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Sunday, June 21, 2015

what makes a father, a good father?

photo by Gina Matchinsky

I think being a good father or a good mother for that matter is just like being a good Christian or a good Samaritan. It is doing something good for the welfare of helpless beings who can't pay you back. They are the "least of Christ brothers and sisters." It is doing both corporal and spiritual works of mercy without expecting anything in return.

The 7 Corporal works of mercy are:
1. Feed the hungry
2. Give drink to the thirsty
3. Clothe the naked
4. Harbour the harbourless
5. Visit the sick
6. Ransom the captive
7. Bury the dead. 

Spiritual works of mercy, on the other hand, are:
1. Instruct the ignorant
2. Counsel the doubtful
3. Admonish the sinners
4. Bear wrongs patiently
5. Forgive offences willingly
6. Comfort the afflicted
7. Pray for the living and the dead

A good father loves his children enough to have a genuine concern in seeing to their well-being all the way through. 

Some parents tell their children that if you can't enter the vows of celibacy (becoming a priest or a nun), you might as well enter the vow of Holy Matrimony (marriage).

In the Catholic religion, there are 7 Sacraments instituted by Christ:
1. Baptism
2. Eucharist
3. Reconciliation (aka Penance or Confession)
4. Confirmation
5. Marriage or Holy Matrimony
6. Holy Orders (aka Ordination or Vow of Celibacy)
7. Anointing of the Sick (aka the Last Rites or Extreme Unction)

The reason why they say that is because they want people to get as many Sacraments as they could. It  is believed that they are special occasions for experiencing God's saving presence and grace. Because if you can't be like Mother Theresa who has the good heart to do both Corporal and Spiritual works of mercy to so many impoverished people regardless of who they are, being blessed in the Holy Matrimony and having children to care for gives a person the wonderful opportunity to truly love people and to give them all the Corporal and Spiritual works of mercy they need in their most helpless state. Because who better to do these things to than your own spouse and children.

If those children are not your own flesh and blood, all the more goodwill is extended and all the more the magnanimity of the act. Because the more people you give love to, the more people who experience God's love because of you, and the more people who became better people because of you - all the better for you because it paves the way for you to receive God's saving grace.

So being righteous, just, loyal and a loving person, I think are the more important traits of a good father. Being a handyman, being a good provider, being strong or youthful, being talented or intelligent are just secondary. It is more important for him to have a good heart. It is also a heart that beats for only one woman, his wife and finds ways to express it.

They say that the best thing a father can do for his children is to love their mother. Dave Willis says "Husbands love your wives well! Your children are noticing how you treat her. You are teaching your sons how to treat women and you are teaching your daughters what they should expect from men." A good father loves his wife enough for things to fall into place.

So on Father's Day, cheers to all the good fathers in the world. Happy Father's Day!


Monday, April 27, 2015

America, the Beautiful (a poetic and contextual translation in Filipino)

photo by Matthew Matchinsky



Filipino translation by Maria Gina Villanueva Matchinsky. All rights reserved.
America, the Beautiful original lyrics by Katharine Lee Bates, 1913 










America, the Beautiful
Ang Magandang America



O beautiful for spacious skies,
O kagandahan kang dulot ng malawak mong kalangitan,

For amber waves of grain,
Ng alon ng mga butil mong ginintuan,

For purple mountain majesties
Ng karingalan ng malaube mong kabundukan

Above the fruited plain!
Sa tuktok ng mabunga mong kapatagan!



America! America! God shed His grace on thee,
America! America! Nawa ang biyaya ng Maykapal ikaw ay daluyan,

And crown thy good with brotherhood
At putungan ang iyong kabutihan sa pakikipagkapatiran

From sea to shining sea!
Na kayang tawirin maging ilan mang karagatan!



O beautiful, for pilgrim feet,
O kagandahan kang hantungan ng mga debosyon,

Whose stern impassion’d stress
Na may mithiing masidhing nakatuon

A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Sa daang hantunga'y sikdo ng kalayaan

Across the wilderness!
Tawid ay maging magpahanggang sa ka-ilangan!



