Tuesday, October 29, 2013

It's been a while

Howdy, it's been a long time, huh?

Well, what can I say? I went to Mexico.

Yeah, pretty much that's what happened.

Two Thursdays ago, I got a video-call from my mom saying that they were leaving to Mexico the day after because the doctor had said that there was nothing else to do for my grandmother, who had been in the hospital for about six weeks.They would drive 23 hours to get to our hometown of Guadalajara hoping to be able to say good-bye to Grandma.

Suddenly, I felt anxiety thickening the walls of my heart and closing up my throat. I had known this was going to be the outcome, and I had made up my mind long ago that I could not afford a trip back home, that this was going to be the same situation as when my other grandmother died and I could not even attend her funeral.

And yet... if my parents were going through all that trouble, surely I--no, I couldn't possibly...

The next day, I was booking plane tickets to go to Guadalajara on Saturday. I could not sleep Friday night knowing that I had just used my student loan money to book a rather expensive trip to Mexico that would surely only bring me more anxiety, anger, and suffering.

Why was I doing this? Probably because I felt bad that everyone else was sacrificing something and I was over here, across the sea, having the time of my life. Probably because I didn't want to feel like nothing had happened--just like when my Abuelita Maru passed away and I wasn't around. Probably because I was afraid of--I don't know what.

What can I say? I am a coward. I avoid suffering at all costs. I avoid sacrifice. I avoid pain. I was terrified of what I would feel, what I would see, how I would react. I was already angry at God--did I really need to go there and see her and trigger that dormant anger? What if I ended up punching an incompetent nurse or doctor? Wasn't I terrified of sickness, hospitals, and death?

Ah, this selfish person, this coward.

But there I was, on a 25 hour journey. On my first flight, I meet a very cool guy, and I thought--at least something good came out of the whole thing! Just because God has a sense of humor: the cool guy asked me to add him on facebook and I couldn't find him. And no, I didn't give him my full name.

The suffering started even before I got there: My body just hates traveling. It shuts down. When I stepped out of my London/L.A. flight, I was SUFFERING. I won't bother you with the details of everything that is wrong with my body. Not to mention, I did not sleep at all.

My LA/GDL flight left just before 2 a.m. on Sunday and I arrived at the Guadalajara airport at 7 a.m.

What was in store for me for the next week?

First, the unexpected joy of seeing mom, dad, Ceci, Andrea, and Danny. I hadn't realized I missed them (I had only see them three weeks before). Then I realized I hadn't been hugged for the past three weeks.

I went to church, had breakfast, and showered. My mom asked me if I wanted to go to the hospital. I said no. I wanted to "sleep." Pfff.... sleep. I couldn't sleep, who was I fooling?

"I'll go."

Yet again, for no reason, defiantly challenging my cowardliness, I was being dragged by an unknown inner impulse to do something I dreaded. Everyone warned me that what I was going to see at the hospital was a terrible, ghastly sight--that it was not even the shadow of the woman I had known to be my grandmother. But nothing could prepare me for what I saw:

The run-down hospital. The yellow paint on the walls. The stifling heat. The stained floors. You turn right on a narrow hall and suddenly walk into a room, with no door, that holds three patients, separated from each other by white tarp curtains.

She is in middle partition. I walk towards her bed and see a human being I have never seen before. I see Christ, in the midst of his passion.

A broken body, grey and bony, yet with hands and feet swollen to the point of deformity. An ashy face with sunken eyes, purple lips sucked inside a mouth that has been opened for days. A tongue lacerated by dryness. A forehead forever creased in an expression of excruciating pain. An oxygen mask, massively violent, covering most of the face. A nose beat up and chaffed. A pair of hazel eyes, weak and lightless. A chest painfully and slowly rising and falling.

My aunt motions for me to come by the side of the bed. As I stand right next to the emaciated body, I stroke the forehead gently. She opens her eyes slowly and sees me.

That face. That expression. It is engraved in the back of my eyelids. It is tattooed in my memory forever. She looks at my face and her hazel eyes smile. A heavenly smile, a loving smile, a joyful smile. The most beautiful and heart-breaking moment of my life.

Let me explain: I was the second grand-child of the family, but my older cousin lived in a city very far away from us, so I was the only grandchild around for a while. My grandmother is my Confirmation sponsor. When you walk into my grandparents home, there is a small hallway leading into the living and dinning rooms. In this hallway, there is a table along the wall that is full of photo frames. The centerpiece, the photograph in the middle of it all, is my university graduation photo. When my grandmother was still able to speak, some days before I arrived, she kept asking how I was doing in the UK. Every single one of her relatives, people I have never met before, knows that I am studying in England because she told them.

