December 24, 2008

for a happy Christmas.


This letter gets a special title, yeah, because this would be different from the previous ones I've sent.

I need to tell you what I really think and how I feel not because I want you to feel guilty in any way. We had been way past that, don't you think? It's been years, too. I think it is just a matter of honesty that I haven't really achieved. I had my ways of sugar-coating words because I'd hate to hurt you, and right now I'll be viciously unkind and brutal. All because this is the last. And all because I never want to regret. Not about you anyway.

This may seem desperate, but I'm too exhausted even for desperation. I hadn't realized that until last night, and I couldn't even sleep.

You were right. You have been unfair, too unfair in fact and maybe even too selfish. You always wanted me by your side, didn't you? And now this happens, you find someone else and you still want us to be friends. How could you even ask me that? The question stabbed me straight to my chest I could be bleeding by now. Thankfully, it just feels like there is a recurring pang that never really subsides. By letting you see why we can't be friends I meant for you to let me go. It's been like you never wanted me to let go, and you always, always know I wouldn't, not until you tell me so anyway. Haven't I told you that more than once, twice, thrice?

Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it's just the bitterness talking. But at this point I just want to feel anything but grief because one doesn't really deserve this punishment at Christmas. Not even someone evil like me. So pardon my pointless, baseless outburst. Maybe I am really just lost and torn apart right now. I guess I've endured all this for too long. I've been talking to myself for too long. I've loved you for too long. I needed the closure, and now that it's here it seems like the last three days have drained all of me. I had known since Monday that something is going to happen. I've been meaning to speak to you that night, to somehow beat you to it, to save you the trouble. I've developed a sixth sense over anything that has to do with you in the last few years, you see. I'm pathetic, am I not? You must know because I hadn't been worth anything for a long time now.

Will you miss me after all this? I will miss you. But I really have to do this so that I can finally move on. This thing between us dragged on and on and on and on, and nothing is left of me, and I had been alone. I'm sorry, this is too sad for Christmas cheers. But I didn't want to miss out on anything. I wanted to exhaust myself to a point of eternal numbness, up to the last email I can write to you.

Even if it will sound like I am just convincing myself, I will be alright. So stop apologizing, and please don't worry about me anymore.

Again, I'd like to thank you for everything. You gave me a chance to give you all of me, my worst and my best. Thank you for letting me write to you, for making me think I am good at it, for inspiring me. Nobody had been able to drive me to my limits. Nobody else but you. So thank you very much. I can finally have my closure.

I had sworn to myself that I will call you by your name when I've chosen to let go. I did since yesterday. And I'll ask of you one more time: call me by my name. "Candy" isn't really an ugly name, is it? LOL

I love you, Dan. Goodbye.

December 17, 2008

the lie.


My celphone rang once, twice, thrice, and I wouldn't answer while I locked my gaze on the LCD. Why? You very well would know why. I'd been waiting diligently with these bored people right beside me on this greenish bench, wondering what took your cousin so long to arrive despite his warning and apology that he'd be coming to meet me later than he'd ever anticipated. I should've been suspicious about why he had seemed so out of character, bordering frantic, when he had asked to see me at lunch in a weekday, in a crowded mall of all places. Oh, I should've seen it coming, this trick that had me wrapped around your finger. I still couldn't shake off the shock even when I already whipped my head left to right and saw your sheepish yet smiling face instead of his stoic. I couldn't move even when you dropped in front of me, almost on your knees, and I tried to save what was left of my dignity by covering my face with a shaky hand. "It was all a lie, wasn't it? You are not even supposed to be here. Not today, no," I whispered, laughing, close to tears, confused. "I wanted to surprise you," you calmly replied, always so calm. I was so stupid.

the longest weekend.


Your cunning schemes shocked me once again, but it was just this last time your biggest surprise tethered me speechless and so faint I couldn't even move from where I stood in my bedroom. This wasn't supposed to happen at all. It was too soon to see you again anyway. Were you trying to kill me? My heart was going to burst I could barely breathe. But, of course, you were only very amused, that victorious grin playing in your lips, a calmness that only you can achieve. Despite the whirlpool that left me dazed the rest of the afternoon, this faithless heart longed for what was lost the moment you turned around and left again.

the cheeseburger.


“I’m not at all hungry.” The pout could be heard in my voice. It was either forced or half-true, and you didn't even notice the peculiar, heavy air that surrounded me. You slightly pushed me forward in the line and insisted that I decide on what to eat for mid-afternoon lunch. One shouldn’t miss on nourishment, you said as an afterthought. But did you know there really was no such thing in fast-food? I told you that I wasn’t in the mood for anything anyway. You wouldn’t listen, grinning in a smug sort of way and asking me what I would like to have for the fifth time with a tone of finality in your voice. I didn't flinch when you suddenly pinned me close to your body and rested your chin on the crown of my head, but still it was a gesture that I hadn't expected you would do in such a situation. But then again it was just the perfect place to be ourselves, where nobody knew us and nobody cared. It spawned bitterness somehow, the bile rising from the stomach to my mouth. I lost my appetite altogether.

the centerstage.


