a sufferingly too long a period of time to remain in the requisite state of grace,
 to partake in the sacramental  bread-and-wine body-and-blood celebration.
 I confess I have gone to the altar, many a time, my soul black as sin,
 just not to suffer the ignominy of the sitting alone in the pew.
 Thank god for plenary indulgences and salvation coupons.
 40
 But there were also doses of non-curricular religion.
 Severe doses of domestic religion.
 In the province,  compulsory evening prayers with the grandmother.
 Nightly  rosaries in Tagalog, all 53 beads, replete with mysteries.
 At home, I remember a few years, likewise, of nightly prayers
 and Wednesday novenas to the Mother of Perpetual Help,
 complete with hymns and litanies.
 On Holy Thursdays, making rounds of churches on the way to Imus.
 Doing countless Stations of the Cross.
 Of course, there was Sunday Mass,
 compelled by the mortal-sin-eternal-damnation thingy,
 Later on, as life became more complicated and arduous,
 as challenges piled up and failures threatened,
 with God and the Virgin Mary overwhelmed with humanity's desperate prayers,
 there were, thankfully, intermediary saints.
 Patron saints galore, specialized for all different human needs,
 One said especially implored upon for desperate collegiate needs.
 St. Jude, patron saint of the Impossible,
 the favorite go-to saint as the semester nears its end,
 by students  threatened by academic failure
 with novenas promising good deeds, sacrifices and life-affirming changes,
 too often, forgotten as soon as delivered from the threats of academic failure.
 41
 These are high school years in a boy's school.
 Of new and raging testosterone.
 Before Playboy, before Hustler.
 Before Technicolor sin.
 This was time when masturbatory alternatives to the classy photos 
                                                            of Kim, Marilyn and Jane
 were palm-sized newsprint editions of porn
 with blurred black-and-white copulating images interspersed
 between pages of titillating porn stories in Tagalog.
 They were sold as "Bedtime Stories" or "Fighting 
                                                                      Fish."
 Familiar and recurring components to the litany of regularly confessed sins.
 42
 But the testosterone started intruding upon childhood innocence
 long before Kim, Jane and Marilyn.
 Way back in elementary school, there were early doses of Sex 101.
 The earliest was the unsettling awareness of a that strange excitement
 when the maid would soap me all over in my daily showers.
 Whoa! What is this that thrills, tingles and excites?
 After a number of times, I went to my mother and said:
 I think I am old enough 
                                                                to do my own showers now.
 My mother, surprised at my precocity, could only muster a sheepish "Oh. . . ok."
 And a little later on I realized how stupid, stupid, stupid that 
                                                              was,
 prematurely giving up a childhood perk,
 instead of milking it to its hormonally raging end.
 Really. . . stupid, stupid, stupid.
 43
 Another time, I came upon the laundry woman taking a break from her laundry washing
 and pulled out her post-partum milk-filled breast and started squeezing 
                                                             it.
 I watched in amazement at the long curving line of squirting milk.
 She said she was cleaning it.
 And asked if I wanted to taste it
 . . . as long as I promised not to tell my mother.
 She put a few drops on her finger.
 I remember how intensely sweet it was.
 44
 As the testosterone started to rage in elementary school years,
 sex became a subject of increasing interest and exploration,
 beyond the generic palmar indulgences
 before the availability of more graphic 'bedtime stories' porn,
 and thank God, way way before cyber porn.
 From a serious effort and complicated process of cajolement,
 I was able to convince a cousin to be our object of sexual intercourse
 and fulfill our hormonally confused Grail.
 The initiates included two other cousins, I guess, early groupies.
 The two level house shared by four or five families
 required  serious planning for a midnight rendezvous.
 In the quiet of the night, we met on the second floor bathroom.
 In hushed conspiratorial silence, we embarked on a menage-a-quarto,
 a cousin standing, her back against the wall,
 lifting her skirt 
                                                                  and pulling down her panties.
 The three of us - I was the lead-boy in an unhurried line,
 pulled 
                                                                  out our  pre-adolescent weenies
 and stepped forward in an orderly fashion,  holding our little 
                                                                  limp organs,
 lightly touching it to the cousin's awaiting and sacrificial pudendum,
 then proceeding to the back of the short line for a second and 
                                                                  third time.
 Alas, all severely Catholic boys and girl, guilt and sin burdened their souls,
 or perhaps, just a case of blabbering and bragging,
 because in just a few days, it  snuck into my mother's grapevine.
 I still remember her shrill screams, in incredible decibels of incredulity:
 What! You put your pititing (penis) into her chichay (vagina) 
                                                                    !!! ???
 Yes!
 What! What! . . . echoing with her disbelief.
 She finally settled down when she surmised from the Q and A 
                                                                  that there was no penetration.
 A few weeks later, undeterred, there was another effort of cajolery with another cousin.
 Alas. . . that failed.
 45
 Soon the cousins left and one of the bottom rooms were rented 
                                                                    to a woman, E.
 In the pie in the sky of pre-teen yearnings,
 this was a slice of pie served by the muse of my preadolescent dreams.
 Every day after school, I would pass by her window by the bottom 
                                                                    of the steps.
 Many times I never made it up the steps.
 E. was always there during the day. She worked nights.
 She always had comic books by her bed.
 I visited her room every chance I had.
 and sat with her in her bed, to pretend to read her comic books
 while I gazed at her past the edges of the comic book pages.
 She was beautiful.
 and always smelled of a sinful concoction of scents.
 Perhaps, it was just the generic fragrance of bath soap.
 But I was dizzy in the delights of scent and forbidden sights.
 She always wore something light and wispy, that bared part of 
                                                                    herself.
 Slivers of openings that revealed verboten patches of flesh.
 In the afternoons, the window by the bed would catch the late 
                                                                    sun
 and the bathe the room with its ethereal glow
 as the magic of light and shadows would slowly reveal
 through the thin veil of thin and wispy, the sensuous curves of 
                                                                    her breasts
 and her nipples punctuating the carnal vision.
 One day, too soon, she was gone.
 46
 Many summers of childhood were spent in Tiaong,
 in that  ancestral stone house with the sculpture of the half-naked Elias
 at the center of the horseshoe-shaped pool,
 inspired and drawn from Jose Rizal's 
                                                                      Noli Me Tangere,
 frozen in time, in his brawn and bravado, battling a crocodile
 that symbolized the common man's struggle against the collective burgis.
 The house was built in 1927 to Tomas Mapua's architectural design,
 historied by the Japanese occupation and damaged by the liberation bombing.
 It houses many childhood memories.
 Doña Concha and Don Tomas.
 They orchestrated many of our childhood days.
 A grandmother who lorded over and ran the business of their land.
 A grandfather,  who endlessly doted over his grandchildren.
 Grew up with cousins, with the embellishments of provincial privilege.
 Weekend picnics in the rivers, banana tree rafts afloat with lunch and delicacies.
 Carabao cart rides through the coconut plantations
 or walking the narrow footpaths of the ricelands.
 When the grandparents died, the house slowly went into disuse.
 And except for occasional  short-lived occupancies
 inevitably aging into disrepair, abandonment and hauntedness.
 It still stands. . . the oldest house in Tiaong,
 relic and repository that reminds of  a time past,
 with its colonial trimmings, the age of the hacienderos,
 the Japanese occupation, a childhood that many shared,
 and the many ignominious stories of  kin, old and recent –
 most edging into the fringes of memory and unremembered.
 But what remains, after all these years, is Doña Concha.
 Remembered for her charity, for the many parcels of land
 contributed to the remote barangays of Tiaong
 for the many schools erected and dedicated in her name.
 47
 In high school I was warned masturbation can make you mad,
 adding to a lengthening list of life-restricting don'ts,
 many, all, eventually debunked by 
                                                                      time.
 Like, If you go to bed with your hair wet, you will wake up blind.
 Walking after a meal will give you appendicitis.
 If you jump up and down, as high as you can, on Good Saturday, 
                                                                      you will grow taller.
 I didn't grow tall.
 Nor go blind.
 Never had appendicitis.
 And I'm not mad. . . (I think.)
 48
 I didn't play much sports, or nothing at all.
 There was so much time for juvenile delinquency.
 Nothing serious, just benign delinquency.
 Just roaming the streets and hanging out street corners.
 Spending allowance on pinball and billiards.
 The precocious thrill of night time drag racing,
 with two underaged friends with faked drivers licenses,
 at a time when streets were literally empty.
 Or moving a police street outpost
 one block across the street
 delighting to watch the police scratching his head
 wondering if he had a little too much to drink the night before.
 A simple time it was.
 Before video games, the telly, and computers consumed the days.
 Just shooting the breeze.
 Bonding.
 48
 Late in high school, there was a burst of interest in combo music.
 A few years dominated by instrumental music.
 The Ventures ruled.
 The Gnats was formed, made up of cousins.
 I played lead guitar.
 All owido, all ears, no professional guiding hand.
 We just played, we thought we were good,
 good enough to play in parties and town plazas.
 We were mediocre, bad.
 49
 The last year of high school, I was somewhat frantic.
 The years of underachievement flew by with delightful and delinquent 
        frivolity.
 The year would end with the Graduation Year Book,
 for many, pictures 
          embellished with the list of extracurricular activities.
 Mine will have no 
          such gravitas.
 I think I joined the Chess Club, maybe something else.
 There was still a rather empty expanse of white space under my 
          picture.
 It is traditional to pass the year book around
 for your classmates' signatures and dedications.
 I read the assortment of dedications on the other classmates' 
          yearbooks.
 Most were empowering words for life's coming challenges,
 Some laced with affirming recognition and expectation: Most 
                                                                                  likely to succeed.
 Alas, mine had none of those.
 I would have settled for something like: Thanks for the memories.
 But no luck on that.
 But one stuck like glue to memory,
 and perhaps, fairly summarized my days as an archer:
 To Butch, the class character.
 50
 True Green.
 And, truly fortunate for the La Sallite education.
 And have worn that badge of green with quiet pride.
 Of course, I wondered how much of what we have become
 came from family, circumstance, and serendipity.
 Later, on recurring occasions, when a hurdle is passed,
 when an opportunity presents,
 I would  think: it's the green education,
 that made one confident and sure,
 made challenges seem easier,
 allowed one foot inside the door,
 or gave a step ahead of the rest.
 51
 Green, with too much religion.
 Yes, it had   shortcomings.
 Sanitized, colonized.
 Abridged and depthless teaching of Philippine history.
 A  modicum of Philippine literature,
 no MeTangere or Filibusterismo.
 Maybe paragraph-caricatures of revolutionary heroes.
 A literary landscape bursting at the seams
 with English and American,
 Shakespeare, Poe, Longfellow,
 bushelfuls of cowboys and indians,
 and the Classics' motley of characters.
 52
 And too much religion. Severe doses of religion.
 From the early years of catechismal rote,
 to help me remember who made me and why God made me –
 To know Him, to love Him and to serve Him.
 The seriously thick pages of the bible,
 bursting at the seams with stories of miracles, murder and mayhem.
 From the incredible seven days of creation,
 to-date, an unsurpassed engineering feat,
 to the early pages smeared with original sin and bloodied by Cain's first homicide.
 Lot's wife turning to salt. Jonah swallowed by the whale. . . and surviving.
 And man, oh, man. Moses and the parting of the Red Sea.
 Jesus H. Christ, that is one seriously over-the-top miracle.
 And that is Old Testament.
 The New Testament is just as miracle-heavy.
 Four authors–Matthew, Mark, Luke and John writing about the King of the Jews.
 Timeless parables, sermons and beatitudes.
 Timeless characters: the good sam and the prodigal son.
 Top-notch miracles. Virgin birth. Water into wine. Loaves and fishes. Raising of Lazarus.
 And his miracle-le-gran, His own resurrection.
 Who needs fiction, when there is this pulse-racing read in one volume,
 free, in every hotel room's bedside drawer.
 53
 If that's not enough, there's monthly confessions, communions and benedictions.
 Confessions and communions were sort of interactive.
 The benedictions I never figured out.
 Just some ritual of incense burning and smoke fogging up the altar
 and the priest murmuring unintelligible Latin.
 What's the point of all these?
 Um . . . just that. . . there was a lot of religion.
 And with more than 300 years of Christianity and colonization,
 and severely Catholic parents, 
          there really wasn't much choice.
 I would still prefer 
          that over some religion that requires you to pray five times a day
 that shuns the open appreciation of the beauty of women,
 that wages a jihad on unbelievers,
 even if it promises  seventy plus virgins for a blow-yourself-up martyrdom.
 Now. . . Rastafarianism with the cannabis rituals. . .
 Hmm. . . I have to think about that.
 54
 What a game.
 Life's first quarter far from finished and already burdened by 
          several realities and events.
 I was a mistake, a product of a failed rhythm method. Merciless.
 Called Tommy Tomorrow early on. Merciless.
 Weekend abandonment, early on. Merciless.
 And now leaving the hallowed halls of high school as "class 
                                                                                  character."
 Um. . . merciless.
 55
 I wanted to go to Art School, and even Europe was bandied about.
 But as I was graduating from High School,
 my older brother, who was on his third year of premedical school,
 developed mumps and its dreaded complication: orchitis.
 Orchitis or not, I think my brother just wanted out.
 Alas, both my parents were physicians.
 Inevitably, the onus of their Hippocratic dream
 of having a physician in the family and the clan was saddled on me.
 My mother, the nominal healer, retired soon after graduation
 for the nobler calling of motherhood, raising the eventual seven children
 with their  rabid and disparate temperaments.
 Father  practiced his kind of country medicine,
 and I accompanied him often, tugging along in his house calls,
 depositing the patients' warm jars 
          of urine for my safekeeping.
 But keeper-of-warm-jars-of-pee didn't enkindle me into medicine.
 Maybe, it was his war-time stories of making rounds in Japanese 
          garrisons,
 and saving many from death or torture by diagnosing them with 
          illnesses,
 like tuberculosis or some kind of plague that might spread in 
          the camps,
 consequently having the the poor souls summarily banished
 from the garrison to die their 
              imagined deaths.
 Good story, but it wasn't that either that took me from art to 
          medicine.
 I think is was just the dutiful son surrendering his earlier dreams
 to a parental wish and plea to have a son follow in their footsteps.
 Hell.
 Mr Mistake. Mr Class Character. Mr Dutiful son.
 Both parents were doctors.
 Did I really have a choice?
 56
 Already edematous and saturated with theology,
 I segued from the moulding hands of the Christian Brothers
 to the educational citadel of the Dominican fathers.
 From the ivy-leagued halls of La Salle
 to the melting-pot environs of Santa Tomas.
 Before I was done, it would be 20  years of an educational 
          life
 ruled by men in white religious garbs.
 For the next eight years, I was a Thomasian,
 dedicating three years of semesters and summer 
          school for pre-med
 and the 
          five years of medical school.
 Early on, I 
          became glaringly aware of the  benefits 
          of archerhood.
 Archer roots provided an edge—a certain hubris, a kind of 
                                                                                    panache
 that elicited varying amounts of awe—and its own subtle strut.
 More noticeably, it was an edge in English.
 I continued my pursuit of education
 in uninspired years of underachievement,
 with  mastery of the tools and ways of achieving passing grades:
 cramming, cramming, and more cramming,
 and if that fails, missed exams and special make-up exams.
 Absences were maxed to the limit.
 Sneaking out after roll-call
 to catch the peso-and-ten 
          first showing in movie houses.
 Passing continued to be no-sweat easy.
 Once, I embarked on an effort to prove to myself
 that underneath the chronic underachievement
 I was capable of putting together a semester of graded excellence.
 And indeed, I put out an impressive academic semester,
 and soon relapsed back to the old commitment of academic underachievement.
 57
 April 17, 1961 was the botched Bay of Pigs.
 November 23, 1963 John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
 February 1965 saw the start of the escalation of the Vietnam War.
 58
 Santo Tomas was really the inevitable  choice for medical school.
 No calorie was expended on why and where.
 Both parents, both physicians, were alumni.
 Quite a number of the my professors were their  classmates.
 There I spent five more years of uninspired underachievement.
 Years rife with conflict, anomie, and personal doubts.
 59
 Still, medicine was a  fascinating journey,
 years of learning and exploration,
 weaving through the separate and unfamiliar disciplines
 of anatomy, histology, physiology, pharmacology, pathology,
 that will eventually provide science and connections
 to the seeming mysteries of the human condition.
 Freshman anatomy was the initiation in our quest of learning.
 A room laden heavy  with the reek of formaldehyde,
 rows of cadavers in stainless steel beds, shrouded in white,
 the nameless and bloodless, the silent sacrificial dead.
 With our gleaming stainless steel scalpels,
 slicing  and cutting through, piece by piece, organ by organ,
 their shreds and fragments slowly filling up the buckets,
 matching the pages of  books with layers of
          exposed tissues.
 Finally, a year of anatomical dissection completed,
 the thousands of fragments are laid to rest
 in a mass burial for the nameless souls
 to lend humanity to their silent service and our indebtedness.
 That from the dead, we learn for the living.
 60
 Underachievement was sadly and occasionally facilitated  by educational 
          dishonesty.
 Not just the usual venial sin peeks on your seat-mates' test papers
 or the system of signals or whispered transfers of answers.
 There was the  commerce of exam papers sold off-the-press,
 a source of added income for professors' secretaries and lab assistants,
 selling educational aids to the educationally lazy.
 61
 The slow shedding of squeamishness,
 brains, hearts and body parts staring back from formalin jars.
 Jerking frog legs in physiology class vivisection.
 Parasites and the army of worms that fed into  evidence-based 
          phobias
 for things raw, or rare and bleeding slabs of steak.
 Knowledge seamlessly segueing from theory to practicum,
 the iconic stethoscope amplifying the sounds
 of heart beats, breath sounds and borborygmi,
 as skills became defined and honed
 as we are slowly led to our inclinations and eventual specializations.
 My earlier dreams of becoming a neurosurgeon, slowly fading.
 62
 Of course, there was never any attempt at scholastic 
          distinction.
 No summa cum laude, magna cum laude, or even cum laude.
 My goal, as always, was pasado bastante laude,
 a goal that lowered the achievement bar
 and allowed for concurrent courses in the University of Life.
 63
 The first summer break, I was asked to a attend summer school 
          for a friend's friend.
 In my anomie and unquenchable thirst for enlightenment,
 and an idle summer that could be put to some use. . . 
I agreed.
 I informed  my parents, matter-of- factly,
 thinking they would merely 
          shake their heads in mild exasperation
 and  merely sigh: Oh, son, that's crazy.
 Or something benign like that.
 Alas, it was met with great dismay and anxiety,
 both ready to have a cow,
 and to boot, sought counsel from a lawyer-uncle,
 who warned me of criminal complicity in fraud,
 in the threshold of endeavors in the most noble of professions, 
          medicine.
 Of course, all of that fell on deaf ears.
 In  anonymity in an unfamiliar university,
 I attended a summer class on Public Speaking and Debate as Arturo 
          C.
 Every one was required to stand up in front to deliver a sample 
          of oration.
 The class, impressed by my delivery, voted me class president.
 From the teacher, I sensed a fondness and admiration.
 When summer school ended, he invited me to join his debating team.
 I suffered a pang of typical Christian guilt.
 The following semester, he searched out Arturo C to join the debate club.
 There was an exchange of confused incredulity and denials
 between him and the real Arturo C.
 But you're not Arturo C. . . Yes, I am, but 
              I didn't. . .But your name. . Yes, but 
                that's not me. . .
 There must be another. . There's only one. . . This is your transcript. . .
 Yes, but I'm not. . .
 64
 By sophomore year, music intruded into my academic endeavors.
 Elvis, Ricky Nelson, Buddy Holly, Paul Anka were fading from the music scene.
 Instrumental rock bounded into the scene and the Ventures reigned 
          supreme.
 For a while, music stopped singing, as guitars twanged and reverbed.
 Locally, RJ and the Riots ruled.
 Walk Don't Run became the instrumental anthem.
 Then  folk music snuck in.
 Locally, it might have started with the Kingston 
          Trio, Tom Dooley.
 Then, Joan Baez, the Bob Dylan.  Peter, Paul and Mary.
 Here, folk music lacked heart and soul, angst and   dissent
 that fueled it and caused it to  rage in America,
 We embraced it here for the melody and harmony,
 for the simple  messages and metaphors of love 
          and loves lost,
 with the   anger,  discontent, and protest of the songs
 incongruous with the halcyon days of  life
          in this part of the world.
 65
 Nonetheless, it was folk music that hooked me.
 Formed a group, Two and A Lady,
 with a repertoire of mostly
          Peter Paul and Mary songs,
 sang with good harmony, albeit, short on passion.
 How could you sing otherwise?
 World War II and the Japanese occupation distanced by decades.
 With no revolution in our souls, they were empty lyrics.
 Apolitical souls in the halcyon days in a place still called the 
          Tiger of Asia.
 We sang folk, making appearances on television shows and campus 
          concerts.
 For television shows, we taped into the morning hours.
 In between waits and takes, peeking into thick medical books in 
          tow
 for next day's exam or some makeup exam or a special-exam for 
          a missed make-up exam.
 We sang till we splintered. We splintered because the Lady left.
 It was a nice patch of time.
 A musical interlude in the midst of medical college.
 66
 Now I must confess.
 All those years of Two and A Lady, I was in love with the lady.
 The raging hormones, testosterone oozing off hair follicles and 
          sweat glands.
 The intolerable painful physical closeness.
 I wrote long letters, avowals of love.
 Letters never sent, consigned to a shoebox,
 testament to a calvary of unrequited love.
 67
 The dollar exchanged to four pesos. A peso bought a pack of Camel.
 Short time motel rooms, P19.50.
 68
 I continued to dabble in art; the passion, constant and simmering.
 Pop Art that 
           sustained the yearning and the ache.
 Warhol's Brillo Pad works came out '64.
 Roy Lichtenstein was putting out his comic book kind of art.
 Art news and images came only in the limited servings
 of  what weekly magazines  like Time, Newsweek, or Life
 would occasionally feature, and local television, more rarely so.
 Images often brought gee-whiz moments.
 The nagging passions for art waged its war
 against
the unrelenting academic demands of Medicine.
 Often I battled with  self-doubts and recurring angst
 of why I allowed myself to be hassled into medicine.
 My mother was always ready with a parry and a tempering advice.
 You have only four years left. Then, you can devote yourself 
          to art for the rest of your life.
 A year later. . .
 You have three years left. Then you can. . .
 A year later, three done, two left, 
          I have lost the taste for battle.
 Art took a respite, as I dedicated myself to the task of completing 
          my medical studies.
 69
 By fourth year, the academic landscape had changed.
 We moved from the classrooms to the clinics,
 from frog legs and cadavers to really sick people.
 Real blood, real suppuration, real dying, real dead.
 Searching, shelving, and sorting through tomes of theory
 to connect the incredible dots of symptoms and signs.
 strutting in our whites, adorned with the dangling badge
 of the black stethoscope 
          slung on our necks.
 Requisite years given requisite efforts.
 70
 1968. Warhol came up with Campbell's Soup 1.
 It was a seminal event for me.
 Blew me away.
 I was incredulous, dazed with delight.
 This is art?
 Jesus H. Christ.
 Yes, of course, it is art.
 Yes. . . and in America, such things are possible.
 I was irrevocably hooked.
 America beckoned, a little more.
 71
 On the 4th year of medical school, I was asked to put  a group together
 for an intra-collegiate singing competition.
 Called the group The Golden Echoes.
 And won First Prize, singing the Sandpipers song: Guantanamera.
 72
 Internship was a whirlwind year, and a blur.
 A twelve-month internship outside the restricting environs of 
          the Dominican citadel.
 rotating from one affiliate specialty hospital or clinic to the next.
 There is not much I can remember of the last year.
 Just one, or two events.
 73
 Other than being voted class president as Arturo C,
 my academic life 
          has been devoid of political aspirations.
 My Thomasian years were almost so.
 Like the Archer years, I did not seek membership in organizations.
 There were two medical fraternities: Caduceus, I think, and Tau 
          Mu.
 I had invitations to join both, enticed by one that they would go easy on me,
 I  declined the benefits of their brotherhoods.
