Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Happy Nigger New Year 2009! Hope,Help and Watch Barack Obama Carry Humankind on His Shoulders Through the Crisis and Overturn the Meaning of the Slur

I know I will catch hell for using such a much detested racist epithet. Internet savvy pundits will accuse me of riding it to ignite a buzz saw of outcries to draw more clicks and attention. It can't be helped that the fate of the whole world rests on a black President's turn at the bat. Never in history do so many pin their fortunes and survival in the ability of a Barack Obama to hit a homer and snatch modern civilization from plunging into a dark abyss. In the same vein, it's the very first time that the whole world will depend on the much maligned and underrated black man.

I told my son I planned to use the word nigger in my blog and he was appalled to no end. His face contorted in alarm and said that the word connoted poison. He rightly commented that I shouldn't strive to be controversial at the expense of ruffled feelings of Afro Americans. Well, I said I wanted freedom from having to whisper the word nigger. I want to be able to say nigger without the recrimination. Barack Obama would have changed its meaning in history. Now you can say it without feeling you stepped on a cat. In the same way that Flips got their redemption because of boxing glory from Manny Pacquiao.

There was a time when the newly married Reginald Lewis, (now deceased) founder of Beatrice and first black billionaire , a fine lawyer and a Harvard grad, paid a courtesy call on my Dad at our home in Magallanes Village in the company of his young bride, Loida Nicolas Lewis. My father, Atty. Raul D. Leveriza, who was Vice President of PNB (Philippine National Bank) had helped NicFur, the company of the father of Ms. Loida Nicolas survive a bad time by restructuring its loans with the state owned bank.

My siblings and myself were lukewarm to the prospect of meeting him. He had not broken ground yet in Harlem as a corporate innovator to put up his Beatrice business empire. We were put off by the choice of Ms. Loida Nicolas who came from solid Manila gentry, schooled in foreign shores and a former ramp model in picking an American Negro to be her husband. It was only when my father trumpeted Reginald Lewis' credential as a Harvard law graduate that we all made a beeline to the living room to uneasily shake his hand in awe.

My father took me aside and scolded me for my standoffish attitude. He admonished me that all guests should be accorded the same warm welcome no matter the color of the skin, station in life, or educational attainment. I jested that I thought I did a lot better than him in the case of Mr. Hans Richter from Germany. That recall froze him in his tracks with the tinge of embarrassment. It somehow got me off the hook albeit temporarily from a more serious dressing down.

My cousin who was a nurse in Germany brought over her new German husband to be introduced to my father for the first time. As they were ushered in through the front door, my father who was descending the stairs with a smile on his face to welcome them, spied our German Shepherd named Hans peek his face through the door behind the gathering. Unaware of the visitor's name or ethnic background, my father bellowed to the dog from his perch on the stairway, "hans, get out." "down hans, down boy". Poor Mr. Hans Richter who didn't see the dog couldn't make heads or tails of the situation and thought that World War II war movies had left such a lingering stigma in the psyche of Filipinos against Germans.

Back in the 1950's when we were young boys in Pasay the misconception that black skin suggested villainy was bolstered by an unsavory incident. There was a single mulatto, a young teener who lived on Leveriza street and stood out like a sore thumb in a sea of brown and yellow. He was ostracized and catcalls followed him wherever he went. He probably got tired of it and went over the edge because when my brother Dennis teased him as he passed in front of our yard, he reacted violently by throwing stones at us while we clung up a tree beside the gate. One rock found its mark and bloodied Dennis' scalp who was barely eight years old. Getting him down from the tree wailing and bloodied was a horrifying ordeal.

My father refused to press charges and said we deserved it. He accepted the apology of the Filipina mother who brought the teener over to face the consequence of his actions. My father was so annoyed with our budding racism. He said we should behave better than the mindless street urchins outside who didn't know any better because he spent a fortune to send us to Ateneo. As part of our cultural immersion he made us sit through his favorite Sidney Poiter movies every time one came along in the box office. He made us sit still and listen for hours to long playing records of his favorite warbler Nat King Cole. That's why I do a mean 'Besame Mucho' when afforded the chance at the karaoke.

