Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 10


Songs you listen to when you are Happy, Sad, Bored, Hyped, Mad


Ugh! This is tough! I checked my music player's most played list and all I could see were the songs I recently listened to with my ringing tone at the top (apparently this Nokia app is messed up).

Making things more difficult is the fact that I don't and can't really distinguish or categorize the songs I listen to when I'm happy, sad, bored, hyped or mad. I don't have all-time favorite go-to songs for certain emotions. I listen, sing and dance to de-stress and that's all about it.

Esmee Denters and Natasha Bedingfield
But okay, just to come up with an answer or a statement re this topic, I'll settle with what I think (and know...without any help from electronic playlists) I've been listening to over and over again of late.

Unwritten (Natasha Bedingfield/Esmee Denters)
-- explains the beauty of not planning and not explaining yourself to anyone; always makes me feel better. 
My First Kiss (3Oh!3 feat. Kesha/Ashley Tisdale)
-- especially love Ashley Tisdale's version. She's so cute and adorable when she sang Kesha's part. Song's upbeat and catchy.
Humayo't Ihayag (Bukas Palad)
-- our church choir here in Mandaluyong always sings this during recessional. Perfect song to end a mass and to start a week.
Lord I Offer My Life (Hillsong United)
-- one of the few songs I "can" sing. Haha. Interesting how I foremost love a song if it's within my vocal range. The lyrics and the music are so nice too. :)
Ngayon at Kailanman (choir versions of this Basil Valdez original)
-- there was a time I thought of this song as boring (old... hohumm). But when I heard a bride and her fellow choir members sing this during her wedding, I just had to change my mind. Korina Sanchez used this as her bridal march, I think. That rendition was nice too.
Glee's New Directions singing a Journey Medley in Season 1
Journey Medley (Glee)
-- catchy, upbeat mash-up of Faithfully, Any Way You Want It/Lovin', Touchin', Squeezin' and Don't Stop Believin'; makes me want to dance and sing with the Glee kids. Now if only I'm as good as them.

Blog Challenge Day 9

Something you're proud of in the past few days

Now this is tough. The past few weeks or months, sure there are things to be proud of, but these past few days? Hmm... Well I don't have anything grand but I sure do have blessings to be thankful for. Let me cite one different/unique thing this time:

Not my Step Counter. But this is what I look at everyday.
12K++ steps! There were at least two days a week ago when I managed to consciously reach 12K+ steps with the other five days ranging between 3,000-10,000 steps. One particular day's count presented 12,673 steps more or less c/o my Nokia Step Counter pedometer application.

How is this important? A fitness website states that in order to keep one's fitness level, one must have at least 10,000 steps in one day. For a woman to lose weight, she needs to reach at least 12,000 steps. Imagine how much of a stretch these are if we're to think that on average, we only reach 3,000-5,000 steps daily. So for me, being able to count my number of steps is motivating. It lets me realize that I can't really cheat on my areas for improvement.

_________________

As of 5:32 PM, my pedometer app has counted 4,096 steps. Off to the gym! Let's add 8,000 more! :)

Monday, May 23, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 8

Short-term goals for this month and why
Anyone interested? :)

1. Sell at least three quarters of the items/pieces I made for Accessories by Precious
I want a lighter "excess" luggage. Also, my closet in the US is begging for a reprieve.

2. Lose 4 lbs
I'm over and done with the weight loss plateau.

3. Finish dad's series of follow-ups (wound dressing/mini-operation) at the Philippine Heart Center's Vascular Department (provided that his wounds heal quickly)
Expensive. And. Exhausting.

4. Have my hassle-free medicals at St. Luke's for my US Immigrant Visa application (provided that the information packet arrives this week or early next week)
When I say "hassle-free", I mean, no lengthy (two-three sessions spanning weeks... dear God, please no!) vaccinations and no "scary-therefore-you-will-have-to-stay-longer-in-Manila" results. Plus, I wish to celebrate my birthday with my husband who also celebrates his' a day before mine. It also wouldn't hurt to get back to reviving my career and starting a family of our own.

