Sunday, April 12, 2009

smiling underneath

things that i swore i couldn't let go of are in the process of being let go of.
things i wouldn't let go of are, gradually, slipping away, going their own way, because i have found a way to loosen my grip.

it's a strange feeling.
i'm having one of those hazy moments, where i'm like, "totoo ba ito? is this really happening? is it really just the difference of a moment? a shift in perception?"

really?

i feel like i got shot at repeatedly, and there's just no way that i didn't get hit.
i frantically pat my body all over, looking for blood or holes or guts or even pain.
and there is none.

it's a strange feeling talaga.
i don't know quite what to make of it.

things that i have used, in the past, to define me suddenly don't fit.
like i had the locks changed overnight.
or maybe i had them removed.

this is a quieter part of the maze.
and, i'll enjoy the newness of it.
and thoughtfully create a space of curiosity about this newness, this new place.

it really is so strange.

Friday, April 10, 2009

genuflection

there is this deep rattling in my chest.
something wants to come loose.
get out, you thing.
get out, you old things that makes me wheezy.

because i’ve done this back and forthing as much as i have,
i know that when i come back from the states, i come back to the Philippines all wheezy.
it’s happened every single time.
i consider it a kind of cleanse.

this kind of asthma that i experience is mostly obstructive, rather than constrictive. i wheeze because the air passages are blocked because i am coughing up some ancient goop.

i’ve come to know this goop as ‘grief incarnate.’

i remember it making so much sense when my friend, Vassi, told me, some years ago now, that in chinese medicine, it is believed that we hold grief in our lungs. and since, most of my health problems, as well as my family’s health problems, stem from all things respiratory, i know we hold a lot of grief-personal, familial, cultural, and ancestral.

this time around tho, this goop, this ‘grief incarnate,’ has a different quality.
it is less in volume and more tenacious, harder to clear.
to me, this means, i’m gettin’ down to it; i’ve cleared so much already.
so, this stuff that i am clearing now must be super duper old.
and…it’s gotta go.
go, please!
thank you!

so, i guess this means i am triple cleansing.
moon.
goop.
master.

i’m almost there in accepting that it’s just not in the stars that i do things, one thing at a time anymore.

Rowell is sleeping in the other room.
and it makes me happy to see him rest.
(and, this must be shared: i am resisting the urge SO HARD to morning chatterbox him. i acknowlege that this is a particular tendency of mine. i happen to think of it as endearing. i’ve gotten feedback, however, more than once, from, ahem, different pea-op-lays, that it is decidedly not.)
(*insert innocent looking, slightly incredulous shoulder shrug here*)

i snuck into the kitchen to do my saltwater flush.
then quietly did my morning sit.
he slept right through it.
sadhana postponed ‘til later.
as well as liturgicals.

today, my plans are to get my house right.
i still haven’t unpacked all the way from my last trip (i do this.), and i’m fixin’ to go on another in 2 days. so, i’ll unpack all the way today. and survey the laundry situation.
it’s summer here, so no real worries for a “rain delay” to affect laundry drying plans.
and, i note that i am not really looking forward to doing laundry.

i wish it were a matter of just throwing it in the washing machine and calling it a day.
pero, my washing machine is my two hands and a washboard. and a little baby stool that squat on while washing. and a big plastic wash basin (rinse cycle), a medium plastic wash basin (wash cycle), and a bucket (spin cycle with softener) i really make sure my clothes are good and dirty before i decide to wash them here. and, i’ve noticed that this practice has carried over to how i do my laundry stateside as well, even with all the gadgetry.
that’s good.
that’s growth.

fortunately, i don’t have so much cleaning to do besides that.
windows and floors mostly.
and i have to refill all the dehumidifiers i have stashed in my closet and under the kitchen sink.
(they’re full again! ah, moist tropics!)

and, i want to get my altar in order before i go off again.
(it’s looking kinda bare. and for the life of me, i can’t seem to remember where i put that wooden Buddha of mine, the one with the slightly stooped posture. and i want a santo of Sta. Rita made.)

OH, and i have an altar!
Mang Ado, finally, came thru.
i’ve been patiently waiting for 3 months.
he’s been too busy planting rice and building new apartment units to build me the furniture i’ve been asking him for.
namely, my altar and a shelf for my kitchen things.

when i came home last week, i was double surprised.
i had some new furniture…
and my house was arranged and clean!