America! America! God mend thine ev’ry flaw,
America! America! Nawa'y lunasan ng Maykapal ang iyong kahinaan

Confirm thy soul in self-control,
At ang pagtitimpi ay italaga sa iyong kaibuturan

Thy liberty in law!
Ng ang batas na mapagpalaya ay iyong makamtan!



O beautiful, for heroes proved in liberating strife,
O kagandahan kang dulot ng mga bayaning nagbuwis ng sa gayo'y kalayaa'y makamit

Who more than self their country loved,
Na higit sa sarili ang paglingap sa bayang iniibig,

And mercy more than life!
At laang magpatawad buhay man ang kapalit!



America! America! May God thy gold refine
America! America! Nawa'y ang iyong kagintua'y higit pang malinang ng Maykapal

Till all success be nobleness,
Hanggang lahat ng iyong tagumpay ay maging kadakilaan,

And every gain divine!
At ano mang iyong nakamtan, nawa'y ang Diyos na dakila ang pinagmulan.



O beautiful for patriot dream
O kagandahan kang dulot ng pangarap ng mga nakibaka 

That sees beyond the years
Na ang paglipas ng panahon ay hindi alintana 

Thine alabaster cities gleam,
Ang busilak mong lungsod ay magniningning

Undimmed by human tears!
Na kahit binuwisan ng luha ay hindi magdidilim!



America! America! God shed His grace on thee,
America! America! Nawa ang biyaya ng Maykapal ikaw ay daluyan,

And crown thy good with brotherhood
At putungan ang iyong kabutihan sa pakikipagkapatiran

From sea to shining sea!
Na kayang tawirin maging ilan mang karagatan!







Tuesday, December 23, 2014

why not the good old fashioned "Merry Christmas!"?

photo by Gina Villanueva Matchinsky

MERRY CHRISTMAS! This is how I would greet and would want to be greeted on Christmas day regardless of whether people say that it is politically incorrect to do so or not. I am not political and I don't care if I am incorrect. I don't care for Happy Holidays because it is too impersonal and there is no warmth. It takes away the spirit of the greeting.

Even if its real essence is the birth of Jesus and is associated with Christianity, what is actually being celebrated on Christmas day is joy, peace and love that brings forth the spirit of giving and goodwill. Take Christmas out and it is just another holiday devoid of its special meaning and of its real substance.

There are many other holidays and people greet according to what holiday is being celebrated. So why exclude Christmas? I don't see why people should not greet other people Merry Christmas when it is the occasion being celebrated. You don't greet people Happy Holiday in the 4th of July and even if some people are not Chinese, they get to greet other people Kung Hei Fat Choi when the Chinese New Year comes. In the Philippines, we even greet our Muslim brothers happy Ramadan when Ramadan day comes even if we are not celebrating it, so why not Merry Christmas?

Not greeting Merry Christmas, for me, is the way really big companies avoid the spirit of giving associated with Christmas ergo saving them a lot of money. Making people greet happy holiday instead of Merry Christmas psychs people and in case of companies, employees to not expect anything when Christmas time comes because it is not actually Christmas being celebrated. It takes away the spirit of giving and turns Christmas into just another holiday one is free not to go to work on. I don't even think of it as a matter of religion or belief, I see it as big corporations being the Scrooge and not wanting to join in the spirit of giving depriving employees big time and still boasts of being politically correct at the same time.

So as for me, it is still Merry Christmas on Christmas time and nothing more!

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

of bathroom tissues & bathroom issues

What better place to ponder things and pose like this than inside the bathroom?
"The Thinker". photo by Gina Matchinsky, Nelson Atkins Museum of Arts, Missouri. 

The ones we have at home is usually called a bathroom or in Tagalog banyo which came from the Spanish word baƱo. It is a room in the house with a shower and/or bath tub, a toilet and a sink.

But what if it is just a toilet and a sink like the ones that come with restaurants and malls?

In Tagalog, it is called kubeta from the Spanish word cubeta which means latrine. Not very pleasant to the ear for most so it is usually called a comfort room or CR for short and that acronym led to the slang term conference room which is all the same, a toilet.

