Arlene M. Paredes (Clips)

Articles published, etc.

Paredes Funeral Homes (My first “home”) November 1, 2006

Filed under: 2bU!, Growing Up, Silang Cavite — crypticmess @ 11:27 am

Growing up in a funeral parlor
By Arlene Paredes

Published on Page C4 of the November 1, 2006 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer

I GREW up in a house attached to a funeral parlor. My elementary classmates knew me as Arlene-Paredes-Funeral-Homes. (Now that I’m writing it, I can actually laugh about it. But back then, it surely wasn’t funny!)

What most people in our little town know is that I was the child who grew up in a sari-sari store standing next to a funeral parlor. What they didn’t know, and perhaps what’s difficult to believe, is that it was fun for me (only because I was curious and playful) and the experience had so much to do with the way I look at death today.

Because when I was growing up, every day was All Souls’ Day, and I wanted to drive a funeral car. The staff of HBO’s “Six Feet Under” must’ve talked to people who had the same childhood as mine. A garage of funeral cars used to be my playground.

Once, when one funeral car was unlocked and there was no one around, I hopped in and pretended I was driving it. Of course the car didn’t move; but I do remember having fun.

It’s both creepy and amusing now that I didn’t even bother then about the fact that the car actually carried coffins and human corpses almost every day. No, I wasn’t exactly being brave. I was just being a playful kid. After all, I was only six or seven at that. But if anyone would dare me to do the same thing now, I would definitely think twice. To be honest, I’d probably chicken out.

Must-have item

My familiarity with the coffins I saw daily must’ve bred a certain level of comfort in me, such that one coffin became a must-have item. Yes, there was a time when I actually chose a cute little coffin for myself. What happened after I announced a coffin preference was a form of education for me. I learned what not to do so as not to get into trouble.

The lesson started one morning, when my mother had just arrived from the market. I welcomed her with a gleeful announcement: There was a very cute small coffin on display, and I could fit in there!

My mother was just coming in through the display room. I pointed to the cute coffin, but was not prepared for her response. She slapped my tiny arm!

I shouldn’t make fun of fitting inside something like that, my mother yelled. I just invited Death to our door, she said. Naturally, I didn’t understand her reaction. But I was bound to see her point.

Not long after that day, I got very sick. It was the first time that I saw fear in my mother’s usually fierce eyes. She said I suffered from convulsions, which I don’t remember now. But from then on, my mother would always remind me of that stupid thing I did that almost cost me my life.

How can you take away superstition from death and dying? I guess you can’t. Because when it comes to preserving your life, you’re not supposed to take any chances.

There were early mornings when I woke up to the sound of people sobbing—families wanting to get a funeral service for their loved one. There were late nights, too, when I heard gentle knocking on our door, with voices of women weeping in the background. They too, needed funeral services. A funeral parlor is a 24/7 business. You can never tell anyone to “please come back later.”

Death happens anytime, I realized early in life. It can come in the morning, or midnight, or afternoon. Death also comes as a result of many things: murder, accident, nightmare, long illness, old age. I thought I’d heard all the stories back then.

Whenever there was a bereaved family in the funeral parlor, I’d immediately ask my father, “Ano’ng ikinamatay?” (What’s the cause of death?) Sometimes, my father would try to make light of it. Yet, even as he would say, “Eh nakalimutang huminga” (He forgot to breathe), his eyes would betray him and reveal his sympathies for the family.

Dressing up the dead

It was always clear to me that he never got used to seeing families crying for their dead. And it was much more difficult when the family was a close relative.

The film “Masahista (directed by Brillante Mendoza)” showed portions of how embalming is done and how the dead gets dressed up after the procedure. I must say, everything in “Masahista’s” funeral parlor scenes was plausible. Although the whole procedure is creepy, the embalmer is not a sinister or weird guy. He’s just a regular person doing something scary. (No one would allow me to watch the embalming before, but I was curious and I had my ways.)

The funeral parlor’s garage was a form of shortcut to my sister’s house, so I passed through that garage frequently, and alone. I was convinced I was brave. But I soon realized I was wrong, because I just couldn’t be found alone with a stranger’s corpse!
One afternoon, when I was going home from my sister’s house, I was greeted by a sight I didn’t know how to handle. There was one unidentified corpse lying on the garage, with no one around. The people from the funeral parlor were in the middle of some discussion outside, so I had to half-run my way to our house. I made a mental note to pray that I wouldn’t be caught dead with a corpse in one room again.

