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Showing posts with label RememberYolanda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RememberYolanda. Show all posts
(Have you read the first part? If not, check out A Story (Part 1) by clicking the link provided.)
I do not know how much time has passed but the thing I knew was that a time for a piece of alleviation came. Someone said that the water was then starting to diminish. The water didn't flood the second floor and it was starting to recede, back to the angered sea, where it came from. We were relieved, at least, and still kept on praying that the storm and the flood will everlastingly be over.
Minute by minute, we saw the flood go down the 1st step of the stairs to the first floor, then down to the second, third, fourth, fifth, every step equivalent to every citizen rescued and welcomed to our boarding house. Remember that woman by the window? She's alive! She's high-spiritedly alive. She told us how she did it. She was struggling to breathe due to the water reaching up to her chin as she clambered to the ceiling and yet, she was removing the jalousies of her window one by one; like the Hulk she destroyed the grills! She made it, she was able to swim and reach our stairs, with the help of the people from our boarding house. She was so inspiring. She was happily laughing while telling us her story as if nothing happened about more or less than an hour ago. She even said,
"Oy, wala ko ninyo gi-picture-an? Basin ga-upload ninyo sa facebook, nya, kataw-an ko sa akong mga amiga, nga sige ko'g shagit murag buang. Nya, kung naglutaw-lutaw ko, kataw-an pud ko nga ni-lubo akong tiyan. Yay!" (Hey, did you not take pictures of me? Maybe you’d dare to upload it on facebook, my friends would surely laugh at me shouting like crazy. Also, if I floated, they’d also laugh at me having my stomach bloated. Yay! )
I lent some clothes to those who were drenched in the rain and the flood. And towels too, and even my bed sheet was used to wrap one soaked grandma. I didn’t think twice. I even felt that it would be fine even if they needed all my clothes, because all I thought was that I was alive. I could have died and not be able to use those clothes again. But I was alive so I gave what I could give. I was so thankful for my life that I couldn’t think of anything else but just being able to stay alive, even if I have to lose many clothes.
I was by the window inside Kim's room. We were gathered there again as the storm weakened and the rising of the flood stopped. I saw the house across the window. There were these young men earlier rescuing other neighbors and bringing them to their stirring but half-roofless house, still continuing their rescuing. There they were, saving person after person, and in between the intervals they sat by the terrace as if the wind and rain did not disturb them even a little. I was touched by what I was seeing. That house had always been very silent during ordinary days but occasionally, there would be big parties there. Then the next day, it would be that serene home that it had been as always. I never really understood that house. Sometimes I'd get scared of the thought that it may be a haunted house despite its beautiful appearance, with a balcony that looks like a ship's terrace. But that is it, the thought there – like the story of Noah and his ark – the men saving lots of people even though like Noah, they were unknown by most people around. I never saw one of them outside of that house. Yes, I'm always observing that house and I always wanted to know the people inside that house, know about the house, and know about why everything about them and the house was like that. And by then, I knew it, not detail by detail, but by the mere fact that the house was great, the people living inside were great, and what they were willing to do was great—they saved many lives.
We started to calm down as the storm did. My boardmates and I and some that were rescued were gathered in the room and were talking about what happened. Had something really happened? It was like everything was just a dream. But no, our bare eyes saw the flying roofs, the raging winds, the very strong rains, people on top of houses and posts, some sailing through floating refrigerators and furniture, and the flood, stagnant as of the moment — all these that we were used to seeing on TV, we witnessed first-hand. I usually do not talk that much so I was just at the room’s corner, still by the window, looking out at the devastated place. My boardmates were already taking pictures and they seemed to be back to their normal selves again. Well I was too, I was my normal self — my inner normal self that is inclined to contemplating. Did papa pursue traveling to Tacloban? Where is he now? I hope he didn’t do the quest. How is my family in Calbayog? Are they ok? Where is Wilma? Where is Ate Moi? Where is Dionesa? Where is Ate Kit? Where are my friends? Where are my schoolmates? Are they all fine? Do they have some people around them to help them like how these people I am looking at are doing now? My attention never snubbed the house across and the heroes that I discovered. It’s one thing that I always remember, up to this time whenever I think about what happened one month ago. (Yes. Today, it has already been one month. Here I am trying to continue writing about it again. It’s your monthsary Yolanda. Congratulations, you were very successful.)
Noon came. 12 PM, and the flood was gone. Yolanda was gone. And as I went outside the boarding house, by the terrace on the second floor, I saw that everything around was gone. Houses on the streets were gone. The store with the irritable owner was gone. But was she gone? Where were she and her family? The trees were gone. The mini-garden there was gone. And then I saw the people’s faces, there was one thing I knew… hope was not gone. They were smiling. They were laughing. They talked about their swim, their climb, their grip — their way to second life. They were lucky. I was lucky that I was there at the 3-floor boarding house. I can’t imagine myself if ever I wasn’t there. God, thank You.
We had food! Ate Nimfa picked whatever she can get inside the drained first floor and there she found their stacked sack of rice and some bulad or dried fish, some canned sardines and more. There were also gas and stove on the second floor. (How lucky!) At least we still had something to eat. All of us inside our “evacuation area” shared the food. And that was it; there were talking, and singing, and laughing, and resting, and cleaning; and waiting — just waiting for the night so we could sleep the depression off.