Stage fright is a state of mind. And if I could get past that trouble, the audience wouldn't even remember my awkward stance, my face or my shaking voice. But that was just what the guitarist said to ease the tension in the cramped backstage and, of course, my hysterics. What if I forget a whole chunk of verse? What if I miss a note? What if I fall off the stage? What if? What if? What if? The freshmen had arrived, noisy and excited in their seats, while I was a nervous wreck behind these grand, yellow curtains that could barely hide my frowning countenance. Some of the upperclassmen, who had graduated months ago, even came to see the event that we painstakingly organized. And the org officers were making last minute preparations, almost yelling their heads off while simultaneously wringing the president’s neck at having forgotten an important detail with the speakers. “Hey, you alright?” I couldn’t believe the violinist just asked me that. The question was unfair, and I couldn’t even work on a sarcastic comeback at the moment, which really said something about how unstable my current psyche was. It didn’t help when someone announced that we had less than 10 minutes before the program should start. I sneaked one last, fleeting look at the audience, sighing at that, a little disappointed suddenly. It still had me reeling, your decision to let go of your passion. And now, you were off to some inevitable family business trip. I let the curtains drop. A couple more minutes and your plane would be leaving, too. In the flurry of mute and hurried gestures, somebody chucked your cousin's celphone to my ear. You just had to call me right in the middle of this turmoil and apologize for missing this relatively important event. I would really want to hear you on that stage, you said. My heart throbbed painfully, the shifting agitation making me faint. You just had to displace the last of my sanity as well. Not a little later, the lens and that blinking red light of the videocam that your cousin was carefully holding served as your eyes. The notes left my mouth, and a promise was made that day.

the postscripts.


I shifted from one foot to the other, eyes looking at anything but your own. We've been standing on the hallway of the newly built and painted gymnasium, effectively blocking passersby, and we barely cared. It had been roughly 3 months since you had quit work, a little regretful, but it was an inevitable move and you had to go away for a month. I started writing letters to you, something that you said you were grateful of, something that I had to do to sort out these feelings. Maybe you realized that as you peered at my flushed face. Leaning on the wall and bouncing slightly on the balls of my feet, I couldn't tell if I was happy or sad to see you again. We were always confused about these things. I was only certain of a pang in my chest as we lingered longer without words. The letters healed me, calmed me, helped me pretend that I was not seeing something else, that I was not reading too much of things. Maybe I was being bitter again. There wasn't anything that you would say tonight that would make me explain why I seemed to be avoiding you, not even a sad gleam in those oriental eyes. By the next day, things would be back to normal.

the matched clothes.


Let me breathe, please. How could you surround all of me with this unspoken distress? It suffocated, your misery that was mine alone. I didn't need you to do this, not when I should finally say it. And that strong hand behind my head, fingers threading in my unbound hair, had to bring me closer to your eager mouth, had to crush my momentum, had to make me forget what I was supposed to do. In this darkness, where I couldn't make out anything but your hovering silhouette, I screamed inwardly the words that would be forever trapped in my mind. This was just the beginning of our end.

the pink and white icing.


I wasn't sure why I also have to be here in the dining room with your mom, your sister, your cousin, your mom's minions, and your trusted housekeeper. Grinning despite the dreary day, you situated yourself on the patriarch's seat, and I visibly relaxed at the information that your dad had somewhere else to be this morning. My self-esteem had suffered enough just having to stay for lunch around people that I barely know and to actually mingle. The mortification was evident in my every movement, but nobody had minded the girl with wire-rimmed glasses. All the women in that room had a comfortable conversation about your grandaunt's birthday party a few days back, and passed the colorful leftover cake around for dessert. I had stayed quiet, offering an awkward smile or a nod at appropriate occasions. There was barely anything on my plate and your sister had noticed. So she urged me to pitch some few slices. And while I yielded to her urging, you just had to call my attention by saying that name. Was it me or everybody had stopped moving for a second? Undaunted by the intrigued looks on the other women's faces, you asked about something that I couldn't just give an answer right away. Must be due to my initial shock or because I had to thank your sister with a faint blush on the face. You really have your ways of embarrassing me.

the rocking chair.