Rowell cleaned my house while i was away.
like top to bottom cleaned.
he took a bit of poetic license on where stuff went, for which even my persnickety Virgo shut her mouth wide open because…i didn’t have to sweep or mop or clear rusty water from pipes or wash dishes or wipe down counters or change sheets, or anything of the sort, when i got home. prolly the best gift i’ve ever gotten. a very good way to come home.

i think i’ll ask Mang Ado, later, if he can help me hang my bamboo blinds in the big window and my mirror, too. (which means i’ll have to decide, once and for all, where that thing goes.) and i need some nails where i can hang the walis and mop, too. oh gosh, wait, i have some art, too. (on second thought, i’ll wait on the art.)

oh, and i want to dust and reorganize my bookshelf, too.
my bookshelf is the anchor of my place. it’s like 10 feet high and 8 feet wide and chock-a-bock full of books. and other random tchotchkes. Rowell said that was the next thing he wanted to organize/clean in my place, and i’m secretly relieved he didn’t get to it.

my books are so…personal.

and i do have them grossly arranged.
tho, to the untrained eye, it would be, perhaps, imperceptible. the higher shelves are for oversized books, books that i’ve read already, or books that i don’t have any plans of reading soon.
the tippy top shelf has different sized bayong boxes full of art supplies.
the very bottom shelf has another set of bayong boxes full of spare bathroom things.
the eye level shelves have the books that are up near the front of the reading list queue.
the second to the bottom shelf is all things yoga, where my yoga bolster, blocks, mat, strap, and eye pillow live.
the rest are all books, books, and books.
there are also some piles of paper and old conference nametags and old credit card hotel keys and receipts and empty guitar brand match boxes (future art project) and boxes of incense and small piles of different colored rubber bands mixed in there. and… i noticed some cobwebs…

this should keep me busy
so, laundry may wait until tomorrow, but at least i’ll get it sorted and soaking by tonight.

i don’t think that there is anything going on at the church today.
this is prolly why Rowell is still sleeping in the other room on the couch/bed at 8am.

ah, correction.

he just got up from said couch/bed, sleepy shuffled to my room, made sleepy face good morning grin towards me, and, after some computer power cord adjustment, promptly fell asleep, on his belly again, next to me, as i write this.
i really do love this one.
Agape.

yesterday, i went to mass at 3pm.
we sang the Pasyon in Kampampangan.
afterwards, Among Gene said a homily.
then, Among Gene started giving instruction, and since it was all in Kampampangan, i didn’t really understand any of it except form two lines, genuflect, and exit the same side you came in.

what the heck was happening?
i had no idea what to expect.
then, i noticed that the huge double doors of the main entrance of the church were wide open. there were people jam-packed, spilling out the doors.

then, about 35 men sweating and huffing and puffing carried in a huge wooden cross, with great difficulty, to the front of the church, towards the altar. people sitting in the pews near the center aisle, were asked to move in so that they would not get hurt, as the men shuffled in with this enormous cross and carefully set it down level on cut tree stumps, about 2 feet in diameter, about 2 feet high.

i think my mouth hung open the whole time they were bringing it in.
it occurred to me that this was a life size cross.
i had never seen one before.
(i am reminded here of the value of direct experience…and how cerebral the US is and how visceral the Philippines are.)

the cross was 8-10 inches thick, maybe 9 feet across, 12 feet long,
it was prolly the very same kind that Jesus, the man, was crucified on.
there were at least 35 men struggling to bring this in.
heavy, heavy.
their process of working together in this task was infused with humility, bayanihan, and kapwa.

i realized that this cross was made and brought into the church on Good Friday, so that we could each kiss it and genuflect before it, as a sign of our gratitude.

maybe this is a good time for me to come out of the closet.

i love Jesus.

there i said it.
i would have never, ever have thought that i would say such a thing, much less mean it as much as i do.

but, i do love him.
and, i’m happy to be getting to know him.
in my anthroposophical studies, in particular, i’ve been hearing about and doing some reading on the Cosmic Christ and the inner Christ. i’ve listened to Caroline Myss speak about the way Jesus held and kept his Sacred Contract, despite not understanding it fully. in addition, it is holy week and all, so i’ve kinda been steeping in some serious Lenten tea.