I must note, too, that the first camera I ever handled was the one owned by the funeral parlor. I shot no hair-rising photos, and encountered no frightening ghosts, thank God.

I was already 16 when I left our house that stood beside a funeral parlor. Now, over 10 years later, I don’t think I can ever go through that experience again. A lot of things have already ceased to become familiar, and that means I no longer feel comfortable about standing amid coffins, let alone staring hard at them, or sitting inside funeral cars, or using a funeral parlor’s camera, or staying for over a minute in a garage for hearses.

But some things don’t change. For instance, I still look at death the way I learned to look at it in my childhood: It is that which happens to a person when it’s Time.

“Hanap-patay,” a pun on “hanapbuhay,” is often used to describe the funeral parlor business. Technically, however, no business looks for the dead; because businesses need people who are alive and can pay for them.

The funeral parlor doesn’t even have to work on the “hanap” part. Business comes to them. There’s one thing I know and can remember about the business: it is (literally) not for the fainthearted. (Inquirer link here.)

E-mail crypticmess@gmail.com

 

Feasting in Boracay August 30, 2006

Filed under: Uncategorized — crypticmess @ 6:44 am

Sun, sand and flavors
Arlene Paredes

Published on August 30, 2006 in the Philippine Daily Inquirer

IN BORACAY, you give all your senses a real treat. Your eyes feast on the colors of ultimate tropical beauty that is your hideaway. Your nose inhales unpolluted paradise air. Your skin either basks in the warm sunlight during summer or enjoys the cool drizzle during rainy days. Your ears enjoy the music of the tropics, away from the crazy hustle and bustle of the city.

And your taste buds celebrate luscious organic flavors devoid of toxic artificial ingredients.

Inquirer 2bU! dined at Garden Café in Patio Pacific to sample its healthy, scrumptious and detoxifying Chinese cuisine.

Among the soups I sampled, the delicious Egg Drop Soup and nutritious Tomato Soup were top favorites. Garden Café’s Tomato Soup was so flavorful that it left a tinge of pepper and spices in my mouth as I waited for the appetizer and main course.

For appetizer, nothing beats Patio Pacific’s Ocean Splash Garden Salad with special vinaigrette dressing. The mere act of gently pouring the vinaigrette on this generous splash of fresh crisp lettuce, cucumber, tomatoes and onions with slices of boiled egg and chunks of tuna was already quite. And at only P180, it was a definite treat.

Next, try Patio Pacific Grilled Prawns. Fresh, juicy and delicious, the six huge prawns came with Patio Pacific’s very own red sauce, at only P300.

My other favorite was the Yoga Chicken Skewers, marinated in yoghurt and garlic then grilled to perfection. Savor the smooth creaminess of the white sauce blending deliciously with the chicken meat in your mouth. Also try the white sauce with other meat or veggies on your table. This set of six chicken skewers came at P175.

If you’re craving for bacon or thinking of a heavy and filling breakfast, try Mignon de Porc Al’ail. My serving came with four pork mignons wrapped in bacon, pan seared then served with gravy, at P350.

For a low-fat, protein-rich serving, try Wasabe Tuna Steak for only P150.

As a chicken meat lover, I just had to try the succulent Steamed White Chicken with special Chinese wine mixed in the white sauce. A small serving cost P165; medium, P220; and large, P275.

For dessert, the mango crepe laced with rich chocolate syrup (P120) was a great way to cap a fully satisfying meal.

Among Garden Café milkshakes, my favorite was the Mega Watermelon Milkshake (P150). Try this perfectly soothing blend that goes right with any meal, any time of the day.

At Garden Café, you can also request that a particular dish be cooked to your specific instructions. The restaurant’s chef, Jomar Bartolome, and the friendly and hospitable staff will take care of it for you.

If you want your dinner to be extra special or romantic, either with the barkada or a special someone, you can opt to have a candlelit dinner at the Garden Café teahouse, where you and your date can call the place your own. (Inquirer link here.)