Evening came. The house was dark, only illuminated by some candles and rechargeable flashlights. I was still at that corner by the window. It seems like it has already been my favorite spot at the sanctuary. I just sat there, fitting through the crowded room, each person trying to find comfort in the very small space he/she could rest his/her body into. I guess some were already asleep after Daryll, my boardmate, Ate Shara, and I kept on singing Christian songs to praise the Lord for saving our lives, and also praying for no more tragedy to happen, for our safety, for our survival. Because even though the night was peaceful, our hearts weren’t.
Around 9 PM, someone went inside the room and said, “Jen, adi imo Papa.”
(Jen, you’re father is here.)
I jumped off the bed uttering the only word I could say, “Papa” and went outside the room, and saw papa having his head wrapped with cloth. I worried. I asked, “Pa, naanano ka?” (Pa, what happened to you?), holding his head. I thought he got wounded. But he said, "Ginputos ko la kay para diri magturo an balhas. Para diri maulang akon mata. Nagbaktas man ak tikang sa San Juanico. Ginbilin ko didto an sarakyan. Ah, kay waray maagian, diri na makakaagi an sarakyan.” (I just wrapped my head so that the sweat won’t fall to my eyes. I walked from the San Juanico Bridge. I left the car there. There’s nowhere you could pass through, the car won’t be able to pass through.”)
He said he traveled from Calbayog in the morning, around 8 AM, and the travel on the road was really long. I can’t imagine how he did it, how long he did it, how he was able to make it. He arrived at the San Juanico bridge around 5 PM and there he started walking to Tacloban proper, arriving at around 9 PM. He said he went to the PLDT station but it was locked so he proceeded to the boarding house.
I didn’t know what to say. I do not know what I have said but all I remember was that I just held Papa’s arm, and thanked God he was safe. I tried not to cry. Ate Shara, my boardmate who has her family in Calbayog too, asked Papa what happened there and Papa said everything’s fine there. People there were safe. Our family was safe. And once again I felt my heart being filled with gratitude.
Then Papa said he’ll just stay outside together with the other fathers there. He left his bag and umbrella with me and whispered to me asking if I have some biscuits. I said yes and he told me to bring him some.
Papa went outside. I returned to the room, reached for my bag and grabbed some biscuits then I went outside where Papa was. I gave him the biscuits and he said “Hay salamat!” Then I heard him offer the biscuits to the people there too. How selfless.
I sat by the window again, and there I cried. I didn’t have a particular reason. Was I crying because I can’t imagine what happened? Was I crying because Papa arrived safe? Was I crying because Papa was hungry? Was I crying because of the hardship that Papa encountered? Was I crying because I had my father there? Was I crying because Papa didn’t talk to me that much when we saw each other? Was I crying because Papa didn’t hug me? Was I crying because I knew that Papa, deep inside, was very happy that he did it, that he went there for me, that he was thankful to see me alive and safe, and that he is just really that kind of father that is not showy but again deep inside he really was very glad to see me and that he being there just proves how gigantically he loves me? Yes, all of it.
Papa had asked me whether I would like to go home with him on the next day, and he also asked Ate Shara because we live in the same barangay in Calbayog. Yes, he asked, because he told us that we’d have to walk 10 km to get to the San Juanico Bridge where he left the car. “Naman, kaya?” (Will you be able to endure it?) We said yes. I guess you can be willing to do everything just to be able to make your way home.
I prepared my things and once again did that “re-organizing my bag” I once did before the storm. But this time, it needed to be light since we had to walk 10 kilometers. Imagine walking with a ton of loads in your bag. The most important things to bring were food and water, just that and everything will be fine. So there, I took out things from my bag, then put some inside, then took out some other things again, then put some inside again. I decided to leave my laptop, because I knew it would really make my bag heavy. After a lot of thinking, I put it inside again. So what were inside my bag were the following: food, water, laptop, a towel, a shirt, my wallet, cellphone, a ballpen, and my Bible. I got my shoes ready — the shoes which Papa bought for me and was supposed to be used in my every-morning jogging with Papa. I tried to position myself in the constricted space I could only get; making sure not to make my feet and thighs feel numb for the 10 km walk. But it was hard. Everyone inside the room had their body and feet at least laid straight. But me, I was at that same corner by the window, I was at the bed’s edge, meeting the walls and there’s a cabinet nearby and it really was hard to be able to lay straight. I got worried because I can’t find a way to lay my body straight and that I can’t wake them up because they were all asleep already and I can’t even see any more available space. I was worried that my feet and thighs would hurt, or worse, my back too. But whatever, I moved some more, and luckily, I found an at least fine position there. Even though it was difficult, I tried and was able to sleep at least for 5 hours.
I woke up at about 4:30 in the morning. I went outside, checked where Papa was, and there I saw him inside one room with other adults/fathers. He was asleep and I was thankful that he it was only for hours and not for eternity. I went back to where my other boardmates, who were then awake, were. We talked about what we felt at the moment and what we were thinking about. Every bit of yesterday was like a dream. No, it was not like a dream, but like a nightmare. But it was not a nightmare that we would want to wake up because of; rather it was a nightmare that we wished had warned us before occurring. We wished it had opened our eyes even before falling asleep. Nobody expected what was going to happen. Nobody knew it would happen like that. Nobody thought that to “expect the unexpected” was the real thing then. Clichés are not just clichés, at last, I can say.