 As senior-year elections were nearing, I joked that I would 
          run for president.
 A friend laughed, said I couldn't win against the frat boys.
 I ran and I won.
 And was burdened with almost immediate regrets.
 Afflicted by social aversion, preferring isolation and solitude,
 I lacked the desire, energy, and skills for the activities of office.
 I disappeared almost immediately, thankful for the female president 
          counterpart
 and the male vice-president who took over the helm.
 74
 The other, my rotation in obstetrics,
 in a government hospital providing service to the indigent.
 The every third night call was shared with another intern,
 always, the inevitable exhaustion into the morning hours,
 manning rows of tables, often filled with gravidas
 screaming in obstetrical pain, promising: Never 
              again.
 Sometimes they never made it to the table,
 A patient delivered in the back of a taxicab.
 But most nights, we sat, gowned and gloved,
 gazing at the progressive bulging of vaginas as the heads pushes forward,
 expectant for the multigravida's rapid and sometimes effortless delivery,
 or scissors in hand, ready to deliver the primigravidal episiotomy.
 While a nurse goes around measuring cervical dilations,
 announcing: Placenta out.
 or warning of imminent deliveries: Fully dilated!
 or frantically screaming: Baby out!
 If there was time, we would rush to the bucket of Phisohex
 for a hurried effort of glove disinfection.
 Some times, you just rush to the "baby coming out" table, 
            the baby half out,
 to guide it in the last stage of vaginal passage,
 hastily cutting and clamping the cord,
 and rushing to another table and gravida
 as another head vigorously pushes into the world,
 deaf to the discordant chorus of screaming women.
 One night, at brink of exhaustion, after cutting the cord
 a baby slipped through my 
          hands, did a half-somersault,
 kerplunked and squished into a bucket 
            half-filled with placenta.
 I did a few  post-delivery follow-ups on the infant,
 making sure the baby was moving all fours and crying heartily.
 The baby was fine and the parents were delighted and thankful
 for 
          my concerned follow up care
 unaware of their baby's precocious circus act.
 75
 The last year's tuition was less than a thousand pesos.
 76
 I got my diploma, in its traditional beige and expensive texture,
 laden with the essential and impressive Latin.
 I never framed it.
 It's folded somewhere, hopelessly creased.
 In fact, I never framed or hung diplomas and certificates.
 I was often badgered about the absence of framed parchment in 
          my office rooms.
 77
 For many, graduation was the prologue for the American dream.
 The interim offered few other choices; many went to hospital 
          residencies.
 I chose the freedom and adventure of pharmaceutical-sponsored medical missions,
 with its opportunity for traveling the islands and provinces,
 remote places, deep in the bowels of boondocks.
 Memorable were the  welcoming feasts that awaited us in the hosting 
          towns
 and the inevitable evenings of bacchanalia.
 Somewhere way up north, in the middle of a mission clinic, I was handed 
          a telegram:
 Your father dead. Awaiting you for burial.
 Seeking catharsis, I ran into the wind, with nowhere to go but 
          the limits of exhaustion.
 I settled down, tearful.
 Then headed home.
 A banca ride, a connection of jeepney rides, and a long 
          bus ride  to Manila,
 sobbing through lonely hours of grief and loss, wondering at its 
          suddenness,
 assured by a certainty that my mother was comforted by the love 
          of family.
 In too-long  stretch of bus-bumpy grief, I even imagined him 
          in the coffin
 in peaceful repose, wearing his favorite light blue suit.
 I arrived past midnight, found the house in a strange familiar 
          clutter.
 My sister, wakened from my knocking, asked what I was doing back 
          home.
 Shortly after, my father came out, a most welcome apparition.
 He said he felt like he has gotten a second lease on life.
 A dastardly joke.
 78
 July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 Neil Armstrong walked on the moon.
 79
 There were a few more  fleeting medical endeavors.
 A nightly school clinic I relieved my father from.
 Another, a brief and fascinating understudy with a cosmetic surgeon,
 cutting away, pulling back  the ravages of aging,
 eyes, noses, boobs,  wrinkles, and sagging bags,
 fulfilling dreams with silicon implants,
 feminizing males by subtractions and augmentations.
 I considered the specialty briefly.
 Thought it could be a merging of medicine and art.
 Egads! Glad a guardian angel intervened.
 80
 And finally, there was time for art.
 A two-year immersion
 exploring different mediums: ceramics, fiberglass, polymer, woodcuts,
 including a short and failed attempt at the potter's wheel.
 I hang around an artist workshop, fiddling around with art forms
 and flirting with Japayuki hostesses killing their daytime hours.
 I entered a juried mixed-media competition, I won first prize 
          in painting.
 In another, with entrees untagged in a juried competition in ceramics,
 I won Grand Prize with a "Last Supper" entry,
 and two other
          prizes: first and honorable mention.
 81
 The Plaza Miranda bombing occurred in August 21, 1971.
 9 people were killed. Scores wounded.
 There was a flurry of finger pointing.
 Incumbent Marcos was blamed.
 He blamed the communists.
 He suspended the writ of habeas corpus
 and soon after, declared martial law.
 Plaza Miranda ceased to be.
 82
 After a  medical employment opportunity in Nigeria failed to materialize
 American loomed large in the horizon.
 Then, called the Brain Drain decade.
 America, that place, that dream, that idea.
 For many doctors and nurses, the common destination,
 their husbands and wives in tow, parents to follow.
 For many,  the elusive  dream,
 To suffer the long and uncertain wait,
 the lottery of quotas
 the imagined powers of prayers,
 to walk away from a homeland and all things familiar,
 to forge a future in some distant diaspora.
 For some, America is the desperate dream.
 Pregnant mothers hoping to 'anchor' their babies
 and, eventually, themselves in a future paradise.
 Embellishing applications, faking bank accounts,
 sometimes a nightmare of hock and usury
 to make the expensive flight to eden.
 83
 Or you could choose to go as a tourist.
 And pray the god of serendipity  grants you good fortune.
 Once there, choices await.
 Legitimacy through work sponsorship or marriage,
 if one can manage it before the visa expires.
 Otherwise, many become the invisible tourist.
 TNT.
 Tago-nang-tago.
 Literally, hiding-and-hiding.
 Disappearing in the melting-pot.
 No. Not really a melting pot.
 But  pockets of ethnicities. Separate. Exclusive.
 Cultural enclaves. Xenophobic, sometimes.
 A Filipino community is an efficient pocket,
 providing a hospitable sanctuary.
 84
 I applied for a tourist visa.
 Although I have already passed the requisite exam, I did not apply  as a physician,
 which would have facilitated gaining entry 
            through a medical working visa.
 Instead, I elected to go as a tourist, to travel the  country, see 
            the art,
 my  soul overflowing with passion and imagined adventures.
 The possibilities with art, visiting the galleries, maybe even  apprenticeship with an artist.
 The processing gentleman at the U.S. embassy said:
 I don't believe you. I know you're not coming back.
 I said I would.
 Grudgingly, he approved my tourist visa application.
 85
 1971.
 There were six pesos to a dollar.
 A peso for a pack of Lucky Strikes.
 The sexual revolution was a decade or two away.
 Young males rabid with testosterone circled the red light districts 
            at night.
 Mabini, Pasay, the barbecue strips of Dewey Blvd.
 Fifteen to twenty pesos paid for a prostitute.
 Short-time motel rooms were P19.50.
 86
 November 1971, I left for America.
 With about fifteen hundred dollars funding a pocketful of dreams.
 My parents brought me to the airport.
 My mother's parting words: You know you can come back anytime.
 My father's parting words: If I die, don't   come back. Just say a prayer for me.
 The grand opposites of parental angst.
 87
 I landed in San Francisco, cabbed to Mill Valley.
 An incredible chunk from my nest egg.
 My first few weeks were in a one-room pad, courtesy of a Pete 
            O.,
 an American returning the courtesy of hospitality given when he 
            visited the Philippines.
 Same night I arrived, aching and weary from travel, he took me some place,
 inserted ourselves into a circle of people where a joint was being 
            passed around,
 and got my first American buzz.
 A good one.
 A few nights later, his girlfriend's daughter comes to me, naked 
            from the waist up,
 asking for a light for  her mom's cigarette, dangling from her lips,
 her mortal sin-inducing nubile breasts. . .
 . . . Bless me father for I have sinned. . .
 reflecting the dance of the flickering glow from a Bic's conspiratorial 
            flame.
 Wow! Jiminy crickets!
 This is America?
 88
 I met Leila, a few years earlier in the Philippines,
 the last year of my medical school, the last year of her BS studies.
 A blinding exploration of love in a landscape of  hormones gone mad.
 Put on hold.
 She left for the U.S. a few months earlier.
 We met in California.
 It was a short renewal.
 A short story of love.
 It didn't seem to anyone in her family that I would amount to anything.
 She was young, the youngest in her family, needing to be protected
 from all the things they saw or didn't see in me.
 Later, she confessed, her family  conspired to break us apart.
 And so in LA,  the earlier promise of love and life floundered 
              and failed.
 Too  soon, forlorn and heartbroken, I was flying to New Jersey.
 89
 My journey for art was long on adventure, low on wisdom, and short 
              on finance.
 My move to New Jersey severely dwindled my dollar stash.
 My continued survival through winter, by the grace of a cousin, Noli.
 By February, my bankroll was down to a fistful of dollars.
 Returning to the Philippines was one of two options.
 Medicine was the other one.
 I interviewed for an internship at a general hospital in New Brunswick, 
              New Jersey.
 Then and there, I was offered a position for a rotating internship to 
              start in July.
 Soon, my years of underachievement would expose me.
 90
 There were still four months to internship
 and there was a large 
              and gaping hole in my pocket.
 I was a charity-case free-loading on a cousin.
 Through a cousin's friend, Ed, I got an under-the-table employment 
              in a small-boat company.
 Squeegeeing noxious polymer liquid on sheets of fiberglass.
 It was a disparate crew made up of an assortment of social pathologies.
 Ed was an ex-convict who had trouble getting it up.
 A married co-worker had the hots for him, and kept making unrequited 
              advances,
 unaware that he couldn't get it up or maintain a functional tumescence.
 Another, an unmarried fat forty year-old Italian who lived with 
              his mother,
 who packed him a daily five-course Italian lunch.
 Another guy who barely spoke a word the whole day,
 and when he did, only to mumble to himself
              .
 And I. . . with my socially dysfunctional existence,
 finally, for the first time in my life, in all and any measure,
 suddenly feeling  the most normal of the group.
 Once a week, everyone would take a break from the squeegee
 and rotate on a day of janitorial duty.
 Ed knew I was a doctor, felt bad, and  offered to do my janitorial rotation
 I declined.
 I was paid $1.90 an hour, took home 90 dollars and change on Saturdays.
 It paid for weekend beer at a local bar, a few games at a 
              pool table,
 and leftovers to replenish much dwindled funds.
 91
 July came, soon enough.
 I embarked on a journey of Medicine.
 I had no idea at that time where it would take me.
 Or that It would be a voyage that would take the next thirty years, and more.
 But first, my years of academic underachievement
 would expose 
                my dreadful deficiencies and inefficiencies.
 92
 On September 21, 1972, Marcos declared martial law in 
                      the Philippines.
 93
 Middlesex General Hospital was an accredited teaching hospital.
 Like many of such, it attracted applicants from a motley of nationalities.
 My group consisted of an Egyptian, a few Chinese, a Czech,
 a few
        from India, and myself, the sole Filipino.
 I was the weakest in the group.
 Well, maybe, except maybe for 
                    the Czech,
 just because she spoke no English
 and went through her internship with a dictionary in hand.
 In the Philippines, I did not do  residency after graduation
 and was unfamiliar  with the day-to-day procedures of 
hospital medicine.
 And although I could wing through  the basics,
 the theory part was glaringly deficient,  my clinical skills, woefully 
                    inefficient.
 A difficult initiation into Western medicine.
 A year of humbling experiences.
 An Indian resident, Dr Subaya, took me under his wing.
 He must have seen in me some kind of promise,
 gave me the 
                    time and patience during my rotation in internal medicine,
 and guided me in the 
                    techniques of procedures and biopsies.
 My reeducation has started.
 But Internal Medicine was still an uncertain calling.
 Towards the end of internship, with nowhere to go
 I applied for a residency in Pathology in a New York hospital.
 After the interview, assured of a position, I was taken around 
                    and shown
 what the bulk of my first year's residency work would be—
 Measuring and dictating notes on aborted fetuses.
 It would fill the next few weeks of sleep with nightmares.
 I backed out of the residency.
 By then, it was too late to apply for an internal medicine residency 
                    in my hospital of internship.
 All the residency positions were taken.
 Also, the Chief of Medicine did not think I had the skills 
                    to teach incoming interns.
 He offered me  another year of internship which he assured me 
                    would count
 as another year for the three years required for an Internal Medicine 
                    residency.
 Of course, I declined.
 94
 The year of internship was dog-eared with some memorable days 
                          and events.
 In a ceramic art show, I entered a smaller version of the "Last 
                            Supper" piece
 that won the grand prize a year and a half ago at the ceramic 
                          show in Manila.
 Again, It won Grand Prize again, with a trophy to boot.
 Another piece, "The Metamorphosis of Judas" won third 
                            prize.
 There were other art shows, hauling artwork to boardwalks and weekend art
                          fairs,
 often coming home
                          with 
                          "ribbon" prizes.
 95
 Christmas eve, with nowhere to go, four of the interns decided 
                            to come to my place.
 After our hospital day's work, we hurried to grocery store for 
                            our night's feast.
 No one warned us.
 All the stores were closed.
 Nothing else to do, nowhere else to go,
 they still came to my one room apartment.
 Simply furnished with a bean bag chair,
 flea market cushions on the floor.
 We feasted on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
 an assortment of snacks, washed down with Coca-Cola,
 while we exchanged stories of motherlands.
 96
 Mr. Fish was a cardiac patient who took a liking for me.
 During his recurrent admissions, I spent much time with him, exchanging stories.
 One quiet night of call, I made a pencil portrait sketch of him and gifted it.
 He invited me to his house for dinner.
 Always tried fixing  me up with the pretty nurses.
 One weekend, he was admitted in cardiac arrest.
 The resuscitation effort was only successful in bringing back a heart beat.
 But there were all the other signs of irreversible brain damage.
 Fixed and dilated pupils.
 His vital signs maintained by mechanical ventilation
 and  a curtain of intravenous pharmaceutical lines.
 I asked the nurse why he was being kept alive.
 She said: The doctor doesn't want to turn it off. . . yet.
 I turned the respirator off. His vital signs petered away.
 I declared him dead.
 And went to talk to the family.
 I never received any censure.
 97
 And, there was. . . sex, drugs and rock n' roll.
 Well. . . sex and drugs. No rock n' roll.
 My music was acoustic guitar. Classic pieces.
 More Bach minuets and bourrees than Beetles and Bee Gees.
 I hang on to folk music, although it was dying off the landscape.
 But still, the acoustic music provided background music
 to many  
                          nights of alcohol-fueled and smoky extended realities.
 This was the early seventies.
 Although there was acid, marijuana 
                            was the social bridge.
 Occasionally, one chanced into Thai sticks,
 skewered premium buds 
                          of seedless marijuana.
 Alas, I don't think I looked like a dope-head.
 But a joint materialized in near every social encounter.
 Well, the long hair, artist, guitar-playing persona surely didn't 
                            help.
 Much later on, with shorter hair, and the accoutrements of private practice,
 I was always assumed the street-smart expert on drugs.
 Alas, my chronic allergic sniffles often took a ribbing
 as a  drug-tooting indulgence.
 98
 And, there was sex, or opportunities for it.
 More than any other immigrant population,
 for that matter, perhaps, more than any other profession,
 the 
          physician gets laid the most.
 The medical profession has a singular allure
 for nurses, secretaries, ward clerks,
 suffering boredom, loneliness and the vicissitudes of family life
 finding sanctuary and respite in the intimate environs of clinics 
          and hospitals
 many playing confusing and interchangeable roles of prey 
          and predator,
 and the noblest of profession with his noble hard-on gets his 
          ample noble share.
 99
 During my internship, I met C., a Flemington Jersey lass.
 Fell in love.
 I thought it was the "cosmic" thing.
 She was Episcopalian.
 I was Catholic.
 We wanted to get married in a park.
 The minister said, No, it has to be in church, the House of God.
 I dug into my catechismal bag and countered:
 God is everywhere!
 Unconvinced by my repartee, I threatened
 to  seek another pastor.
 He agreed, but with a compromise.
 Instead of a park, my in-laws' backyard.
 Under an oak tree, with a yellow ribbon tied around it.
 The minister, probably upset he couldn't get me inside God's house,
 delivered an  ill-chosen ill-omened homily
 on divorce 
          and the fragility of relationships.
 The sermon upset me none.
 I was high as a kite with a New Jersey buzz.
 I wore an off-white  well-tailored Hongkong-rushed suit.
 Guests commented:
 People dress like this where you come from?
 They must have watched a Geographic Mag special
 with natives wearing G-strings.
 100
 March 29, 1973, U. S. withdrew from Vietnam.
 101
 With no available   residency  in an Internal Medicine teaching program,
 and the  lean pickings for other specialty residencies in late June,
 I opted for a  house staff position in a non-teaching hospital.
 We trucked our meager possessions to Baltimore, 
          Maryland.
 Everything fit in a pint-sized U-Haul.
 Generic pieces of furniture, bed, pillow-couch, dining table,
 kitchen necessities,  boxes of books, a guitar,
 still unopened wedding gifts,
 and schnookel, a three-month old schnauzer that C. definitely had to have.
 102
 Schnookel's name, I think, derives from  a German word  meaning 'sweetheart.'
 From a country with a penchant for eating dogs,
 having a dog as house pet was an unfamiliar encumbrance.
 The toilet training and  pee-or-poop walks.
 I was incredulous at the 30-some dollars spent monthly
 for her  muzzle-whiskered cuteness and coat trimmed to a crop.
 I was indifferent to her cropped wiry coat and weird muzzle-whiskered cuteness,
 A hyper dog. Perhaps, because she was abandoned daily.
 ADHD. Abandoned daily, hyper dog.
 We'd come home to find the furniture legs, slippers, shoes,
 carpet corners, pillows, in increasing degrees of chewed-up-ness.
 Belonging to the old school of punishment-for-character-development
 there were varying measures of doggie-corporeal punishment
 which she seemed to accept with guilty-doggie-equanimity.
 I tried to teach her dog tricks, to kneel, roll over,
 shake hands and beg, but learned none of it.
 What she leaned, from god knows where, was to hump my leg.
 Yes, hump my leg.
 Hyper-humping.
 Coming home, dog-tired from long days of hospital work,
 she'd come rushing to meet me, in frenzied delight
 humping hard at my shin bone, to C's dismay and my perverse delight.
 103
 Provident Hospital was a non-teaching hospital at the edge of 
          Baltimore City.
 The patients, the nurses and support staff were mostly black.
 A few of the attending physicians 
          were black,
 the rest of the medical staff were mostly of immigrant roots.
 The house staff were a motley group of interns or residents,
 two Filipinos, a Spaniard, a Korean, a few from India, and a Thai.
 It was a half-way house for rejects,
 residents who missed out on placement to teaching hospitals.
 I took it as an opportunity for a re-education into Medicine.
 104
 For the next six months, I embarked on a review course in medicine,
 pored on tomes of books, read and re-read, day and night,
 and read again on the diagnoses of every patient that I was involved with.
 In the threatening theater of the cardiac-intensive care unit,
 I confessed  my ignorance to the nurses,  asked for their help,
 who more than willingly guided me through an on-site ABC of acute 
          care.
 I bought  books in electrocardiography,
 studied the electrical 
          basis of rhythms and patterns.
 I honed my auscultation skills, listened to tapes of cardiac 
          murmurs and sounds.
 It was the beginning of a fascinating journey.
 105
 Early on, I found surgery's mechanical dexterity unappealing. Nixed it.
 None of the Specialties appealed to me,
 although I contemplated them all.
 Internal Medicine continued to draw me in.
 The challenge of distilling  layers of  complexity.
 The seeming unconnectedness of  conundrums and clues.
 Then connecting of the dots.
 Yes. Connect-the-dots medicine.
 Somewhere along that fascinating journey of re-learning and re-education,
 came the realization and epiphany that in Internal Medicine
 was the true art of medicine,
 and with  mawkish hubris, believed that more than any branch of 
          medicine,
 it is internal medicine, practiced to craft and commitment,
 that brings one closest to 
          the human condition.
 106
 Barely four months in Provident Hospital, deep in my effort of 
          re-education,
 the Chief of Internal Medicine, a Thai immigrant, took me aside
 and told me I was wasting my time there and should finish my residency.
 He heard of a new residency program in Internal Medicine
 and made me an appointment to interview for a residency position.
 I was interviewed by the Chiefs of Medicine, Infectious Disease 
          and Nephrology.
 The muses or gods must have intervened.
 All the questions asked were on topics I have read over the past 
          two or three days.
 I looked at it as more luck than erudition.
 The Chief of Infectious Disease asked why I wasn't on a residency program,
 and added: What a loss for  the last 
              program that didn't keep me.
 I was allowed to break my contract with Provident Hospital.
 January, I started on my Internal Medicine residency in Franklin 
          Square Hospital in Baltimore County.
 107
 It was a whirlwind year.
 The fascination with medicine grew.
 The residency program was new,
 a motley crew 
          of cultural diversity.
 Interns and residents from India, Pakistan, Burma, Bangladesh and the Philippines.
 There were Americans rotating through Medicine from the Family 
          Practice program.
 A bright group, and despite occasional doses of intrigue and short-lived 
          animosities,
 there was a warm camaraderie that provided an exciting environ 
          for learning.
 Also, it was cultural diversity that scrumptiously manifested
 in the  
          social evenings with feasting tables of culinary delights
 appetites whetted by  adventure and assault of spices
 and  mouth-numbing fire-breathing concoctions.
 108
 It was a great time for re-learning and improving skills.
 It was a time before the age of  "more" technology 
            and laboratory,
 early CTScan, pre-MRI, pre-CPK, way pre-Troponin,
 before the deluge of expensive diagnosing armamentaria.
 Despite my years of underachievement in medical school,
 the basics in the art of auscultation stuck.
 And in internal medicine, the stethoscope is the indispensable 
          instrument.
 a fascinating and powerful implement, amplifying the inner human sounds
 of bruits, gallops, murmurs, rhythms, snaps, rales and crepitations,
 providing critical clues for diagnosis and treatment.
 I enjoyed the diagnostic challenges,
 honed on the oft-neglected art of history taking,
 clues spilling out from the layers of questions,
 examining the patient, listening to sounds, laying hands,
 reconciling the laboratory data, then. . . connecting the dots,
 the wonderful eurekas  arriving at the correct diagnosis.
 And sometimes, the humbling occasions of missing it.
 109
 On one emergency room duty, a forty-some year old female was 
            brought in for chest pains.
 By the time I saw her, after a GI antacid cocktail given by the 
          nurse, the pain has almost resolved
 The history revealed nothing to suggest a cardiac problem, no 
          family history, no lifestyle risks.
 A system review suggested acid-reflux problems.
 Her electrocardiogram was normal.
 Her physical exam, except for minimal epigastric tenderness, was 
          unremarkable.
 This was the time before the availability of cardiac enzymes for 
          emergency room screening.
 She was sent home, pain-free and reassured.
 Four hours later she was brought back to the emergency room in 
          cardiac arrest.
 Resuscitation efforts, which I led, failed.
 For days I was paralyzed, incredulous, burdened by uncertainty.
 I consulted on it, played it again and again in my mind,
 agonizingly searched for the error or clinical misjudgment.
 And found none.
 I considered a safer specialty.
 Dermatology proffered as an alternative.
 But stayed in internal medicine.
 The death was an early lesson.
 A lesson that stayed with me.
 110
 A death.
 A lesson.
 A crossroad.
 pondering and reflecting, burdened by a realization
 that no matter the science, no matter the thoroughness and commitment,
 I will be brought back to this crossroad, again and again.
 To ponder a death, to ponder what omission,
 To ponder what else could have been done.
 Or, to ponder what  should not have been done.