5. Come up with a legal draft for that Transfer of Rights for mom's niche
Mom's niche at Eternal Gardens in Binan, Laguna is way too far that it gets ignored during important dates (Mom's birthday, All Saints/Souls Day). I have to be able to hold that legal right of deciding in case anything happens.

6. Check out PCSO's packages for dialysis patients
We can really use all the help we can get. Thrice weekly dialysis treatments are no joke, money-wise.

7. Stretch this month's budget to the 18th of June
Budgeting. Need I say more?

8. Pay all the utility bills for June.
More of a routine.

9. Set a schedule for our house help's requested vacation and think of a way to make my life easier during her absence
It's no joke to run a household with a sick father.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 7

A picture of someone who has the biggest impact on you

My husband takes the cake here for the following reasons:

  1. I used to go to mass only when I feel like it. Now I'm happy to say that I attend mass regularly every Sunday. Hubby's influence.
  2. When buying food, price is now secondary to sodium content. Hubby's influence.
  3. I go to the gym at least 4x/week. Hubby's influence.
  4. I regularly check Yahoo! News for sports competition spoilers (who needs Pay-per-view?) and interesting features. Hubby's influence.
  5. Rock music now has a place in my listening repertoire. Hubby's influence.
  6. I now look forward to comedy and action hero flicks (Transformers, The Hangover, etc.). Hubby's influence.
  7. I don't trust public transport drivers in the Philippines anymore. Hubby's influence.
  8. I laugh and smile more. Because of him. :)

Friday, May 20, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 6

Favorite superhero and why

My response to this blog topic will not help me win the Miss Universe crown.

I'm on the fence with this one. I used to have Storm on the top of my list but I must have outgrown it. Neither deep affinity nor strong connection exists now. I don't even care anymore if she's the perfect example of a strong, smart, powerful, righteous and fair woman. The characteristics now just seem too.... cliche-ish.

So for a change, I'm settling for the following characteristics with "powerful" non-negotiable as it's requisite of a superhero: powerful, loyal, cute, funny. No one else represents this perfectly than..... Bumblebee!


Bumblebee's like a "pet" to Sam in Transformers. Like a pet, Bee's loyal and cute. Unlike a pet though, he's independent, smart and powerful. Doesn't hurt too that his overall mission in life is to protect men like Sam Witwicky from villains like the Decepticons. Hubby and I are so enamored with him that we nicknamed one of our cars, an emerald green Toyota Corolla 1999 sedan, "Bee" (the other car, a silver-grey Honda Odyssey 2010 mini-van, is "Fiona".... don't ask me why. One look at "her" and I just know she's a "Fiona"). :)

Blog Challenge Day 5

A picture of somewhere you've been to

UNBELIEVABLY BLUE brook on the way to Kawasan Falls in the island of Cebu.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Blog Challege Day 4

A habit you wish you didn't have

Ugh. It happens every time. I put it on (....). I rub against it. I take it off. I rub against it once again. It's only when I reach satisfaction that I'm able to fall asleep...

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Bed sheet! I rub my feet against my bed sheet, dear friends! :) :) :)

For some reason, especially at night, my feet become so dry even with generous applications of lotion. It is so uncomfortable that the only way I can sleep is by rubbing my feet against something firm, wrinkly and soft. If the bed sheet isn't firm, my feet, in moments of desperation, will remove it until the mattress is exposed. More often than not, it really is the mattress that helps me. However, my husband, who is a light sleeper, is not helped by the act at all. He hears the rubbing and it kills his sleep buzz. LOL Sorry honey. Hehe.

The bed, in the morning, always looks as though a tornado has run right through it. This has been the case ever since I was young. I know it's harmless but I sometimes wish it's a habit that I didn't have.

All I Ask...