That morning, my boardmates, who were also my schoolmates, and I decided to visit UP Naming Mahal( our beloved UP, as our school hymn goes). I asked permission from my father and he said yes but requested for us not to take so long so that we can begin our journey early. As we tramped down the detritus-filled streets to our university, we can’t quite imagine how it used to look like because then, it seemed like it was a different place. No more trees and posts. I mean they were there but were fallen and served as our “tiniks” as if we were playing luksong tinik just to arrive at our precious ménage. And then the next moment was we rushed to the front of the great representation of our university – we saw Oble standing strong and sturdy among the defeated walls and scattered debris. That sight was the greatest hope we had obtained then for the rise of UP naming mahal.
We continued going around. We saw the famous Pili Tree beaten-up and the mini-forest naked as if it was fall season; but yeah, what happened actually, was a fall—literally. We saw the roofs stripped off, flagpole bended, and lots of school properties coercively dispersed. The whole place was crying. Crying with us. Because by then, we started to think that we could hardly have classes anymore, which would have started two days after that day. What we were going to do, we didn’t know. And all that we were able to think about was that we needed something to eat and drink because maybe those foods that were found in our boarding house were already consumed. Luckily, we saw our washed-out canteen open showed to us some grace in the form of several cases of Sparkle softdrinks. Were we stealing? I do not know. I think yes but it was just practical at that moment. We took about 2 cases and washed them in the nearby well because the bottles were somehow coated with Yolanda’s shit. We brought that much because we also thought of those rescued and were also staying with us. We didn’t know them, but we knew at that time that we were all as one.
When we were half done with the washing, I worried that maybe papa was already looking for me and so Ate Shara and Ate Naneth who were to go with Papa and I home asked our friends if the three of us can go ahead and they said yes. We brought some of the bottles with us to stock them in our boarding house and to bring some for our walk. When we arrived, Papa told us to get ready and prepare our things. We packed our bags lightly and made sure that they contained water and some biscuits at the very least cause it’s a long way down. I put on my rubber shoes and used a more travel-suited backpack and left my favorite backpack which I had never ever left behind before. I’ve got to set it free; I’ve got to bring just the necessary things; it would be too heavy if sentiments be carried still.
Time to tread the melancholic streets. We bid farewell to the people left in the boardinghouse but we brought along the contact numbers of their families for us to contact and tell them about their condition. I was quite sad at that moment because of course I knew that as we leave, they are there left unsure of what the day will be. But what motivated me was that thought that when I would be home, I could ask for help and lend a hand to those families that keep on searching for their children; I could do something to let people know that rescue was needed. Much needed.
Long Been Hanging. Five days from now, a third monthsary will be celebrated somewhere up the eternal skies. There’s a league there, just so you know, it’s a league that loves to blackguard silencing sanctuaries. And just months ago, one of their comrades has achieved an ultimate success of boasting their league’s might. This audacious girl was named Yolanda. She loved glistering entities. Her eyes were bold and saw the so-called Pearl of the Orient. And so she landed there and showed off what she can do to impress her beloved league. Well, she did it right. So right. Her caped colleagues clapped for her a thousand bolts of lightning and showered down their tears of joy for their one and only pride Yolanda— Surging Yolanda. When she was done, she left. She unmindfully left. Guess she was all eyes, she didn’t have a heart.
We went first to the PLDT station where papa left some instructions to the other workers there. My two boardmates, Ate Shara and Ate Naneth, were talking to me and we were encouraging each other that we could do it, we could go home. When papa was done talking with the workers and the other bosses, we started walking. We felt the sea soil, spread through the streets, swallow up our shoes. We leaped through the fallen posts and tree branches while holding on to each other’s hands because the roads were slippery due to the migrated sands and spilled crude and oil and maybe just anything that Yolanda made fun of. I was actually expecting to see dead bodies along the way because the other day, people were talking about a huge number of casualties—made up, believed, “tsismis”-ed or whatsoever; just words coming out of people’s terrified lips. But I didn’t see, not even one.
I know it’s already been so long since that day, and maybe I already lost the strong feelings. Maybe I already lost even the color in my words. Maybe? Maybe. I don’t know. I’ve always crawled through my emotions just to take out what emotion should be taken out but it just seems like it really is hard to write about it. As what I said in the very first line of this writing, I started writing this twenty days after the tragedy. But now, it’s already February 10, 2014, three months and two days after. From the very start I planned to get this done within just a few days, bursting out with emotions from that day. Just something, like a summary or whatever, but I can’t even finish it until now. It was supposed to be a narrative, but my “author’s notes” keep on sprouting every once in a while. Just like this. Just now, I think, maybe, this is a journal. A journal of mine, recalling, day by day(even skipping some days— many days), at least the most that I could recall, at least the most I could say, at least the most I could share, at least the most I could bear— bear to reminisce and write down as a memory… a fading memory.