 Centuries ago, Ambroise Paré phrased the motto:
 Guérir quelquefois, soulager souvent, consoler toujours.
 "To cure occasionally, relieve often, console always."
 Only in the absolute commitment to that can we justify and comfort 
          ourselves
 In the occasional and inevitable deaths that surprise us.
 111
 A Jewish couple came to dinner.
 The guy a fellow resident at the hospital.
 They brought a bottle of red wine,
 a departure from the beer and 
          Tanduay of the Philippine days.
 This was my first taste into the civilized world of grapey libation.
 I found it unpleasantly tannic and warm.
 I put a couple of ice cubes in it.
 Um. . . Better.
 My proletarian ways were exposed
 and ended future social interactions with the couple.
 112
 By mid year, my marriage was floundering.
 Medicine consumed my hours. Her studies consumed hers.
 She wanted to find herself.
 It was that time when "searching for oneself" was de 
            rigueur.
 She also wanted to try modeling in New York.
 I told her she was too short.
 She left anyway.
 It broke my heart.
 And she took Schnookel and her humpin'-doggin' ways with her.
 113
 A broken heart.
 A different kind of crossroad.
 I wanted to leave.
 Start anew. Someplace. Any place.
 Even, back home.
 I sold my artwork for a plane ticket and extra cash.
 Soon, I packed my bags.
 Ken L., the Chief of Medicine came to my apartment.
 I imagine, to rescue me from my decision.
 We talked, idle chatter. I played guitar.
 A few gin and tonics.
 Offered me a place, a room, in his home.
 To crash, to put the pieces together, to chill.
 I didn't take him up on the offer.
 But it was an act of kindness and concern I have never forgotten.
 I stayed on.
 More than twenty years later, I thanked him for that act of kindness,
 how the evening made me change my mind about leaving.
 And in more ways than one, changed my life.
 I choked on my words.
 We hugged.
 For me, pleasantly cathartic.
 114
 On my second year, I was offered the Chief Resident position.
 A validating vote of confidence.
 It was an incredible year of learning and teaching
 and gaining hands-on experience on bedside procedures.
 The climactic personal event happened some holiday weekend,
 a myocardial infarction patient went into varying degrees 
          of heart block,
 with no cardiologists immediately available
 the chief of medicine asked me to insert  an emergency 
          temporary pacemaker
 I successfully threaded wires through a subclavian stick,
 A fluoroscopy machine and a cardiac-PA 
          providing guidance.
 For someone who could have been measuring aborted fetuses,
 it was a personally defining moment.
 An immeasurably exhilarating moment.
 115
 I met B., a lass from the farmlands of the Midwest.
 A chance elevator encounter and weeks of corridor flirting led 
          to an 8-year relationship.
 She left her husband of six months.
 "All is fair in love and war."
 She said he said I was a gook.
 It was a first-time word that required a dictionary check.
 Said she frequently dreamt of having a Korean lover.
 I guess gooks all look alike in the ethereal haziness of dreams.
 She became the alter ego.
 We shared in music. My guitar, Her flute. We sang together.
 She was country music crazy. Late seventies. Early eighties.
 Don Williams, Merle Haggard. Willie Nelson.
 Some loves songs that continue to break my heart to this 
          day.
 Oh. . did I mention she had great farm legs.
 Healthy looking gams, thighs, goobers
          and butt?
 In her tight jeans, black men would just gawk and ogle,
 shake 
          their heads and say Oh, Sweet Jesus!
 And she loved her dope, marijuana mostly.
 And loved lacing her cookies with it.
 She half-filled cigarettes with grass and repacked them, perfectly.
 Passing through customs with her faux-pack of Salems
 and an innocent looking bag of cookies and brownies
 High on the Swiss alps on Maryland goodies.
 That was the time before airport sniffing dogs.
 Later, she invented a smokie surf-and-turf—a combo of grass and snow.
 Days of reckless anomie.
 Days long gone.
 116
 A few months left of the chief residency year,
 I was granted an 
          unheard-of privilege and allowed to take a part-time job
 as a Medical Officer at the Maryland House of Correction.
 A maximum security prison in Jessup.
 There were an hour-and-a-half of Monday-to-Friday morning clinics,
 for which I had to rush out of Franklin Square after morning rounds,
 speeding the 40-minute drive to Jessup.
 Massive metal sliding doors, opening, and clanging 
          shut,
 walking through a gauntlet of men in the fringe of existence,
 in their silent honesty of failures, hardened criminals, recidivists,
 murderers, rapists, perverts 
          and pedophiles
 and the so-many who claim their innocence.
 The first chore is to ask if anyone was put in the "Hole,"
 a prisoner with a bad attitude or who disrespected the guard.
 A dungeon . . . relic 
          from the Dark Ages,
 down a long flight of steps, to a few rooms in the dark and dank,
 where we might find a recalcitrant soul, half-naked
 curled and shivering 
          a thin shield of blanket.
 Next, to attend to any claims of anal rape
 and the unpleasant 
          task of confirming it with rectal swabs and smears.
 Then rounds in two Segregation Halls, fifty cells each.
 Each cell as wide as the arms' stretch in a yawn,
 their days scratched on to the walls,
 some walls pasted with pages of naked women,
 shared and silent surrogates.
 Listened to generic complaints, headaches, frayed nerves, 
          sleepless nights.
 Recurrent requests for sleepers, pain killers, anxiolytics.
 Then to Lock-Up, where some prisoners are punitively placed in 
          isolation,
 or where some request self-imposed protective isolation.
 117
 I walked the line of cells, from end to end, listening to the 
          litany of human misery,
 their maladies, real and invented, and their ephemeral needs.
 The first days my hands shook so hard I had to hook my fingers 
          onto the door bars
 to steady my hands as I held and wrote on the chart.
 The guard escort warned me many times: Don't stay too 
              close, Doc.
 They have splashed buckets of shit and urine on doctors.
 I heard quite a number of doctors lasted only a week 
            or less.
 A few, just a day.
 I never got splashed on.
 After a few weeks, their greetings became cordial.
 Good morning, Dr. Sharp.
 I always wore a suit. They loved my threads.
 But it still took a while to get over my fears.
 In the clinics, I had to learn the language of their complaints, 
          the real and the feigned,
 the bartering and the pacts, the culture and trade of the drugs.
 Everyone was testing the new doctor.
 Everyone wanted drugs: pain killers, sleeping pills, nerve busters,
 or for that matter, any medication with trade-in value.
 Many of the maladies are feigned and the drugs found their way 
          into the local drug trade.
 Doc, those motherfucking pills don't do the job.
 Doc, some motherfucker stole my pills.
 Doc, I still get these motherfucking headaches.
 There was no science in the medicine.
 But there was skill and art in the pacts.
 Doc, my motherfucking nerves are acting up.
 Here comes the Equanil line.
 They liked their Darvons, Valiums, Soma.
 They liked anything they can snort,
 or 
          shoot into veins, arms and toes.
 They liked anything they can trade or sell.
 Five for a Valium, three for a Soma, a dollar for a Darvon.
 Two packs of cigarettes for an Equanil.
 They play poker or Jacks, betting and bidding on pills and capsules.
 If I scrimp on writing prescriptions, they'll bug the motherfucking 
          bejesus out of me
 and sign up for clinic visits two or three times every motherfucking 
          week.
 The other doctor, a few months ahead in the trenches, advised 
          me:
 You gotta stay tough.
 So I gave tough a try.
 Started  talking their mother-fucker embellished language.
 The first time I used "motherfucker," it turned heads 
            around.
 Ok, I'll give enough pills to last the fucking month,
 but I don't want to see you for a mother-fucking month.
 They'd say: Deal, Doc.
 Or Word, Doc.
 Soon enough, my hands weren't shaking anymore, and I could look 
          them in the motherfucking eye.
 And I don't see them for a month.
 When it came to pill pacts, they were always true to their motherfucking 
          words.
 118
 I brought the language home with me.
 B. noticed, said You're starting to talk like a sailor.
 In elementary school, when my mother heard me cursing putang 
              ina, she soaped my mouth.
 Alas, my short stint as a prison doctor left me permanently afflicted 
          with a motherfucking penchant for cussing.
 A malady so severe, my mother would have suffered elbow tendinitis 
          soaping the curses off my mouth.
 119
 There was a prison hospital.
 Most of the time empty, except for a 
          chronic patient or two.
 One was an elderly man who had been in prison most of his adult 
          life.
 He had nowhere to go to. No family. No home. No children who cared 
          or visited.
 Maladies were invented for him that justified chronic use of the 
          hospital ward
 in exchange for the cleaning and janitorial services he gladly 
          performed.
 This and other small favors I did for the inmates did not go unnoticed.
 Soon,  my clinic patients were being screened by inmate bosses,
 abusers and trouble makers 
          were kept away.
 One time I was warned: Monday, don't come to work, there 
              will be a small riot.
 And true enough, there was.
 120
 As residency was ending, I had three offers to join in private 
          practice.
 The second, with too much baggage of censure, I turned down outright.
 Another was appealing, two Jewish doctors, but was asking me to cut my hair short.
 Thought the request was too establishment, I nixed that too.
 But many years later, a photo relic showed what I was being asked 
          to cut off.
 Lordy, lordy, lordy.
 I was still fashioning my motherfucking Mod-Squad afro-type hairdo.
 I asked everyone why no one told me it looked so anachronistically 
          motherfucking silly.
 I took the first offer, from a guy who expressed interest early in my   residency days.
 Even then, he 
          saw of medicine as an instrument of power and politics
 and spoke of how I can help him realize that vision.
 We formed the base for what would grow into a successful enterprise,
 for a while, a brotherhood of men
 immersed in the humanity and commerce of their profession,
 becoming one of the busiest and more successful private practices
 in the 
            Rosedale part of Baltimore County.
 121
 The practice grew from two to five physicians,
 a new physician joining each year or two.
 It became a multispecialty group.
 A cardiologist,  oncologist,  pulmonologist, and a gastroenterologist.
 All internists.
 The group was a rainbow coalition of ethnicities.
 From the Dominican Republic, Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
 and a Baltimore born-and-bred Jewish physician.
 I was the basic internist.
 From the start, I begged off  committee appointments, medical politics and 
            socializations.
 Although there was a busy clinic practice, the bulk of the work 
            was hospital practice,
 many of the patients referred by local practitioners for hospital admission
 and management 
            of acute life-threatening problems.
 Almost always there was a handful of patients in the cardiac and 
            intensive care units.
 It was a time before the hospitalists became in vogue.
 At the peak of the practice, we averaged about 60 to 70 patients 
            in the three hospitals we rounded.
 Weekends, the partners take off, the on-call worked it alone.
 Alone, doing patient rounds, new admissions,
 and in-between, phone calls from patients with their generic complaints
 and 
          families inquiring on the condition of their loved ones,
 from sunrise to way past sundown, sometimes to the midnight hours.
 Tired to the bone, you crawl  to bed.
 Some nights, you get called back to the hospital,
 for a patient taking a turn for the worse, or an imminent death,
 or for a patient admitted for an acute cardiopulmonary problem.
 You crawl out of  bed, dragging your weary bones.
 122
 Back-breaking weekends.
 Although at times punishing and exhausting.
 Perhaps it was the trimmings of the good life,
 that provided the balance.
 We joked about the math and economics of our profession,
 in a month, earning much less than half
 of what some baseball players would make in a single at-bat.
 123
 Godofredo.
 Friend of God.
 Given name that presented as a problem every now and then.
 Too frequent, a cause of misspelling; and sometimes, a mis-attribution.
 Once, I advised a daughter on her mother's diagnosis of metastatic cancer
 carefully treading and explaining the  options for supportive and palliative care
 and the withdrawal of life-extending measure.
 She screamed a long stretch of invectives
 resounding down the halls of the hospital ward:
 God! I know you have 'god' in your name.
 But you're not God! How dare you decide my mother's life!
 124
 The guitar was never idle.
 Always ready to provide therapeutic doses of sound.
 A repertoire of classic pieces, practiced to reasonable perfection.
 And the songs, mostly folk and 80s country and ballads,
 more often singing of love found or pining of love lost.
 I was asked to perform for weddings of nurses and residents.
 After a few years of this musical avocation, the chief of Family Medicine 
            told me
 Perhaps, you should stop singing for the residents' weddings,
 they separate within a year.
 125
 Guérir quelquefois, soulager souvent, consoler toujours..
 To cure occasionally, relieve often, console always.
 Both tenet and maxim, it guides many in their practice of medicine.
 And good medicine demands work and sacrifice,
 way beyond the three A's that I was mentored with early on.
 Ability, availability and amiability.
 But I have seen some successful practices run on 2 A's,
 sans the ability,
            replaced by an indefinable ingredient
 of "style" 
            or "quality" that cements a bond of trust and loyalty.
 I have covered physicians' practices during their vacation or 
            illness absences,
 or took care of their patients during their hospital admissions,
 and listened to them talk of their physicians in awe.
 while reading through the charts or listening to their histories
 that exposed  dreadfully  negligent care.
 But some practitioners are blessed with accidental humanity
 practicing their profession with caring and compassion,
 with doses of consoling words or comforting touches
 always dispensed in unhurried time
 that more than make up for their negligence, omissions and ignorance.
 Medicine is both science and art, sometimes more of the latter,
 reliant on tincture of time, faith and placebo. 
            . . and luck.
 126
 They come to us, not just for the cure and the comforting.
 But also, with their hopes and fears.
 Ready to bare their souls, if we have the time to care,
 with many stories they want to tell, if we have time to listen.
 And if we care and listen, the stories are often windows to their illness
 or sometimes, doors they invite you to enter
 if you can spare the time or dare to enter,
 into rooms filled with their 
            dreadful or sad little secrets
 that might explain the whence of their  maladies.
 You try to fit that all in a 20- or 30-minute visit.
 It is impossible to do that in the 15-minute visit allotted
 by managed care's ka-ching-ka-ching kind of jiffy-lube medicine.
 127
 I became the "astute" clinician, a reference that embarrassed 
            me.
 Compliments always left me  tongue-tied and uncomfortable,
 in awe as i was, of the brilliance of the many physicians around 
            me,
 who taught and mentored me.
 I felt mine was a simple system of hard work,
 learning the art of the history taking, the patience to listen,
 and blessed with an ability to connect the dots.
 128
 But there  were many humbling moments.
 Times when the dots won't connect.
 Or times where there were no dots to connect.
 Dr. S called: I need help on this patient.
 She keeps telling me she's going to die.
 The tests I've done are all normal.
 Please put her in the hospital,
 just
                  run her through some tests to reassure 
                her.
 She was a woman in her mid thirties.
 Healthy, with no significant past history.
 Nothing in the family history of concern.
 A physical exam that was essentially normal.
 She told me: I am going to die.
 It was a Friday.
 Her admission tests, x-rays, labs and ecg were all fine.
 No red flags.
 Reassured her of the normality of the results,
 tried to assuage           her  premonition of death.
 I decided to keep her over the weekend, to discharge on 
            Monday.
 Sunday night, during the nurse's routine vital 
            signs rounds,
 she was found dead
 An autopsy was done.
 During the interminable wait I pondered on what I missed.
 What pathology  would be revealed at postmortem.
 It revealed nothing.
 Forewarned, yet unpreventable.
 An inexplicable death.
 129
 Most deaths are not inexplicable.
 They hover   over our days, familiar, often predictable,
 a welcome end to a painful and protracted struggle.
 When all else have failed, we must guide them into that end.
 The dignified death, unfamiliar to many
 who choose instead to wage against the inevitable
 with desperate efforts to extend life
 believing it is part of their god's grand design.
 It is our
          onus to talk to them about death
 —with the patient or the family—
 searching for the  words of wisdom
           to speak
 on a subject colored by
          culture, fears, and religion.
 or the god that rules all three.
 . . . to console always. . .
 in the death that awaits
 in the death that transpired.
 Sometimes, we sit in silence
 time to draw out the last questions
 or to wait for the last sigh of resignation.
 130
 There are deaths that come with suddenness.
 A patient is brought lifeless into the emergency room.
 Or found unresponsive in the ward.
 The paging operator calls a Dr Blue or a Code Blue.
 There is a hurry-scurry of activity
 doctors and nurses taking pause,  then responding,
 the crash-cart rolling down the corridors
 all rushing and congregating to the 'code.'
 A lead doctor conducts the CPR
 goes through an ABCD of resuscitation
 orchestrating the chaotic bedside activity
 of doctors, nurses, respiratory techs with their assigned chores,
 intubating, bagging, compressing, frantically searching for veins.
 Reading the streaming ECG and calling out the directions.
 Pump. Flat line. Shock. Lidocaine. Bicarb. Calcium.
 Bolus. Shock. Pump. Lab. Gases. Pump.
 Sinus rhythm. Pulse check. Blood pressure check.
 Sometimes you quit. Note the time. Pronounce the patient dead.
 As often,  you bring them back.
 A drama of life and death.
 The ABC of it is routine,
 The outcome never predictable.
 And it never ceases to exhilarate.
 More so when a patient tells you later,
 Thanks. I was dead. I was watching everything from across the room.
 131
 Sometimes, it can be far from routine,
 removed from the  efficiency of the hospital and trained personnel.
 A 40-some patient, visiting from Pennsylvania,
 came to the clinic to consult on recent onset chest pains.
 With the  day's schedule slightly backed up, the tech decided do an ECG.
 Unknown to him that the patient's clinical history was significant
 and reading the ECG to be normal, he told him to do sit-ups.
 After a minute or two, he started having chest pains, then collapsed.
 The tech interrupted my clinic,  told me:
 A patient passed out in the ECG room.
 Rushed to find the patient, not passed out, but lifeless and pulseless.
 In full cardiac arrest.
 No nurses, no support staff.
 Other than the tech who asked the patient to do sit-ups,
 who had just about lost it completely at that point.
 And a front-office staff of secretaries
 whose expertise were insurance forms and billing,
 unprepared and untrained for such emergent events,
 running around in panicky circles in a circus of comic confusion.
 Get the oxygen!
 Where's the oxygen?
 Do we have  oxygen?
 I've never seen oxygen around here.
 A frenzied search for oxygen and a  frantic call to 911.
 The patient was lying on a high and narrow examining table.
 I needed a stool for better compression leverage,
 They couldn't find a stool.
 I gave as strong a pound on his chest, climbed the table,
 straddled him and started doing external cardiac compressions
 while straining to read the streaming EKG printouts.
 The oxygen tank was still missing. The tech did mouth-to-mouth.
 By the time the emergency rescue team arrived,
 at about the same time the oxygen tank was located,
 the patient had stabilized into a regular rhythm and vital signs.
 He survived his heart attack.
 His family called, effusive with praise and gratitude.
 My partner said they raved like
 I walk on water.
 132
 There were unpredictable visits of unfathomable dark moods.
 Often, the catalyst, some absurd and inane incident.
 Almost always, benign, manageable, short-lived.
 Growing up, the family made fun of it, that the moon was full,
 the dogs would be howling, and soon I would be lost in my dark moods.
 Always I attributed it to the benign madness that came with creativity.
 Seasonal or recurrent disruptions of the delicate balance
 between neurons, chemistry, synapses and electrical wiring,
 and the million and one pieces of unpleasant memories surfacing,
 overwhelming, possessing, controlling,
 immobilizing in some vast  emptiness.
 Or as the Chinese see it—imbalances of the energy meridians,
 yin-and-yang asymmetries.
 But sometimes, it takes form,  frightening but familiar.
 It seems to have visited before.
 It will be gone. Sooner or later.
 Let me just do battle with it.
 133
 One time, the demon came with brutal vengeance.
 Insidiously, it took form, gained a foothold.
 A month into it, of  dark days and sleepless nights.
 John Lennon was shot dead.
 I nose-dived into a bottomless abyss.
 Difficult to put in words.
 An inexplicable emptiness.
 A heavy  torturous nothingness.
 A brutal emotional blackhole.
 Medical work kept me going, the malady undetected by people at work.
 None of my partners noticed.
 No patient died during that span.
 Moving, motion helped.
 I would get in my car at four in the morning,
 drive the beltway towards Washington,
 returning as the sun was starting to rise.
 B. was there. Suffered the long quiet months.
 Watched over me.
 I flushed down everything that I could overdose on.
 It was a long time before prozac.
 It lasted a while, four, five months.
 Spring came, it must have helped.
 Unnoticeably, slowly, it lifted.
 One day, I realized. . . I was feeling fine.
 Normal.
 Surviving it was reassuring.
 Having survived it came with the knowing that I would survive it again.
 The demons have revisited.
 But never, again, as it did that one time.
 134
 My mother was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer.
 Eighteen of 19 nodes were positive.
 The surgeon gave her  six months.
 She refused chemotherapy and
 discontinued radiation after two cobalt treatments.
 Vitamins and supplements.
 Prayers.
 Laetrile.
 A trip to Lourdes before heading for Baltimore.
 The powers of prayers and placebo, faith and the fringe.
 She survived another twenty-seven years.
 135
 My parents visited  me in Baltimore,  the early  80s.
 It was fall, the colors were changing.
 My mother was almost blind.
 We drove through autumnland.
 Through parts of interstate-95
 early with the colors of  October's palette
 Then up to the Shenandoah Valley's 
            skyline drive
 through West Virginia's winding backroads
 the forests and mountain faces ablaze.
 They sat in the back, father excitedly describing the colors as 
            we passed them by.
 The yellows and reds, the pinks and oranges.
 I stole rearview mirror glances at my mother
 who sat straight, her eyes closed, with a smile on her face.
 Later, recalling the highlights of their vacation,
 she said the drive through autumnland was one of her favorite parts of 
            the travel.
 136
 It's a story often told,
 my mother's drive through Autumnland.
 Some confess to a realization
 of how much they have taken for granted.
 Perhaps, I need not ponder too much
 the whence of my 
         communion with nature
 waxing lyrical on mundane things.
 The magnificent sunsets,
 ethereal sunrises,
 the barren winterlands, 
          the blanketing of snow.
 I remember strange moments from childhood days.
 Sitting on a tree, while my friends swam the lake beneath.
 Watched, awash with wonder
 the sun filtering through the lattice of leaves,
 its glistening spots dancing on the rippling lake.
 Another time, in Tagbakin, sitting on the kamalig window ledge,
 enthralled by the golden rice stalks gently swaying,
 bending to the wind, bowing to a god,
 framed in the distance by a  line of coconut trees
 and the cloudless blue skies above.
 137
 B. took regular breaks to visit her folks in Minnesota.
 Returning from one of those visits, she told me she was leaving me.
 She ran into her high school sweetheart who offered her something I wouldn't.
 A child.
 I say it happening.
 Stalling at magazine pages with cute babies staring at her.
 At malls, longingly following strollers till they disappeared in the horizon.
 She left in 83.
 On a February, a day before Valentine's, I think.
 In the midst of one of the heaviest snowstorms 
            in Maryland.
 I remember the good-byes, in the airport waiting lounge.
 I could hear, feel, my heart breaking, watching her walk away,
 then disappearing as the airport
            doors 
            closed behind her.
 There are some country songs that sing of such a time.
 Of love ending.
 Of love walking away.
 Of pain, of emptiness.
 Oh, sweet Jesus, how it broke my heart.
 But. . . all's fair in love and war.
 138
 A few months later, August 21, 1983. Ninoy Aquino was 
              assassinated.
 I wrote a piece: Nasaan Ang Mga Bayani?
 Where are the Heroes?
 I made a collage art work, with the same title.
 139
 The vast and beautiful country awaited to be traveled.
 Decided to do it the Amtrak way, with sleeper comforts.
 Asked my cousin Noli to join me.
 We took a cab from Baltimore to the Washington Union train station.
 The cab driver fucking got lost.
 We missed the train.
 Took a plane to catch it in Pittsburg.
 Finally were on our way.
 It's a good way to go from point A to B.
 Not for sightseeing.
 The back road scenery blurring by.
 Did frantic sketches of generic train station stops.
 Recurring generic meals.
 Got off in Denver, picked it up again in New Mexico.
 Noli was happy.
 The bar ran out of booze.
 Got the porters high.
 Twelve days, to-and-fro,
 returning to Baltimore by way of the flatlands
 and thought unspectacular railroad sceneries.
