Once-Upon-A-Holiday (or a story of how one family attempts some quality time together)
What do four people with less than two hundred pesos between them do on a warm balmy night? Why, go to the Lagoon, of course.
In the middle of a bustling city, sits the "people's park". Wide and tree-lined, it has the requisite pond, jogging paths, stone benches, ancient naked statuaries, rusty playground equipment.... and most importantly - it's free.

In the early mornings, the Lagoon is a gathering place for power walkers, joggers and tai'chi-ers. A donation-run aerobics class. The occasional aged stroke victim and pregnant lady. All moving to their own version of rhythm to the piped-in music.
In the late afternoons, children run amok among the playground leaves, their parents resting weary bones while keeping a wary eye. In the evenings, the Lagoon teems with couples: flocks of young giggly tweens on the pretext of study group. New couples. Old couples. Seriously intense couples in want of a room. At the periphery, itinerant vagrants wait to occupy their favorite sleeping benches.
In this setting, we parked the car a stone's throw away from the very tree where Atch & I used to make out, several young and carefree centuries ago. Woog yammered excitedly. He had spent a lot of fun and memorable moments here. Eli clutched at me in anxiety. This was after all, his first time.
Carrying a packet of stale crackers for the tilapia, we made our way down to the fish pond. Woog ran ahead, narrowly missing a trio of septuagenarians out on an after-dinner stroll.
It looked like the start of a wonderfully relaxing family evening.
Not.
"Come on, El," I called, beckoning to the wild-eyed toddler who was still super glued to the metal railings, his eyes darting around in ferocious anxiety.
Atch walked a short way off and lit one of his poison sticks, while his older son meandered on the rain-damp grass a few meters away, thinking to attempt a tumble of his own.
Sighing in resignation, I picked him up and gagged at his sudden convulsive choke hold. From that moment on, he refused to be put down, whimpering intermittently every time a stranger passed. For the umpteenth time, not without a trace of maternal pride, I halfheartedly wished he didn't weigh a ton.
"Mom!" Woog yelled, ankle deep in wet muddy grass, "I lost my slipper, Mom! Mo-OOOO-om!
Atch tossed his cigarette into the nearest bin, and went to rescue his panicking son.
The recent rains had turned a portion of the grassy quadrant into a swampy quagmire of mud and moss. And Woog, in a typical encounter with prime splashing opportunity, made the most of the situation.
Standing on one slipper-clad foot, mud splattered from the knees down, Woog was a study in comic relief, occasionally bending down to feel around in the ankle-deep grass and muddying his arms as well. "I can't find my other slipper," he whined.
"Well, where'd you last put it?"
"I don't know."
A grandfather figure was creeping alongside him, feeling his way into the grassy marsh. His teary-eyed granddaughter stood a few meters away on the dry sidewalk, barefoot. Apparently, she had lost her slippers, too.
"Is this it?" He wearily asked, holding up a pair of muddy pink maryjanes. The granddaughter shook her head and commenced her silent weep.
Atch & I exchanged a disbelieving glance. Welcome to the bayou of lost footwear.
"Oh, throw your other slipper back in, Woog," Atch advised his frantically searching son, "maybe tomorrow, some poor little boy will find both of them, and you'll make him very happy. You'll be like Rizal." In reference to Woog's pre-school reader book where the young national hero had tossed his remaining slipper into the water for some poor fisherman's son to find.
Woog grumped all the way to a faucet where I washed off most of the mud as best I could. He stepped gingerly all the way to the car, urging us to please hurry let's go home already. Eli continued to whimper in Atch's arms, a scared and timid version of his normally cheerfully brusque self.
Sitting in the car for a breather, trying to console a cranky Woog and a weepy Eli, Atch & I exchanged long-suffering glances. "How's your sense of humor, Atch?"
Atch rolled his eyes heavenward.
*****
The next morning, we gave the Lagoon another chance. Eli giggled merrily at the fish, and shrieked with terror when we tried to urge him to explore.
We searched for Woog's missing slipper in the bright morning sunlight. It was gone of course, just like Atch said. Some poor little boy was somewhere happily sporting a pair of size 4 lime green flip-flops.
The next few moments were spent watching Woog & his Tatay race the remote control Ferrari down a sidewalk, soaking in our requisite Vitamin D, and letting the morning breeze fondle the stray strands off our foreheads.








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