Garden Café is in Patio Pacific in Boat Station 1, Balabag, Boracay Island. Call +63 36 2883888 or 2883999. In Manila, call +63 2 8452222 to 27. Visit www.patiopacificboracay.com

E-mail the author at lhenparedes@gmail.com

 

Wall climbing in Boracay August 30, 2006

Filed under: 2bU!, Boracay, Hobbies, Lifestyle, The Philippines, Tourism, Travels — crypticmess @ 6:33 am

My Bora climbing experience
Arlene Paredes

Published on August 30, 2006 in the Philippine Daily Inquirer

IF YOU sports enthusiasts out there ever decide to fly to Boracay during the rainy season, remember you may miss doing some water sports, but you can still flex your muscles right in the comfort of Patio Pacific, the only resort with wall-climbing facility that is perfect for fun-filled barkada sports.

This author tried wall-climbing for the first time. I didn’t really expect to make it to the top. Sometimes it’s better to just enjoy the journey, or in the case of wall-climbing, the way to the top, than be too occupied with the destination.

We climbers first checked the equipment at the Patio Pacific Alpha Fitness Centre and did some warm-up exercises to stretch our muscles.

Legwork

“Remember, use the power of your legs and feet,” Kuya Richard of Patio Pacific told me as he helped me don the harness that would ensure my safety during the climb.

“Keep this rope between your arms and don’t let it bother you,” he said, noting that some beginners mess with the rope, making their climb more difficult than it should be.

Whether my legs and feet have sufficient “power” for the climb, I was going to find out.

Curiously though, when I looked closely at the holds on wall, I was thinking of how to hold rather than step on them. I was definitely thinking of handwork rather than footwork. This would later result in shocked and stressed arms the morning after.

(After the climb, I read some stories on wall climbing. I learned that beginners are not likely to understand that the sport requires more precision in footwork than anything else.)

I asked the guide if it would be okay to climb barefooted since I didn’t think my beach sandals could help make the climb any easier. Kuya Richard said some people actually prefer to climb barefooted. So I did.

After the first few steps, my instinct was telling me to look up and check the distance left from the top. This is wrong. This is not enjoying the journey, this is impatience.

The right thing to do is look down and check for holds to step on. Once you found another hold to stick your foot on, that’s when you look up to find a handhold that could clear several inches to the top. Progress in steps and give in to the thrill, not fear, of doing it.

Kuya Richard was observing me very carefully, shouting some directions when he noticed I was getting stuck for over five seconds. As much as possible, trainers will let you strategize your own climb. But once you’re stuck, trust them when they say “right” or “left,” it is the way to go. If your foot slips off at first attempt, relax. Direct your weight properly to place your foot at a right angle and you’ll get comfortable in no time.

After a few minutes, I noticed my arms were beginning to ache and my fingers were shaking. I knew I wasn’t doing it right but I had no time to care, I was almost at the top. I thought if I fretted about not doing it right, instead of just giving in to the thrill, I would mess up a few meters to the top.

I was laughing when I grabbed on the last handhold to the top. Not knowing I could do it but enjoying anyway resulted in an awesome “Dear Diary” moment. I finally did it!

Bell

“Ring the bell!” Kuya Richard yelled.

“What bell?” I yelled back. I was so high throughout the course that I forgot I was supposed to pull the bell string once I had cleared the wall.

Of course, it’s not over until the bell rings!

After ringing the bell, I held on tight to the rope as I was told and just let gravity take care of me. What can I say, it’s always exciting to fall if you know someone’s going to catch you.

Once I was back on the ground, Kuya Richard first checked my hands for any scrape or cut. Clear. Then he asked me what body part was most stressed at that point. I said my arms. And my fingers were still shaking. He laughed, “You didn’t do it right.” I pleaded guilty. But I was still definitely ecstatic.

Now remember, your legs are stronger than your arms. Trust your legs to place your foot properly on the holds. Use them well. The next time I try wall-climbing, I’ll bear that in mind.

Pampering

After the climb, what should one do?

Do cool-down exercises to relax the muscles.

Alpha Wellness Centre boasts of cutting-edge equipment for pampering the body, the Alpha Capsule. This “unearthly” capsule combines dry-heat sauna, aromatherapy, ionized air (healthy molecules absorbable by the human body), massage and soothing music for a completely relaxing experience.

A 30-minute stay inside the Alpha Capsule and a separate 30-minute Swedish massage are more than enough rewards for the wall-climbing challenge this author had to face. (Inquirer link here.)

E-mail the author at lhenparedes@gmail.com

Copyright INQUIRER.net. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

Halloween! July 21, 2006

Filed under: 2bU!, Growing Up, Halloween, Holidays, Life, Lifestyle, Relationships, Wacky Side, Youth — crypticmess @ 10:48 pm

How to host a Halloween party for friends
By Arlene Paredes
Published in the Philippine Daily Inquirer

IT’S Halloween, and while we continue to remember our loved ones who have passed away, it’s not bad to go with “other traditions” this season. Like Halloween parties.