For all the hardships that my dad has endured since his childhood, bilib ako sa kanya. He has never really lived a life without worries. Even now that he no longer has to think of having to provide for his family, the million dollar question in his head is how to relieve me and my husband of our duties of taking care of him. Sadly, that kind of thinking has led to more health-related problems for him, the latest being the two wounds on his left foot.

When I returned to Manila on August 1st of last year, I had already psyched myself that he'd look thinner than his then latest picture (uploaded on Facebook by my cousin, Ate Theng in July of 2010, I think). I had to bite my lip and make my weary eyes look pale in comparison to his exhausted cataract-filled eyes when he met me at the airport.

On the way to Binalot for breakfast before heading to our Mandaluyong house, my mind was filled with longing for my husband in the US and solutions to the problems that faced me in the Philippines. I thought, I just had to accompany dad in his check-ups and dialysis sessions, have his cataract on his right eye operated on so he could see again and fix whatever had to be fixed at our house while waiting for the approval of my spouse petition. I was hell bent on focusing only on the solutions. Until I saw dad's right index finger.

It was the first bomb that fate dropped on me upon my arrival. In the middle of waiting for servings of unlimited Sinigang soup, my gaze locked on dad's finger. It looked... burnt, its fingernail deformed. I was so shocked that I stopped caring that I was crying in public.

As if the image of dad's finger were not enough, what had started to appear to me as a prick-like wound the shape of a 25-centavo coin on his right big toe became bigger and bigger. His former vascular surgeon at the National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI) was someone who I had thought as very smart for treating the wound conservatively, i.e. "conservative" in the sense that whatever could be saved should be saved (no amputations... system followed in the US). I also had thought of him as very charitable and generous for stopping us from paying his professional fee each time I took dad to him due to an otherwise "alarming" development of the wound.

No. Nothing has stopped since my arrival.

Correction  -  nothing has stopped (for dad).

Dad (left) was Senator Mar Roxas's PR Consultant
My grandparents were not rich. Their children, in the spirit of Pinoy soap operas, needed to live separately in order to survive. Relatives treated them like maids and houseboys. They had to scrimp and save, sometimes surviving solely on dinners of coconuts that had fallen from trees during stormy nights in a house with a leaky roof. Dad, for his part, refused to let poverty get in the way of his education. He worked and studied at the same time. With all the help he had never failed to extend to his loved ones, it seemed as if he never ran out of sources of income.
Always a daddy's girl

Time came when it materialized that all his efforts were really not enough. So many things were and are continuously taken from him. It was and still is so painful to watch.

Mommy & I with our "bug"
I was not yet in the lives of my parents when he had to sell the first house he had acquired. It was in San Pedro, Laguna. Because mom kept having a miscarriage due to travel to and from work, dad willingly sold the property just so they could have a child of their own.

I think I was 14 when dad had to let go of the Kia sedan he had converted into a taxi. Maintenance was too costly for us and we never really needed two cars (our other car was a bug).

When I turned 15, he was diagnosed with diabetes. No more sweets for him. And he has a sweet tooth.
Dad (left), mom (to my right) and I with mom's relatives
during my college graduation in April of 2005
(a year before mom died).

After college graduation, our printing press's financial state was no longer in the pink of health. Just so we could start anew, dad had to sell his cutting/cutter machine. I was a witness to the numerous months when dad and mom had to pay in installments for that machine that they bought from Germany through a third party.

Our bug rotting in the garage of our house in Santa Rosa, Laguna and with no money to have it repaired, dad also had to let that go. It was the first ever property of value that he had bought.

Our family picture taken by dad's colleague Nick Sagmit of Manila Bulletin
in front of our Santa Rosa, Laguna house (December 25, 1994).
And then there's our house which had been in a state of disrepair for many years. I guess by now you wouldn't be surprised if I said that we also had to let it go just as how we had to let go of mom when she died.

