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Bern's Book Club: Into the Drowning Deep
Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant was more violent, more real, and more terrifying than I thought. In the most fun way possible.
I began reading this because of Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield. I was looking for a book with underwater horror and sure, Armfield delivered that. The Eldritchian quality of the oceanic entity preempts the chill you feel as you read about the body horror. A wife watching her wife who was trapped in a submersible for longer than expected slowly turn unrecognizable, eyes popping, an addiction to salt, webbing on the hands. The grief was terrifying and what brought it upon them added to the mystery. But it wasn’t a tangible ‘monster’. So I needed to read another underwater horror, obviously.
Into the Drowning Deep began with a mystery, yes, but already, from the start, there was a proposition of oceanic creatures that could tear humans apart. Easily. Very concrete fear which I liked. It was not a matter of what was doing the killing of people in the middle of the Mariana Trench, it was a matter of when we will see what was doing the killing.
When I looked up a listicle of what other sea horrors I could read, it said that maybe avoid reading this if you don’t like the really terrifying portrayal of mermaids and it’s true. They are very scary in this book, but they are also so, so interesting. As a sci-fi horror novel, it does a really good job of scaring you while also illustrating a clear vision of a mermaid—its anatomy, its hunting nature, its language.
Grant also discusses contradictions such as the way a media conglomerate is funding scientific research in the middle of the ocean, the desire to know fighting with the desire to survive, the lack of humanity in scientific discovery in order to further mankind. In these conversations, the dialogue or the writing can border cheesy at times, but it does not make what the book says less true. And in general, the writing style is easy to read while remaining interesting.
This gave me what Our Wives Under the Sea didn’t, and for that, I am grateful. Ironically, a joy to read.
If you like scifi horror, especially one marine in nature, you might want to pick this up! Four stars.
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i keep items in my shopee cart like a collection. add this, add that without ever buying it. as if having it in my digital cart expels the need to buckle to consumerism.
once, my boyfriend gasped at the sight of 100 items in my cart. he asked why i wouldn't like to put it in my likes tab instead. i didn't know how to tell him it's not the same as having it.
my likes tab means i might go back to it one day if i ever remember. my shopee cart means i will purchase it, just bidding time. but the truth is, i delete more items from my cart, ending up buying one out of ten.
i tell my boyfriend scrolling through my cart shows me my different eras, what i liked at a certain time based on what i have been putting. it shows me i have grown, or maybe just changed. once an inactive item, it tells me it's time to let the dream go. whatever item that may be.
recently, it showed me that my shopee cart cannot have more than 200 items. my jaw dropped, feeling my digital container stopping me from buying and buying turning its back on me. maybe this means there are many things i must let go of now. maybe i need to empty my cart.
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my 20s aren't so hot
i'm afraid i will feel like 23 forever. i am 24 now, turning 25, yet i am in the same state of confusion, of limbo. is this what purgatory feels like? is this why ghosts roam around possessing living people's bodies, desperate to escape perpetual oblivion?
i think about all of the times i tell people what i do for a living, after telling them i was in creative writing, a playwright. i see light leave their eyes, and i have to say, no, wait, let me explain myself. let me make myself interesting again, i think. and i convince them why i do a boring job completely unrelated to my process of making. i tell them i love advocacy work, i tell them i love the work set-up, i tell them i'm earning okay, i tell them it's interesting. in telling them, i know i am trying to convince myself too.
i always do for a little bit, until i have to go home. actually face the work i've been bragging about. i then ask myself again what i am doing with my life.
do i actually have a plan? can i still make things the way i used to before? or are those skills from college only memories i grasp onto now hoping i can still call to them?
i'm turning 25 and i am nowhere near what i dreamed of when i was 15. i am not a filmmaker, or a new york times bestselling author, or a rich youtuber, or living on my own. i can barely even call myself a writer anymore.
i know i don't have to chase things, that i have time, yet it doesn't feel that way. i wonder if i want to prove myself to younger me, or i just know i deserve so much more?
i'm turning 25 in a month, when will things let up? last year was the first time it didn't rain on my birthday? will it not bless me this year again? i hope it does. i need something. i need to destroy things and remake them. i need something else. i need more than this.