You can simply invite your friends over to watch horror flicks while eating popcorn, or you can cook up more adventurous (yet safe at home!) Halloween happenings this year.

How about an intimate masquerade party exclusively for your close friends? You can be Sadako. Or Dracula. Or one of the Charmed ones.

Or, you can host a friends-meet-friends Halloween party, where you can meet the other friends of your friends from school, workplace or church. Now is the time to let your circle of friends mingle in one bigger circle and have fun!

2bU! shares with you a few tips on hosting a Halloween party:

Mark your calendar. Set the date on when and where you want your party to be held. Setting a definite date will help your friends to plan ahead, adjust their schedule or ask permission from their parents early on.

Conceptualize. Think of a motif. Ask some friends to help you in the planning stage of your party. Brainstorm. The more ideas you toss around, the more creative you’ll be.

Delegate. Know that you can’t pull off a party alone. You need help from friends, and they’ll gladly help as much as they can. Assign different friends to oversee food and drinks, decor, costume coordination, presentations, games, etc.

Choose food and refreshments. If you have a theme for your party, it will be more fun if you can reconcile your theme with your food and drinks. Ask the help of your friends who are aspiring to be chefs someday. Or, you can check the Internet for recipes that go with Halloween parties.

Involve as many friends as possible in your Halloween program. If you’d like to have a ghost story-sharing session a la “Are You Afraid of the Dark,” make sure to ask everyone for stories. Or ask them to bring the most delicious and unique Halloween meal, drinks or dessert.

List your wanted guests. Make sure you have a clear idea of the number of your guests to avoid running out on food and drinks. If you have big shockers and effects at your door, make sure all your friends are healthy and will not wind up with a heart attack because of utter shock.

Invite in style. Instead of a regular invitation card or a text message, you can try sending an invite using spooky items like a rag doll, a toy spider or anything creepy.

Whatever you do, just have clean fun and stay sober. Enjoy!

 

Back to School! June 22, 2006

Filed under: 2bU!, Education, Growing Up — crypticmess @ 10:35 pm

8 last things to do before school opens
Arlene M. Paredes

This is the time of the year when students just want the hands of time to stop from moving. Vacation is almost over. Here’s a checklist of what you can still do before the bell rings again.

Get enough sleep. What is it that we loved to do that we sometimes couldn’t afford to do during the school year? When school starts again and you have to be up by 6 a.m., you wouldn’t have to look back to the vacation you thought you had.

Finish pending business. Maybe you have wanted to build a homepage for so long now, but you just didn’t have time to do it. Boot that computer now and start working your brain out.

Learn something new. There are so many things out there waiting for our attention.

Update your journal. Visit your old friends. When time is scarce and opportunities are rare, we seldom see and talk to our friends outside school even if we miss them so much. So, while there’s still a chance, let’s all make up for the lost time.

Clean your room. You have to clean your messed-up room now, or you’d just forget about it.

Text. Grab your chance to be able to text without guilt until you can no longer text because your professor is in front of the class, discussing Physics.

Surf the net. School can be a lot easier if you learn to use the internet.

Read a good book. Reading makes our minds healthier and our insights profounder.


Published in Inquirer Libre on June 2, 2003.

 

Growing Up June 21, 2006

Filed under: 2bU!, Growing Up, Life, Lifestyle, Youth — crypticmess @ 10:29 pm

Beyond the reckless and feckless youth
Arlene M. Paredes

Published in the January 20, 2000 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

What does the youth of today have to offer in the future if they continue bumming around at shindigs everywhere?

Right now, we disobey our parents, we cram for exams, we text incessantly, we eat and breathe party, we drown ourselves with booze and smoke. We scream for independence. We want our own style. But tomorrow, the next years, what are we going to do? Running for important political titles? Maintaining large-scale businesses? Creating an all-digital environment?

But are we heading in that direction?

Amid teenage pregnancies, early marriages, drug addiction and violence, our elders may conclude that our future is one of failure. It seems to them that our increasingly growing knowledge of the world is leading to self-destruction. Even our contemporaries look at how we enjoy life so much and think it’s impossible for us to get anywhere.

