


Vaguely afraid of the heat. An all-enveloping one that sticks to you like how you’d feel cling film would. And you keep asking, when did it get this bad? Would you really get used to it? Is it just something in the mind, and that the mind can override it? On the fourth day, I gave up and retreated to one of the rooms to read and turned the air-conditioning on. I didn’t get to use half the usual facial stuff I normally put on my mug daily, and gave up wearing underwear altogether.
Authority/the Powers-that-be. I’d like to believe that our family name still has some value and that it’s a currency you can use when needed. But I hope that we won’t need to, not anymore anyway since we’re now citizens of another country. Or let my mother use it for herself instead to navigate an even more complex, even more sinister system running on favours, contacts and kickbacks.
Violence. I studied college in Manila and spent some time working there, but I can’t say exactly that I know it, not when the places I inhabited and moved around were places of privilege. Stepping out into a place like Cubao or Pasay is still jarring. You wish you were chameleon-like, to blend into the scenery, to look a little rough at the edges, your skin duller, your body language slightly less assured and more defeated. But have never succeeded in fooling the dodgy taxi drivers at the airport that I was an OFW, or those roving opportunists when my father was running for re-election that I was no one but the household help. Maybe it’s all in my imagination. Maybe it’s all mostly random. But I never linger, the share-ride mere minutes away to whisk me off to a ‘safer’ place, all my cash (in the mid-5 digits) stuffed in my tight pants pockets where I feel it’s safer. But in Pangasinan, I relax a little bit. I take the jeep around Dagupan which is forever fixing itself but never really succeeding. I take a tricycle home and take some perverse pleasure at all the gawking, of people trying to recognise me - look at that guy, he looks different.
The plane circled around Guangzhou for over an hour. There was a weather event the pilot said and looking out, the sky though was clear and the city below sparkled. But who knows- the weather everywhere has been strange. Then there was another announcement; the plane was being asked to fly and land in another airport an hour or so away.
So by the time we headed back, it was well past 3am and our connecting flight was canceled. When the airport staff started talking in barely incomprehensible English, my stomach lurched. You sort of realise that language universality is arbitrary; they can choose to not learn English fluently.
It felt like one of those disaster movies where people who were minding their business on the plane and keeping to themselves, suddenly start reaching out to one another. Earlier, when the plane was doing loops above Guangzhou, my seatmate who was a Filpino dairy farm hand working in Hastings started talking to me and we were hopeful, expecting it even, that no matter what happened, we were flying home to New Zealand. But it was not meant to be.
And in the chaos and babble of sleep-deprived passengers and mask-wearing airport staff, it was every man to himself. Or maybe that was just me. Growing up, I wasn’t reliant on anyone. I had to figure things out by myself whether I did a good job or not. I had to sort my shit first especially when to my shock, I was handed a boarding pass that indicated my flight to be nearly 24 hours away. The only thing I understood from the airport staff was ‘transit visa’ and ‘hotel’.
The other Filipinos were families and the Caucasians stuck together which didn’t help much as they thought that Googling the situation was better than trying to make sense of what the staff were saying. The Pinoy dairy farm hand vanished.
I managed to get the transit visa (how the officer understood my handwriting I would never know); then went through immigration where inexplicably, most of the Caucasians failed to even fill up the declaration card before getting into the queue and were asked to step out and do it first. Then I got through and it was finding the airline counter next so that they could give me accommodation.
The Filipino groups were seemingly wandering around and my first thought was that, well you do your own thing and I’ll do mine. I have never been a team person. My focus was getting out of the airport so I walked past them and left them to it. I thought briefly about my luggage and I assumed that since I was already given a boarding pass, my luggage would be delivered to that plane. If not, well, fuck it, there’s insurance.
I had my backpack which had my meds, my toiletries, and my electronics. Unfortunately, the only clothes I had were the clothes I wore for the flight, but there was nothing I could do about that.
I realised when I went through customs that we weren’t the only flight canceled. There was a queue several meters long to the China Southern counter. At this point, my hoodie was hot and my eyes were watering from being up so late. I went straight through to the counter and no one was paying attention; everyone was on their phone.
The staff were besieged by angry passengers; one even reached out to try and grab one of the staff’s keyboards. I felt sort of nauseous at the thought that this was hell, and that the worst fate of all, was being trapped in a situation not of your own making where you don’t understand the context of what was happening and where you can’t speak out.
But I knew what I wanted though - I wanted a bed. I wanted to wash my face. I didn’t want to sleep in the airport. I didn’t want to wash my armpits in a public sink. I didn’t want to amuse myself wandering into duty-free stores daydreaming of stuff I couldn’t afford.