But when I asked for directions to the comfort room or CR in restaurants in the United States the waiters didn't know what I meant. I had to say toilet for them to understand. Here in the U.S., they are more conveniently called restroom and for British a water closet. I don't understand the logic though. You don't go to a toilet to rest or just get water. It is more of a place to get comforted and being English speaking people, they ought to know.

So how do you call a toilet that is not integrated in the house or an establishment?

In the Philippines, we call it palikuran from the root word likod which means back in this case located in the back of the house as where they usually are. In English, it is called an outhouse.

But palikurans are not necessarily what Americans call a portable toilet, port-a-potties or port-a-john. Not also the British porta loos. If it is not a permanent structure at the back of the house, they are not palikurans, Filipinos just call them portalet or a more general term would still be CR.

It is important for Filipinos to go when they need to go. Thus the need for a chamber pot we call arinola. So we don't use arinola as a name for a person in the Philippines.

In houses where a lot of people just share one bathroom, this is especially important. In homes where the toilets are an outhouse, this is useful especially at night or during foul weather. Two-storey houses with no bathroom on the second floor also use this for the safety of the kids.

In another light, another use for arinola in the Philippines not associated with being comforted in the having to go direction is using it as a storage for money by vendors in small stores or retailers. It is easier to get a change there for customers and it is considered lucky to put money there to encourage more money or business to come in, not to mention an inconspicuous place to keep money. That is probably the last place a thief would likely look into unless they know. Probably another of the Chinese influence in the country or can be associated with the Filipino belief that when you dream of poop or fecal stuff, the more it is, the more money you are going to get.

So the next time you go to a small Filipino sari-sari store (a small store that sells an assortment of things) or a baratillo (bargain sale) or a tiangge (flea market) and see an arinola there, it is not serving its true purpose, but then still comfort in a different sense - the comfort being able to sell more and the hope of getting more money from it. So still all in the name of getting comfort when it is needed.

So what is the difference between a restroom (in the U.S.) and a comfort room (in the Philippines)?

Apart from there having more people in a comfort room that you oftentimes need to get in line even when there were several cubicles already in a mall or a department store - one big difference is the bathroom tissue. In a usual comfort room in the Philippines, there is usually no available roll of bathroom tissue. You have to bring your own. That was why when I first came to the U.S., I often brought with me bathroom tissue wherever I went only to realize that in every restroom be it an Interstate facility, supermarket owned, a school or church rest area, and even department store restrooms - they all have bathroom tissues. Only comfort rooms in hotels and some hospitals provide bathroom tissue in the Philippines.

But then a bathroom tissue is not a major concern in a Filipino comfort room. Unlike in the United States restroom, most Filipino's primary concern is if there is water, soap and a tabo or dipper (especially the tabo) to wash things with. That is something American restrooms do not have.

I met a Filipina in a Speedie Mart in Nevada. She approached me because she instantly learned that I am a Filipina by the way I look. She said the payong or umbrella I was carrying when it was summer and there was no rain was a dead give-away. She expressed the same concern, too. The first thing she looked for when she moved to Las Vegas was where to buy the good old tabo. I improvised mine and used a 500 ml. plastic measuring cup for the purpose. She went all the way to Seafood City just so she can buy one and showed me where it was so that started our friendship.

The question that came to mind is if people around here are not using tabo, and most of the houses do not have a bidet, how do they make that area clean after a major bowel moving? Isn't it supposed to be first, you wipe it with a tissue and then you wash that area with soap and then dry them with tissue again? At least that's how my mother taught me.

Of course there are a lot of bathroom issues that are worse than concerns about whether to use tabo or just plain bathroom tissue and I am happy to not be one of those who have such major problems. People who often get indigestion and have thrice as much trips to the bathroom than the regular visiting people is one example. Finding it hard to move bowel is another major cause of concern, too. It was during those times when a magazine or any reading material inside the bathroom or an I-pad like what we use is most useful.

