1/29/2023

A Moment of Gold

The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being AloneThe Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone by Olivia Laing
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I don’t believe the cure for loneliness is meeting someone, not necessarily. I think it’s about two things: learning how to befriend yourself and understanding that many of the things that seem to afflict us as individuals are in fact a result of larger forces of stigma and exclusion, which can and should be resisted. Loneliness is personal, and it is also political. Loneliness is collective; it is a city.


Unlike Olivia Laing, I live in one of the Enlisted Men's Barrios of Makati. I walk everyday to-and-fro my workplace: #TheBank situated in one of the towers of Bonifacio Global City (BGC).

I wish to digress about my ways of opening connections via online and offline, and how I do this while traversing the most gentrified business district of Manila as of late, and how expensively insulated this concrete community is. I wish to give a warning about this SG-citylike sans the efficient commute, and how this concrete jungle is not only filled with deafened dreams, but also filled with realizations and ruminations of my healing heart with bits of profanities whilst walking and having loony conversations with my midnight therapist, memes and IG reels combined.

BGC isn't exactly like New York. There maybe rats, but they are lurking outside the district, resurfacing in the EMBOs around it. BGC is filled with working class who do not get to enjoy themselves at their breaktimes, thanks to the expensive bistros and limited benches and greenery. There's also no library, so if I wish to read, you have to locate a gentrified space and pray that there will be no rain for the day. This concrete jungle adds to the loneliness we feel as inhabitants of it. Together with the expounding rise of sibuyas and bigas, it aggravates our need to be in a community of affordable living, or at least a collective ground to air our grievances.

In my Saturday self-care regimes I do walk the city in an introspecting pace, lurking the side streets, people watching. Sometimes, breathing the vibe of stillness in the empty spaces. In a way, I see the street art in its walls, simply being there, or maybe waiting. Just like Olivia mentioning about the gloomy character of NYC, she explains how people cope via their creations. She mentioned Edward Hooper, Andy Warhol, and, in a vast majority, David Wojnarowicz and his activism through the AIDS epidemic. And through these people who breathed loneliness bring a hope to cope, or maybe an opium of attention, for us to know ourselves more, and finally, to give courage to start a connection.

Last Chinese New Year eve, I was looking for a vacant bench to eat my salad and read some more and after a long walk of getting out of a congested High Street, there's a newly-filled community of expatriates who live in a posh two (or three?) bedroom condo complex. One Meridien Tower houses expats with their little kids, some AFAMs and their wives, and mostly caters bistros filled with working-class Filipinos in bikes, grab food, and what-have-you. All benches are filled, except for one who is occupied by a tired man blankly staring the newly-opened store in gold.

I said hi to him and seated across him, and we had conversations about livelihood, reading, writing, and him being on his precious break time. At first I was annoyed; he keeps accommodating me even though all I wanted was to eat and read. And then after that small talk and me eating in the next 10minutes, I looked back at him and he was stealing sleep.

He was talking to me because he was battling the antok. And I was looking at the newly-opened store, testing the density of the instagrammers, the kids ranting about May wifi po ba kuya?, and the Titas of Manila drinking spanish wine with their amigas. I looked at him feeling the pity, and when he opened his eyes he jolted at me and sheepishly said sorry for I was caught looking at him. Told him that I know the feeling, for we are the same. We are both part of the working class in the concrete jungle — I was just five floors higher. #TheBank

More of Q-and-A here-and-there, and before he stepped out of the bench, he gave me the store's sample chocolate — the one with the 42%. I said my thanks, but as part of my overthinking spree, I was wondering if he has read Douglas Adams, or if he's into high fantasy books when he jested "You know that 42 is the answer to everything."

I know, I read Hitchiker's Guide.

Be it his way to reconnect or not (in the future), I kind of understand Olivia's excerpt when she wrote "Sometimes, all you need is a PERMISSION TO FEEL."

Maybe with all these problematic things in our lives, all we need is to feel... To finally heal.

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1/02/2023

2023 Reading Spree


This year, I am going back to basics loljk 
I'll put whatever I have in mind at this moment: 

  • A doorstopper, something that has 500 pages at least in the Trade paperback edition. Two doorstoppers are so fulfilling!!! Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See is finally done, and Olivia Laing's The Lonely City is also done and notated. Time to grab the Hanya Yanagihara book about NYC and #laslasreads 
  • A highly-marketed contemporary fiction, like Crying in H Mart, or Malibu Rising. Any that has "NYTimes bestseller" up on its sleeve. 
  • A pocketbook — Wattpad, Popfic, Precious Hearts, What have you got, as long as lower than 300pages. Ella to locate an old Penguin classic on the old vault of old books lols Scifi rosters especially those stories that were recently found in Clarkesworld Magazine back-issues. That was an amazing treasure grove of good works. If I can, I will try Asimov. BUT DO NOT EXPECT. 
  • Essay and/or Creative Nonfiction compilations. Because I want to go back to writing again. And as I see myself, I have my bread-and-butter calisthenics on recording flash-fiction-esque memories. So I want to do CNF and submit a work again somewhere.
  • LOCAL READS — andami ko nang Pinoy-authored books na hindi ko pa nababasa huhuz. Like Bibliolepsy, YƱiga, and even the newly purchased Love Team (I have to ask Alan again if I can sound-produce an excerpt in my #Pahinahan) 

No pressure but I will try my best at:
 
  • Post-Modern work like House of Leaves by Danielewski. It has a cult following, pero natatakot aoo basahin sa gabi. Please, give me courage and strength. 
  • Horror or Surreal works of Stephen King and Chuck Palahniuk. HOMAYGAHD AM I SERIOUS WITH THIS THOUGH OMG I DUNNO I — fine, YOLO. 
  • ONLY ONE Self-help/Leadership/Management-related book. I cannot afford to splurge Php1,000 just to trash it away after one session of fast-read. So if you love me or love the nature at least, I'd appreciate if you can give me a discounted copy, a bootleg, or a kindle version of it. I NEED RECOMMENDATIONS!