Is there hope for the Filipino youth? Listen to what they have got to say:

I think we are more modern and exposed to the reality if life. Thus, we are more open-minded and mature in dealing with different matters and handling different situations. – Juneth Nitro, 19, UP Los Baños.

We are more adventurous nowadays. We tend to experiment a lot and this makes us nonconformists. We lack identity and we are easily persuaded by the latest hype. It is not good. – Benjo Bergado, 19, UP Diliman.

We are so liberated. Maraming alam. Curious. – Gretz R. Bautista, 19, Fatima College.

We are so aggressive in many ways and aspects. Ang dami nating gustong I-explore. – Regilyn Dimaculangan, 18, UP Diliman.

I think they are more aggressive, persistent and more interested in wordly matters, not to mention that they no longer observe Filipino values. – Greg Wilson, 24, Cagayan de Oro.

GenXers are a bunch of kids who are all style but no substance. – Emerlito Paredes, 19, La Salle graduate.

Most Filipino youth don’t have respect for the elders anymore. Before we practiced pagmamano. – Al Loyola, 20, Baguio.

The Filipino youth now have lost majority of their values. These GenXers have to be taught a lesson. – Raul Santos, 21, Dumaguete.

The Filipino youth is more aggressive today than ever. They need to control lives is growing every day. – Leonida Paredes, 19, DLSU – Dasmariñas.

We are greatly affected by Western cultures to the point that our own identity seems to be diminishing with each passing generation. It goes the same for the moral values and traditions that our forefathers had passed on to us. – Earl Caymo, 19, UPLB.

Basically, we are more aggressive, not afraid to die, happy go lucky, yet far more advanced with the times. We have a good sense of humor, though! – Curt Peralta, 20, Manila.

Filipino youths are generally self-centered. Nothing matters more than themselves. – Noel Balana, 19.

We are a mix of everything. I believe that most of us do think. I mean really think! There are things inside our mind that we care about. We are concerned not only with our love life and our allowances. We think about politics. We think about the environment. We think about religion or – better – about faith. We don’t want to be bums all the time. We want something and that something depends on each and every one of us. Given a chance, we can show what we really are worth. – Remar Zamora, UP Diliman.

Now, that’s the youth spirit!

Our Time

Some adults would look at us from head to toe, criticize about fashion and complain about our lifestyle, perpetually comparing us to their generation without batting an eyelash. They are firmly suspicious of what we do. They sigh, “Ang mga kabataan nga naman ngayon.”

Are we being unfairly misjudged or is there really something wrong with us?

Beaver Flores, UPLB graduate and a member of the UPLB Development Communicator’s Society explains, “The so-called ‘elders’ of society are too old to understand our travails and mishaps. This is our time. It’s true what the Blue Ice commercial says. The technological advancements that our parents have long dreamed of and have gone to immeasurable depths to attain are the real reasons why we are acting this way. In short, they’ve got a taste of their own medicine.”

He added, “We are too lazy and too proud to admit that we are indeed the future of mankind. Technology has increased our level of materialistic dependence. Values are now a thing of the past. Though it’s cool to live in a liberal society sometimes, there are times when the good old-fashioned values still apply. Nagmamano pa rin ako sa lolo ko.”

Prejudged

Of course, there are cynics who don’t believe that we can make a difference. But then again, maybe there is really a problem, after all. When was the last time you did something significant for others? When was the last time you helped you community? When was the last time you thought about school and did not think about it in a bad light? When was the last time you put your compelling words into effective actions?

Sometimes we get prejudged. Sometimes we don’t really get it. But we are constantly searching, learning and discovering the things we can do to affect the world positively and thus, allow it to turn around progressively. It’s easy enough for some to overlook our efforts. But we can try harder – not just to please adults but to realize our maximum potentials. If we keep on asking ourselves for more, if we keep on trying harder, then we are going to trudge the path to a better world.

The parties may never stop. But that’s because we have endless reasons to celebrate. Our minds. Our views. Our accomplishments. Soon enough, the pessimists will regret ever having doubted us.

 

“Bunsung-bunso” June 14, 2006

Filed under: 2bU!, Growing Up, Love, Silang Cavite, Tatay — crypticmess @ 11:30 am

The First Magician in My Eyes
By Arlene M. Paredes, 2bU! Correspondent

Published on Page C2 of the June 14, 2006 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer

IT must have been really tough for you then, Tatay. You were 69 when I came into the world, a helpless tiny infant.