Dad, a year and five months before being diagnosed
with renal failure with my cousins and I during
the Cardenas Family Reunion in January of 2007
Fast-forward to 2010, a few weeks before my wedding, we had to leave the first property I have ever acquired through dad's financial help. This condominium unit was in Taguig proper  -  way too far from hospitals in case of an emergency such as what had almost resulted to a disaster in 2009. We were fortunate that my aunt arrived on time to pick dad up and rush him to the nearest hospital via C5 (Medical City). I know it pained him to see another property go. I know that part of him blamed himself for what we had to do.

In April or May of same year, I was in the US when he was rushed to the hospital due to bleeding. It was after midnight, I think, when Sergs and I received a call from him. He was already asking us to take care of each other...

Where we used to live in Taguig (DMCI's Rainbow Ridge 2)
Dad survived... only to be hospitalized, two more times I think for water in his lungs and another one that I can't remember.

After his cataract surgery in August, he had to, once again, stay at the hospital for one week in September due to another accumulation of fluid in his lungs. In October, he had a mini-stroke. In November, he had to have a declotting/declogging procedure performed on his Gore-tex graft on his left arm. It was also during the same month's confinement that he had an acute psychotic breakdown due to major depresssion. His psychiatrist told me that dad has been having a hard time dealing with his losses, my leaving (and separation from him) for my life in the US included. Yes. Hindi na niya kaya ang mga nangyayari sa kanya.

Dad with his siblings on his birthday (August 6, 2008),
a month before he had his first dialysis session
Though, with the help of relatives and our very loyal househelp, Belen, we've successfully managed to keep dad away from hospitalizations for a few months now, this week and the week before that were no different. Yesterday, we had our fourth appointment with dad's new vascular surgeon to have his feet's wounds treated and operated on. Dad was crying, groaning and grunting in pain. All I could do was hold his hand and repeatedly assure him that it would be okay.

In my moments of contemplation, I ask God why dad's fate is such. Daddy, my sweet dad, like I said above, has never lived a life without worry. It was  -  and still is  -  one of my ultimate dreams: that he lives a life without having to worry about anything. But God has other plans. One of the nine-day readings of the Blessed John Paul II Novena spoke of sufferings: why people need and have to suffer.

My human-level understanding leaves me with the thought that people suffer for a purpose. And it's not necessarily just because they have brought such upon themselves (which I'm sometimes guilty of repeatedly informing dad in fits of frustration  -  so sorry dad ). According to the John Paul II reading, it's to make other people realize what they've done and need to do. I immediately thought of my half sisters... Can they learn from this lesson? Will they even realize that there's a lesson that needs to be learned? A lesson that they may or may not learn "on time"...

And there's me... God's teaching me to swallow a very bitter pill. I know it's not out of spite. His schooling  -  my classes and courses on budgeting, taking care of loved ones, independence, acceptance, faith, understanding and love  -  have not come to their conclusion yet. I wonder which ones I'll pass with flying colors. I wonder which ones I'll pass... "on time"...

I know and understand that all these are in conjunction with how Christ suffered on the cross so mankind will realize salvation... But then my human emotions have to ask... why does it have to be so hard? Why does it have to be so hard for my dad? Why does he have to suffer so my siblings and I can learn a lesson?

Lord, Diyos ko.... all I continuously ask is for dad to no longer suffer any further... And I know You know I do not mean anything that lessens my own burdens. Please give my father a chance to fully realize a life, however brief, without any worry.............That's all I ask.... before the time is up.

Blog Challenge Day 3

A picture of you and your friends

This is my favorite picture of me and my girl friends on my wedding day! They completed my day! :)
L-R: Nina Gemma Pilante (Veil; schoolmate/batchmate in pre-school & blockmate in UP Diliman),
Atty. Jasmine Adriano (Cord; batchmate/classmate in UP Diliman), me (the one in white, of course!), Vanessa Camille Verzosa (bridesmaid; blockmate in UP Diliman), Marie Valine Alvarez (my bestfriend & maid of honor; classmate in grade school) and Joy Puntawe (bridesmaid; PEx friend)

Monday, May 16, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 2

The meaning behind your Blogger name

I've always been a drama queen so for my blog title, I wanted something dramatic (Musings) AND original (Precious Full-Time Part-Timer). I didn't want to be a stereotypical drama queen so I took something from my previous blog names that accurately describes me: a full-time part-timer.