You know those grandmas that are really embarrassing? Mine is not like that. My grandmother is the epitome of a lady. With a stately presence, tall and strong, she conducts herself always with great dignity and kindness. She is a doting grandmother yet knows how to discipline. She is respected and admired, and many of my childhood friends call her "grandma," too. She is a wonderful wife, a wonderful mother, and a wonderful Christian. She is the older lady you look at and say--I want to be just like her when I get to that age. I have never seen such a lady, in the full extent of the word.





The contrast, is, therefore, heartbreaking.

Yet she's still all that--just in a weakened body. I sit by her bed and start telling her about all my adventures, the stuff you've been reading on this blog. She laughs with her eyes and forehead at the tragic fact that I have not met a single decent British guy and that I have an Indian neighbor who eats my food and that I am always hungry because I walk so much. Her face shows awe, joy, fun, wit, incredulity. For a few minutes, we have a conversation like the old days: I talk; she listens and smiles. She holds my hand, our fingers intertwine.

When they remove the oxygen mask for a while so she could rest her face a little, she attempts to speak. I put my ear to her mouth to hear the raspy whisper: Te Amo.

My heart hurts so much. Hot tears stream down my cheeks. I tell her I love her too. I tell her I am really grateful to have her. I thank her for being who she is. All of this I say while choking on tears and heartache. It is my grandma dying-- the lovely lady from whom I take my height and heavy bones, my paralyzing fear of dying, my passion for writing. I ask her if I can have her poems. She nods. It is my grandma, lying here, dying. And she will never get to see me obtain my masters. She will not be present at my wedding. She will not hold my newborn babies. A future without her in it seems so surreal and unimaginable. My grandmother, lying here, dying.

But it is also Christ being crucified.

This is the only day I get to have this conversation with grandma. The following days, she's too weak to open her eyes for more than five seconds. I come and talk to her, though, because I know she can hear me. I stroke her arm, I hold her hand, I kiss her forehead, I massage her feet.

On Thursday night, I sleep over at the hospital--another moment of inexplicable bravery.

At first it looks like she's leaving us, then her breath normalizes and she falls asleep. It's ironic how we all beg God to take her because she is suffering too much, yet the moment she seems to be leaving, we all hold our breath hoping she will breathe again.

In the morning, when we change her, I get to see the terrible ulcer on her back--about 8 inches in diameter, deep, and never ceasing to bleed. Stigmatta, almost. She has sores such as this one all over her body: 55 days laying in a hospital bed.

The nurses and the doctors don't seem to care anymore--rather, they seem to be trying hard to accelerate the process. They have stopped feeding her because  "her stomach can't take it anymore." That's right, they are killing her of starvation. Your darling grandma, who prepared grand feasts for Christmas, New Years, and birthdays, dying for lack of food. A horrendous death.

I try not to be angry with God. But I am just a coward with a weak faith. I believe that what He does is for the best, that all this suffering will help a lot of people (as it already has), and that the reward for this will be great indeed.I see the love with which her children take care of her and their father, the fervor with which dozens of people pray for her, the effect she and her family (I don't include myself) have had on other patients and their families: hope, faith, love.

And yet... I feel so angry. Why? Why her? Why so long? I don't think I'll ever understand. My prayer was for healing until the day I saw her. Then it became a prayer for mercy, to stop it all. Neither of them has been granted. What then? Thy will be done.  Just give me strength to accept it and give her strength to bear it and the peace and courage to remain faithful.



I returned to Durham on Sunday, not before having a seven hour layover at L.A., which I used to hop on a bus, by myself (plus my luggage) and go to Santa Monica, CA, a place I have never been to before.

I know--this trip has been a lot about overcoming my cowardliness. I see that. There's something else to thank granny for. And Santa Monica was beautiful.



My heart overflows with pain and anguish at the memory of what I have seen in the past week.

I find it so hard to keep believing You, Lord, and yet... I do. Hesitantly and forcibly and begrudgingly, but I do.


Update: a day after writing this, my grandmother passed away. Thank you to all the people that have kept us in their thoughts and prayers. I can say that I am heartbroken yet absolutely sure that she is in a better place. Now I had two amazing, holy women advocating for me so that God will send me a great man one of these days.

Abuelita, I love you. See you in the Eucharist.



















