I Was Careful, But Not Enough

As some of you know, my genre of writing practice is creative non-fiction. I am working on compiling essays and poems from my experience here on this trip for a collective personal project. This essay will be part of that project. It is based on my experience today.

Before you read this essay, know that I am well, happy, and am running at high energy levels once again.

I Was Careful, But Not Enough

8:00am
The morning was strong, as I. And my stomach made noises as it did yesterday, but they were weakened, I observed. I tested it with crackers. Waited.

Bathroom.

I tested it again, water.

Bathroom.

I was determined to go on this immersion daytrip to see the urban living conditions, but worried about whatever had invaded my stomach yesterday. Avoiding dehydration was my number one priority. I said a prayer to an Almighty in the heated sky above and swallowed two Immodium pills, asking for strength for whatever lay ahead of me.

We took a taxi and I was grateful for the air-conditioning. With only a few clouds in the sky, Manila heat can be unforgiving and dangerous. Becky looks my way, knowing I am not well. Her eyes ask if I am ok. I smile thinly and nod.

We change to a jeepney and the driver is aggressive in speed and rough with stops. My eyes upward, I summon all strength to at least get to 12pm, just enough time to be exposed to the life of so many urban poor. I want to understand. Somewhere inside, a voice asked, “At what expense?” I answer, “Even if it kills me, I want to understand. Even just a little, I want to see this.”

The group gets off and I do not know where we are. There are vendors, cars, taxis, and jeepneys. Crowded, but I do not notice anything but the stench. It smells of rotting everything. The odor is so sharp my mouth opens in reflex, but closes quickly when I see flies heading toward my gaping face. My eyes cannot hide, I am terrified. I am disgusted. I want to leave.

Press onward.

We board another jeepney and I hear the weakened army in my stomach begin another rebellion. I bargain that they can do whatever they like later in the day, just not now. They obey in agreement.

The jeepney takes us to a small community surrounded by garbage. I hear someone mutter, “How am I going to do this?”

I turn quickly and meet her eyes, “Mind over matter. Don’t think.”

The earth smells of decay and my soul darkens in misery, sorrow, and disbelief.
Without pants or underwear, I see the children wailing. Someone is soulfully singing into a karaoke machine. I recognize another Journey song. The new lead singer is Filipino. Another source of pride for the people. The narrow walkway crosses makeshift bridges over green and white water with flies attacking something I cannot see, something I refuse to see. I quickly walk further, wanting to escape the smell, the dirt, but it is everywhere.

We stop at a house and enter the room. I feel stupid because we wear our shoes inside and we are covered in dirt and they leave their tsinelas (sandals) at the door. They bring us broken dirty chairs to sit in and I sit by the couch, my mind is numb from the situation.

They tell us the story of their lives.

They pay 3000 pesos (roughly $66.00) for a whole truckload of garbage from which they sift through for things to resell and also PAGPAG, leftover food they pick up and they shake free of dirt and then re-cook to eat. They scour for plastic utensils, metal, soda bottles, plastic bags, and anything edible.

The prices change depending on where the garbage comes come. If it comes from condos, the price is high. If it comes from a construction site, it’s even higher because you will find good wood and metal, which can be sold at a junk yard. The least expensive garbage is from chain fast food stores and restaurants which throw out perishable foods and unused ingredients.

We survive off the garbage, they tell us.

And they pay for the scraps.

I turn my head in disbelief.

I look into the face of the woman talking and smile even though I don’t understand her words until they are translated after she is finished speaking. My eyes gloss her home and become fixated with the staircase. Uneven wood blocks. The last step is incredibly steep. The stairs look like something for a tree house. Some of the climbing ladders in the children’s playgrounds in the US are sturdier and better built than this house.

I close my eyes.

9:30am
They open a door to show us one truckload of garbage they keep next to their homes. Coughing, someone is gagging. Steps backward. The smell is indescribeable. I want to cry for a hundred reasons and apologize a thousand times and give everything to them and kill whomever breaks their promises to these people. All those feelings, all in one moment once he opened that door.

Another moment, they show me a bag of organized food they have put together. It is full of leftover bread, stuffed in a bag and left on the ground near the garbage. I take a picture of it and walk away. I wonder if I’m in an alternate universe.

Actually, I am.

Across the street there are shirtless men watching us. They are not leering or glaring, just watching us take out our cameras and document what we see. Tourists at a garbage community, their home. I feel wrong. My camera is worth more than 30 truckloads of garbage, but I don’t want to give them 30 truckloads of garbage. I want to give them homes, clothes, healthcare, clean water, fresh food, education, chances, changes, life, more.

We move on.

We go to another community.

Our leader, who is wearing a shirt that reads, “Real Men Wear Pink,” warns us to keep our bags in front of us and do not take pictures because they will be, basically, stolen right out of our hands. Kim nudges me, “I know he doesn’t have to tell you that. You already guard that thing with your life,” she nods toward my Nikon SLR. I smile mischievously and do a karate high-kick in the air, “I feel bad for anyone that even tries.” She laughs.

We crawl into a trike (motorcyle with extra seating on the sides) and take off.

We walk through the town and I move my brain into turbo strength.

Mind over matter. Mind over matter.

The smell of the vendors makes me want to hurl. Fish, hanging meat, a salad with a village of flies sitting on it. I tuck my bag closer to me and walk straight ahead.

Stares.

Blend right in, we were instructed.

Right.

10:15am
We stop at the top of a hill and our guide says it’s safe to take pictures here, but not when we go back to town. A few hundred yards away is a mountain of garbage. At the base of it is the village we are standing in. I pull my camera out but cannot take a picture yet. My mental pictures are always better than Nikon, anyway. Theresa whispers to me, “The children are asking you to take their picture.” I look to my right into a doorway. The darkness cloaks them but I see small feet and hear young giggles.

