Restart: Far Beyond That Place

To start building our life our life as family– my spouse, the baby I was carrying then and I. It was the image envisioned in my mind, when we agreed to stay in a little room in his mother’s compound in a little town outside the city.

To start building our life as a family. My spouse, the baby I was carrying then, and I. It was the image envisioned in my mind. We agreed to stay in a little room in his mother’s compound in a little town outside the city.

It is actually a suburb bustling with so much activity from dawn to dusk. Its residents have lived there for several years and grown many generations.

There are a lot of structures that they can brag of. Besides the old Churches, there were the Spanish-style houses with cozy balconies and windows made of capiz shells.

As days and months passed, the simple life of its people unveiled before me. The friendly smiles of the elderlies greet me as I passed them.

Peddlers haggling stuff like tilapia, peanut butter, buttered (small) shrimps, and rags were not uncommon sights on the streets. Neither the scents of various kakanins sold from morning until afternoon.

Young children running to and pro along the eskinitas. The religious piety of both the old and young alike. The noisy bets for the battles of spiders.

The arguments between the members of the paluwagans. People hanging out by the streets in wee hours, pretending they were playing cards or darts. These were a few of the things that may remind me of that place.

But above all else, what bemused me? It was how the neighborhood cradles hucksters. Hucksters trading the country’s most prominent, most prohibited substance today. It’s Methamphetamine Hydrochloride or simply, shabu.

Drub abuse in that little town does not choose age nor gender. Men and women alike, youths, and adults. Married, widowed, separated, single, and out-of-school kids. Students, laborers, drivers, professionals, and the unemployed. The stuff could lure anyone.

The community takes care as well of some “users, runners and mongers”. I realized they were mere pawns in this somewhat big and widespread illegal trade.

It’s a trade that could tolerate even the most painful consequences to a family.

I can only recall a few. Men keeping two wives under one roof. Minors forced into illicit affairs with dealers. Battered wives, and parents axed from their jobs. Couples being separated and mothers who abandoned their children.

Every day, these were only a few of what is actually happening before my eyes. I get curious why those people can outrun the authorities. They do their transactions even in the middle of the day, even they use the simplest street language.

It was a wonder why our other neighbors could tend to evade that. Were not their own sons and daughters affected as well?

Why the residents could overlook this and go on with their lives? Isn’t the neighborhood intertwined with their lives?

I realized existing in the same place demands to act oblivious to what was happening. But I cannot do what someone usually does there and it was sad that it seems it had made things worst.

That’s why I drafted this writing. Because the system affected my own budding family. It had seized from my daughter and me the chance to live peacefully with my husband.

It was the image envisioned in my mind, when we agreed to stay in a little room in his mother's compound in a little town outside the city.
Photo credit: Volkan Olmez on Unsplash

Drug dependence lured him again.

He was unemployed for some time now. But, he learned to steal and selling kinds of stuff. From jeans to CDs to auto spare parts to anything to support the vice.

He even got an affair with a married, much older and similarly, shabu-dependent woman. Somebody who could more satiate him with his monetary and salacious needs.

His family had warned me neither to be disturbed nor to mind him nor his ways. Since he was being his old self again, I had to stop waiting for changes and need not worry about him.

I must no longer mind if he went home at two o’clock or four o’clock in the morning. Suspicious callers must not bother me. Even they call him daily for clear “suspicious business”.

I must not nag. I must not force him to tell where else he had spent almost the 24-hour of his Sundays. Or even his Christmas and Valentines.

It’s funny that it’s still expected, or even insisted on me to remain a docile wife as ever. The house must be neat, and meals are cooked and ready. The kid is well-tended, and the wife must be cheerful and cuddly in spite of everything.

The idea seems foul enough, yet, I tried conforming to the expectations. I strive to be the embodiment of devotedness that was imposed upon me.

Yet, nothing changes.

The distance between us became much too raw and much too cold not to notice. We seldom share lunch or dinner together then.

More often, he was getting unreasonable and defensive. As if protective of something or someone.

The number of times he turned his back at night already hurts. The times our intimate relations became disgusting. He alone needs only to release the tension the substance built within him.

Our fights were another. I withdraw and explode later; while him, he started hitting me.

Apart from the vindictive words he threw, I was more insulted. I was more wounded about the idea that he wanted us to leave him all alone.

It felt as he has long given us up –our family, our relationship, and me.

It almost makes me crumble and shatter. Yet, faith reminds me not to let it defeat me.