Fast forward to Houston, Texas, in the 80's. My brother in law got into a traffic altercation with a black right there in the driveway of our apartment complex in Inwood Forest at Harris County. The black in the heat of passions hit and damaged my brother in law's car who went down and grabbed the adversary by the front collar. The commotion caused a lot of the inhabitants to come out to watch the ugly scene. My brother in law never forgave me for not running over to help him beat up the guy. My first instinct was to restrain my young nephew who came down toting his absent Dad's shotgun. Everybody owned a shotgun in good old Texas. I grabbed my nephew by the arm and pointed to the long line of blacks who stood a neutral distance from the imbroglio as an obvious sign of restraint to prevent a racial gang war. I made him come to his senses and respect the demarcation line. The two protagonists were left to resolve their own issues one on one and rightly so.

My first real deep connection with an Afro American was at work in Sunlovers in Houston. Our outfit was a tour wholesaler to Acapulco and Cancun in Mexico. It was not a good guage about inter racial equanimity because the truth is unbeknownst to my wife, Mona, I fell truly and madly in love, totally smitten by my office colleague Patty, the first black I grew to meet up close. Patty you should know is a carbon copy of Nicole Scherzinger and was a model like Nicole , and in Patty's case she served as a late hours floor model for Neiman Marcus in Houston. She'd work with us until five p.m. then run off to the ritzy department store to do her stint until closing time.

It was that fateful, afternoon in a Viet restaurant over Imperial rolls that we had a private tete a tete to let out our true feelings in the open. I began of course with a litany of my undying affection for her coupled with a proposition to toast the whole affair with a physical highlight. She turned her face away so dramatically and strained to check her facial expression. She said that she had been waiting for this chance to tell me for so long but couldn't find the strength and the right atmosphere. Whew, I trembled in anticipation with all my being. Then she said with teary eyes, " Joey, don't take this as a personal affront, I want to be your friend forever, but you need a stronger deodorant." "The ethnic food you fix at home leaves you with a distinct odor."

My youngest son Regis Josef was born in the New York State University Brooklyn hospital. The place was teeming with blacks. All the newborn babies to the the left and right of him were all mahogany skinned. Most of the nurses cooed and swayed like Janet Jackson or Paula Abdul. But despite my son's multimedia exposure to the exploits of the likes of Lebron James, Kobe Bryant, and Tiger Woods, my son was not necessarily enamored with the black race. He waxed apprehensive about living there after graduation from college in La Salle and kept pestering me with questions about surviving in a milieu filled with the intimidation from living shoulder to shoulder with black rapper gangsters.

I am such a lucky writer. I always have aces to end a story with dramatic flair. It seems I can pull them out from my sleeve with such ease like they were stored in a subliminal threshold waiting to be told with the right occasion. But rest assured they were not concocted to lend poignancy to a narration. But you be the judge. Try to see if such a tale could be invented from imagination without the intricate points ever really happening.

Like my father to me it is my sublime duty to set my youngest son straight about racial equality. And so I told him about the story about how America said goodbye to us when we went home in 1989 and I carried him on the plane in a bassinet. On the eve of our departure, California greeted us with a 7.1 magnitude earthquake on the Richter scale. It was like doomsday because a major freeway collapsed. The San Francisco airport where we were supposed to take our flight out was immobilized for three whole days.

We were doing last minute shopping at the Serramonte mall in Daly City when the tragedy happened. The ground shook and an eerie rumble from hell made everybody panic and run for cover. My eight year old eldest boy, Ramon and seven year old daughter, Lesley scampered away frantically to seek refuge in a nearby shoe store. My wife Mona had left me to watch the three kids while she checked out some items down the corridor. In my haste to catch up with the toddlers, I lost my presence of mind and abandoned the baby in the stroller in the middle of the atrium.

When I realized it before even reaching the shoe store, I wheeled around and saw to my amazement that in the middle of it all when the roof threatened to cave in , a black gentleman draped his whole body over the stroller to protect Regis just in case all hell broke loose from above.

I'm so overcome with emotion even at this point to continue with this typing. That's the way America said goodbye to me and my family. A display of unequaled heroism and decency. A decency that comes from every grain as a human being with instinctive, impulsive, and automatic reaction to every trying moment.

And so I rest easy with Barack at the helm of things. I will sleep soundly for four years during his term and know that we are in the hands of a decent man. If there is anything I can can do to help him, he needn't even ask me. Plus to top it all he is a Harvard law graduate. Emperors at the oval office just don't grow better than that.