Papers were strewn all over the dining table. I studied one in my hand as I picked it up to the dimmed light. "You made me come to your house to watch you check test papers?" I asked incredulously, eyebrows drawn together in confusion. "Am I even allowed to see these?" You laughed a little, the sound bouncing against the almost bare walls of your living room. "I'm sorry. I wanted to see you," you said something like that, steadily seated in that misplaced rocking chair, form awashed in shadows. I must've rolled my eyes to that effect, trying not to believe that you just said that. Moving behind you, I tried to push the chair to sway forward, but you caught my hands above your head and pulled me closer. My face burned at the contact, cursing to myself about not having foreseen this. Thankfully, the darkness left me some dignity. That grim expression on your face gave me the impression that you were a little strained by a lot of things lately. You wanted to be understood but everybody always took things the wrong way, and that was making you sad. I wanted to believe I could bring you this much peace, even just for tonight. Finally, you released me and started marking those neglected papers again. As expected, there were a lot more of X's than of checks, and the red ink blurred all the wrong answers on my classmates' papers. "You haven't marked mine yet." I voiced the observation when I accidentally had a glimpse of my untouched paper underneath somebody else's. You momentarily looked up. "I suppose so." There wouldn't be any way to know whose paper you're checking unless you memorized your students' ID numbers. "How...?" You went back to your work. "I would know if it's your paper. There's a certain scent on it." I lifted my paper to my nose, sniffing edges and spaces. "I don't smell anything." The interruption didn't faze you. "Really? Maybe you're used to your own scent that you can't find it." My own scent? I could hear the distant ticking of that clock on the wall. It seemed too fast in my ears. "You have unique, sweet smell." No. It was just my heart, hammering wildly again.

the expected return.


It was finally that day. The graduates were ecstatic to a certain degree, and perhaps even light-headed at the ceremonies that wouldn't seem to end in this glorious Saturday. Classmates, who've become friends over the past few years, congratulated each other in advance and in masked relief. The black robes had become stifling as we anticipated the closing rites, most of us getting a little too impatient just standing. But there was a reason to celebrate, and it's not because we finally came out of college alive, even just barely so. Somebody made a comment about seeing you here. Isn't he supposed to be somewhere else? He asked me. I didn't bother listening to his next comment as my attention had shifted easily to the spectators who were standing in the upper right platform. By this time, I couldn't hear the noise that was steadily rising. My eyes had lifted themselves to your profile without effort. Now, there you were, casually leaning on the blue railing, unchanged and beautiful. You must've been watching me for a long time now because you knew I was going to see you there, smiling down at me. I allowed my own smile to pass my lips as I waved. I hope you're proud of me.

the song of goodbye.


Here I was, standing in the stage with a hundred of pairs of eyes focused in my direction. The ground should swallow me whole already. But when the violin played the first few notes of the song, the platform under my sneakers wouldn't indulge my prayer. Never mind the crowd that formed in front, never mind the curious passersby gathering in the sides of the railing. All I was actually aware of was that unrelenting gaze in my right, in that exact position where you had been sitting. And you stared as if I was transparent enough and you could read my feelings. I hadn't even dared to look your way for the fear of breaking my last thread of confidence. In the most unlikely time, our dialogue 30 minutes ago just had to flash in my mind. You had told me your side of the story, and I was adamant in keeping my promise to your ex-girlfriend about finding out what was really happening. What I heard from you was something I never thought you'd say, and now the last few months had to come crashing back. It had nothing to do with me but it was still wholly unjust because we were back to ourselves again. Thankfully, I was able to keep a straight face, and you never knew why I had to look at anything but your face. Oh, yes, it hurts to want everything and nothing at the same time.

the comic book.


It was amusing to watch you turn your back on me while you slid your limbs in those faded pants. Too late. I've seen a substantial amount of skin right there, what a nice view from where I'm sitting. I snorted in the effort of the unconscious (or otherwise) modesty. What are you doing? It was supposed to come out that way, but what I really said was: "I've seen more than that." Just then you realized what you did, the momentary shock written in your face. I had intended to laugh but I settled for a smirk instead. Me and my unusual vocal perverseness. You covered the distance in 3 steps instead of 6, surprising me in turn as you bent to my level on the floor and wiped that smirk in my face with a rather hasty, hard kiss. You always liked to get even.

the cloudless day.


I studied the sparkling spring water quietly by myself while I drowned in the cacophony of splashing and mindless chatter in the other pool adjacent to where I chose to linger. One of us made a comment on the perfect weather. I heard her saying that there were absolutely no clouds this afternoon, the very contrast of that particular day a few months ago. It didn't take long for you to move beside me, joining me in the shallow waters and staying too close despite the deserted expanse. I hadn't seen you for the last 7 months, and the awkwardness of having to reacquaint myself to your company was more unnerving than I could ever imagine. The words that formed in your mouth were light, almost cautious and controlled as if you were sharing a secret that no one else should know. I stared at the swaying branches above our heads as you mentioned about her and the advice that you took from me, that one about speaking to ex-girlfriends again and making peace at last. Absentmindedly, I nodded at the account, more aware of the seeping sun rays through the green leaves than of where the talk was heading to. The soft light bounced on the water and created a luminous effect in that area as if it hadn't been bright enough already. Maybe you realized that I hadn't been myself today, mind afloat elsewhere and gaze fixed somewhere, on something unseen. But then this usually happened when I couldn't place my feelings, didn't know how else to react in your presence. It's quite unfair how you always knew how things would go, how my mind worked, what I'd say next, what I'd do when you surprised me with a tight embrace with everybody watching while telling me that you'd like to see me again in a few days before running off. You knew I wouldn't be able to move from that spot as I watched you leave.

the passion of christ.