When I came up with "Full-Time Part-Timer", I had already been dabbling in several activities all at the same time. I was a language trainer at eTelecare Global Solutions, an events host, a magazine contributor, a layout artist and a blogger. And those were in addition to my being a daughter and a friend. I thought, since my name's Preciosa which translates to the adjective "precious" in English, it wouldn't hurt to add said word to my blog title.


***Still true but no longer applicable (refer to the new blog name with my name :D  -  Precious, 08/22/15***

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 1


A recent picture and 15 interesting facts

about yourself

The picture to the right is my most recent one. Can't find in my laptop the one that doesn't have "Accessories by Precious" and I'm currently way too lazy to download the original photo from my cellphone. Hehe.

15 Interesting Facts About Me

1. I'm a jewelry designer. Still an amateur but I consider myself one already as I've been making pieces since 2007 that I either sell or give as gifts to friends and colleagues. In fact, my picture here is the profile picture of my Facebook Business Page. I'll be closing the page soon though as I'm about to leave for the US to join my husband and it's going to be for good. Who knows? Maybe I'll start a line there once I'm able to get the capital. Getting the much-needed capital though means working as an employee of a company (any company! haha) first. Then again, my priorities will surely change once I become a mom. Oh well... Let's just say that I'm thankful for the skills that I know I'll take with me once I leave the Philippines.

My Kare-Kare
2. I'm not fond of sweets but I like my Kare-Kare sweet and my dipping sauce a combination of sweet, sour and spicy.

3. The best gifts to give me are chunky necklaces and bags (ehem... calling my friends...).

4. My mom and dad were public speakers and writers. Thus explains what I've been doing since grade school.

5. I can't swim, much less, float. I don't even trust a flotation device enough to just let go.

6. Sue me but I'm anal when it comes to really bad (not tolerable!) grammar and pronunciation. I'm not perfect but hearing people settling for something mediocre such as saying "cents" when its "centavos" that should be said (hello! 50 cents and 50 centavos are NOT the same!) and saying b-ih-tch when they mean beach is completely unacceptable.

7. I think (and some do) that I have the gift of prophecy. I just do not wish to explore that area. I only do it for fun.

Our Wedding Missalette
8. I'm not Chinese (or maybe I am because of my great great grandparents) but for some reason, the number 8 seems to hold an important place in my life (Note: I did not make it a point to put this fact as the 8th Interesting Fact About Myself  -  it's merely a coincidence... or is it?). My 8th official boyfriend became my husband. We became a couple in 2008 and got married on January 24, 2010 (01+2+4+1+0=8). The unit number of our property in Manila is 1H (H=8th letter of the alphabet).

9. I'm not against the Reproductive Health Bill in the Philippines. Haha. There! I said it! But before you condemn me to death, wait for a blog post about my reasons. lol

10. I was a Batibot child star in the early 90s! I remember coming to their studio on EDSA (near Quezon Ave!) after school and "interacting" with their puppets.

11. I love spicy tuna rolls, gyoza, hakaw, chopsuey, spaghetti in red sauce (not too sour or sweet, please), Pizza Hut's Hawaiian stuffed crust (cheese) pizza, Greenwich's Mozzarella Garlic pizza, siomai, Chinese cabbage (bok choy/pechay) and fried eggplant and/or steamed kangkong (water/swamp cabbage) with bagoong (alamang).

