Category: Personal

  • Found My Soulmate. Who’s Yours?

    Found My Soulmate. Who’s Yours?

     Because Valentines’ day is just around the corner…

    On January 1, 2011, New Year’s day, Louie and I watched Good Will Hunting (1997), a movie about “a janitor at MIT, who has a gift for mathematics but needs help from a psychologist to find direction in his life. (imdb)”

    Regular sessions were attended by both Shawn the psychologist and Will the janitor, teaching us all basic but valuable lessons in dealing with the social life. Overall, the movie can be described as uplifting, touching and bittersweet; its plot revolving around redemption, the human spirit and hopes.

    There are many good quotes to remember in Good Will Hunting but the one which struck me most was in the conversation of Will and Shawn where Shawn asked “Do you have a soulmate, Will?” Will, wanting more clarity, asked him to define it. And Shawn answered,

    “A soulmate is someone who challenges you, opens up things for you.”

    I have encountered a bounty lot of definitions of what a soulmate is, in the past. This movie just reminded me of one acceptable meaning of it. Well, we won’t know if there indeed exists a “soulmate,” but by Shawn’s compelling concise explanation, I think I’ve found mine. He’s the one sitting next to me: Louie.

    It wasn’t love at first sight. Our love wasn’t like instant coffee; it took time to brew up the rich taste. It took time to understand the unsaid things and what was actually implied when something was said. It took time to know what every look of the eye meant. It took some time to understand the way he thinks, how he makes up his mind and almost everything he comes up with.

    In the first few months that we’ve been classmates, seatmates, and each other’s familiar face, I didn’t like him. Fast forward one to two years, things have turned to a hundred-and-eighty degrees. By that time, in my mind, he’s the only one who falls into the “special” zone. In the two years worth of his effort, we became closer.

    Waiting for “us” to happen was like waiting for a 9 in minesweeper. I thought that with heaps of academic deliverables and requirements to complete, extra-curricular activities to be done and the pressure from our peers, he won’t be sure if he would ever get in, but something told him if he could spend enough time and avoid all the right mines, he’ll find me. And he did.

    “They say there is a window from one heart to another. How can there be a window where no wall remains?” from Thief of Sleep by Shahram Shiva

    The date was January 5, 2009, our third “date” together. (First, although unofficially a date as it was, took place on October 11, 2008 when we watched Ulan ng Mayo, a play we had to attend for some point incentives in a class. Second was on December 15, 2008 when we watched Bolt in Promenade and had dinner in Teriyaki Boy.) Moving on, this third encounter materialized when his thesis group mates Jeatte, Renrick and JP with Patty invited us to watch a movie and have dinner with them for their post-birthday celebration.

    No, the feeling that was surpassing the common usual was not exactly present during the whole time we were in the movie theater, restaurant or even the picture studio where we had a group photo-shoot together.

    It just came alive when only the two of us were in his car on our way home.

    From SM Mall of Asia, we drove for one hour and so in the wrong direction. A disaster. Being lost? My least favorite feeling. In times like this, my hands would normally shook like pebbles on swaying whitecap of anxiety. Redundantly, my eyes would repeatedly glance at those digital numbers. One minute, two minutes, twelve minutes closer. Cement would fill my stomach.

    Darkness was upfront, but we endured. I watched the charcoal sky, succumbing to sleep on a “deserted road.” I asked again and again if we could stop at a corner and ask some people where to head next to right course. He said no, we could not do that. There were no policemen, no street guides, no passersby. In sheer exaggeration so to speak, daylight left us long ago, dissolving in the rear view mirror.

    Ultimately though, we made it home. Home to crinkled sheets, my bed lamp and my soft pillows.

    Being home: my favorite feeling. Being home: I feel when I’m with him. The realization just came upon.

    While in the long drive, despite being lost in the middle of nowhere, I didn’t feel worried nor doomed at all. I felt safe. I felt at ease; I felt happy I had every reason to still smile.

    From that day on, I knew I could trust this person. I’ve always had a million things I plant in my head that I want to say to him, but whenever I see him, I could hardly do anything but smile. And when he smiles back, I wondered what his million things could be.