Then you were in your mid-70s when I was a hyperactive, crazy-dramatic, irrationally demanding and attention-hungry toddler. But you loved me well and you took care of me as a doting lolo-tatay.

I didn’t help make it easy for you. I was a very naughty child. Once, I made you gasp for air after you had to chase me around the house to try to discipline me with your scary sinturon (leather belt). I was mischievous and rather challenging, so I ran away from you, unmindful that I was giving you a really tiresome exercise. I still got the whip, all right, and remembered never to mess up with you again.

But more than remembering the lesson learned, I wish I didn’t have to make fatherhood even harder for you than it already was. But I was your daughter and you knew what you had to do and you loved me still. I never even once got to really thank you for loving me in spite of the very difficult situation we were in.

You made the most of what we had and tried your best so I, as a child, would not feel the lack of a strong father in my very vulnerable years.

I know a lot of children who aren’t so fortunate to get even a glimpse of a father. But you always gave your best. Dressed in a barong Tagalog, you fetched me from my school on the first day of classes. People must’ve thought it was weird, but I knew you had not fetched a child from school in a very long time and must’ve forgotten that you could opt to dress down for it.

Fortunately, the more appropriate time to wear the barong Tagalog came when we accepted my first medal in school. You must’ve been the oldest father in the Recognition Day crowd, but on that day you must’ve felt proud. At least I hope you did. Because apart from that, I can’t deny that I gave you a lot of unnecessary trouble growing up.

When I was 4 or 5 years old, I gave you quite a shock when I stuck my head between the wooden bars of our sari-sari store. Naturally curious, I played and tried to see if my tiny head (no, not tiny, I was fat!) could fit between the wooden bars of our store window.

I was amused that it did, but quickly I realized I couldn’t get my head out. So I cried and wailed like a siren for our entire little town to hear! You had to run out and call your carpenter friend to cut the bars using the smallest saw. Funny, but I don’t remember how afraid I was with the saw only an inch away from my neck!

You were in a state of real panic then, but all I could think of was, “Oh, my God! I’m sure Tatay will keep my head intact!” Of course, you did. Nanay and I would later look back at that time and, though we both knew it wasn’t funny at all, we’d end up laughing hard about it.

Nanay had all these stories of how tense you were when she was pregnant. You probably were anxious that the capacity to take care of a person was already beyond you. But see, we turned out fine because you never let your age get in the way of being the best father that you could be.

Before you got very ill, we enjoyed fun rides together around the town, on your bike and your old truck. Next to your patience, love and care, my ultimate gift from you was this little bike with a sidecar that you got from a passing junk collector. With your natural craftsmanship, you made it look almost new, and I had something that most of my playmates then could only dream of: my own wheels, a real funky ride!

When you finished reassembling that bike for me, you became the first magician in my eyes, turning junk into precious treasure. Later, I would realize that you were indeed a magician because you could see things differently. What others saw as trash, you transformed into a magical wonder of a toy. And when I was difficult to love, you looked through me and found good reasons to never give up on me.

You were the first one to go the extra mile to love me a bit more each day, even when I was unwittingly making myself so unlovable. Movies like “Riding in Cars with Boys” where a daughter can talk her heart out to her father never fail to make me cry, because it’s an important experience that I wish I had been able to share with you (including more fun truck rides around the town).

See, even before I could understand a bit about myself to start talking of my angst, you had become too sick to talk to me about even the mundane things. It was just part of my being human to always wish for more. But in hindsight, you gave me everything you could while you still could, and that’s more than enough for me.

I was 17 when you died. I prayed for God to let you live until you’re “90-plus” because I thought by then you would have walked me down to the altar and met your grandchild from me. But God said, no, you had to go. God, of course, is always right. There’s a time for everything and you made our time together all worthwhile.

There is no way for me to thank you enough. But I’m writing this for my sake–so I’ll remember that my father loved me, and that love should be enough to carry me through whatever difficulties I’d meet.

I’m sure you and Nanay are watching over me now, and will always do. So here’s to love and to a great father. Happy Father’s Day, ‘Tay! (Inquirer link here.)

 

Dynamic in 24 hours May 24, 2006

Filed under: E-writersplace.com, Writing Style — crypticmess @ 11:41 am

Transform Your Character in One Day
by Arlene M. Paredes

Previously, this column discussed how to write a “one-day short story” (a story that transpires within 24 hours) and satisfy readers with a resolution or conclusion that is justified by the circumstances in the story.

