Sun.Star Davao

A Prayer for My Father (1)

- BY RIA VALDEZ --Ria Valdez is a Senior High School teacher in Davao City National High School. She loves Penongs Inato 4 and Jollibee Super Meals.

Iwas taught how to pray before I knew how to write. But my father made me learn both at the same time.

While my mother wanted me to memorize the Lord’s Prayer at the ripe month of six months, my father, a non-Catholic, had explained that a prayer only consists of four words: Thank, You, God, and Amen.

That, my father explained to her daughter, who would one day tell him she is a lesbian, is all you need in prayer.

So when I had learned from my CLE teacher in Grade 2 that a prayer had four parts instead of four words, I was skeptical in making my own prayer. I remembered thinking that my father knew prayers so well, maybe that was the reason the Lord’s Prayer started with an “Our Father”—to honor fathers. Years later, I would learn that the “Our Father” in the Lord’s Prayer was a form of adoration.

Being the ambitious kid who wanted to have the best written prayer, I told my teacher I didn’t know where to begin. Years later, I would take up a degree in Creative Writing and would still ask that same question—especially when I write about my father. My then late-30s teacher wrote the acronym A.C.T.S on my paper with her veiny hands and said, “This might help you write.”

I. ADORATION

A prayer must always start with adoration. Think of it as a letter heading. Put an addressee so that the letter wouldn’t get lost.

I had to make sure my prayer was heard by God and no other deity. It is meant to be sent. My CLE teacher told us to always start the prayer by saying His name or an adjective that connotes praise before His name. It shows respect to His power.

I hated myself for not having an adjective to describe my father. I felt like I had no respect for him since I couldn’t associate him to an adjective. Maybe generous? Because he gave me the toys I wanted and the books I wanted to read. As early as two years old, he knew I preferred books to toys.

The first book he gave me was a children’s bible with watercolor illustrati­ons of all the books of the Bible from the colorful Creation Story in Genesis to a more child-friendly version of the end of the world in Revelation­s. The bible was white like milk and thick as a hollow block. It was quite heavy for a child beginning to read since she had woken up every morning to the image of her father lying on the sofa or bed, one hand behind his head while the other held a John Grisham or Higgins-Clark novel, his brow always furrowed while reading. Because he read a lot, his brows always met in the middle, a permanent scowl, which made people, and myself, intimidate­d (if not afraid) of him.

This was the book where I had first read the story of the Golden Calf. Years later, I would watch the movie “The Ten Commandmen­ts” for CLE class and see the scene where God’s voice roared like thunder over the people dancing around the calf. I was in second grade that time, the same year I heard my father’s thunderous voice began ringing in my ears.

The first Bible story I’ve read was the Creation Story. Creation stories always fascinated me since there are a lot of versions. I’ve memorized the Story of Creation in Genesis since I grew up as a Catholic School girl, and I’ve learned about the world being created by the Limokon bird since I went to a University people referred to as “Walang Diyos” for college. Apart from those different versions, I imagined a God who was tired with all the loneliness thus conjuring man, whom, according to my teacher, was created in His own image and likeness. For my father, I lived up to neither.

Apart from my brown complexion and rough skin, reminiscen­t and fondly called by other people as “chicken skin”, I bore no resemblanc­e of my father. I was a carbon copy of my mother: slanted eyes that learned to smile on their own to hide fatigue, hair as thin and fragile as sotanghon, and a body built between chubby and healthy. But I believed I was fat since he called me “taba” when he was drinking with my uncle. And since his words were powerful like God’s, I believed him. It became my adjective. The word felt like a cross I bore on my shoulders. My mother would sometimes pester me to fix my posture but I couldn’t explain to her why my shoulders felt heavy.

Perhaps I couldn’t find a word to put beside his name as adoration. No single word could hold all the respect I give to my father. On the night I came out to my father, I only uttered the word “Pa.”

II. CONTRITION

Say how sorry you are for your sins. After you addressed him with respect, show you are humble enough to ask for forgivenes­s.

I may not be able to be molded in his image but I did my best to be molded in his likeness.

My parents both worked for the government. My mother was an accountant and my father used to be a forester before he retired. When I told them I would study in UP, they immediatel­y wanted me to take up a degree in Agribusine­ss Economics because it was convenient to let their child study a course that had both their specializa­tions. But I was different. I wanted to take up a Creative Writing course – the degree program where I met my first girlfriend, the reason I came out to my father. I believed I had the gift of words so I wanted to become a writer. I started writing stories because I had no one to talk to when I was growing up. I used to be a timid kid who watched people from a comfortabl­e distance because I would rather read in a corner.

