Monday, March 12, 2012

||: Of Men and Friends

||: Recently, I have been able to come home relatively earlier than usual. In one of those nights, I happened to notice several new magazines on the living room's coffee book table as I entered the house. On top of the stack, a magazine named Billionaire caught my attention.


||: Curious about what's happening and what's new with opulent living, I picked the magazine up and brought it with me to my room to browse. After skimming through a few pages of glossy ads of (to die for) high-end products and services, I found a relatively long article on friendship that engaged me until the very end.


||: The article talked about men and the dynamics of their friendships, as opposed to that of women. I thought the article was a bit sexist, at first, but eventually, I found it down-to-earth, funny, with a little peek of some old-school truths and "oo-nga-'no?" moments.


||: This was written by Jemy Gatdulaa lawyer specializing in international economic law and an advocate for natural law. After failing to (exhaustively) search for electronic/on-line versions of this piece that I can just link to, I decided to manually type (!!!) the entire manuscript just so I could share this to everyone. I don't think Atty. Gatdula would mind, so read on and tell me whatchathink.


There was this scene in the movie The English Patient that I guess sums it best – Ralph Fiennes’ character Almasy recounting the previous expedition: ”I once traveled with a guide who was taking me to Faya. He didn’t speak for nine hours. At the end of it, he pointed at the horizon and said, ‘Faya!’ That was a good day.”

That for me is male friendship. Call me a dinosaur, but for the life of me, I cannot get the need of men today to spill their guts out to everyone. Men are supposed to be silent (particularly about themselves), have no emotions (or at least keep it buried), and rather have their actions do the talking. As John Wayne would put it: talk low, Talk slow, and don’t say too much. The Duke was actually giving advice on acting. He might be talking of male friendship as well.

That’s as un-PC as you can get but screw that. Time was when conversation between men would have been a grunt and a squint. Men don’t spend time together to get empathy or share feelings or exchange greeting cards. They get together to get things done, whether it be building a rocket ship or getting wasted. And if it’s usually the latter, so be it.

“You’re not too smart are you? I like that in a man.”

Of course we men are stupid. That’s genetic. We don’t remember anniversaries, are bad at taking hints, and terrible at giving gifts. Take the three wise men for example, do they give baby Jesus a cuddly bear or cute squeaky toy? No! Like any guy, they were most likely at a gasoline stop convenience store when somebody suddenly remembers, “Dude, we have to give baby Jesus a gift!” “We do?” “Like totally!” “Word. Just pick that up that… uh, gold, frankincense, and myrrh? Whatever, don’t forget the beer.” And despite countless rantings of women for men to force themselves to acquire this ability, they are simply unable to muster the necessary brainpower to be psychic and predict what they want without having to tell us. But coupled with that stupidity is a real man’s sense of certainty, that certitude, of right and wrong, of who we are, what we do, and what we’re supposed to do (whether what we’re thinking or doing is smart is another thing altogether). These days that manly sureness is gone, replaced by a roomful of doubts due to some angst about missing parents or a bicycle that was stolen in childhood, or a highschool sweetheart lost due to a letter never sent, or some other piece of crap.

“Come with me if you want to live.” That line, popularized by Arnold Schwarzenegger in the Terminator movies, was actually first uttered by a human, Michael Biehn’s character in the first Terminator movie. The line became one of the more famous pieces of movie dialogue for its simplicity. And certitude. No doubts, no angst. Just a simple declaration. I miss those days when a character could say such lines with a straight face. Now, even James Bond (albeit played greatly by Daniel Craig) has issues, as seen in Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace (the latter for which he was seen seeking closure, sheeeesh!).

Who needs a man with issues? Nobody does. The last thing I need is a plumber who breaks down all of a sudden because the pipes he’s trying to repair reminds him of… I don’t know, inadequacies? Men don’t have issues, we just get drunk. Or start hitting things. Preferably soft walls or much weaker men. Rick didn’t spill is guts out to Sam, he just sat there sullenly drinking his whiskey. And when he did lose it, for a moment, to whine about how “of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world” Ilsa had to walk in on his, he stops himself and asks Sam to play a tune while he stares blankly out to nothingness.

