Monday, July 27, 2015
Stories of my mother
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
The two weeks I spent in my birthplace of Tagoloan town, Misamis Oriental in northern Mindanao, Philippines was a reunion with my ailing father, whom I haven't visited for five years.
He might be boney and fragile but my Tatay (father) Simeon Barros Naelga's mind is as clear as the skies. During those few precious days with him I recorded all our conversations to serve as posterity for me.
One of those topics we discussed was about his late wife, my mother Loreta “Lily” Ejem Espellarga Naelga. Sorry Nay (mother), we were talking behind your back--he said he was just stating facts about you now that you are gone.
He had no fears of retaliation from Nanay because she was six feet below ground. But trust me, my tatay's recollection of my Nanay was told with gentleness and love. I would see a tear or two drop from his eyes.
It was not a straight recording I stopped twice for him to compose himself. Today, July 27th, is her 10th death anniversary today and she is always remembered by those she left behind.
Nanay (Mother) took time to learn something especially if it has something to do with electricity and technology. She learned about it with my father's help but still scared if it is a new thing.
There are exceptions of course and there are some things she didn't learn. The more I thought about it, it could be that her genes influenced my choices because there are some things I didn't push through like driving which I chickened out of.
Anyway I recalled the stories my father told me about her. One of these stories is my mother not learning to look at time. My father said he and Nanay were taught by the American Peace Corps how to read time.
My father knew the difference between pocket watch, wrist watch, wall clock and table clock. The problem lies in my mother unable to memorize the Roman numeral equivalents to number 5 to 10 which is V to X.
We all know that V to X means adding I to V like VI or six and so on. This was too much for my mother, who knows only the Roman numeral equivalent from 1 to 5 or I to V.
When she worked at the cannery at the former Philippine Packing Corp., now known as Del Monte Philippines, he bought a table clock with an alarm. He set the alarm before he goes to sleep and the problem came when he slept.
Tired after finishing the 2 a.m. work-shift, he would be roused from sleep by mama after the alarm went off. Since the alarm clock is set in Roman numerals she doesn't know the time so she wakes him and asks him what time it is.
He taught her how to set the alarm but she wouldn't budge because she was scared that she would break it if she set the time. To solve the problem, he asked that they work on the same shift and their employers agreed.
The second story involves my mother's fear of appliances that run on electricity. It's okay if it was battery powered but if it runs on electricity, she won't operate it.
She doesn't have a problem with the refrigerator because it's always plugged in. The problem lies in the TV, stereo and others which usually involves unplugging it whenever there's a brownout and plugging it back in.
When the appliances malfunction, she's not the primary suspect because of her fear of appliances. My mother was a simple woman who prefers to be left alone with her plants and laundry.
Never one to complain, she is always proud of her children. Cooking wasn't her forte but she can do the laundry. She can cook rice without “dukot (burnt)” but she cannot cook any viand except stewed fish roe or ”inon-on.”
One more thing, my mother has the most beautiful handwriting I have seen. She writes with dedication on a piece of paper that I noticed in my younger days.
She might lose an argument with my father with people around since she is a believer of the old adage “respect me in the road, kill me in the house (respitahi ko sa gawas puede nan a patya sa balay) but trust me when in the house, my father would lose the argument.
She was the winner. Yes it's been 10 years since she left us but her memory is still fresh to my mind especially the time when her seven children was on her bedside as she breathed her last. My father was outside her room at the time.
One thing I'm sure of is that she does not want to be buried alongside my father to which my father already made an oral will that he would like to be buried beside his mother at Sta.Ana cemetery.
I guess it would be too much and too loud for the neighbors if they are together, but don’t get me wrong they sure love each other. My father is still a bachelor 10 years after her death.
My sister Betty Alombro who's now based in Auckland, New Zealand told me the other day that there is a Filipino belief that on the 10th year of death the departed would be far away from their loved ones.
That's sad because nobody would be guiding us anymore. How true that belief is I don’t know. She appeared in my dreams on several occasions and I knew it was her.
We all love her to death and we hope she will still guide us until it is also time for us to leave this world.
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed as teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
Friday, July 3, 2015
The movies in my mind
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Photos by Jong Casino from Facebook page Old Tagoloan |
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
Yes, there were movies back on the old days of my home of Tagoloan town in Misamis Oriental, northern Mindanao in the Philippines.