From the very start, I knew what this was going to be about. I knew to whom I would offer this writing. I knew that this was going to be a “pasasalamat” or thanksgiving to the hero that went all the way just to save me. The hero I was talking about from the start. The hero that would always be the “story” I’d like to tell anyone who would ask about my Yolanda experience. I know many people have their stories of almost drowning, climbing up the roofs or trees or posts, swimming through the flood of rubbles, bumping into dead bodies while still striving to save their lives, holding on to their loved ones until they lost their grip, and many other extreme near-death experiences; they’re all sad, they’re all horrendous, they’re all what we never would want to happen to anyone. I know I don’t quite have that, because I was at least safe inside a three-floor house, I didn’t swim, I didn’t climb, I didn’t run as the waves chased me, but this is my story. And I’d like to tell it, even though it may seem like a single grain of sand over a whole beach of utmost experiences of the other survivors; because I had a hero. I have a hero. He is my father. He was the one who traveled, thinking que sera sera just to make sure his daughter would be alive. I admit, during the aftermath of the storm, I really thought that he went there more because of the reason that he had to look after his work’s station; I thought that was his bigger reason. But a week after, when my sister who had talked to him called me on the phone, only then did I realize that I was his very reason of risking whatever would be risked, just to save me. See, he almost met the storm.
“Waray gud ak kasabot kun kaynano mapadayon gud siya, kun kaynano diri gud siya mapapugong, makakadto la,” Ate Weng(my eldest sister) spoke on the line, “kaurusahon nga trabaho la talaga iya tuyuon didto? Ikaw Pang, ikaw gud an rason kaynano kumadto gud siya, bisan maanano, makadto ka la niya.”
(I truly couldn’t understand why he really wanted to push through, why he couldn’t be stopped, just to get there,” Ate Weng(my eldest sister) spoke on the line, “it’s unconceivable that it’s just work that he would go there for. You, Pang, you truly is the reason why he really went there, come what may, just to reach you.)
I was at our kitchen when we were talking through the phone then Ate Kakay, my other sister arrived and saw me crying. Only then have they seen me crying like that ever since I was home. I was crying enormously because of my father’s massive love for me. I was a trillion times grateful to my father, to my hero. I really am.
Now shall I continue? I want to. I want to narrate the happenings, one by one, same as what I did in the first paragraphs. In finishing this journal, I choose not to change the formats I’ve done in the beginning even though I think an ordinary writer would; to make his/her piece look organized. I’ll leave it as it is; because it’s what I have made on each particular day that word was written, that phrase was written, that paragraph was written. There were days when I was only able to add a single sentence to this piece. But I always take time for myself, no matter how short I could write, it would be fine. Take time, take time. I’ve been waiting for the day when I could spontaneously spell out the story I want to tell. Maybe you could see it through the paragraphs that look alike—that they were written on the same day. Too bad if I claim this be an official journal, there are no dates to determine when I have written particular lines. But still it is, a journal compressed into one piece. A collaboration of squeezed memories from a tired mind.
We continued walking. I saw people coming out of damaged stores, getting what they can get, whatever, just to survive. I understood why. It looked normal at that time. I saw my favorite stores too, and thought about the delicious food there, but then it was gone. I tried to enjoy the walk just so I would not get tired. I can still remember how strong the emotions on the people’s faces were; the scariest were anger and desperation. They were desperate of having something for their own, something for their family, something for them to be alive. We stopped by a fallen tree branch and sat there. Papa took his medicine and we drank water, just a little, we needed to save it for our long way down. Then we walked again. Talked. Walked. Stopped by a wooden bench and sat. Rested and talked. Then walked. And walked. And walked. Stopped by a fallen post. Then we continued walking. There were times when we’d again see people looting, some trying to rebuild their homes, or build a new home, some crying, some staring at a distance blankly, some joking around, some laughing, some just living the second life they were given. We passed by flooded streets, soaked our shoes just to get through, traveled through muddy and slippery roads, and finally I saw a corpse. No, corpses. Laid in a line by the stairs of a church. They were covered, but I saw the pale soles of their feet and the obviously bloated bellies shaping the material used to cover the dead bodies. I don’t remember what I felt.
We continued walking. Talked. Drank water. Walked again. Talked. You see, it was all the same, walking and resting and talking and drinking and one time eating biscuits and walking again and on and on and on. It seems simple, right? But it was not. Worrying about my father’s feet and thighs that have gone the 10 kilometers we were treading that time, and then again repeating what they have done the other day, it was not simple. Worrying about Ate Shara who was carrying a heavy bag plus a heavy laptop and was having a hard time because of that, it was not simple. Worrying about Ate Naneth who had a metal on her shoulders and I didn’t know if it was already safe and if nothing will really happen, it was not simple. Worrying about what if we’d have to stop and cannot continue anymore, what if Papa lose strength, what if Ate Shara, what if Ate Naneth, yadeeyadeeyada. I wasn’t worrying about myself. I didn’t worry about myself. I didn’t want to. Hoping at least I could be the one to save. I didn’t know how. But I thought, Papa was done, it’s my turn.
So it was a very long walk. Papa estimated it to take two hours but we took four. As we were getting nearer and nearer to our destination, I got more determined to stay stronger— our journey will soon be over. Locomotion all around. Many have we met ways with, many have we walked with, many have we sat with, many have we talked with— we all had the same history of a day: no matter what, all of us had the right to lament. All of us deserved to cry. All of us should have grieved all day and lost our minds but we were alive and we all decided to keep living. At least try. At least hope. At least pray
I’m done. My narration is done. I don’t know what will change, all I know is that a lot has truly changed. In my life. In our lives. One hundred days since the heart break, I’ve picked up all the pieces; but I got wounded from it. We all got wounded, and we are still.