Monday, October 14, 2013

Apparently, I have been married for 25 years.

Yes, it's true.

My marriage was arranged to a man who was not even born yet.

                           

It turns out that my next door neighbor, the Indian, and I seem to have fallen into this unhappy marriage dynamic, to the amusement of all my other flatmates and my readership.

Allow me to describe, in a brief list, what our relationship is like (dang, I'm turning into Buzzfeed over here).

1. I cook for him delicious meals which he eats, although most of the time he's has to find fault in them. "Good flavor, but it's dry. Needs something. Oh, here, let me ruin it with some garlic salt. GARLICGARLICGARLIC."




2. Sometimes he cooks and I commend him on his effort. For the most part. Except when he decides to fry mash potatoes. In that case I just tell him he's dumb.




3. He makes "jokes" /bullies me about my weight. I just met the guy. For Christ's sake.




4. We grocery shop together. Asking each other what we need/should buy.




5. We argue ALL THE TIME. While our friends laugh and think it cute/funny.




6. He openly tells me when he is going to the restroom to poop.




7. He talks about other women in front of me and sometimes even asks me for my opinion. Otherwise known as "I know you are cheating but I just ignore it because--"

8. We (obviously) sleep in separate bedrooms. This is the best part of the marriage.




9. He think my dad looks Indian. 




10. Despite his obvious disregard for me, he offers to make me tea when I'm cramping.
AWWWW, HONEY!
He also said "I won't make jokes about feminine hygiene. PERIOD."




11. To eat a meal, we sit as far away from each other as possible.




12. We have the most absurdly stupid conversations.




13. We have absolutely nothing in common except for our political incorrectness, our hatred of  philosophical and smart conversations, and our ugly humor.




14. He hates museums, art, history, literature. I know right? What was I thinking?




15. The other day when I got home late, he was in the kitchen stirring some tomato soup. He says "I feel like a stay-at-home dad. Honey, how was your day?"




16. He fixes my computer when the internet is not working and he solved my phone problems with a bunch of codes and whatnots.




17. He leaves his chanclas in the middle of MY room.




18. He's always complaining about my blog. He asked me to write a blog entry about him because isn't he important? Why do I never talk about him? Yet he hates my want for attention (demonstrated by the fact that I write a blog, instagram everything, and share too much on Facebook).
                


19. He wants me to spend money I don't have. It's like I'm the dude and he's the high-maintenance real housewife of Durham.



       



20.  We find any type of physical contact, even a handshake, repulsive.










Chapter 2: A Narrative of the Life of Freder---------------------- ME.

Hi, how are you?

Oh, you know, not much, just living in England and stuff.

You know, every time I sit here to write, I completely forget what I was going to say. Yet, all throughout the day, I'm constantly thinking "This is totally blog-worthy!"

So, to help my memory, I like to make lists. I also like to make lists because I am a control freak.

Now, you are going to have to excuse me, but I have been feeling rather blue in the past few days. Yes, it's that time of the month.


Let's move on (everyone, come with me).

1. I have horrible, almost unbearable hip pain. Yes, I guess all the walking finally took its toll on my 90-year-old body. I think it's also due to that one fall I told you about a couple blog posts ago. Anyway, I can feel my hip bones like... grinding (twerking?) against each other. It has caused me to stop walking as much and to take the bus more, which I detest because

2. The free bus system here (free for students) is ALWAYS LATE. I've had to wait up to 40 minutes for a bus. Since I'm pretty much American, I find this to be a torture. Waiting? REALLY? And speaking of waiting

3. Waiters are horrible. In England, the waiting staff does not depend on tips at all. This basically means they can get away with a lot of crap. People ain't tipping anyway, so why emotional-labor your way into their hearts? We went to an Indian restaurant on Saturday and the waiter was soooooooooooooooooo incredibly upset because only 7 of the 8 people we made a reservation for showed up. Then he was upset because we were taking our time to order. I, with all my experience in customer service, naturally wanted to knock him unconscious.

The same thing happened at one of the pubs. We were trying to order food (yes, you have to get up and go order at the counter. No one comes around) and the bartender said, waving his hands in the air, "I don't have time." I grabbed my things and left. Ain't nobody got time for that.

4. I have to go out with a thin jacket on or else I become a walking sauna. It's horrible, because I'm cold at first, then I walk, warm up, then I'm completely soaked, and I get cold, but I can't put my jacket back on because it's wet. SO WHAT'S THE POINT OF JACKETS?! MIGHT AS WELL GO OUT NAKED.




