Things I want most | Inquirer Opinion
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Things I want most

I have been wanting these three things for as long as I can remember:

  1. To become a certified public accountant.

I have longed to become one since I was a kid, but my desire has intensified. It’s understandable as I am in my last year as an accountancy student. Furthermore, my friends and batch mates passed the board examination in October.

I keep telling myself that but for some unwanted circumstances, I could have been one of those new CPAs. I have to accept the fact that it is not yet my time, and that there’s no use in dwelling on the past and thinking about what could have been. I have formed my objectives: Work hard to finish my degree, enroll in a review school, and take—and pass—the board exam. I will become a CPA and achieve my dream.

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  1. To have a normal loving father.

I should tell you that I have condemned myself numerous times for wanting this. I grew up having only my mother as a parent. At first, I did not think having a father by my side was an essential. I always thought my mother’s love and care for us, her children, were more than enough to fill the empty space due to my father’s absence. But as I grew older, I thought a lot about how it would be to grow up with a father.

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Yet I should be thankful enough for my wonderful family. I have a brother who, though a little childish sometimes, cares for his younger sisters and whose presence I have associated with safety. I have a sister who is the best “Ate” in the world and acts as my second mother (she’s nine years my senior). And, of course, I have my loving mother, who raised us all by herself. Still, I want more and I feel guilty about it.

Don’t get me wrong. My father and I are in constant communication. He pays for my studies and I’m thankful for that. But what I want is a father who’s more than a financial supporter, a father I can go home to and be grateful about it, a father who spoils his children but scolds them if they go out of line. I have craved to know what it feels like to have a loving father whose embrace means comfort and security, and who cares so much for his children that he will do anything for them.

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But this is wishful thinking because my father has his own family now. I think it should be enough for me that he at least cares for me in his own way.

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  1. To meet The One.

I am not the only one who wants this. Who wouldn’t want to meet and be with the one person who is destined for you? I guess I got this silly dream from reading so many romance novels. I am swept off my feet by Mr. Right every time I read a love story. I always imagine being the heroine. But after finishing the story, I’ll have this sinking feeling inside, and I ask myself if it can happen in real life.

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No matter how I love reading perfect love stories and dreaming about perfect Mr. Right, I only want to meet the one for me. I don’t care how imperfect he is because neither am I perfect. I believe that accepting imperfection will make our relationship a perfect one. I want to love and be loved by him for the rest of our lives.

It seems naive of me to wish and wait for such things. But a girl can dream, right?

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Ma. Cyreen Lei C. Gavino, 20, is completing her accountancy course at Araullo University-Phinma.

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TAGS: Broken Family, college, fatherhood, growing up, youth

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