It was when I decided, against my desire, to let go of him, and of everything that we started. Our dreams, our little family, and even our little home– if there’s used to be one.

I left that place and took my child with me.

Yet, hoping that in doing so, I am not yet giving up on him. I left vowing that I must do something about whatever happened. Or what is still happening there.

I left praying that we may still take my daughter’s father away from that deteriorating place.

Twice before, I have already tried going away with him to start a new phase of life somewhere.

Yet, he seemed scared about finally detaching himself from the charm of that place. The crutch of his frailties and of his dependency.

Anyway, who else would be brave enough to live a decent life amidst a place poisoned by cowardice and absurdity?

How many young families may still break because of the apathy of today’s society on drug abuse?

Whose children would be denied a secured future before the government will actually do something?

It is in this light that this writing is hoped to be taken.

For the purpose to go far beyond that small place. So that no more neighborhood will stage the same stories again.

That this tale would no longer repeat to another guileless young person’s life again.


©1999 M.C.Padilla 

©2018 March – First to published this online

Featured image: Soragrit Wongsa on Unsplash

In response to the  Daily Prompt: Restart

Quotes #3

Quotes and Musings: Leaving a Place

The only thing more unthinkable than leaving was staying; the only thing more impossible than staying was leaving.

I didn’t want to destroy anything or anybody. I just wanted to slip quietly out the back door, without causing any fuss or consequences, and then not stop running until I reached Greenland.”

Elizabeth GilbertEat, Pray, Love

Autumn. Quotes. Leaving a place.
Image: Noah Silliman on Unsplash

 

The Dream That Is

A baby.

I always dream to bear a child of my own.

Ever since I was a toddler, I often pictured myself as someone who’s older enough, nursing and cuddling a beautiful, bouncing baby girl I would name Cassandra.

I would dress her with a pink lacey gown with soft ruffles and put pink satin ribbons on her curly mane. I would tuck her in bed, tell her stories of princes and princesses and elves and fairies until she falls soundly asleep. Every morning, we would take walks together and I would show her the world around her.

Such a wonderful dream!

Yet, I really do not know how motherhood could have been lovelier–until then.

It was pleasant to remember that used to be within my womb is a tiny speck of miracle who, supposedly, could have been blooming and growing these days.

But perhaps, it’s sad that my baby have to come at a wrong time.

Wearily, I dropped my head, both forgetting the hideous white mask this small room is wearing and regretting the things I have just done.

As I shut my eyes, I heard again my own voice tearing the silence of the past.

“Lorenzzz.”

Lorenz, my boyfriend, was atop my naked body. While his rigorous pumps went faster and harder, he clung more tightly unto my body while running his tongue on my naked skin.

“Tart… Keith…”

And I felt him exploded into invisible pieces inside me.

“Lorenzzz… wait up…” Another spurt from him and he was lying on his back beside me.

“Hey, Keith are you okay? What are you staring about?” he asked me after a while, I can barely hear him behind the monotonous hum of the A/C.

The buzzing seemed to get louder against the stillness. The cold numbly bite on my flesh yet, it nudges me to finally speak.

“I’m afraid, Lorenz, maybe, I’m actually more scared than what I can say. We should have not gone this far,” I whispered a few minutes after, the chilling cold around the room,  the thing that just happened between us and the fears building up within me all sent my voice to quiver.

“Ssh…”

“What if Dad learned about this? What if I end up just like Leslie?” Leslie was a classmate who had dropped out from school last semester after she got pregnant. “I don’t want that to happen to me.”

“Keith, stop fuzzing. Stay calm, okay. ‘No need to be scared,” Lorenz indifferently uttered.

He was alternately toying again with my peaks.

“But, Lorenz…” I felt electrified as I respond to his touch.

“I said, don’t worry. Just take those pills I’ve given to you, okay? They can help us,” he said, convincing me.

He, then promptly lowered his head unto my chest.

PERHAPS, HE IS RIGHT.

MAYBE, I CAN TRUST HIM, HE’S BEEN AROUND, I thought foolishly then.

At nineteen, so much was expected from me.

In fact, my dad’s anticipating that I would also be a good lawyer someday. That’s why he was that kind of strict.

It was really easy to please him until one day, during the school’s foundation anniversary, I met Lorenz, a good-looking junior from another Law school.

Eventually, he invited me for a date. It was followed by another date and another one. And after sometime, I ended sleeping with him.