    Our relationship has developed. So and so, our story became known to many. And now going back to the soulmate conception: I regard him as one incredible soulmate because he’s…

    > someone who fills in my gaps and makes me a better person
    > someone who tells me not what he can just say but others are unable to say to me; someone who tells me the truth no matter how hard
    > someone who pushes me to accept the things I didn’t and don’t want to accept
    > someone who supports me and helps me achieve my goals

    and to date,

    > someone who challenges and complements me at the same time
    > someone who loves me inside and out, the gross and the dark parts and helps me learn more about myself and the world.

    Once upon a time, I saw the world in a much different light.

    As a child, the world was about what I could find. Each moment was about discovery. What was around the corner? What did this do? Why was the sky blue? My parents told me I was fond of asking weird questions. In my innocence, I saw the world as a never-ending parade of questions and life was a search for answers.

    But like all things, that innocence and childish wonder passed. A parade of questions became a parade of one question repeated in endless variations. “How can I get out of this situation?” “How can I manipulate this to benefit me?” “How can I get something from this person?” Life became about me. I became a manipulative narcissistalbeit one who was good at appearing altruistic. I looked at every situation as me versus the world. I had learned that the world was out to get me. I had been taught by life, society, and pain that I must fight against everyone and everything around me to get what I wanted from life. The sun seemed harshly bright; the wind bitterly cold. I no longer wondered why the sky was blue. I knew it was blue to keep me from seeing the stars. I should have realized that that too would pass, but in my cynicism, I did not realize that even I could be wrong.

    Life changed as I felt love. Suddenly the questions were subtly different. No longer was I asking how I can get something from this person. Now the word “get” was anathema to me; it vanished from my vocabulary. Now I’m asking what I could just give.

    I’m always in the lookout on how I could make myself better and how I could make myself worthy of others. I’m humbled by who and what people are, and it made me appreciate the hollow nature of my life. Now I truly know what love means. All lovebe it Epithumia, Eros, Storge, Phile, or Agapeeschews taking. When love is involved, there is only giving, with no thought to recompense.

    “Live to learn. Learn to love. Love to live.”

    So I thank him for teaching me of love. I want it known that I love him for who and what he is. I want to thank him for being so kind, for genuinely wanting to know how I’m doing, for listening, for smiling at my jokes, even the ones everyone else thinks are cheesy. I want to thank him for giving me his hand, because whenever I hold it, I know that I love him and he loves me, too.

    In relation to the milky way, we are just rambling bodies that are smaller than the period at the end of this sentence. But we’re something special.

    To my protector, my sarcastic conversation starter, my encourager, my teaser,. my reason for being stronger, my butterfly kisses, my superman, MommyLou, Beef, LouieBoo:

    ¯`°º·¤.¸¯`°º·¤.¸¯`°º·¤.¸ (¯`v´¯) ¸.¤·º°´¯¸.¤·º°´¯¸.¤·º°

    .¤· º°´¯¸.¤· º°´¯¸.¤· º° I love you. ¯`°º·¤.¸¯`°º·¤.¸

    Congratulations for reading this far! 😀 Happy Valentines (in advanced) to all there loving couples and soulmates…

    Stay happy.

    *´¨)
    ¸.•´¸.•*´¨) ¸.•*¨)
    (¸.•´ (¸.•` ¤ Stay in ℒℴѵℯ. ♥

     

  • Celebrating My Parents’ 23rd Wedding Anniversary

    Celebrating My Parents’ 23rd Wedding Anniversary

    Dum dum dum dum…

    “You complete me.”

    I have no doubts that the scriptwriter of Jerry MacGuire has had a finger in many failed relationships all over the world. What is it about us humans that crave completion from outside ourselves? Why do we burden another person with the expectation of filling the void within us that we somehow cannot fill on our own? I guess it’s just humans’ inane nature.

    Most people, amidst living in an emotional state, would sense that there’s some missing part who’s out there in some place, spinning through the universe in the form of another person. People would also be born believing that if only they searched relentlessly enough, they might someday find that vanished half, that other soul. Through union with the other, they would re-complete their original form, never to experience loneliness again.

    This is the singular fantasy of human intimacy: that one plus one will somehow, someday, equal one and that each of us can potentially have a perfect partner sewn into our skin and make us quite whole and blissfully happy.

    But fantasies don’t belong in the real world and so we keep on searching for that one perfect relationship. And more often than not, we wind up hurt and bitter because no one seems to be able to complete us in exactly the way we want.