Images of my niece and nephews cross my mind. I swallow hard, missing them.

I start snapping shots of the doorway and they peak out with the whites of their eyes. Reviewing their pictures on the screen, I check the exposure of the shots. Their shyness comes alive in my photos.

I hear a movie playing in someone’s house. The sound amplifies and carries so far that the entire group can hear a hundred feet away. We can’t identify the movie but it’s in English and the gunshot sounds reveal an action movie. I hear tires squealing and screaming.

Why more violence? Why more death, even if it’s fictional? Is that entertaining?

We navigate a narrow pathway and find ourselves at the base of the basura (garbage) mountain. The heat is bearing down on my skin. The smell comes in waves, my nausea as well.

An unfamiliar man begins asking if we are students. Someone explains we are from the US taking an immersion trip. He explains their community.

Many of them were displaced from the homes and placed here by the government. Now that foreign development companies want to develop the land, they are trying to move them out of their homes. Some of the families take the small amount of money they offer because they do not know what else to do and the government moves them again with promises of stable homes and better conditions. Instead, they are put in flooding areas with tents. No water, no electricity. Their promise of a better life is unfulfilled.

Not too long ago, one of the garbage mountains grew too high and collapsed from the weight. Three hundred people were buried alive in the garbage and left there to die. Many of them were husbands and fathers looking through the trash for survival. When the story broke, billions were raised and donated to the families for aid. The families have not yet seen one peso of that money. Strangely, any money that passes through the government never sees its intended destination.

The government of the Philippines, the man said, asks for assistance of other countries for arms. The government uses the language that the US military will understand: “terrorists” and foreign countries donate arms for the military to use against the civilians.

So they ask other countries for arms to use against its own people? Yes.

The military is used against the people here. The weak, the small, the helpless communities are threatened, harassed, and bullied with arms when they do not want to move, refuse the development companies, or voice their concerns over their living conditions. Their organizing for rights is considered “terrorism.”

His voice becomes louder, “I am not a terrorist!” He is nearly screaming.

There are undercover military all around. They are used as a frightening tactic to prevent people from organizing. “Organizing” means fighting for their basic right to live with decent living conditions and surroundings. The government blankets their surveillance of the people as “anti-terrorist.”

I look down at the ground while absorbing his words.

Much later, one of the leaders later tells a story of how he left for a few months to get out of town. To travel, experience, get away. When he returned, in the late hours of the morning, he was taken from his home by the government. They put military guns in front of him asking him to assemble them, if he knew how, and what he was doing for four months away from home. They thought he might be in terrorist training.

He went away for travel. To live his life.

They have no rights here. They have nothing.

“I am not a terrorist!!” The man is proclaiming.

He tells the military, “You can kill me! I will not move!” He retells his convictions to us.

My translation skills slow…I feel lightheaded and I see the man’s mouth forming words, “…Bush and Cheney…” but I cannot process it anymore. The mountain stands before me. The smell is in my body. The sun beats on my skin. I walk to Theresa, “Something is happening to me.”

I wander to a fallen tree and use the trunk as a seat.

I put my head between my legs.

Breathe, Lisa, breathe.

I cannot breathe, though, from the smell.

Relax, I’ll be fine.

I’m not fine.

Kim. I call out.

Kim. I call again.

KIM. She turns around. I wave her over.

I look at the mountain of garbage and my brain is turning fuzzy. I’m becoming so disoriented I wonder if I’m looking through the lens of my camera because everything looks fluorescent white and overexposed; similar as to when I don’t put the right settings on my camera. To my left, my camera sits.

Oh God, it’s me. Something is wrong with me. It’s not my camera I’m looking through. It’s my eyes.

I look up and Kim’s face is blotched with circles. I blink slowly to make them go away. They scatter, small circles all over her face, her body, even the garbage behind her.

Her hands touch my forehead. “Oh God….” Sweat is dripping off me like a faucet.

“I can’t see anymore.” I’m terrified.

“When did you eat?”

I slump forward, “Crackers.”

“No, WHEN did you eat?”

“This morning, crackers.”

She blows air out of her lips, worried. She knows I barely ate yesterday because of my stomach.

She grabs everything out of my hands. She’s talking but I don’t hear her.

“Help me, please. What’s happening?”

A cracker goes into my mouth. I crunch once, but there’s no saliva in my mouth. The crumbs are pebbles in my mouth.

My ears are slowly filling with jelly and my vision is dimming. My head begins gaining weight and needs to touch the ground. I cannot hold it up any longer.

“I AM NOT A TERRORIST.” He’s still talking.

Images come through my mind as someone forces a straw in my mouth loudly commanding me to drink soda.

My brain neurons are everywhere.

Far away, I see Nick working in his office and hear my mother’s voice telling me to be careful in my travels.

I’m sorry, Mom, I wasn’t careful enough.

The mountain is now nearly pure white and the faces are almost gone. My hearing is underwater.

Theresa pulls out small packets of sweetened jello candy and slides it into my mouth.

Another bottle is shoved in my face. “Sip this!”

I sip with whatever strength I have left. Warm, red Gatorade goes down my throat.

Gatorade. The taste conjures images of the Borchers, Voisard Street, and Russia and how I almost never drink Gatorade unless I am in Russia. I hope I drink Gatorade there again.

Am I dying?

I panic and wonder if the light I’m seeing is “The Light” and if this is the end for me, to die at the base of a garbage dump surrounded by people who’ve known me for three weeks of my life. Everyone and everything most precious to me is on the other side of the world.