And of course, Dad knew nothing.

Even my recent last visit to the OB clinic has been a secret. Though, I never thought that the obstetrician would later confirm what I still doubt earlier.

“Your tests came back positive, Miss Vialez,” the OB eagerly announced, not knowing her words were like bombs to my ears. I never thought that she would confirm what I still doubt earlier.

Foolishly, I tried to believe that getting pregnant was something that happened to other girls, not me.

Not me, I am sure of that.

Not me, not yet.

However, when I started missing a couple of periods, I began to panic.

Chaos of fears and confusions reeled in my mind. I even didn’t know how to react exactly—to be delighted or to be anxious. Of course, it my dream to be a mother, but not now.

But what shall I do?

“Why don’t we try the doctor suggested by my friend?” Lorenz softly implied on the phone. I’ve just called him and told him about the baby. “Owen said that doctor knows how to help people like us and he only asks a little payment.”

“Who’s doctor? What do you mean… are you saying…? Are you saying that you want to abort our baby? How dare you think about it?” I drawled at him.

I no longer mind his cold reaction about my condition but the idea that he just implied enraged me.

“Tart, we have no other choice…”

“But not abortion. Not that one. It’s no different than murder, Lorenz. I could not allow anyone to kill my own child.”

“Keith, you’re not thinking, are you? You’re going to have a baby, yet, we are too young to be his parents. Tell me, what do you know about taking care of a kid?”

Then, why didn’t we think of these things before, I wanted so much to shout at him, but I might not have the will to do so.

“You told me that’s it going to be okay. You said the pills will help us.”

“If only you have been careful.”

“I’ve skipped only once.”

“Damn, Keith, look what happened? What do you think we will do next? Sit on our damn ass? Relax while waiting for that baby to come out and make our lives more miserable?” he sharply said.

“Please, Lorenz, stop blaming me.”

“Okay, okay, just think about what I’ve said. Not our best option, but it will do us good.” Lorenz reminded before the dial tone went on.

I thought hard, cried and tried to make some sense out of his words; and there really isn’t.

Abortion.

How could he ever think of abortion when we are talking of our own child?

Maybe it was just sad that my little Cassandra had to come too soon. I wonder, DOES SHE EVER FELT UNWELCOMED AND UNLOVED?

OH, IF ONLY I HAVE BEEN BRAVE FOR HER.

But, I have been alone and very confused during those times.

That a week after that phone call, I found myself lying helplessly on that narrow coach untidily covered with a yellowish cloth.

Somewhere outside that room, I heard Lorenz talking with someone. Then, a man in white robe entered and gave me two pricks of injection and went out, leaving me alone again.

After almost an hour, I just felt a stinging pain down my lower abdomen as if a hundred big pins were piercing it.

Afterwards, it gradually lessened, but later returned.

The intensity of the pain was much greater then – it seemed a steel belt was being tightened and twisted around my waist.

“Aaarghh… Lorenz… it hurts.” I cried out, wishing at least he could hear me.

Moments passed, I was already panting and soaked.

I was beginning to be totally scared, when a man in white came in and gave me another shot of injection.

Maybe, fear of what shall happen next, I just closed my eyes against the gleaming lights.

The pain was still there when the man started to work on my lower body with a cold instrument. As he moved it in and out between my legs, shiver crept my spine painfully.

I COULD NO LONGER REMEMBER HOW LONG IT LASTED UNTIL I FELL ASLEEP AND DREAMT THAT MY BABY HAD WAILED HARD, FOUGHT HARD TO LIVE, BUT I, MYSELF, HER OWN MOM, REFUSED TO EMBRACE HER.

MY POOR ANGEL, I KNOW SHE’S GONE.

Then, a few days after we had gone from that concealed clinic, I was suddenly experiencing cramps, but suspected nothing about it, I just ignored it.

Then, immediately the following day, there was just a terrible, severe pain; and later, continuous bleeding.

The blood just won’t stop.

I was scared as hell with the sight of the scarlet blood and the recurring horrors of the abortion in my mind that perhaps, I had finally passed out.

celebration_by_jackmcintyre2
Image by  JackMcIntyre on Deviant Art

When I opened my eyes, I was already inside this white, neat room. I heard two fuzzy, distant voices from somewhere.

I tried to move but I was so exhausted and drained.

The voices outside continued murmuring—might be of my dad and the attending doctor. From the torrent of their words, I could only sense a few.