    So many complicated angles, emotions and thoughts, decisions, events, talks and relationships—ah, that’s love life. So many have been there and like fools, keep coming back for more, like in a revolving door—despite previous heartaches and keloidal battle scars. And I am just truly honored to witness how THE search for the completion has transformed from fantasy to reality, from selfishness to sacrifice, from refusal to responsibility, from abstract to the simple and sentimental, from mere connectivity to love.

    Celebrating My Parents’ 23rd Wedding Anniversary

    Yesterday, we celebrated the 23rd wedding anniversary of my parents in Eastwood Cafe, Richmonde Hotel. Original date is February 21, but because I could not attend on that day, we did it in advance. It’s not just love life; it’s married life that we’re celebrating.


    Married life is more than love adjustments and understanding. It’s greater than just being husband and wife, mommy and daddy. It’s getting through the needle of marriage, keeping the love in the relationship burning alive with all that jazz despite adversities through the years, and not just holding on to the marriage for the sake of camaraderie or the children. I salute them for getting to live their fairy tale love story.

    I once asked Mom how she knows she loves Daddy. She answered,

    when she cares for him more than herself, when her happiness is his happiness, when she accepts everything that’s him and when she thinks if he’s not worth the time, then nothing else is.

    Well said.

  • What Does it Mean to Be Chinese?

    What Does it Mean to Be Chinese?

    Before anything, I’d like to greet everyone a happy Chinese New Year! 恭喜發財!萬事如意。年年有餘。新年快樂!:-)


    And yes, I’m Chinese (naturalized Chinese-Filipino), not Korean, Japanese, Thai, Taiwanese or whatever you think I look like. :))

    Why my surname is Santos is an overrated question. Here’s the story, from what I know: My grandfather and his father came to the Philippines from Fujian (厦门, 福建), China in the 1940s when they decided to turn a new leaf in their lives and make trading as a business here.

    In some unfortunate circumstance, my great grandfather lost his re-entry permit to the Philippines, leaving my grandfather alone in this foreign country thus becoming an immigrant settler with nothing but his dream of continuing to live with strength and dignity.

    Life was extremely hard for him, I imagine. In his teens, he sold taho (Chinese mongo bean jelly or meal with syrup) and peanuts as a street vendor under the excruciating heat of the sun, walking by the same vicinity every day.

    One pleasant afternoon, a strike of luck came across, and he was hired as an assistant in a warehouse / small enterprise selling auto parts. Because of hard work, trust was bestowed upon him and the Chinese-Filipino family who owned the warehouse adopted and treated him as a member of their household.

    In 1974, President Marcos relaxed the naturalization policy and many Chinese in the country were able to become Philippine citizens. It was during this time that my grandfather has become a naturalized Filipino citizen and opted to change his surname from Chiongpico to Santos to give due credit to the Santos family who raised him and gave him the opportunity to build his own business for the first time.

    From Eng Kiam Pak, he registered for a Filipino name which is Jose Santos, Sr. (my father being the junior). Years after, he met my grandmother and got married. How their love story blossomed, however, is up to now, unknown to me (it might have been pre-arranged following the tradition).

    My maternal grandparents, on the other hand, came from Guangdong (九龙,廣東) province in China and also moved in the Philippines during the 1940s. They did not change citizenship and kept their family name, hence keeping the surname Chin.

    What does it mean to be Chinese? Living in the Philippines, being Chinese can be a down or up, a debit or credit on our life ledger: being a minority race, having an unique culture and living up to certain stereotypes. It’s as if I am caught between two different worlds (experiencing a sense of “twoness”).

    Nevertheless, I do appreciate who I am and where my ancestors came from; I embrace my Chinese heritage as one that was born from a great civilization and also one that highly values education and progress.

    ℒℴve ♡❤❤ Happy New Year ❤❤♡ ℒℴve ♡
    祝 ┏┯┓┏┯┓┏┯┓┏┯┓┏┯┓┏┯┓♥(\ /)
    福 ┠恭┠┨賀┠┨新┠┨年┠┠快┨┠樂┨ღ( . .)ღ
    您┗┷┛┗┷┛┗┷┛┗┷┛┗┷┛┗┷┛c(”)(”)