As usual, you were late again. I leaned on the smooth, cylindrical post, waiting diligently as I watched people animatedly walk past in this Sunday afternoon. If I checked my watch, it'd say that you should've been here 15 minutes ago. I tapped my loafers on the tiled floor, a manifestation of idleness. You didn't need to invite me to see this movie with you, not when you thought you should make up for last week. That guilt on your face when you made your way to me was the very thing that prompted you to see me this weekend.
Is it out of pity? Because I don't need that. You muttered your apology, eyes smiling, and asked if I had been standing there for too long. I shook my head in reply. Almost an hour later, I was burying my face in your sleeve, hiding the tears, and you didn't even mind. How could you take me to watch such a sad movie? I cursed in my head. Later I figured that I must've been unconsciously affected of the mess I was getting myself into.

the comeback.


There would always be something angry about the rain despite how it would look. Today wasn't any different. The day had started off calm, and of course, there were the sporadic grays in the skies that rather reflected my mood. Now, the downpour was steady against the windows, and seeing both of you again after all these months, the sober rain transformed to one of turbulence. This was one of those times that I'd rather not have come to these occassional rendezvous. It was infinitely awkward to see two guys that I had come to be fond of in the same setting. I couldn't be sure which stirred me more: his familiar, laidback expression, or your unusual jerky body language that ascribed to some nameless guilt that only I could notice. I was uncharacteristically sombre but everybody didn't quite notice, chattering excitedly about some joke and laughing about. I was expecting that he was the source of this uneasiness, the unfamiliar familiarity grating the senses like how it usually does when you get to speak to somebody that you haven't seen for some time and finding the interaction plain gauche. But, no. It had to be you. I know this because I was much more aware of your closeness when you noncommittally nudged me, and if I may boldly add, affectionately. And I hated it. I had to be angry again because you were not supposed to have affected me this way. No, not anymore. Not when you moved away and left me out on some secret that shouldn't have been. Oh, they have a name for this thing, too: bitterness, at its grandest ardor.

the river.


I hollered at the sight of a man half-naked in his underwear in the side of the riverbank and in turn making everybody in my raft laugh with me. Your group had been behind mine, and you tsked your disapproval of my amused reaction too loudly for everybody to hear. I gamely stuck my tongue out to you, ignoring that pointed look that you were throwing in my way. What? The challenge was manifested in a carefully arched brow. But your eyes, those oriental eyes looked back with so much tenderness and silence that I could feel a cool shiver run up my spine despite the warm weather. You were most definitely the most selfish man I've ever known. You wanted me to think of only you.

the valley.


The excursion out of town would be good for everyone, so you said. There wasn't anything to do in the short break, and we relished the idea of seeing everybody out of their university uniforms and more so the fun in the countryside and the promise of wilderness adventure. We should be going down the steep valley in pairs, you announced. You easily picked me for a partner, either out of familiarity of the choice or it was me you just saw first. I panicked for a second not by our mutual friends' reaction, but by my own flushed face. By now it wasn't new for everybody to see us together this way, closer than a professor and his student should be. You grabbed my awkward hand playfully and led me down, down the steepness. It might as well had been my feelings that we were walking on. I remembered how you kept me real close, as if almost afraid to lose me in the unfamiliar trek. When I saw that secret smile on your face again, I was so sure you were out to tease me for the umpteenth time today. My face must had resembled a tomato.

the rumors.


You asked to see me that afternoon, to keep you company in your first students' graduation. That, or you just wanted to amuse yourself by poking fun at me. You always knew I'd concede to your every whim. So I went to see you. Standing beside me, weren't you too close for comfort? People had thought so, too. There had been a remark or two, but you never cared and even seemed amused to the point of teasing them further, and me. You grinned some more as you watched me pout. In the back of my mind I wondered if you anyway knew why I was with you that moment. You must had known, and it'd become too obvious in the way those eyes of yours rested on my face. The mirth was mocking me to no end.

the midterms.


The unlikely day flashed in my mind for a brief moment, that one about what happened a few years back, that one about him. It spoke of a dimness, an amused laugh, a sudden and unexpected contact, a gasp that had escaped the lips, and of no words and infinite confusion. Closing the narrowing gap, you held me real close in the dark. It was the first time that you've done such thing, and you knew it was unnecessary as it was dangerous. It had been a fuel for everything.