When I See You Smile - Bad English

Saturday, December 13, 2008

English Speaking Beautiful Native Women, Excellent Seafood, Humorous Populace, Cheap Maids and Housing, Make Philippines This Blogger’s Paradise

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I once went to the Pasay City University campus beside city hall. I was there for like thirty minutes eating noodles in a canteen near the school gate. During that time I counted no less than 20 pretty coeds pass by my nook. They were college undergrads so they surely spoke passable English or else they couldn’t reach up to that level. They looked so delectable they made my heart flutter. 17 to 21 years, all of them, fresh and clean.



I was 60 years old so I couldn’t possibly deserve a second glance. About 5 of them gave me the eye and one even smiled and stuck out her tongue. I looked at my garb to check if I dressed up like some rich business tycoon. Going to that school made them belong to low income families. I guess they were scouting for a sugar daddy on the side who could give them a regular allowance for shopping or to help them with tuition and other expenses. Not a bad deal, if only I were so inclined or if I had the goods.



Manila is a place where the density of beautiful women per square foot of living space is something to marvel at. There are native women and mixed race hybrids ranging from Eurasian to part Chinese. I’ve seen some who display a blend of American, Filipino, with the chink eyed milky whiteness of the Chinese. They come out so stunningly beautiful.No wonder it is so entertaining to just ride the trains. They materialize every passing minute.



























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Father’s Legacy Is Name That Fish



My father, Raul Deveza Leveriza Sr. was a lawyer-banker by profession. His second love was cooking. This he got from his mother, my grandmother, Inday Deveza Leveriza, who ran a cooking school back in her heydays in San Pablo City. She was a real luminary in the art of gastronomy as she authored a cookbook which frayed pages my elder brother, Dennis Leveriza still keeps as a memento.



I don’t know what the reason exactly was but my father chose me to be the understudy to inherit all his culinary treasures. At a tender age he would wake me up in the early hours to trudge with him in the narrow passageways of the wet markets to pick put the freshest produce and ingredients. Most of the time we concentrated on the fish section which was my Dad’s favorite in the same hallowed stature as his love affair with pork.



My exposure at such a young age (I was barely five years old during the first orientation)

armed me with an expertise to recognize all the edible fish species being hawked in the marketplace. Mind you we didn’t just go to one. We went to a different wet market every weekend. I could easily win a name that fish contest if ever they stage one.



I soon developed my own particular love for crabs that cook to a red lusciousness when steamed. I badgered my father to buy crabs at every opportune trip to the market. Philippine crabs are the most delicious in the world. This I have a basis to say so because I’ve tasted nearly all varieties on my trips abroad. The flaky meat is pink and white and malleable in just the precisely sumptuous texture. Not too limp and not too stringy either.

























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Laughing with the Lady Vendors and the Maids out Shopping in the Market




If the financial crisis cut into your lifestyle back in the U.S. mainland, you might want to give life in the Philippines a try. There is no language barrier. The major newspapers and the medium of instruction in the schools is English. The Hollywood movies in English are more popular than local movies in the vernacular. All the good looking girls can rattle off dollars and cents with amazing ease so no problem there in striking a liaison.



I enjoy going to the markets where a lot of the lady vendors are so attractive despite their dabbling in fish. And they are so funny with their jokes. I pick up a lot of the humor I use in my blogs from them which of course I have to upgrade to a higher social application and cognizance because my readership belongs to the American milieu. Adding excitement to the close confines and the bustle of the fish stalls are the good looking maids sent by their masters to shop. They only get $60 a month salary which is so cheap.You can actually build a nice harem over here with your last remaining stash.



Housing is so cheap. You can buy a 60 square meter house with two bedrooms for $10,000 or rent one for $60 a month. There are countless colleges in the Philippines thanks to the American legacy and impetus as a benevolent colonizer. Small wonder then that an IT grad can be recruited into your start up venture for a measly pay of $120 a month in the province. There are many programs that give incentive and allow foreign investors to put up businesses in the Philippines. As such they are granted indefinite resident status. You don’t have to submerge to the pits of the hobo back in the States. Come to the Philippines and live like a king with Big China as your market only one stretch of sea away.














Angel of The Lord Blog Novel PART 16 Can Be Clicked By The Link Below







http://internetfleamarket.blogspot.com/2008/08/angel-of-lord-novel-blog-part-16.html
JOSE ROXAS LEVERIZA FIRST NOVEL SERIALIZED IN BLOG
ANGEL OF THE LORD (PART16)



Cigarrest to Stop Smoking in 7 Days!