Come to think of it, Rick was actually quite chatty. I prefer McQueen’s Bullitt, a movie with no speeches for the lead character, no opening up, no apologies. He just drove his 1968 CID V8 Ford Mustang very fast and shot bad guys using his cool quick-draw shoulder holster. Also Lee Marvin in Dirty Dozen, silently and very relaxedly blowing-up Nazis. If he got any more relaxed he’d be asleep. Or remember Samuel L. Jackson’s character in Snakes on a Plane. Yes, I know. It’s stupid. But I did say men are stupid, right, so who cares? And when Samuel L. Jackson’s character stood up, sure of himself and his anger that the snakes must die, not for a moment does anybody think about the absurdity he is about to mouth: “I’m tired of all these m….f…. snakes in this m….f…. plane!” He shoots the plane window, the snakes get all sucked out into space, and all is again right with the world.

Men don’t go whining about their feelings. Well, at least not in public. Feelings are to be shared, privately, with wives. And even then, it’s a constitutional right of men that women don’t divulge such confidences to other women. At least, not within their hearing range.

“Nobody cries in baseball!”

So what’s the point for men to have friends if they don’t share feelings or confidences anyway? Frankly, I don’t know. Although it’s certainly more fun to do stuff if there are other people around. The problem is, “other people” would normally, can’t be, women. A guy just wants to be left alone, in peace, while watching a boxer ripped apart in the ring. He doesn’t want to hear the cluck clucking behind him about how sad it is for the widow and the kids the boxer will leave behind. A guy just wants to drink, munch on pork rinds, and shout: “hiiiit him againnnnn!!!! Keeeeel heeeeeeem!!!” (preferably with a deep voice and not a screech).

I must say that having an audience while one does things would be good. And having somebody watch your back while you do things wouldn’t hurt as well (hence the importance of wingmen). That’s why in the olden days, men don’t bring women to dinosaur hunts. They detract them from the concentration and just suck the fun out of the hunt. With fellow cavemen, you won’t have to bother on whether the other caveman is feeling thirsty or uncomfortable or if walking exposed to sunlight could damage the skin. There’s nobody around bitching about the other cavewomen while watching for your reactions. And at least other cavemen won’t go sullen when through your fault everybody becomes lost because of your refusal to ask directions.

That’s why the famous friendships are always between men. Because they are so much more fun. Simple, stupid, yes, but without drama. Do you know of any famous female friendships? Aside from Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Tokas (uh … ahem!), nobody else comes to mind. Fine, Laverne and Shirley. And those women from Absolutely Fabulous. But that’s it. Ok, fine, the Golden Girls. Thelma and Louise. Fried Green Tomatoes. And those women who made that quilt. And the Joy Luck Club. And Little Women. But that’s it ok? Anyway! Ok! Ok! There’s also Charlie’s Angels. Oh and there’s (gnashing of teeth) those Sex and the City girls (we’ll get back to them later).

On the other hand, famous male friendships are numerous: from Bert and Ernie to the Odd Couple. In between, there’s Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Julius Caesar and Mark Anthony, Don Quixote and that fat guy, Watson and Crick, Masters and Johnson, Smith and Wesson, Clinton and Gore, Sonny Crockett and Ricardo Tubbs. The (very brief but undeniable great) partnership of Fr. Merrin and F. Karras. Han Solo and Chewbacca. Plus those guys from the Streets of San Francisco. Lethal Weapon (1-4). The guys from The 40 Year Old Virgin and Wayne’s World. Chet Huntley and David Brinkley. The Three Stooges. Laurel and Hardy. The Beatles. Michael and Scottie. Jaworski and Arnaiz. McGarret and Dano. Sam and Dean Winchester. And, of course, there’s Ocean’s Eleven.

Which brings us to the Rat Pack. Not that travesty Brat Pack. The real thing. That epitome of macho cool and effortless swagger. Of Frank, Dino, Sam, Peter, and Joey. In short, of guys doing all those stupid things and getting away with it. From the original Ocean’s Eleven, to those Vegas shows, to Robin and the Seven Hoods, the Rat Pack just sang, drank, flirted, gambled, smoked as if the Surgeon general was in their pay. (He probably was. The Rat Pack could justifiably be considered as one long commercial for Jack Daniel’s and Camel cigarettes.) And their jokes weren’t even that funny. Example, Frank (to Dean): Why do you drink so much? Dean: I drink to forget. Frank: What do you want to forget? Dean: I don’t know, I forgot a long time ago. Classic. George Clooney and Brad Pitt? Pleeeeaaase!