It all passed in my yearning mind for a fleeting moment. That one about what happened a few years back, that one about him. Always about him.

the new year.


I awoke not in the sudden, rude interruption of my own throaty rasping, but of that hand that held me steady and gently, offering a stroke and more on my bare back. I blinked in the dimness in what I thought was an unfamiliar room. What am I doing here? I asked my own hazy mind as I struggled to focus clearly at a familiar face that peered at me closely. The mattress was adjusted to cover my chilled shoulders, and a kiss on the cheek brought me back to the world and to recognition. I didn't think, never expected to find myself sprawled like this on your bed. My heart swelled at that small smile. "Good morning," you said in a voice almost of caution and at the same time of amusement. But I realized it wasn't even morning.

August 30, 2008

tribute to my failure: an essay entry for ENG 48.


It had been more than once in the last two months that I was asked why I did not consider majoring in English the first time, or why I had not turned to AB English when I was in my junior year even when I already had the chance. Once or twice, I might have actually thought about it then but never actually cared too much of the future to do anything about my impending demise.

My parents could only suspect that my fondness of closer friends had been one of the main reasons why I stuck in Computer Science for too long, which to them seemed lame if it were really true. The truth was more foolish than their hypothesis: I was too comfortable of where I was despite the failing marks and the disappointments that I was consistently reaping. Eventually, my more determined friends went on to fulfill their ambitions and I was left behind, waking up one day bitter of my own carelessness and the unyielding apathy that impaled me to an ultimate downward spiral. What was worst, I felt anxious and confused to the point that I did not know what I wanted to do with my future. I was ready to quit.

But giving up should never be an option, a friend had said. By then I knew I had to deal with the consequences and to accept the retribution of my actions. People I knew would not stop living their lives just for me to be able to catch up to them, and chances at redemption are few. What happened was an effective wake-up call, and ultimately, after careful evaluation of my life in the past few years, I resolved to finish what I had started in the most diligent way I knew. I learned to appreciate my limitations and to work harder to improve myself. Finally achieving that aspiration after rising from the fall is just going to taste sweeter by the end of the day; my greatest failure have become my best inspiration.

For a while, I wondered what I would have been like if I were somewhere else, not having disappointed my parents and myself in that manner, and not having become aware of what I really wanted to do or what I was meant to become. Would I have been as inspired as I am right now? For now, I am grateful that I am where I should be.

August 14, 2008

You don't know me.


I had been sitting on this lavishly upholstered furniture for some time now, waiting for him to turn up. It was not entirely a productive course of action to just watch every person traipse in and out of the café, expecting for an adventure to happen any time soon whilst tapping a lazy finger on the smooth coffee cup, suddenly stricken with nostalgia, because, after all, nothing favorable could ever come out of such sentimentality.


One swift look at my watch and I figured how it was already late. He had not yet turned up for our afternoon rendezvous, but I was surprisingly unfazed about it.


A rupture of brittle notes floated in my ears before it filled the empty air. A middle-aged man was languidly playing the baby grand piano on the plinth in the far corner of the dainty shop. Despite the agreeable atmosphere in the café there was somehow a misplaced impression that lingered in the air that instantly made me feel rather out of place. I sighed inwardly because I could not help it, thinking that he must have forgotten about this engagement.


I mulled over my espresso before I took another careful sip, fidgeting on my seat again, probably for the umpteenth time already and feeling all self-conscious that I was alone in a two-person booth. Everybody else within fifteen meter radius had company.


After settling the pasty demitasse on the polished table, I consciously tucked a stray lock behind my ear.


It was almost a sin to be all alone in a place like this, and the fact that I was solitary had become increasingly uncomfortable like something was about to jump off underneath my skin. I could not quite get rid of the strange feeling.


“Hey.”


In a painfully slow moment of choked sighs and widened eyes, I turned to look behind me, the arresting lazy haze of the coffee overlooked at once. The whole world had seemed to spin faster, had crashed and burned before my eyes in a fraction of a second, but it was the rush of caffeine that was making me so faint.


And then there he was, the one whom I had been waiting for, the man of my dreams, still looking like the way I always remembered him.


“Hey,” I said rather serenely as if reigning my emotions could not any more strain me further, gesturing for him to sit on the chair right across me with a burst of adrenaline running though my veins.


“So,” he started with that noticeable tilt in his deep voice, hanging his coat carefully on the backrest and running a hand to brush his messy brown hair away from those mesmerizing dark eyes that grazed my face effortlessly. “I haven’t seen you around lately. What have you been up to?”


“What have I been up to?” I murmured a recursion intentionally to give myself some time to think of a better response.


Distracting myself a lot lately, I told him in my mind. Or had been trying to.