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Peeling Skin
I unsheathe the blunt, brandless razor, really only good for one use, it says, but ignore that.
I once used a ‘disposable razor’ for more than a year and I did not die.
I start to slather the conditioner like shaving cream; it’s slimy on my legs, like a slippery kind of grime.
I lift one leg, do an upwards motion with a razor that dares to not cut and my hair starts coming off.
This routine has always made me feel like a fully realized woman— shedding hair I’m not supposed to have, coming out of a bristly, rough cocoon.
I work my way up, and then onto the upper leg. My hand moves involuntarily like I am doing a biological process.
I go to the next leg, and then I hear a quiet but coarse scrape. Like the peeling of a carrot.
There is white where my razor was, where my skin was. I pause, let it sink in— I peeled my skin off. I wait for the white to bleed, confirm that I am human. I continue shaving up my leg, and then my thigh. I draw my eyes away from the blood, stop myself from crying. Until I am done.
It is finished. I can feel like myself again. Most of the hair is gone, even where I peeled the skin.
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Today, my boss asked me if I remembered Lolo. He saw my lola’s post that it’s been 20 years since he passed away. I give him the simple answer: yes. Yes I do because I lived with him.
I do not tell my boss that I remember so well. That my memories with him are some of the clearest ones I have.
I went to pre-school at four. At the time, in the province, this was quite early, and really, not seen as essential. But I wanted to go because my ate and kuya both went to school, and what was the point of staying at home when my siblings were gone the entire day? I do not remember saying goodbye to him before leaving for school but I remember going home so well. I’d be running and then quiet, almost tiptoeing to him. To greet him. To tell him I’m home. To saludar. To lie down in bed beside him and put my head on his chest to listen to his heartbeat. Not even bothering to change from my uniform. This routine was more important. It was as if even without really knowing, I understood how much I’d value spending time with him in retrospect.
I learned about Gary Granada because of him. He had a radio with a CD player in the retro cream color that old gadgets used to come in. He would play Gary Granada CDs there repeatedly. I formed an odd but very strong connection to the song Saranggola sa Ulan chronicling the tragedy of star-crossed lovers, and the persistence of romance and love. I learned the lyrics and made an interpretative dance that I performed. I remember his laugh clearly. His amusement, even more. At the time, I didn’t understand. It was just a dance. I didn’t realize the joy of watching your four-year-old grandchild perform so earnestly to a song you liked with all the trust they have put on you.
One year, we would spend Christmas in the hospital because Lolo was confined. I have a picture of myself holding a Zest-O sipping happily, no questions about why we were in the hospital for Christmas. After all, all my memories with my lolo are permeated with his sickness. I cannot remember a cancer-free lolo, unfortunately. But I remember his love, and I remember him lovingly despite.
My last memory of him was bidding goodbye. This one, I cannot remember how much has been fabricated by the brain to fill in the gaps. The only thing I am sure of was that they had to write a letter to the hospital to let me in the ICU (?) to visit. Because wherever he was before he died, children weren’t allowed. The family must’ve known he was about to go. And then the next thing I remember was crying. Lots of it. I said goodbye. I said that I hope that in heaven, he was alive. I was a religious child who obviously did not understand the concept of death. Or maybe I understood the afterlife too well. And then I remember my father trying to console me, asking me if all I wanted was to ‘bless’. That he could do that with me. I laugh. He laughs with me. He was probably relieved his child stopped crying loudly in a hospital. This was the first moment of reprieve I remember.
My lolo holds a lot of my first memories. I doubt I’d remember so clearly if those weren’t my last years with him. So, yes. I do remember him. I remember him a lot. I remember him still, 20 years after. And I miss him so much, larger and larger seemingly.