I speak of this after reading a Facebook post of my friend and town mate Gerva Tagapolot nee Celeredad.
It stirred memories of a time in Tagoloan town when TV and radio were considered luxury items. I wasn't sure whether it was in grade school when I saw for the first time a giant white “telon” in the public plaza.
What I do remember is that there would be a van or a jeep that would go around the town announcing a free movie showing at the town plaza later in the evening.
I was reminded that the movies were sponsored by “Purico” and Star Margarine. Purico is a brand name for lard. A quick side note: I remember Purico as a white bar used in cooking by my mother.
Worth living
I also remembered placing Purico on hot rice or corn if there is no fried fish, chicken or pork to eat it with. If days are good then I would also place Star Margarine on my rice.
Since movies were hard to come by, these public film showings were always something to look forward. For me it made life worth living.
Why? That's the time when school hours would zip by and household chores so easy to do because everyone wants to watch that movie in the plaza.
Watering plants and cooking are done quickly and when everything is finished I bathe my sibling and dressed them so we can go to the plaza.
Film showings are usually held during the summer evenings when the night air is cool and the acacia trees sway comfortably near the town plaza.
At its best
Bringing our own bench and some essentials we head to the plaza. My late brother Ramon Naelga would go with his buddies Onyot Rollenas and the other guys.
We would be walking with my aunt Luz Pete Naelga and her mother Nay Doring. The plaza isn't far from our home and so we are usually the first to arrive.
We usually sit in the second row because the front row doesn't actually offer the best view for such a large screen. Same principle applies to today's IMAX I think.
Commercials would be playing as we wait for the movie to start. Seeing those images on the screen brings out a sense of wonder and awe in our eyes back then. To my young mind, it was technology at its best.
Unlike Gerva who recalled the names of every movie held in the town plaza, I can only remember those cowboy and Indian movies in which the Indians are the bad guys.
Double feature
This is unfortunate because at the time we associated unacceptable behavior or anything bad with Indians.
As the commercials played, the town plaza would soon be filled with people from all walks of life. Boys would be running around and chasing girls. Most are sitting on their benches while a few stood.
The film showings would usually consist of a two-hour movie followed by a double feature. I loved the movies but strangely can only recall those cowboys and Indian films.
But even now I didn't know there was a movie house in Tagoloan town until I read Gerva's Facebook post entitled The Movies in My Mind.
She recalled the big movie house of Iya Pepe and Iyo Oloy Factura located in the same street that she used to live in. The movies there were sponsored by Sputnik, a traveling theater from Jasaan town.
Breaking news
Gerva said there was no permanent schedule for screening as Sputnik would come to Tagoloan only after visiting other towns where it was eagerly anticipated by the fisherfolk.
The day would start with Sputnik securing permit from the late Tagoloan Mayor Antong Cosin. “Among my playmates, i would be the first to know because of my Tatay Kiking who was a police then. Must have been an early version of "breaking news". Haha!!!,” Gerva said.
After securing the permit, the yellow Sputnik bus with the big megaphone on top would start going around town to announce the movie showing scheduled for the evening.
The lines would be visible at the ticket booth early in the evening. Gerva said her mother has relatives working at the Sputnik bus so she and her family watched the movie for free.
“Inside the movie house were rows and rows of long benches in the balcony and orchestra areas. And like the moviehouses in the city, there was always the peanuts and other snacks sold by vendors near the entrance,” Gerva said.
Open air
Gerva recounted that when the movies are shown, laughter and screams would be heard depending on the film genre. At the end of every show the people would form a line and leave, each with their own story to tell about the movies.
Besides Sputnik, other companies sponsored film showings like Darigold, a milk brand from Procter and Gamble. “It was an open air film showing in the town plaza and it was always well attended. But everyone has to bring their own chairs,” Gerva said.
Yes, those were good times. I may not recall every movie, but I cannot forget those film showings for they helped make my childhood more enjoyable and introduced me to a bigger world of which I would soon be a part of.
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed as a sub-teacher and a part-time teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
Good times anew in my hometown of Tagoloan
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Photo by Jong Casino |
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
For two weeks, I was home again in Tagoloan town, Misamis Oriental in northern Mindanao, Philippines.