“I’m making a dissertation for my Literature class, and I’m also working on this thing for the university paper,” instead I rattled on in the most haphazard way I knew and did not look in his eyes or even at his face as I did. He must have known how this tendency always betrayed the awkwardness I felt, but he was thankfully obliging in feigning nonchalance. “All these things are taking over my perfectly normal life. You probably know what I’m talking about. College stuff, driving me crazy. Already in our Senior year, and I’m still not used to the whole roller coaster schedule thing.”


“Fill me in.” He said, sounding almost interested as he leaned on the table, but that was naturally him, indulging at the right moments.


“Oh, no. It’s really nothing.” I forced myself to concentrate on the space between his ear and shoulder. Looking at his face now felt wholly sacrilegious.


You were never truly interested in anything. Not about me, at least, I cynically countered in my head as I finally averted my attention to the laughing couple who sat near the counter, fighting not to visibly wince at my off-putting thoughts.


“But you don’t know that,” he told me. To prove his point, he leaned closer with a slight twitch in the corners of his mouth, a grin forming on his peaceful face. It had been one of his quirks, an almost-habit that I had come to witness since time immemorial. “Don’t worry, I have all night.”


I swallowed an uncomfortable lump in my throat, over-thinking again before plunging head-first in the pool of confusion of my imagination.


“Well, don’t blame me later if I’ve bored you to death.” Thankfully, I managed to return a weak smile as I finally succumbed to the calls of nostalgia with a poorly disguised detachment before I started telling him about the things that made my world, things that were driving me insane, but I could not tell him about how he was fitted into all this.


Maybe it had really been that long that I could still forget how he could seem so engaged to my monologue, how his candid laughter could reflect his real feelings and how his eyes seemed to disappear when he smiled.

“It’s frustrating really,” he said later, absently stirring the cup of tea in front of him with a graceful silver spoon that glimmered against the dimmed lights behind him. A wry grin had graced his brooding countenance this time.


“What is?” I asked, intrigued by the undertone of bitterness in his voice. He had previously started talking about his own activities in a rather lighter mood, and now he was changed.


“I’m not even seeing anybody right now, and it’s still frustrating,” he replied without meeting my eyes.


I refused to remark on it because he would know I knew what it felt like.


“You’re not seeing anyone?”


The question was really for the sake of the conversation.


“No.”


This time I palmed one side of my face as I regarded him through hooded eyes, still wondering about what was really in that beautiful mind of his right that moment.


“No?”


“No.”


I supposed I could have asked him why, but since we were not the people we used to be I decided to leave the reason to himself. I should not be asking about these sort of things somehow because I knew it was not my place to even comment. We were not that kind of friends anymore.


So this was how it was going to be for us. Years had passed and we were separate people with different ambitions, different goals, different plans. I discovered as much when we discussed about more important matters, about life and the future.


“Are you alright? You’re quiet all of a sudden, and it’s sort of freaking me out.” He usually said things like this with an awkward grin to match, but it was more of a way to appease himself of whatever bad was to come when I was being unusually pensive in the midst of a somber conversation.


He reached out his hand to me, lightly resting it on the back of my own. It was a gesture that was achingly familiar and unfamiliar at the same time. It was disturbing that it was just like the past.


This was the adventure that I had been anticipating since I let go of my thoughts, and now I was almost regretting it.


Just then this traitorous heart was curiously pounding harder against my chest with the slightest unexpected physical contact, and just then I realized I had been staring at the cooled coffee for a while now, wishing to be anywhere else but this place, previous thoughts falling by the wayside in that instant.


“You know, you can’t really get all the things you want. Even those that you really want so bad, no matter how hard you try. Life’s just like that.”


It’s just not meant to be, is it?


His words that breached my thoughts puzzled me right in that moment as if I could not been any more bemused. In the caffeine-induced dialogue, I was suddenly thinking about him and me in the middle of our conversation.


Him. And me.


“Hey.” That voice was the warmest velvet. I could not remember if I was able to fight a wince from relaying my emotions. “Say something.”


“I’m fine,” I bluntly replied, breaking off the entrancing gaze before he could pull me deeper in those balmy obsidian pools that were his eyes, and immediately I pulled my shaking hand away, gravely contradicting my last statement. It was not the time to care anymore.


By now it was steadily raining outside the ornate windows, a lethargic downpour of mercury that should not be present while the overcast blush of dusk was replacing the afternoon skies. It was by far the saddest picture I had seen today.


“Is that the truth?” He asked another tragic question.


With unstable breath and closed lids, I tried to repress the dull ache that would not go away, the memory of the days that were long gone, and the feelings that should not be there any longer.


It had been wrong right from the start.


“Yes, of course, it is,” I said, sounding harsher than I intended to. My breath had hitched and my chest was just about to burst.


Why can’t it be meant to be?


Confusion painted his usually indecipherable face, and something else like an old guilt. He was so different and yet so constant that it broke my heart to a thousand pieces.