I can’t be dying. They say when you die, it’s a peaceful process. I’m scared as hell.

Wait. Maybe this is hell.

A small, rough, and unfamiliar hand touches the nape of my neck. It’s soaking and cold. “Malamig!” The women’s voice rang with worry that I was cold despite the sun beating down on us. Her worry heightened my panic.

I am nearly blind and deaf and cannot speak.

Becky forces her way to be in front of me and lets me rest my head on her, “We’re taking care of you. Close your eyes.”

I’m afraid if I close my eyes, I will fully pass out and never regain consciousness. I open them and see a dog looking at me curiously. The ground is covered in garbage. The smell is enveloping my last thoughts.

I am almost crying, “Please help me. Please help me.”

Three people are wiping me down with cloths while the town women fan me down.

Kim is nearly exploding, “She needs to get out of this heat. She needs to get out of here.”

I hear voices, all muffled.

“The stretcher can’t make it down the pathway. It’s too narrow. Can she walk?”
“Look at her! She can’t walk!”

“We’re too far from the clinic.”

“Can she eat ice cream?”
“She can’t! Her stomach…”

“Is she diabetic?”
“I am not a terrorist!”
“Where’s the medic?”
“I’m an artist, I use art to bring peace in the world.” Philippe is explaining himself to a local. He doesn’t care that I’m slipping away.

Out of nowhere, I miss my sister and want to talk to her. My heart squeezes with love. My eyes close to listen to my body.

I realize my heart is racing and my breathing is labored. I want to lie down, even if it’s covered with the most horrendous garbage, my body feels like it weighs a ton and I cannot hold it up any longer. I am slipping off the tree I was sitting on.

Pray. I hear my Mom.

Dear God, if you get me through this, I’ll…I’ll…I can’t think of anything at this moment, God, but whatever it is, I’ll do. I’ll be better or more loving or more forgiving or less selfish. Just get me through this. Whatever is happening to me, just give me enough strength to get me through this. Please help me.

I remember that was my prayer this morning.

I pushed myself too hard. I’m so foolish.

More soda in my mouth. Theresa pops open more cherry flavored jello candy.

I hear Lexie in the background saying she has chocolate. Someone opens my hand and places a melting candy bar in it. I don’t have enough mental strength to explain that I don’t like chocolate. The wrapper is too strong for me.

“Keep drinking the soda!” Whoever is talking to me is talking loud because I can hear it through the pillow stuffed between my ears. The cool sweetness coats my tongue in sugar.

I hear Kim, “It’ll take effect in a little while.” She’s talking about the sugar I just ingested. Her parents are doctors. It shows. I love her in that moment.

Behind her a man has a machete and slams it toward a coconut. It splits open and they gather the juices in a glass for me. I close my eyes.

When I reopen them, the glass is in front of me, “You need potassium.”

There’s a long hair on the glass and I feel like I will vomit if it comes near me. I shake my head, refusing the glass of Buko (coconut) juice. I feel awful that I am not drinking it after they opened a coconut for me, but the chances that the glass has been properly cleaned are relatively low. I think of the bacteria already in my stomach and know the last thing I need is to build that army in my digestive system.

“Lisa?”

I shake my head again. I am not drinking it.

I can’t win.

I need the juice to recover, but I’ll probably get sick again from whatever’s floating in it from the glass. I detest my odds and whimper, “I want to go home.” Not sure which home I meant. Home means so many things. It means Nick, family, familiarity, clean, fresh water, and safety. Geographically, the last home I remember is Boston, but I no longer live there. Cleveland was my home for three days before I left. “Home,” though, at that moment had limitations. It meant somewhere familiar, somewhere cool where I can lie down and cry alone. Some place that made sense. Home, at that moment was Casa Clementina on Timog Avenue, Metro Manila. That is my home for now, where my flip flops are, where my notebooks and pens lie, and where my laptop is stored. I sadly reflect, “home,” is where my “things” are, not people.

“Should we call someone? Nick? Your Dad?”

I shake my head. “They’ll just worry.” I am not dying on this mountain of garbage, I decide.

“What about your Uncle here in the Philippines?” Becky pushes.

“No, he’ll call my Dad.”

I open my eyes. The mountain has some color. That brings me relief.

“What happened?”

Kim peers into my face, “You’re better,” she diagnoses, “your face doesn’t look green anymore and I can see that your lips are a normal shade.”

“What happened?” My brain is moving toward orientation.

“Dude,” Kim explains with experience, “this happens to me, too, sometimes. It’s hypoglycemia. You barely ate yesterday because you were sick and you only had some crackers this morning. You’re out in this heat, walking around, and, well, we’re here…” she gestures to our surroundings, “your blood sugar just dropped.” Her hands fly from above her head to low near the ground.

“Am I diabetic?” I scream.

“No. It’s just you only had crackers this morning.” She looks at me as if I did heroine for breakfast.

“Oh. I drank a lot of water because I was afraid of dehydration.” Suddenly, I feel embarrassed that I had forgotten about such a simple task as eating. I turn and see everyone milling around my emergency.

“You need to go home and rest. I’ll go with you.” Becky is still holding on to me. I look into my friends’ faces. They are my family now, I realize, while I am here.

A feeling of loving gratitude spills over me. I want to cry again, but this time it’s because I’m so overwhelmed by everything and everyone; all the good, all the evil.

My body still feels like it is a pendulum between hot and cold and it’s dripping with sweat, but my senses have returned. Shakily, I stand.

Hands hold me up as I make my way to town where Becky, Gibo (one of our trusted group leaders), and I ride a trike and then a taxi back home.

My head clears in the taxi as I rest my head on the door. The experience inundates my memory.

