Food for the heart | Inquirer Opinion
Young Blood

Food for the heart

It’s the month of decorated trees and gift-wrapped items. It’s been months since I last woke up in my double-sized bed, ate breakfast with fine cutlery, went to school in a Mirage, returned home in an Adventure, looked up to see hundreds of stars, ate dinner with my loved ones, and went back to sleep surrounded by my seven pillows.

Though I understood how big an impact all these changes would make to mold my fine future, I still couldn’t grasp all the facts and tuck them in my heart. I couldn’t stop complaining every other minute; I always caught myself ranting inside my head about everything I was adjusting to. And, more often than not, I kept looking back at the things that used to be.

I knew how wrong my actions were, yet I just let my emotions rule.

ADVERTISEMENT

After two full moons I didn’t even notice, 11 weeks of packing and unpacking, about 77 days of the new routine, I was still trying to get the hang of being one-eighth independent. Now that I was outside the four walls of Palawan, so sturdy that it could possibly protect me from a zombie apocalypse, my eyes had become more sensitive to sights I didn’t see in my hometown: moms sleeping on cardboard boxes, their kids in their arms; kids with huge sacks of garbage to sell; families making fire on the sidewalk to cook their meal; children clinging to jeepneys singing for spare change… I knew these sights were common to most people, but they brought so much pain to me that I cried inside. I wanted to help, but all my ideas just didn’t seem right, making me more uncomfortable at day’s end.

FEATURED STORIES

Looking back at how much complaining I’d been doing, I felt really ashamed of myself. I couldn’t believe I was complaining about how hot it was at noon when others couldn’t even find shade, or thinking that the food I had wasn’t enough for my current appetite when others couldn’t even have a full meal for the day. I felt bad for not being content. But then, I’m only human. I tried to correct myself, but sometimes I’d realize that I had done it again.

I wish to stop my endless babble about my “misfortunes.” I fight with good and bad voices in my head. I hope to become a better person in the long run. I’d love to see good in every bad thing, and to smile even when I stub my toe on a table leg. I want to be able to look past all the things I miss and have a clearer vision of what I want to get at the end of the tunnel. I’d like to never cease to thank the Lord for having “downs” in my life because I now understand that they’re lessons.

For now, I’m keeping myself from ranting. One or two baby steps at a time, as they say. Hopefully, I’d be able to look past the inconveniences and just be thankful for what I have. Then, maybe a bigger step: Help others because I’ve learned to help myself.

Forgive me for going on and on about my future. But hey, at least I have a vision.

Lira Princess G. Cadorna, 16, is a fine arts freshman (major in product design) at the University of the Philippines Cebu.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

TAGS:

© Copyright 1997-2024 INQUIRER.net | All Rights Reserved

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. To find out more, please click this link.