Where thou art,
that is home.
– Emily Dickinson
We move in to the
Sanat's house in Margarita Village in Tagum City. About four
kilometers from downtown, the village has a suburban feel with houses
a little further apart and a little larger than many of those in the
surrounding neighborhoods though still relatively modest by American
standards. Some homes have lawns and sidewalks and brick style
facades. Just down the road are some recently constructed larger,
more upscale homes. The rocky road in front of the house has a new
cement lane with cement forms set on the the other side.
“When will the
road be completed?” I ask Mare Vising.
“The government is
constructing it,” she says. “So probably in about a year.”
Once a banana
plantation, there are still many banana and coconut trees clearly
visible from our roof balcony with cows milling in the fields. We
live near the crossroads between Capitol Road and the National
Highway and about a 15 minute tricycle ride from the public market
and malls.
Elsa with daughters Hairy Lynn and Risa |
Tagum is the
provincial capital of Davao Del Nortre and the provincial government
buildings lie just a couple of blocks away including the legislative
building, a two story, 1950s modern style building with curved
colonnades and an extended portico and wide recessed columns. Behind
the building, rows of palm trees fill a large grounds area. Across
the road from them, a new sports complex sprawls, housing a modern
track, swimming pool and basketball court (no gym though). Elsa and I
arise at 5 a.m. each morning to take a walk around the track before
the sun rises above the mountains and waves of heat beat down on us.
The household is
bare and we need to make a home. First things first. We need a bed. A
wooden bed frame lies in a corner of the smaller bedroom on the
second floor, but we can't get it out of the room and into our
bedroom. It's too heavy and bulky and Elsa and I can't shimmy it
through the doorway by ourselves. In the street outside the front
gate, we see four teenagers throwing a basketball through the hoop on
a makeshift, plywood backboard attached to a telephone pole. Elsa
asks them for their help. They agree and follow us up to the second
floor. Two take one side and two the other and they try to jam the
bed through the doorway. No dice. They decide to disassemble it; it's
held together with nails (like most wooden furniture here in the
Philippines), instead of screws. So one of the boys grabs a hammer
and bangs on the frame until the nails give and the bed falls into
pieces. The boys carry the pieces into the larger bedroom and hammer
it back together. We pay them 100 pesos each (about $2.25 each) and
thank them. Now we need a mattress. So the next day, we go shopping.
Elsa and I walk down the road in front of our house to a side street
to catch a tricycle; it will be my first of many tricycle rides. We
pass a small open air pool hall.
“Hey Joe,” comes
the call from a couple of young men, playing pool. Elsa says ignore
them and walk on. I think she is telling me that this is a sign of
disrespect – many Americans take it as such and so did I at first –
but later Elsa assures me that the comments weren't intended as such.
Those who use the appellation simply don't know how else to call to
us or attract our attention. The term isn't used because Filipinos
view us negatively – in fact, most Filipinos have a favorable
impression of Americans. The latest polls show 92% view Americans
favorably; Filipinos hold us in higher esteem than do the citizens of
any other country (even Americans view other Americans less favorably
than Filipinos).
First house in Margarita Village, Tagum City. |
A tricycle passes
and Elsa flags it down. She and I sit in the front seat of the green
monster (every municipality has it's own color of tricycle – Tagum
City's are green). We occupy two narrow padded seats next to the
motorcycle driver and I feel squished. Four people sit in the back on
two facing benches. The tricycle pulls away from the side of the road
and we head down Pioneer Highway toward NCCC and Gaisano Mall, the
largest local shopping centers in Tagum. The tricycle putts along at
less than 10 mile per hour and stops frequently. We arrive at the
malls in about 15 minutes.
At NCCC mall, we
take the escalator to the third floor and head to an appliance store.
We buy a new fridge, a microwave, a coffee maker, a toaster, a
television with accompanying DVD player and karaoke machine and
speakers. Then we go to Gaisano Mall and buy dishes and a foam
mattress for the bed. I'm a little concerned about exhausting my
savings, but we are starting all over again. NCCC delivers the
appliances and goods from Gaisano while we head on down to the
supermarket in the basement.
On the way, I need
to relieve myself and find a comfort room (toilet) on the first
floor. Unfortunately, there is no toilet paper in the stalls and no
soap to wash my hands. I do with what I have and then we head down to
the supermarket. We fill our shopping cart and I look for some ground
coffee. Most of the coffee is instant, but I do find some coffee
beans next to a coffee grinder. We're not allowed to grind the coffee
ourselves though. Instead, a store clerk must grind it for us. But
before he can make the grind, we must stand in the grocery line and
pay for the coffee. We come back and show our receipt. The clerk nods
and grinds the coffee. He grinds, and he grinds and he grinds until
the coffee beans become a fine dust.
Next I want to buy
some razor blade cartridges. I see some Gillette cartridges behind a
glass case in front of the aisles displayed like they were museum
artifacts. I point to the clerk, but she tells me, once again, I must
first stand in the grocery line and pay and bring back the receipt
before receiving the cartridges.