If only it didn’t happen, I would be jogging with my father at Magsaysay Street in the morning. If only it didn’t happen, I would be attending my classes at the AS building. If only it didn’t happen, I would be running hurriedly to get to my next class at the edge of the DM building. If only it didn’t happen I would be eating lunch with my boardmates at our boarding house. If only it didn’t happen, I would be taking the shortcut alleyway I love to get to school. If only it didn’t happen, I would be talking with my schoolmates while waiting for the bell to ring. If only it didn’t happen, I would be sitting at the loser’s bench or at the pili tree and have fun singing and talking and joking around with my friends after our classes. If only it didn’t happen, I would be staring at Manong Oble, thinking about how glad I am to be in UP Tacloban. If only it didn’t happen, I would be going home, sleeping soundly, waking up in the morning to go to Balyuan, and watching the sun rise.
But it did happen. And we can’t turn back the time.
Now, my to-be-continued-writing list will finally be emptied. Arriving home, trying to write but couldn’t, twenty days after was able to, thirty days after added some, forty, fifty, until a hundred, now the most difficult storytelling I’ve ever done is over. My story— about weather forecasts, meals, e-mails, a fearsome world, storms, floods, surges, prayers, a neighbor’s house, struggles for life, a long walk and, a loving father— is complete. One less unfinished piece to be worried about. But you see, it’s not just about me getting it done; it’s actually about me hoping to not keep on recounting everything anymore. I’m tired. I’m tired of having a particular day in my life marked and counting how many days has passed ever since, as if numerating how many days I have been alive. But actually, it seems like it. For every one of us who was there on that day, we keep on not forgetting that day, like it’s our second birthday. It’s a happy day, ‘cause it’s a birth day; but it will always be a different kind, we know it.
One hundred days, when am I gonna stop counting? Can I hope that as I write the very last word in here, I can forget remembering? But a story is made, because it happened; and a curse is instilled in me to keep telling it. This is my Yolanda story—a draft no more.
***
This essay written for #RememberYolanda was written by Jennifer Ebdani.
I have tried many times to write about what happened twenty days ago. I always cannot finish it. Now I'm trying again, to see if this will once again become a draft or not.
Sunday, November 3, 2013. Tacloban.
This was the day I went back to Tacloban. The enrollment period at our university was going to start the next day but our batch's turn was still on Wednesday, November 6. I just wanted to go, I didn't know why. Maybe I was just excited for enrollment, or maybe I just wanted my cyclic sembreak to end already. Papa was there in Tacloban even though it was Sunday—normally he goes home to Calbayog in Samar during the weekends. I think it was because he had some overtime or some work he immediately had to do.
I arrived in Tacloban and he called me, telling me to go to the PLDT station where he worked so I can get my allowance for the start of the semester. I went there and ate lunch; rice and delicious eskabetche Papa bought from the nearby carenderia. As I was eating, he asked if I had brought my laptop with me, and I said no. I left it at the boarding house. He asked if I can get it after I eat and so when I was done, I stood up and asked permission to buy groceries first before going back for my laptop which was fine with Papa. I returned there bringing my laptop, because Papa needed to check something. We searched for weather forecasts, because there was a typhoon coming.
That night, we ate dinner together. They can't cook at the PLDT station anymore because their rice cooker was damaged so, we went to Chow King and ordered some fried chicken, canton and rice for Papa and honey garlic chicken and rice for me. I thanked Papa so much because it was a tasty meal and we rarely eat out at restaurants together.
Since that night, we've always been eating our meals together at the station. During lunch time, it was always papa's turn to buy our food, and during dinner time, it was always my turn. Even though it's not always food from a restaurant but rather yummy vegetables from the carenderia, for me it was always the most delicious meal because I was always eating with my dearest father.
Day by day we've been keeping track on weather forecasts. I also kept posting on Facebook and texting my family updates. Papa taught me how to read or interpret the satellite pictures. I was really learning a lot from him.
I remember on November 6, Wednesday, an afternoon after I finished enrolling at school, I was exchanging e-mails with my father. Here is a status I posted on Facebook:
"This is my first time exchanging e-mails with my father. And it's about updates regarding the typhoon. Wew. "
It may be shallow, but I really felt glad while we were exchanging e-mails. It started because Papa asked me to send him a satellite picture of the typhoon, since I could access the internet more than he could. Then he was asking for more information, from the PAG-ASA website. One fun moment was when he thought I sent a wrong photo:
"June 11, 2013 lagi itun na satellite picture na imu gn padara " (Telling me there was something wrong with my e-mail)
Then he sent a message again,
"Aw sorry, 06 November 2013 – tama man ngayan he he he"
That "he he he" is queer to hear from Papa, and that just made me happy.
On November 7, Thursday, Papa was going home to Calbayog. He wanted to make sure that our house and our family will be fine, because on Wednesday night, November 8, Samar and Leyte were already experiencing a Signal #1 typhoon. He told me to keep sending e-mails of updates and he'll check it when he gets home.
As of November 7, 4 AM, Samar and Leyte were already experiencing a Signal #2 typhoon. It was then raised to Signal #3 and then at 5 PM, Signal #4.
Let me tell you an inside story. I think most teenagers won't normally do this because I think they've got their minds on other things and do not worry too much about the typhoon but ever since Papa and I started keeping track of the forecasts, I have been preparing things in my backpack. I put my medicine, Bible, a notebook, pen, tissue, flashlight, umbrella, some clothes, some biscuits, water and other important things inside my bag. I thought, maybe, it would be possible that we would need to evacuate.