“Failed to remove other products of conception…

infections…

serious complications…

hemorrhage…

hysterectomy…

sterility…”

THE HORRORS OF ABORTION, INDEED.

My head seems spinning; nevertheless, I try to sit on my bed, looked outside the dull night.

The moon, dumb and bright has just risen over some distant mountains, while I remained where I was slumped, musing.

I try to believe that one of the million shimmering sparks of lights up there is my own little star. My own little baby whom I snuffed out the chance to see the rays of the sun.

She would never even blow her pink little candles or wear her pink ribbons.

“Cassandra, my sweet darling, you do not deserve me for disowning you, but I wish that you’ll still smile upon me from way up there. Whenever sorrow and regret haunts me, may you always be there to happily shine light to the darkness of my nights.”

PERHAPS, MY MOURNING FOR MY BABY WHOM I NEVER KNEW SHALL LAST A LIFETIME.

Tears start forming on my eyes—tears for losing Cassandra and all the lost babbling babies I would have had.

My dream of bearing and rearing my own children shall always be a mere and lifeless dream.

A dream.

A baby.

It’s all gone.

(End)

A photo showing a little girl in red standing alone on a beach.
Image by Danielle MacInnes on Unsplash

 

Copyright © terradegramm 1994

All rights reserved.

This short story is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

 

 

Quotes #2

Are you sad?

It’s normally fine to feel that, but do not allow yourself to be sad for such a long time. 

So, how will you be happy?

1. Think less of your self 
2. Help others
3. In the midst of loneliness, find joy. Smile pa rin.


Reblog from Arun Gogna

 

Chagrin

The square clock finally struck ten in the evening.

For the thirtieth time, Alexandre disgustedly pulled the bond paper from the typewriter, crumpled it to a lump, and then plunged it into the blue waste can to join other crumpled papers he had thrown there earlier.

How long he had been sitting on that creaking chair no longer matter as long as he could come up with at least one bit of a story– right, just one darn story.

Tomorrow would be the last day to pass his entry for the prose writing competition of amateur writers. He must finish a story all this night to be able to submit something tomorrow. For beginning writers like him, the competition could be a sort of a big boost to make his name and skills recognize on that field.

He always like to write. But, when he received the neurologist’s diagnosis about his disease, he knew he can’t face failure twice.

A rare type of Dementia runs in their family and it will soon devour his memory prematuredly, including his skills on words and writing or whatever he has inside his mind.

Actually, at first he was reluctant to submit anything, afraid of being rejected again or maybe of being disappointed again. But his friend had been determined to pursue him until he couldn’t argue anymore.

“Don’t tell me you’ve given up so soon,” Tim mocked.

“It’s not that. You know that I like writing. It could be my life, yet it seems my hand and my mind doesn’t like to cooperate with me most of the time,” Alexandre muttered.

“I never know that it could possible, is it?”

“Me neither. Until…”

“Until you have read the story of the painter with a carpenter’s hand, am I right?” his friend interrupted. “That hopeless, frustrating story cast you to believe that such things might be real and worst, might happen to you as well.”

Perhaps, it was also happening to him.

One moment, his head was full of ideas and fancies enough to draft great tales and narratives, yet, the moment when he tried to give those bared thoughts a life and a form with letters and words and paragraphs, his mind would get frozen and blocked.

He could not even scrawl anything right out of those perfect images.

“Now, I’m also running out of time. I might woke up one day no longer remembering anything of the stories already scribbled in my head.”

“You are still young and I’m sure you still got enough time to finish a number of books.”

“What I know is that I’m scared.”

“Of what? Not able to write?”

“No. I realize that I’m afraid not being able to remember the words that I have not yet written down.”

It was, indeed, a hard struggle.

A failure.

“But just the same, you can still write,” his friend argued. “Sometimes ago, I stumbled upon what’s left of your written works and I think they were good enough.”

“I don’t think so. What I often write was not exactly what I have in mind,” Alexandre shrugged.

“But can’t you keep those? These might also deserve to be read, not just to be crumpled and thrown into your can.”

There are few time when he could be able to scribble something too, but, just the same,  that will just end up in his blue can
Image by Hector Laborde on Unsplash 

There are few time when he could be able to scribble something too, but, just the same,  that will just end up in his blue can.

This was not the first time he considered joining a similar competition; yet to no avail, he just couldn’t create one perfect story as an entry. He was ashamed of it. Not being able to do something that’s perfectly right seems to tear him apart.

