Christmas Eve 2002

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life, and the life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

Today we celebrate the Word made flesh who dwelt among us: Jesus Christ, God made man. We were sinful, wretched, lonely, separate from God; and he came to give us a way, Himself, the perfect sacrifice for the sins of all, that all would be forgiven. To the person who receives him as Lord, professes him as Savior, and holds to an unshakeable faith in Christ alone, he promises life eternal, blessings aplenty, and unspeakable joy.

Take heart and be of good cheer! We celebrate His coming, and cry out with joy, “God is most certainly with us!” Merry Christmas to you all.

On Track

Little girl on the cable car tracks, downtown San Francisco. “Schindler’s List” style color effects applied.

Photo taken with an Aiptek Mini Pencam 1.3MP SD.

Chowder with Rhesa

I met up with Rhesa yesterday for a lunch of clam chowder at Pier 39. After attempting — unsuccessfully — to wolf down our entire bread bowls, we window-shopped the pier and talked about school, faith, work, cute kitties, and other bloggers. But alas, the afternoon was over too soon, as I had to meet up with my old grade school friends for yet another viewing of The Two Towers. It was even better the second time around.

Raffy and Pau do SF

Thanks to Raffy for a fun tour around downtown yesterday. We attended morning worship with friends, had a hearty Filipino lunch at Ongpin in Daly City, then hopped on the BART and the MUNI to get some cool photos at Pier 39 and Fisherman’s Wharf. Then, after a few rounds of Hyperbowl at Metreon, we watched The Two Towers.

In an IMAX theater.

It. Rocked. My. Socks.

Afterwards, a quick jaunt to Union Square and a hearty Irish dinner of corned beef and cabbage at Lefty O’Toole’s, then we headed home. Beautiful day to tour, lots of photos taken, and I even got to phoon the Wharf.

So today, I get to meet Rhesa of Creative Slips, and maybe even watch Two Towers again. And it’s another beautiful, sunny day. San Francisco’s being very good to me this Christmas.

Martin and Kathleen

Hearty heartfelt congratulations to Martin and Kathleen, who tied the knot today over at Mission Santa Clara, in a ceremony that was at once whimsical and beautiful. I sang bass with the small choir while the vows were exchanged, and it was wonderful to see my old friend (from waa-aay back in grade school!) perfectly blissful with the lady he loves. All the best to you both, and may the Lord grace you with eternal happiness as you begin your new life together.

Fourteen Hours to San Francisco

MARC train to Washington DC, Metro to National Airport, walk around terminal wondering where the ATA desk is, walk the entire length of the airport to Old Terminal A, be told that ATA desk isn’t open yet, walk back to Terminal B, eat a too-sweet Cinnabon with a too-flat iced mocha, walk back the length of the airport to Terminal A, confirm reservation, walk through security without a hitch, sit and wait, get on plane, sit at window, take pictures after takeoff, fall asleep.

Wake up, land at Chicago Midway, emerge from plane into a veritable sea of holiday travelers milling about the cramped corridors of Midway airport, go to transfer gate, learn of one-hour delay, go to food court, buy mushroom-emmenthal artopita, hunt around for outlet in airport with too few outlets for too many laptop-bearing travellers, accidentally drop pita on floor at gate, quickly pick up pita and brush off while muttering “Wala pang five seconds,” eat pita, find outlet, plug in laptop, suddenly unplug and stand up again as counter attendant informs passengers of abrupt change of gate to another gate two terminals away, hunt for outlet again, find one at elevator where one cannot sit to use computer, leave laptop in backpack and set beside outlet plugged straight into bag, sit opposite bag to read a book while informing passing security guard that yes, the backpack is mine and no, I am not a terrorist bomber, my laptop is simply charging, wait and read and look at the billowing snow outside until called to board two-hour delayed flight, get on plane, sit at window, take blurry photos of Sears Tower on the horizon before falling asleep.

Wake up, land at San Francisco International, come out with only handcarries, call brother, wait outside terminal. Get picked up, head home to San Mateo. Eat. Talk at length. Fall asleep.

Total travel time from Baltimore to Washington to Chicago to San Francisco: 14 hours.

Paper done

Paper done. Is an overview of weblogs, and brief discussion of the “death” of Kaycee Nicole vis-a-vis context of poststructural thought and the obliteration of the author-function in new media. Paper is named “Death of the Blogger,” a play on title of Roland Barthes’ essay “Death of the Author.” Drinking coffee and eating bagel now. Must fight off sleep for one last class of four hours. Dinner with a friend tonight, then must head home to pack. Leaving for San Francisco first thing tomorrow morning. Tired.

Erap at the Healing Spring

Where else but in the Philippines can an ousted ex-president accused of massive corruption be temporarily excused from lawful incarceration to indulge in a “spiritual healing” ritual? Apparently he had to do the Stations of the Cross, bathe in the miraculous water of the healing spring, drink a glass of the stuff while saying Jesus’ name, then hold the hand of a Jesus statue while he prayed. The rite was administered by nuns of the Religious of the Virgin Mary (RVN).

Does anything about this strike you as being wrong?