I'm at home in a town where I learned to read, write and do my arithmetic and multiplication tables. At home where my family and the friends of my youth live in, where life is just the best.
For two weeks I was in Tagoloan and it is a beautiful town. It is one of the largest towns in Misamis Oriental and it is located to the east of Cagayan de Oro City and located southeast of Macajalar Bay.
It is a residential and industrial town and according to Wikipedia it has five high schools, three colleges and two hospitals. Tagoloan has a population of 99,677 people as of 2013 and 29,677 registered voters as of 2010.
As a member of the media industry in Cagayan de Oro City I knew that in the early 2000 there are 23,000 registered voters already and the number listed by Wikipedia is reasonable.
Migration
Tagoloan produced two governors in Vicente Emano and his son, the incumbent Governor Yevgeny Emano.
Not only did it produce politicians but also doctors, lawyers, engineers, nurses, teachers and other related courses.
We also produced top military officials like retired Air Force General Gregorio Gerry Paduganan, son of the late Dodoy and Denny Gaccion Paduganan.
But there are many Tagoloanons who remained in the town and stood by it through thick and thin. There are many of them. I don’t have to name names and I salute them- they are the witnesses of what Tagoloan is today.
When the Phividec Industrial Estate opened, many migrants from other towns and provinces came to Tagoloan for employment. As Phividec started growing, the migration increased and intermarriages followed.
Stranger
Now I barely recognize a face in the crowd. Of course I understand that my contemporaries are either six feet under or migrated to other places. So for the first few hours, I felt like a stranger in my hometown.
I recall being startled by the changes and I wasn't sure whether I could locate all the places I went to in my youth in today's Tagoloan town. Most astonishing to me then were the Mercury Drug Store and Paula Hotel—an actual hotel in Tagoloan town.
Tagoloanons can now shop in the town and don't need to go to barangay Puerto in nearby Cagayan de Oro City. What didn't change are the people in my town who remain friendly and well.
Ask my friend Roy Paduganan and he would tell you. The stretch of the national road is a place of business. The Mercury Drug Store is located close to the home of Landa Yap who married a Dalman. It is no longer vacant.
There are stores and business establishments of all kinds. Even the entrance of the Catholic cemetery could not be seen unless one is a frequent visitor of the cemetery.
'Chicken place'
Then there is the hotel where my uncle Norman Naelga works and is operated by the Ragandang family of Sta. Ana. Right in the hotel's backyard is a gasoline station.
The area occupied by Iya Linda Lee or specifically the house owned by Seigfredo Lee is now known as the “chicken place.” I forgot the name of the outlet though. Beside it is the terminal of taxis operating in the town.
Transportation is no longer a problem for those who can afford to go from Cagayan de Oro City to Tagoloan town. I think the fare is P300. Taxis are plenty along with the hundreds of trisikad and habal-habal (passenger motorcycle) operating in the town.
Since there are a lot of commercial outlets, Tagoloan had become quite noisy. I recalled a time when it was a lot quieter and serene. I couldn't see the house of the Marianos because it is blocked by a three door commercial building which they own I think.
Many other things remained the same. Tagoloan Central School, the Sta. Maria Candelaria Church Catholic cemetery, the town plaza, St. Mary’s High school formerly known as St. Mary’s Academy and the Municipal Hall.
Improvements
The Tagoloan Central School where I studied had been rehabilitated through the years. I hope it won't be demolished unless it posed safety risks to the students and teachers. The building should be preserved.
The Catholic cemetery which many believed is a public cemetery is filled with occupants. When I visited the grave of my mother I think it rained the day before and it was messy.
But I saw that there are improvements undertaken by the church. Five years ago I saw “condos” inside for the dead. The plaza is different now as there are finished and unfinished structures that cut its old size.
A few acacia trees remain. The plaza used to be surrounded by acacia trees.
St. Mary’s High School now looks new since the old one was burned several years ago.
I hope it still houses the pictures of the old school. Being a former alumni president, I am supporting any project that improves the school.
Nostalgia
The municipal hall is new and its compound houses new buildings. The old Puericulture center is gone. I don't know if it was necessary to demolish it to give way to the new PNP building.