AND, in the PAG-ASA talk i attended last week, Fe Mangahas reminded us that Jesus, was a radical.
he was an activist.
he was crucified for his beliefs.
and his beliefs challenged the power structures of the day.
that the thieves who hung next to him on crosses were bound by ropes, and that he, only he was nailed.
because to question the validity of a corrupt power dynamic, the over-arching structure much like the Matrix, which pervades practically every facet of daily life and that is as easy as breathing to collude in it, is dangerous.

Jesus threatened the establishment by daring to question.
and his questions led to his actions.
and his actions pointed a Way.

a different Way.
a better Way.
a humane Way.
an integral Way.
an aligned Way.
a way to Freedom.

to say he died for our sins does not contextualize it enough.
what the hell does that really mean?
and i realize that all these years of hearing about Jesus, i had been missing that context.
and now, that i have it, i am in utter awe of this person and the way he chose to live.

i was writing to my friend, Simha, earlier this week, where i first professed my love for Jesus.

i love that he was human.
the qualities and concepts that i associate with him include humility, warmth, acceptance, Truth, Service, a deep love for humanity, conviction, alignment, compassion, surrender, and sacrifice. these are not unique just to him. they are actually ALL available to ALL people ALL the time. like Buddha-nature, we have these things in us already.
and the difference, the remarkable difference, is choice.

simply put, it is a CHOICE we have to express these qualities in every thought, word, and action that we do.

to quote the Warrior Spirit Prayer for Awakening, perhaps my most favorite of anything written by my Teacher,
“…may i exercise the precious gift of choice and the power to change that makes me uniquely human and is the only to true path to liberation…”

it is a CHOICE.
it is a CHOICE.
it is a CHOICE…
to be Free.


so, yesterday, i fell in line, and genuflected and touched my forehead to the enormous wooden cross. and i whispered, “thank you” to Jesus for pointing a Way. and i whispered, “thank you” to all others who do the same.

tears were flowing down my cheeks as i did this, as
tears are flowing down my cheeks as i write this.

and, i think it is my most fervent wish that everyone have the experience of freely choosing to make it non-optional for them to steadily peer inward and really love what they see. and in that loving, their actions are guided towards loving others just the same: no separation. and in that loving, there will be more to point a Way.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

kalamansi and Agape

my mind is racing.
so much keeps happening.
how to keep up?
(subtext: why do i feel compelled to “keep up?”)
(more subtext: what exactly am i trying to “keep up” with again?)

i specifically didn’t sked anything major for myself for the time between coming back from the states and going off to the last block of the Waldorf teacher training. i thought 10 days with nothing really major scheduled would be good for me. (i am reminded that i still need to write a pentatonic song for recorder; that was a personal goal of mine before the 3rd block. but, i don’t think that counts as ‘anything major’ scheduled.)

in theory, it was a good idea. in practice, the days filled up a bit.

well, at least i’m improving. i used to give myself like 3 days after returning, if that, before i was charging off to do the next big thing. and then it was a week, but i scheduled all of these major things to do, everyday, or when i was feeling ‘kind,” every other day. i did that a couple three-four times. and, i am grateful for a particular gchat exchange with my friend Sundaresvani where she reminded me that i can actually make my schedule so it’s not so unreasonably ridiculous. (my words, not hers.)

at the moment, i am in the midst of a dwindling-faster-than-i-would-like-10-full-days.
AND, i am grateful that i’ve done this back and forthing enough to learn some valuable information about myself.

like, travel takes a lot out of me.
particularly international travel.
crossing all of those time zones and date lines.
saying goodbye. (again.)
saying hello. (again.)
being up in the air for the better part of a day.
realizing that the concepts of “day” and “night” feel so contrived.

arriving on the other side of the freakin’ earth, at the end of it.
in another land.
with a set of different rules and customs.
and languages.
and climate.
and money.

it’s crazy.

don’t get me wrong, i appreciate the magic of airplanes.
i agree wholeheartedly with comedian, Louis CK, when he said that we all should be shouting “wow!” the whole time we are flying up in an airplane…because
we are “sitting in a chair…
in the air.”

WOW!