I return to the apartment and shower, eat rice with soy sauce and drink ice tea.I google “hypoglycemia” and absorb the website explaining the symptoms. My worry deescalates as I read that it is common to experience it after the stomach empties itself from illness. This never happened to me before, but I learned a hard lesson about self-care, limitations, and eating breakfast for goodness sakes. I snuggle into my bed and turn the air-conditioner on low.

The clock reads 12:31pm.

What a morning.

I thought about how simple the problem was: not enough food, not enough sugar. And yet, truthfully, I felt like I was possibly dying. Shit, when all your senses are disappearing and everything around you is reminding you of death and survival is on a thumbnail, it’s easy to conclude that death is the next step. Even with what happened, in which I had never been so frightened in all my life, I am glad that I saw what I did. I am grateful for the opportunity to learn, even if it took everything out of me.

It is a privilege to be able to visit, because to visit means I am free to leave. I was free to go home to Timog Avenue. Eventually, I will return home to Nick, to the US, to Cleveland.

No one there had that same choice.

I Was Careful, But Not Enough

8:00am

The morning was strong, as I.  And my stomach made noises as it did yesterday, but they were weakened, I observed.  I tested it with crackers.  Waited. 

Bathroom.

I tested it again, water. 

Bathroom.

I was determined to go on this trip, but worried about whatever had invaded my stomach yesterday.  Dehydration was my number one priority.  I said a prayer to an Almighty in the heated sky above and swallowed two Immodium pills, asking for strength for whatever lay ahead of me.

We took a taxi and I was grateful for the air-conditioning.  With only a few clouds in the sky, Manila heat can be unforgiving and dangerous.  Becky looks my way, knowing I am not well.  Her eyes ask if I am ok.  I smile thinly and nod.

We change to a jeepney and the driver is aggressive in speed and rough with stops.  My eyes upward, I summon all strength to at least get to 12pm, just enough time to be exposed to the life of so many urban poor.  I want to understand.  Somewhere inside, a voice asked, “At what expense?”  I answer, “Even if it kills me, I want to understand.  Even just a little, I want to see this.”

The group gets off and I do not know where we are.  There are vendors, cars, taxis, and jeepneys.  Crowded, but I do not notice anything but the stench.  It smells of rotting everything.  The odor is so sharp my mouth opens in reflex, but closes quickly when I see flies heading toward my gaping face.  My eyes cannot hide, I am terrified.  I am disgusted.  I want to leave.

Press onward.

We board another jeepney and I hear the weakened army in my stomach begin another rebellion.  I bargain that they can do whatever they like later in the day, just not now.  They obey in agreement.

The jeepney takes us to a small community surrounded by garbage.  I hear someone mutter, “How am I going to do this?”

I turn quickly and meet her eyes, “Mind over matter.  Don’t think.”

The earth smells of decay and my soul darkens in misery, sorrow, and disbelief.

Without pants or underwear, I see the children wailing.  Someone is soulfully singing into a karaoke machine.  I recognize another Journey song.  The new lead singer is Filipino.  Another source of pride for the people.  The narrow walkway crosses makeshift bridges over green and white water with flies attacking something I cannot see, something I refuse to see.  I quickly walk further, wanting to escape the smell, the dirt, but it is everywhere.

We stop at a house and enter the room.  I feel stupid because we wear our shoes inside and we are covered in dirt and they leave their tsinelas (sandals) at the door.  They bring us broken dirty chairs to sit in and I sit by the couch, my mind is numb from the situation.

They tell us the story of their lives.

They pay 3000 pesos (roughly $66.00) for a whole truckload of garbage from which they sift through for things to resell and also PAGPAG, leftover food they pick up and they shake free of dirt and then re-cook to eat.  They scour for plastic utensils, metal, soda bottles, plastic bags, and anything edible.

The prices change depending on where the garbage comes come.  If it comes from condos, the price is high.  If it comes from a construction site, it’s even higher because you will find good wood and metal, which can be sold at a junk yard.  The least expensive garbage is from chain fast food stores and restaurants which throw out perishable foods and unused ingredients.

We survive off the garbage, they tell us.

And they pay for the scraps.

I turn my head in disbelief.

I look into her face, the woman who is talking with us, and smile even though I don’t understand her words until they are translated after she is finished speaking.  My eyes gloss her home and become fixated with the staircase.  Uneven wooden blocks. The last step is incredibly steep.  The stairs look like something for a tree house.  Some of the climbing ladders in US children’s playgrounds are sturdier and better built than this house. 

I close my eyes.

9:30am

They open a door to show us one truckload of garbage they keep next to their homes.  Coughing, someone is gagging.  Steps backward.  The smell is indescribable.  I want to cry for a hundred reasons and apologize a thousand times and give everything to them and kill whomever breaks their promises to these people.  All those feelings, all in one moment once he opened that door.

Another moment, they show me a bag of organized food they have put together.  It is full of leftover bread, stuffed in a bag and left on the ground near the garbage.  I take a picture of it and walk away.  I wonder if I’m in an alternate universe.

Actually, I am.

Across the street there are shirtless men watching us.  They are not leering or glaring, just watching us take out our cameras and document what we see.  Tourists at a garbage community, their home.  I feel wrong.  My camera is worth more than 30 truckloads of garbage, but I don’t want to give them 30 truckloads of garbage. I want to give them homes, clothes, healthcare, clean water, fresh food, education, chances, changes, life, more.

We move on.

We go to another community.

Our leader, who is wearing a shift that says, “Real Men Wear Pink,” warns us to keep our bags in front of us and do not take pictures because they will be, basically, stolen right out of our hands.  Kim nudges me, “I know he doesn’t have to tell you that.  You already guard that thing with your life,” she nods toward my Nikon SLR.  I smile mischievously and do a karate high-kick in the air, “I feel bad for anyone that even tries.”  She laughs.