I also was able to speak out - in the best American English I could muster 😂 - and the staff was more than happy to assist someone not screaming into her face in Mandarin or Cantonese or whatever.
In 15 minutes, I was on my way in a shuttle to the Marriott.
The barrio life is too 🥵.
Eight o’clock in the morning feels like high noon; like summer on the Australian Gold Coast (which is why I only cross the ditch in winter). The climate has changed, my brother says.
Who has the energy to cook three meals? But they do and I’m glad for once, not to be the cook and two, to sit down for another meal.
A shower doesn’t help, especially when your skin is used to at least three layers of creams. I just settle for a facial sunscreen, and being topless for most of the day, use the same cream for my neck, arms, hands and feet. The humidity clings to you like a needy lover and half the time, I flee from it and seek refuge in an air-conditioned room. What was once a luxury, is now a necessity; taking the Skyway in Manila, ugly and dilapidated shanties sport rows of condenser units.
If there’s nothing to do, there’s the pool, but even that sticks out in your mind like a red flag. We didn’t grow up with AC and swimming pools, or heat that has arrived like a guest that has stayed on permanently in your home.
You just make the best of it or in my case, sad as it makes me, bear with it for a bit longer before going back to my own home.
Maintenance
HMO
Retirement car
Retirement
lipid profile
Generation Z
Consistency
Unapologetic
Diplomatic
China
We were shocked and laughed at the decor (hope they weren’t offended) but then realised, this is the Philippines in 2024 and the road to the Lingayen venue had changed drastically in the last seven years we were here last. The speeches were long and florid, the display of affection genuine and the sudden dance turns on the floor both bizarre and impressive (for people in their 70s who complain of a million and one ailments). But in the end, what mattered most was seeing people again who continue to hold a soft spot in your heart and memory.
I saw this on Insta where it was described as ‘elevating Spam’. I loathe the word ‘elevating’. Pretty much the only things that elevated somethings manage to elevate are your expectations and 9 out of 10, it comes crashing down anyway. If it’s beneath you to eat anything out of a can, then fuck you lol.
When I bring Spam to work for lunch, I get a lot of comments but not because Kiwis are precious or anything; processed meats haven’t really been part of the gastronomic landscape.
But this recipe really works when generally, stuff from social media are not properly kitchen tested, or worse, fake.
Grate it like you would a slab of cheese
Didn't realise that Spam was that fatty; the absorbent baking paper underneath was drenched.
Feel free to freestyle on what flavourings you'd like to put. Instead of soy-sauce I used hoisin for some sweetness.
Just FYI, it's not as spicy as you think
Not to be toxic
Which is like thinking that all our efforts to mitigate impending climate change disasters can actually work. It’s sort of too late and we’re too far gone. Everything and everyone is toxic. But have hopped off that bandwagon after realising that I wasn’t getting anything tangible out of it. Pay me $5 dollars- no, let me negotiate that to $20 - and I’ll probably do it. Maybe.
Time is money AND a commodity
I’ve started Ubering all the time when I saw that my hourly rate was over $70 (before taxes). I can’t be sitting at a bus stop waiting for the next one in 30 minutes because it’s simply a waste of my time, I reasoned. I’m too good to wait. And now, Uber rides have gone up like 25% and I’m thinking, I could have used that added fare for an extra bottle of Emma Lewisham Supernatural Face Elixir. So I’ve started bussing again and simply readjusted what I normally do like prepping meals the night before so that when I got home, I could start on the meal at an even earlier time. And today, I managed to take public transport, finish a gym workout in 30 minutes, dropped by the supermarket for some stuff and got the same bus back, all in under an hour (we have a 30-minute lunch-break and morning tea and I just worked through those). Save me nearly $30 had I taken Uber.
Be healthier
have to admit that I’m slightly better with my health than my finances. However, I don’t want to be super aggressive about it and end up as a cautionary tale. I secretly revel in the fact that all my medical stats are good. But during my recent check-up and blood work, I got a younger doctor who thinks that my stats are rubbish. He straightforwardly told me to my face that I had the worst of luck because genes determine 75% of me, and that, it seems, there’s nothing I can do about it—except medicate, that is.
“Maybe it’s my coffee drinking,” I told him.
“How many coffees do you have in a day?” he asked.
“Eight to ten espressos.”
“Is that a lot,” he asked, “compared to a latte?”
I blinked. Mmmmmm.
There’s an earnestness there that’s missing from my regular GP, who I think is in her seventies.
“I think we can get this under control,” he said.
“What’s our timeline?” I asked.