AND, i know there is a way that i feel scrambled up after doing this back and forthing. it’s like when my physical body arrives on the other side of the earth, my etheric body is trying to pick up the rhythm of the new land and adjust accordingly, my astral body was already there and is like, “what took you?”, and my spirit is scattered throughout, encapsulating all of it and, perhaps, still mostly at the other place and on the way. it takes awhile for everyone to get synchronized again. and all four of them are like, “dag. she’s doing that back and forthing thing again. attention everyone: REGROUP!”

i AM getting better at it tho.
and, it’s a lot.
perhaps it is necessary, this discombobulation.
i mean, there should be some kind of felt impact, right?
some kind of marker that a long ass journey has occurred.
give props.

it’s holy week here, and perhaps that factors into the discombobulation.
intensity is in the air.
yesterday, i drove to angeles to my favorite frozen yogurt place.
(it was a kind of last supper gesture before the master cleanse.)
and on the way, i must have passed at least 50 hooded young men, walking barefoot on the hot, hot asphalt, beating their backs to a bloody, pulpy rawness. their backs are so red with blood, i don’t think it’s real. like it’s Hollywood. and, i note, that there is something in me that wants to shield myself from this truth: these men, for many reasons mostly unknown to me, have chosen to take up this practice every Lenten season.

and, it is really hot nowadays.
summer in pampanga is rough.
the sun is intense, relentless.
and it’s only early summer at that.

i took Tita Fely, Rowell’s mom, to mass at the san fernando cathedral this morning. she asked me to take her when we were walking in the holy week procession last night. we were behind the San Pedro. she wanted to go because there was a special mass where all of the priests from all over pampanga were all going to be there to receive a blessing from the bishop, anoint some oils, etc.
also, Rowell was singing.
that’s why i wanted to go.

the whole mass, in it’s totality, was quite a to-do.
all the pageantry,
all the robes,
all the pomp and circumstance.

my favorite part was the processional of all of the priests dressed in identically beautiful ecru robes. i was sitting near the aisle, in the second to the last pew, right side, and i could see the details of their costume. all the layers, collars, and sash thingies. so fussy! perhaps all priestly robes are like this. i remember helping dress Paco Sensei for ceremonies last year and thinking, “what’s with all the fuss?” all the pulling and tucking and straightening. and then i remember seeing my Teacher, the first time, all gussied up in her ‘specially made white bamboo cloth juban and the way her black sheer robes hung ‘just so,’ wearing the rich, cranberry red kesa that we all sewed for her, and i was like, “oh! THAT’S what it’s all about.”

i liked witnessing the priests’ camaraderie. the way they shook hands and hugged and greeted each other like old friends, like old army buddies. like ones that have been in the trenches and seen combat. i like the way some of them hung on each other. the sometimes slight and sometimes overt homoeroticism. (i am so sensitive to that…)

i liked how they all smiled and joked with each other. there were one or two intense ones that seemed appalled at all of this chatterboxing. (hi.) then there were the quiet ones who smiled and kept mostly inward. (hi, too.) mostly, they all seemed genuinely happy to be there. (hi, three.)

i liked looking at all the different shapes, sizes, ages, and colors of them. some had to be younger than me. and some were in their 60’s. and some had really cool hair, like done up or spiky. one of them had this kinda corny, pasted down looking page boy cut that looked anachronistically medieval. some had facial hair, and the tita that i was sitting next to whispered to me that she thought it should be bawal, or forbidden, for priests to have facial hair. i smiled at her because she was so earnest in her conviction. some priests wore make-up, like lipstick!

some were really good looking. (thorn birds!) and some were not so much. i would see one, and i would say to myself, “whoa. he looks like my friend Maui from cebu. and that one looks like, Rolly, that one nurse. and he looks like that guy who fixed my car that one time.” someday, i’ll look into that idea of the different archetypal ‘looks’ of hu-mons. it’s caught my interest because it’s a pattern i’ve always noticed, ever since i was small. and, i’ve noticed it cuts across race and culture. those universality, connection things really do grab me.

i appreciated the ritual of this mass and even some of the pageantry.
And, i am reminded that i don’t like too much pageantry. perhaps it is my pragmatic Virgo that asserts herself. somewhere this morning, i felt a line was crossed from ‘acceptable indulgence’ (to mark the specialness of the gathering) to just plain overindulgence (ego masturbation). perhaps, it is a finer line than i previously thought.

i’m not exactly sure when i felt the line was crossed. i’m curious what were the contributing factors. maybe, it was the preachy homily given by the bishop or the lipstick or the way the choir sang so high that there was no hope for the congregation to sing with them. maybe i’ll peer deeper into this someday. or maybe not. i think i will tho, for it would be useful. it’s good information for me just to know about myself, how i hold ceremonies, and something about the importance of the overall design of ceremonies to be accessible and relevant while maintaining an appropriate level of pageantry.
ba-lahns-say!

i’m in this cleansing mode.
it has a lot to do with getting this physical vessel of mine stronger and better able to keep up. (there’s that phrase again.)
i’m getting to this point in my evolution that i am quite strong and flexible in my emotional, spiritual, and psychic health. and in the interest of true alignment, and if i am truly to be a vehicle for Freedom and “point a way,” i best get my physical body up to speed.