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The Goodest Boy
The vet stands in the corner of the room, and the dog lays on the metal table. The mother, daughter, and son are all crying–staring at the body that used to be the goodest boy in the entire world. When the sniffles stop for a bit, the vet cuts in. The daughter guesses he’s practiced this many times, cutting into the grieving. He says his condolences, not without emotion, but with a cadence that tells you you aren’t special. He talks about how long the goodest boy has been with the mother and the daughter and the son… And then he tells the family that they did everything they could. And then he says the suspected cause of death. And then he says he understands how much he means to the family. Yet the daughter thinks, you don’t understand, he is– was really the goodest boy in the entire world. Do not look at his remains like you understand. We’ve lost him before he completely collapsed. He was the goodest boy until his body failed him. Then the daughter thinks, how dare I write an essay in my head when the goodest boy in the entire world lies dead? Sometimes, literary sentimentality can save us from breaking down completely.
Mommy brings a spoon of meat and skin from chicken on the table. She walks to a dog bowl and calls, “Augustus, here!” We both pause. Only for a fraction of a second, even though it feels much longer. We look at each other, and silently, we share and carry our sadness.
We got Augustus Morris in 2019. One morning, Kuya asked me and Mommy to go to a dog breeder. We have gone to the house before to pick up the first dog Kuya will ever buy from them–Bugel. Bugel was given to his girlfriend’s family. He’d be renamed to something less silly, and he’d grow up kingly.
We picked up Augustus from the same house, maybe a year later. He looked quite like Bugel as a puppy. Black, white, small, a little funny-looking. We think: he’s going to grow up as refined as Bugel. We were completely wrong.
Sure, he grew older. But grow up? He didn’t seem to. He’s a mix between a chihuahua and a shih tzu, and it seems that he only got the chihuahua blood. He remained small, except unlike most chihuahuas I’ve met, he wasn’t nervous or feisty. He never growled or tried to bite my face. (Someone’s chihuahua tried to do this to me before. Rest in peace, Chico). Instead he was jumpy and behaved; he was so goofy. Unlike Bugel, he did not look refined or regal after a year or two. He remained as silly as can be.
Across the four years we had him, he’d meet the entire extended family. They’d pet him, carry him, draw him even. Look for him when he was sleeping or hiding. Everybody watched him because everybody loved him. He was small and funny like a cartoon, and he’d snuggle up to almost anyone who gave him attention. He would also end up meeting all our current partners–Kuya’s, Ate’s, mine.
When my partner visited for the first time, he fell in love–with Augustus, not me. I know this because he kept carrying him around like a little airplane. Or like that superman game you play with kids where they put their belly on the soles of your feet then you lift them up. He would begin to share this with his family, with his siblings the most. And then his friends. And my friends.
This was just upon seeing Augustus too; without spending time with him, they just know that he’s the goodest boy in the entire world. His mere existence was enough. His energy. His earnestness.
He was the goodest boy to them even without knowing that he would sneak into my room to wake me up or to say hello to me while I do yoga. That we would wake up with one slipper missing because he stole them in the night so he could cuddle with them in his bed. That he would never snatch food from your hand no matter how close it was to his face because he waited for someone to say go! That when he saw me crying or felt that I was sad, he’d jump next to me so we could both sit with my feelings. That he would sneak into the deepest part under tables or chairs so that I couldn’t give him a bath. That he smiled for the camera like a person. That he’d tap on our legs during meals to ask for food. That he would sit near Mommy while she sliced kamatis or pipino because he knew she’d give him some. That he would play with an unopened pistachio like a real toy. That he loved people as fiercely as people loved him.
I wanted to tell the vet when he said he understood that he didn’t. Because he never knew Augustus. He didn’t see him lying on his back while sleeping, moving his legs like he’s running in his dreams. He didn’t see him wag his tail when I pointed my camera at him. He didn’t see him sit in front of the bathroom door while Mommy took a bath like a real guard. He couldn’t understand that the body there used to be the goodest boy in the entire world because he never really saw him. He never will. I wanted to say all of this, but I didn’t because what was the point? Augustus is gone. The goodest boy is gone.
Instead, we take the box amicably in our hands. Carry his body into the car. Give him a burial. And we cry some more. And then to myself, I think of what John Green says in The Anthropocene Reviewed, “[L]ove survives death.” And I do hope so.