We crawl into a trike (motorcyle with extra seating on the sides) and take off.

We walk through the town and I move my brain into turbo strength.

Mind over matter. Mind over matter. 

The smell of the vendors’ items makes me want to hurl.  Fish, hanging meat, a salad with a village of flies sitting on it.  I tuck my bag closer to me and walk straight ahead.

Stares.

Blend right in, we were instructed.

Right.

10:15am

We stop at the top of a hill and our guide says it’s safe to take pictures here, but not when we go back to town.  A few hundred yards away is a mountain of garbage.  At the base of it is the village we are standing in.  I pull my camera out but cannot take a picture yet.  My mental pictures are always better than Nikon, anyway.  Theresa whispers to me, “The children are asking you to take their picture.”  I look to my right into a doorway.  The darkness cloaks them but I see small feet and hear giggles. 

Images of my niece and nephews cross my mind.  I swallow hard, missing them.

I start snapping shots of the doorway and they peak out with the whites of their eyes.  Reviewing their pictures on the screen, I check the exposure of the shots.  Their shyness comes alive in my photos.

I hear a movie playing in someone’s house.  The sound amplifies and carries so far that the entire group can hear a hundred feet away.  We can’t identify the movie but it’s in English and the gunshot sounds reveal an action movie.  I hear tires squealing and screaming.

Why more violence?  Why more death, even if it’s fictional?  Is that entertaining?

We navigate a narrow pathway and find ourselves at the base of the basura (garbage) mountain.  The heat is bearing down on my skin.  The smell comes in waves, my nausea as well.

An unfamiliar man begins asking if we are students.  Someone explains we are from the US taking an immersion trip.  He explains their community.

Many of them were displaced from the homes and placed here by the government.  Now that foreign development companies want to develop the land, they are trying to move them out of their homes.  Some of the families take the small amount of money they offer because they do not know what else to do and the government moves them again with promises of stable homes and better conditions.  Instead, they are put in flooding areas with tents.  No water, no electricity.  Their promise of a better life is unfulfilled.

Not too long ago, one of the garbage mountains grew too high and collapsed from the weight.  Three hundred people were buried alive in the garbage and left there to die.  Many of them were husbands and fathers looking through the trash for survival.  When the story broke, billions were raised and donated to the families for aid.  The families have not yet seen one peso of that money.  Strangely, any money that passes through the government never sees its intended destination. 

The government of the Philippines, the man said, asks for assistance of other countries for arms.  The government uses the language that the US military will understand: “terrorists” and foreign countries donate arms for the military to use against the civilians. 

So they ask other countries for arms to use against its own people?  Yes.

The military is used against the people here.  The weak, the small, the helpless communities are threatened, harassed, and bullied with arms when they do not want to move, refuse the development companies, or voice their concerns over their living conditions.  Their organizing for rights is considered “terrorism.”

His voice becomes louder, “I am not a terrorist!”  He is nearly screaming.

There are undercover military all around.  They are used as a frightening tactic to prevent people from organizing.  “Organizing” means fighting for their basic right to live with decent living conditions and surroundings.  The government blankets their surveillance of the people as “anti-terrorist.”

I look down at the ground while absorbing his words.

Much later, one of the leaders later tells a story of how he left for a few months to get out of town.  To travel, experience, get away.  When he returned, in the late hours of the morning, he was taken from his home by the government.  They put military guns in front of him asking him to assemble them, if he knew how, and what he was doing for four months away from home.  They thought he might be in terrorist training.

He went away for travel.  To live his life.

They have no rights here.  They have nothing.

“I am not a terrorist!!” The man is once again proclaiming.

He tells the military, “You can kill me!  I will not move!”  He retells his convictions to us.

My translation skills slow…I feel lightheaded and I see the man’s mouth forming words, “…Bush and Cheney…”  but I cannot process it anymore.  The mountain stands before me.  The smell is in my body.  The sun beats on my skin.  I walk to Theresa, “Something is happening to me.”

I wander to a fallen tree and use the trunk as a seat.

I put my head between my legs.

Breathe, breathe.

I cannot breathe, though, from the smell.

Relax, I’ll be fine.

I’m not fine.

Kim.  I call out.

Kim.  I call again.

KIM.  She turns around.  I wave her over.

I look at the mountain of garbage and my brain is turning fuzzy.  I’m becoming so disoriented I wonder if I’m looking through the lens of my camera because everything looks fluorescent white and overexposed similarly when I don’t put the right settings on my camera.  To my left, my camera sits. 

Oh God, it’s me.  Something is wrong with me.  It’s not my camera I’m looking through.  It’s my eyes.

I look up and Kim’s face is blotched with circles.  I blink slowly to make them go away.  They scatter, small circles all over her face, her body, even the garbage behind her.

Her hands touch my forehead.  “Oh God….”  Sweat is dripping off me like a faucet.

“I can’t see anymore.”  I’m terrified.

“When did you eat?”

I slump forward, “Crackers.”

“No, WHEN did you eat?”

“This morning, crackers.”

She blows air out of her lips, worried.  She knows I barely ate yesterday because of my stomach.

She grabs everything out of my hands.   She’s talking but I don’t hear her.

“Help me, please.  What’s happening?”

A cracker goes into my mouth.  I crunch once, but there’s no saliva in my mouth.  The crumbs are pebbles in my mouth.

My ears are slowly filling with jelly and my vision is dimming.  My head begins gaining weight and needs to touch the ground.  I cannot hold it up any longer.

“I AM NOT A TERRORIST.”  He’s still talking.