Yeah really, I thought about that. I didn't tell anyone because maybe they would say that I was "praning" or paranoid but I still re-organized my bag every day, checking the things I would need.
The past few days were sunny, with bright skies and no strong winds even under storm signal # 4.
After being busy following Napoles' senate hearing in the afternoon, the evening of November 7 came. Still, the surroundings were calm. Around 7:30 PM, Papa called me on the phone.
*in Waray*
"Hello? How are you? Are you alright there? Do you have food and water prepared?"
I said yes.
I had one pack of biscuits and one 1.5 L bottle of water. I thought that was enough. But I tried to think twice. Maybe it was not enough. So even though it was already dark, I went outside our boarding house, waited for a tricycle so I can go to Rose Pharmacy and buy some food and water. But not a single one passed. I was kind of scared because the people around me were acting suspicious. Maybe they were bad people and would do bad things to me. I managed to wait for a few minutes and when two ladies passed by, I decided to walk near them, just behind them, so I can be protected. The walk was dreadful. Even now as I try to remember it, my heart beats fast in fear.
I was able to buy two more packs of biscuits, a 1.5 L bottle of water and another 1 L bottle of mineral water. I went outside the pharmacy, and thought of buying some bread. So I proceeded to the nearby bakeshop, Panato, and bought about eight pieces of German Bread, because shockingly nothing else was left except a few of some other bread. That just proved that people were panic-buying the whole day. I put some of the food and water I bought inside my bag, and holding some with my hands.
The struggle for tricycles was there again. I couldn't find any vehicle to ride home. There were tricycles passing, but they were full. There was a suspicious man I saw on the street, and I was nervous. I was afraid he would steal my purchases. I kept on walking to the sides of the streets where there were at least a few people such as security guards and restaurant personnel. I was very frightened. Luckily, one tricycle passed by and I called it even though there were some people already inside. I sat at the back seat, behind the driver. I can't help but repeat this, I was really afraid. I reached our boarding house and entered my room and puffed a heavy, heavy sigh of relief. Right there I uttered the words, "I hate the world for I fear it."
I got out of my room to go the CR and I saw Ate Naneth, my boardmate. She said “I’m sleeping in Kim's room because at 12 AM, black out will occur.”
She invited me so I got my bag, and my beddings and stayed in Kim's room too. We were afraid of the black out to happen while we are alone in our respective rooms, so we decided to gather there in one room. There were four of us, including Gio. The room looked crowded that when Arizza saw us, she took a picture of us and posted it on Facebook with a jest caption:
"SELGA WARRIORS EVACUATION AREA!
#medjoprepared — feeling safe with Mikee Tan Cubio and 3 others in Tacloban City."
The night was calm. We slept tight.
November 8, 2013, 5 AM.
We were awakened by knocks on the door. It was Arizza and Natasha from the third floor (we were on the second floor). They said the wind has been blowing hard already and their roof upstairs has been noisy since dawn. They were frightened so they entered the room and stayed with us. We were all texting and trying to contact our families, checking how were they doing in our hometowns. Papa called me. He asked about the wind, the rain, the boarding house, etc. He said he was about to go to Tacloban that morning. I told him not to. "Please, do not travel, it would be dangerous." But he said he'll see about it.
5 o'clock onwards.
The winds and rains gradually strengthened, slowly instilling fear among us. All the other boarders went out of their rooms, we gathered, talked, and even managed to laugh just because of the warmth of happiness from friendship and togetherness we had. But we were already witnessing flying roofs, swaying trees and things being ravaged by the thundering winds.
Around 6 AM, Ate Nimfa, Lola Vilma's (our landlady) right hand helper went to the room where we were all gathered and said that Lola wanted us to go downstairs where their family stays so that all of us are safe together. We did. We got whatever important things we could bring and then we all trooped down to the first floor.
Papa called me. He asked about everything again. And I told him, "Pa, ayaw na pagbiyahe. Makusog na gud an hangin. Nagkukusog na liwat an uran. Sige na pa,ayaw na pagbiyahe." (Pa, don’t persist in traveling anymore. The winds are already so strong, the rain too. Please pa, don’t.)
But he said, "Sige la, kikitaon ko. Naghuhulat ak san impormasyon/balita." (I’ll see. I’m just waiting for information/news.)
"Pa, ayaw nala lagee." (Pa, listen, please.)
"Sige la, ako siton magdedesisyon." (Don’t mind me. I am the one to decide about that.)
I tried to text mama and my siblings. I texted Papa that my load was expiring soon, so Mama reloaded me. It meant the weather there was still fine because they still were able to go out of the house and go to the store.
We listened to the roar of the wind, and tried to bear its increasing pressure. We felt the downpour of the rain and the grisly sway of it. Nothing was calm. Our phones couldn't reach our contacts anymore, and we were all worried. We could already feel the coming howls of the typhoon. Someone was monitoring the condition outside, peeking through windows. He said it was starting to flood outside.
Then, at around 7:30 AM, there was panic. We were all told to go upstairs, to the second floor, because the flood was starting to elevate. And it was fast! We ran with all our might to reach the next floor. Ate Shara, one boarder, said she was the last one to go upstairs because she was still picking up her things, and she said that while she was struggling, the flood was already waist-high. We were all so nervous. When I tried to look at the stairs leading down to the first floor, I saw it three quarters full of water - so soon!