Another issue but not a bathroom one, but more of a lack of it is the way some Filipino men just pass water where ever they feel like doing so -- be it on a tree or somebody else's fence or wall. That is the reason why in some areas in the Philippines, you will read a sign printed on the walls of houses or establishments that says: "Bawal umihi dito" which means passing water in that area is strictly prohibited. In some Filipino men's desire to go as soon as they need to, they defy certain conventions. No such sign here in the United States, and definitely not a Filipino woman thing to do also - not without water, soap and the good old tabo, at least.

So be it a comfort room or a restroom issue, a tabo or a bathroom tissue issue, a diarrhea or a constipation issue, a bathroom ought to be a place of comfort. Nothing beats that good light feeling and relief after a good bowel movement or urination. Sometimes it is even when you're sitting in your small throne there that you even get to contemplate on a lot of things. It was how I thought about this piece after looking at the new set of bathroom tissue rolls inside the bathroom and the issues I had once with it. But issues or without, a bathroom ought to be a comfort zone and I intend that ours will be just that.


Thursday, January 30, 2014

no friend of mine

"Tattler". photo by Gina Matchinsky, Iowa City




J

January 23, 2014 question is "Do you need a break? From what?"

It took me a while to think what it is about my life that I need to take a break from. As it is, I am already in some kind of a hiatus already as I wait for my papers to get processed so I can start work and I am not burdened with an 8 to 5 job. Since I still don't have my children with me, I am also not saddled with the everyday routine of taking care of their daily needs and that definitely needs taking a break from from time to time. I just got married, so it is definitely not taking a break from my husband who is so easy to get along with and not at all demanding even when he is sick.

So what is it that I need to get a break from?

In my earlier post entitled, "Some things never change" http://loveandfreetobe.blogspot.com/2014/01/some-things-never-change.html, it tells of me being one of the boys when I was young. Back then I preferred playing with boys more than with girls. Probably it has got something to do with whom I got the most interaction with.

I grew up on a street surrounded by relatives with more male sons my age I got for cousins and I used to tag along and play with them. On that same street, there happened to be even more boys my age than girls, too. Being a daddy's girl also who used to tag along with dad whenever he attended auctions and conventions, I had the privilege to get introduced to his friends, and of course, they were male friends. So I even got to play board games with them several times when they visit us at home. So early in life I learned how to deal with them, felt more comfortable and get along well with them better than with girls my age or even older.

With boys or men, it was more straight-forward and predictable. No groupies, cliques or intrigues. They were more understanding or a lot more patient in explaining things. And when I compete or play games with them, victory was a lot sweeter after being most of the time underestimated. The best thing about it, I never got to hear myself talked about between them or anyone in a negative way. When good things happen to me, they were genuinely happy, too and there was no feeling of jealousy over my good fortune nor were there catty remarks to put me or pull me down.

Quite the opposite of what I experienced being in the company of a lot of female peers. Having studied in an exclusive for girls school in high school or even just the female classmates I had or female office mates or friends, I had some pretty unhappy experiences.

I remember a time when I had an argument with one female classmate and the next thing I knew, a lot of other female classmates were not talking to me anymore and I had nobody to eat lunch or go to the restroom with. How can that much people get influenced by just one person when they only heard just one side of the story? There were instances when if I did good in something, got praised or did well in class, all of a sudden I got a surprise treatment from a female friend being sarcastic and insulting when I had known her to be sympathetic when I was not doing well and having problems.

A lot of times I got really surprised by how unpredictable some could become. Like just the last time we talked we were joking and laughing out loud, and the next time we met she would not even talk to me and I was being ignored.

Just recently, I felt betrayed by a female friend who I thought was a well meaning one. The way she told other people her opinionated version of an issue is not the way friends are supposed to be treated. She used to be supportive and helpful when I was down but when things were good she acted differently.

And then there were female friends, too, who just made friends for what they thought they will get. Probably, some men, too, may have an ulterior motive when they make friends. I learned that when I got a little older but it is a lot easier for me to see through them to quickly dodge. But with female "friends", you sometimes just don't until you got betrayed. Probably I am just having a hard time to decipher and more vulnerable to girl friends because of the need to have a good one while guys I have not much effort at all to be friends with.

