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I am proud to announce that I have advanced from gigi mangler......to a competent enough gigi handler.
Yes, I cleaned them all myself. This time without fuss. Without any cuss words. Without a single gigi head out of place.
Little Indie seems to think of herself as one. She's perfectly at ease at big airports. She appears to be no stranger to take offs and touchdowns. And shows every indication of familiarity with on-board routine.
During a flight from Bangkok to Manila, upon seeing the stewardesses with the food trolley, she immediately formed a megaphone-like circle over her mouth and dutifully announced to all passengers:
"Eating time, eating time!"
In a month’s time, my hotpot has evolved from edible to yummy, having been the melting pot of a few "learnings" here and there…
- Beef should be sukiyaki cut. Always. It’s easier on the palate, not to mention the teeth.
- Add carbs. Like corn. Or noodles. For obvious reasons.
- Squid balls take some time to cook. A little patience is necessary.
- The more onion leeks, the better. (Yes, even if they make you cry.)
- Chili flakes are essential. They add oomph, even to tasteless, flavorless stock.
- Hot pots look hot with really nice chopsticks.
- It’s bok choy, not botchok. Always remember and save self from another embarrassing moment in the palengke.
Thrice I learned about it. First from a poster hanging by the door of the Crocs store in Greenbelt 5. Second from the Sunday paper. Third from my BPI credit card bill.
Yes, three times. I took it as a sign for me to go and get my little one a new pair.
We, my husband Nubs, my sister Pie, my daughter Indie and myself, arrived at the venue, a tent somewhere along Meralco Ave., 30 minutes later than the designated time which was 10 in the morning. And to our surprise—or should I say horror— there was a line. No, make that two, one for BPI cardholders and another one for those who do not own a BPI card.
The lines were long and getting longer by the minute. It was pretty obvious the event organizers were unprepared for the onslaught of people wanting to get their hands on a marked down pair of the immensely popular, brightly colored rubber sandals.
They stopped letting customers in by 10:45, claiming that the place was jampacked already, and we were among the unlucky ones left to wait under the scorching sun. By midday the sun had grown too hot and had caused quite a good number of hotheads to emerge from the swelling crowd.
There was a middle-aged Chinese man who issued invectives at one defenseless female staff at the gate. There was another guy who shouted kapal ng mukha mo at a woman trying to get in with total disregard for the queuing public. There was a verbal battle, I overheard, that ensued between two car owners in a contest for parking space. It was utter madness and I was afraid a gunshot would be next!
Was all this worth it? I was about to tell Nubs that we should just go home when the guards opened the doors again and, suddenly, I was inside the tent scrambling for a pair of maryjanes for Indie at 60% off and other pairs for my nephews Bubbi and Mojo and niece Yanna at Pie’s bidding. The effort took more than an hour.
The lines leading to the cash registers were discouraging as well. There were only 12 or so cashiers servicing hundreds of shoppers buying around 6 pairs each on the average.
It was a struggle every step of the way. For people from different walks of life. Whose idea of saving in the face of the looming recession was not holding back from spending but shopping at whatever % savings. Who would risk being out there even when things threaten to get ugly. All for the most comfortable but ugliest shoes on earth.