We were crowded in the second floor. There were eleven boarders including me, and there was Lola Vilma's family—her children, and her grandchildren with their wives and husbands, and their cousins and their cousins' children; some were already crying, we were so afraid. But what frightened us more was when we heard somebody shouting.
"Tabang! Tabang! Tabang!" (Help! Help! Help!)
We panicked; we immediately checked who was missing. But none of us was. While the water was rising even higher and higher, we saw outside, a woman inside her house, appearing through her window, screaming for help. She never stopped crying out, begging Kuya Marlon, Lola Vilma's son, who was trying to speak to her amidst the strong rain, saying,
"Mag-aano man ako? Waray man ako mahihimo. Diri man ako makakakada. Diri man ako makakalangoy, kakusog san hangin. Pasensya na gud man day. Waray man ako mahihimo. Aadi it akon pamilya. Pasensya na gud man day." (What can I do? There's nothing I can do. I can't go there. I won't be able to swim, the wind's too strong. I'm sorry. I can't do anything. I have my family right here. I'm very sorry.)
But the woman never stopped. And we never ceased begging the Lord to end the storm. I even heard Kuya Marlon say, "Tama na gad Lord, may mamamatay na sa gawas." (Oh Lord please stop this now, someone's already to die outside.)
Everything was passing by too quickly—the time, the wind, the rain, the flowing of tears, and the rising of the flood which by then started to reach the second floor. About fifteen or twenty minutes has passed and water was entering the second floor. We were all stunned. We didn't want to believe it. We rushed, lined up at the stairs to the third floor but only up to there, because the third floor room's ceiling was already filtering, the rain pouring down from it with the roof already shattered.
We can't stay in, so we were at the stairs, lamenting, begging, praying, daunted by the thought that the water was still to rise, and later on be able to fill the second floor, and even the third floor, and that all we'd have to do was swim for our lives and hold onto whatever we can hold on to. It was not inconceivable. I looked through the window, and saw that the whole place was like a swimming pool. Let me take that back, I looked through the window and I saw a vast sea.
I didn't know how to swim, but all I could think about was that maybe, I would just be able to swim, just to survive. But still, it's not unthinkable that we could die, that I could die. Even though I kept on holding onto the faith that the flooding would stop, I accepted the possibility that it could already be my time. I asked for forgiveness for all my sins, and for every single person there's too. I thought of watching over my family, every day, from heaven. Watching them? Seeing them grieve and cry over their departed loved one? I guess I can't take that.
Prayers never stopped. Lola Vilma, staring out the window, watching the flood, kept on uttering the words "Lord, have mercy" over and over. There was no one else we could believe in and trust that would save us but the One above. It was during this time that people who live carnal lives unknowingly revive their belief in the Almighty in their hearts.
A Story will be continued in Part 2.
***
This essay written for #RememberYolanda was written by Jennifer Ebdani.
Ulan ang mibundak –
dili grasya
disgrasya.
Ang panganod
mihagba sa yuta.
Gadala og baha
luha
nga minglunop sa
siyudad.
Tanan minglutaw –
atop
haligi
balay
ang tagbalay.
Apan sa dili pa mosaka
ang luha pabalik sa mata
ang baha pabalik sa
inatay nga langit,
monaog ang tanang galutaw
motago ang lawm nga baha
ubos sa yuta
kuyog sa yangungo ug ang nalumos
nga paglaom.
Sila madugta. ilubong.
Ug tuod, mosaka ug balik ang tubig
magpabilin ang lapok
ug buak
nga pagdahom
ug usab –
modag-om.
Ang Biyahe han Tubig
Uran nabunok
dire grasya
disgrasya
An dampog
ang luha pabalik sa mata
ang baha pabalik sa
inatay nga langit,
monaog ang tanang galutaw
motago ang lawm nga baha
ubos sa yuta
kuyog sa yangungo ug ang nalumos
nga paglaom.
Sila madugta. ilubong.
Ug tuod, mosaka ug balik ang tubig
magpabilin ang lapok
ug buak
nga pagdahom
ug usab –
modag-om.
Ang Biyahe han Tubig
Uran nabunok
dire grasya
disgrasya
An dampog
gin
pusdak ha tuna.
nagdara
hin baha
luha
nga na lunudhan
aton siyudad.
luha
nga na lunudhan
aton siyudad.
tanan
lumutaw --
atop
harigi
balay
an tagbalay.
mintras dire pa nasaka
an luha bumalik ha mata
an baha bumalik ha
pistehanon nga langit
malusad an tanan nga nalutaw
matago an hilarum nga baha
ubos han tuna
upod an pagkalumo ngan an nalumos
nga pagla-um
adi hira madunot. Ilubong
atop
harigi
balay
an tagbalay.
mintras dire pa nasaka
an luha bumalik ha mata
an baha bumalik ha
pistehanon nga langit
malusad an tanan nga nalutaw
matago an hilarum nga baha
ubos han tuna
upod an pagkalumo ngan an nalumos
nga pagla-um
adi hira madunot. Ilubong
ngan
tuod, masaka na balik an tubig
mapabilin an lapok
mapabilin an lapok
ngan
an buka
nga
paghingyap
naliwat
madalumdum
***
Kining maong balak para sa #RememberYolanda sinuwat ni Tara Prieto with Waray translation by Bem Cerilla.