‘cause we’ve got shit to do.
and good shit, too.

so, i’m looking at my relationship to food and eating
and its relationship to nourishment.
and its relationship to culture.
and the ways to flex it.
and the ways to not.
not quite ready to write about this yet.
but, soon.
(or not.)

i did a bowel cleanse for 5 days.
i never did have much trouble in this department.
i go at least once a day. (sorry, if this is tmi.)
when i am in the Philippines, mostly twice, sometimes thrice.
i think it’s the heat.
among other things.

i had to mix up a teaspoon of this intestinal formula #2 with 6 oz. of juice and 6 oz. of water, shake it up in covered glass jar, and drink it down 5 times a day. it wasn’t bad, the taste, i mean. for the first day and a half, i didn’t have juice, so i just drank it in water. that wasn’t so good, for the grit. ugh. i found through trial and error, i like mango nectar the best for this cleanse. it has just enough body to hold the grit but still the smooth drinkability factor. jyess. grape juice, not so good. carrot juice not so good either.

i found i ate less because i was drinking this all the time. 60 oz. of fluid is kind of a lot. and i found it challenging to drink it the full 5 times each day. i think i did it only 4 times on two of the days. anyways, all was good in the hood, because i started going like 5 times a day after this.

now, i’m master cleansing for the next 3 days.
it’s been awhile since i did this. may 2007 was the last time, during sesshin.
i’m happy to report i’ve indigenized the master cleanse.
lemons and limes are expensive here.
they are imported from god knows where, and impractical for me to get (i have to drive 20 minutes away to the big supermarket to get them).
kalamansi, the native lime of the Philippines, on the other hand is plentiful, local, and relatively inexpensive. i paid P100, that’s like $2.10 for a kilo of them this morning at the palengke. a kilo of kalamansi will make enough lemonade for me to cleanse for 3 or 4 days, so i’m juicing those.

it’s a little more tedious juicing kalamansi. they are small, like the size of a good peewee marble, and they have big seeds. so, it takes like 25 or so to make ¼ cup of juice.
i brought organic real maple syrup, grade B, from the states. (Trader Joe’s!) i can get it here, but it’s super expensive, something like $20 for a small glass bottle. brought cayenne from the states, too. the water i pump from the ground, outside the gate of my compound.

i’ll break my cleanse on Sunday by eating Indian mangoes and brown rice. Indian mangoes are aplenty now. oranges (like lemons and limes) are not. besides, Ate Melds, my neighbor just gave me a sackful. they are all green and cute. and shiny from the treesap. they are sitting in a basket on my table, patiently waiting another 3 days.

i started the master cleanse this morning and elected not to saltwater flush before going to mass. we left at 6:30am for the 8:00am service. the hassle factor of going to mass is so high already: traffic; parking; heat; lack of bathroom; might be a bathroom but it likely being janky: for sure no toilet seat, nor toilet paper, likely no regular flusher, no soap, etc; dodging pedestrians, dogs, street vendors, and hooded men beating themselves. i didn’t want to worry. (sidebar: after mass, i noticed that the cars that were parked on the street by the church were all spattered with droplets of dried blood from the men walking past, beating their backs, while mass was going on. since i was sitting near the back of the cathedral, i could hear the steady rhythm of their lashings over everything else. i was SO grateful that a magic parking spot opened up for Pipsy right when we pulled up, a good ways from the splash zone. eww.)

by early afternoon, we got home, i dropped off the Titas, then had to run to Guagua to try and go to the bank. it was closed. gak. i am traveling early monday morning to Iloilo, and i need some cash. everything is closed for Good Friday here (the only day of the year EVERYTHING is closed), and banks are closed on the weekends. thought i was safe going on a thursday, but apparently, the bank had been closed the whole holy week.