Images come through my mind as someone forces a straw in my mouth loudly commanding me to drink soda.

My brain neurons are everywhere.

Far away, I see Nick working in his office and hear my mother’s voice telling me to be careful in my travels. 

I’m sorry, Mom, I wasn’t careful enough.

The mountain is now nearly pure white and the faces are almost gone.  My hearing is underwater.

Theresa pulls out small packets of sweetened jello candy and slides it into my mouth.

Another bottle is shoved in my face.  “Sip this!”

I sip with whatever strength I have left.  Warm, red Gatorade goes down my throat.

Gatorade.  The taste brings up memories of the Borchers and Russia and how I almost never drink Gatorade unless I am in Russia.  I hope I drink Gatorade there again. 

Am I dying?

I panic and wonder if the light I’m seeing is “The Light” and if this is the end for me, to die at the base of a garbage dump surrounded by people who’ve known me for only three weeks of my life.  Everyone and everything most precious to me is on the other side of the world.

I can’t be dying.  They say when you die, it’s a peaceful process.  I’m scared as hell.

Wait.  Maybe this is hell.

A small, rough, and unfamiliar hand touches the nape of my neck.  It’s soaking and cold.  “Malamig!”  The women’s voice rang with worry that I was cold despite the sun beating down on us.  Her worry heightened my panic.

I am nearly blind and deaf and cannot speak.

Becky forces her way to be in front of me and lets me rest my head on her, “We’re taking care of you.  Close your eyes.”

I’m afraid if I close my eyes, I will fully pass out and never regain consciousness.  I open them and see a dog looking at me curiously.  The ground is covered in garbage.  The smell is enveloping my last thoughts.

I am almost crying, “Please help me.  Please help me.”

Three people are wiping me down with cloths while the town women fan me down. 

Kim is nearly exploding, “She needs to get out of this heat.  She needs to get out of here.”

I hear voices, all muffled.

“The stretcher can’t make it down the pathway.  It’s too narrow.  Can she walk?”

“Look at her!  She can’t walk!”

 My hands begin tingling.

“We’re too far from the clinic.”

“Can she eat ice cream?”

“She can’t!  Her stomach…”

“Is she diabetic?”

“I am not a terrorist!”

“Where’s the medic?”

“I’m an artist, I use art to bring peace in the world.”  Philippe is explaining himself to a local.  He doesn’t care that I’m slipping away.

Out of nowhere, I miss my sister and want to talk to her.  My heart squeezes with love.  My eyes close to listen to my body.

I realize my heart is racing and my breathing is labored.  I want to lie down, even if it’s covered with the most horrendous garbage, my body feels like it weighs a ton and I cannot hold it up any longer.  I am slipping off the tree I was sitting on.

Pray.  I hear my Mom.

I try to focus on something other than my fear.

Dear God, if you get me through this, I’ll…I’ll…I can’t think of anything at this moment, God, but whatever it is, I’ll do.  I’ll be better or more loving or more forgiving or less selfish.  Just get me through this.  Whatever is happening to me, just give me enough strength to get me through this. Please help me.

I remember that was my prayer this morning.

I pushed myself too hard.  I’m so foolish.

More soda in my mouth.  Theresa pops open more cherry flavored jello candy.

I hear Lexie in the background saying she has chocolate.  Someone opens my hand and places a melting candy bar in it.  I don’t have enough mental strength to explain that I don’t like chocolate.  The wrapper is too strong for me.

“Keep drinking the soda!”  Whoever is talking to me is talking loud because I can hear it through the pillow stuffed between my ears.  The cool sweetness coats my tongue in sugar.

I hear Kim, “It’ll take effect in a little while.”  She’s talking about the sugar I just ingested.  Her parents are doctors.  It shows.

Behind her a man has a machete and slams it toward a coconut.  It splits open and they gather the juices in a glass for me.  I close my eyes.

When I reopen them, the glass is in front of me, “You need potassium.”

There’s a long hair on the glass and I feel like I will vomit if it comes near me.  I shake my head, refusing the glass.  I feel awful that I am not drinking it after they opened a coconut for me, but the chances that the glass has been properly cleaned are relatively low.  I think of the bacteria already in my stomach and know the last thing I need is to build that army in my digestive system.

I shake my head again.  I am not drinking it. 

I can’t win. 

I need the juice to recover, but I’ll probably get sick again from whatever’s floating in it from the glass.  I detest my odds and whimper, “I want to go home.”  Not sure which home I meant.  Home means so many things.  It means Nick, family, familiarity, clean, fresh water, and safety.  Geographically, the last home I remember is Boston, but I no longer live there.  Cleveland was my home for three days before I left. “Home,” though, at that moment had limitations.  It meant somewhere familiar, somewhere cool where I can lie down and cry alone.  Some place that made sense.  Home, at that moment was Casa Clementina on Timog Avenue, Metro Manila.  That is my home for now, where my flip flops are, where my notebooks and pens lie, and where my laptop is stored.  I sadly reflect, “home,” is where my “things” are, not people. 

“Should we call someone?  Nick?  Your Dad?”

I shake my head.  “They’ll just worry.”  I am not dying on this mountain of garbage, I decide.

“What about your Uncle here in the Philippines?”  Becky pushes. 

“No, he’ll call my Dad.”

I open my eyes.  The mountain has some color.  That brings me relief.

“What happened?”

Kim peers into my face, “You’re better,” she diagnoses, “your face doesn’t look green anymore and I can see that your lips are a normal shade.”

“What happened?”  My brain is moving toward orientation.

