Four days into my self-imposed holiday and I'm bored out of my skull. In between watching Jamie Oliver and Giada De Laurentiis, there's really nothing much to do but cook. So far, I've whipped up a mean zitti with sausage, basil, and tomatoes (I mixed 3 kinds of sausages: Italian, Hungarian, and Vienna and added ground beef to the tomato sauce); a Shaker lemon pie where I had to wrestle with an uncooperative pâte brisée; and a pot of steaming pancit molo. By the time, this article goes to print, I’ll probably have a casserole full of corn pudding warming on the kitchen counter. I’m no expert in the cooking department but I do love to whip up new dishes for my kids. Sometimes I fail miserably especially when some baking is involved, but most of the time I’m actually capable of making something that my kids can eat without throwing up. (I’m just being modest, of course.)
Aside from slaving in the kitchen, I've been learning how to put on eye make up. Last night I did the smoky eye effect using black and gray eye shadow and I feel pretty smug because it actually came out really beautiful and dramatic (as opposed to looking like somebody hit me with a non-stick frying pan on both eyes -- yes, in my world that could happen, but I usually do the pan-hitting).
I know I won’t be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the Palanca, or even Miss Congeniality in some trite beauty pageant (where my 2 year old can speak better English compared to half of the contestants) by doing the things that I’ve been doing for the past days. I know I’m dilly-dallying. I know it’s IQ-zapping to stay in the house day in and day out and be concerned about the most mundane of things (i.e. mulling over when the next CSI rerun will be, researching Heather Mills by typing “gold digger” on Google, and ruminating over which brand of shampoo is better for my daughter’s sensitive scalp). But it’s actually quite exhilarating, to be in the state where I am in right now. Nothing like the prosaic to remind me of how profound life truly is.
People always talk about their so-called “A-ha moments”, those pivotal, defining moments of their lives. I know you’re all familiar with what I’m talking about and some of you might even be having that moment right now as you’re reading my column. (That or you’re having an aneurysm – probably the latter, I know!) I’m sure Oprah would be so proud of you and all that, but sometimes, these Oprahesque take on life gets so maddeningly passé for me.
Sometimes all I want to do is puke when I read stuff like “As I stood there all alone surrounded by the breathtaking beauty of dusk, inner peace engulfed me.” I actually understand where that kind of phony profundity comes from (probably from reading sappy Danielle Steel books and committing to memory a few lines from some retro Hallmark greeting card).What puzzles me is that people never say things like “As I poured laundry soap in the washing machine, I began to understand the purpose of my life” or “I changed my baby’s diapers today and as I wiped her smooth buttocks with alcohol-free wipes (yes, it has to be alcohol-free), it dawned on me that life is indeed beautiful.”
And so, as I sit here in front of my computer wondering when this article will end because I have to go and cut my daughter’s toe nails, I can’t help but feel genuinely happy and content. There’s nothing like doing the most boring and inconsequential task to tell you that you’re living your life to the fullest!
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