 140
 R. stumbled into my life, a friend.
 Became my literary muse.
 Became a platonic love.
 We exchanged missives, short notes, poems.
 A  world of words laced with magic and metaphors.
 And slowly, in the inevitable consequence of proximity
 platonic became passion became carnal became friendship.
 The friendship stays, lingers, sustained by a memory
 that once we lived in a castle of words,
 a strange world, all our own.
 141
 I dabbled in acupuncture for a while.
 Electrical acupuncture.
 Pondered the   meridians, points, yin and yangs,
 the 
            balancing of energies, endorphins, and qi.
 The disruption of the electrical pathways as cause of disease.
 The continuity of within and without.
 I liked the electricity of it.
 Another electrical system, a life force energy continuum,
 not as specialized and recordable
 as the brain's EEG, the heart's ECG,
 the nerves and muscles' EMG.
 In my practice, it worked more often than not.
 Gave a man a series of treatments for erectile dysfunction.
 He said, It worked!
 But always at a wrong time, in the middle of the night,
 when his wife refused to be bothered.
 My partner, bent over from acute back strain
 walked unassisted from the examination table after one treatment.
 A woman with severe recurring migrainous headaches
 experienced a sudden indescribable
 light-suffused brain-cleansing event,
 asked if that's what it means by "getting high"
 followed by a few headache-free months.
 142
 Iris was a next door neighbor, a sad woman, long afflicted by  depression.
 Plagued by demons that taunted her.
 Dreadful failures of motherhood.
 With three previous failed attempts to end her life through 
            drug overdoses.
 She chastised me on the silver Corvette I bought when B. left.
 She said it was a phallic expression,
 an obvious attempt at covering 
          up a failed relationship.
 Months later, she invited me for dinner.
 Hmm. . . I confess. . .
 I thought it was an overture for romantic possibilities.
 A scrumptious dinner and a bottle of red later,
 she revealed the nature of her invite, saying:
 I want you to help me kill myself.
 Cupid scampered away, laughing.
 I spent the rest of the evening exhorting with all the Hippocratic 
              arguments I can manage.
 Her depression was chronic, but succumbed to seasonal worsening 
              in the winter months.
 Antidepressants barely smoothed the ragged edges of her malady.
 I offered and she agreed to a course of acupuncture treatments,
 hoping that a meridian balancing of energies might help.
 She completed a course, and she said it helped.
 Six months later, I ran into her at the grocery store,
 exchanged pleasantries, asked how she was.
 Fine.
 Nothing revealed in her face.
 A week later, she was dead.
 She had bought a gun. . . and ate a bullet.
 143
 1983, I lucked into buying a shell of an old brick townhouse
 in Fell's 
          point, a quaint and historic waterfront community,
 beneficiary to  Baltimore's Inner Harbor renaissance,
 and one of the sanctuary neighborhoods of Baltimore,
 within walking distance to the ethnic communities
 of Little Italy, Greektown, Pigtown, and ghetto communities of the inner city,
 invisibly fenced and economically insulated from travails and 
              maladies of inner city life.
 It was early in its years of gentrification and upscaling,
 homeless people littered the benches, panhandlers harassed the 
              pedestrians,
 winos took their siestas wherever, in benches, sidewalks, alleys and doorsteps .
 They were part of its old world ambience,
 with its profusion of 
          antique shops and craft stores
 restaurants, dives, and pubs galore
 with live music that splashed out onto the sidewalks.
 1622 Thames Street was one of the oldest houses in Fell's point,
 160 years old, perhaps older, crumbling brick works, leaky roofs, rat-infested.
 With the help of friends, the inner shell was stripped and transformed
 into a contemporary living space of wood, metal and drywall.
 I bought it for a fast-flip – to renovate and sell 
              for a profit.
 Instead it became home  for the next twenty years.
 The first floor front room became  Thames Street Gallery,
 which showed mostly my 
              artwork
 and provided that  space where I became the artist,
 after
              work, shedding the physician's 
              white coat.
 A great time, never tiring of the gallery talk,
 talking about the creative process,
 and feeding off the visitors' accolades.
 Nights, the town transformed.
 As the early evening fine-dining 
              crowds receded to suburbia,
 the late evening Bawlamer locals materialized for their raucous 
              bacchanalia.
 The deepening night brings the barroom brawls, the sirens and 
              paddy wagons
 in decibels that crescendoed into the closing time hours.
 The gallery usually stayed open late, an avid witness to the nightly 
              street theater.
 The goths in rebellious statement of black, sequined and pierced, 
              hair dyed eerie shades.
 The drug dealers and drug users and countless good-time seekers 
              seeking to forget.
 Some begged to use the gallery comfort room, pleading their urgent 
              bladderful,
 but often, more than a pee, also for a toke and a snort.
 One time, I caught someone in the middle of doing an Eight-Ball.
 Sometimes, they'd leave small appreciative tokens of grass or   
              coke.
 There were a few house calls made in ungodly hours of night or early 
              mornings
 for a few locals having adverse street-drug reactions.
 Soon enough, my permissive ways created rumors of drug-dealing.
 Sharing a common alley walkway with a drug-dealing neighbor didn't help.
 Rumors spread that I was in cahoots with local drug dealers.
 It took a month or two of fruitless surveillance by unmarked cars 
              and undercover to pull away.
 A "No Public Rest Room" sign stopped the courtesy use 
              of the gallery rest room.
 It was a nice stretch of time.
 Of art. Music. Inner city life.
 A piece of American street theater.
 144
 Although long  separated and divorced from C, I kept in touch with the in-laws.
 I learned of their slowly failing health from their daughter Kathy.
 Helped with the economics of their medical needs through pharmaceutical samples.
 On one visit, I was surprised to find Schnookel with them.
 She had gotten sickly, with gout and kidney problems.
 Burdensome for C., she gave her to her parents  to care for.
 All those years, so surprised that she remembered,
 in frenzied delight, scampered to meet me,
 and started humping hard at my shin bone,
 to my perverse delight.
 145
 In February 1986, I watch for days, mesmerized, gripped, shivering 
              in elation,
 the televised  unfolding of the Philippine 
          people power revolution.
 Years of festering anger and frustration against the 
            Marcos regime.
 I watched the tanks, the swelling masses of people,
 the rapidly multiplying cast of characters, the circus of political 
            defections.
 the lumpenproletariat providing noise and number,
 marching into the crescendo of that historic crossroad in EDSA.
 Four days that galvanized the nation and transfixed the world.
 The culmination of the rivalry between Marcos and Ninoy,
 climaxing non-violently with the ouster of a dictator,
 the end of his regime of oppression and terror.
 Where are the heroes?
 I asked when Ninoy was assassinated.
 I watched them for days, the collective hero . . .the masa.
 But in the epilogue, everyone started dipping their fingers into the 
            hero-bowl.
 The high-end political defectors and military rebels – without 
              us, it couldn't have happened.
 The bourgeoisie and power-elites – only because we 
              allowed it to happen.
 In the end, the miracle brokers won.
 With nuns standing their grounds on advancing tanks, a Cardinal 
            power-player,
 the bloodless coup, and a populace steeped in religiosity,
 it was no hard-sell.
 The Miracle of Edsa.
 A few years later, they built the Edsa 
              Shrine.
 146
 In 1987, I received a third notice from the immigration office.
 an invitation to   
            apply for citizenship.
 My immigrant status was fast-tracked by a marriage to a Jersey girl in 
            75.
 (That's a Tom Wait's song).
 Long before that, just a few years in America, in awe and 
            accumulating wonderment,
 I wrote an impassioned letter to my parents,
 that 
            in America I have found the country
 with the spirit, ideals, passions, freedoms that I could embrace.
 To take from and give to.
 Sadly apologizing that I was thinking of applying for U.S. citizenship.
 Still, I declined two earlier invitations for citizenship application,
 burdened with  
            birthright and vestigial patriotic notions.
 By then, I have been in  America more than 16 years.
 I have already metamorphosed.
 My Americanization long ago accomplished.
 147
 Finally, I went to the immigration office to file an application.
 I was surprised when the officer dispatched me to an examiner for Q and A.
 Usually, you were made to fill up an application and return for 
            oral exam.
 I expressed surprise and unpreparedness.
 He smiled, said Go ahead. You'll do fine.
 Lordy. Lordy. Lordy.
 Simple questions on America—who, what, where.
 I failed.
 Miserably. Shamefully.
 I returned a few weeks later.
 Prepared to sing the Star-Spangled 
            Banner, accapela if I had to.
 I aced it. No anthem needed.
 Came back weeks later for the oath-taking.
 And brought home the oath-taking flag as memento.
 148
 I made a  sculpture,  a stylized plaster figure
 looking out the art gallery window that opened to a pedestrian sidewalk.
 It held the small oath-taking flag in its hand, fluttering in 
            the wind.
 One day, I looked up instinctively, alerted by the raucous  sounds
 of 
            a group of inebriated  young men who just walked by.
 The flag was gone.
 I ran after a group of  college kids disappearing around the corner.
 Yelling to them, they stopped.
 I demanded to have the flag back.
 One of them uttered a group denial. We don't have it.
 It was there. Now it's gone. One of you took it.
 Second group denial: We don't have it.
 They were too big, too many, and too tipsy;
 a situation  futile for a civilized exchange of words.
 Shaking my head, I walked away, quietly lamenting the loss of 
            my flag.
 A minute later, one of them came back to the gallery,
 handed me the flag, saying I'm really sorry.
 149
 There was a restlessness that surfaced too often.
 Yes, Medicine as profession allowed a good life.
 But its seeming noble humanity also had a murky side.
 Before the gatekeepers and sentinels came to keep watch
 over the machinery and commerce of medicine.
 The practice became productivity-based,
 income based on what one generated.
 There were so many ways to milk the medical cow.
 Procedures, laboratories, referrals, charting.
 Doing basic internal medicine work,
 maintaining the income would require milking the cow.
 I tried, but couldn't.
 In 88,             I quit my private practice of 13 years.
 Perhaps, even thought I was done with medicine.
 Went back to the Philippines, built a house in Baguio.
 Seduced by the idea of doing art full-time.
 The weather was perfect, but the culture so strange.
 I searched for my muse but all I found was a vacuum of creativity.
 After six months, I returned to Baltimore.
 To Fell's Point.
 150
 I was barely five when my grandfather died.
 I remember the burial. The procession to the cemetery.
 The freshly painted white tomb, with its massive cross at one end.
 The gaping opening at the unfinished end,
 with the pile of cinder blocks that would seal the hole,
 to finally wall off  the dead in casketed repose.
 I remember the tearful lacerating wailing of the women
 as the coffin was 
            being pushed into the dark of the nicho,
 the swelling sound of sorrow as the opening diminished with each 
              block
 the cacophony of mournful sounds that lingered long after the 
            last block.
 The tearful and anguished ritual of final separation.
 151
 My father died in 89.
 I was in Maryland when I got the call.
 He was still alive, hanging on.
 They wanted  to wait for me.
 I tried to make it home through an uncommon connection of flights.
 But father was going through too much agonal
                  suffering.
 They turned off the life-support measures.
 I didn't make it in time for good-byes.
 His death was not sudden.
 It was
            a long suffering  decline from heart 
            failure
 that slowly nibbled at his gregarious love of life.
 After a heart attack more than 20 years before, he confronted 
            his mortality.
 Gave up his nightly Chivas or cognac.
 Mounted the exercise bike with great passion.
 So proud of how he turned his cholesterol numbers back.
 On my last visit, looking back, there must have been a feeling 
            it was our last time.
 He was giving me some of his personal items, books.
 Himself, a physician, he  sensed from the recent years 
            of declining health
 his coming confrontation with his mortality.
 For me, it was his second dying.
 Grieved as much, cried as much, the first time.
 His wish to be cremated was long ago decided.
 His cremation, the first of many that would follow in the clan.
 152
 Cremation was still an uncommon choice.
 At one time, requiring the purchase of a dispensation.
 It hyperaccelerates the dust-unto-dust idiom of our mortality.
 It subtracts from death, the rituals of grieving,
 the long held traditions 
          of religion and rituals.
 the indigenous contributions of customs, myths and superstitions.
 The coffin's glitz and glitter that measures social status.
 The wake, the sorrow-filled faces paying their  respects,
 in seeming prayers, with their final thoughts
 He looks so peaceful.
 As the  garden of flowered condolences
 engulf the coffin with ephemeral scents.
 To share a thought, one last time.
 To remember together, something, one last time.
 The rituals of the rich.
 153
 The rituals of the poor.
 In the province, there is the tupada, cockfights to raise money 
              to help defray expenses.
 Card games, tong-its, mahjong to add to the funereal 
              coffers.
 In the urban areas, unclaimed corpses are claimed
 to be used for acquiring a permit for gambling during the wake's duration.
 A ghoulish commerce, but a burial
          nonetheless.
 Then for both the rich and the poor, the traditions of prayers.
 Nine days of nightly prayers, punctuated by apatan (4th-day) and siyaman (9th-day)
 The tapusan, the last day of prayers, the 30th day for women, the 40th day for men.
 And a year later, 
          the babang luksa, the final prayer event
 when grieving is officially lifted, the black wardrobe retired.
 Although many of these rituals persist,
 cremation diminishes and dulls the grieving process.
 From dust unto dust, cremation hastens it.
 154
 Father's body was taken to the crematorium.
 The family was assembled in a room with a big glass window,
 the view opening to a space that connected to the crematory.
 The gurney rolled in, my father still clothe in wake attire.
 We were told polyester left a film of black soot.
 My brother and I undressed him to his cotton underwear.
 My mother stood by, blind, but sensing, listening.
 The crematory door opened and revealed an inner space littered 
    with bone fragments.
 The attendant shrugged, tried to say That's the way it is.
 There's always 
    leftover 
    bones.
 Like table crumbs, I thought.
 It was unimaginable and unacceptable mixing father's remains with 
    others.
 My brother asked him to sweep it clean, which the attendant gladly did,
 after some assurance of a 
    tip for the extra broom-and-rake services.
 The flat bed was separated from the gurney, pushed inside.
 The window was filled with faces, siblings, children, waving 
    goodbye.
 There was sadness, some tears, but no wailing.
 The door closed, the heat turned on.
 While the chimney smoked, I searched for an urn.
 While the family waited, exchanging stories of father, new and old, retold, reshared.
 A few hours later, only bones remained, small and large fragments, 
    in the outline of a body.
 It was broomed into a pile, raked into  a bucket, poured into a crushing machine
 and ground to  homogeneous pebbles of osseous remains.
 Then to a waiting marble urn, then back to the house.
 155
 Alas, cremation would repeat itself, too many times.
 In twelve years, there would be five deaths in the family,
 three, too soon; two, unexpected.
 The last two deaths did away with the traditional wakes.
 Straight to cremation, followed by  nine days of ash-wake.
 Death became familiar.
 Grieving found new rituals.
 While there might have been the initial wailing of grief,
 there were no longer the mournful sounds of final separation.
 The accelerated ash-to-ash ritual altered the grieving.
 The ashes were taken back home.
 Perhaps, there was some comfort to proximity with the remains.
 The urns found their home in an antique cabinet
 in a corner of the parents bedroom, among a collection
 of 
    statues of Christ and the Virgin Mary,
 and other objects of devotion.
 156
 After a truncated sabbatical, or a failed effort at early retirement,
 I went back to medicine, in the managed-care setting,
 and stayed 
    in it for the next 14 years,
 working a part-time schedule, three to four days a weeks,
 six months a year, three on, three off, or, six on, six off.
 Quite unlike the Jewish communities of Reisterstown
 or the blue-collar patient population of Rosedale,
 I worked in a clinic
    serving a patient population
 and a culture 
    I was unfamiliar with.
 The Eager Street clinic, serving the black community of East Baltimore.
 The Fells Point residence was barely a mile away,
 No fences, just a visual transition
 from the gentrifying blocks of the middle class
 to the
    poor white communities that collared Fells Point
 to the ghetto  landscape of inner city life,
 of abandoned neighborhoods, boarded up tenement 
    houses.
 At night, we shared in the sounds of sirens and the familiar popping of gunfire.
 Not a place to wander to, not a place to get lost in.
 157
 The inner city became a place of work for the next twelve years.
 The patients at the Eager Street Clinic were mostly black, mostly East Baltimore.
 They came with    generic complaints and maladies,
 many consequent to the tragedies of inner city 
    life.
 Drug addictions, alcohol abuse, teen pregnancies,
 sexually transmitted diseases, HIV and AIDS.
 Some come to the clinic, high on something, or down on another.
 Or reeking of thunderbird wine, eyes ablaze, pupils dilated,
 often, 
    barely able 
    to stay awake, some dozing off while talking.
 Part of the days, always spent in  filling up their disability and medicaid forms
 urgently needed to access their food stamps and month's end checks.
 Many times, food stamps  are sold or exchanged for heroin or 
    crack.
 Drive-bys were common, stray bullets and accidental victims,
 or the wrong house sprayed with bullets.
 In too many streets, drugs were the inescapable day-to-day commerce.
 Everyone either bought or sold.
 Its middle class have long ago trickled out to suburbia.
 Of the underclass, many tried to leave, only a few could.
 To nearby communities where they were resented and unwelcome.
 To Virginia or North Carolina or wherever a relative might offer 
    a place of sanctuary.
 But for most, there is nowhere to go.
 Most are born, live and die in Baltimore.
 158
 If you have time to listen, there are a thousand and one stories.
 Stories from the 'hood.
 Of helplessness and hopelessness.
 A daughter dying of AIDS.
 A son gone to prison.
 A child slain by an errant drive-by bullet.
 A son's suicide and a note left behind that the mother has read a hundred times,
 trying to understand, searching for answers in prayers and from 
    God.
 A daughter just out of crack detox, returning to a home
 in a street where everyone is either using or selling.
 A minister, down on his knees, pounding the floor with his fists,
 in tears, speaking of hopelessness for his people.
 A mother in and out of detox, her drug needs paid for by tricks,
 shoplifting, or selling her children's Christmas toys.
 At month's end, men and women, young and old, line up,
 diving 
    to the ground, as they fight over samples of crack vials
 thrown from the back seat of a dark-tinted 
    gold-colored Lexus,
 whetting drug appetites to commit tomorrow's food stamps and medicaid 
    checks.
 When the checks arrive, the dealer next door sell out by noon 
    time, seventy thousand, easy.
 A young woman with AIDS, selling tricks to support a 150-dollar-a-day 
    drug addiction.
 Drug runners in too many street corners, with their languages 
    of whistles and signals.
 Where are the men?
 We're all afraid. Nothing we can do. You call 
      the cops, they don't come.
 If they come, the dealers will get back at you.
 They have eyes. Ears.
 Man, they know who's snitching
 We can't sit on the 
      stoops anymore.
 When the sun sets, you go inside.
 To your TV, to your VCR.
 Where are grandmothers and grandfathers?
 They have become foster parents, baby 
    sitters to grandchildren
 whose mothers are out searching for crack,
 whose fathers are serving 
    time.
 Stories from the 'hood, sometimes you can't help it, a tear breaks 
    through.
 All I can do is listen.
 A silent touching of hands.
 A hand on 
    the shoulder.
 They are thankful that I take time to listen.
 Many times they say Thank you.
 Sometimes they shake my hand, lingering, with a grip that speaks.
 Sometimes, it's 
    a slow quiet nod of the head.
 Sometimes, a hug.
 159
 I learned to listen.
 Made time to listen.
 Learned how to draw out the stories,
 Countless little stories and details of their lives.
 Their vegetable gardens. Hoping the tomatoes will be as good this year.
 Their weekend bus trip to the casino, their pockets emptied, their bellies stuffed.
 An upcoming cruise,  a lifetime dream.
 A family illness or death. A wedding. Their thanksgiving dinner.
 I made little cryptic notes, tiny drawings on the corner of the chart.
 A tomato. A cruise ship. A wedding cake.
 Or innocent little drawings for information only I can read.
 A nose for cocaine use,  a line-graphic  for a marijuana joint.
 On their next visit, the notes and drawings remind me,
 their faces lighting up as I ask  about the tomato garden,
 how the cruise was or where they went for the honeymoon.
 They would smile from ear to ear, so happy that I remembered.
 160
 The clinic support staff were mostly black
 W., the specialty factotum, adopted me as brother.
 With many others in the staff, taught me a 101 on black culture.
 It took some time, but slowly, as i earned their trust
 they started sharing with me the intimate details of their lives.
 Learned the nuances of black language,
 their signals, their postures, their struts.
 Learned about the black shades of their prejudices,
 the ebony black and the high yellow.
 Some referred to me as 'brother' or 'homey,'
 not in disrespect, but as a 
    final word of acceptance.
 Sometimes, I was allowed to enter rooms of their inner sanctums,
 lined with anger, scarred by prejudice, simmering beneath the 
    surface.
 A few spoke openly of their resentment and distrust of whites.
 Of this or that clinic doctor's obvious prejudice.
 A few times, I argued.
 W. would say:
 You're blind. You just can't 
      see it.
 161
 But I have seen it.  Listened to it. Read about
    it.
 Growing up, reading, browsing through history books.
 The black and white
    photographs of lynching
 Later, reading more. Tuskagee. Antibellum South.
 More recent, there was the videotaped Rodney King beating
 and the acquittal that sparked the L.A. riots.
 How can one be blind to that.
 How can one not see that.
 It was easy to see the whence of their anger
 at the incredible conspiracy of prejudice.
 I have wondered, too many times,
 how does one heal from that kind of hurt?
 In 1995, through months of the O.J. Simpson murder trial
 the staff followed the proceeding closely, talked about it.
 Some confessed they thought he was guilty.
 The day the verdict was read, the clinic came to a standstill.
 The staff were glued to a small television, sneaked in for the event.
 The eerie and nervous
          silence exploded into a burst of cheer and elation.
 Yes. Yes.
 Fists pumping in the air
 Clapping.
 Hugging.
 It was a communal celebration, not of Simpson's vindication.
 Something else, from deep inside, that linked their cheer and 
          elation together.
 For many of them thought him guilty.
 W. caught in a moment of exhilaration, admitted to me:
 It's a get-back.
 162
 Racism still exists.
 And prejudice, in all its myriad forms.
 It is part of the nature of homo sapiens.
 For some, it is
          difficult to do away with the hate, as it is for some to heal the hurt.
 We can institute laws, preach political correctness.
 Sing songs that imagine a brotherhood of men.
 But how to legislate  the thoughts and silent prejudices of men?
 Maybe less. Maybe not as loud. Maybe, more hesitant
 But still there, in the seeming safety of circles of friends.
 The discriminations and slurs uttered in unguarded moments,
 fueled by alcohol, annoyance, or anger.
 Odious , brutal,
          shameless.
 Or, 
          subtle or veiled by political correctness.
 Slipping out in countless ethnic jokes.
 Working with partners from Caribbean, Bangladesh,
 Pakistan, India, and a Jewish doctor.
 An Egyptian, friend and mentor.
 A doctor friend and his German wife.
 A practice that stretched from Jewish Reisterstown,
 blue-collar Rosedale, to inner-city black Baltimore.
 It was always there.
 In all degrees of hurt and venom.
 163
 In 1989, I applied for a part-time job in an inner city clinic
 that provided care for people with HIV and AIDS.
 HIV has long broken out of its shell,
 spreading, but still mysterious, unfamiliar,
 starting to appear in small community hospitals.
 Ignorance terrorized the public, even the community of doctors.
 Many refused to care for them, instead referred them out.
 Even infectious disease specialists referred them to the university.
 Or to 
            clinics funded and set up to 
            provide specialized services and care.
 It was a fringe population of patients that society  would rather 
            keep on ignoring,
 blaming it on the consequences of  addictions, homosexuality, 
            promiscuities,
 life-style choices and risk-laden adventures.
 164
 In the interview, the clinic medical director asked
 Will you have any problems working with gay people?
 No.
 The clinic was manned and ran by a front-line of foot 
            soldiers –
 all, or mostly gays and lesbians, I thought, volunteer doctors,
 nurses, medical assistants, nutritionists, social workers
          and clerks.
 The patients were a mix of gays and heterosexuals.