I just realized that when people talk behind your back, when you got treated negatively for no apparent reason, when you got condemned without them getting your side of your story, when people just hurt you and destroy your image and they were not supposed to be enemies but friends -- it  is probably the workings of envy or jealousy or their own feelings of insecurities. Not that there is much to be envied about my circumstance but sometimes people are just not satisfied with what they got. So I got hurt by it, I survived, I moved on but the most important thing is that I learned from it and now I know the people I can't trust.

So what do I need a good break from? It is probably, people who hid behind the veneer of friendship but who are not so well meaning after all. How I intend to deal with it? In the words of Booker Washington, "I shall not permit no man to narrow and degrade my soul by making me hate him." or her for that matter.


Monday, January 27, 2014

taking the plunge

"Taking the Plunge". photo by Gina Matchinsky, Freemont Street, Las Vegas, Nevada

January 22, 2013 question is "Are you seeking security or adventure?

There was a time when I used to be one of those kinds of people, Rainer Maria Rilke in his Letter to a Young Poet  describe as one who "knew only one corner of their room, one spot near the window, and one narrow strip on which they keep going back and forth."

When I was a child, I had a very protective father who would not let me sleep over on relative houses or join campings or attend field trips without an older and more responsible companion. When I was in my teens, I was not even allowed to attend parties without a chaperone if allowed at all. If allowed it was strictly up to a certain hour only and at that exact appointed time I got to be fetched by no other than my father himself and not a minute time extension whatsoever.

It was home to school and school to home and just going out from time to time during weekends with him for long walks at Rizal Park or the coastal areas along Roxas Blvd near the CCP complex in my early elementary days. I almost contracted polio and the doctor thought it would be a  good therapy to exercise the legs more to build muscles just to be safe.

In higher elementary, high school and college, I got to tag along with him to auctions and conventions because he was a numismatist. He thought I gave him luck in his dealings. Those weekends were fun because after that I got to be treated to good food and shopping galore and most of whatever I wanted I got. With him it was always a taxi ride and never a passenger jeepney commute that my mom made me ride every time we shopped after buying too many things..

I used to be sickly when I was small and while he earned a lot during those times, most of the money went to paying hospital bills and buying medicine. As a businessman with his own manufacturing company, we did not have Medicare benefits and health insurance were not that popular in the Philippines at the time. So that accounted for him being overly protective of me long after the time when I was not sickly anymore. So it was still basically school and home, and home and school and a few "monitored" diversions in between.

10 days after graduating college, I got a job, so after that it was home to work and work to home. The 3 of us siblings were not allowed to have a boyfriend or a girlfriend while we were still studying. So I was already working when I had my first boyfriend whom I married. After marriage, he preferred that I be a stay-at-home mom for the children so it was home and shopping, and shopping and home from then on.

So I had a pretty much sheltered and relatively secured life for the most part. I have not even toured most parts of the Philippines. I never even had the chance to explore the world or even my own personal potentials and possibilities.

So back to the question if I am seeking security or adventure - it is probably both.

But first let me define how I take security. I take it to mean being free from harm, danger, threat, fear or anxiety. But more importantly I take it as the feeling of being secured in a loved-one's love, and that there is still somebody there to catch me when I fall.

Having a father whose business folded just when I was about to go to college back then had been a trying experience for me after experiencing the "good life" our bag business had to offer. I don't want to go through the same feeling of uncertainty again. There was the anxiety that I would not be able to finish school college at the time and I so really wanted to. It even made me worry if there will be food on the table the next time.

Same thing happened with the father of my children who work as a freelancer. But it was not just worry about having food on the table the next time and the children being able to finish a college education. After him not allowing me to work so I can take care of the children properly or as how he wanted it, there was also the constant threat of him leaving me and the children and how that would make me the loser. Whenever there was an argument, he threatened to no longer work or to leave and he won each time. So I used to have a feeling of being dispensable and not being loved enough to matter so I left him. I don't want to go through the same feeling again.

After not being allowed to work and being treated unfairly just because, my motivation to work now is to be financially independent so I will not be so dependent again and controlled or treated so low and without respect. So maybe I seek that kind of security. I want to be secured enough to be independent but still stick to a relationship because I wanted to.

