Thursday, August 28, 2014

Dog Days of My Summer


By
Kim Jardeleza

Imagine this: Boisterous laughter from children running in a dusty unpaved provincial road on a hot summer day. A cornucopia of art; colours, tradition and culture in one scene. Staged from the road outside your front window, you almost imagine having the best seat in the opera house. What was once an irritating singing of antics (’’Morion, bu-bungi. May *** sa binti...Hinabol ng pari…” C’mon, you know how it goes.) whose lyrics have never really been credited to anyone, now a living tradition; a piece of the olden days.
I always remember how it was back then, those were the scenes. Those are the memories that trigger a nostalgic day dream. The summer days spent in a happy little island almost unknown to any other person living a few regions away; my sleepy little home town.
I was not aware of how lucky I am to be born and raised in a place where tradition, religion, culture and beauty exist in almost everything in harmony. It is my realization that the things that make me go back reminiscing my childhood days are the dog days of rustic summers where every child is free to roam the streets until six in the evening. Where bruises and knee cuts are signs that you have enjoyed the dirt and bike. Where the ringing of church bells cues the praying of Angelus, taking the hands of the elders saying “mano po” and the fetching of parents for their children lost in the middle of a feisty game of ‘piko’. And arriving home with the scent of the day’s sun in one’s hair. Those were the days.
Every local child’s summer would not be complete without seeing a “Morion”[1] during lent. This is the best of the best days of summer that I have etched in my memory. Folks coming home from the city and my cousins staying for a week driving the whole household mad with all the simultaneous sound of shouting, laughing, giggles and baby cries. I remember my first real glimpse of a Morion as a child. I must be three or four. It wasn’t a pretty sight. I confess that I did not grow out of my fear of the legendary morions until I was ten. Then, the beach. Of course. There’s this place we call “isla” where the whole family goes to as a tradition. It is not really an island but a cove, just looks like one. I can’t remember the first time I got there but photographs show I was months old when my parents introduced me to the place. Must be why I love the island life.
In the island, there were times when clean water was scarce and a flock of town people would go down the river to do their laundry, which was a thrill to their children. This means pure unadulterated fun and a good excuse to make a picnic out of a house chore. Then detours to the park and the rice field, as “armoseco” seeds cling to the lining of my shorts means I have evidence clinging in my clothes pointing to where I’ve been.
The simple charm, the humility of the people and their big hearts these are what I grew up to. The home made fish balls ni Tagle and Mang Ben’s dirty ice cream in the afternoon or bananaque[2], kalamay[3] at ‘snobol’ ni Ate Germa sa silong.Oh! and the "pinaltok" at "tutong" ni Nanang Ogie. I miss those now. How could I forget my skill of climbing trees: mango, aratiles and that guava tree where I practiced my flying powers (in the latter years to come I also enjoyed climbing gates and our veranda). And one of the best things that I ever owned, my tire swing Papa made with his bare hands (I appreciate that now). Where I made fights and friends---of course they’d make up with me to use my swing. Then the picnics in the park. Bike lessons in the tennis court (I didn’t learn from that). Kite flying (or watching the big boys) in the field, thereafter nagging Papa to make me a kite too (he did, out of pad paper which he tied to a sewing thread and we tried to fly it while riding the bike in the school grounds). And when I have been bad, there’s the thrill of sneaking through the window to the adjacent bedroom window of a friend when I am grounded. Then on a quiet passive night would subconsciously find myself gazing through the night sky imagining what would be in the future (yeah, I was a sappy child) wishing time would take me there fast. But then again, I shouldn’t have.
As the last days of childhood never presented itself with a farewell party. It was gone and I never knew when exactly and how it left. Little fragments of memories when there was no guilt in letting yourself get drenched in the rain. Then somebody telling you “para kang bata”, when all you thought you are still. The late nights you stayed out with your friends just to admire the beautiful sky and wait for falling stars, you unconsciously trying to figure out the constellations but all you ever got was Orion’s belt. And yes, a few falling stars brushed the horizon that night.

[1] Morion, a person donning centurion mask and costume as a sign of penitence. Popular during lent in the island province of   Marinduque with the Moriones Festival.[2]Bananaque is a deep fried banana in a stick with caramelized sugar [3]Kalamay is deep fried banana doused in flour.

BUM BUM BUM BUM!

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