 For most gays and lesbians, sexual orientation is easily revealed
 by nuances of body language and voice.
 Some patients choose  an anonymity of 
            orientation.
 preferring to give a history of addiction and 
            intravenous drug use
 as source of HIV rather than admit to homosexuality.
 Or, an accidental needle stick.
 Or an accidental splash of blood.
 A few years working in the clinic, I was relating stories of a 
            recent travel with a girl-friend
 and the nurse gave me a quizzical look, asked
 You're not gay?
 No.
 We all thought. . . see, everyone here is either gay or lesbian.
 No. Dr J. is straight.
 No. We think he's gay.
 165
 It was a a polarizing time, shrouded by fear, mystery and ignorance.
 The afflicted shunned into a purgatory of intolerances, festering 
            discriminations, anti-gay hysteria.
 The fire stoked by fundamentalists, always ready with extracted 
            biblical passages
 ranting on the afflicted with pronouncements of God's 
            wrath and vengeful punishments.
 As the circus played – the media, politicians and 
            the scientific egos racing for their grail of discoveries.
 In some places, surgeons wore astronaut-type insulated surgical 
            gowns,
 as industry urgently looked into the commerce and profit
 of making metal-based gloves impervious to needle sticks or scalpel cuts.
 Some doctors were afraid to touch infected patients,
 some afraid 
          to breath the same air.
 I, too, was afflicted by ignorance and fear.
 I gloved my fears.
 At first, threatened by  uncertainties of contaminations,
 I double-gloved drawing blood or simply doing physical examinations.
 A few times I got splattered with blood, sprayed with saliva.
 Once, I bled from a scratch by a patient's fingernail.
 Occasions that brought sleepless nights.
 Some patients brought pastries and cakes, some  they baked  themselves.
 At first, I could not partake of them, made sundry comic excuses,
 that I just had dinner, imagining the virus smouldering in 
            them.
 I stayed on.
 A colleague asked me Why are you doing it?
 I don't remember what I said. But likely nothing with any profundity.
 There's not too many doctors doing it. . . or, just because.
 She was so moved. Ignorance and fear can do that.
 She said You will be blessed by God.
 I did not see God in the trenches.
 166
 Yes. God was not  in the trenches.
 The ministers of religion were all too busy damning the souls of the afflicted.
 Perhaps, it was not so strange, in the suffering and the painful journey to their deaths,
 in all the years I spent caring for patients with HIV and AIDS,
 not once did I hear an invocation to God, to any god.
 167
 This was the time of AIDS before AZT,
 when all we could  advise were untested supplements
 and dispensed hope with the uncertain promise
 that drugs and the magical vaccine were just around the corner.
 The gay community's grapevine was incredibly efficient.
 with its  burgeoning underground commerce of fringe therapies,
 for anything that could blunt the edges of hopelessness.
 They shared with me their secret concoctions of self-medications.
 Animal organ and exotic plant extracts,
 herbal remedies from far-flung 
            corners of the world.
 Many were still asymptomatic.
 But many were starting to get sick. 
            A few were dying.
 Patients were coming, searching for hope, asking questions.
 When will i die?
 How much longer do I have 
              left?
 Can I still buy a car?
 And what do you say to a 16-year old black kid who says
 I 
                gonna die.
 Not as a question. But acceptance.
 Or another who says It's government orchestrated ethnic 
              genocide.
 Or another whose father, a minister, banished him for his homosexuality.
 Sometimes there are no answers
 just bromides of hope laced with white lies.
 168
 Early on, for the infected, for the symptomatic, there was so 
            little hope.
 Patients continued to die, despite the short-lived promise of the 
            drugs
 that followed AZT – the NRTIs and the NNRTIs,
 before the arrival of protease inhibitors.
 As lives became predictably abbreviated,
 viatical settlements came into vogue, 
            patients selling their  
            insurance policies
 desperate to fast-forward and  indulge on a future dream  tomorrow.
 Dying was the constant ogre, becoming so familiar.
 Everyone 
            knew someone who was dying or who died, a friend or lover.
 John H. says he is the only one left in his circle of fifteen 
            friends.
 A common story, of circles lost.
 Rare is the gentle death, dying usually sufferingly slow.
 Some chose to orchestrate their deaths, deciding when and 
            how.
 Before the dementia or the diarrhea disables.
 Before the emaciation immobilizes or dermatologic cancer exposes.
 By a death cocktail concocted from hoarded prescriptions
 of nembutals, valiums, antinauseants and a bottle of cabernet.
 By assisted suicide.
 By hanging.
 It is never easy, talking to the wife or lover left behind.
 Sometimes, they shared the details.
 A letter left behind.
 The handful of pills.
 The infusions and injections,  the intravenous ways of dying.
 The holding of hands.
 Often, despite the cruel slowness of their deaths,
 the
            peaceful way their lovers passed away.
 169
 A patient's wife shared her story.
 She needed to talk about it.
 Perhaps, to find closure.
 Her husband drove from Canada to Baltimore every four or six weeks.
 kept his appointments faithfully.
 Perhaps the distance kept his disease in secrecy.
 He was a Muslim, bisexual, the disease slowly progressing.
 She knew of his infection, forgiveness given long ago.
 She also saw an increasing despondency
 as he anguished over the shame and
          the suffering he was causing her.
 One day she came home to a strange silence,
 everything spotlessly clean, nothing in its usual state of disarray.
 The bedroom likewise.
 Everything eerily in place.
 She knew before she saw the note, taped on the bathroom door.
 Please don't come in alone.
 She called a  friend.
 He hanged himself.
 There was a note, asking for forgiveness.
 He was buried before the next sundown
 with the usual trimmings of Muslim rituals.
 The death certificate lists the cause of death as suicide.
 His illness forever concealed.
 170
 By the time I walked away from AIDS medicine, the landscape had 
            changed.
 There was more science and pharmaceuticals.
 The family of protease inhibitors has been added to 
            the treatment armamentaria.
 With aggressive treatment, HAART,  highly aggressive antiretroviral therapy,
 the virus was subdued, not defeated,
 although 
          in some,  undetectable.
 Cell counts were climbing back up.
 Before I left, beckoned to another crossroad, I had attained a level of expertise,
 caring for more than 150 AIDS patients in two clinics.
 I was dispensing real hope,
 not old hope, laced with white lies and heavy doses of placebo.
 Rather than the merciless truncation of lives I saw early on,
 the patients were living longer.
 Many have gone back to school, or planning to.
 Many started to looked forward to a future
 filled with the clutter of mundane things 
          and normal dreams.
 It was a different kind of medicine, for a long time, more art 
          than science.
 It tested the Hippocratic tenets and maxims of medicine.
 Yet, it was the part of medicine In its landscape of the dead and dying
 that  left me fulfilled the most, enriched by the privilege
 of working with a community of volunteers, 
          of gays and lesbians,
 who gave to a population of patients, immeasurable caring, concern and compassion
 while so many others stayed in the sidelines.
 171
 So many stories of gay patients 
          and their lovers
 staying on together until the end,
 one taking care of the other, 
          one to be left behind,
 through the dementia, the diarrhea, the emaciation,
 through the days disabled by multidrug side effects,
 feeding cleaning bathing comforting
 caring loving in commitment and devotion
 companion husband lover friend.
 A window into stories of love.
 And for those ministers of their gods who rant and rave against 
          this kind of love between men
 for the politicians who rant and rave against same-sex love and 
          marriage
 look in this window and read the stories from their Book Of Love
 and perhaps learn a thing or two about compassion
 or learn something new about love.
 172
 In 1990, a 7.7 Richter earthquake struck central and northern 
              Luzon.
 Baguio, the summer capital, suffered widespread devastation.
 The house I built by the edge of a cliff, cracked and twisted 
            on its beams,
 and leaned precariously 15 degrees to the cliffside.
 The aftershocks were strong and there was great concern
 that the house would tumble and crumble down the cliff.
 My brother Arthur suggested that the house be stripped,
 save what could be 
          saved, and haul the innards to Manila.
 The aftershocks did continue for a time, as the grounds shifted 
            and settled,
 and by some fluke or by the grace of the rice gods, the house 
            untitled back.
 173
 In 1991, Mt Pinatubo erupted.
 The cataclysmic event  spewed magma, minerals and metals,
 and aerosolized the atmosphere with a global layer of chemical 
            haze.
 Some said it made the sunsets more magnificent
 imbued them with a deeper palette of colors.
 174
 In 1992, Arthur died, so young at 52, unexpected.
 But in the retelling of his last month,
 from  the cumulation of life-style 
          indulgences
 the 
discomforts attributed to indigestive complaints were likely cardiac.
 His death, a heart attack.
 Rollie was visiting in Maryland at that time,
 I did not return 
          to the Philippines for the funeral.
 Instead, we exchanged reminiscences.
 Rollie confessed, sighed with relief,
 that after many years of a strained relationship with Arthur
 he was able to patch up things, started talking to him again before he left for the States.
 He talked about Arthur's last years of anomie, of hard luck,
 scrapping an existence at the barrel's bottom,
 Tiaong providing a sanctuary and lifestyle on the fringe,
 of excesses served and cloaked from view by his faithful minions.
 175
 A month after his death, a strange occurrence of sounds visited.
 I was playing guitar, a classic piece, Romansa De Un Amor.
 A melody that wowed Arthur, made him want to learn the guitar,
 He said: Just that one piece, that's all I'd like to learn.
 That's when I head an alarm clock ring.
 I didn't have one.
 The alarm clock sound, went on and off, fifteen seconds at a time,
 going around the bedroom, each time ringing in another place,
 the desk, cabinet, drawers.
 I searched in vain for the source of the ringing.
 Eventually, it stopped.
 The night before, he came in a dream.
 Knocked on the alley door. I asked him
 What are you doing here?
 To visit.
 A visitation. A goodbye.
 Intrigued, a week later I made a long distance call to the Philippines.
 Talked to Joanna, Arthur's daughter
.
 She said her father did have an alarm clock,
 one he always carried with him wherever he went.
 She played the alarm on the clock, the sound so familiar,
 the same sound that visited a week ago
 176
 Sometime in the 80s, I started camping.
 I researched the basics, purchased the essential equipment.
 On an early spring weekend, I ventured to  Assateague Island, Maryland.
 I set up tent close to the dunes,
 complete with a campsite shower and a chemical tent-porta-potti box.
 The lullaby of gentle waves, the solitude, the aloneness.
 Far from the madding crowd.
 I was hooked.
 From tenderfoot, I became the proficient camper.
 Learned to set up camp, tent and gear in record time.
 Once a campground ranger watched, intently and curiously,
 as I put together a 10' by 12' screen tent,
 with its complicated connections and tangle of poles,
 usually requiring a combined effort of at least two people.
 When I finished, he came up, quite impressed, shook my hand and said:
 I've 
              never seen anyone do that alone.
 Slowly, I accumulated camping equipment.
 Nope, not low-end horse-and-blanket Marlboro-Man  
            kind of camping.
 This was high-end, creature-comfort state-of-the-art tent camping.
 Portable, mobile, foldable, lightweight, functional gear.
 177
 Summertime, the northeast States offered a respite from Baltimore's dog days.
 In the fall, the raging palette of colors of West Virginia's foliage beckoned.
 Once, I camped alone for two weeks, high up a West Virginia mountain.
 At night, I listened to the winds moan and snake through the valleys,
 the unfamiliar sounds of animals, more threatening in the dark,
 the rustle of leaves and the snapping of twigs
 seeming approaching footsteps of forest ogres
 poking fear through the flimsy barriers of tent,
 a loaded shotgun by my side, providing an ephemeral dose of courage.
 Half the time, I camped alone. Half the times, with friends.
 In solitude, or sharing it.
 Camping often enough, I learned of nature's unpredictable tempers.
 Rainstorms, windstorms, thunderstorms.
 Once, I had to seek refuge from a violent thunderstorm.
 Sought sanctuary in my car.
 Returned to find the tent gone.
 Stakes tracking out to sea.
 178
 One winter, on adolescent impulse, I bought a snow mobile.
 Called it: F. R. George.
 FR stood for fuck-a-roonie.
 My friend Richard provided the brawn and company,
 single-handedly loading and unloading the snowmobile on his pickup,
 We drove to Potter Country, Pennsylvania,
 two winter cowboys intent on a two-week  adventure
 through twisting snow-covered mountain trails.
 Late afternoon, bone-tired from hours of bumping through packed snow trails,
 we picked a spot off the trail, shoveled out a space for our tent,
 set up an early camp to rest our weary souls.
 As the adrenaline slowly settled down,
 it also started to slowly feel like an icebox inside the tent.
 Almost in unison, we said This is fucking cold.
 The two winter cowboys skedaddled out of the cold
 to the warm cozy comforts of an inn.
 It was an exhausting outdoor activity.
 We gave up on Potter County in three days.
 Drove up north to Niagara Falls, New York.
 Then back down to Deep Creek Lake in West Virginia,
 seeking little adventures from the wintry landscape,
 going full throttle-crazy against the bitter cold,
 snowmobiling up  challenging  hills and across  expanses of frozen lakes.
 Great fun, but the cold beat us up.
 We were back in Baltimore in 10 days, with leftover days.
 179
 In the mid-90s, I packed my 6-month old VW Golf for a cross-country 
          odyssey.
 Wanting an able-bodied companion, I asked a friend along.
 Roy. Carpenter. Burly man. Drug-using history.
 One condition. It was to be drug-free trip.
 And readily, he agreed.
 Packed  the car to brim-and-hilt, save for a sliver of  backview 
          on the rear-view mirror.
 Two tents, cookware, guitar,  portable toilet, sketchbooks, art supply essentials,
 maps, guides, medical bag, wine, cheese and crackers.
 Even lambanog laced with Pear-Williams, a bottle of 20-year old Port.
 A CB-radio, short-wave radio, small TV.
 There was no set time-schedule or destination,
 other than a decision to avoid the big cities and camp only in National 
          and State Parks.
 The rest was whim and winging-it, with a nightly map-check on 
          where-am-I? and where-next?
 I pointed the Golf westward, barrelled out through the Pennsylvania 
          turnpike.
 Slept the first night in the Golf in some truckstop.
 Then to Wisconsin through Minnesota, to South Dakota and Mt. Rushmore.
 180
 On the third day, I woke  to find Roy gone. His tent neatly folded.
 I thought he might have fallen off the cliff.
 Searched everywhere, even looked down the camp toilet,
 thinking
          he might have been
 butt-sucked 
          off the earth while doing his thing.
 I walked around the campsite, hollering his name.
 Roy. Roy. Roy.
 A few campers thought I was looking for my dog.
 Finally, I went to the ranger station..
 Was told a big man with a 
          red bandana on his pate,
 toting a small suitcase, walked out into the highway, a few hours 
          ago.
 The Golf caught up with him miles down the road, in a junction, 
          waiting for a ride.
 What followed was
 a Cheech-and-Chong episode worthy of a Saturday Night Live.
 Roy! Jesus H. Christ! What the fuck?
 "I don't feel good about this trip."
 Fuck! You could have left a note. I thought you fell off the 
            fucking cliff!
 "I'll hitchhike back to Baltimore. I've seen it on TV. 
            I've always wanted to do that."
 You have no fucking money!
 "That's ok. I'll do small jobs along the way."
 Yeah, fuckin' cowboy.
 Offered him money, which he refused.
 Fuck you!
 And I drove away. Ten miles later, gripped with concern, 
            I turned back.
 Found him in same spot, still waiting for a hitching ride.
 After refusing it a second and third time, he finally took 200 
          dollars.
 I said
 Fuck you!
 and drove away a second time.
 A year or two later, he came to see me, repentant and apologetic,
 saying he was going through drug withdrawal at that time.
 He said he has changed.
 Asked if he was drug free now.
 He said: Just now and then.
 181
 Minus  burly Roy, to fend off small bears and generic 
          threats, I felt vulnerable.
 Shit. What now?
 Decided to forge ahead.
 To Wyoming through the tip of Bighorn National Forest.
 Camped at Yellowstone Park.
 Vistas changed like an impatient slide show, spectacular scenic 
          delights
 that unfolded as I screeched around unending winding roads and perilous 
          bends.
 Ice-capped mountains, gullies, rock formations, through blinding 
          rain and thunderstorms,
 from rushing rivers below through 15-foot snow walls up the mountain 
          roads,
 to the Grand Canyons,
 through the tundras and petrified dunes 
          of New Mexico into its vast white dune park,
 through Arizona lined with cacti 
          and Joshua trees.
 through Vegas, the Death Valley, Redwood and Yosemite National 
          Park,
 through the breathtaking coastline of Oregon,
 through countless 
          small towns and scenic back roads.
 Some days,  drove less than a 100 miles   to the next National 
          Park.
 Some days,  more than 500, once or twice, close to 700,
 decamping at the break of dawn, ending the day late at night,
 soaked in scenery but weary to the bone.
 Sometimes too tired to pitch a tent, I struggled into a restless 
          sleep,
 hopelessly attempting to rearrange limbs and torso
 in the cramped unforgiving front-seat space of the Golf.
 Some nights, too weary to cook, I fed the hunger with wine, 
          cheese and bread.
 Every fourth or fifth night, I sought the comforts of a motel along 
          the route,
 to indulge in a hot shower, clean the toilet equipment, and catch 
          some CNN.
 I became the proficient camper, pitching and dismantling camp 
          with increasing ease.
 and surviving on ascetic food fare.
 Often, I slept to the sounds of the deepening night, weighed down by weariness,
 sleep shattering to wakefulness with the deafening rushing of rivers
 or the maddening cacophonous singing of birds.
 A dissonance most welcome, remembering the urban morning sounds 
          that wakened,
 garbage trucks and the metal clanking of its jaws.
 Often, I decamped  before the campsite awakened,
 when the boom boxes and car-stereos blared the rap and the rock.
 Early starts brought sightseeing bounties.
 The peaceful valleys 
          still in slumber.
 The early sunlight and the morning mist casting its ethereal veil.
 In Washington State, contemplated heading back east through Canada.
 Decided against it and started  driving back through the vastness of 
          Montana,
 the Glacier National Park, theater of its massive chameleonic 
          clouds
 casting undulating  shadows on barren prairie plains.
 The manic-frenetic pace was catching up fast, getting wearier 
          by the day.
 I was starting to talk to myself, reading billboards and plate-numbers 
          aloud.
 Tired of the CB radio's mindless prattle
 and the recurrent country music songs of lost loves and tortured 
          souls.
 The rest of trip back was a blur. . .through North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
 Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Penn back to Maryland,
 21 days and more than 12,000 miles later.
 All the other 80-plus countries traveled,
 nothing yet compares to the scenic beauty 
          in that cross-country odyssey.
 182
 The 80-plus countries, many twice- and thrice-traveled fill up 
          a travel cache
 of stories, photographs and memories, doses of great fun and inevitable 
          sufferances.
 Delays and detours, lost and misplaced luggage, missed flights, 
          missed trains,
 culinary disasters and gastrointestinal intolerances, and the sundry of mysterious 
          travel ailments.
 And there have been many occasions that took me out of medical anonymity
 to become the Good Samaritan.
 One medical travel story comes to the forefront – Morocco.
 183
 It was suppose to be a 9-day travel in Morocco, sampling 
            sight, history,
 culture and cuisine of Rabat, Casablanca, Meknes, Fes, and Marrakech.
 On the second night, I noticed a fellow traveler, a lady from 
          New York, dining alone,
 without her artist husband whom I met the night before.
 She said He has taken ill with fever, abdominal 
              pains and diarrhea.
 That night, I took myself out of medical anonymity and made a 
          "house call."
 The following day, the husband rejoined the tour bus, brimming 
          an appreciative smile.
 That following day, ambling through the narrow stone-walled streets 
          of the Marrakech market,
 I watched helpless, as a donkey trotting down the cobbled-stone 
          pathway,
 its wares strapped on its back and precariously balanced on both 
          sides,
 squeaking by the New York lady, with horror on her face, forced 
          against the wall
 the donkey load pressing and crushing on her chest.
 An auscultatory exam reassured that the lungs were not crushed.
 her breathlessness, more from panic, and the pain from contusion.
 I treated her with reassuring follow-ups and and regular doses 
          of Tylenol.
 Alas, by the fifth day, one of the nemesis of foreign travel was 
          increasingly taking toll,
 more than half of the travel group was already taken ill by a 
          diarrheic malady.
 By the sixth day, more added to the count, some even projectile 
          vomiting in public places,
 frantically searching and hurrying-scurrying to public rest rooms.
 It was a a dispirited and gloomy busload-full of tourists, in 
          heaves and runs.
 as I dispensed from rapidly dwindling supplies of antibiotics, 
          analgesics and antidiarrheals.
 Providence must have intervened, and the last days left in Morocco 
          were enjoyed in intestinal calm.
 Until. . . the last day, assembled in the lobby, our Moroccan 
          guide was running quite late,
 hurriedly giving last-minute instructions on the etcetera of airport 
          procedures and paperwork.
 Then, barely finished, the last word still hanging from his lip, 
          he turned around,
 intent on a fast clip and stride to hurriedly lead his flock of 
          travelers to the bus . . .
 Wham! Ka-BonK!
 He walked right into this massive Samsonesque marble hotel pillar.
 Stupefied, he slowly collapsed to the floor, a wide bleeding gash 
          over his left eye.
 He refused to be taken to the local hospital, and pleaded with 
          me Please do something.
 Curtained by a half-circle of concerned fellow travelers, I did 
          a sutureless wound closure.
 Later, in the bus, en route to the airport, watching the Moroccan 
          guide in his bloodied caftan
 and a left eye half closed from pressure bandages and steri-strips
 and the rest of the travelers in intestinal calm, I indulged in 
          a moment of self-satisfaction.
 Generic problems, yes. And I thought, Go ahead! Throw 
              in a cardiac arrest. I'm up for it.
 A little later, barely settled on the return flight via 
            New York, there came the amplified call.
 Is there a doctor on board?
 Anonymity was no longer possible. I was sitting next 
            to the New York couple.
 With the rest of the Escherichian-afflicted scattered all over 
          the plane.
 I just hoped the call was not for something gastrointestinal.
 The Good Samaritan was led to an 80-plus elderly male, feverish 
          and achy with a viral affliction
 which I treated with reassurances, fluids and acetaminophen.
 Barely settled back in my seat, the stewardess came to me and 
          whispered
 that a woman was waiting in the galley, needing assistance.
 And off to the galley Good Sam went, and there, behind the drawn 
          curtains
 was this drop-dead gorgeous French woman in a red floral-printed 
          dress (a detail I strangely remember),
 holding a vial of antibiotic on one hand and a syringe on the 
          other,
 pleading in stuttered English that she is hours late on an injection 
          dose,
 for what i surmised was for a sexually-transmitted disease.
 Before my hesitation and concern could deepen into doubts,
 the lady lifted her skirt, pulled her panties downs, to expose 
          a full left derriere
 with visible injection marks, giving verity and justifiable urgency 
          to her request.
 Yes, I gave her the shot.
 And, no, the cardiac arrest did not happen my way, although I 
          did not stop imagining its occurrence
 until after I have extracted my bags from the airport carousel 
          in Baltimore.
 It was not all medicine. There was a day in Fez, its medina, the 
          scents and sounds in the souks shops
 the color and costumes of the street theater of Moroccan men and 
          women in their jalabas and kaftans.
 It was a memorable travel, the travel medicine made it doubly 
          so.
 184
 In the 90s, a trimmed-down schedule of medical work
 allowed 
            more travels and more frequent visits to the Philippines
 and visits 
          to the family farm in Tiaong, Quezon.
 50-some hilly hectares of agricultural land
 with a peak boasting a circumferential view of the mountains and the verdant countryside,
 the neighboring barangays, the green of the rice fields and  
          blanketing tops of coconut trees,
 and in the distance, the imposing  peaks of Mts. Banahaw and 
          Cristobal.
 To family, it was the Farm and the Peak.
 OId-timers referred to the Farm as "Proces," a rural 
            contraction for an uncle's four women in his life.
 The peak was referred to as "Pulang Lupa" for its red 
            gravelly volcanic soil.
 Others call it "Pinagbanderahan" (flag site) where the 
            Japanese held strategic camp during its provincial occupation.