And the jokes kept coming. Despite Frank getting suicidal over Ava, Dean wanting to sleep early to play golf the next day, Sammy getting booed due to his inter-racial marriage with Mary Britt, Peter being Peter, and Joey frustratedly reminding people that he is actually member, the Rat Pack just kept “the gasoline” flowing, trying to keep “the rain” away. Which reminds me of a time I was drinking with a friend. His girlfriend left him recently. We hear the news and say, “That sucks. Sige, next round on us.”

That’s it. No two-hour sharing of feelings. No sharing by which we could “somehow, er, cathartically dispel all that heinous stuff.” By the way, that’s a line form the movie Heat (another great guy buddy movie. And if you can’t tell which is the central friendship in the movie, you’re a woman).

Which brings us to the unpleasant topic of “bromances”. I mean, what the hell is that? Wiki defines it as “a close but non-sexual relationship between two (or more) men, a form of homosocial intimacy.” See? It contains the word “homo”! Ok, homo is not a word but you get the point. Homer Simpson would. There is no such thing as a bromance. It’s either the relationship is gay or not gay. If you start sharing feelings or listen o Kenny G with another guy (or, as Paul Rudd said, listen to Coldplay), you’re gay. I don’t care what Oprah says, men don’t show feelings in public, don’t exchange intimacies or emotional issues with other guys, or what the heck, don’t use facial cleansers (especially in public washrooms). Actually, if you care about what Oprah says, you’re gay. Period.

No that there’s anything wrong with that (as Seinfeld would say).

Anyway. Where was I?

“Lost without my Boswell.”

As usual, the shrinks have the last say. Rannveig Traustadottir, professor of social science at the University of Iceland, writes:

“Although the majority of men may not have close friends they do not conduct their lives in isolation.” Block (1980) found that most of the men in his study had a variety of same-sex relationships. These include what Block calls ‘activity friends,’ such as a weekly tennis partner or drinking buddies; ‘convenience friends’ where he relationship is based on the exchange of favors; and ‘mentor friends’ typically between a younger and an older man.

 While women’s friendships are usually defined as self-revealing, accepting, and intimate, men usually shy away from intimacy and closeness. Authors identify at least three barriers to close friendships among men: competition between men, traditional masculine stereotypes about ‘real men,’ and fear of homosexuality (Fasteau, 1991; McGill, 1985; Miller, 1983).

In a discussion of gender differences in friendship, Sherrod (1989), points out that although men rate their friendship as less intimate than do women, at least in terms of self-disclosure and emotional expressiveness, men’s friendships nevertheless serve to buffer stress and reduce depression in the same way that women’s friendships do. Sherrod also reports that when men do achieve a high level of intimacy with other men, they usually follow a different path than women, one that emphasizes activities and companionship over self-disclosure and emotional expressiveness.”

All the foregoing probably explains why men hate Sex and the City. Feminists brush it off by merely citing sexism. Sexism has nothing to do with it. What rubs off men the wrong way with it is this: although men like doing stupid things together, at least they’re doing things. And we happily admit that what we did was stupid. Sex and the City women don’t do anything except whine, bitch, and prattle about themselves. And, what’s worse, is that they’re proud of it. I don’t know of any guy who hates Police Woman (Angie Dickinson version), Princess Lea, or Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Because these women do something! Police Woman catches bad guys (after swinging her lush hair and shouting “freeze!”), Princess Lea battles the evil empire, while Buffy slays vampires. Sex and the City women? As Robert De Niro’s Al Capone in The Untouchables (another great buddy movie, the mentor-mentee relationship between Connery and Costner is really one of the all-time greats) would say: “They ain’t got nothing!”

Which leads us to that quintessential example of male friendship: Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson.

Anybody who connotes anything homosexual between the two misses the point. Beyond the fact that Conan Doyle’s 1880’s England sees nothing wrong with two single men sharing a flat, the bond and trust built between the two is grounded on the fact that both are familiar with, have dealt and must necessarily face violence. This may be hard to understand for today’s metrosexual guy whose only exposure to combat is when he hits the gym or pounds the treadmill (or, even more childish: paintball or ultimate fighting). Holmes and Watson (as envisioned by Conan Doyle) have been tested repeatedly in real life crisis (like their creator) and developed a certainty (that word again) regarding their masculinity. They, like all real men of the past, can afford to have, be comfortable with, deep friendships because they already know who they are, without self-doubts clouding their judgment or their relationships.