Also after having just 3 years of regular work experience and long years of intermittent freelance job and then stopping for a long time, there seems to be a feeling of insecurity in fitting in a regular 8 to 5 job again. So I also need to feel secure of being accepted no matter what.

As for being adventurous, I can go so long as it is not debilitating or life threatening and although there is risk, just calculated ones.

I think, I just had my share of "adventure" when I went to the United States all by myself for the first time and decided to alter the course of my life, which I hope will be for good. With that big step it changed the way I view the world, too. I realized that there is more to life than the everyday routine and safety or uncertainty of the four corners of the room I frequently stayed in back home. I now understand why white can't be all that white or black through and though black and how sometimes it has to be the color in between. I also discovered the free-spirited person in me surfaced after being used to living by a given set of conventions. It felt like a breath of fresh air after being stifled for so long.

So now I felt that I have missed on a lot -- a lot of "I have not seen that..." and "I have not done that...". So maybe with adventure it is more of seeing the world more, being less conventional in my views, experiencing things I have not experienced before, learning to actually live and taking the plunge to love again, the biggest adventure of all."


Saturday, January 25, 2014

wings still intact...

"wings still intact..." photo by Gina Matchinsky, at the Henry Doorley Zoo, Omaha, Nebraska

January 21, 2014 question is "What are you looking forward to?"

Ever dreamed of late? I don't for quite sometime now.

Sleep researchers say that every 1 1/2 hours in between sleep we dream every sleeping time of our lives. People, like me, who say they don't simply just do not remember. Because the only times we recall our dreams was when it occurred right after we wake up and sometimes our minds were so preoccupied with many things to ever spare a thought.

There was a time I used to remember my dreams a lot. I even recall knowing I was dreaming and there were times when I was even able to control the happenings in the dream. That awareness that you are in a dream state is what was referred to as "lucid dreaming". It can be a "dream-initiated lucid dream" when while dreaming you realize that you are and a "wake-initiated lucid dream" when the awareness that you are dreaming came after  you woke up and then continued dreaming again. And I have experienced both so that just goes to show that at one point I dreamed and recalled them.

During those times I remember most of my nighttime dreams, I recall having too many  daytime dreams, too. Not much for myself, I dream mostly for my children. I longed for a happy and secure home for them. I so wished they would all finish a college degree. I prayed that they will be God-fearing and grow into a responsible and successful individuals. I dreamed that they will have a brighter and happy future.

Then one day, I just woke up to the thought that I have no control over any of those dreams to get realized especially the part about giving them a happy and secure home.

Giving them a secure home was hard enough already but what was harder was the happy side to it since it was already a living hell for me to stay in a house that I could no longer call home. That was the time when I started not recalling my night time dreams also.

But by accepting the things that are beyond my control, it cleared my mind and made me think no longer in terms of the dreamer's solutions, but more workable ones. I stopped brooding over the what might-have-beens and thought instead in terms of possibilities for the future.

The way Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. worded it has been an inspiration:
"Yet in opinions look not always back --
Your wake is nothing, mind the coming track;
Leave what you've done for what you have to do;
Don't be "consistent", but be simply true."

So back to the question of what am I looking forward to - I don't think I have much to look forward to because I view looking forward as already getting what you hope for for certain. But I still dare to hope and perhaps, I may still have a few dreams left, too - not the kind that needs recalling when I wake up. And probably I no longer recall nighttime dreams because of a busy mind working and getting too much preoccupied with more feasible stuff to ever have the time to entertain the thought or have the luxury of recalling things as trivial as dreams.

So not much of looking forward to but it is more of still being able to dream. I still dream of the dreams I had for my children, but now I also learned to dream of dreams for myself, too, and I am holding on to that dream. And as a quote by Langston Hughes says "Hold fast to dreams, for if a dream dies, life is a broken-winged bird, that can not fly." Sometimes it is the hope of realizing dreams that keeps people going - fly. It can even inspire them to soar.

So what do I dream for myself? John Lennon, Beatles singer and composer, once said that "A dream you dream alone is just a dream..." So it is the dream of building beautiful dreams together with someone that I dream of because it is only a dream you dream together that turns into reality.