 To family, the Peak was the traditional destination for the young ones on Easter Sunday gathering,
 their walk up rewarded by a serving of fresh buko juice and coconuts.
 185
 With my brother Louie, there were recurrent evenings, tippling 
          on 90-proof lambanog
 that never failed to fuel our conversations, designing little 
          dreams, dreaming little visions.
 Of building a small public library, for the town had none.
 Or a small school, a one-room school,
 even amused ourselves, thinking of a name. . . Liceo Pulang Lupa.
 In 1997, I went up the Peak again, accompanied by Ruben,
 a long-time 
          on-and-off family employee, when he was away from intermittent NPA employ.
 We pitched tents and camped for three days,
 clearing the over growths and saplings, slowly revealing the surrounding 
          vista.
 At  nights, by campfire, I listened to Ruben tell his stories of the 
          land,
 under a celestial canopy, ablaze with its constellations
 engulfed by layers of sounds hiding in the dark.
 As the clearing was completed, the peak undressed into a vast 
          and empty canvas,
 overlooking an incredible vista of mountains 
          and  verdant countryside.
 186
 In April 1998, I started building Pulang Lupa.
 At the start, my brother Rollie was a great help, allowing me 
          to return to my Baltimore clinics.
 It was his long time dream, one much older than mine, to make 
          something of the land.
 And before him, my mother and older brother Arthur, all dreaming 
          something for the idle land.
 He shared in my excitement, the possibilities were intoxicating.
 He supervised the laying of the 
          foundation works for the first buildings.
 Sadly, he would never see the fruition of our dream.
 187
 Early on in my return visit in July, I was notified Rollie suddenly 
          took ill.
 He went into cardiac arrest in Los Baños 
            and taken to Manila.
 He had previous confrontations with cardiac problems.
 About a year ago, he was airlifted from Mindanao
 diagnosed to have a heart attack, subsequently had a quadruple 
          bypass.
 Unfortunately, he could not shed his lifestyle dependencies.
 When I got to the emergency room, I found him beyond help,
 with signs of irreversible hypoxic brain damage,
 his pupils fixed and dilated
 his vital signs pharmaceutically maintained.
 I told his family of the hopeless prognosis.
 No further tests were done.
 He was taken to his room where his family and kin awaited.
 To die there, rather than in the impersonal and too clinical death
 midst the chaotic theater of the emergency room.
 To me, he was gone.
 Or perhaps, if his spirit lingered, he was just waiting for the good-byes 
          to be said.
 A year ago, while he was recovering from his first attack, we 
          talked.
 Or, rather, he talked and I listened.
 Stories that opened a window into his life, hidden from view.
 Stories that resuscitated as he lay in his death bed
 in a tangled curtain of wires, tubings, and intravenous lines
 in the rhythmic mechanical sounds of the respirator
 as his heart streamed green patterns of beats across the monitor 
          screen,
 vital signs maintained by pharmaceuticals started in the emergency room.
 I watched, waited,  while good-byes were said.
 Prayers offered, forgiveness given or asked.
 I started to taper down the medicines, a little at a time.
 Watched 
          the monitor numbers drop.
 Watched the heart's green complexes slowing to a rhythm before inevitable 
          fibrillation.
 Said He's leaving us.
 Beckoning for a final goodbye.
 188
 The early construction of Pulang Lupa was all consuming.
 It was hampered by the weather, water supply was always wanting.
 Often, river water had to be delivered by was delivered by a small trucks.
 When the rains would make the road impassable for deliveries,
 Ruben would painstakingly shovel water accumulating in puddles
 into buckets and small drums of water, in the middle of the night,
 or whenever it rained, for the next day's cement mixing needs.
 Horses would supplement the supply, hauling five-gallon jugs
 strapped on their back from the village deep wells.
 There were many work stoppages, waiting for weather to clear and the 
          roads to dry.
 There were no architectural plans.
 No engineers.
 Just a foreman to orchestrate the work with a motley crew of artisans 
          and laborers,
 I drew plans on cardboard boxes, backs of  old calendar pages and 
          scraps of plywood,
 forever disappearing as kindling or some secondary use.
 Eventually the foreman caught up with what I was trying to achieve.
 Lines, alignments, symmetries and various design elements.
 Quite a few times I would tear down and redo things that didn't 
          look right to me,
 to the foreman Vic's head-scratching incredulity.
 189
 Twice a week, Wednesdays and Saturdays, after the day's work,
 I brought out a half-gallon of lambanog,
 to the men's delight and their waiting wives' dismay.
 The jiggerful of arrack would go round-and-round,
 fueling and loosening the men's storytelling,
 as the decibels increased and the stories slurred.
 And I was the voracious listener, taking the occasional jigger,
 while slowly being filled with the stories of their lives.
 But it was more than drinking and getting drunk.
 It was also a rural ritual.
 A social hour, exchanging stories, local news, secrets,
 current events, town politics, and gossips.
 190
 The one-room school house did not happen.
 Instead, it mushroomed into a complex of buildings.
 On a personal level, it was my sculptural grand opus
 a vast  empty canvas that slowly filled up
 with a collage of buildings connected by steps and walkways,
 careful that the elements did not obstruct each other,
 each sharing in the scenic vista of mountains and countryside.
 I stared at empty spaces, endlessly sketching in my mind.
 drawing and redrawing, designing and redesigning,
 adding, extending, altering, tearing down and rebuilding.
 191
 During the early years of Pulang Lupa's construction,
 my time was divided between Tiaong and Baltimore,
 returning 
          twice a year to Tiaong, staying 3 months at a time, a few times, longer.
 Although the Baltimore clinics adapted to my long absences,
 continuity of care was starting to suffer from the three month 
          absences.
 I quit my  regular clinic at Eager Street and started taking  assignments in the satellite clinics,
 covering physicians on vacation, conferences, sabbaticals or maternity leaves.
 192
 The ten or more years practicing in the inner city were most fulfilling.
 Medicine in an incredible environment of learning and teaching
 with the clinic affiliation with Johns Hopkins Hospital.
 It was a different kind of medicine practiced in the managed-care setting,
 removed from the day-to-day temptations of commerce.
 A serendipitous fusion of medicine and   cultural immersion.
 I became the brother, the homie.
 Came to know of their God and the prayers in their lives.
 At a time when I  have long walked away from my God,
 I was struck by the religiosity of the inner city folk.
 They relinquished to God's will the outcome of their illnesses 
          and sufferances.
 Early on, I used to smile when they would say when they got better.
 I thank God and I thank you.
 They tell me how they prayed.
 I was arrogant and amused, having to share with their beliefs,
 as I thought their improvements were the fruits of my labors
 and the ministrations 
          of medicine.
 But somewhere along the countless minuets of life and death
 of lives saved and lives lost, even as science triumphed,
 I came to realize prayers were more than generic doses of placebo.
 And learned from the patients, its powers, its comforting ways.
 And in the end, it was I who rediscovered prayer.
 Some kind of epiphany from watching the patients
 in their resolute strength, serenity and resignation.
 If it was placebo, it worked better than those ones we prescribed 
          or uttered.
 Later, whatever its pathways or mechanisms, it became part of my treatment.
 Talking about prayer.
 Asking them to pray
 for  what ever wonderful ways it would help 
          what I was trying to do.
 193
 My mother died In 2000. She was 86.
 For years her health has been in slow and age-related steady decline 
          and disrepair.
 She adapted to the gradual deepening darkness of her world
 while continuing her daily kilometer of exercise, walking around 
          the big dining table,
 her path cleared of chairs and obstacles,
 a completed circle marked by a piece of tape at the the table's 
          edge.
 Her days were filled with mental word games, jumbles and crossword 
          puzzles,
 a long list of mnemonic exercises, and hours listening to readings 
          from her children.
 She had long resigned herself to the eventuality of her death,
 dreading the specter of intensive care unit, immobilized with 
          tubes and wires
 intubated and hooked to a mechanical ventilator.
 So many times, she voiced her fears
 and asked for reassurances that her life not be needlessly prolonged.
 She initially resisted, later consenting, to the implantation 
          of a temporary pacemaker.
 Her string of illnesses brought her to regular visits to physicians 
          and specialists.
 Alas, too many times, I was angered and horrified
 at the recurrent instances of negligence, inattention and incompetence.
 194
 She was eventually hospitalized, for exploratory surgery for a 
          suspected colon cancer.
 A pre-admission cough and respiratory difficulty raised the possibility of pulmonary 
          embolism.
 I wrote a clinical summary which included my clinical impressions.
 Alas, my suspicions were discounted,
 saying what I suspected was "normal" for old patients.
 Her condition needed to be stabilized before surgery.
 And stabilize, it did not.
 Suboptimal care saw to that.
 Visits from doctors giving her few hurried minutes of rounding-time.
 My mother's condition worsened daily, and In about 10 days, she 
            was much worse.
 Her lungs were filling up with fluid.
 She asked to be taken home. To die.
 The scheduled lung scan done on her day of discharge
 confirmed 
            my earlier suspicion of pulmonary embolism.
 She said
 I am tired. Please. I just want to go home.
 195
 We took mama home.
 To die.
 Away from the hospital ambience of white-starched nurses
 and white-coated doctors hurrying through their rounds,
 restricted visitation hours, the intrusive blaring  
            of the paging system.
 To a room at home, surrounded by family, giving care, keeping 
            vigil.
 Relatives came, for quiet forgiveness, for prayers, for closure.
 I slowly withdrew her medications and fluids.
 Replaced them with medications to keep her comfortable.
 In the process, science and pharmaceuticals failed in its expected 
            mechanisms.
 She suffered   the discomforts of dehydration,
 as she drifted in and out of a semi-coma,
 her parched lips instinctively sucking at wet towels
 opening her mouth to small doses of ice chips.
 Many times she slid into pharmaceutical coma,
 Only to waken  from them.
 I suffered those moments.
 She passed away, surrounded by family,
 as she wished, at home.
 And as she wished, she was cremated on the same day.
 Brought the ashes back home.
 I went to look at the room where she died,
 not certain why,
 perhaps, just because. . .
 A wispy band of bluish-white cloud hang in the room.
 It swirled, 
            in an instant it was gone.
 196
 My mother's dying haunted me for a long time.
 Wondering what more I could have done.
 Long before she died, she expressed her many fears.
 Not of dying, but how she would die, how she might suffer.
 She turned to me, her doctor son.
 I made a promise, reassurances.
 That in the end, her death would be a dignified one.
 Yet, she still suffered in her dying.
 She came out of pharmaceutical coma,
 a few times, awakening, so aware, surprised,
 her fists clenched, thumping the bed with all her feeble strength,
 whispering Why am I still alive?
 Dignity in death does not come easy in a culture ruled by religion
 whose  sole ministration is the sacramental anointing of extreme unction
 and a promise of salvation.
 197
 My mother's last years and death was sadly revealing of
 the deficiencies and poor quality of her health care.
 I had the unfortunate experience of having accompanied her
 through long waits for her too short and too hurried  visits,
 the inattention of the doctor, the inadequacies of the treatments.
 It is a sad commentary on a profession that has become
 too focused on the ka-ching of its commerce.
 198
 There was an "ash wake" with the nine days of prayer.
 After 30 days, there was the traditional "tapusan,"
 I had a separate celebration in Pulang Lupa, with the villagers 
          joining in prayers and a small feast.
 Against rural traditions, the feasting food was not all consumed,
 At that time I was not aware of a rural superstition that concerned"tapusan"  leftovers.
 199
 From Pulang Lupa, I stopped by the family house in Mandaluyong
 to pick up sundry supplies to take to Baguio.
 I knocked for a few minutes, calling Cora! Cora!
 I went to the adjoining house, asked my sister Angie if Cora was 
          home.
 She said she was just talking to her an hour or so ago.
 I got the house key, entered, and found Cora
 sitting in bed, her back leaning on the wall, her legs hanging by the 
          side.
 seeming to having fallen asleep while watching television.
 She did not respond to a gentle slapping of her thigh.
 I noticed her feet were mottled blue
 her shorts stained with dry urine.
 She was dead.
 Leila wanted to do CPR.
 The signs dictated otherwise.
 It was difficult breaking the news to her two children.
 She was cremated the same day.
 She died, a year and less than a week after mother's death.
 200
 Cora fills up a room in my heart.
 Her marriage to Arthur failed so long ago, but she stayed with 
          the family.
 I do not know what her other choices were, but she chose to stay.
 She was mother's faithful companion, an alter ego,
 assumed the burden of her care in her advancing years,
 her eyes in her years of progressing blindness.
 As she did for mother, she did for everyone else in the family,
 and for anyone else in the compound's families of dysfunctional 
          relationships.
 She was "radio-balita," news and gossip filtered to 
            and through her,
 not too many secrets safe in her keeping.
 She was always there with a helping hand,
 dispensing generic advice and her brand of homespun medicine.
 And all these in saintly resignation awash in an eternally sunny 
          disposition.
 201
 When I returned to Pulang Lupa and spoke of Cora's death,
 Mina, the village lady who served as "katiwala" 
          factotum,
 said she wasn't surprised that she died.
 A year ago, the small feast that was partaken of in celebration 
          of my mother's"tapusan" prayer ritual
 was not all consumed, the leftovers kept, instead of all being 
          given away the same day.
 It foreboded of another death, of a relative or love one, following 
          within a year.
 202
 Pulang Lupa continued to sprout up from the ground; buildings 
            kept adding.
 When the first phase was completed, it was painted. . . white.
 Imposing, even from afar, from the neighboring barangays,
 intermittently peaking in view from the national road,
 a cluster of white buildings, atop the hill of Lumingon.
 So, the White House name.
 I waged a small campaign to keep the Pulang Lupa name.
 The White House moniker stuck.
 203
 Each return to Pulang Lupa further immersed me into Tiaong's rural
              culture.
 Awash in superstitions and alive with mythological creatures.
 The frightening predatory creatures of childhood suddenly closer, 
            immediate.
 The kapre, monstrous and hairy, high up on the tree, his presence
 given away at night, as he puffs on his giant cigar, the red glow 
            lighting his face.
 The tikbalang, the upper half-horse, the lower human-form, hiding 
            in bamboo groves,
 preying on those afoot, casting his spell, leading men astray, 
            walking round-and-round.
 The elves, black or white, duwendeng-item or duwendeng 
                puti ,
 and the earth-dwellers, lamang-lupa, nuno-sa-punso, 
              inhibiting the termite mounds,
 the other creatures of the night, the asuwang in its various forms,
 the mananangal, feeding on infant's livers,
 and the White Lady afloat in ethereal ghostliness,
 a cast of characters providing theater to their rural lives.
 204
 And in this milieu. . .
 of superstitions and mythological creatures,
 of maladies cast by gnomes and elves,
 of spells, counter spells and possessions,
 where the villagers whistle to summon a breeze
 and predict tomorrow's weather by the starriness of the night 
          skies
 where the local healers diagnose illnesses
 by  the configurations of candles drippings,
 alum, embers, or eggs whites in oil or water,
 and dispense their folkloric treatments
 with concoctions of herbal roots, seeds, leaves and flowers
 or fragments of paper inscribed with prayers in pig-Latin,
 pasted on skin or stuck in bodily orifices,
 and all the final outcomes resigned to God's grace and will,
 in this milieu. . .
 . . . I dared practice my brand of Western medicine.
 205
 Word got around fast. A new doctor in town.
 I was "less expensive" than a visit 
            to the town doctor.
 Meaning, free. Gratis.
 And to boot, free medicines, too, when available
 from boxes of medical samples from Baltimore,
 later on from Leila's salvaged boxes of pharmaceuticals from L.A.
 Some came with prescriptions written by local doctors.
 Some came for second opinions.
 Many presented with maladies, persistent or recurrent
 despite visits to the local albularyos and medicos
 after  treatments of herbal concoctions, tawas, bulongs and orasyons.
 or various esoteria from their indigenous bags of treatments.
 Well,  not really all gratis medicine.
 Actually, some back with tokens of their appreciation,
 with their visit or returning a day or two later,
 with their bag or basket of sundry things.
 Freshly harvested vegetables, sitaw or kalabasa, a papaya, bananas,
 half of a jackfruit, bags of crackers or peanuts from the sari-sari store,
 a bottle of achara, yes. . . a chicken, once.
 Native, the patient proudly asserted.
 Once, a patient's mother came with a small basket of bayabas fruits.
 The next day I ran into her, oblivious to my approach,
 her basket almost full of bayabas 
          being picked from my brother's trees.
 206
 Alas, allopathic medicine was in comic and constant conflict with the 
          alternative.
 My diagnoses were forever challenged by the pronouncements
 of albularyos and medicos, even by the rural system of health beliefs.
 Villagers preferred to believe the folkloric causes of their afflictions:
 earth dwellers, elves, bad winds, and sorcery,
 rather than the  science-based mechanisms of pathologies.
 Often, after a consultation with me, free medicines and all,
 they would still  seek the albularyo's  help, for a tapal,
 a magic twig, 
          an herbal decoction, a bulong or orasyon.
 I diagnosed a woman with breast cancer, metastases all over,
 confirmed by biopsy, and eventually scheduled for palliative surgery.
 A local healer disagreed with the cancer diagnosis,
 said it was caused by a spell cast by a creature of folklore,
 and advised a treatment of herbs, tawas, and orasyons.
 A neighbor who had a problem with a breast mass in the past,
 shared an advice that her albularyo had given her:
 to have her husband straddle her, and to roll his testicles over the lump.
 A day before her trip to Manila for surgery,
 maggots squiggling  out of the ulcerating breast mass,
 she asked if she could make another visit to the local healer.
 Another patient I was asked to do a house call on
 showed to have a stroke, a left sided-weakness, with  hypertension,
 and to boot, a contralateral carotid bruit.
 I started her on treatment, antihypertensives and blood thinners,
 hopefully to  prevent or delay another stroke.
 A week later, I learned the family stopped the treatments.
 An alburlayo they consulted said it wasn't a stroke,
 and started a regimen of massage,  herbals and vitamins
 for what he diagnosed as pasmang-ugat,
 a malady brought about by a hot-and-cold imbalance.
 Later, I would lightheartedly require that before patients consult,
 they should already have consulted their albularyos,
 and have tried the various folkloric  rural remedies.
 207
 I do not denigrate the local healers.
 Only those who have started to mix the alternative modalities
 with prescription pharmaceuticals, steroids, NSAIDS, and antibiotics,
 ignorant of their indications and adverse effects.
 Alas, for many of the rural poor, they are the only affordable ministers of healing.
 Albularyos, medicos,  hilots, and shamans with their otherworldly view of maladies,
 low on science, high on mythology and folklore.
 But a view so easily comprehensible to the rural mind.
 Familiar modalities - tawas, kudlit, tapal, bulong, orasyon.
 Often a pittance payment compared to a doctor's visit
 that can cost a two to three days of wages,
 with prescriptions, too often, unaffordable.
 Still
 they survive, as long or longer than the urban-suburban rich
 with their
 diagnostic work ups and costly maintenance prescriptions,
 from whom I hear of more sudden deaths than from the rural poor.
 They survive as long, on regimens of faith, prayers, and esoteric placebos.
 Or, perhaps, they survive as a consequence of poverty.
 Where meat is only an occasional luxury.
 As they are forced on the frequent diet of inexpensive market fish.
 Or too frequent cans of sardines.
 Or dishes made from weeds pulled from the river banks,
 wild herbs, leaves, and roots that become ginatan (coconut) dishes,
 suffering their diets, unaware of their wonderful benefits.
 Often, they survive to old ages.
 And when age catches up, willingly welcomes death.
 208
 The rural folk accept death with surprising equanimity.
 An aging woman down the hill, matter-of-factly, asked 
    me a few times
 if I had at my disposal: Ang gamot ng kamatayan. 
    . . The death pill.
 She said she had already picked out her burial dress.
 She was tired.
 Alas, lasted another year,  dying the slow death,
 suffering the decubiti of bedriddenness and immobility.
 Another time, past midnight, I was asked to visit a man down the 
    village.
 In the rain and through muddied paths, I trudged,
 Ruben guiding me through the dark of night.
 The patient was sitting, slouched forward, somewhat breathless.
 Tulungan mo ako. Bigyan mo na ako ng gamot ng kamatayan.
 (Please help me. Just give me the death pill.)
 His diagnosis was uncertain.
 The xrays read possible tuberculosis vs possible metastatic disease.
 His coffers  long ago emptied by many visits to the provincial hospital,
 that brought only costly and short-lived relief for his breathlessness.
 He said he has been sitting up for days, unable to lie down.
 I told him there was no death pill.
 But sat with him. And talked to him, with all the situational wisdom I could muster.
 About dying, about spending what was left of his time
 in prayers, in closure, in forgiving.
 I left him a handful of Tylenols.
 A few days later he died.
 His daughter came up, thanking me for visiting
 and spending time with her father, 
    for talking to him,
 for the powerful pills that allowed him to rest and sleep soundly in his last days.
 209
 Sometimes an emergency still manages to present itself.
 On a Sunday, when all the staff were gone,
 while sorting through medical samples with my girl Friday, R.
 she said: Doc, nahihilo ako. I feel faint.
 A look of dread, beads of sweat on her face.
 Within seconds, she slumped forward, passing out in my arms,
 I guided her to the floor, between the cramped spaces
 of table, chairs, wall and litter of medical samples.
 Took her pulse, found none.
 Shit.
 Went around the table, dragged  her out by the legs.
 No pulse. No carotid.
 Almost a minute gone.
 I did a fist thump on her chest
                and started CPR.
 Pumping on her chest, 120 per minute.
 Fuck, fuck, fuck, in cadence with every 2 compressions.
 After a minute, a pulse check. Nothing.
 I broke away to get my stethoscope.
 A cavernous emptiness in the chest.
 No heart sounds. No breath sounds.
 Started compressions again, fuck, fuck, fuck, in cadence.
 I was starting to sweat.
 My arms, starting to ache.
 Another minute went by. Still no pulse.
 I started thinking fuck she's not coming back.
 Then, an arm moved.
 Oh, sweet Jesus.
 Then, she opened her eyes, bleary, confused.
 Oh, sweet sweet Jesus.
 She asked: What happened?
 210
 I never played much sports.
 None that demanded physical stamina.
 Billiards,  I was just a bit above average.
 A few trophies from neighborhood competitions.
 Days when angels guide the balls.
 One night  I played five consecutive
 difficult, impossible cuts
     and slices
 guiding each shot to the pockets with a mantra:
 Smooth as silk. Smooth as silk. Smooth as silk.
 Five impossible shots
 that earned me the moniker: Silk.
 Another time in Ocean City, Maryland, playing money games
 and sinking close to impossible cuts,
 guy wanted to beat me up, thought I was a hustler.
 I used to enjoy playing chess.Read on openings and gambits.
 Won a lot lot more than lost.
 I thought I was good.
 Until my brother Rollie asked if I wanted to play his frat brod,
 a pre-master level player.
 He destroyed. . . demolished me, utterly, completely,
 made mincemeat of my game.
 I stopped playing it soon after that.
 
 But I was the avid spectator of most sports,
 celebrating both victors and vanquished.
 awed by the excellence of the athletes who ruled their sports.
 The era of Bird and Johnson, then, Jordan.
 Muhammed Ali, the longevity of his reign.
 The era of Hearns, Leonard, Duran, and Hagler.
 When men were kings.
 Betting, winning more that losing.
 And the horses. The racetracks.
 Pimlico, Laurel, Timonium, Charles Town.
 They filled my days with 
          delight and eustress,
 my heart pounding, palpitating perilously
 as they thundered down the stretch.
 Tried the science of  racing forms.
 Betting,  losing  more than winning.
 211
 In the Philippines, I discovered cockfighting—sabong.
 Not just  occasional visits to the cockpit.
 But a short-lived immersion in its culture—
 the rural fanatics, the kasadors, the kristos.
 buying and training cocks,
 my 
          dark side fueled by testosterone and adrenaline
 relishing its slashingly brutal and bloody offerings,
 accepting the loses with a shrug
 celebrating the winnings with jiggers of lambanog
 and
          the victor's dish of tinola-sambot.
