Friday, August 21, 2009

She Finally Kicked Cesar out of the House




In South Orange, New Jersey we used to have a spring cleaning day when residents could put out all their household discards on the berm and the town would pick them all up and send them away to trash collection centers. Every year, on the night before pickup day in the Spring, our berm was overflowing with discarded toys, broken furniture, appliances and other odds and ends that my first wife and I had decided we no longer needed.



On one such night before pickup day, my brother, his wife and sister-in-law came to our house to return a station wagon that my brother had borrowed from me.
On seeing the pile of discarded household items, my brother exclaimed: "Oh no, she finally kicked Cesar out."
My first wife and I were the least likely people to ever get married. We were exact opposites in most things, the only commonality was our love for literature. But even on that we eventually diverged. She continued to read voraciously, while I stopped reading. It was therefore just a matter of time before she would kick me out of the house and eventually out of her life.

I've been trying to go back to a comfort zone that I had left more than forty years ago when I immigrated from the Philippines to the U.S. At first I thought it would be easy, since my childhood friends still looked the same - only a little older - and seemingly welcoming me with open arms.

But much has changed over the years. I'm no longer the same guy who left long ago, and no matter how hard I try to fit in, I'm just not like my friends anymore.

I am passionate about my politics, am a liberal-progressive now to the core. Shortly after my graduation from high school, my father lost his fortune to politics - dirty politics - and for a few years I knew what it was like to have a father who was broke and to be poor. I am therefore attracted to the causes that help the poor, the downtrodden, especially here in America, and most of such people are usually either African-American or Hispanic.

It has made no difference how much I earn, I have always identified with the teeming masses, the "milling, moiling miasma" of the underclass. (The phrase in quotes is a borrowed phrase from a campus friend I admired when we were both in college at La Salle in the Philippines.)

I am perfectly happy in the U.S. There is a place for me here. There are tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of Americans who similarly passionately pursue the goal of helping minorities and the downtrodden lift themselves up by the bootstraps. There's the billionaire George Soros and MoveOn.Org. There's the Clintons, Al Gore, Bill Gates, Barbara Streisand. There's the Brangelina tandem. There are celebrities galore who are devoting a good chunk of their leisure time to helping the disadvantaged.

When I take that same passion for the underclass to my birth country and to the friends I left behind and who would be my social circle if I finally decide to pull the trigger on my Philippine retirement, all I get are blank stares. My friends, who are very much a part of the elite in the Philippines, cannot understand why I care more about the downtrodden than about their feelings.

In a country that runs on the culture of exploitation of the masses, it is very difficult to find among the elite the same passion for proletariat politics that we liberals in the U.S. eat, drink and breathe.

While my friends have not changed over the past forty years, I am already light years away from them. As members of the elite - the ruling class - in the Philippines, my friends are partly responsible for the status quo. I don't think that they have consciously contributed to the problems that beset the Philippines, in fact they probably have genuinely struggled to be at one time or another a part of the solution.

But the Philippines is a basket case. At some point one has to decide: do I continue to knock my head against that immovable object, or do I give in and achieve an accommodation? The question is moot, because most of my childhood friends are retired. At 10 p.m. they are getting ready to go to bed. They have grandchildren who remind them every day that they are old. In a culture that accords the greatest respect to older people, they feel comfortable in being old.

In the U.S. where everybody wants to stay young, you feel good if you go through life without any major medical issues and can still do what young people do. People here respect you more if you constantly defy the aging process. and not give in.

On a personal basis, my friends are still my friends. We are friends forever. But we are very different now. I still feel that my greatest work is ahead of me. I am trying to make a difference not only in the U.S. - which is my home now - but also in the Philippines, which I feel needs my help.

Most of my friends are just retired, or about to retire, and enjoying their golden years.

Talk about my wife putting me out along with the discarded household items on the berm. Recently I tried to post a message to my high school Internet group. It would not accept my post and when I checked, yahoogroups told me that I was not a member of the group.

They finally kicked me out of the house.

It was like going to a Thanksgiving dinner and finding out you had to eat in the porch and not at the dining room table with everybody else.

It was only a matter of time before my friends would decide that I can no longer be one of them, at least not with my noisy and peace-shattering politics and worldview, which drive me every day of my life and which drives some of them crazy.