Augustus, I know you cannot read all this. You will never comprehend that I’m telling you how much I love you. How much we all do. But I hope, in the time that you were stealing our slippers and eating ube from my fingers and refusing to eat banana, you felt the entirety of it.
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October 24, 2023
I have not been able to write in months. Here and there, a few paragraphs. Here and there, a line or two. But none of them are whole and filling and satisfying. Digestible, sure, I guess, could be.
I crave a big writing task, a project to pour my entire being into. At 10pm, in bed as I read, I look for the feeling that staying up until 1:34am writing endlessly gives. When the words just seem to take over your body even without caffeine. Instead, I am only filled with ideas. One about a Catholic mother turning to fortune-telling and clairvoyance out of desperation, for comfort. Another, the concept of a mech bakunawa swallowing the moon and extracting everything else, controlled by corporations. Many more even tinier ideas just floating around, hoping they could make me full.
It doesn’t. You know when you cannot remember a word and it feels like it’s at the tip of your tongue? This is what my ideas feel like. They’re not filling; they’re frustrating. They’re driving me to the brink of my sanity. The lack of realization of all these things are so painful and frustrating.
However, no matter how angry I get at myself, it feels as if the words are lost within me. If I do this, if I write and complain and tell you about things every day, will things change? Will the mother finally visit Quiapo? Will the bakunawa finally meet its end? Will I feel filled? Fulfilled? The word I’ve been looking for for months spilling fast, unapologetic, rushing? I hope so. I really do.
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Tonight I am hit with a clarity, the things I’m stressing about are arbitrary. Well, most of it. Responsibilities and bills and capitalism and class are real. And our struggles because of these also are. But the deadlines I try to meet (even earlier than I’m supposed to at times), the expectations of the people who assign work to me, the important work dates. They are all arbitrary.
One day, I can just disappear, or quit, or take a step back. I will not die. I will not stop existing. And as weird as this sounds, that is comforting.
I am not a fan of quitting. I am not a fan of doing things only halfway. While I have a few times, it’s not my regular programming. And so, when I commit to something, I tend to have this strong feeling that I am stuck. That I can’t get out. But I can if it gets too bad. Or I can take a break or ask for a pause.
Things are arbitrary—the things I value the most, or am afraid of the most, I should say.
The people and the feelings are all real. The value of what we do is real. But the belief that we must do the things assigned to us, that we must only do this, that we can’t stop or breathe until everything is finished, that the world will stop if we disappear, it’s arbitrary.
I guess if so, I’ll be okay.
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In a mad rushing world
The past few weeks, everything has felt like a rush job. Every part of my life has become a checklist waiting to be tended to. I have been running with no breaks to chase this unknown thing just to fall flat on my face. All of the tasks feel like thankless jobs with no space or time to relish after. I did not imagine that this is what they meant when they said, life goes on. I want the pauses. I want the halt. I want the quietness that is lent before daybreak.
Progress is slow but the demands are fast. Can I not want slowness with growth? They say patience is crucial if you want good change. How come it feels like the rest of the world is not patient with me?
My life is shifting all at once, yet it wants me to be the same. I'm not sure I can do that, or want that.
I guess we'll have to wait and see, even if no one seems to want to wait anymore.
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The Terrifying Ordeal of Being Known (By Yourself)
June 6, 2023
Note: This isn't a literary essay, I just wanted to get some jitters out.
I have been lost for a year(ish). Apparently, the only structure that kept me together was school. So when it ended for me, I was stuck standing in the middle of the room after the party was over. I don't know why I'm so shocked when I was obsessed with academic validation and treated school like the entire world.
I can confirm that the graduates were right. Post-graduation is more difficult. Because you decide what you want to do, you decide what you like, you decide who to keep in touch with. It's all you. And for my first year out of the thing I used to call hellhole, I decided to work for a former professor. I still do. I look up to him and he has been a great boss. It's a lot of writing and research work. I don't mind, especially since we have flexible hours. But it buried me deeper into the structurelessness of my life. Flexible hours meant deciding when I do what and deciding what to do was already too much for me.