 212
 I was in Baltimore, during one of my prolonged absences,
 when I received  news that the Ruben, the Pulang Lupa caretaker, 
          was murdered.
 A well-planned killing, perpetrated at deepening dusk, 
          the electrical lines cut off,
 approached from behind, stabbed while napping in the courtyard bench.
 He staggered out of the courtyard, trying to call for help.
 A witness, an 8-year old granddaughter,
 was unreliable in her fright and the dark of the twilight.
 There were two suspects.
 A suspecting husband who spied from high up a coconut tree
 watching Ruben having a dalliance with his wife.
 The other, someone Ruben pulled a gun on, caught stealing bamboo sprouts.
 No one was ever charged.
 The spying husband left in the dark of night, a week later.
 The other still loiters around, with his petty larcenous preoccupations.
 Cold case.
 213
 September 11, 2001.
 I was working one of the Baltimore 
              clinics.
 when the nurse interrupted my charting to tell me a plane hit New York.
 I rushed to the TV lounge to watch a plane hit the second tower.
 For the next hours, the next days and weeks, like many others
 I watched, mesmerized, unending stream of cascading visuals,
 consumed with a cauldron of familiar and unfamilair emotions,
 a profound emptiness, sensing and mourning the loss of something 
          immeasurable
 and a dreadful realization that terrorism was no longer remote, 
          occasional, or improbable.
 It had a new face, a  rabidness with frightening resolve.
 The  numbers 9/11 became part of our vocabulary of fears,
 of a new reality of uncertainty, an early millennium milestone.
 Our modern-day Pearl Harbor.
 214
 A year later, Nestor, the caretaker at the Baguio house was murdered.
 Caught his wife in an affair with a local guy.
 The story is told, while he was lashing out his pent-up fury on 
          her,
 his wife's brothers were texted and came to her rescue.
 He died with seventeen slashes and stab wounds, front and back.
 I left the country, assured it was an open-and-shut case of homicide.
 Alas, his family's coffers could not afford the costs of greasing 
          the investigative work
 and no effort was made to communicate financial needs to me.
 His death was eventually labelled a "suicide."
 215
 L. was a long-time friend, companion, lover.
 We lived together for a long and nurturing time,
 shared in many things, but separate in some ways.
 She suffered through  dark stretches of my days,
 the inexplicable recurring madness.
 I watched her raised her daughter,
 shared in her grandson's early years.
 We thought we would grow old together.
 Then, Pulang Lupa started to happen.
 She visited five times, stretches lasting a month.
 It never stopped being the alien place,
 unfamiliar, even threatening,
 Then, there were things that clung to her,
 friends, family, all things familiar, and an independence.
 Life in the Philippines would be unembraceable.
 It was a slow separation, hesitant, unspoken at first.
 eventually, living separately, remaining friends,
 waiting for healing hands of 
          time, distance, and  circumstance.
 216
 Then came the breast mass.
 A mammogram showed a spot.
 After a prolonged pacing of indecision, the doctor elected to wait and see.
 Six months later, a follow-up mammogram showed the lesion's progression.
 L. was angry, and so was I.
 Second readings and hindsight suggested
 the lesion should have been biopsied and excised from the get-go.
 Such is the fallibility of medicine.
 An excision biopsy confirmed cancer, extending beyond safety margins.
 L. said: I need you. . . for this.
 As an internist, after the diagnosis, I am usually distanced
 from the choices of treatment and the terrible
          realities of prognosis.
 Usually, in practice, a patient would be referred to the cancer specialists,
 the surgeon, radiation and medical oncologists
 to orchestrate the therapeutic decisions within the purview of their expertise.
 This one time, there was to be no distancing.
 It was to be an unfamiliar journey.
 I read through the literature, often conflicting recommendations.
 Read on surgical options, radiation, chemo, and hormonal therapies,
 Sifted through
          pro and cons,
 toxicities and five-year survival rates of various protocols,
 weighing survival rates vs complications or dying from treatments.
 Pondering the alternatives, agonizing on the choice.
 Watching her, from one treatment to the next,
 seemingly undaunted, yet palpably frail inside,
 working through the days, fretting over the choice of wig
 to hide the the ravaging onslaught of chemotherapy.
 Eventually, I snipped off her last patches of hair.
 She survived her cancer.
 As a physician, a doubly profound and new experience,
 an unusual proximity to an illness,
 with its familiar and unfamiliar underpinnings.
 It left me, strangely, surprisingly, enriched.
 217
 I must have "returned" when I started building Pulang 
            Lupa.
 Although the years divided into blocks of three to six months
 shuffling between the construction of Pulang Lupa and medicine in Baltimore,
 the balance was shifting.
 As Pulang Lupa mushroomed, so did the dreams and visions.
 The possibilities were exhilarating.
 Even the art was happening with novel abandon.
 I thought I could find a balance in a divided existence,
 between Baltimore and Tiaong.
 but the allure of going back to the Philippines full-time grew with each 
          visit.
 In 2001, with hesitance, I sold the Fell's Point 
          residence.
 and with sadness, shut down the Thames Street Gallery.
 In 2003, I resigned from the the Baltimore clinics,
 and dismantled a life of some thirty years.
 Maryland, Baltimore, medicine, and art.
 Unlinking from friends, lovers and loved ones.
 218
 Leila returned to my life.
 After more than 30 years. . . 
          a circle.
 Then, the suddenness of its ending.
 Now, the strangeness of its return. . .
 219
 If I knew then what I know now, perhaps I would not have returned.
 Or maybe, I would have taken a different path on the crossroad.
 Now I wonder. . . if I simply chose to live the good life,
 a bohemian  existence, the urban artist,
 or teaching medicine part-time in the university,
 or just idling away in the city life and culture
 with all the accoutrements and indulgences of a  nest egg.
 Egads!
 No. Instead I chose rural Tiaong.
 In some ways, it's Any Small Town, Philippines.
 But it was, also, birthplace and hometown.
 Familiar, 
          palpable.
 Maybe, it just all the childhood memories that tugged.
 Maybe, my grandmother. My mother.
 Maybe, I just tippled on too much lambanog with my brother,
 dreaming dreams, poking at possibilities,
 imagining things we could do for the town,
 a town caught in some kind of  inertia.
 No crystal balls. No card readers. No fortune tellers.
 Just a mix of hubris and naivete.
 And an Americanness.
 And over the next few years, my pandora's box slowly opened
 with failures and frustrations, with conflicts and intrigues.
 challenges that crossed my path,
 many unfamiliar to my experience and expertise.
 220
 In Baltimore, I was labeled  by some in the Filipino 
          community as the "brown American"
 from a social distancing that was misunderstood, perceived as 
          un-Filipinoness,
 rather than my nature, preference,  freed from 
          social encumbrances,
 an inability for idle chatter, an affliction as long old as long ago  
          kindergarten days.
 Now, having returned, much of what I do  is labeled as being  "too American."
 I think it's just the lifetime affliction of  "one-track-mindedness,"
 fodder to the parent's recurrent amusement and incredulity.
 Yes, perhaps, I have become "too" American.
 Thirty years of cultural immersion can do that,
 Perhaps, having become "too" American was what brought me back.
 Wanting to do things this side of the world.
 In  my hometown.
 221
 The many visits, years before finally returning, slowly painted a picture
 of worsening maladies that plagued the country.
 Each visit added a patch to the collage of a landscape
 of political corruption, of social malaise and the suffering masa.
 There were many nights of animated talks with my brother and sister,
 lambanog fueling our passions and belief in the future,
 seeds of low-grade activism germinating
 with  hopelessly romantic notions of change.
 Louie was confident. Change is around the corner.
 The creme de la creme of La Sallites and Ateneans,
 U.P. activism, too boot, coalescing into one formidable force of change.
 I eagerly drank into that cup of  hope.
 Alas, later, to sadly learn that many of the la creme
 slinkered to the political establishment.
 Angie's hope was later tempered, that change was far from imminent,
 but possible through the thousands of scattered grass-root efforts.
 Alas, the la creme is old, balding and dying off.
 The grass-roots hopelessly unable to mount efforts of measurable change,
 unable to coalesce against the unyielding powers in the institution of corruption.
 222
 Ricardo is a friend and alter ego. A burgis Manileño
 who provides me a 101 on  urban matters of his expertise.
 Ready with elucidations on bourgeoise-related current events.
 He readily criticizes my recurring quixotic musings.
 I am certain I have bored him too many times,
 talking
          about the corruption, the elusive change,
 and the Filipino's disabling inertia.
 He said: Duwag ang Filipino. Walang bayag. (Cowards. No balls.)
 Perhaps, too stern a pronouncement, an unkind mismeasure.
 But there are some painful realities to our collectively diminished courage.
 Centuries of colonialisms have subjugated our collective will.
 Reduced us to pathologic timidity and resignation.
 The heroes, few and far between.
 Delivered from colonization, occupation and oppression
 by liberators who become the new colonizers.
 I counter: 7,280 islands. That's the problem.
 More than geographic separations, it isolates and disconnects.
 A rabid regionalism that dilutes and divides the collective will
 and prevents a true masa movement.
 Also, we don't have a bellicose streak in our DNA.
 In more than 300 years of Spanish rule, there were too few battles won.
 The first was Lapu-Lapu's.
 The other two were more then 300 years later.
 Not turn-the-tide victories.
 No, we not  a warring people.
 It's more than the thousands of islands and thousand of miles that separate.
 Something else.
 That has severely diluted the bellicosity in our souls,
 dampened our anger,
          and doused our outrage.
 Something else.
 223
 Why are we so corrupt?
 Inevitably, conversations lead to that question.
 We have talked it to death.
 The contradictions.
 Most Catholic, most corrupt.
 Is it the easy confessional cleansing of corruption as sin?
 Its easy absolution by penance?
 How did we get this way?
 Some say it was started way back to the Spanish colonization.
 Some say it's the Chinese.
 Some dates it to Quirino's golden arinola.
 Of course, Marcos and Company redefined it.
 What came before and after them.
 The math is staggering.
 It has been said, more than 65 to 70 centavos of every pesos
 goes to the coffers of corruption.
 Ricardo said: If not more.
 224
 When Erap got convicted of plunder, there was a collective sigh of relief.
 People said
 It's about time.
 We have to set an example.
 We have to start somewhere. . .
 It sends a lesson and a message.
 Politicians will start thinking twice. . .
 That's good. Someone high up.
 I asked Based on the definition of plunder,
 who are the politicians, in the past 30 years, who are not guilty of plunder?
 Salonga. Tañada. Pelaez. Joker Arroyo. Diokno. . . Five fingers. . .
 Um. . . 
          Rene Sagisag? . . . Six fingers.
 A short list. Not easy to add to.
 225
 Of course, greed and corruption are not unique to Philippine politics.
 It is generic to most third-world democratic systems,
 with power achieved only with  unavoidable indebtedness,
 reimbursed through cronyism, nepotism,
 the countless  political sleight-of-hand ways applied to pork and plunder,
 and the myriads of ways policies are reshaped for the benefit of the few.
 What is unique is the heartlessness and the absence of sophistication and shame.
 Nothing is safe from the leeching and the bleeding.
 It happens
          off the top as the monies get disbursed
 for infrastructure, education, health care–roads, books, medicines.
 I asked someone who won a recent local election.
 What is your program? Malinis ba?
 His reply, immediate: Babawiin muna.
 Incredible millions are spent in getting elected.
 It would take many lifetimes of political service to get it back.
 But through pork, plunder and other political machinations of corruption
 one gets it back, and much much more, in less than a term of office.
 The incomparable ROI of the business of politics.
 226
 And the populace has long resigned to this reality of Philippine life.
 Corruption is its other original sin.
 For the burgis, it is what it is.
 An immutable fact of life in this country.
 Many of them, independent of its machinations,
 While some are gears in the machineries of corruption.
 The middle class are making do.
 Many surviving through one of many economic diasporas.
 Both yearn for a change.
 Sadly, all sing the familiar chorus.
 Not in our lifetime.
 Sharing in the feeling that there is no alternative to the reigning rule of the corrupt
 and that the   elections, rather than a democratic instrument of choice or change
 do nothing but provide a perpetuation of the corrupt status quo.
 A musical chair of corruption.
 227
 The masa are afflicted with a more profound hopelessness.
 Long resigned to the impossibility of change.
 Not even in the next lifetime.
 They share the chorus.
 Lahat magnanakaw. . . Wala namang ipapalit.
 (They are all thieves. . . They are all the same.)
 Their voice is scattered, regionally diluted.
 Their protestations barely audible whimpers.
 Their collective outrage never threatening to the ruling powers.
 Or, collectively threatening, albeit short-lived, only when called upon
 as the lumpenproletariat, to provide noise, number and decibel
 for the recurrent  oppositional protests, marches and coup d'etat attempts.
 Yet it is the masa vote that determines elections outcomes.
 And they are feted to a campaign circus
 replete with same-same predictable promises of change
 with busload doses of celebrities and entertainment.
 They know too well the futility of hope and change.
 At least get something for the vote.
 Votes are sold for the 500 pesos, or half-sack of rice, or a bottle of liquor.
 Or a promise. . . if elected.
 228
 Once, I waxed romantic about change and possibility.
 Decrying the sad state of education.
 The dreadful decline of English proficiency.
 I suggested calling upon the retiring and returning diaspora,
 that population so rich with its doctors, nurses, engineers and scientists
 their incredible knowledge and abilities destined for oblivion and senility.
 I pondered the possibility of them  dedicating and donating
 one or two years of their retirement years to teaching
 in their school or province of choice.
 Who needs the Peace Corp with this endless supply of talent?
 Ricardo smiles and says
 Nice thought. Go ahead, write about it. See if anyone listens.
 229
 There is  never a lack of talk, testosterone-and-alcohol-fueled,
 of a coalition between the bourgeoisie, the military and their "chosen leader."
 with the cast of opportunist angels of change who will star
 in this dream team of a revolution.
 Talk and passion, with
          the longevity of a hangover.
 Alas. . . I join the ranks of those who have resigned to the impossibility of change.
 To the realities that burden the possibility of change.
 Everything is too corrupt and the corruption so deep.
 with the populace silenced by timidity, conditioned to subservience.
 The rabid regionalism, Islands that isolate.
 The waters that distances and further dilutes the collective passion.
 A democracy mired in the detritus and excrement of the corrupt.
 No heroes in sight.
 No mechanisms for change.
 There is nothing in the immediate landscape.
 I have ceased waxing lyrical for change.
 Yes. . . Not in our lifetime.
 230
 Pulang Lupa is the microcosm of many small towns,
 seasonally agricultural, at the mercy of unpredictable typhoons and El Niños.
 In between, the farmers survive on their second trade,
 competing with carpenters and masons who depend on it  as sole craft.
 Too often, the harvest is unable to provide the basic needs during the dry season.
 The cow or carabao or gun is sold.
 On dire times, a 5-6 loan is taken, paid at 10 percent a month.
 Sometimes, meals diminished to twice a day.
 Often it's rice and dried fish, or sardines.
 There's no miracle of loaves and fishes.
 An old man I was treating for hypertension told me:
 Many times, it's just rice and salt or patis.
 I've heard that so many times
 Early on, I was amused by what I thought was an exaggeration of their needs.
 But I have seen it too many times.
 231
 Many children go to bed hungry.
 Some infants are weaned off from milk at 6 or 8 months,
 feedings substituted with "am," sweetened rice water.
 Teeth are lost so early on.
 There's a mental dullness that struggles with education.
 The children are familiar with worms,
 pulling it out of their butts, occasionally coughing it up.
 Many are weaned off the care and watch of parents too early,
 to join the community of children with whom they share  the same plight.
 Too young and innocent to understand the whys of their stories,
 and the shrunken circumference of their future lives.
 But today, they play to their hearts' delight,
 endlessly performing, posing, singing and dancing.
 People from the other side of the fence, watch, listen,
 and agree: We really are a happy race.
 Rich in street smarts, so  wanting in parented wisdom,
 many sharing the reality and tragedy of ignorance.
 Education is not a right. It is the privilege of the burgis and middle class.
 Many never make it past elementary education.
 Of those who manage through high school,
 few can afford a college education.
 232
 The Pulang Lupa Foundation was established in 2001.
 With Leila's help, we set up a scholarship and educational assistance program.
 The foundation  has graduated a small number into professional lives.
 Also, provided assistance for day-care needs,
 elementary and high school tuitions, books and school supplies.
 Beyond educational projects, built a tuklong for a Lusacan village,
 youth activities, a short-lived art club and a marching-band.
 Gratis medical consultations.
 Free medicines.
 Deworming the children of their familiar squiggly infestations.
 Providing financial support and loans for seasonal planting.
 Grass roots efforts in the boondocks.
 233
 Some days I felt like a "mayor" of Pulang Lupa,
 waking up to find eight to ten people waiting in the kubo.
 Always, they come unannounced,
 my availability known through the rural grapevine.
 A parent with a son or daughter asking for a scholarship.
 A farmer asking for financing on a seasonal planting.
 Someone selling a carabao, horse or billy goat.
 Someone with an emergent need, selling a gun.
 Someone offering a price for a coconut or banana harvest.
 Or asking a loan or seeking employment.
 A medical consultation or a second opinion.
 Or asking for medical samples for a prescription need.
 In each visit, there is a story, if one cares to listen.
 Stories to break your heart.
 234
 But as there are stories that sadden,
 there are as many stories that anger.
 Some who showered us with praises,  stole as we turned our backs.
 Padded expenses, faked or doctored receipts.
 Some parents and students exaggerated their needs and impoverishment
 to better qualify for educational assistance.
 One who said he would take a bullet,  repaid us with thievery, dishonesties and lies.
 Crops are harvested on the sly, banana trees hewn down,
 trees hacked down for firewood.
 Electrical lines stolen, five separate times,
 water pumps, metal windows, corrugated roofs,
 for the underground rural wire-and-metal market.
 I heard it so many times –
 Dahil sa kahirapan. Because we're poor.
 But many times, it was  because it was just  easier than working.
 After so many umpteen times, you sadly see a culture of dishonesty.
 Some  draw on their rural brand of twisted philosophy
 saying their thievery is no different than the politicians.
 I made a small rural-based survey, one question.
 Given the opportunity, how many would steal or alter receipts?
 My caretaker said Six out of ten.
 And she's been caught with one hand in the cookie jar.
 Others said Eight to ten out of ten.
 To the one who said ten, I asked Including you?
 He immediately parried No! No! I mean nine.
 235
 I could not completely retire from medicine.
 In Tiaong,  the albularyos and the alternative modalities reign supreme.
 Folklore and mythology explain the pathologies of many their diseases.
 The duwendes, kulam, balis, usog, pasma.
 Of course, I tried to deconstruct it. Failed.
 Many cases resolve with the placebos and tincture of time,
 always attributed to the arbularyo's or medico's healing ways.
 Some cases that persist are brought to me.
 Sometimes,  too late for my intervention.
 Sometimes, an opportunity to  merge the science of my medicine
 with the folklore of their beliefs.
 236
 Yet, despite the  an absence of traditional health care.
 people survive their sundry of maladies
 with folkloric remedies, prayers and tincture of time.
 The more serious illnesses make it to traditional consultations,
 but too often, the treatments are never pursued,
 the work up and surgeries too costly, the prescriptions
          unaffordable.
 Long-term maintenance medications are non-existent.
 And when the choice is buying medicines
 or a few kilos of rice or food on the table,
 It is a no-brainer.
 Also, I have wondered many times at their rural hardiness.
 Despite the utter absence of  nutritional guidelines,
 with the excesses of the salty and fatty,
 they survive into relative longevity.
 is it the freshly picked roots, leaves, tubers, fruits and vegetables
 that grow in the wild or robin-hooded off the rich?
 The absence of urban stress?
 The  bucolic simplicity of their lives?
 The credo of their existence?
 237
 Medical care is a privilege of the burgis and middle class.
 But for many of them, it is still a crapshoot.
 Privileged crapshoot.
 Medicine is commerce first,   ability second, and compassion a distant third.
 Ka-ching medicine.
 Many attempt  specialty medicine without requisite training,
 while many specialists woefully wing through  the complexities of internal medicine.
 I have witnessed its appalling ministrations with my mother's final years,
 of dreadful inattention, glaring omissions, terrible mismanagement.
 And later, in countless stories from kin and friends
 and the incredible inefficiencies revealed from the reviewing of charts.
 I commented to a doctor, asked why it was so.
 He said
 It is what it is. Go back to medicine. Start a revolution.
 238
 It was a tempting challenge.
 It would have consume all that is left of time.
 And I could not imagine 
          making a difference teaching for a few years.
 It would require a deconstruction of the way we think,
 move beyond long established barriers of reasoning.
 The "art of medicine" is an abstract confluence of knowledge, intuitiveness,
 and the ability to ask, to extract the clues and the mundane,
 with time to listen and time to connect-the-dots.
 But the malady is many layers deep.
 It is not just bringing the art into medicine.
 Good medicine is  difficult when the business of medicine
 tries to cram as many patients with 10-minute visits.
 Jiffy-lube medicine.
 I remember a visit I accompanied my mother to.
 A 12-minute of a comedy show where the doctor
 spent most of the time going through my mother's thickened chart
 nodding on and off, uh-huh, um. . .
 Oh, yes. . . um. . you have a pacemaker.
 I wanted to jump over the desk and wring the fucker's neck.
 Oh, yes. It is a malady many layers deep,
 in a profession sorely lacking in censure,
 too often, ka-ching ka-ching ka-ching medicine.
 239
 Ka-ching medicine is not just an urban malady.
 The boondocks are also recipient to the dark side of the business of medicine.
 A pregnant caretaker, her pregnancy seemingly magnified by obesity
 decided to deliver in a clinic setting,  hurried to the next town
 and was referred to the next town's clinic,
 where she was asked to fork out thirty thousand pesos.
 For an emergency caesarean section.
 In increasing labor pains, she rushed to the provincial hospital,
 barely making it, delivering vaginally with great ease and great economy.
 240
 I came upon another crossroad
 discovered a magical world that was always there
 of trees, leaves, weeds, stems, tubers, fruits, and flowers
 Searched for the goddess, found none.
 Stumbled upon  a muse, who turned me down.
 
 The wonderment revealed itself slowly
 the daily kilometer walks  to-and-fro the peak
 the early years of Pulang Lupa's construction.
 Interrupted countless times by the flora  along the winding footpaths
 thrilled by the botanical melange, the seasonal transformations.
 Making colored pencil sketches of the many nameless flowers,
 being educated in the rural botany of healing folklore.
 The simple answers to my recurrent What's this?
 Without a name, it is
 damo (weed), baging (vine) and halaman (plant).
 The villagers were eager teachers to my ignorance and interests.
 Soon enough they were sharing their how-to on plants.
 Leaves chewed and spit on freshly circumcised wounds.
 Or leaves pounded, decocted, infused, heated, oiled for sundry uses.
 Soon, I became the avid listener to stories of their fascinating world
 of elves and earth dwellers, the kapre, tikbalang and the white lady,
 spells and counterspells, anting-antings,
 the superstitions ever-present in their daily lives
 and the their belief system that rules  life, health and death.
 A world   once  familiar, resurfacing easily from childhood memories.
 241
 Soon, I was deep into  a study of Philippine alternative medicine
 a compilation of folkloric materia medica
 a 
          one-track minded fascination that continue to consume
 Interviewing the villagers, elders, hilots, albularyos, farmers,
 anyone and everyone who had a story  of folklore medicine to share.
 Countless hikes, many hills, and little mean mountains,
 seashores, marshes, open fields,
 knocking on doors, intruding inside fenced gardens,
 digital camera in hand, clicking, clicking, clicking.
 So many came out to help, to answer a question, provide a name,
 or  offer a plant story of folklore.
 Later, the countless hours sorting out the clutter of info and photos,
 tweaking
          the digital images, uploading into cyberspace
 working into the early hours of morning,
 until cerebral crowding and weariness force me to shutdown.
 Many years into the compilation and more than 500 medicinal plants later,
 I have wondered many times: Is this worth it?
 And asked myself: Is anyone  reading this?
 242
 But there are enough emails that have given thanks for the effort,
 students and teachers who have strayed into the website.