Real estate agents are ancient history. Do It Thys

Monday, October 20, 2008

No Living happily Ever After For Raul R. Leveriza Jr. And Betty Balmaceda. But Who Knows The Sequel Could Be Written Unpredictably.

MY BROTHER RAUL R. LEVERIZA JR. REPLIED THUS TO MY PERSONAL LETTER TO HIM ABOUT HIS DIVORCE WHICH I POSTED IN MY BLOG ON JULY 18, 2008.

Please Click This Link To View "A Personal Letter To My Brother Raul"


September 26,2008

Dear Kuya Boy,

I read your blog.

I have always said that you have a way with words, but sensitivity (and empathy) you have always been short of. While your intentions may be out of concern and kindness, your blog, while profound and even poetic, reminds me of a person who talks because he loves to hear himself talk, rather than to communicate.

Now, why do I say that? You see, my divorce was very personal, deeply hurtful, and extremely "gut-wrenching" - and mine was a "mild' divorce. In Massachusetts, when you get divorced, you need to attend a 2-day, 6 hour seminar about divorce and its effects. And it was palpable: the anger, the hurt, and the confusion etched in the faces of those people there with me. One man had been separated for 15 years and was now trying to officially end it. But the personal trauma was still visibly apparent.

My divorce was personal. And I take issue with your blogging it publicly. I am not Britney Spears, and my life is not a public circus. I only informed our niece to tell Kuya, whom I consider the patriarch of our family now, because I did not want you and my other siblings to hear it from someone else. As you know me well, I would never burden others with my own problems.

I know you did not think of it that way, as I have said, sensitivity has never been one of your strengths. I am writing this letter to say that there are other ways to show sympathy or concern. Whatever it was you were trying to say was lost by the method you had chosen to use. You may as well have written it in Greek. A simple phone call would have sufficed.

Toy


PS. You may post this in your blog if you wish. And if there is any inkling in you to say "I'm sorry", don't say it to me. Say it to my former wife and to my kids. They did not deserve the public exposure of a very personal matter.

cc: Betty Balmaceda




DEAR TOY,



If there is a love story I'd love to write it's yours and Betty's. I held it sacrosanct and restrained myself out of respect for your privacy. In fact in the blog, I purposely omitted Betty's name and your surname to keep it incognito to a certain degree.

I would have loved to write about that MBA thesis which was started and dedicated to Jessica then completed by Betty. Nothing else could be a more faithful depiction of the shifting sands of love and the lives and persons catalyzed by it. Yours is a beautiful love story up to the late wedding with full grown children marching down the aisle to precede you. If nothing else such an event could be crowned a family covenant.

How it can be viewed negatively to mean less love is something I will never figure out. It served as the niggling stimulus that bejeweled to a pearl which saw Betty graduating with a cum laude from the Harvard University night school. It meant a growing up not only in individual pursuit but a strengthening of a collective bond as a couple. It stemmed from the drive to evolve and excel out of the inspiration from a loving relationship.

The sad thing is that you destroyed it with a divorce. The funny thing is that you consider it a denigration of your persons and therefore feel immeasurably hurt. Well, I take the opposite view. I should say it was a unique fairy tale that was casted for leading roles in an erratic manner. But you can still pick up the pieces, so to speak. But that is not for me to speculate about.

I apologize to Betty, to Mike, to Kevin, to Chris, to Daphne, and to Bianca.

In your case, you should learn how to be romantic again. Forget the forever arguments like you were a lifetime member of the debating team. Next time she nags you, don't say a word. Sweep her off her feet and whisk her away to bed. Give her the old bazooka. That shouldn't be a chore. I saw your latest pics and she matured splendidly. And you are no slouch or washout yourself in the looks department.

With love and respect,

Boy

Friday, August 1, 2008

Angel of The Lord (Part 15) Novel Blog

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Zhang Ziyi In Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon







Zhang Ziyi In Hero










JOSE ROXAS LEVERIZA FIRST NOVEL SERIALIZED IN BLOGGER

ANGEL OF THE LORD (PART 15)



PREVIOUSLY:

PLEASE CLICK THIS LINK FOR ANGEL OF THE LORD (PART 14)



The watchful sentry at the hospital lobby tried to bar the entry of the tall lean missionary with athletic gait. The auburn hair topping cool blue eyes on a chiseled profile flashed the warmest smile. With upraised palm and officious tone, the guard laid down the house rule, “no solicitations and preaching in the hallways!” He was an easy prey for Jason’s Burke’s Media ID. He mellowed instantly at the sight of it although it bore nothing more than the word PRESS emblazoned in big bold block letters. Nothing stirred more reverence in Manila than Western journalists with trappings of the big NEWS. “Hollywood gunk”, Jason loved to call it. The chastened security guard ushered him right through with a peremptory salute.


