Holmes and Watson, furthermore, complemented each other. Not to emotionally grow or “be all that they can be” nonsense. Holmes stayed the same curmudgeonly, arrogant, drug addicted, calculating machine from the moment we see him to the moment he retired to his Sussex bee farm. No. The friendship was valuable for how they were able to get things done. In their case, solving crime. They didn’t compete against each other, they fought alongside each other. One trusting the other’s abilities, courage, and reliability. Holmes was the intellect, the detached observer, and instigator. Watson the steady nerves, the expert marksman, the approachable ladies’ man, as well as faithful chronicler. The important thing was to get the job done. Holmes and Watson may be fictional but all the great men friendships, fictional or real, are the same on this simple fact: The friend for a man is the one who could help him get to Faya as agreed.

They say that society imposes certain rules and demands. Obviously, the impositions on men and women are different. Male friendships, while certainly different from the friendships formed by women are still friendships and none the lesser. For all their simplicity and apparent absurdities, bottomline is that men would be lost without their Boswells. And we can all drink to that.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

||: Fine Dining



||: Good food has always been among my passions. Next to music, eating has, is, and will always be an integral part of my life. I am not stating this primarily as a biological fact, but rather more of a psychosocial thing. I eat when I celebrate life's victories. I eat to nurse my sometimes wounded soul. I eat to bond with friends. I eat to offset my sleep deficits. I eat for any reason that one can think of in between.


||: Personally, I view eating and good food as a total experience. Through eating, you get to travel without moving. You get to experience different cultures first-hand sans a time machine. You get to exude wellness through the comfort, security, and general well-being that you get from good food. You also get to feel the love and effort that goes with how the food was prepared.


||: Having said more than enough to show how much I love food, it dawned upon me that my salary-less days is leading my gastronomical adventures into a bottleneck. I used to splurge A LOT on food. I wouldn't care how much something would cost as long as it can be delectably justified. For now, I am sadly in a state of eating-for-the-sake-of-survival. This brings me to this very moving short film that I want to share. Its entitled Fine Dining and is directed by Lance Katigbak. Watch and see the best fine dining experience anyone can have...


||: Watch HERE

Sunday, February 5, 2012

||: The Ketchup Freak and the Four-Eyed Dimwit



||: Since the beginning of the year, I have come to "re-discover" eating at the hospital's co-op canteen. Being item-less and going about with no salary for my final year of training, the said canteen has once again become my first choice for meals whenever food from the dietary would rather make me and the patients choose death over eating their fare.


||: Anyway, my frequent visits at the co-op canteen reminded me of an unforgettable experience with a person who I haven't seen for the longest time. Either she already died or was already treated, I really don't know for sure. What I know is that I realized I miss seeing her in the place where I usually see her... (you guessed it right!) the co-op canteen. Well, here's her story...




||: I had been wanting to write about this for months, I just didn't have the time. This incident happened a few months back, during those times when I was still living the life of a pauper because I still wasn't receiving my salary and didn't have the guts to still ask my parents for allowance.


||: I was with a co-resident at the co-op canteen having late dinner. It was about 10pm that time and we just finished doing some backlog ORs. We decided to have dinner before going home, and with the cash that we had, our only option was, naturally, the co-op canteen.


||: I recall having chicken that night. While feasting on what my wallet could afford, I noticed an old woman moving around the canteen. She was shuffling from one table to another, apparently looking for something. I couldn't extinguish my curiosity so my eyes followed her saccadically, finding out later that what she was looking for was ketchup!


||: I, too, tried to look for ketchup earlier for my chicken, but the server told me that they ran out of the condiment. That was fine with me, since I'm not really a condiment freak. But the old woman was remarkably persistent! Despite her seming difficulty in walking, she pursued going from table to table to check out each red plastic container for --what else, but-- ketchup.

||: "Ang arte naman nito," I thought to myself. "Ketchup freak. Can't she eat without ketchup?!"

||: Finally, I noticed that she was heading back to her table with a red plastic ketchup bottle. She placed a saucer in front of her and then perseveringly squeezed out every single drop of ketchup that she could out of the plastic container. After having a small pool of the condiment on her saucer, she seemed satisfied and put the ketchup bottle aside.