The Puericulture Center, just like any other landmarks of Tagoloan, should have been preserved and rehabilitated to help Tagoloan residents remember the past.
A long time ago I saw the market transferred to its new location. I have not visited the Tagoloan River due to time constraints. Maybe next time I would make sure to visit it.
I felt a deep sense of nostalgia on seeing my hometown. Everything seemed smaller than I remembered but it looks to be progressing and that's a good thing.
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Photo by Jong Casino |
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed as a sub-teacher and a part-time teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
Thursday, June 11, 2015
The healing power of vaginal fluid
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Taken from Wikihow |
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
Vaginal fluid is said to be an antidote to insect bites. Many swore to its efficacy and potent powers including yours truly.
I tell you this to prove my point about the efficacy of vaginal fluid which is corroborated by others that got bitten by insects and used it as the immediate answer to the problem.
As I came home from work last Friday I decided to do some light housekeeping when I saw the black jacket of my husband Ronnie on the couch. I picked it up only to recoil when I sensed that I was bitten.
It took a few seconds to zero in on the jacket as the cause and I saw a creepy crawly thing scamper on the wooden floor. It looked like a bee and I stepped on it, but the poor thing didn’t surrender as it kept moving.
I got a can of pinto beans and used it to pulverize the insect. Anyway, I ran to the sink to wash my bitten skin with warm water and Dove soap. Before I can apply Neosporin cream, the area was already swollen and red.
Swollen
I panicked as I talked on the phone with Ronnie detailing the circumstances of my predicament. The first thing he asked was if my breathing was normal. Hell yeah, I was breathing but the itch was killing me as it reached my entire arm.
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Taken from telegraph.co.uk |
He asked “do you want me to call 911.” Then I answered no, saying what for?
It dawned on me that insect bites were ordinary for me as I came from a tropical country with insects flying all over the place. I was not worried back in those days.
Though the pain was overpowering, I remembered then that I could have been bitten by insects a lot of times when I was growing up but I couldn’t remember it now, it’s very blurry in my memory card.
After I called Ronnie I sent a message to my daughter GG in England who is very good on handling insect bites. She said I should apply cold compress. When I applied cold compress on my swollen skin, I felt that the pain was fighting the cold compress. I could feel it.
I posted my status on Facebook and it immediately got 70 comments and close to 90 likes (to be honest I don’t know why they hit like- Did they like that I was bitten?)
Remedies
I was amazed anyway and thankful for the comments that came from across the world. They all gave testimonies about their experience with insect bites and their chosen remedies.
It ranged from saliva (David Breden of England) to lemon grass (from Malou Tabada Cordery and Alice Cincoflores Dabalos). The problem is I have to go the Asian market to buy lemon grass. But I fully agree with Gwendolyn Garcia that bee stings can be life threatening for those persons allergic to stings.
There were two doctor-friends of mine--Drs. Maelen Santua and Irwin Arribas of my home city of Cagayan de Oro, Misamis Oriental in northern Mindanao, Philippines—who prescribed ice compress, hydrocortisone cream and allergy tablet to me.
But what caught my attention was the comments from Alice Dabalos, Merlyn Adis Santiago and a private message from Melba Tagam. It has something to do with vaginal fluid. Their advice was to obtain vaginal fluid and apply it to the affected area.
I don’t know why I forgot that my Nanay (mother) used to do that if any of us, her children, are bitten by insects in the area especially after a week’s worth of rains.
Friendly tip
It’s funny advice for others but for a person who wanted immediate relief one would not hesitate, right Melba Tagam? (Our secret Bang). I can sense that Joan Dequina Lightle smiled as I mentioned this, since she did this many times.
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Taken from Wikihow |
I was torn between the medical recommendations and the old ways. I remembered which worked on me before when I was young.
I did it anyway and then I Googled it after a few minutes but nothing came out of my search for the efficacy of vaginal fluids.
Whatever, the combination of hydrocortisone cream, the allergy tablet, cold compress and toothpaste (which I remembered using and actually made me feel better) could have been working already when I swiped my little finger on my flower and placed the fluid on the affected area.
It was Tuesday when I wrote this piece and I noticed that the skin didn’t worsen and I feel much better now.