Ang laki-laki kasi ng nagawa mo para sa aming lahat. Ang laki-laki kasi ng epekto mo sa ’ming lahat. Ikaw yung dahilan kung bakit nagsimula ang bayanihan sa aming bayan. Ikaw yung nagpakalat ng kabutihan sa lahat ng mga mamamayan. Siguro kung wala ka, hindi kami ganito ngayon. Salamat ha? Salamat talaga.
Grabe, isang daan mo lang, ang daming leeg ang nabali.Ganyan ka kaganda! Ang ganda-ganda mo, leche ka. So natuwa ka na lahat, pinag-uusapan ka nung mga panahong ‘yon? Talk of the town ka, gurl! Teka, mali. Talk of the world. Ang galing mo! Ang galeng-galeng. Eh ginamit ka na ngang pampangalan sa mga tindahan at kung anu-ano pang mga lugar o produkto eh. Sa’n man ako pumunta, kilalang-kilala ka. Lahat, marinig lang ang pangalan mo, napapa-“aaah!” na agad. Ang sikat-sikat mo ‘no? Bakit ba kasi hindi ka na lang nag-artista? Dinamay mo pa kami. Dinamay mo pa kaming mga nananahimik. Dinamay mo pa kaming mga inosente. Dinamay mo pa kaming mga nais lang mabuhay nang disente. Dinamay mo pa lahat… noong nagdaang Nobyembre.
Sabi nila, alalahanin daw kita.
Kahit ayaw ko nga, leche, ‘di talaga kita makalimutan, as in! Pero ‘di naman kita namimiss. Hindi nga kita mahal eh, miss pa kaya? Akala ba nila natutuwa ako na lagi ka na lang kakabit ng pagkatao ko? Tipong kailangan pa maungkat ang nakaraan natin para lang makumpleto nila ang pagkakakilala sa ’kin? Hoy! Sino ka ba, ha? Hindi naman kita gusto. Hindi ko naman kailanman hiniling na mapunta ka dito sa mundong ‘to. Hindi ko naman kailanman hiniling na mahulog ka at tumama sa lupa. Kasi ang tanging dulot mo lang naman ay luha… at pagluluksa.
‘Di ko nga alam sa’n ka na napunta eh. Ang bilis mo dumating, ang bilis mo lang din umalis. Ganyan ka. Bigla-bigla ka na lang nang-iiwan. Tingin ko nga, para sa’yo yung kanta ni..Imelda Papin ba yun? Yung “kayrami ng winasak na tahanan, kayrami ng matang pinaluha, kayrami ng pusong sinugatan..” Oh tukso, layuan mo ako, sasapakin ko na ‘to! Ba’t ba kasi papansin ka, ha? Sa lahat-lahat ng pwedeng daanan, sa’min ka pa dumaan. Tsaka wala pang respeto. Dadaan lang naman, nanggulo pa. Nagkalat ng mga basura. Naglaro ng tubig kaya bumaha. Namutol ng mga puno. Nangalbo ng mga bundok. Nanuklap ng mga bubong. Para kang bata. Lahat, pinaglaruan. Kinulong. Inanod. Nilunod. Tinusok. Binalatan. Binombahan. Na parang gulong. Oo, ang buhay ng tao, parang gulong. Pero bakit kailangang sa ganito humantong? Bakit ka ganyan, ha, bakit ka ganyan?! Bakit mo ginawa ‘to sa aming bayan?
Sabi nila, alalahanin daw kita.
Eh anong magagawa ko, maaalala’t maaalala lang naman talaga kita?
Sabi nila, alalahanin daw kita.
Sabi nila, alalahanin daw kita.
Sabi nila, alalahanin daw kita.
Sabi nila, kahit ayaw na rin sana nilang maalala.
***
This essay for #RememberYolanda is written by Jennifer Ebdani.
Mother,
i know you always tell me to smile. That i
always look better when i lift my head and stretch
my lips sidewards, curving up to the heavens.
You say the outstretched lips is like a prayer.
It will bring good things to me.
So if i could, i'd try
so hard to smile, mother.
But the truth is smiles are not magic prayers.
They cannot make our home rise
out of the rubble,
rebuild concrete tiles
from dust, debris, clay,
fallen trees.
cannot bring me back
my washed-out mattress
or our ruined kitchen, our tables
of sunday mornings with family, and roast fish,
and the beatles, and apo hiking
nostalgia that you'd play on a sunday.
i know you loved
those songs, grin and force me to sing
along whenever Sharon or maybe the Carpenters came on.
But a smile would not fix us, not even
our black waterworn radio
mother. The stormsurge sang too
great a song,it seems.
With the waves, all the shelves where we kept
the baby photo albums,and the
ceramic cookie jars
with Anne's long letters, the family memos, notes, bills,
post-its, have gone downstream,
even the golden rolex lolo gave me.
Now I can’t tell the time.
So how do I know,
when this will all end, mother?
After the waves comes the sun that burns
through time, it hisses at all that's left
all the rocks and stones that were once home.
It does not stop.
It does not give way for a smile.
So of course under this sun
i cannot smile while i
pull you,
you, mother,
out of the pile of broken walls,
radios, and shattered ornament glass.
i cannot smile while I set you
down at the side
with others lining the battered street.
Look, you do not even smile at me.
So tell me mother,why should i?
Come, stretch your lips wide and tell me.
***
This poem for #RememberYolanda is written by Alsteine Diapana.
***
This poem for #RememberYolanda is written by Alsteine Diapana.