Movies colored a lot of perceptions in the far flung corners. Newsmen and ministers were the good guys. If you knew how to ride such stereotypes it could open a lot of accidental doors. Jason Burke was trained to use it in the manner of illusion for elusion, one among many in the bag of tricks of cloak and dagger practitioners.

The hospital was bright and airy with renovated pastel painted whitewashed walls. The ceiling soared to cathedral height giving the impression of Grand Central station in Manhattan. It made for a very positive and cheery outlook quite unusual for a place associated with infirmity and suffering. The pitter patter of shuffling feet echoed in the far walls. Jason admired the stucco panels which reminded him of the classical columns so prevalent in Washington D.C.

A long queue formed along the margins of the restraining tape to the bank of elevators. By instinct Jason detoured to the stairway and bounded up the steps in threes like an obstacle course in Special Forces camp. Without breaking sweat or labored breathing, he broke surface on the ninth floor.

The ninth floor reception area was more somber with subdued incandescence. The squared counter lacked the usual accoutrements of a fast service outlet but instead surrounded a single figure seated at the middle while stooped over some illegible medical transcriptions.

The nurse with a white cotton fedora looked up momentarily and was thrilled by the sight of the Mormon preacher in standard black and white with resplendent boyish appeal. The Sunkist hair and soulful blues made her think he had stepped out from a television set. “Hollywood gunk,” Jason thought again as he felt elated by her admiring welcome. He found her form draped by crisp whites somewhat enticing. Like a white box of chocolates, Forrest Gump used to say, you never know what you are getting. He waved and continued on panning her with his best Tom Cruise smile.

A shapely figure with shoulder length page boy locks paced outside the door to room 912. A cell phone was ubiquitously pasted on the right ear. Her superior tone matched well with the regal pinstripes on her dark blue suit which flowed just above the supple knees.. By the sound of it she was dictating some legal verse to an assistant on the other end. Her beauty stunned Jason when she looked up to put away the palm held device.

Her exotic slit eyes seized you with simultaneous acuity and seduction. Her milky white geisha complexion became more illustrated with the carousing strands of jet black hair that swept down randomly. Her expression bore a deep set drama frozen in time and mystery, cajoling you and leading you to make her unravel piece by piece.

The impact of her desirability was confrontational. Jason felt like a hot gust of wind unsteadied him where he stood. This was a novelty because Jason always prided himself to be the quintessential pursuer. This time around he gawked and waited for the first tidings to emanate from her bewitchingly sensuous mouth. Ellebana Sey smiled a welcome that lighted up dizzying neon lights in Jason Burke’s subliminal threshold.

“You must be the missionary, Jason Burke; Richard brought me up to speed. I’m the Special Prosecutor on the case of the rogue agents. My name’s Ellebana Sey.” Ellebana pressed Jason’s right elbow instead of offering a glad hand.

Her coming close pricked Jason to life followed woefully by a faint struggling in his loins. But that’s neither here nor there now, as he debated inside how far Richard has compromised privileged info with her. He was tempted to throw her a challenge phrase to see how far she could respond with the proper code to denote top level clearance or insider credential. The heady waft of her chic perfume suffused his nostrils and made him reel with infatuation mixed with near insanity. He drew from the deepest pits of resolve to prevent his tongue from wagging out and salivating openly like he imagined his dog Yeller back in his youth. It was all he could do to keep from howling out like a wolf at the desert moon.

Jason Burke looked down to the floor then looked up with bated breath in his ballooning cheeks. “Richard who?”

Ellebana Sey threw back her head and sprayed her comely hair. Her sultry giggle made her loom more desirable in his eyes. “Hi hi, I should have expected that from you.” “Don’t worry. All he ever told me was that you were the champagne missionary tasked to convert all the fun seekers at the beach resorts. Must be some tough job, huh?”

“Fuck Richard,” Jason Burke muttered under his breath well below Ellebana’s earshot. But then he fervently hoped not.

PLEASE CLICK HERE TO MOVE ON TO ANGEL OF THE LORD PART 16









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