12. I hate pork fat (but I eat chicharon! lol), wasabi, kimchi, mustasa (mustard leaves) and ampalaya (bitter melon).

13. I ballooned to 185 lbs last year because of my sedentary (it's way too cold to jog in the Bay Area! lol) almost 6-month stay in the US (hello all-you-can-eat restos and big servings!) so when I returned to the Philippines to wait for the approval of my spouse petition, I vowed never to knock on death's door because of weight issues. I thought, if I love eating so much, I have to match that love with an active lifestyle. Plus, I want to become a mom already! I have to be in shape for that! So when my dad's monthly hospital confinements ended in November of last year, I started making it a point to go to the gym at least 4xs/week. The 3 and 5-lb dumbbells, the treadmill, the Abcore machine and the Precor elliptical and crossramp machines are my bestfriends for at least an hour while at the gym. As of this typing, I've already lost 20.5 lbs! Now you know my current weight. lol :)

14. I can read Spanish texts and make native language speakers think that I speak the language fluently. Proved that during my 2-month stay in Nicaragua while on a business trip. Haha! Seriously, I wish to go beyond my poor fluency in said language. Accent is not an issue. Grammar is somewhat an issue. Vocabulary IS the biggest issue!

15. I am afraid of heights....The stairs of the MRT stations in Ortigas and Shaw are to blame for this! Let's also include the really high escalator at the Shangrila Mall in EDSA. I have to overcome that though so as not to spoil the trip hubby's planning to the Grand Canyon Skywalk. Wish me luck!

My 30-Day Blog Challenge

Got the idea from a college classmate, Pauline. I thought, why not? I love writing and it has been a while since I've pushed and pulled my  writing skills. Her blog in Tumblr had me googling for 30-Day Blog Challenge posts and as it turns out, this one started a few years back and has different variations. There's one that focuses solely on fashion topics. But since I'm not into hardcore fashion, I'll settle for what I found at Bloggity Boop:

BLOGGITY BOOP (VERSION 2)
Day 01- A recent picture of you and 15 interesting facts about yourself
Day 02- The meaning behind your Blogger name
Day 03- A picture of you and your friends
Day 04- A habit that you wish you didn’t have

Day 05- A picture of somewhere you’ve been to

Day 06- Favorite super hero and why
Day 07- A picture of someone/something that has the biggest impact on you
Day 08- Short term goals for this month and why
Day 09- Something you’re proud of in the past few days
Day 10- Songs you listen to when you are Happy, Sad, Bored, Hyped, Mad
Day 11- Another picture of you and your friends
Day 12- How you found out about Blogger and why you made one
Day 13- A letter to someone who has hurt you recently
Day 14- A picture of you and your family
Day 15- Put your iPod on shuffle: First 10 songs that play
Day 16- Another picture of yourself (baby pic!)
Day 17- Someone you would want to switch lives with for one day and why
Day 18- Plans/dreams/goals you have
Day 19- Nicknames you have; why do you have them
Day 20- Someone you see yourself marrying/being with in the future
Day 21- A picture of something that makes you happy
Day 22- What makes you different from everyone else
Day 23- Something you crave for a lot
Day 24- A letter to your parents
Day 25- What I would find in your bag
Day 26- What you think about your friends
Day 27- Why are you doing this 30 day challenge
Day 28- A picture of you last year and now, how have you changed since then?
Day 29- In this past month, what have you learned
Day 30- Who are you?

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Favorite Jewelry Pieces


These are the ones I'm selling at my FB biz page (Accessories by Precious <-- click this) and not the ones I made for myself. Truth be told, if I'm greedy and all, I'll horde them all up for myself and myself alone! *snicker*


But since I'm running out of wardrobe space in the US as my accessories, shoes and all, have taken most of the space in one of my two closets there, and for profit purposes, I have no choice but to sell them. My huge task? To have at least 90% of them gone by the time I return to the US para bawas excess luggage and so I can make more! Haha.


NECKLACES
More than bracelets or anklets or rings, I looooooooooooooove necklaces! This is primarily because I inherited my dad's genes that cause my nape to develop a not-so-appealing chasm-like line. Ang pangit tuloy that's why I'm not so keen on sideview shots unless something's covering my neck/nape (turtleneck shirts, chunky necklaces and long, ponytailed hair are my bestfriends). Of course, necklaces give an illusion of length and grace  -  something women like me need more than anything.