||: "Finally, she can eat," my thought bubble popped above me. But what happened next made me cringe in disgust. Not on the ketchup freak but on me. With her ketchup that barely filled a quarter of her small saucer, she took out a packet of crackers and dipped a piece before taking small bites. That was her dinner. That could also have been her only meal for the day. I really wanted to barf at myself that time. It really felt horrible to have thought of her that way.

||: An Ophtha resident whom I knew came in the canteen to buy a drink and saw her. The old woman was apparently her patient. She called out to her and asked her what she was doing in the hospital that late. I overheard her answer that she was there for her check-up at the OPD the following day. I felt worse.

||: I took out my wallet in an attempt to buy her something decent to eat. To my dismay, I only had twenty pesos left and a few coins in my pocket. Since it was already late, there were no longer twenty-peso treats (lugaw, pansit, spaghetti, sopas, mami, sandwiches, etc.) in the canteen. With enough change for a jeepney ride home, I got her a pack of puto worth fourteen pesos... something which could never erase my guilt from thinking bad thoughts of her. Even until now.

||: I saw her again a few weeks back. She never fails to remind me not to be judgmental and to never think badly of anyone. I still feel guilty about how badly I judged the "ketchup freak."

||: As for the four-eyed dimwit, I guess by now you know who he is.

||: Buhay, Kamatayan, Pag-ibig, Pagmamahal



||: "May mga sandaling katulad nito na ang pagharap sa salamin ay pagtitig sa sariling kabaong -- sinusuri ang katawan, ang balat, ang kabuuan. Nakasaksi ako ng maraming kamatayan: pagkaluoy ng bulaklak, pagpiglas ng tangkay ng halaman, pagbagsak ng maya sa lupa.

||: Ngunit paano kung ang pumanaw ay pag-ibig?

||: Binalikan ko ang salamin, ang aking katawan. Hindi ako maaaring mamatay. Sa sarili mismo maunang mabuhay ang pagmamahal..."

||: Talk to the Wall!


||: Ekaw ba'y nalolongkot? Walang magawa at walang makaosap? Pwes, eto ang pader... kausapin mo! Hehehe!

||: These grafitti are so funny. They're a collection of the works of witty vandals compiled from the different nooks and crannies of Diliman Republic. Just a warning, though: parental guidance is advised for some adult language. Read on...

||: FA Wall:
            "nobody cares"
        somebody answered:
            "not even the carebears?"
        then another:
            "not even kier?"
        then:

            "not even zoren?"
        lastly:
            "not even zorro?"
        all written by different people.

||: AS:
        AS chairs:
            "push button to eject seatmate"
            "push button to eject urself"
            "push button to kill teacher"
            "push button to eject teacher"
        ...reply:
            "it's jammed! We're doomed!"


        AS cubicle:
            "Donate your bulbol here..." tapos may chewing gum na pagdidikitan...

        AS chair :
            you know bobo? bobo is you!

        AS 1st floor CR:
            if you forget the past, then you porget the purious...

        AS 1st floor CR uli:
            Im a simple gay
        tapos me sumagot
            sira! Dapat Im simple and gay! Taga peyups ka ba? duh!
        tapos me sumagot ulit (with matching arrow pa na nakaturo dun sa reply)
            sira ka rin! yung simple is used as an adjective tapos yung gay is used as a noun.
            kaya ok lang yung simple gay nya!


||: CHEM:
        Chem chair:
            push button to spray acid on prof's face.

        Another chem chair:
            You Boron!!!

||: BIO:
        Bio chair:
            "Push cadaver to haunt teacher.

||: FO Santos:
        SA MGA NAGTATAPON NG BASURA DITO... bawal.

||: ENG'G:
        Sa Men's CR, facing the urinal:
            "Hawak ko saking mga kamay ang kinabukasan ng bayan!"
        Reply:
            "the future you are holding is very small."

||: GAB:
        sa likod ng armchair sa isang room sa GAB: takas ng ward 7

||: MATH:
        sa cr sa may math building:
            SUMAPI SA NPA!
        may sumagot:
            PAANO?
        may sumagot pa:
            MAGFILL UP NG COUPON AT IHULOG SA PINAKAMALAPIT NA DROP BOX
            SA SUKING
 TINDAHAN!