It was only a matter of time before my friends would say enough is enough, we don't want to hear your opinions, we don't care what you think - and shut me up.

I want to change my world, they are happy and content with their world. And none of them want to hear about the health care reform in the U.S., the debate that is currently raging in my new home country. None of them want to hear that the Philippines sits on a social powder keg.

There are two images about Home that readily come to mind. There's Michael Buble's beloved hometown in the song "Home." And then there's Thomas Wolfe's Home in "You can't go home again."

6 comments:

  1. From my economist-friend, Norman Madrid:

    I went to NYKOS2.blogspot.com to read your blog and found this one most charming so far. As I read about your being kicked out from your high school yahoogroups site, I said, Hmmm... is Cesar talking about himself or myself?

    I've had trouble with my fraternity brothers in the Philippines who simply lack the heart to be Tigers. I do not know if it was their fault or that of Philippine culture that is so fun-loving and blame-oriented but not constructive, not globally entrepreneurial that my brods just could not understand the message to focus on Tigerization. I lost several fingernails typing out "focus on tigerization" to them; in the end, I got no reward, only pain. The worst part is that one of my frat brothers is now a top trade officials for the Philippines at the some very important Filipino embassy. This brod of mine would soon be kicked out of a Singapore, Malaysian, Korean or China trade promotion office, and I have met some of the officials of these non-Philippine consulates. Instead, he is part of the rotten Philippine system of global Tiger incompetence starting at the very top with Gloria and at the bottom with many yahoogroups such as ABP--Ang Bagong Pinoy.

    Having had this experience with my college frat brothers, I was shocked, but should not have been, to see the same behavior pattern among my high school batch mates. I did donate $1,500 for one of our occasions, but have refused to attend activities. I do not want to be a Nero fiddling. I think that most Filipinos have become Caligulas at economics. They just can't figure out the need to focus on Asian Tiger cry, "Export or Die!"

    I am glad you narrated your experiences, Cesar. I thought that I was the only one having trouble with Filipinos.

    I pulled out of 62ndForum because it is only an intellectual talk shop. At nation-building investment action, they are not Chinese, not Koreans, not Japanese.

    Welcome then to this group of Filipinos who very much understand what you are saying. Now you and everyone here are challenged to make our Tigerization words come true. I am putting pressure on myself to make them come true. Or else, I will finally kick Norman out of the house. I know everyone else will be pressuring themselves. We would likely then have great achievements in the end.

    Norman

    ReplyDelete
  2. Cesar
    I am sorry that you have been removed from our Yahoo group. I dont understand how it could happen; I suppose Dickie has the final say as he is the moderator and he has the right to do this if you violated any rules for posting within the group. I am sure you would not be barred because of your ideas.
    However you can never be barred from being one of us - a HS 59 alumni. Ony God can remove you from that membership. You will always be a part of our group, our common history,our shared development.
    Keep well, my friend, and keep on growing.
    Tony

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi Tony,

    You, like most of the hs59ers, will always be my friend. What about the others? Well, we had classmates and we had friends when we were growing up. That hasn't changed. Some classmates may hate your guts, but they're still classmates.

    We'll keep in touch.

    Cesar

    ReplyDelete
  4. From Nina Terol:

    Wow. This is a great post, Sir. I'm sorry about how events and friendships eventually turned sour, but glad for you that you've at least found your place there. Thanks for sharing!

    All the best,

    Nina

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Nina,

    My friends will always be my friends. They're my friends forever. But, in a graduating class numbering 160+, not all could possibly have been my friends. Some were classmates, not friends.

    Those were the ones I had problems with.

    Regards and have a good trip.

    Cesar

    ReplyDelete
  6. From my friend, Louie Fernandez:

    Chay,

    You have your La Salle fascists. We have our Ateneo fascists. We have the same progressive/liberal views and these rightwingers hate us for it. Don't waste your time associating with these Rush Limbaugh-, warmongering-, mata-pobre-, white-wannabe-, "elitist", racist-types. Consider your being kicked out of your LaSalle e-group a badge of honor. Mabuhay ka, and carry on!

    Louie

    ReplyDelete