This time, we will look into ways of effectively transforming characters, both protagonists and antagonists, without giving readers the impression that the whole transformation was either a miracle or was magic-bound. That is our task as story writers, relating life stories to readers in the most realistic way possible. (Of course, the rules are rather different if we are writing fairy tales and such.)

We often hear people saying something like, “One day I just woke up and realized things have changed.” But of course we shouldn’t take this literally. We don’t just wake up and realize something! We live through a moment and discover something (and at first, we will even fail to notice the hint of change but indeed, it has happened).

The transformation shouldn’t be too general as from-good-to-bad or vice versa. It would be more interesting to show more specific changes than give general implications. For instance, you may give hints on how a cheating husband decided to settle with his wife and forget his other affairs; how a coward beau learned to gather his guts and take risks; or, how a totally miserable old man learned to enjoy life again. Can these transformations take place in less than 24 hours? Yes.

Look around you. Find a person whom you’d like to transform emotionally or spiritually, even only in your imagination, and write about how you think he could forget about his old ways, in just one day.

Here are some basic tips on writing your “transformation in a day” story:

  1. Don’t tell all, let them talk. It is understandable that you would want to describe your characters in a narrative since giving them dialogues could make you run out of space, so to speak. However, for a more delicious read, you ought to properly combine or balance your narrative with your character’s remarks, quips and sentiments, such that your readers would feel that they have “met” or “heard” your characters before.
  2. Expose the flaws early. Reveal the weaknesses of your character early in the story. Remember, you will show how your protagonist would overcome his flaws and be transformed in the process. While you do this, make certain your pacing is not too slow or too fast.
  3. Introduce a turning point. What will be the major turning point in your character’s life? These turning points can be one major triumphant moment or one big, mind-blowing tragedy. It can be very complicated, just as it can be very ordinary. But it will definitely change the character in your story. From where will the chain of changes begin? After witnessing a woman who untimely gave birth on a public place? After a near-death accident? After a political downfall or a twist of from riches to rags? Focus here and make sure the preceding and succeeding events would smoothly stick with your turning point and leave a feeling to your readers that, indeed, such things may happen and could result in character-behavior transformation.
  4. Let there be angels. Let’s call them angels: they can be your character’s parents, friends, long lost friend or even stangers. They would touch your character’s life and influence your character’s manner of thinking and seeing through things. Think of the stranger in the bus who suddenly brought up a conversation with the person next to him, and they talked about family and how he missed his children. Subsequently the other person would talk about his fear of getting married or starting a family. Let the angel explain his thoughts but be careful this won’t be done in such a preachy way. Instead, give the angels soft but meaningful punchlines that could enrich the story even more.
  5. Allow time for transition. You cannot rush the changes. You don’t have to. Instead, put your character through quiet thinking moments and some more moments of realizations. Then gracefully lead your readers to the conclusion of your story.

To sum it all up, it is important to make sure your readers can easily identify with your protagonist. Make it easy for them to sympathize with your main character during his trying moments in your story. Gracefully spill the motives behind his actions and be consistent with his way of speaking. Finally, be careful not to change your character abruptly and without sufficient justification because your readers will notice it and would even think you changed your character in a rather “magical” way, with the wave of an imaginary wand. Focus on the process, turning point or emotions your character has to go through. (E-writersplace link here.)

Copyright © 2003 Arlene M. Paredes

 

24-Hr Impact May 22, 2006

Filed under: E-writersplace.com, Writing Style — crypticmess @ 11:46 am

Write A ‘One-Day’ Story and Make an Impact
by Arlene M. Paredes

Anybody’s life could change in one day. A wake-up call after a long period of depression, an unexpected mail from a long lost friend, an engagement proposal, a woman’s unexpected conception, a tragic incident that almost claimed one’s life, the discovery of treachery — all these can change anybody’s beliefs, perspective and life in general in one day. In a split second, even.

As a writer, you are challenged to effectively write about a story that happened in just one day. It is not very easy because you need to effectively illustrate the events in your story in such a way that you will make a significant impact to your readers and make a strong point in the end.

You will establish and expose a character by showing to your readers only a single day or a few hours in his/her life. Ultimately, you will move your story from introduction to climax in as short as 10 to 15 pages only.