A year out of school meant a year of not knowing who I really am. I have gone through multiple hobbies, haircuts, and outfit inspos, and I still don't know. All I know is who I am not. And what I do not like. Being stuck in this cycle has convinced me that this is it. I am meant to feel like this, like I don't know who I am but comfortable.
I reveled in the comfort of the past year despite its structurelessness. Sometimes, I felt like rotting out of a lack of motion but I thought that was better than being burnt out. I can tell you, neither is better than the other. The thing was, I didn't know what to do.
But I guess, a year is enough to be tired of not being tired, and of not knowing anything about myself anymore. I bet I wouldn't even be able to answer a slambook anymore. So when I saw this opening for this job I've been dreaming of for a while, I applied without thinking because if I thought, the current comfort would tell me to stop, you're comfortable now. How can you be truly comfortable though without knowing you? Wouldn't that just be a facade then?
Surprisingly, I think I'm going to be accepted in. I am reeling, from excitement and nerves and fear. They say that when your gut doesn't feel good, you should trust it. But I think, this is just what it's like to feel again (and to have anxiety). My mentor in high school also used to ask me before oratorical speech competitions, kinakabahan ka ba? To which I would nod to, always. And she would reply, buti 'yan na kinakabahan ka kasi ibig sabihin, may pakialam ka.
I guess It is normal to feel afraid and nervous about something that matters. And it is normal to feel the terror of knowing yourself after losing you for quite a bit.
Just wish me all the luck please. I need it. I hope I find a piece of me in this commitment I'm about to make.
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TOEM and 'The Art of Noticing'
May 30, 2023
In TOEM, you are a silly lil guy who looks like Ilong Ranger going on his first big boy trip to see a phenomenon called Toem. You travel with your grandmother’s camera, primarily viewing the world and experiencing adventure with your lens.
There are many quests to complete in the form of taking pictures, or really in simpler terms, noticing things. TOEM reminds me of the fondness I experience with every camera click, knowing I just took another nice photo I can look back on.
There are animals, people, and places that demand to be photographed in this game; here, documentation is fun.
I enjoyed this game a lot, probably one of my favorite games now. I love how it tasks you to not only climb a peak to see a beautiful phenomenon (trust me, that part goes so hard), it also asks you to look around. I don’t care how cliche it is, we do forget to look around, and I think this was a really good reminder.
In fact, TikTok has a phrase for this, for those who take the time to take pictures of their daily life, the art of noticing. TOEM teaches you that with lovely visuals and funny characters.
I played this game for 11 hours. Yes, that is much longer than the estimate. But that is what the art of noticing does to you (and being stuck in some quests as a baby gamer, I guess.)
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The Displacement of the Probinsyana
May 24, 2023 - May 29, 2023
I think about home often. And when I do, I am transported to the shade of an acacia tree where I believed a kapre resided but chose not to pick me up and roll me into a cigar. I think of a clump of mango trees where people in white flowy dresses set up tables for a feast (or at least that's what my lola's mother said). I think of heavy plastic sandals with mud stuck on the heels after walking in gowns pretending like we were part of the local sagala.
When I think of home, I am compelled to think of the first place I ever lived in, San Miguel, Bulacan. It is a part of the province where people had an entirely different Tagalog lexicon paired with a strong accent that can be comparable to 'country'. As someone with a non-Bulakenyo family (they moved before I was born), I had to assimilate in school. When my friends started saying words like "taban" and "panik", I asked them what they meant and took a mental note that I tucked away in my brain so I didn't forget. The accent came naturally the more I talked to my classmates.
Whenever I went to conferences of Paulinian schools where students came from literally the entire Philippines, I found myself trying to use the conyo lexicon and neutralizing my accent. I pronounced my friends' names differently-- "Machu" became "Matthew", "Rayana" came with a soft R instead of a rolling one. I remember desperately wanting to impress students from Manila. Maybe if I talked like them enough, they would finally acknowledge me. I was not new to being shoved aside because I was a probinsyana. Manileño students would probably deny this because they didn't notice, but in the congresses, they would form cliques and lead the group without a consensus. I found myself wanting to be like them, but also hating them for being dismissive.