Finally, we complete
our grocery shopping and wheel our cart over to the grocery line. An
American stands in front of us. Another man with a carton of ice
cream pushes ahead of him and the American complains bitterly that
the man has cut in line. The man points out that's the custom in the
Philippines -- those with ice cream go first so that it doesn't
melt. The American refuses to accept his explanation and continues to
complain. He grumbles on about the poor service in the Philippines.
He's an older man who looks to be in his 70s. He tells us that he has
left his 20 year-old wife at home since he can do the shopping
quicker.
We finally get to
the head of the line. The clerk rings us out and another clerk boxes
the groceries and seals the box with plastic twine. Outside, twenty
or so tricycles wait in line. Elsa haggles with the drivers and one
agrees to drive us home at a premium cost for transporting our
groceries – 30 pesos rather than the standard 20. The driver grabs
our groceries and tosses them on the floor of his tricycle and I rest
my feet on them, holding my knees to my chest.
Once we get home, I
turn on the fan and plug in the refrigerator and microwave and the
coffee pot. Udong helps me set up the TV and speakers. Almost
immediately there is a brown out. There is a brown out every day for
an hour or two, sometime longer, for the next two weeks.
After a couple of
hours, the electricity comes back on. I brew my first pot of coffee.
It tastes stale and flavorless. Definitely ground too fine and the
coffee is old. Brewed coffee is still a luxury here. Elsa's daughter
Risa visits and I offer her a cup. She declines, saying she has never
tasted brewed coffee and doesn't want to start now. Most people drink
five in one or seven in one – instant coffee mixed with nondairy
creamer (mostly made of highly saturated palm oil) and some herbs.
I soon find out the
risks of buying cheap goods in the Philippines and what it is like to
live without American conveniences. The washing machine was
advertised with a dryer, but it turns out the dryer is just a small
spin chamber that really is not functional and there is no spin cycle
on the washer, so we still have to wring out clothes by hand and hang
them outside on a line to dry. Elsa's daughter Hairy Lynn does the
washing, but I try wringing the clothes a couple of times and it's
hard physical work. The coffee pot stops working after one week as
does an electric water boiler bought at Gaisano. Other things break
just as quickly. We lose the umbrella I brought with me and Elsa buys
another for 50 pesos, but it breaks in a week. We go through a dozen
umbrellas over the next few months. Few last more than a couple of
weeks.
We set up our
television, but we have no cable. In the U.S., I could just call or
make an appointment on the internet, but it doesn't work like that in
the Philippines. If you want to see a doctor, you visit his or her
office or you visit the hospital; you don't call. And if you want
cable service, you go to the cable company's office; you don't call.
Same for paying your bills. It's not done online or by phone. You
don't call or ask for service for anything. You must go to the
office.*
So we visit a local
cable company office. The woman at the front desk says that they
don't have service in our area and she sends us to another company's
office. We go there and again they tell us they don't have service in
our area. We're too far out from city they tell us even though we're
less than a 15 minute tricycle ride away. So finally, we ask our
neighbor about his cable service. We talk to the company that he
recommends and they promise to install the following Monday. Three
weeks later, there is still no installation. Marie Vising tells us
about her service, a company that installs a satellite dish. The
service is more expensive, but in frustration, we go ahead and make
an appointment. Finally we have service, but no HBO or major English
language channels.
We sign up for
internet service through Smart Communications. They make Elsa sign a
a two year contract with no opt out for bad service, promising a
speed “up to” 3 mbps – still slow compared to the 20 mbps speed
typically available in the U.S., but adequate for our needs (if the
promise were true). In reality, the speed rarely reaches one tenth of
that; the internet service is extremely slow and video viewing is
next to impossible. Furthermore, the contract has a “fair use”
clause in which Smart ratchets the speed down even further when it
deems you have used the internet too much.
We have no air
conditioning; usually a fan is sufficient, but I sometimes have
difficulty sleeping in the hot and stuffy upstairs bedrooms and Elsa
doesn't want a fan on her. She believes they cause illness. And, of
course there are the brown outs. There is a shower in the downstairs
comfort room (bathroom), something few Filipino households enjoy;
however, the water is unheated and ice cold. Still, there is a flush
toilet, toilet paper, and soap to wash my hands – conveniences that
I don't find in many public facilities in the city. And then there
are the insects and rats. I'm startled one day to see lizards
crawling around our walls.
“It's okay,”
Elsa tells me. “They eat the mosquitoes.” They don't seem to be
doing their job since I'm covered in mosquito bites. Cockroaches the
size of my thumb scurry about. And there are ants all over the
kitchen. We find a dead rat under our bed.
This first month in
the Philippines is proving challenging for me. I am finding that I
took my comfortable American lifestyle too much for granted and need to make more of an adjustment than I expected. Maybe I'm more
like that 70 year-old American in the grocery store than I would care
to admit.
*Actually, online
payment is available, but it is still relatively new and few
Filipinos use these services as yet. Only about one quarter of
Filipinos have an account at a formal financial institution and only
about 3% have a credit card.
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