Here are some tips that can tap your creative nerves and inspire you to work on a one-day story:


1. Look into your theme and conflict.

When a story idea comes to your mind, it is more likely about a conflict and not a character. You don’t say, “I’ll write about a young girl” but “I’ll write about a young girl with a life-threatening disease.” That’s because conflicts are actually inspiration from which we can generate the theme of our stories.

The theme is the main framework of your story. Your plot, setting and characters must be consistent with your theme to make a solid point. Upon identifying your conflict and theme, explore the many possibilities your story can bring.

By now, you are ready to create the outline of how your story will progress.


2. Captivate readers with your starting paragraph.

You certainly don’t have the luxury of time to build up your story. Hence, at the beginning of your story, be sure to sound interesting enough to keep your readers with you.


3. Capture moments.

Freeze important scenarios in your conflict that will illustrate the way of thinking and attitude of your characters, especially your main protagonist. Here, you’ll be establishing his/her character and at the same time you’ll be inviting your readers to empathize with your protaganist and understand what s/he’s going through.

In the case of the young girl with a life-threatening disease, you can create a scene where she encourages her parents to be strong for her. Capture this moment and illustrate it very carefully. Study how you can come up with side stories involving the parents and their feelings, while remaining focused on your protagonist.


4. Let every line be punchlines.

As you capture important moments in your story, imagine the dialogues and the exchange of lines between your characters. Choose your characters’ lines carefully. Effective lines will help you to remain focused in your theme while your story is moving.


5. Make a remarkable twist.

The denouement or the resolution of the conflict is the deciding factor for some readers on how to rate your story, as to whether it’s been effectively written or not.

Just as you have been creatively straightforward in the early parts of your story, you should be artistically direct to the point in the exposition of your denouement, likewise in concluding your story. Finally, after you’ve written your first draft, review your material and make revisions if you feel it’s necessary. Proofread your work and polish its format and spelling so your publisher would have an easier time evaluating your story for publication. Once you’ve started drafting one-day stories, you’ll have an easier time coming up with more stories and interesting conflicts. You’ll be more enthusiastic in your craft, ergo, you’ll keep getting better as a writer. (E-writersplace link here.)

Copyright © 2003 Arlene M. Paredes

 

How many characters? May 22, 2006

Filed under: E-writersplace.com, Writing Style — crypticmess @ 11:40 am

Deciding on the Number of Characters in a Short Story
by Arlene M. Paredes

In our desire to write a story that is packed with insights emanating from different types of characters representing widely divergent point of views, we end up with so many characters who are either too underexposed or too vague for the readers.

So how many characters could we put in and develop effectively in our story, without confusing our readers?

For a short story that would not exceed fifteen (15) pages, at least one major character and a maximum of two should do well. Then you can add at most three (3) minor characters, even as other writers manage without any minor characters at all. It depends on what kind of writing technique you are going to use and how “short” your short story will be. At any rate, you should be careful not to give your minor characters very long speaking parts so as not to sacrifice space for your major characters.


Controlling minor characters

Minor characters could be friends, fellow customers in a restaurant, an antagonist’s ally or anybody whome the major characters would interact with as you expose them and as the story progresses. But even as you limit the exposure and speaking parts of your minor characters, you should be able to justify their existence and make them a worthy part of your story.

For instance, if you would write a story about a doctor who has been blaming himself for the loss of his child, you could make him interact with a doctor friend, or maybe his own patients who would like to console him. Your minor characters will exist briefly in your story and may or may not cause a significant impact in the life of your major character. With too many minor characters in a room or at any given part of your story, you may confuse your readers as to who is talking and what his/her relation is to your major character.


Controlling major characters

Major characters or protagonists need as much time and space as possible so you won’t be confusing your readers with their intentions and choice of actions. If you choose to use your major character’s point of view (POV) in expounding your story, you would help yourself if you won’t mix in too many POVs in a limited space. If you do well with one POV, then do so.

If you challenge yourself and put in more major characters than you can handle, you risk losing your readers or you can also expect them to get confused with your story. So to be able to expose your characters effectively, consider their number and length of lines in a given scene.


All characters present

When you’ll have a scene where everyone is going to be present for a confrontation, discussion, celebration or whatever kind of gathering, you will greatly please your readers if your characters can give a confusion-free, strong, engaging and catchy exchange of dialogues. If you can make this work, you can be sure you’ve successfully given your readers a story that’s definitely worth their time. (E-writersplace link here.)

Copyright © 2003 Arlene M. Paredes