I'm sure a part of this was projection, but a part of it was true. And so I hated them and I hated myself a little bit too.
I wanted to be them so bad that I wanted to escape to the city. Maybe if I lived in Manila long enough, I would be like them. People would notice me and listen to me and count me in.
I did get all of that, I still do. Except I lost a lot in the process. I lost the deeper vocabulary and the strong accent and I missed them as soon as I did.
The probinsyana with 'big dreams'--of being heard, seen, known--is destined to move to the city and cut parts of themselves in the process if they want to survive. Don't want to get held up? Lose the wonder and sparkle in your eyes and replace it with grim determination to yank your bag out of someone's hands when they try to snatch it.
I have always wanted to be 'a creative', whatever the fuck that means. I wanted to be writer, a filmmaker, someone respected in the arts. I wanted to make things for a living, and that in itself necessitated moving. While I'm sure it's different now with the revolutionary work-from-home, there are simply more opportunities for the kind of livelihood I want in the city. When I look back on what my classmates' parents jobs were, at least those who stayed in town, they were accountants, nurses, municipal workers, dentists, or business owners. While I do not have anything against those jobs, I do not want those jobs. I could have been a teacher there, but I would have been yelled at by nuns, paid in peanuts, and forced to teach a subject I knew nothing about.
I was having lunch with Mita, my lola, earlier today. She told me how when she moved to the city for college, she would think of the food she got to try and dream of earning enough money to buy the same food in the province for her younger siblings. When her dad would introduce her to his compadres, he would say, 'Panganay ko 'tong babae, nag-aaral sa Maynila!' Simply getting inside the city was an accomplishment, it was a promise of better lives.
I don't know if I'd still say that now with the inflation and rising heat, but at least, it promises having a job--and even then, not to everyone.
The first week I moved to Quezon City with my mother (after forcing her for a semester to finally move here because I was desperate to get out of the town and get the town out of me), I started learning to commute to school. And not the baby-commute I knew from San Miguel which was taking a tricycle and telling the driver where you wanted to go like they're taxi cabs. This was the big-girl-commute. After four grueling jeepney rides to school and three grueling jeepney rides going home, I asked my mom if we could move back to San Miguel again. The city has chewed me and was spitting me out.
Of course, my mother said no. She said that I just needed to be strong and adjust. Because what I said was stupid. She was right, after all. After getting my black shoes sopping wet during a rainstorm, chasing countless jeepneys, falling off of a jeepney and scraping my knee on the road, getting taken advantage of by a taxi driver by not giving me change, losing my wallet to snatchers, losing my Bulakenya accent and the vocabulary I worked for my entire life, I finally adapted. Survival of the fittest, as Charles Darwin believed.
I am thankful that my mother let me experience all the shit things because I would have kept being chewed on by the city if I didn't toughen up. And I needed to toughen up because the probinsyana who 'dreams' (or who wants to be a 'creative', or who wants to 'see the world', or who wants to 'experience culture, or who wants to be 'well-educated', or who needs to pay the bills) has always been destined to be displaced. If you ask your parents or grandparents, you quickly discover that at least one of them moved to the city for a 'better life'. My maternal grandmother was a hardcore Bicolana, my father was Novo Ecijano. Our roots are in provinces where trees grow and magic doesn't seem far-fetched and you can hold the world in your palms, but they are dislodged for dreams and survival. I am reminded of a balete tree when I think of myself clinging to the city like I am a parasite and it is my host tree.
Sometimes, I find my peers not knowing these roots about their families until it comes up, but that's because probinsyanas go through a process of loss (of themselves, their identity) to survive a cruel city. And we barely get to ever grieve over this loss.
How often do you hear people make fun of provincial accents? Of probinsyanas not being 'cultured'? Of being clueless?
The probinsyana camouflages out of the need to survive. How are you going to have a better life or give your family a better life if the city crushes you, after all?
The displacement of the probinsyana is not unknown. I discover that many women I look up to who have really made a name for themselves are probinsyanas. Because we have something to prove. Because what is the point of cutting parts of yourself, of changing who you are, of losing the sense of home, if you do not become good at what you do at the very least?