i hate going to independent money changers because they feel somewhat seedy and janky. i illegally parked Pipsy on a sliver of sidewalk in front of an impromptu carinderia, and ran in. i think i don’t like these places because you can’t really see the person you are conducting business with. they are hidden away behind glass, behind metal bars. and the glass has all these random stickers and signage on them. and there’s all these signs admonishing you to count your money before you leave the counter, like it happens all the time that someone makes a horrible mistake. or some robber comes in guns ablazin’. it makes me nervous to count money out in the open. i get afraid someone is casing me, and then i’ll get mugged. and well, there it is. none of that happened. i survived it…again. and, writing this, i really think it’s time to drop that particular thought pattern. i have a powerful manifesting thing sometimes.

after changing money, i headed back to Sta. Rita, bought kalamansi at the palengke and a Ventolin asthma inhaler at the pharmacy because i am still quite wheezy from the states.

i was supposed to saltwater flush right when i got home. i got sidetracked tho, checking email and facebooking. then, i had a horrible headache that i kept trying to ignore. and ignore. and ignore. then i thought i wasn’t getting enough sugars. so, i kept drinking more lemonade. still, it didn’t go away. then i straight up took a swig of maple syrup. it still didn’t go away. then i realized, this must be a toxin headache. the lemonade was working it’s magic, and the toxins didn’t have anywhere to go. time to flush.

the saltwater flush is not my favorite thing to do. and, i‘ve noticed that if you chug it, it works better (and gets it done faster). i had this one roommate that use to sip it, out of a teacup. took her forever to finish the liter. Lord, it was like torture watching her do that.

after i took the flush, i layed my body down on my couch/bed. i was feeling particularly poorly. soon after tho, i felt some relief from my headache. i figured the hypertonicity of the saltwater was drawing the toxins away from my brain. (thank Goddess, and i am such a geek.) i even slept for 30 minutes. after my nap, the saltwater flush was… well, flushing. it used to take an hour or so to go through me. apparently 30 minutes here. 6 or 7 times later, i was empty. and my head no longer hurt. and i slept some more. i gave myself permission to ‘back off’ from sadhana today.

and you know, i am looking at this lemonade with some new eyes. and the saltwater flush, too. in Yoda tongue: powerful liquids they are. i remember last time i was home and we were doing fearless Yoga. my Teacher had been master cleansing, and for the 1ST time, she was touching her nose to her knee, BOTH sides, in seated forward bend. i could gage her amazement by the way she exclaimed, “toxins are real!”

toxins ARE real. and i’m curious and looking forward to sadhana tomorrow morning to see if i’ll have some more space in me, too. i’m a ways from nose to knee, but i’m convinced that it is the genuine striving that counts the most.…

the other day, i drove my ass all the way to manila to attend this talk on engaged spirituality and societal transformation. it was put on by PAG-ASA, so i knew maybe 10 of the 60 folks attending. nice to see some of them again. one of them (i named him in my Practice Period intentions) i’m working on reclaiming relationship with, and i was truly surprised to see him. (like jo kata surprised to see him). it has been awhile since we’ve connected. and, truthfully, at this point, i’m amused that i still get caught by surprise by anything and anyone who “just happens” to show up… it’s Divinely scripted, dear Muki!

so, with my PP intentions worn like my invisible rakusu (i miss that thing.), i worked diligently at reclaiming relationship. it’s a work in progress (like they all are), and much of it is done inwardly, not really requiring participation of the Other. ideally, i think mutual participation is best, but it isn’t necessary.

there will be no banners or parades or fireworks when this work is being done. there is no clear finish line, nothing to “get.” there are no award ceremonies nor is there even a guarantee that a broken friendship will mend nor rebuild. instead, a quiet steady acceptance of the history and the moment ensues. and somehow, that becomes enough. after the grasping is done, really done, it becomes the most grown up word, “enough.”

it has a lot to do with effort and release, extending, honoring boundaries, getting back up again after falling (again), all-around forgiveness, grace, humor, gratitude, awe, humility, following the out-breath, truthfulness, fierce compassion, fierce Love, self-love, expanding especially when wanting to contract, and creating, maintaining, and sustaining warmth. not to mention a good deal of pacifying, enriching, and magnetizing. good stuff. good Practice. (I hear Simha’s voice, “Practice, Practice, Practice.”)

i also spent time with my friend Jodie that day. we met for a meal at the green halo at cubao x. then, we attended the lecture together. we also got lost on the way; her sense of direction is slightly better than mine, and that ain’t sayin’ much…

i love my friend, Jodie. i like the story of how we met. i attended a panel discussion on decolonization and reclaiming indigenous chu-chu at the I-hotel in san francisco last may. it was just after the sesshin. there were maybe 15 or 18 of us in the audience. Leny was there. Mildred was there. Venus was there. Videl was there. me and my bald head were there. and Jodie was there.