PhP160

Scarf Necklace  -  PhP200
BRACELET(S)
I'm a big-boned girl and I have hair on my arms and legs that are so fine they don't really need to be shaved off. These are the reasons why it's difficult for me to find a bracelet that would look and feel nice on my arm. I despise, to the highest heavens, stretchable/elastic nylon. Who invented these, anyway? Ugh. My solution? Make my own that's heavy on charms and nice acrylic/swarovski stones.

PhP140
EARRINGS
I have a round face. Dangling earrings in subtle, earth tone colors, are therefore the best accessory for it.

PhP45


PhP35
PhP60
By now, you might have already noticed that I made my items work around my features, taking into consideration as well the features of other women. As they say, you have got to let clothes and accessories fit you, adjust to you, work around you and definitely not the other way around :)

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Love In The Time of Dementia

The following article is a repost from my Multiply blog. I wrote this piece in 2006, one to two months before she died. I wish to share this, once again, as it's Mothers Day today and the timing can't be more perfect (it's her 5th year in heaven).
___________________________________________________________________________

"Perdonare."

Such was what was said by one of the characters in Mitch Albom's "For One More Day". Said character, one of the wives of the grandfather of the main storyteller, was telling the lead character, Chick Benetto, to forgive himself.


In loving memory of mommy, Aurora Villamiel Tierra-Cardenas (Sept. 20, 1944-April 10, 2006)

Just how does one accept that her parent may already need to go?
This is dedicated to my mother.


Happier Times: With mommy in October 1997

‘I still want to live’


            My mother, as an advanced-stage sufferer of dementia of the Alzheimer’s type, only cries for six known reasons  -  when she’s hungry, when she wants to see either me or my dad beside her, when she struggles to remove her diaper which she really hates, if she’s in physical pain, if she needs to respond to the call of nature,  and if something has annoyed or irritated her.

            One night however, I woke up to a very different cry. It was her fourth night in the hospital where she was rushed after being badly bruised from a fall. Thinking that it might be one of the six reasons, I checked on her underpads (we earlier decided to stop the usage of diapers), it was not wet. I peeked into her underwear, it was not soiled. I asked her if she’s hungry or in pain, she only continued crying with nary her usual nod or  “no” for a response.

            She then began calling for dad who was partly hidden from her sight. Since dad’s out of sleep and was not feeling well, I told her that dad and I were just there while caressing her arm. But she persisted in her crying so I just ignored it thinking it is ordinary for advanced-stage sufferers of her illness to act like that.

            A minute into lying down on the makeshift bed I placed beside her bed, I suddenly heard her saying some words that were too garbled to understand. From experience, if she keeps on saying some words over and over again, I must really try to listen and guess what she’s trying to say. What I heard sent chills down my spine that I knew I had to wake dad up.

            Restless in bed and saying the words “I still want to live” and pointing and looking at something, I recalled the story of our house help who said that prior to the hospital confinement, mom, who I know is not much of a believer of anything supernatural save for some creatures she often told me as the other creations of God, kept on insisting that she’s been seeing a lady in white in our kitchen which could be seen if the door to the master’s bedroom is open.

            When mom eventually calmed down after 30 minutes or so, knowing she’s scared, I asked her permission so I could sleep beside her in her bed. Before sleeping, I told her some happy stories that made her laugh. Upon knowing her nerves had already calmed down, I asked her what she had seen and for a response, what she gave evoked different images that could only make me cry:

            “I saw a small star, a light.”


Aurora


            Dictionaries define the word “aurora” as the Latin word for dawn. The online encyclopedia, Wikipedia, describes it in detail as a glow observed in the night sky, usually in the polar zones which could either be known as the "aurora borealis" or the "northern lights” that often appears as a reddish glow on the northern horizon as if the sun were rising from an unusual direction, or the “aurora australis" of the southern horizon that also has similar properties.