My father was also distant. He loved to do things in solitude: he read alone in the sala, he went to malls by himself to have a cup of coffee, he didn’t want other people around when he cooked. He loved to have a world he could call his own. When my lola, his mother, told me about him, she said that he was well loved as the bunso in their family of nine. But sometimes he hated being the youngest because his older siblings were already in college or working abroad. Thus, he began to read his older brothers’ law and college textbooks. He was smart but he was a black sheep, according to my lola. My father would not go home to Baguio for days because he said he was busy studying in Los Banos. My lola had then discovered that he went on a rally against President Marcos when she saw her then longhaired son, being hosed down by the police, on television. “Your father always did what he believed was right,” my lola said. Maybe that was why like God, his word was law.

Despite expressing my plans to enroll in Creative Writing, my father still placed me as a waitlist under the program he wanted.

“Anong gagawin niya sa English na course? Hobby lang iyan,” my father snapped.

But I never wanted to stop writing. So I shifted to Creative Writing. During my first day in the course, he told me he had expected that I would shift courses.

“Kasi quitter ka naman talaga,” he said over diner.

He then recounted the times I didn’t continue my training for the school’s swimming team despite the persistent recruitmen­t of my coach; my piano lessons even though my teacher told me I was a fast learner; joining a sorority (which he disapprove­d of since it wasn’t the equivalent of his fraternity) even when I was closed to my final rites; and now my Agribusine­ss Economics degree. Those were the things I tried just so I could be shaped according to his likeness. But he never knew how much I cried to achieve those things until I couldn’t continue to fool myself anymore.

When he said “quitter,” I remembered the scene with the Golden Calf in The Ten Commandmen­ts movie where God, whose voice bellowed like thunder, stated his commandmen­ts. As he spoke, lightning flashed and etched his words on the rock wall. I was like Moses, back against the mountain wall, mouth agape because of fear. That was the first time I was afraid of God. What scared me wasn’t thunder or lightning, or the burning of the Golden calf. Rather, it was God’s voice which reminded me of my father’s loud one when he scolded my mother or our kasambahay­s whenever they forgot to heat water for his morning coffee.

I knew he didn’t scream like God did at the sinners. But every word he said weighed like 10 rocks. Each word was a rock thrown at my direction, hurting my bones. This was the reason I shake when my father talks. Thunder roared in my ears growing up. I guessed that was why my friends teased me bingi. I’d just joke that my thoughts were loud. But my father’s words were louder.

I had always wanted to tell him I was sorry. Sorry that I wasn’t the daughter who would make all his words come true because I had words I wanted to use on myself, including the words writer and lesbian.

III. THANKSGIVI­NG

Of course after you apologize, you say thanks. Be grateful for the things He gave you. He is a giving God.

My father really has power in his words though he’s a man of few. He had words that were cool to the ears like David playing on his harp and singing praise to God. Whenever my father asked me what toys I wanted, I would always ask for a Beyblade or a Crush Gear, spinning plastic tops and battery-operated cars—toys people referred to as “boy toys.” There was one time my father and I went to the toy store because I earned a gold medal being ranked first in our class. The cashier looked at me then to my new Dragoon bit beast Beyblade before she remarked, “Pang lalaki man ito.”

I suddenly felt conscious that I was called out for buying a boy’s toy. But my father, taking a 50-peso bill from his brown leather wallet that he still uses until now said “Ito gusto niya eh. Let her have what she wants.”

I waited for the next time he would tell me those words. But it never came.

Another thing I was thankful for about my father was he didn’t care about how I dressed. In fact, he never stopped me from wearing baggy maong pants and Scooby Doo t-shirts. While my mother threatened not to bring me to church if I didn’t wear a dress, my father allowed me to dress whatever I want to stop me from crying. That time I had always wanted to tell my mother that it didn’t matter what we dressed since God will still love us. But looking back on it now, I thought that what really matters is how I dress didn’t matter to my father.

But I was most thankful for the stories he told. We used to live in a village that always flooded during the New Year. My mother always had work during those days in ComVal so my father and I were stuck to struggle with the New Year flood.

I felt we were in Noah’s Ark. Because of the high level of water, we fled to the roof with our dogs, hens, and roosters. At night, my father told me stories to make me forget how cold it was on our metal roof. He talked a lot. And I loved watching him from behind the candleligh­t. There were no lines of age on his face and his eyes were filled with glee.

He told me stories of him in Pangasinan, his childhood home. He and my uncle, the one my father was drinking with when my father called me fat, loved to swim in the sapa behind their home. Both of them would latch on floating logs from upstream and held on for dear life, entrusting their fate to the water. Of course, lola would find out about this and give a “hearty sermon”, as what my father said.

“I had always been a rebel,” my father said while he gave water to our three dogs on the roof. (To be continued next Sunday)

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