        sa math building, sa likod ng isang teachers chair sa 3rd floor:
            BABALA: asawa ni babalu

        sa math 3rd floor, sa isang upuan uli.
            "you'll NEVER find what you're looking for"
        May nag-reply:
            "find x."

        sa math 3rd floor, sa isa pang upuan uli. nakasulat sa armchair:
            F*CK DA WORLD!
        ta's may sumagot:
            F*CK U TOO! --WORLD

        3rd floor math cr:
            "kaibigan, pagkapatos mong umihi, paki PLUS mo naman, hehehe."

||: UPIS
        sa loob ng music room.
            maam _______(music prof) boses palaka!
        tas may sumagot
            nakarinig ka na ba ng boses ng palaka
        tas may sumagot uli
            weh
        tas may nag-react uli
            oo, sabi kokak! kokak!

||: VINZONS:
        Wall ng vinzons
            "Do not steal. The government hates competition"

        men's cr sa Vinzons:
            "remember: the hands that clean this toilet are the same hands that cook
             your food."

        men's cr waaaay above the urinal:
            "if you can reach this, the fire department wants you!"

||: NIGS:
        sa isang upuan:
            "f*ck nigs!"
        may nagreply:
            "who's nigs?"

||: MAIN LIB
        Sa isang lamesa ng main lib, filipiniana section:
            UP STUDENTS HAS BECOME PATETHIC"
        tapos may sumagot...
            "mali pang grammar at spelling mo, halatang di ka taga UP"

||: KALAI:
        Nietzsche - "God is dead"
        God - "Nietzsche is dead!"

||: SC:
        sa labas ng PNB:
            in case of emergency break ass and push butt
            (binura ang GL sa GLass and ON sa buttON)

        sa girls CR:
            Bawal ang vandal Dito!...
            Mommy said: First Aid Terramycin

        sa girls CR uli:
            My boyfriend and I had sex and now Im pregnant
        Reply:
            Pray to God

||: Expeliarmus! Confundo! ... Eureka!



||: It's dawning on me that I now have a little less than 11 months before I finish my residency training in General Surgery. Time indeed flies fast. It seems just like a few months back when I passed the Medical Licensure board exam and was somewhat clueless as to what specialty to pursue.


||: Looking back, I stumbled upon an old blog post from my Multiply site, which I am reposting for the sake of reminiscing...






||: Yesterday was one helluva day. It started with everything going smoothly and according to plan. I woke up early, even had time for a leisurely breakfast, arrived at PRC before it opened its gates at a little past eight. I was able to register, get my other license, and request for a certification all in less than an hour!

||: At around 9 o'clock, I was already in Robinson's Place Manila, having a second breakfast --err, make it mid-morning snack, hehe!-- at Gonuts Donuts, while waiting for Flo. We were supposed to go together to Dasma for our batch's thanksgiving mass (and for the college's pa-lunch and our beloved Dr. RA's pa-dinner). Since she unexpectedly had to attend to 2 patients, I went ahead at around 11 o'clock. Although I was running late, I was able to make it just in time for the Gospel. Things are still going smoothly and just according to plan.


||: Lunch was very pleasant since I got to see classmates and former mentors which I haven't seen since we graduated. After luncheon, some of us took advantage of already being in Dasma and went to the registrar's office to file requests for some documents which we will be needing for residency. While queueing at the cashier's, Alysees asked me about my plans and I told him how I was waiting for the DOH Integrated Residency Program for surgery. Suddenly, his girlfriend Leah, also a classmate, told me that Nyok, our classmate and my co-intern under the DOH Integrated Internship, already applied and was to start pre-res on Monday! Huwhaaaaaaaat!!!!

||: I really felt like I just performed the Expelliarmus and Confundo spells simultaneously... ON MYSELF! All the while I really thought application would start in September or October and pre-res would begin on October or November, as was customary. I was wobbly-kneed all throughout the afternoon, while Flo, Candy, Ayen, Aldwych, and I were killing time in SM before RA's dinner party. I felt like I got a solid upper-cut from Manny Pacquiao in the gut! I haven't submitted my application yet and pre-res was less than 5 days away!


||: Upon hearing the info yesterday, I really wanted to go home (stat! asap! immediately! right now!) and rest! But I chose not to be KJ and stayed on until the party (which I enjoyed, especially the food! Thanks, Sir RA!) and even went home later than some.


