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On a night like this
Wednesday, September 17, 2008

The first person is someone I’ve known for more than twelve years now. We met at a time when I’d just gotten out of a stifling relationship while he was wrestling with his emerging sexuality. Looking back, I think we were doomed from the start. That time, I had an almost business-like approach in my relationships–unable to think without a purpose, to act without a plan, to feel without guarantees, while he had absolutely nothing to offer, being a newcomer in same-sex relationships. Our only common denominator appeared to be the fact that we were both lonely during that time. Perhaps, we naively thought, we’d be enough for each other. Even for just a while.
Less than two years later, after a break-up and reconciliation, we finally decided to end the relationship on a rainy July evening. I didn’t cry so much. It seemed that I’d been crying for the most part of our relationship that when the end finally came, my well of tears had dried up. Yet, out of this broken relationship, friendship bloomed. We became closer than we were before, when we were lovers. Continents stand between us now, along with the lives that we have built separately. We rarely communicate, but in the instances that we do, we do it as if our previous conversation happened only the day, or week, before.
Only a few kilometers separate me from the second person I’m thinking of, but the rift I sense inside is much wider than that. He might as well be on another planet. When I met him four years ago, he was entangled in a relationship that he felt was going nowhere, hanging on the words of a transient lover who hadn’t contacted him in months. Meanwhile, I was a new arrival in his country, taking in all that I could of this new environment. I wasn’t particularly looking for love, and he said he wasn’t too. To me his beauty was intoxicating–wan at the start, gaining dimension once you looked at him long enough, his eyes were at once innocent and flirtatious, while his smile and disposition seemed to betray a deeper sadness and pain.
These contradictions fascinated me and I sought to know him well. I basked in our closeness and soon love sneaked up on me like a thief. I thought I knew him. But, as it turns out now, I really don’t. He is like a lump of clay that changes under the hand of the potter. And while this unpredictability is amusing at the start, I was soon plagued by fatigue that rendered me immobile against the mind-games that he leveled upon me. Yukio Mishima wrote, “What makes a man cruel is the consciousness that he is loved.” This sums up my fate in his hands.
A breeze sends the curtains billowing briefly. I look past the window and try to decipher a pattern among the lit windows on the other buildings. I wonder what the third person I’m thinking of is doing right now. Perhaps, his own tool in hand, giving form and beauty to other people’s ideas. Mutual friends brought him into my sphere, a shy and unassuming young man whose manner of speaking seemed equally imploring and nonchalant. Having seen him only a few times, I am mostly intrigued as to how he really is, without the masks, so to speak. My attraction is like a germ that sits in the pit of my belly, incubating. To what extent, I don’t know. I don’t want to find out.
How could I? And why? What do I hope to accomplish if I bring him–and me, into this morbid tournament of emotions? Do I dare pollute him with my own rancor? I think of him, his supposed wife, his secret friendships, and his own demons to tame. I am drawn to him like iron fillings to a magnet. I hope this doesn’t become too hopeless. Silence engulfs my wrangling. The night devours my words. The shadows thicken. The soft wind carries the faint scent of night-blooms.
I stop typing as sleep beckons.
Previous Comments
beautiful writing
somebody said: loss is the measure of love.
ewan. im not making any sense.
Posted by gibo at September 17, 2008, 10:37 pmthe cycles we go through and all, for that one true thing. Deep and very profound writing… I loved reading it…
Kudos
girard: i like the way you write, too.
gibo: loss being the measure of love somehow does make sense, i think…
luis: thanks for the kind words
Posted by pinakadalisay at September 18, 2008, 9:40 amI hate reading your blog because i know you…and as i read each word the urge of finding out who these peaople are makes me want to finish reading it without skipping a single punctuation.
But nonetheless, hate is not even a percent of the interest your writing brings to readers…
You’re my daily newspaper of life..hehehehe
Have a great working day!:-)
You are so poetic.
Posted by Mugen at September 18, 2008, 3:07 pmgaling! i’ve never had any real feeling of loss. does it mean i’ve never really been in love? depressing thought.
Posted by jericho at September 18, 2008, 6:49 pmhmmm i dont know what to say but this is that side of you that i dont see often when its about love and loss because you are always making smart remarks or launghing about it. Me and mai are the usual drama queens..maybe one day you will show me this side face to face
Posted by daden at September 18, 2008, 6:51 pmbeautiful, zen.
love, it makes us flowing with sweet waters and flowers.
like this one.
Posted by Kiks at September 18, 2008, 7:11 pmmai: so ‘abante’ pala ang dating ko sa yo? tse!
mugen: ikaw din naman, p’re
jericho: it could be that you just cope well with loss, kaya in the long run e dedma na
daden: are you sure? you might not like what you see…
kiks: teynks pow!
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whoa, great job on this post! ang galing ng pagkasulat.
Posted by girard at September 17, 2008, 7:47 pmi’m so glad you’re back to blogging. you were missed.