“Dude,” Kim explains with experience, “this happens to me, too, sometimes.  It’s hypoglycemia.  You barely ate yesterday because you were sick and you only had some crackers this morning.”  She shakes her disproval.  “You’re out in this heat, walking around, and, well, we’re here…”  she gestures to our surroundings, “your blood sugar just dropped.”  Her hands fly from above her head to low near the ground.

“Am I diabetic?” I scream.

“No.  It’s just you only had crackers this morning.”  She looks at me as if I did heroine for breakfast.

“Oh.  I kept drinking water because I was worried about dehydrating.”  I feel embarrassed that I forgot about the simple act of eating.  I turn and see everyone milling around my emergency.

“You need to go home and rest.  I’ll go with you.”  Becky is still holding on to me.

A feeling of loving gratitude spills over me.  I want to cry again, I’m so overwhelmed by everything and everyone, good and evil.

My body still feels like it is a pendulum between hot and cold and it’s dripping with sweat, but my senses have returned.  Shakily, I stand. 

Hands hold me up as I make my way to town where Becky and one of our trusted group leaders and I ride a trike and then a taxi back home.

My head clears in the taxi as I rest my head on the door. The experience inundates my memory.

I return to the apartment and shower, eat rice with soy sauce and drink ice tea.I google “hypoglycemia” and absorb the websites explaining the symptoms.  My worry deescalates as I read that it is common to experience it after the stomach empties itself from illness.  This never happened to me before, but I learned a hard lesson about self-care, limitations, and eating breakfast for goodness sakes.  I snuggle into my bed and turn the air-conditioner on low.

The clock reads 12:31pm.

What a morning.

I thought about how simple the problem was: not enough food, not enough sugar.  And yet, truthfully, felt like I was possibly dying.  Shit, when all your senses are disappearing and everything around you is reminding you of death and survival is on a thumbnail, it’s an easy thought to conclude that death is the next step.  Even with what happened, in which I had never been so frightened in all my life, I am glad that I saw what I did.  I am grateful for the opportunity to learn, even if it took everything out of me.

It is a privilege to be able to visit, because to visit means I am free to leave. 

No one there had that same choice.

"…Or else you’re just a feminist."

The program I am in is a non-stop flight from ignorance to overwhelming.  Since my arrival in Manila almost three weeks ago, I have spent about 17 hours everyday in lectures with historians, activists, peasant farmers, union leaders, scholars, and the poor people of this country.  There is little time for rest, let alone for writing.
Part of the danger in not writing is not processing.  Without processing there can no progress.  Without progress, what am I doing here?  And so today, it’s as if my writing soul and my physical body agreed to join in illness.  I’m ill enough to stay in my bed, but well enough to write.  This has been the most physical journey I have taken in many, many years.  My life in the US is so comfortable.  My home is dressed in warm colors and beautiful photos, fans, writing utensils and loved ones calling me every day to inquire about my life.  Comfort, consistent comfort has softened me.  These past three weeks, I’ve woken up more exhausted than the previous day, but I tell myself to keep going, keep reading, keep asking, keep absorbing, until this morning.
My body collapsed.  I woke up.  My body aching. My lungs heavy.  My limbs almost anchors. My stomach refuting everything I sent it.  My lungs closed in soreness, my forehead a hot blanket full of slow thoughts.  This is what happens when you do not take care of yourself.
So I am here, with three weeks worth of thoughts, stumps, epiphanies and emotion to process.
Here I am.
My advisor in my directed research is a professor at the University of the Philippines.  In her presence, I am graced with her words of naked honesty, painful recollection of torture, activism, and hope.  She spoke for two hours in a personal meeting and my notebook was drenched in her memories.  Hunger strikes, abuse, imprisonment, community, fight, fight, fight.  She is in her fifties and she calls us all in her class beautiful, young, “the sun on the horizon of activism,” and my head lowers in shame for some reason.
I think of blogging.  I think of blogwars.  I think of inevitable drama that ensues among strong women who have agendas and egos the size of an island.  I think of waste.
What IS my activism?  Where am I in the unfolding story of ALL women’s liberation?  Where do I want to plant my bare feet and which field’s soil do I want to plant?  Judy asks me what is my statement.
“My statement?”
Yes.  You must have a direct, strong, inquiring statement about what you want to do.  Or else, she says, “…you’re just a feminist.”
WOOOOOah.
Feminists are the aware, the thinkers, the ones who see something very wrong in the world of gender and recognize the inequality on every scale: workforce to militarization, motherhood to childcare, state violence to sexual harassment.
And then what?
Here in the US, what do I do after the awareness?  The usual answers come, “It’s about living a socially conscious life,” “I teach others,” “My job is my activism,” “You can’t do everything and it’s overwhelming,” “I’m just beginning to learn about myself,” “I really didn’t like feminism before and now I’m just learning it can be something useful in my life…”
Yes, Yes.  I’ve been there before.
But, what is my statement?  What’s yours?
What do I want to see in my lifetime?  Is it enough to raise consciousness?
No.  Never.
It’s the beginning.  Where do I go from there?
What is my statement?  Who am I for?
How is it in intersectionality the crossroads become the dead-end road?  That the intersection stops at the middle, but there is no deepening.  There is no drilling at the intersection of intersectionality.  It’s all consideration, remembering, “including” marginalized womyn.
Does that even really happen for US feminists?
“Other” womyn, the non-mainstreamed, no access to media, education, food, healthcare, voice are not just marginalized.  They are dying.  Womyn.  Womyn like you in and me who roll their eyes, and clap their hands when they laugh, who are trying their best to live a life to meaning, dignity, and want to see the world better than what it is.  Womyn, these womyn, are dying.
They are dying of curable diseases.  They are kidnapped and raped by the government and left in ditches in an unknown part of land.  Womyn are fighting, resisting, creating, and protesting for the right to work, rest, be paid more than $0.17/day.
These are womyn who are both similar and foreign to me.  They wear blue aprons and clean my plates while they tell me of their children and how their lives are on the line because of their resistance.  The womyn look puzzled when I ask about “a movement.”  They tell me that the women’s struggle is always present next to another struggle and therefore is specific.  The union leaders who work in factories and inhale textile all day and have developed asthma and breathing problems from unimaginable working conditions are specific in their fight.  They don’t ask for “equality,” they are for something very tangible.  Wage increases, hours off, benefits, break rights, an end to groping and harassment by management, and more than 5 minutes to go to the bathroom.
“What is your statement?”
There is no current US Women’s Movement.  There is no US Feminist Movement.  What is it that we face?  The face of the US movementS change with community and by geography.  It changes with all the things that make up the intersection of intersectionality.  It is no wonder so much argument and fighting occurs – so many women believe their agenda is the most important.  Intersectionality is the tool to help you clarify the dynamic of your own kyriarchal oppression and ALSO to equip yourself to ultimately CHOOSE how to resist.  Understanding intersectionality has become the limbo for US media-driven feminists.  We wait there until we “get it.”  
The danger of intersectionality is that it is often mixed in as an objective of US feminism, not a tool of alliance work or consciousness-raising.  It’s a method, not a goal.  The perception is that we can’t move forward until we understand the condition of Asian Americans, or disabled womyn, or Black lesbian and queer activists.   That is not intersectionality, that is stupidity.  There is and should not be One Movement for US womyn because we are as diverse in need as we are in faith, values, and life exposure.  Intersectionality is a TOOL, nothing more.  We are to first understand ourselves in the context of a kyriarchal system before we can critically understand the condition of other womyn.  It’s not oppression olympics, it’s humbling self-decentering.   My own story is significant.  It is sacred.  In studying my own life’s meaning, I uncover the stories of others whose own lives are also significant and sacred.  Holding both is not giving up my own power or agenda.  Recognizing other lives and individuals and populations does not negate or change the course of my struggle.  It enriches it with the power of knowledge, alliance, and shared hope. 
I’ve learned that I can carefully be an advocate for womyn’s liberation, but I must fight and live with chosen direction and purpose to truly impact my own community.
There must be action.  There must be a statement.