||: Today, I was supposed to go to the DOH Integration Office at NKTI and East Avenue MedicalCenter first thing in the morning. But I was in denial and ended up sleeping most of the day and went there at the last hour -- at 4 in the afternoon! O, diba, pasaway? Hehehe!


||: I found out through Ma'am Glenda, the ever gracious and accomodating secretary of the DOH Integration Office, that USec Jade del Mundo was still processing the accreditation of the Integrated Surgery Program of DOH. Since they still lacked some papers, they decided to do a semi-integration, still with the 5 DOH Specialty Hospitals: Philippine Heart Center, National Kidney and Transplant Institute, Lung Center of the Philippines, Philippine Children's Medical Center, and East Avenue Medical Center (as the mother hospital), while its not yet official. So I was told to hand in my application there, instead, since it will eventually be the Integrated Program once they finish working-on the accreditation.

||: Since the pasaway me went late, I wasn't able to catch the secretary of the Department of Surgery, but a resident, Dr. Jiju Garcia assured me that they were still accepting applications. Besides, Ma'am Glenda mentioned that Dr. Nilo delos Santos, the DOH Integration Coordinator and surgery consultant at East Avenue, said that he would accept anyone who had their internship with DOH. Oh well, I'll just go back tomorrow then... early this time, I'll make sure! Hehehe!


||: Anyway, why is it that it always seems that I am under the Expelliarmus and Confundo spells... and self-inflicted, at that?! I am always clueless with application deadlines! I feel lika a Ron Weasly- or perhaps a Neville Longbottom-incarnate whose spells almost always backfire on them. This same cluelessness caused my delay in entering med school and the very reason why I wasn't able to apply in PGH, although I am perfectly happy and proud to have graduated from La Salle -- and would not have it any other way, if ever given the chance to start things all over again!

||: Although my anxiety was tamed by the assurance that they're still accepting applications, I still continue to pray for guidance as to where my career is heading. As you see, I believe God has been behind my med-life all throughout... and always in the nick of time. You see, from the very beginning, I was clueless when the NMAT was and how one applies for it. Through a classmate, Taj, I learned everything I needed to know about it and I even got to prepare for it well. I also recall I was in CDO for Christmas when I found out that the deadline for submission of application for PGH was on that very same day... and that the other med schools' deadlines were also over! When I got back in Manila after the holidays, I found out that La Salle was still accepting applications, when Flo invited me and another classmate (Shana) to study there with her. And as I've said earlier, I am perfectly happy and proud to have graduated from La Salle -- and would not have it any other way, if ever given the chance to start things all over again! The curriculum's perfect! I mean, with a semi-PBL/modular curriculum, I got to experience both the problem-based learning and traditional curriculum -- the two ways of teaching medicine. And since its a Catholic university, I really am proud how our medical education (including the community and our classmates/friends) moulded us to become Christian doctors.


||: The story doesn't end there. When we were applying for internship matching, I already submitted my form (with East Avenue Medical Center as my first choice)  when again, the clueless me, found out about the DOH Integrated Internship that was based in NKTI. But when I received my acceptance/matching letter at East Avenue, it accompanied a letter which informed me that there have been changes in their program since the DOH Integrated Internship has been formalized, making EAMC officially part of the integration! And, had I not attended the thanksgiving mass at school, I wouldn't have known about the changes in the schedule of the application deadline and pre-residency.

||: I believe God is behind all these last-minute twists. This evening while hearing mass, I prayed for Him to continue guiding me and bringing me to where He wants me to go. And then I came into a realization that the cluelessness that's making me miss out things is the very same cluelessness that's allowing me to let God lead me and plan things for me in exactly the way He wants it to be -- the perfect way!

||: Although the perpetually clueless me continues to cast the Expelliarmus and Confundo spells on myself, I am thankful that God is always there to make my mistakes serendipitous... Eureka!





||: PROLOGUE: For the record, I'm glad I was led into pursuing Surgery. I couldn't imaging myself in another specialty! ü

||: One (More) Chance


||: DISCLAIMER: This old blog entry is being reposted FOR a friend (hopefully this would somehow help) and NOT for any other reasons.