Is it because of the vaginal fluid? But many of my friends swore that they have done it in the past. From my reading of Wikipedia, it seems that the vagina has bacterial properties.
I read that vaginal fluid has acid, glucose and fructose (is that sugar?). In fact the vagina is a self-cleansing organ. Writers and researchers call it vaginal ecology which can protect itself from bad elements.
My simple mind tells me that the human body produces its own soldiers to fight off its enemies so the vaginal fluid must be effective.
So a friendly tip to women out there; the next time you get bitten by an insect, you may consider swiping your “flower” and apply your “nectar” on the swollen bitten area. But if the symptoms persist, then it’s time to consult your doctor.
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed as a sub-teacher and a part-time teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
Monday, May 18, 2015
My five years with Ronnie
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
“Married couples who love each other say a thousand things without talking.”-Chinese proverb
Today, May 20, is my fifth wedding anniversary. I thought about whether it is appropriate to write and publish this since this may not be the right place to do so.
Then again I answered my own question; if I can write about others why not write about myself and Ronnie? In short it is the “I’m going to write anything I please” day.
We were married in a simple ceremony in Gatlingburg, Tennessee. The place was romantic and lovely, almost like you're visiting another world. Gatlingburg is the wedding capital of the Carolinas and in fact, the US.
The ambiance was perfect and simple. It was simple because there were only four of us: we, the officiating pastor and the assistant.
The chapel was located atop a semi-elevated land where the car can only park at a certain area on the plain level and the people who wish to reach atop have to walk.
It was adorned with all the beautiful flowers that one can imagine the garden of Eden in books and illustrations. The shrubs and trees were manicured and maintained.
The pathway was clean and everything on it is really designed for that beautiful “aha moment.” I was panting as I walked since I wore heels. It wasn't an easy walk because even Ronnie took sometime to move.
Eventually we reached the top. Looking back I likened it to the walk we had for the five years that we have been married. Never been easy, there were good days and rough days but mostly there are happy moments shared by two adults who pledged to stay together for the days of our lives.
I was reminded of that saying either from a movie or from a book I read. Maybe it was sort of my “East, West, North and South,” that I read on my Sunday rest or during breaks on my weekdays.
I recall that it was said during the movie “Four Weddings and a Funeral” by Hugh Grant. We have our good times and bad times in five years and I have to write this so you know our story.
We have known each other for two years online before he went to visit me in the Philippines. That time he posted along with his good looking picture a Bible and a big pot while he stirred whatever it was inside the pot.
My thinking was that with the Bible I am sure we'll be sharing our time in church which I do love much and with the pot, he will make sure that my tummy would always be full thus my life would be secured. Indeed it was a good sign for me. A Bible and a pot.
To me, it represents the spiritual and the earthly matters. So far so good for me. I don’t know with him (lol).
But since we've spent five years together I have to tell you five things why I am still in love with my ex-boyfriend Ronnie Dennis.
1. He's stingy. Now he stops giving me gifts on Mother’s Day. His reason “You are not my mother.” We discussed this since I was appalled. “Are you kidding me” He was philosophical about it and for all intents he is right.
You only give gifts to your mother on Mother’s Day. Of course he is wrong with his reasoning but I find this funny that I'm not annoyed at him for not giving me gifts on the most important day for women mothers or not. Despite this I love this man.
2. He is argumentative to be polite about it. He argues with me but he has learned his lesson well that he stops arguing with me anymore. He never wins anyway. At first he is on the winning side but before the day is over he is losing that eventually and I would show that he lost the battle anyway. I told him not to start a battle that he can't win.
But there are times that his arguments are valid that I let him win or I compromise. His worst enemy is his mouth either directed at me or to anyone else.
This is actually related to # 2. Still I am learning how to tame his tongue. But he is improving, his tongue is becoming dry most of the time. Reason: I told him I would get a big needle and sew it. Despite this I love this man.
3. He is morbid as he loves his prepared obituary. Yes it is true he made his obituary already, he has his own crypt fully paid. And I don’t discuss with him especially if it is on Friday. He is excited about it.
Yes it is ready and the only thing missing is his body. In fact he asked me to join him but I told him already if he dies ahead of me I am going home to the Philippines. Despite his love for death I love this man.