I’m in the Philippines, Gloria Goes to the US

While Gloria Macagalpo-Arroyo, the president of the Philippines, visited the US this past week, I have been here in the Philippines for the first time in my life.  And wouldn’t you know, here is President Bush with his great stereotyping, degrading vernacular talking to the woman president of the Philippines:

PRESIDENT BUSH: Madam President, it is a pleasure to welcome you back to the Oval Office. We have just had a very constructive dialogue. First, I want to tell you how proud I am to be the President of a nation that — in which there’s a lot of Philippine-Americans. They love America and they love their heritage. And I reminded the President that I am reminded of the great talent of the — of our Philippine-Americans when I eat dinner at the White House. (Laughter.)

PRESIDENT ARROYO: Yes.

PRESIDENT BUSH: And the chef is a great person and a really good cook, by the way, Madam President.

PRESIDENT ARROYO: Thank you.


One of the White House cooks is Filipino and that is his comment about Philippine-Americans?  That is what he says after the history of colonization?  After hundreds just died last week in a typhoon?  A cook? His dinner?

And Gloria thanks him?  

Many reactions have suggested that GMA should have replied, “Your cook is a Filipino?  Oh good, my driver is White.”

Grow a backbone, Gloria.

Good commentary here.

Cross posted at APA for Progress

Peasant Community



On Monday, July 1 we visited a peasant agricultural community. The logistics and traveling were, uh, interesting. From jeepney (public transit) to bus, from motorcyle rides to a long hike at 12noon, I can say that Monday was probably one of the most difficult days of my life – physically, psychologically, and even spiritually. The hike we took at noon drained any form of energy we had. I don’t know if I’ve experienced heat like that before. We traveled the hillside by foot. The pictures show a lovely grassy area, but don’t be fooled. It was a HIKE. Not a walk. The sun was at its zenith and yours truly ran out of water by 12:01pm.

We helped till the soil, both by hand, and yes, you see the picture, by caribou. The caribou is roped by some farming tool that when it walks forward, it pulls the tool along, driven by the farmer. I was the farmer for about 5 minutes. Five minutes in which the caribou listened intently to me, more than any other driver! It returned when I yelled, “Balik!” And I was able to turn that monstrous beast around to turn direction. I was very proud.

A not so proud moment was when the caribou relieved itself and we were front row for the unbelievable opening of its rear end and the release of whatever it most recently ate. Another not so great moment was when it released whatever it most recently drank. I’ve never seen a caribou’s butt before and I don’t think I ever will again. This is not a bad thing. I may have nightmares for several months. It opened to the size of a well before it pooped right in our faces. My gosh, I was in a trance, I barely reacted.

It was difficult to face rural poverty and see the children without underwear or clothes. Some of them had lice and it was a hard day to face the reality of so many Filipinos whose land has been stolen from them, are out of work, and cannot provide the most basic needs for their children.

A lot of us in the group are still processing it two days later.

I am one of them.

Barrio Visayas


I stood before them and they asked me if I had any questions.

I nearly laughed out loud.

How do you survive?
How do you feed them?
What is life like as a poor peasant woman on this farmland which
is repeatedly stolen from you?

Why is this world failing you?
How can feminism be so incomplete?
What is within my power to change, do, or improve?
How can you be pregnant again?

As I watched her pull lice out of her child’s hair and avoid my gaze, I left Barrio Visayas with a dehydrated body and changing spirit.