The sealed thoughts haunted him like restless ghosts, as if his head will burst out if these are kept inside.

Alexandre recalled the painter whose hands were not blessed of the capabilities, which his head had.

Somehow they were not different at all; and they might even share the same pain and frustrations. Both the painter with the carpenter’s hands and him were artists deprived of the expression for their crafts.

“I must not be like him. I must not end up a total failure like him.” Alexandre whispered to himself. “If only I could write something different.”

He got up from his seat and went for the kitchenette on the far left side of his room.

While fixing a glass of milk, something in the cupboard, which, hanging above the sink caught his attention. As if remembering something, he reached for a little vial up above the shelves and took a spoonful of the white powder and mixes it with his milk.

Alexander brought the glass with him as he went back to his table; and began to stroke the typewriter’s keys.

Slowly, despite of the difficulty of letting the thoughts flow continuously, he had somehow, been able to form a narrative.

It took a longer time trying to come out real on his story but just the same, he was definitely sure he has done it.

A cock crows just as Alexandre was already tapping the last words of his article—”the words on the bottle read…” The cock crows again and he has finally finished it.

Going over his work, he frowned at the start but grinned to himself later on. The smile revealed his satisfaction. It was not a winning piece but it was his only obra-maestra. It was enough that now, he had not only written something else, but have also finished it.

He yawned and the thought that he was tired and sleepy finally came into his mind. He tucked the finished materials in a brown envelope and left it atop his table.

Recalling the glass of milk, he reached for it and gulped down all the remaining content of the glass. Then, he lay down on his bed and closed his eyes.

Hours later, it was already morning. Rays of sun streamed through the window beside the table.

The typewriter was silent. On the table are papers unused and an empty glass. An envelope lay half-sealed beside it.

At the side of the table was a blue waste can full of crumpled papers. At the other side of it was a wooden dock where the writer was stretched out.

A sink was positioned at the bed’s foot. A few plates still unwashed were neatly piled up on it. A half-filled vial stood beside the plates. Closely, the words on the bottle read: Warning: POISON.

(End)


© terradegramm 1995. 

Forlorn

“She is all of this mixed up and baked in a beautiful pie. She is gone, but she used to be mine.” (Sara Bareilles)

Odd. I search for some fitting words to describe this vacuum-like feeling within me. And this beautiful song found me.

Guess, I will never get over this poignant song.

It’s as if it was written for me. It tells about what my crutch hides. What I’d been wearing for so long.

It revealed the lies that I have been so scared to admit to even myself. It made me confront all the fears that I allowed to walled up high around me, separating me from others.

For many years, I stood on my own but now, I can no longer see that determined girl whenever I face the mirror. The fire in her eyes has vanished. And too bad, I can no longer go back to her.

Yet, for such a long time, I have tried to convince myself that all is fine. That love and motherhood will finally define healing and happiness. It is just enough.

Well, it isn’t.


SHE USED TO BE MINE

It’s not simple to say
That most days I don’t recognize me
That these shoes and this apron, that place and its patrons
Have taken more than I gave them
It’s not easy to know
I’m not anything like I used be, although it’s true
I was never attention’s sweet center
I still remember that girl

She’s imperfect, but she tries
She is good, but she lies

She is hard on herself
She is broken and won’t ask for help
She is messy, but she’s kind
She is lonely most of the time
She is all of this mixed up and baked in a beautiful pie
She is gone, but she used to be mine

It’s not what I asked for
Sometimes life just slips in through a back door
And carves out a person and makes you believe it’s all true
And now I’ve got you
And you’re not what I asked for
If I’m honest, I know I would give it all back

For a chance to start over and rewrite an ending or two
For the girl that I knew

Who’ll be reckless, just enough
Who’ll get hurt, but who learns how to toughen up
When she’s bruised and gets used by a man who can’t love
And then she’ll get stuck
And be scared of the life that’s inside her
Growing stronger each day ’til it finally reminds her
To fight just a little, to bring back the fire in her eyes
That’s been gone, but used to be mine
Used to be mine

She is messy, but she’s kind
She is lonely most of the time

She is all of this mixed up and baked in a beautiful pie
She is gone, but she used to be mine

© Music and Lyrics by Sara Bareilles

toia-montes-de-oca-345720.jpg B
Image by Toia Montes de Oca on Unsplash

In response to the Daily Post – Daily Prompt Forlorn