Jodie was one of the speakers, and i loved her personal narrative and how she delivered it. she is hilarious for one thing. and wicked smart. and articulate. and warm. and did i say hilarious? Leo rising, i think. so, a true performer. my cheeks and belly literally ached from laughing and smiling so much that night. house of nanking is a couple of blocks away from the I-hotel, so we all went there after to eat delicious, albeit somewhat msg-laden, food. and by the time the evening was over, our bellies and hearts were full, our pocketbooks empty, and the BARTs had stopped running. it was the night before Jodie was to board a plane and move to the Philippines to teach preschool munchkins in her Tita’s school in Antipolo instead of working retail at the Gap or Forever 21. and, in the dark of that night, i drove her home to Hayward, and made a new (old) friend.

it’s funny because a few weeks before i met her in the flesh, i stumbled upon her blog. Leny had posted a link to it from her own blog. Jodie had also graduated from Humboldt State, though, something like 10 years after i did. in her blog, she mentioned a local hang out spot, Don’s Donuts in Arcata, and i was just so tickled. i had prolly gone into Don’s Donuts maybe 5 times in the five years that i lived in Arcata, so it wasn’t doughnut magic. it was a different kind. a simpatico magic. a fellow Fil-Am radical woman of color sister doing the good work….

i loved that we got to spend time together. i visited her only once before in Antipolo and met her family and her students. i’m in awe of how a lot seemed to happen in just one afternoon and night. it was like we traveled for 3 weeks. we were all over QC that night. cubao x, running red lights and miraculously not getting killed nor caught, getting lost in san juan/sta.mesa, finding PETA, hole in the wall sisig and pita pie at kebur, project 8 at 2am. meandering conversation, heartbreak and redemption, dreaming a Show, hope and fear, lots of laughter, and lots of wide-eyed looks, like “dude, it’s so awesome that we are friends and it’s kinda weird how we met”. we have a lot in common, and dude, i can speak American with her. AND taglish! i like that. it was a good afternoon/night/morning. and, i’m still trippin’ off it, all the stuff that’s come about from it.

it’s 3am here, and my friend, Rowell, is in the next room tossing and turning on the couch/ bed. he has run himself ragged…again. there are so many activities at the church for holy week. and they don’t just magically happen. there is a lot of effort that gets put into them. PA systems, programs, scripts, food, looking after Among, songs, choir practice, flowers, service, banners, etc., etc., etc. the church volunteers do an awful lot, and they do it so well, they don’t even make it look easy…they make it look invisible. really, i feel like everyone just assumes these activities and events just magically come down prĂȘt-a-porter, polished and ready, from the Heavens. they so don’t. i know some things and stuff about this.

my friend Rowell is in “worn-out, weary, so-tired-i-wanna-just-sob-and-sob” mode, and because he is a friend that i specifically practice Agape, don’t-want-nuthin’-from-you-except-the-privilege-of-loving-you, unconditional cosmic Christ, Jesus love with, i welcome him, anytime, in whatever state he is in, and give him a soft place to land or a kick in the ass, whichever is called for in the moment. it’s mostly a soft place to land. he texted and showed up at my front door after being at the church all day and night.

one look is all it took. i got up off the couch/bed and let him have the whole thing. after asking some precursory general questions and receiving one word answers or no answers at all, i let him be. i gave him cool water to drink. and cranberry emergen-C. from time to time, i would come over and give him a few kisses on his head, touch his back or shoulder to let him know i was close by, and then, i just let him be. effort and release.

a voice inside told me that it would be helpful if he bathed, to help wash away whatever it was that needed to be washed away. i heated water and gave him a towel. i smoothed his hair while i quietly spoke just what the voice inside had said. he shook his no; he didn’t want to. “okay, friend,” i said, “if you change your mind, it’s ready for you.”

and then, i just let him be.

about an hour later, he bathed.

i made some lemonade. or in my case, kalamansi-ade and started writing this tome.

when he recovers “enough”, and not a moment before, i’ll point out this pattern that seems to play out, often, in his relationship with his Service, in the hope that he may realize that he is capable of finding a more balanced relationship with it.

he may.
he may not.
i won’t love him any less.

my Life is really good.
really good.
really full…
and really, really good.

.