“What were you really thinking of?” The rich baritone of his voice ricocheted in my head, a sound that I had gotten accustomed to.


I could not tell him.


I could not tell him I was thinking about him and me and before.


“Nothing,” I rejoined, but he was not at all convinced.


Something in the air changed that I was almost choking.


“Are you running away again?” He did not even care for my self-preservation anymore, and he rarely spoke without thinking it through.


Before I could remove my other hand on the table he simply captured it in a firm grip, determined to keep me trapped.


“Don’t do this again—please.”


Subtleties were so out of the question now.


My eyebrows creased at his audacity to say such things now. A heavy blur of tears clouded my sight but I knew he had the softest look on his face while he painfully begged. I wanted to believe that he had never wanted to let go, but of course that was far from the truth.


I can’t do it. I can’t. You don’t know that...please don’t make me say that I still—


“Am I so late?” A very harassed man, whose trench coat was almost soaked through with rain, had made his way to our booth in turn interrupting the thick tension with the rhetorical anti-climactic question.


The fragile balance in the air was once again restored, the other patrons’ animation a surprisingly dreary change of scenery.


“Jack.” I could not be more grateful to Jack for the sudden digression. I was not sure what could have happened if he had come a few seconds too late.


It was strange that while Jack was trying to explain while profusely apologizing in between all I could hear was the poignant music that the piano was producing that mingled with the echo of the beating rain, mist descending to my already muddled thoughts.


“Jack, you remember Ethan, right? We’ve been friends since Freshman year.”


It was all I could say about him. We had never been more than that anyway because, as pitiful as it would sound, he had not allowed a relationship like that.


No matter what, I could not pull away from those defeated obsidian spheres even if the hand that held mine had long before liberated it.


“Of course, I do. I’m sorry, I didn’t know Rachel had company.”


“No, forgive me. I didn’t know she was waiting for anyone. She had looked so out of place and lonely.” His effortless smile was back in place as he gracefully shook Jack’s hand in acknowledgment.


“Thank you for keeping my girlfriend busy while I suffered under the dreadful deluge, my fault for making her wait anyway.”


Girlfriend? I was sure that was the question in his eyes.


“Why didn’t you tell me about this?” He asked noncommittally but there was a sense of betrayal in his tone, and I could only make out a guilty smile for him.


I don’t know. Maybe because I didn’t want to.


“We’ve been seeing each other for almost two years now,” I supplied too readily, the tears rising once again with the bile that did not leave my system.

“Have we really stopped speaking to each other that long?”

It was a rhetorical statement that I was almost deigned to respond if only to satisfy my masochistic tendencies.

I wasn’t running away. You pushed me away, and eventually, I fell out of the loop, and we just stopped being friends altogether.

“I’m sorry but we really don’t have much time now. Jack and I are actually late for a meeting. It had started about thirty minutes ago, too,” I apologized to him, giving him my hand, which he received and gave a melancholic squeeze.

This was the inevitable goodbye, a closure that did not happen years ago, a conclusion that I did not really need when I was just remembering how much I still knew all about him.

“Goodbye, Ethan. I’ll see you around, alright?”

“Sure,” he said in a rather sorry voice.

The delicate open bars of the piano and percussion permeated the cheerless ambiance.

“You have a great night, Ethan.”

“Take care of her, Jack,” he extracted one last cryptic undertaking before Jack confusedly acceded with a nod.

When we reached the door, I dared one last fleeting glance at his face, wanting to immortalize that final remembrance, but he was not even looking at me. His exclusive attention was locked on the woman singing by the piano in the scaffold.

You give your hand to me and then you say hello,
and I can hardly speak, my heart is beating so.
And anyone can tell you think you know me well,
but you don’t know me.

“Is something the matter?” Jack asked me quietly when I eventually ceased on my tracks.

No, you don’t know the one who dreams of you at night,
who wants to kiss your lips and longs to hold you tight.
To you I’m just a friend, that’s all I’ve ever been,
because you don’t know me.


“Nothing. I was just...thinking,” I told him pensively when he pierced through my trance, hating myself for being such a coward, for wanting so many things. With a weary sigh, I went back on Jack and me.

“You know, maybe I’ll just go alone and you stay here. I’ll just pick you up later. I don’t suppose the chief’s going to keep us that long anyway.”

“It’s okay, really.” I offered an assuring smile that could not reach my eyes.

“If you say so. But if you still want to stay—”

I shook my head with an air of finality before I slipped my fingers between Jack’s. It was a guilty act of distracting him. I knew for sure that if I had chosen to stay longer, the past was just going to catch up on me again.

Jack gave me a long look as if trying to read what was in my mind. He only beamed mysteriously when a minute had passed and curled his long fingers against mine before he led me out the café.

I have to move on.