5. I cannot get any work done. I start reading only to fall asleep on my bed or get distracted by people outside my room (i.e. two Indian men singing Adele songs). I am so behind on my reading and yet I am sitting here writing this instead of reading Lazarillo de Tormes.




6. I had my first real class today. It sucked. I'm sorry, it just did. The professor is GREAT and the other students are BRILLIANT. So, naturally, everyone communicates everything telepathically. Words are a waste of time. Moreover, the classmate that makes the most comments has the thickest accent ever, so I cannot understand a word he says.

Excerpt from class [transcribed to the best of my ability]:

Prof: Yes, let's talk about the unspeakability (not an actual word) in Dorian Gray. What about art and sex? Aesthetics and Decadence? Beauty and desire?

Student: sdkfasd asdasdjvadfcvandf avdf adfv awrfgvaek wef ansdvlaksd asdcnasdsmdfna sdga dfasdfjas dfklasjdf sdkfjas kljaw erfawosfjasdf ag

Prof: HAHA! Excellent point, you are absolutely right. Has any of you read Dr. Seuss' To Kill a Mockingbird? Well Seuss mentions the theory of relativity in relation with gender roles in 13th century Indonesia. And that's just what this is.

Me:




In other words, I am lost.

7.  Downton Abbey has been freaking horrific. YES, THAT'S WHY I AM SO UPSET AND THIS LIST IS SO NEGATIVE. I am so depressed. I want my mommy. I want cookies and Christmas TV movies and Pope Francis videos. 



8. I have a doctor's appointment on Wednesday and the lady that booked it over the phone was VERY RUDE, so I am scared and not looking forward to it.




9. My student loan money came in last week, but get this: it takes  A WHOLE WEEK for my bloody British bank to accredit the deposit to my account. Like... yes, you read right, 5 business days. That's a million years in America. Meanwhile, I continue to live off charity.




10. I have cramps.



NOW,  I need to make an effort to be positive, right? So I can at least come up with a short list of positive things:

1. I made some Jesus-loving friends! I am very happy to be able to share my fandom of the Big G! This comes in handy in a time when one is so far away from family.




2. I cooked a full-blown Mexican Feast for my dorm friends and they loved it! People here think I can actually cook!! (no Southern Belles to compete against, phheeew).




3. As part of the college dorm experience, my flatmates decided to set the fire alarm off last night at 11:30 p.m. It was a great opportunity to finally meet all those introverted people who now hate everybody in flat 1 because we woke them up in a school night. It was pretty hilarious.




4. I went to a formal dinner! It's like a super fancy, three-course dinner at the Castle. While we wear our robes. It's pretty ridiculous: they have a security guard making sure no one stands up or puts their elbows on the table. Yes, like an actual muscular security guard for that shit. And no, no one is allowed to stand up, not even to go to the toilet. You have to wait until the main guy, the master (apparently of the universe) gets up. These brits are pretty cray about tradition. Ironically, the conversation was as trashy as an episode of Geordie Shore.




5. I went to my college's soccer try-out and actually did really well, so I'll be able to play intramural soccer. Except my hip is a mess. But that's why I'm going to the doc doc in 2 days!




6. I was invited to join a book club at church. I don't like the idea of reading an extra book, but I do love the fact that I was invited by a local. Maybe I'm doing something right?




Parenthesis: you know when people call a quirky person "an old soul." I don't think that's what an old soul is. My idea of an old soul is a person that gets along better with people who are much older (who could be your mom or your grandparent). So, me. Although I must say... I seem to have the ability to connect with people of all ages except those in my own age cohort (22-28). Ah well, my mom knows I'm not normal. 

7. I ate Indian food for the first time and I loved it!!!




8. I got to go on a night tour of Durham Cathedral and it was awesome AND they finally did let us take some pictures, which is remarkable. To make it even better, I went to this tour with a Sikh. L O L





9. I was asked to join the church choir! I know, amazing, right? Except I would have to go to the mass at 6:30 p.m. and walk home, alone, after mass, in the dark, lonely streets of Sunday Durham. On a quick note: Monday morning Durham is quite a sight to see: puke on the street, beer-piss odor, gloomy and hungover town--a reflection of its inhabitants.


10. I bought an umbrella for cheap, lost it at the bus station, and had a friend find it, a few hours later, in the same spot where I had left it and bring it back to me. What an amazing feeling!
















