I turned 24 last April 1st and this is my birthday entry for my 24 years of existence …
… and still counting!
BEFORE TURNING 24, I
have joined various organizations and tried numerous activities, including Taekwondo,
publication writing, and weightlifting, and even theater acting and singing. In
all these, though, I suppose I’ve never been the “best”—a word that I associate
with being outstanding in every aspect. Hence, I’ve enumerated the skills I’ve
done preeminently, those that I may have learned to master, or at least to get
the hang of, from all the things I tried and organizations I joined… or even
from experiences, painful and blissful, I encountered.
Number 10: Laugh in the whistle register
I rank this skill in number 10 because it’s now extinct.
Back in my high school days—I was 14 then—my closest friends would always
remember me for my ability to laugh in the whistle register, the high-pitched
sound usually being associated with birds and dolphins and extraordinary
singers like Mariah Carey and Minnie Riperton. I know I can’t sing, and I
actually don’t know how I was able to reach that high register, which only
remarkable artists can reach. Perhaps, just extreme laughter enables me to use
my vocal cords peculiarly. When my laryngeal prominence, however, started
developing, my voice began getting deeper, and that “whistle laugh” people used
to hear from me just had to pack its bag and go to Bahamas or Bali or Palawan
for a lifetime vacation.
Number 9: Execute a tower-high axe kick and hold my legs apart using
the front-kick-side-kick-combination leg split
Being a Taekwondo practitioner from ages 11 to 17, and “legitimately”
a Taekwondo student from ages 13 to 17, I have acquired this ability to split
my legs apart, a stretching exercise I have always done prior to executing my
trademark kick in our Taekwondo gym: the axe kick. A lot
of my fellow taekwondo beginners and novices used to fear me for this kick; but
a lot of my instructors and other experts in the art see me as a perfect target
for a turning-side kick counterattack. Though graceful-looking, this flamboyant
kick leaves any one vulnerable for other faster kicking styles in the Taekwondo
kicking arsenal.
To date, I can still execute this kick and even split my
legs apart. But unlike before, my execution isn’t as graceful and effortless as
it used to be. And this time, I feel it already hurts somewhere in the middle.
(To maintain this flexibility though, I recently decided to perform some basic
Taekwondo stretching exercises at least once a week.)
Number
8: Lift weights despite having muscle injuries
You know that feeling when your wrist or shoulder
really hurts? Then you take the risk of still lifting those dumbbells to
complete your workout routine for the day despite possibly worsening your pain?
I take that risk.
After leaving my Taekwondo gym at 17, I shifted to
weightlifting. Despite being timid of working out with people whose bodies are
like those of gods, something just pushed me through to obliterate that feeling.
That something could be my own insecurity: my being very skinny as though I
were an elementary boy. When I turned 18—after leaving my first gym because I
have seen no significant improvements in my body—I resorted to steroid
ingestion and this made me gain weight, not desirable because I looked so
bloated. I started lifting weights again when I turned 19 in a different gym,
and another gym again that was nearer to my home, the gym where I used to train
Taekwondo. That was the start of my being a masochist, leading to my bodybuilding
preoccupation; I have seen significant improvements since then. I was perceived
with the image I have been longing for myself, treated as I deserved. From then
on, I started working out six times a week, even on days I’ve had injuries,
though that could be unhealthy. Just like the timidity I have learned to
obliterate the first time I stepped into the gym, the pain of the injury is all
in the mind. I call that “discipline,” but don’t ask me how I arrived with this
illicit conclusion.
Number
7: Be either a good or bad influence to people’s physical insecurities
Some of my officemates have become health-conscious,
exercising every morning to become fitter and eating healthy foods to make them
slimmer—they blame me. Some of my flat-mates have become body-conscious, doing
cardio and abdominal exercises every morning to flatten their tummy—they thank
me.
Number
6: Write according to the technicalities of writing, as indicated in “different
style guides”
I am a technical writer; it’s my profession. That says
it all. The problem though is I tend to mix different style guides sometimes.
I’ve read almost nine or ten different style guides since I was in college.
That explains it all.
Speaking of my profession, my officemate and friend
Marge said that I know how to follow the technicalities of writing. She said
that is my strength, and I am still currently convincing myself to believe her
statement.
Number 5: Write in a “spontaneously disorganized”
style
I used to be the writer who believes that he can
change the society by writing about antivirus software or an oven toaster his
mother disposed in their backyard. I used to be the writer who writes whatever
that pops into his mind, striking from anywhere with any random subject. I used
to be the writer who finds connection from one topic to another by utilizing—or
even abusing—false analogies that readers find humoristic but secretly
offensive. I used to be the writer who dislikes articles that are well written
and rather prefers articles that are “spontaneously disorganized.” That’s my
legacy—at least during my days in the university publication, in which I
happened to have an opinion column concurrent with my other columns in two
local newspapers in our province.
I put this skill in number 5, better than the preceding
item, because I suppose it’s the writing skill that’s innate in me. It’s where
my writing path started.