4. He is funny. When he talks to me I usually answer him- he claims that his brain is frozen but when I answered it is defrosted.
It happens to us many times and it makes this marriage interesting. These are among the five reasons why I love the man I married.
5.He is generous and his heart is made of soft tissues that even if he doesn't have it, when something is needed I trust that he would deliver. And these generosities include my family I left behind and even to our friends.
Our marriage is not that perfect, we have personal issues, or with the family. We have our share of struggles, health concerns and we have these illnesses but we have learned to compromise. We promised to stay in love and we will have so many more years together.
As long as we have God and we dedicate to honor God all days in our life then we would be okay. Love you Ronnie Dennis and happy five.
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed as a sub-teacher and a part-time teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
Thursday, May 7, 2015
My mother's love of plants
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
My favorite memory of my mother (Nanay in Filipino) is her love for plants and flowers. Writing is to me as taking care of a plant is to her. And my story tells how her love of plants made me cry and how she would poke fun whenever I do.
I am the eldest in a brood of seven children to working parents. Back in the days in my country of birth (and I hope it still is the norm despite these changing times) much was expected of me.
as the eldest you carry responsibilities and duties as second parents.
Expectations in fact are an understatement concerning the obligation and duties that my parents entrusted to me while they were out. For now, I'll be talking about my being a little mother or nanay.
Being the little “nanay” in her absence, I would assume the duties every mother is bestowed with upon having a family. While I revert to being a child whenever they are around, like every dutiful daughter I would assume the “mother hen” role for the most part.
I may forget to mention that if I have to do it again I should have done better for my siblings. Anyway, according to them this is my story of my mother and her plants.
My Nanay is Loreta Ejem-Espelarga Naelga, Lily for short and she loved plants among others aside from cleaning the house. I guess taking care of her plants is a stress reliever.
I didn’t hear her sing to the plants but I did hear her saying” pamulak na (Bloom now).” In those days, mothers are just confined to their homes when not working.
There was no aromatherapy or sports wasn't a fad at the time when she goes home after working at Philippine Packing Corp. (now Del Monte Philippines).
Recalling only groups in the church or at the Puericulture Center with Iya Ipoy (what’s her last name, Iya Ipoy?), my mother listens to the radio in the morning and her favorite programs feature stars like Diego Salvador or Melodina at Night Time while cultivating her flowers, pulling out the weeds around the pot or plot and talk to her plants. Sometimes she'd wipe away the dirt on the leaves.
She got all kinds of cacti in big and small pots, begonias, ferns, roses and wildflowers as well as bougainvilleas. The plants were arranged based on what plant she thought needed the most sunlight or water.
There was no Google that time, the only way she cared for her plants was through common sense and she had a lot of it.
Her plants were given or bought and later she swapped plants with others. Yes, some plants were bought but most of the time it was exchanged with friends who also have their own plants.
Every payday on the 5th and 20th of the month, she would have new plants. At first it was nothing to me.
Here is the thing- if she had first shift and that would be 6 am to 3 p.m., unless there is overtime I would see her coming home either from the corner of Iyo Glen Gamber's house or at Iya Pamie Valdehuesa's home and I would see her hands are full and even from afar I know she's holding plants or pots.
Even at a young age I know what barter was all about. She usually did this, bartering plants with Iya Oling Santander, Iyo Gorio Cabunoc and Tiay Gingging Dagus or with the Mama of Myrna and Allan Cagaanan.
This is how it works: If Nanay had this cactus which Iya Oling doesn't have then my mother would give her cactus in exchange for one plant she doesn't have.
Then there was the onset of her love for orchids. Gosh, it wasn't not only water and pots (plastic pots weren't discovered yet and if it was, it was made in China and it did not reach us yet) that were the problems, but the coconut husk.
We have to shred a lot of coconut strips to get the husk that would be used for the orchids. The orchids would be placed on the coconut husk. Her love of plants was her therapy for life's struggles. She would be so engrossed with her plants especially when my father is too busy with his gang of “ Alsa Baso” or doing carpentry works at home.
If she is still around this time I would buy all the plants she would like to have, including the pots, soil and vegetables.