 And many who were seeking from the compilation an alternative cure
 for a desperate need or seeming hopeless situation.
 Some see it  as "advocacy," some as "legacy,"
 emails showering with  praise and gratitude
 that nudge me out of doldrums and inertia,
 some renewing my resolve.
 Picker-uppers, I call them.
 They justify the madness in the effort.
 And, in the end, I have become the accidental teacher.
 243
 Gunfire is a part of the daily background    noise,
 happening so often it merits nothing more than cursory hesitation,
 to wonder what kind, a .45, automatic, or assault rifle,
 or to wonder if there's a wedding, baptism, or birthday nearby,
 or someone testing a newly acquired firearm.
 Often, deep in the bacchanalia of festivity,
 the host or a guest would pull out his firearm
 to fire a magazine's worth of celebratory gunfire.
 A guess is that more than 80% of households have a gun or two or more.
 And 95 %, if not more, are unlicensed, kolorum.
 Many are handmade - usually .38 paltiks.
 Or, homemade shotguns-sulpaks.
 244
 On an  early morning of late November 2005,
 the usual bucolic quiet of rural Tiaong was broken by the sound of gunfire.
 At first, I thought,  pre-holiday fireworks accompanying a  drunken revelry.
 But soon,  screaming and  an exchange of rat-a-tat-tat.
 Local police, acting on a tip, stopped vehicles filled with NPAs,
 unbeknownst to them, well armed.
 The confrontation turned awry.
 The local police was initially outnumbered and outgunned,
 until the arrival of a military contingency.
 The 30-minute battle left dead on both sides.
 At the break of dawn, heavily armed soldiers came up to Pulang Lupa,
 looking for wounded NPAs who might have sought shelter.
 They were met by my male staff, none of whom had any ID,
 all suspiciously looking -  boondocky and scruffy.
 When they were asked for their employer's name,
 they said they
          only knew me as "Doc."
 They searched the grounds,  kicked the kubo door down.
 Found no wounded NPAs.
 A surreal week followed.
 Surveillance helicopters frequented the skies.
 There were scattered skirmishes nearby,
 sounds of heavy artillery  in the afternoons to early evenings.
 Nights, the choppers dropped flares,
 streaming lights piercing through the dark,
 bursting to 
          dazzlingly   light up the countryside.
 For days it went on,  sounds and sights,
 each day 
          the  encounters slowly receding
 farther away into the barangays of Anastasia and Cabatang.
 For most local folk, it was life as usual.
 The school kids glad for the suspended days of school.
 The village folk adapting to the temporary inconveniences,
 providing me daily updates on military movements,
 evacuations, body count, and livestock lost.
 245
 Tears come easy. . . always.
 Sad movies.  Sad stories.
 Or in the middle of singing a song, a line breaking through.
 Often, incomprehensible, for the suddenness, the why.
 A few times, an accidental melody from the radio.
 a plaintive violin piece unexpectedly bringing me to tears.
 One, I tracked down the title  from a radio station that played it.
 Waited two weeks for the CD purchase to arrive,
 only to listen to it, passionless and uninspired.
 There were also those violent tearful episodes, since the mid-eighties,
 recurring every three or four years,  lasting an hour to three hours.
 From out of nowhere, sudden, paroxysmal, cleansing, cathartic.
 This is violent tearful sobbing.
 The first time it happened, it was quite scary.
 As the episodes became familiar, I would manage a laugh between sobs.
 It would cease as suddenly as it starts, to leave me severely exhausted.
 I have pondered the whence.
 Medicine? The dying? The deaths?
 A restless incarnate, surfacing from some obscure niche within?
 Or the countless minutiae of life's experiences,
 breaking through  the frail barriers of memories,
 synaptic connections
          opening  floodgates of emotions.
 They seem to have gone. Or, in remission.
 None since I have returned.
 246
 2009, a year of events.
 August 1, 2009,
 Cory Aquino passed away.
 November 2009.
 Pacquiao beat Cotto to a pulp; the world celebrates a boxer.
 He is given a hero's welcome every time he returns victorious.
 He's a pugilist. A damn good one. But a hero. . . no.
 CNN voted its Hero of the Year - Efren Peñaflorida,
 the pushcart educator, for his Kariton Klassroom advocacy.
 A hero? No. Perhaps, a humanitarian.
 But that same year, two real heroes.
 Muelmar Magallanes, a construction worker, and Pfc. Venancio Ancheta
 saving 50 people between themselves, before they perished
 in typhoon Ondoy's raging floodwaters.
 I choke up when I read their stories.
 A silent sob.
 I confess. . . their stories bring tears.
 My kind of heroes, now forgotten.
 247
 Christmas 2009, with the inevitable  December blues.
 It still came, the inexplicable dark cloud of depression.
 Seasonal, recurring, mild,  manageable with its predictable end.
 Still . . .
 I thought it was  the cold Baltimore Decembers,
 the barrenness of the wintry landscapes
 the shortening light and lengthening dark of the days
 and the long and glittery  commerce of Christmas.
 Here,  it still came.
 In tropical December months
 I still waged a battle with the seasonal Scrooge within.
 On the 23rd, the  villagers  came up, sixty-some, young and old,
 for the annual event of gift-giving, usually of food baskets
 and  clothes, old and new,
 some worn once or twice, or grown out of by kids.
 This year the clothes were sent by Leila, collected from her California friends.
 four big boxes filled with clothing and shoes.
 The big draw was 
          sweaters and jackets, given out to  squealing delights,
 so timely for the unusual chill of the December days.
 From the grapevine, I heard how so many were proudly parading
 up and down the village paths, showing off  their colorful hooded jackets.
 For many days, villagers came up, asking if there were any left.
 Many said it was the best thing they got for Christmas.
 248
 Christmas eve, I drove to Manila, the car loaded
 with small bags filled with food and toys.
 The streets were deserted,
 except for homeless people, street kids and panhandlers,
 people rummaging through early holiday debris,
 children caroling for the commerce, discordant and desperate,
 hookers looking for  last-minute tricks to add to their feasting table.
 all searching for a piece of  Christmas.
 I drove around handing out  bags, as I searched for my Christmas.
 Christmas day, I drove around deserted avenues in a snail's pace,
 freed from its curtain of   traffic and urban bustle and hustle,
 discovering the sidewalks and the street people
 enjoying the quiet of their make-do homes
 of pedestrian concrete and cardboard walls.
 On the red lights, the beggars came up, in surprising droves,
 mostly young  mothers, gaunt,  in colorful but tattered garbs,
 with clinging infants, props to their street corner begging.
 Muslims, Badjaos from Mindanao, referred to as palao or lumaan,
 God-forsaken, oppressed, dispersed by desperation
 seeking day-to-day existence in the commerce and charity of red lights.
 A surreal Christmas day, handing out bags to non-Christians.
 249
 In 2011. I applied for dual citizenship.
 An incredibly easy process that barely took five hours.
 Life is a circle.
 Coming back to what I left.
 Reclaiming a birthright.
 Citizenship brought back some rights.
 250
 We bantered about running for Town Mayor.
 On a program that would promise
 every peso in the coffer from whatever source,
 to be spent for education, health care, and local services.
 It's a fool's dream. . . fizzled soon enough.
 Another right of citizenship. . I purchased firearms.
 And a permit to carry.
 251
 I miss the four seasons, the wonderful patterns of nature.
 While I study and divine the science of  its cycles,
 often I opt for the childlike ignorance,
 to just bathe myself with it wondrous magic,
 with its exhilarating servings of ephemeral beauty.
 The blazing colors of autumn.
 Tenting under the canopy of the October colors.
 As November bares into the gray
          before the winter chills.
 The snow that blankets the barren landscape of winter.
 The pleasures of snowbound days,
 watching the flakes slowly build white on the branches.
 And soon enough, the flowering  dogwoods
 and the slow greening of early spring,
 camping in the still desolate dunes of Assateague Island.
 as the months march on
 to welcome the rituals of the sun worshippers
 who titillates  with 
          their seasonal nakedness.
 And when the dog days of summer stifle and smother
 to once again pine for the gentle days of autumn.
 252
 As I continue to  yearn for those four seasons,
 Tiaong has revealed the rural wonders of Mother Nature.
 Perched on that small hill, away from the madding crowd.
 I have watched its cycles of beauty
 and listened to its raging tempers.
 The monsoon rains and the drowning of crops.
 the typhoons viciously whipping across.
 In its wake, to waken to a stillness,
 to find some giant acacia trees uprooted,
 coconut trees supine on the ground.
 And some nights. . .
 A collar of distant lights from neighboring barangays.
 Above, the unimpeded celestial canopy of stars,
 the predictable arcs of the moon and planets,
 the unpredictable clouds that veil the night skies.
 But on a moonless and cloudless night,
 I can only gaze at that fiery firmament,
 shaking my head in wonderment,
 in its splendor, feeling strangely diminished.
 Hoping for a falling star, always ready with a wish.
 And the winds. . .
 blowing fiercely in  January and February.
 The villagers call them by two names, amihan or habagat,
 one or the other, 
          the science matters little to them.
 Days, the trees sway and bend
 bowing to the majesty of its power.
 Nights, in the dark, the winds moan
 plaintive, mysterious,  and eerie.
 Some hear voices in them.
 Messages from afar, from beyond.
 253
 The sunset. . .
 The early months also bring the spectacles of it.
 The play of clouds and colors, as the sun
 sinks below the edges of the Ayusan mountains.
 Some mediocre, to forgive the lazy gods,
 some so grand, to ponder a god's design.
 And sometimes, like an artist gone mad,
 playing god with his colors,
 splashing the west with swatches
          of
 reds
 yellows
 orange.
 Like the snowflake, none ever the same.
 The sunrise. . .
 I have met one too many times.
 Now I struggle with the weariness
 pleading with sleep, to wait a while longer,
 for the  breaking of dawn,
 the dark shades of night tinting with the colors of sunrise.
 Mount Cristobal and Banahaw coming out of shadows
 revealing its bed of clouds.
 the  village of Lusacan enveloped by the morning mist.
 The ethereal landscape of sunrise,
 unearthly, 
          mysterious, unexpected, mystical.
 like the snowflake, none ever the same.
 The rainbows. . .
 sometimes suddenly arching in the distance,
 from some far-away rain, some so wide and grand,
 sometimes, two in unison.
 and despite the science of raindrops, prisms and refraction,
 I opt to watch with    childhood's delight. . .
 imagining the pot of gold at one end
 while wondering what lies on the rainbow's other end.
 254
 The cycles. . .
 of the plants and trees, their flowers, pods, and fruits.
 They unfold around me,
 I have learned their rhythms.
 The cycles. . .
 of the flowers, the seasonal accenting the perennials.
 The blooming flowers of the acacia,
 their dark pods punctuating the grounds.
 The kakawati, redolent of  cherry blossoms,
 pink and white petals
          lacing the footpaths.
 The cycle of its pods, green, then brown and brittle,
 on a quiet day in March,
          they decide
 to snap off their branches, in some kind
 of delightful rhythmic cadence and unison
 in some kind of botanical conspiracy,
 cracking and snapping for hours,
 like the mild tapping and beating of some mystic drum.
 255
 So, where does this story end?
 Is there another  adventure or crossroad to insert before these last chapters?
 Many stories linger in the sulci where memories dwell.
 Some, long forgotten, suddenly, surprisingly surfacing.
 Some  stories beg to be written, but   may cause anguish to some.
 There is no autobiographical megalomania in this effort.
 The writing  has genesis from the laughter elicited
 from some of the stories of early childhood and adolescence.
 Friends and kin said I should write them down.
 Surely, the funny and the laughter lessened as I grew older
 But I still try to practice what I preach.
 A prescription I have always handed out.
 To try to have one rollicking tearful good laugh a day.
 Perhaps, laughter, indeed, the best medicine.
 Or, laughter and medicine,
 both adding  to the math of longevity.
 256
 There were loves that sustained, that nurtured,
 some that touched me but for a while,
 some that lingered long after they have gone,
 that graced my life with all its wonderful complexities,
 with countless moments of passion and pleasure,
 and as often, countless moments of pain and anguish.
 The wonderment of its beginnings and the suddenness of its endings.
 257
 There are no children, no family in the story.
 But having children, having a child
 was a crossroads in some relationships.
 Loves lost.
           Lives changed.
 In Baltimore friends express hesitant admiration
 for an inexplicable decision.
 In the boondocks, it is incomprehensible
 not to have  a child, an heir.
 They imagine hidden truths.
 Secrets.
 I have wondered where the story would have gone
 if there were children, if there was a family.
 A different life.
 A different story.
 258
 The God of childhood left my story long ago.
 It wasn't an epiphany, but small degrees of slow realization.
 I lacked the blind faith to sustain me through recurring and accumulating doubts.
 There was the widening  chasm between religion that I grew up in
 and the science that I was growing into.
 If the choice in God lies in its present countless varied institutions of beliefs,
 then I am an atheist.
 Or an agnostic atheist.
 I do not believe in heaven or hell of theology.
 I find comedy in one religion with its unending threat of hell
 and another with promise of  virgins waiting in heaven.
 I believe in a persistence of an energy after death.
 Reincarnation.
 Spirits and ghosts.
 I believe in the innateness of good and of evil,
 each struggling at opposite ends,
 the in-between, the struggling multitude
 forever caught in the tug-of-war of good and evil.
 I wish I could believe in a Supreme Being.
 Then, I would be a Freemason.
 Still, without a god, I am still bathed with the residuals of religion,
 the biblical stories that colored my childhood, the parables, the gospels,
 the saints and miracles, the prayers and rituals, sins and salvation.
 They have  indelibly  contributed to my moral construct.
 And perhaps, in any measure of good and evil,
 I would like to imagine, in the final mathematics of how I lived,
 I have done much more good than evil.
 And a deity, if there is one I have failed to know, can judge me so.
 Hell? It can't possibly exist.
 Hell is a generic instrument of fear wielded by most modern religions.
 The fear as instrument for the purpose of religion's commerce.
 Hell is not in the afterlife.
 It is where we live today.
 It is what we leave behind when we die.
 259
 Now, the days are filled with plants, music, and art.
 The work on plants consume my time.
 It started with 10 plants. Grew to a 100.
 500 seemed an incredibly ambitious number.
 A hundred or two ago, I imagined I'd stop at a thousand..
 I have passed that now.
 And I still continue to delight at the sighting
 of an unfamiliar plant, tree, leaf, flower or fruit.
 As I wonder on its details,
          I ponder its possible powers.
 Alas, the plants have taken me away from the art.
 The artworks have become infrequent.
 When they happen, it surprises, bathes my spirit with wonder.
 And everyday, I play my music, sing to the songs,
 Pondering its poetry.
 Wondering why it tugs.
 I play to myself, and for anyone who'd care to listen.
 260
 February 2012, I started the rehabilitation of the ancestral house in Tiaong.
 I stare at the skeletal remains of the stripped insides.
 The ceiling lattice works, the joists, and post-and-beams.
 Times I ponder  why I took on the work.
 Because I was born in the house, Lola's room?
 For my mother, in her last years, yearning to save it?
 She asked why Pulang Lupa and not the old house?
 An aunt who wished for the same.
 Siblings who shared in the possibility
 A cousin once shared in the passion.
 It sings memories to me.
 Images and the sounds of childhood.
 Racing around the garden pool.
 Cousins and siblings growing up together in some halcyon past.
 The grandparents who doted on us.
 Then they were gone.
 The grand house slowly abandoned,
 sliding into decay and disrepair,
 the emptiness taking on a ghostliness,
 reviving, renewing its hauntedness,
 summoning the  ghosts and spirits of past.
 I lived in the midst of its  slow metamorphosis
 as the phoenix rose from the ashes.
 Tearing down, building up.
 Remnants of the old—Mapua and Gonzales—
 merging with the new.
 Room by room, I watched it restored.
 Not merely rescued and rehabbed.
 In many ways, transformed.
 Perhaps, the spirits watched in wonderment.
 Perhaps, they no longer roam freely.
 Just occasional strange sounds, old house creaks.
 Once, a painting and shelf items tumbled over,
 with nary a whiff of wind  to blame.
 During a typhoon, as the winds rages
 a boy crying for help: Tulong. Tulong po.
 from the sampalok tree in the  front yard.
 Otherwise, n o headless soldiers.
 No resident ghosts in  generic white.
 Yet.
 261
 Suddenly,  a decade and six years since I came back.
 Ten years since I last saw Baltimore.
 The past has taken roots again. . . and more.
 The boondocks of Tiaong becoming my world.
 The people, the prevalent culture of dishonesty.
 The children, their dreadful deprivations.
 Grassroot efforts, seasonal advocacies, band-aid results.
 As I pondered the frustrations, America beckons again.
 T
          he places and the people.
 The wonderful cycles and colors of its seasons
 The arts and cultures.
 Ricardo says: its all on CNN.
 But it's not.
 It's being there, breathing and living
 n the midst of its pulsatile energy
 its still unpredicatable, exciting possibilities.
 But. . . I'm still here in the boondocks,
 stuck with the dreams that that grown old
 still hopelessly hoping for the elusive  change
 in a country caught in a quagmire of metastasized corruption.
 as I, in the duality of citizenship,
 the Filipino lamented the failures of fruition of  dreams and visions,
 and the American I have become, pushing me forward.
 262
 Maybe, the story ends quietly.
 No culminating event to punctuate the end.
 Unlike  the book of fiction with the remaining pages thinning down
 as the plot predictably orchestrates into its suspenseful or sorrowful climax.
 Here the days thin down, rather than the pages.
 Pondering the inescapable shadows of mortality,
 what  challenges remain, what adventures are still possible,
 what gods will resurface.
 Maybe, as the days wind down or as the idle time increases,
 I could set out to do some of the things I have never done.
 Like learn how to swim and roller skate.
 Travel what's left of the countries untraveled.
 See the aurora borealis.
 Or maybe, come to another crossroad or pick up another benign adventure or two.
 Ricardo has talked about a top-ten burger drive across the U.S.
 A perilous hyperlipidemic gastronomic odyssey.
 Or, maybe. . . just do the next 500 plants.
 Or, maybe. . .airstream into the sunset.
 Or, maybe. . . run for town mayor.
 Or, maybe. . . become a father.
 263
 Well, none of that has happened, yet.
 But something else.
 A wedding.
 Since Leila came back, marriage was brought up, more than occasionally.
 What for? Why not?
 Engendered a recurrent clash of emotions and rationales.
 I thought the time would eventually come,
 sometime later, than sooner.
 In my disposition for the dark and morbid, I wondered a deathbed wedding.
 When she left in February, she wondered about a cruise ship wedding.
 Also, promised to come back in May to give me a birthday bash on the 17th,
 the Saturday before my birthday.
 Never celebrated my birthday.
 Almost had one, when I was 8 or 9,
 when a cat gobbled up a mother-baked pineapple upside-down cake
 dutifully awaiting its celebratory consumption the next day.
 Now a real birthday bash?
 Leila emailed, asked if I wanted to cruise instead.
 Cupid's arrow struck.
 Hmm. Why not get married
          on the day of the birthday bash.
 Spring it on her.
 Thought it would be difficult to keep it under wraps.
 A sister said it was unfair to Leila, and what, if she said No!
 Another said it was a great idea, that she wouldn't say no.
 The house was divided on the town mayor, but was nixed
 due to a recent assassination attempt, his busy scheduled,
 a possible hurried wedding,
 and the likelihood the
          grounds would be littered with bodyguards.
 
 And so a search for the judge began.
 The leisurely hopeful confidence turned to frantic and desperate
 running into countless disappointments and dead ends.
 Every few days, I was calling a nephew, niece, cousin, in-law,
 friend, friend of a friend, who might know a judge.
 Zilch.
 No judge was willing to officiate outside his jurisdiction.
 April came and went. . . still no judge.
 Meanwhile, Leila's emails spewed with requests and reminders.
 She wanted 
          a pianist, a crooner, a band, a string quartet.
 Party favors, to boot,
 
 B early May, as the search for the judge was becoming desperate,
 almost  everyone in the clan knew about the wedding being planned.
 I was becoming doubtful it could be kept under wraps.
 and still. . . no judge.
 I was becoming doubtful there would be a wedding.
 Leila arrived the 8th of May.
 A day or two before, I finally got in touch with the mayor.
 Told him about the planned surprise wedding.
 He said: Really, you'd do that?
 Added, it would be an honor to officiate.
 A day or two after Leila arrived, I mentioned to her I invited the mayor.
 It was a full-fledged quarrel.
 Leila: why? why? why?
 Why invite a stranger? This is not the time to invite the mayor.
 Sheepishly I said, maybe it's as good a time to make a connection.
 Leila: We can do that some other time, after your birthday. Blah blah blah. blah.
 At first, she was inconsolable; slowly, she relented.
 As I was starting to  think the wedding could really happen.I started worrying about the weather.
 The rainy season starts in May
 and there have already been a few downpours.
 Rains loomed the  specter threatening to wash out the 17th.
 Saints and religion to the rescue.
 Offerings of eggs were made to Santa Clara religious order of sisters.
 For non-believers, some kind of egg commerce scam.
 For believers, a saintly intercession to the Blessed Virgin Mary to keep the rains away,
 to bless the days with sunshine and the nights with celestial starlit heavens.
 Egg offerings were made, not for a day, mind you. . . but for five days.
 Rings. . . a week to go, still there were none.Richie suggested, push come to shove, look for some in popcorn boxes.
 I needed ring sizes. i made idle conversation
 while trying out her rings laying around, trying not to give anything away.
 Oh, this is nice. . a little tight. . . what size is this? . . . i guess mine is a size bigger?
 I fretted the slip of the tongue that would give it all awaysurrounded by people who knew.
 While Leila set up the kitchen for the 17th bash.
 While Nancy engaged her in seeming idle conversation
 extracting information needed for documents: place of birth, parents' names.
 She said: Got it.
 I asked: Think she knows?
 Uh-uh.  Still clueless.
 I continued to worry about the slip of the tongue.
 The 17th came.Leila commandeered the kitchen.
 I ran and delegated the  thousand errands.
 Ice, liquor, beer, beverages, lechon, parking, road signs,
 shuttle needs, detour stops at the ancestral house.
 Guests started coming by early afternoon.
 Asked: is it on? She knows?
 The feasting started with the first flux of guests.Wine and liquor flowed,
 unending plates of signature Leila hors d'oeuvres
 to the delight and amazement of all.
 Music filled the air—from a string quartet,
 a brother-in-law crooning old familiar tunes.
 The Mayor came, mixed and lingered, practiced politics.
 
 Dusk turned into a starlit night,
 the evening animated, expectant.
 My cousin Noli asked when and how.
 I said I was going to sneak the family and a friend to the chapel.
 He said, No way. Announce it. Let everyone know.
 To which I responded with expletives.
 But then. . . why not. . .
 to be surrounded by friends and loved ones. . .
 Why not.
 So, I  interrupted the music,
 took the mike, welcomed the guests,
 thanked Leila for the feast.
 Then started on a soliloquy of love,
 to Leila, my first and last love,
 a profession of love for all to hear.
 every phrase interrupted by a cheer and gleeful laughter,
 until finally, in front of the multitude, I asked her to marry me.
 Some said there was not a dry eye in the house.
 Someone said her face fell in disbelief.
 She said she was momentarily in shock,
 flustered, things flashing before her,
 hoping her kids would have been there,
 a nicer, more appropriate dress.
 or a wedding gown.
  The crowd flowed into the chapel area.The place expectant, the icon cubicles lit up in red.
 As the violinist played, we exchanged vows.
 As the Mayor stammered with his English,
 asking if he could officiate in Tagalog.
 So we were married
 amidst family, friends, and guests
 wildly cheering and laughing
 and sharing in the happy occasion of a marriage.
 There was no solemnity. . . the saints might have frowned.
 but the god Hymenaeus must have been smiling.
 My sister Babes forgot to bring the flowers.I forgot to buy the fireworks.
 At least my friend Richie didn't forget to bring the rings.
 No one brought any gifts.
 None for my birthday, which the bash was for.
 None for the wedding, which most of the guests knew about.
 The eggs worked—a day blessed with sunshine and a starlit night sky.
 A magical night. . . like no other.
 264
 . . . .
 
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