Aurora Cardenas nee Tierra
            Astronomically speaking, an “aurora” may first appear as a faint, milky glow low in the north, too dim for the human eye to detect any color but bright enough to silhouette clouds near the horizon. Astronomy.com described it as a “ghostly glow” which is a “feast for the eyes”

            Similar to the effects these lights possess are the never-ending wonders my mother gave to me and to persons who have known her. Seemingly destined to be named after such phenomena, Aurora Villamiel Tierra-Cardenas was born on September 20, 1943 although apparently, a mistake occurred in the inputting of her birth date of which was the reason why on all of her important documents, she’s always a year younger than her actual age.

            Her sisters describe her as the most beautiful of more or less a dozen siblings who all hail from Atimonan, Quezon. Stories speak of how both her innate and physical beauty always earns her the admiration of many people. At the risk of being over the edge what with my natural bias for her as her daughter, I believe such descriptions to be true. These descriptions, however, cannot compensate the very reasons why she always stands out in everything she does.

            Career-wise, she once was a star. Many people recall her as the “Tiya Dely” of the Quezon province as for a time, she had a stint as a radio announcer (DJ) in one of the local radio stations and became famous, with a share of fans of her own, for her slow but soft, and low but sweet tone of voice that made people compare her with the famous radio personality.

            Said event in her life was just one of the many instances that made her shine and glow like an aurora until dementia closed in on her lights and eventually swallowed these like one big and strong black hole.


More Cruel Than Cancer


It was only in 2004 when mom suffered a severe stroke when her doctors discovered that she could have probably been undergoing a series of mini-strokes beforehand that caused numerous minute ruptured veins and damaged cells in her brain. Such discovery had been previously unknown to us as every time mom would have a high blood pressure or any discomfort, she would not inform us of the physical pain she was feeling. No, she never did. She never wanted us to worry.

            According to Reader’s Digest Guide to Medical Cures and Treatments, it is “a brain disorder in which memory, thought processes, and behavior become progressively impaired named for Dr. Alois Alzheimer, the German neurologist who first described it in the early 1900s.”

            Dementia.com on the other hand provides that the word “dementia” is only a general term for a condition that results to different illnesses such as Alzheimer’s.

        One could only imagine the pain that struck me and my dad upon learning only recently that from the abovementioned website that in the three stages of Alzheimer’s, mild or early stage, moderate or mid-stage and severe or late/advanced stage, mom is already in the latter stage.

            Often dismissed as a natural occurrence due to old age, dementia could be much more cruel than cancer as it could only be slowed down, not treated. I am no medical expert but who’s to say it only happens to people in their 80s or 90s? My mom, my dear, sweet and loving mom is only 62 as of this writing!


Beyond Borders


            Commitment means passion, dedication and the will to finish anything that has been started. As in the case of my mom and dad, it is love beyond affection, acceptance beyond caring.

           It took me quite a while to really accept and understand that my mom has dementia. Sadly, now that I am beginning to see how I really love and accept mom for who she was, is and will be, that I’d even have my hand with a tissue placed at the very hole of her anus just so I could fully catch her excrements and fully have her cleaned three to four times during my shift in looking after her, mom is already at the last stage.

           Two years of seeing how my dad, despite also being sick with hypertension and diabetes, managed to play his role very well as the man who stands by his wife “for better or for worse, for richer or for poorer, in sickness or in health”; two years of my mom looking older than her actual age due to dementia; two years of seeing mom mentally and quite stubbornly battle her illness that rapidly eats her physical strength because “she still wants to live” for us; two years of me loving her but not really being able to show it until recently…

            Now all I could do is stand by her and be strong as she is being strong for dad and me. All I could do is increase the faith, even go to the extent of asking Him fervently to postpone the “light” that is now fetching my mom who is the “light”, the Aurora of our family, of our home.