That was among the memories I had of living with her and if I had the chance to live another life with her, I would gladly water all her plants again even if her garden circles the world. I miss you Nanay.
What about you, what is your favorite memory of your mother? Add yours in the comments below. Thanks for reading and Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers and mothers-to-be out there.
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
On learning Spanish
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Taken from Spanishclassesinmumbai.in |
by Susan Palmes-Dennis
Como esta? (how are you?) como se llama (what is your name)? Dondi vives tu (where do you live).?
These are just a few of the Spanish phrases that I knew by heart. Not only am I proud of having a grasp of a foreign language but my little knowledge of Spanish (Espanol) proved to be useful to me in my work.
I took Spanish 1 to 4 in college way back in time. It was easy to memorize and remember then. Now this knowledge that laid dormant in my brain all these years waited for the time when it would be recovered again. Why?
Working as an assistant teacher in one of the schools systems in the Carolinas I have noticed there are groups of students that converse in Spanish. I know that for sure. They talk among themselves in my class or in the hallways.
I was surprised that I can understand what they're saying among themselves. I can add one word or phrase to another to make a complete sentence and even some complex sentences. Sort of a “little of this and a little of that.”
I have no idea where it came from. These conversations among young students reminded me of my Spanish classes at Liceo de Cagayan under Mr. dela Torre, I forgot his first name.
Anyway he must be a good teacher because I retained most of his teachings in my brain. Have you heard that lessons learned when a person is young stays with him/her?
Also for five years I attended a weekly Spanish class offered by St. Mark Catholic church here at Huntersville and it was at that time that I recalled that my Spanish was not bad at all and that given a chance I can speak the language.
During that class I can connect one word to another word to express a complete thought. “Makadangul sad (trying hard).” Es verdad no me molesta (it is true it doesn't bother me).
Going back to my teaching work here in the Carolinas, there are some Spanish speaking students that are loud so what I did was to talk to them in Spanish and since then I have not encountered any issues in class.
When I heard these groups of students conversing in Spanish I joined them by asking or striking a dialogue. First they were surprised and after a while I was made part of their conversation.
They thought at first I am from Columbia or Venezuela. I told them honestly I am the Philippines and to some Filipinos Spanish is a second language or if at all a known language. “Poquito habla espaniol (speaks little Spanish).”
My approach works and because I speak in Spanish to these kids, they sit and pay attention. “Entarse y silencio (sit and silence).” I think these kids embrace me.
I could only surmise that they consider me as their own. Since then I have not encountered any behavior issues.
Filipinos are fortunate because of the influence of foreign languages like Spanish and English in our society. We have words in Tagalog or Bisaya that are actually Spanish words.
We use this daily. Examples are plato (plate), kutsara (spoon), tinidor (fork), mantel (jacket), calle (alley), maestro (teacher) and so on. It's part of our heritage from Spain.
Among my siblings it was my late brother Ramon whom most of the time used the Spanish language during conversations. “Entonsis, por favor, despues (please later).”
Others like to add Spanish during their talks out of curiosity, habit or to feel intellectual. Whatever is the reason, it's good for us to try learning Spanish or another language starting today.
Recent medical studies showed the positive effects of learning a foreign language on the human brain.
Studies by York University of Alzheimer's patients “demonstrated that those who were bilingual had a significant delay in the onset of the disease compared to their monolingual counterparts.”
Other studies concerning the health of monolingual and bilingual patients' brains showed that the effects of dementia were less advanced in bilingual patients even though their brains showed more brain damage as a result of the disease.
It is not yet late. Try to learn one foreign language a day and you’ll never know when it can be used. It's better to be prepared than to be caught flat footed. Entonses senor?
(Susan Palmes-Dennis is a veteran journalist from Cagayan de Oro City, Misamis Oriental, Northern Mindanao in the Philippines who worked as a nanny and is now employed as a sub-teacher and a part-time teacher assistant in one of the school systems in the Carolinas.
Read her blogs on susanpalmesstraightfrom the Carolinas.com and at http://www.blogher.com/myprofile/spdennis54. These and other articles also appear at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/author/2582/susan-palmes-dennis.
You can also connect with her through her Pinterest account at http://www.pinterest.com/pin/41025046580074350/) and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Straight-from-the-Carolinas-/494156950678063)
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