*****

You give your hand to me and then you say goodbye.
I watch you walk away beside that lucky guy.
No, you’ll never, never know the one who loves you so,
because you don’t know me...

How could I just watch her leave like that?

July 28, 2008

the art of make-believe: an essay entry for ENG 48.


It was my best friend’s graduation yesterday, and I wanted to give him something as a graduation present. Before I went to see him, I contemplated if I still needed to wrap the sign pen that I was going to hand to him. In my mind I knew he’s the type of person who didn’t care too much about gift-wrapping, but since I have been a firm believer in presenting gifts in a rather formal way, and in an occasion such as this no less, I finally decided to succumb to the practice.

It would have seemed odd to people, who didn’t know of our history, that I chose to give a pen of all things symbolic to our friendship, but I didn’t need to explain how it was a special thing. When I finally showed my best friend the reason why I asked him to see me that afternoon, he might already had known what was underneath the carefully crafted covering even before he had it in his hands. Even so, there was something arcane about wrapped presents, something that creates that unique moment in spite of our own private coffee time. It was ironic that my friend still held the gift carefully despite the anticipation and started to open the layers of paper cautiously. That smile that formed on his face told me that wrapping this seemingly unimportant thing was worth it. It certainly created the mood of eagerness of receiving a memory.

January 10, 2008

to my dearest.


I'm writing this just in case I'm unsuccessful with calling you tonight, January 10 of 2008. The reason why I wouldn't have made the call would either be: cowardice, OR regret on the plain stupidity of wasting the only opportunity I'd ever have a few hours back.

Yes. I told you I needed to tell you something. You hadn't persuaded me enough to say it this evening, but it's not really your fault.

I was supposed to vocally tell you that I love you, in your face, while I would still be able to see your reaction after I would've said it. But, no. I chickened out on the very last minute, pretending I was dozing off, playing apathetic and uninterested. But, of course, I was actually afraid of whatever your reaction would be, unnerved of the possibility that you'd not say it back, because we know for a fact that you don't anymore, and haven't said it in the last 12 months. I know, because I remember when the last time had been (I'm cursed of almost always remembering things like these). And, you told me you only say it when you mean it.

Now I hadn't done what I had originally planned, even after making speeches on paper towels at work. I almost killed myself in doing so, because, as much as I hate to admit, it hurts having to say I love you and not knowing what your response would be. It's like my chest would explode anytime and I'm so confused I almost missed my point again, and I had to write a new speech that hopefully wouldn't sound too selfish and demanding and desperate. I must've overwhelmed myself again. That or I have become guilty because I had almost given up on you for reasons I had chosen to forget. But I love you, very much, and just waited even if I wanted to stop.

Now I know why I'd always, ALWAYS feel so nervous when you'd ask to see me. Because I don't know how I should act around you anymore, even after we've hung around together for a hundred times, being too comfortable on some rare occassions. I'm not simply being silly. I am so confused about what exactly I am to you. I guess--no, actually, I know that I'd rather be ignorant of things just for them to stay the same, maintaining the balance of everything than hear it from you. But, aren't you getting tired of it? Because I am. It's like I'm playing around with you, waiting for too long for something that wouldn't happen, confusing myself with directions, losing the point, forgetting your reasons why we are stuck here, why we should be just stuck here. I am really, really sorry. Did I confuse you? I confused myself more by asking too many questions. But maybe I wanted to finally risk knowing about things now even if it will just hurt me more by hearing the truth. I wanted to say all these a few hours ago but I am not the one to relate such without hiccoughing all the way through my speech, choking badly because of the tears that'd reached my throat. I think I am getting better at keeping my miserable emotions at bay, even when you gently urge me to look at your face.

haaaay...

You know, I just realized lately, thinking about the past few weeks, about the reason why I wanted to stay near you. Seeing your face and that smile, I feel like I've come home. You hold my memories of the last five years, you see. I've carefully written of reflections, chronicled situations and experiences like as if I'm too scared of losing my memories to time. I hadn't even thanked you for all the things you've done, for what you've taught me, for the influence, for the impression that you've left in my life. Thank you so much for everything. I wouldn't regret anything but I just wish I had a clearer idea of some things.

When you read this it'd be Monday, and I wouldn't be around because I'd be hiding (which is what I'm only good at), and you'd say sorry. Again. Because that's what you said the last time and I couldn't quite get what you're really apologizing for. We're in this together and you pretty much know what we are getting ourselves into, so why apologize? I'd appreciate answers better, you know. Another sorry would just hurt me more than you'd ever know.

But know that I still love you, possibly still in love with you, too (because they are actually 2 different things in my opinion). I hope I'm still alive by the time I send this because my heart is about to shrink. It must be just the restlessness.

Take care. I wish I had been braver. But then that was what I'd wish for the last time and I haven't really changed much.

Love,
Candy