||: One of the luxuries that my so-called vacation has been affording me is unlimited TV time. We have this what we call legally illegal cable TV access. Confusing? Well, in our building, most units have cable TV access. The unit in front of ours, the one to our right, above, below, and even the one to our left (in the other building) all have --I think-- CATV connections. And so, with just an ordinary antenna, we have free access to Sky Cable Platinum! Woohoo! The best things in life are indeed free! Hahaha! Although the reception is not as crystal clear, what have I to complain? Besides, the more important channels (Star World, AXN, HBO, National Geographic, Lifestyle Network, etc.) are clear enough to watch for hours without straining my eyes (but the long hours of doing so probably is, hehehe!), especially after midnight when more channels become clearer. That explains our "legally illegal" connection.

||: With such free access, I usually turn the TV on even if I'm not really watching anything, since I only get to do this rarely (labo no?). Anyway, the other night, the TV was on and doing its thing in the background while I was busy catching up on forwarding messages to friends and cousins who text me regularly (including those who don't but matter to me, hehe), when I heard something which literally made me (and the world around me) stop.

||: The dialogue of the guy went something like "5 years, itatapon mo lang ang lahat? Hindi mo man lang ako bibigyan ng isang chance para ayusin ang lahat?"

||: That made me blurt out something that you can spell by pressing SHIFT + all the numeric keys on the top row of your keyboard. Yes, I very rarely curse, and that line made me. Primarily because it brought back very painful memories. It felt like a scab that was covering a slowly healing wound was forcibly taken off causing the wound to rebleed profusely.

||: I stopped what I was doing and focused on the TV. It was, I found out, the trailer of the Star Cinema Movie One More Chance (I see faces smirking and cringeing in disgust... I don't care). I know this may be major baduy to a lot, but I am not ashamed to admit that I was able to relate to the movie (or, at least, to what the trailer showed).

||: The curse wasn't actually for anyone (her, him, or both of them)... no, it was for the pain that I (once again) felt. The trailer really felt like it was reminding me of my not so recent sob story. And as if to add insult to the injury, the trailer goes:

        GIRL: 10 years from now ganto pa rin kaya tayo?
        GUY: 11,12,13,14, forever & ever!
        GIRL: Promise?
        GUY: Promise.

        WHEN LOVE ENDS...

        GUY: 5 years, itatapon mo nang lahat?
        GIRL: Kailangan ko 'to, kailangan mo rin.
        GUY: Pero ikaw ang kailangan ko.

        FRIEND: If kaya pang ayusin, piplitin, but if this is really what both of you need then
                     just be strong, magiging mahirap at masakit pero hopefully all the pain would
                     be worth it...

        HOW LONG SHOULD YOU HOLD ON?

        HOW SOON SHOULD YOU LET GO?

        GUY: Mahal na mahal kita kahit ang sakit na!

||: Was someone listening to our conversations? Or is that what people usually say to each other in situations like this? The last movie I saw was I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, which I wasn't even able to finish because of this circumstance: my senior and the rest of my team sneaked out of the hospital one lunch time during pre-duty the other month to eat out and watch a movie at The Block. A little over halfway through the movie, the chief resident was suddenly looking for our senior and was calling him on the phone. We had to leave and rush back to the hospital because he told the chief that we were just having lunch and that he'll be in the office in 10 minutes! Anyway, segue aside, that trailer made me curious enough to want to watch the movie and see how everything ends up. But then again, I don't think I'm masochist enough to risk the possibility of watching a very "similar" story to my own and to relive the pain.

||: That night, I didn't watch TV until the wee hours of dawn as I have been doing for the past few days. And I swore not to watch too much TV anymore. Good thing I'm going back to work again tomorrow. That would make things easier. Diversion of attention, I mean.

||: But just an afterthought: I know this is a bad thought, but I think it would be cathartic to be able to personally say the last few lines shown in the trailer:

        HOW DO YOU MOVE ON?

        GIRL: Ako naman ang my gusto nito diba? Pero bakit ang sakit sakit? Hanggang
                 ngayon umaasa pa rin ako na sabihin mo sa akin na ako pa rin, ako na lang,
                 ako na lang ulit.
        GUY: SHE LOVED ME AT MY WORST, YOU HAD ME AT MY BEST... AND YOU CHOSE
                 TO BREAK MY HEART...

        About how true love waits, hopes, and needs... ONE MORE CHANCE