Our new chaplain, Rev. Fr. Peter Tiguelo, requested the LIDE Ladies Club to present some intermission numbers, during the BEC (Basic Ecclessial Community) Assembly for the Palompon Vicariate yesterday, September 27, 2008.
We rehearsed for two hours each day for 4 days. We decided to present a folk dance - Binuyugan, a chacha number, and Willie Revillame's Giling-Giling. We enjoyed dancing the latter. The ladies marveled at my 'perfect' giling movements. They deduced that I must be a "kapamilya" after all. "No! I'm a certified "kapuso"! But this giling-giling is actually a modified revival of the "grind" during our heydays, when the gyrating movement was 'mani'(very easy, no effort at all).
Now, after each rehearsal, this blogger has to ask hubby to apply 'haplas' like efficascent oil, polar bear, pau de arco, omega, ben gay, etc.(to name a few) to the aching hips, knees, legs and feet. Sigh!
Well, going back to the presentation, the Binuyugan dancers did it perfectly! Not one of the 'palayok' on their heads dropped and they danced so gracefully.
If we were in a dance competition, and audience impact was a criterion for judging, the giling-giling would win the top prize hands down. In our all black get-up ---- skinny jeans and hugging t-shirt with an abstract fuschia design on the bodice, matching accessories and high-heeled shoes, we took the crowd by storm. Maybe they couldn't believe that a group of midlifers and senior citizens can stil giling-giling ala Roxanne Ginoo (or ala Pokwang???). Oh my, how it is to feel young again!
After the program, we hurried to our Lide Ladies Club Office cum Community Library, for a lunch of litsong manok, ginataang gulay, among others. Because of the successful presentation, everyone pleaded with our dance instructress, AteJess Goyone, for more choreographed dances for (hopefully) future engagements.
Group dancing is a very good exercise in itself. It also fosters friendship and camaraderie, and is very effective in fighting boredom and depression.
So what are you waiting for? Let's "giling, giling - giling, giling..." hahaha!
I have beautiful memories of the river that passes through the Tulay-Bato, the Tulay-Baraka, and the Lambingan Bridge in Wawa(Pabiluang). I went to school and back on foot from elementary to high school. Looking down from the two bridges near the public market, I was always attracted to the brook-like water current, and the pebbles that can be seen clearly beneath the clear waters.
I walked from school to our home in Wawa, at least four times a day. When we were in the elementary grades, I used to pass through Daan Bilolo, the palengke ( to see my grandmother), then Lati and Pabiluang. When we were in high school, I took a different route: Arellano (Tangaran), Bagumbayan, and the Bagumbayan-Wawa bridge. Everyday, there were boys having fun either swimming in the river or paddling the lunday in the river. It was very safe to swim in the river during those years.
Now, the water is greenish and littered with all kinds of garbage. It is almost stagnant. It is in a very sorry state. It is literally 'dying' if not yet dead. It is very unsafe to even set foot in it, much less to swim there.
However, I think with concerted effort our river can still be saved. It is a matter of educating the people on proper waste disposal and strict implementation of municipal ordinances, as well as national laws on saving the environment. Somebody or a group must take the lead.
What do you think, batchmates? Please send in your comments and suggestions through our blog. (Luz is willing to post them for you. Please call her up or send your handwritten notes to her.)