Friday, October 11, 2013

Roundabouts: The circle of death. A poem that makes no sense (just like Roundabouts)

Your breath stops your heart stops your feet stop on the edge of the pavement
look left look right
which way do I look again?
You see the cars they look at you with their evil eyes and you know 
they put down their feet on that gas pedal 
and you only have a second to fly
go go go go go
dodge the bullet
it's a circle
a cycle that never ends
your life hangs off a thread of pity
if the driver feels benevolent you will be spared
if the driver is running late you will finally get to see the inside of University Hospital
cars going round and round
which way? How do I tell?
look left look right
and run for your life.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PirgrfzDRBY

Monday, October 7, 2013

Small Triumphs and Gigantic Failures in the UK... powered by The Office gifs




Greetings and Salutations!
Allow me to apologize for not having posted anything in the past.... three days. Oh, that's right, I HAVE BEEN POSTING. It's just that my readership has gone significantly down. I know who you are. 

Anyway, the tide is turning and I am slowly getting used to this life--except for the fact that the town dies of old age every Sunday at 5 p.m. only to resurrect Monday morning, hung over and worried about school assignments. 

On that note, let's recap what's been going on in a little segment I like to call... Small Triumphs and Gigantic Failures.


1. Small Triumph: going to Tesco (Wal-mart equivalent) and finding a small Mexican food section (food that we would deem Tex-Mex in the US, but it will do). Products include: flour tortillas, pickled jalapenos (yaa-llaa-pee-noes, as they call them here), sour cream "topping" (which I will be trying soon), guacamole "topping" (hell no), fajita seasoning, and canned refried beans. PRAISE GOD!


2. Gigantic Failure: I tried for the University's soccer team. With no ACL and all. So you can imagine this over-weight, out-of-shape Mexican (who is terrified of rough sport contact and soccer balls flying at a great speed) running around trying to look busy in the field. Also, about 6 years older than the majority of the team. Anyway, I figured I'd give it a try, and I "convinced" myself that I was going to be fine if I didn't make it to the team (which I knew deep down I wouldn't). Yet, we got the email saying "thanks but no thanks" yesterday and my little competitive ego got mortally wounded. 




3.  Small Triumph: I am a badass at economizing. I have had zero money for the past 5 days and I have manage to be absolutely fine. I used my last 40 pounds for groceries and have not been going to any restaurants. My student loans should come in about 10 days. Can you say fa-la-la-la-la-la-la-la-cha-ching!



4. Gigantic Failure: seeing people here who remind me of people back home SO MUCH but being unable to actually say WHO they remind me of.


5. Small Triumph: classes are only every fortnight. Only have four classes. The break down: odd weeks I only have class on Thursdays for two hours; even weeks I have class Monday, Tuesday, and Friday, two hours each day. This blog ain't going anywhere.


6. Gigantic Failure: I fell. In the middle of the street. Slowly, all the way to the ground. While wearing my expensive "walking boots."



7. Small Triumph: I cooked! I cooked chicken and pasta with a special chipotle sauce. My mom's recipe. First time doing it and it was delicious. My flatmate ate some too:
To be fair, he is Indian. He knows nothing of Chipotle sauce.
                                     He just wanted free food... bastard. 

8. Gigantic Failure: I shopped for clothes without trying them on... turns out, the size 12 here for blouses is like a size 6 in America. Can't even get my wrist through the sleeves. 





9. Small Triumph: I found a parish and have been attending regularly. I met the priest and some of the people of the Catholic Society. I also had Soup Lunch on Friday with some of the parishioners. Might not have known anyone, but I felt at home.




10. Gigantic Failure: I hung the picture of Our Lady of Guadalupe above my bed using some self-adhesive hook I bought. It fell on me in the middle of the night. Didn't even last up there 24 hours.




11. Small Triumph: the city market. It's like your favorite flea market... British version. I bought some locally produced bacon. And a little shopping basket with wheels so I don't have to cut my wrists with heavy plastic bags.




12. Gigantic Failure: my little trolley for shopping. The streets of Durham are not the most evenly smooth streets. So my little shopping cart tips over... all the time. And the groceries fall out. And I paid 15 pounds for the thing.




13. Small Triumph: I'm walking somewhere between 5 to 10 miles each day. Which means I can eat, like... forreals. It's comforting to know that I won't put on weight (losing weight is out of the question--try walking 5 miles every day and see if you're not starving all the time).



14. Gigantic Failure: I have not been able to do ANY work since I arrived to Durham. I can't read for more than 30 minutes without falling asleep. What am I going to do?