From the monthly archives:

November 2009

Not of the Same Feather

by Dave Garcia on November 27, 2009

Today is the last Friday of the month. As has been our little tradition ever since we all got jobs, friends from high school and I met to hold our (what else) “last Friday of the month special” (read: let’s all meet, get drunk, whine or babble on about something that has been the cause of happiness… you get the drift).

We have never had a permanent hangout, it’s all been random. Earlier, we were at a bar in Antipolo, high up in the hills. It was great looking down at the houses below, and just after moving one’s head a bit, staring at the stars scattered over the black, black, black sky. Cheesy as it sounds, I love looking at a wide expanse of black sky. It soothes me, makes me feel all relaxed inside. Hell, anything black does that for me.

But anyway. I was talking about my high school friends…

It was nearly 9 pm and drunk as we were, Ron, our 4th year class clown who became a dentist, still manages to say coherently that there are days when he could absolutely scream if he had to pull another seriously decayed tooth. We tell him that he should be happy instead of whiny because in these times, a trip to the dentist isn’t really a priority for many people and if he is getting more than enough customers to make him hate getting another tooth out, then it is a sign that he is weathering the hard times. He says “of course not” and tells us stories about how vain most people are, and the reason that majority go to see him is not because of their concern for dental health and hygiene. Ron says that his client base is composed more of rich matrons and relatively well-off, aging dudes who can afford to spend a lot on cosmetic dental work, after so many years of neglect. I think of Mr. Peterson, good ole Mr. Peterson and his lovely set of teeth and try to imagine what it must have cost to maintain them looking like that.

Liza butts into Ron’s prolonged whining and asks him what’s wrong with having matrons and relatively well-off and aging dudes for his primary customers. Ron says the matrons and the rich dudes aren’t the problem, the problem is that there just aren’t enough of them who are okay with spending a lot to have their teeth fixed.

“So, you aren’t really that financially fluid right now?” Megan, the enterpreneur in our little group, asks.

Ron doesn’t reply, opting to simply tilt back his head and drink his glass of beer straight, down to the last drop.

Megan frowns, chewing on the nail of her index finger. Right hand. Always the right hand for Megan.

Ron’s reaction and Megan’s reaction to him depresses me somehow and makes me wish I was back in Hong Kong and just pretending that I owned the world as I rubbernecked the goods in the Night Market while eating a hot bun bought from the sidestalls.

Liza waves her hand in front of my face, muddying up my memories of Hong Kong. I frown and am about to tell her to drop dead when she raises my cellphone, smiling weirdly at me. I become aware that it is ringing.

The display shows “Peterson, Mark”. Argh.

“David. Where were you off to,” Liza asks. “It’s been ringing for some time.”

Argh again. Should I risk it? Should I answer the dang phone and talk to Mr. Peterson? As if I had a choice. Hah!

“Hello, sir.”

“David? Is this David Garcia?

“Y-yes, sir. It’s me, David. Uhm, good evening.”

“Yes. You sound…”

“Sound…?”

“Different.” He clears his throat and my face screws up in fear. Liza, Ron and Megan find this hilarious and start laughing. I frantically try my best to shush them up, but they only laugh harder and louder. I stand up and walk away for a few steps.

“Where are you?”

“W-with some friends, sir.”

“Oh. Yes. Friday night. Okay. I won’t be disturbing you much tonight, then. But can you come to the office early tomorrow? I understand it’s a Saturday tomorrow and it’s one of your days off, but…”

I cut in, relieved to finally have a chance to say something without stammering.

“Yes, sir. I will.”

“Alright. Thank you.”

He hangs up and I look at the guys with what I can only assume must have looked like a “what me worry” face because they start laughing again.

“Who was that?” Megan asks.

“Mr. Peterson.” I say, smiling stupidly.

“His boss!” Liza giggles. “The love of his life!”

“Boss?! Love of your life?!” Ron looks at me with total disbelief. “You are having an affair with your boss, David?! Brokeback, dude?”

“No, you shitape. But yes, I love him.”

I haven’t been long yet in my present job and only Liza knows something about my boss, and even then, just a little something at that. So it’s not surprising that they go off on a laughing binge again at what I said. Still, I don’t feel easy about it.  Don’t get me wrong, I love my friends but sometimes I feel like an alien beside them. That thing about birds of the same feather flocking together doesn’t apply to me and them. Never has and never will.

Anyway, all that was a few hours ago. I’ve already drunk 4 cups of coffee and taken 2 showers to get the alcohol out of my system. Doing good at that, I think.

Can’t wait for the sunlight. Can’t wait to get to the office.

____

I am David Garcia and my current mood is: OPTIMISTIC :)

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Anything I Want

by Dave Garcia on November 10, 2009

I just realized something today. I can write about anything I damn well please here, because this is my blog.

And when I say anything, I mean anything, because as far as I know, there isn’t supposed to be any kind of censorship over the internet.

Hah! So am I going to rant and rave like I’ve seen other bloggers do? Or maybe I am going to write in a more adult way, like maybe talk about the latest porn I’ve seen (hey… I get lonely).

Nah.

I admit I’ve been tempted to do both, but was kept in check by the fact that in case the web doesn’t collapse in on itself in a couple of decades or so, my son Ira could come across this blog.

I have no idea if he’s ever going to find out that I am his dad and that I do exist and have been thinking of him since day one (the day his mom told me her test at the doctor’s had come out positive), but just in case he does, I don’t want him to know me as a perv who writes about porn movies. Nor do I want him to visualize me as coming across like Bruno Ganz playing the male lead role in Der Untergang.

Let me see… how do I want Ira to know me, what kind of person do I want him to see me as? Definitely not as an asshole (forgive the lousy punning, I’m feeling out of sorts right now).

Ira, my son, I think I want you to know me as a man who enjoys eating vegetables, has been to both Hong Kong and Bangkok many times and loves it, can write reasonably coherent prose and poetry with depth without being ashamed of it, and can whip up a deliciously nutritious meal in less than thirty minutes.

Of course, I follow recipes attentively to achieve the last claim I made. But it’s true, Ira. If ever you meet my boss, Mr. Peterson, someday, ask him about my Vegetables With Rice, Hong Kong style. He’s eaten it over and over again, but still tells me he’ll never get tired of it.

I’m tired now, but tomorrow, I’m going to put the recipe up here.

Sounds good?

I’m sure this sounds better — someday, Ira, I am going to cook that for you also, and we are going to eat it together… and maybe, even get drunk together too.

_____

I am David Garcia and I wish that: I had agreed with my mom when she suggested long ago, that I convince Melinda to make our son-to-be a “Junior”.

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Knitting and Needlepoint

by Dave Garcia on November 3, 2009

Mr. Peterson was right about this blogging thing. It does relieve my stress.

It also has its downside though. The other day, while trying to get myself drowsy without drinking any kind of alcohol (for a change), I tried to find out what other kind of people blogged and what sort of topics they blogged about.

I used Google to find different kinds of blogs randomly. It puzzled me so much, and puzzles me up to now, why most of what I kept getting were blogs on arts and crafts, namely knitting and needlepoint.

Was it a thing with bloggers? Arts and crafts? Was I out of my league? Should I also take up knitting or needlepoint? If ever, what kind of sweater should I knit? Would I wear a sweater that I, myself, knitted?

Further clicking around did not give me the answers I needed and expected. All I know is that there were so many blogs dedicated to arts and crafts which I saw, and so few oriented towards helping a 29 year old guy get his bearings back after a disastrous non-marriage.

If I’m not making any sense to you, rest assured that neither am I making sense to myself right now.

_____

I am David Garcia and my current outlook is: depressed.

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