But it is not to be for time
inexorably moves on, and most typically its harsh elements bring the unwanted
ravages many of us are unwilling to accept.
And so it is while intently
revisiting the place where an over-sized family once stayed and grew up. A small place in the heart of the city just
beginning to flex its young muscles in the decade of the 50’s. The old timber
house built in 1948 on a hundred square meter lot has now been gone decades,
but somehow its immediate vicinity has managed to stem the tides of time,
keeping its looks much like they were in the 50’s.
What remains then are the
microcosmic haunts that I as a kid used to spend interminable time , whether at
play, in study, or just in idle moments which as kids in the idyllic 50’s we
had plenty of.
One such favored place was
the covered walkway separating the two houses of my father and that of her
elder sister on the Victoria St. side. It may have been no more than 3 meters
wide and 10 meters long. The underside
of my aunt’s staircase limiting our movements at one end, and our outdoor bath
and laundry room on the other end. This
place was perpetually dark, dank, and dirty, making the soil loamy and rancid. But while there we were sheltered from the
sun and rain. So there we played our
geolens game, pock-marking the place with the shallow holes we needed for the
play. Many idle moments witnessed our
noisy presence in that small cramped space, none the worse for its limitations
in size. In times past as I got older, I
would find myself smirking as I pass that area, being reminded of even earlier times. The images attached are now those of the
current day, and a lifetime apart from my childhood. Still the memories linger and haunt.
And so this multi-purpose
space was the scene of many of our youthful mishaps, like learning to ride a
bike, carefully climbing the tree for its delicious fruits, clambering on the
trusses and joists of the garage structure, deep in our pretend games of being
vine-swinging Tarzan and the other Hollywood heroes we had accumulated in our
youth. I even played knife-throwing
Errol Flynn, using the poor tree as target. And so forth.
And yes, we even had some
left-over space to maintain a little vegetable garden where sibuyas and
kamatis, and pechay were planted. At
times chasing after the pesky talisik or the bigger talapan which were
bountiful then.
I particularly as a kid spent
much time in my escapist thoughts in this area, mindlessly engrossed in my own
pretend world oblivious of all the distractions around.
And to this day, laundry
still hangs on that area where slivers of sunshine could still penetrate during
certain hours of the day.
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