Number
4: Work out while wearing a tight-fitting girdle as though I’m tightly corseted
Lifting from 45 to 120 lbs of steel weights back then,
I needed to support my back to prevent injuries in my spinal cord and backbone;
so I bought this rock-hard girdle to support my back. The girdle was about 20 cm
wide, wrapped around my waist during workout. I enjoyed wearing it tight like
olden-day corsets—that the initial purpose of supporting my back led to the
side effect of reshaping my waist, from the last five pairs of my lower ribs
down to my pelvises. Having my waist narrowed, I decided to make this a habit
until now to maintain the shape of my waist, as I have done for two years back
then.
Number
3: Block bad memories in my mind
March 2009, I suffered a severe emotional breakdown
that lasted until around November or December 2010. Late December 2010 until
around March 2011, I tried pretending to be happy, doing stuff that I used to
do before, those that satisfy me, such as getting back in shape. (My emotional
breakdown caused me harsh weight loss and decrease in muscle mass, but I
promised myself to be back in shape, not to mention multiple criticisms I
received, saying that I’m into drug abuse, from people who used to know me by
my college-days body figure. Fortunately, I’m back in shape now.)
I kept on thinking about the great things life has to
offer, reminiscing good memories that I can always experience all over again
with friends who never left, people who were always there. Just like a
computer, I blocked those bad memories that caused me wakeful nights, those
memories that filled my eyes with tears. And I became very good at it. Partly,
thanks to my unusual laughing manners.
Number
2: Laugh aloud using different unusual laughing manners for different purposes
As I mentioned in the preceding item, I laugh aloud to
block bad memories. I also laugh aloud for other purposes such as: (a) to conceal
pain and pretend that I’m happy; (b) to fill a room with people who could be
trying to bring me down with my aura; (c) and, of course, just to express my
happiness whenever I’m with people who make me laugh. The item in A is what I
always used to do before, until sometime in June 2011 I’ve realized that the pretense I’ve lived with has already
become my reality. The item in B I’ve done just once or thrice, and the
item in C is often the reason why I laugh these days.
Just like my purposes for laughing, my laughing styles
also vary. Considering that my whistle laugh is now a history, I typically
produce a throaty, squeaky sound using my modal register nowadays. Sometimes, I
use the falsetto register too to produce high-pitched laughs, especially when I
haven’t had enough sleep, during which my modal register tends to be weak and
whispery that it almost sounds like the vocal fry register. But my favorite
style is when I start my laugh in a high falsetto register and then shift to my
guttural voice, resulting in a full-throated pinnacle. During very funny
instances though, I also can manage to produce a laughing sound through my diaphragm,
which my officemates reckon as the “evil laugh.” This one rarely happens. Thus
far, the only people I’ve known in person whom I believe could surpass my ability
to laugh aloud are Patti and, of course, our big boss.
Number
1: Hold my stomach in, 24/7
Now this one is difficult to explain, but I’ll try...
I’m aware that I don’t have the broadest and most masculine-looking shoulders,
sleeve-splitting biceps, and massive chest. Indeed, my biceps and chest are the
parts of my body that need improvement. My triceps and traps, meanwhile, could
be my assets with enough exercise, but still, they aren’t that remarkable. The
feature that sets me apart from the rest—the feature that has received most
praises from fitness instructors, swimsuit vendors and stylists, doctors, and
nurses, among others—is my ever-flat tummy. Thanks to my ability to fully
control my abdominal muscles, my tummy doesn’t get big no matter how much and
what I eat, and regardless if I am full or not.
Growing in an environment with my brother who was
influenced by my bikini-tournament-enthusiast cousin, I have been told when I
was 8 years old that my tummy was big only because it was slightly protruded—that
was considered a shame. From then on, I started holding my stomach in, as long
as I can until I managed to hold it in as long as I am conscious. I just did
it, though I really didn’t know the possible adverse effects of what I was
doing. As I grew older, I just haven’t noticed that my tummy has become
naturally flat, unless I’m unaware that I’m still holding my breath just to
make it appear smaller, flatter. But hey! I can breathe properly, and it neither
hurts nor suffocates me.
By the time I reached 18 or 19, I have mastered the
art of controlling my abdominal muscles that I have used them in every exercise
I’ve been doing. In fact, I use these muscles to get extra strength for some
extra lifts intended to work on my triceps. I’ve learned to use them in a way
different from how most people use theirs. The only thing that could affect my
ability to do this is “constipation.”
4 comments:
Muntik ko na isipin na this is a fitness post, may tungkol sa taekwondo, weightlifting, exercising LOL. So nag-taekwondo ka pala kaya pa kung maka-kick ka ganun-ganun na lang, very nice :)
Oo nga nuh. Lahat kasi ng mga nasalihan ko eh related sa fitness halos. So that's what I call a calling... hihihihih!
A workout program consisting of carefully selected, biomechanically correct abdominal exercise utilizing the very best abs exercise.
April Fool's Day baby ka pala... nahingal ako sa pagbabasa... ano na update? hehehe
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