When I think of home, I am transported to the shade of an acacia tree and magical moments. When I think of home, I think of memories I made years ago in a place I used to call home. The displaced probinsyana rarely discovers their sense of home again after the move. Coming home to the province always feels strange. Like meeting a stranger who used to be a lover. You knew them, but not anymore, it seems. It is never really coming home; it is just visiting. And if you visit someplace, how would you call that your home?
Yet, the city is not home neither. It never will be. It is grueling and cruel and filled with the stench of excessive and exploitative labor and rotting dreams.
The displacement of the probinsyana seems inspiring from the outside looking in, but it is tragic when you think of how much she had to lose to get to the top.
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Nonfiction finally made me cry again: thoughts on Everything I Know About Love by Dolly Alderton
May 22, 2023
I found myself crying today. For many different reasons--my birthday for this year is over, I am dealing with separation anxiety yet again, I am tired.
But for the most part, I cried because I finally finished Everything I Know About Love by Dolly Alderton. I took me months to get through it, and I was ready to admit that it is just difficult for me to read nonfiction, until I saw the comments on it from this YouTube review. I guess it wasn't just me who found it hard to read. Like others, I didn't didn't think the first 1/3 was strong enough to be the first 1/3. I found it quite boring, and a little bratty (but I can forgive the bratty because really, there is lots of great nonfiction created because of brattiness). How will a woman develop as a character in a book if she isn't bratty after all? (That was a joke by the way.)
I found myself reeling waiting for it to be finished. But trust, it's worth getting through the high school stories from the first third. Trust me, it gets better when she gets a little older (which is also true for a lot of things and many people so I guess it's thematic?) The boring, bratty 1/3 was worth getting through to read the other 2/3 of the book. Actually, upon finishing it, I realized that I had to know the brat to know the writer deeply eventually. The brat becomes something more, flawed and young and irresponsible and damaged and a people-pleaser, and then you start rooting for her.
It was not always easy for me to understand Alderton's behavior. Most of the time, it seemed like she was just making it harder for herself. I wanted to hold her by the shoulders and shake her to knock some sense into her. But that's the whole point, isn't it? Even Alderton didn't really know why she did what she did. Until she saw her therapist and they dissected her psyche, and finally, we understood as well. We knew her when she started knowing herself.
Maybe I also ended up liking this book because I saw myself in her. In the Fleabag-esque way that girls say, "she's just like me for real". While I am not as reckless or as brash as her, our old actions come from a similar place: the constant need for validation. Dolly Alderton and I are both Mirrorball-adjacent, and because of this, I really ended up feeling for her. Dolly was and is not a terrible person in her nonfiction. In fact, she cared a lot. She was a good friend despite the hiccups. She held Farly when two of the most heartbreaking things that could happen to her did in a span of maybe two years. She was good to herself, eventually. She figured it out.
Her writing gripped me because she was brave enough to put everything in, even the things that were questionable (like the tantrums about her best friend being in a happy relationship, and sleeping with a guru who she never met but felt so connected to). Especially the things that were questionable. The pay-off was better because of what was questionable. And knowing that she liked being in control of what people thought of her, I bet it was harder than it seemed.
I was crying by the end because I was proud of her, because I found her prose funny and beautiful, because it gave me hope for myself, because I, too, wanted to learn everything (or most things) about love through female friendships. For the most part, I have. But I want more. I wanted more than what I was allowed with the people I treated as my closest friends for over a decade. I was crying because the people I remember when I see "we were girls together" all over the internet are not close to me now. I was crying because this book is the textbook definition of "we were girls together" and I didn't have that for myself anymore.
I was crying because I suddenly felt the desire to be a writer again, like Dolly Alderton. I wanted to be funny. I wanted people to read parts of me. I wanted to pick myself apart and understand better. I wanted people to know me. I wanted to look back on experiences and re-live them through writing.
I was crying because the longing for many things were so strong, and it hadn't been for quite a while. This is how I ended up with this new blog. I hope I get to keep it.
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