When I returned, it was with a heavier suitcase and a lighter heart. I had learned a vocabulary of autonomy: bills paid on time, a savings account that meant I no longer asked permission for small things, an ability to say no and mean it. Yet the return was not a return to the same place. Houses had new roofs, and some neighbors had moved away. The radio in the plaza played different songs; the world had been slightly rearranged while I was gone. My grandfather’s mangrove had been cut back for a new road that promised easier access to markets, and with it went a place where boys had once climbed and made kingdoms of their palms.
In the evenings, when the sampaguita scents the air and the city lights make a slow constellation over the bay, I sit at my kitchen window and think of the women who came before me—the ones who balanced mountains of laundry on their heads, who baptized children with one hand and tended fields with the other, who learned to fold grief into prayer. I think of my daughter, tracing the lines of her textbooks with a pen that might one day draw a very different map. When I returned, it was with a heavier
Love arrived quietly, as it often does in the gaps between duty and desire. He was a man who collected books the way some men collect stamps: compulsively, with a reverence bordering on obsession. He smelled of paper and rain. We met in a thrift shop that reeked of musk and possibility. He listened to my mother’s stories as if they were rare editions, turning pages with care. He learned to ask questions the way my grandmother had taught me to answer them. Our conversations were often about small things—the wrong temperature for rice, the best way to preserve calamansi juice—but from small things grew an intimacy that was not loud; it was a steady, careful thing, like braiding hair on a hot afternoon. Houses had new roofs, and some neighbors had moved away
There is no singular way to be pinay. Some of us wear our joy like a dress and dance in the rain; others keep it close like a talisman. Some leave and send money; others stay and hold the line. We are fisherfolk and lawyers and nurses and poets; we are quiet in prayer and loud in protest. We carry songs that older generations taught us, and we add verses as we go. In the evenings, when the sampaguita scents the
Being a pinay, I realized, was an ongoing negotiation. It meant carrying histories inside you that did not always fit the present. It meant being both caretaker and escape artist, keeper of traditions and inventor of new ones. It meant knowing how to survive on little love and turning those lean meals into stories that would feed a child’s imagination. It meant listening hard to elders and also learning when to step away from their versions of sacrifice.
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