“A fortnight- and if we don’t, we’ll find another strategy,” he said cheerfully. He has thin, ascetic features and wears rimless glasses. It’s the comforting, generic face of a doctor who believes that nothing is impossible in medicine.
I have my doubts, but if you’re receiving subsidized health care, your job isn’t to doubt it.
“Let’s do it then,” I said, smiling back.
After working over the weekend at one of our shows, I spent a few days at Doyet’s. We had plans, but a drizzle that fell late Sunday and actually drenched most of the country stayed put and so did we. There’s nothing more intrinsically sad and lethargic than bright autumn trees drooping and sodden with rain.
I had the small heater on the whole day in the spare bedroom. I worked remotely in the morning and went to the gym in the afternoon. I had coffee on-tap. I took long, sweet dreamless naps. I ate Doyet’s food which always perfectly aligns to my memory of how they’re cooked back home in the Philippines. I couldn’t have gotten a better vacation no matter how brief, or basic.
Just the three Fs- food, family and fitness.
Laughing
the week that you left
the skies celebrated;
a glorious, vulgar display of colour and light.
You would have shrugged your shoulders
ignored it for Temptation Island
and a bit of burrata on toast.
Or you could have dragged
someone out to the ocean
where you can revel in the celestial show,
washed down with a bottle or three of Tui.
But from where I’m standing
in the darkness of our deck
vainly squinting at the horizon,
I don’t see anything.
I don’t see you,
didn’t really know you.
All I see is blackness.
All I see is nothing,
and the vast empty night sky.
Some days are exactly what they are in photos.
Popeyes didn’t open and the cake wasn’t what you expected. But these are not really problems.
It’s still a good day.
A full head of hair is over-rated
A good friend is hard to find
Bacon can kill you
Stick to the truth no matter what
The past is pointless if all you do is look back and remember
Moderation is under-rated
Imagination is king
Kindness should be your baseline behaviour
Loving is so EASY
Hating is so HARD
Hating is not worth your time and energy
When it’s time to let go of something, you’ll know
The last couple of months since going back to the gym, I’ve been feeling hungrier than usual. I had a couple of moments when I felt that condition that Filipinos call ‘nalipasan ng gutom’- you’ve eaten (like your first solid meal of the day at 5pm) but the weakness lingers.
So I did a food diary which I had intended to do for at least a month. I stopped after over a week because every-day (except weekends and special holidays) looked exactly like this:
Morning
Coffee (two espressos with almond milk, artificial sweetener)
An espresso around 10am topped up with water, no sugar + a cookie or two from the office kitchen pantry
Afternoon
Packed lunch (usually a protein and rice)
Watered down espresso after lunch and around 3pm
Evening
Pre-workout drink
Protein and a cup of rice after work-out
Espresso!
A protein shake if I remember it
So yeah, I need to eat a bit more!
I think I’ve told this story before; my mom made this once and then never made it again. I don’t know if I got obsessed over it because it’s a great dessert (it’s not fancy, but it is comfort desert) or that my mother made it only once and had been mysteriously evasive when I asked her why. But it’s now part of my desert rotation (made it last Easter) and it’s one of those things you make a trip to the fridge for at odd hours of the day (and yes, I cradle it in my arms with the fridge door open as I take spoonfuls of it).
My dilemma about this is that the proportions never seem to be right. You either end up with too much of the paste and butter, or too little of them. Ramen I think is the right noodle for it, but it’s never quite satisfying as good quality spaghetti (we use Garofalo). But the addition of protein (shrimp) and some greens (peppery watercress), more than makes up for the seasoning question. Recipe here
I am ashamed to admit that there are some adobo basics that have escaped my attention. I have always wondered whenever I made adobo why it still had this slight sour tang. More ashamed to admit that I think I found the answer watching one of Marjorie Barretto’s YouTube videos- apparently when you add the vinegar, you have to let it evaporate by not putting the lid on. And it worked. My chicken adobo never had that sour tang again and I’ve always added butter to it ever since, thanks again to that video. Butter is the perfect complement to the Kikkoman soy-sauce.
It’s always this dream and variations of it; I’m somewhere which in my dreams is an amalgamation of all the places I’ve been in my life, and I’m trying to get home but I can’t. I get delayed by something or someone. Something doesn't work. I walk and I get lost. I take a car and it doesn’t move. But it’s never clear to me really where home is. In a variation of the dream, I am home (in the Philippines), but I’m still trying to leave, to flee.
And the dream never resolves itself. I wake up and it’s small comfort at least in that moment when you’re half-awake, that you’re in your bed, in the place that feels and smells like home.