PEOPLE | Travel Buddy Arlan

Travel is a sensitive vice. However planned, one can only control traveling so much. It takes a great deal of flexibility and tolerance in order to enjoy, let alone survive one.

Choosing people to travel with, like other factors of travel (ie., weather, terrain etc.), is just as treacherous. I, in particular, is never Miss Friendship. I am not very good at making the small talk necessary in building initial rapport. But over the years, I have been fortunate to have bumped into people to whom I needed not explain myself.

Having been raised in a home dominated by boys, I grew up more comfortable in the no-nonsense way of men. My preference in travel, for instance, is more suited to the rough and rowdy nature of boys and to (maybe, someday) girls who, like Summer Finn, warrant exclamations of “you’re a dude!” from impressed, often drunk male species.

Let me start this series with one of my biggest influences in backpacking:

Arlan Huilar for The North Face in Mt. Apo

My vagabond ways started with Arlan Huilar’s influence. In 2003, I was Associate Editor of the School Paper while he was the Sports Editor. We cut class and made a spur-of-the-moment decision to attend a CEGP council meet in Mactan, Cebu.

Because we were running out of time, we had no option but to take an old Sulpicio Lines boat to Cebu. We were literally shaking in our economy bunks the whole the night. The next morning, the crew made amends by serving us free coffee, which in turn, wasn’t really a good idea. Arlan nursed a bad case of diarrhea the whole day.

Our 3-day school-related activity turned into a week-long adventure in the Queen City, ranging from sleeping on a hut in Lapulapu, ditching off plenaries and ride a ferry to SM for the sole purpose of “moving our bowels”, writing poetry while acing videoke in a bar in Banilad, surfing at a stranger’s place for 3 nights and walking around the infamous Carbon market to interview fishmongers.

That trip didn’t only foster our friendship. It also awakened our sense of nationalism and renewed our advocacies in terms of our writing. We became almost inseparable since, working for the school paper until the wee hours of the weekends.

On the next semester, I stepped up as the EIC and Arlan became the Managing Editor. We capped our term with a 12-hour roadtrip to Digos City, taking the Bukidnon-Davao road.  We went with four other journalists but it was obvious we built an exclusive world around us. We had an inside language, a secret sign. We knew the ins and outs of each other’s lives and boy, there was no telling how dark were the secrets and sins of writers.

In the rooftop of the Cor Jesu Grade School Building on the hills of Digos, we fixed a tent up and a folding bed beside the tent. I had a holiday boy who was a fan of Kenshin from Samurai X. He had a holiday girl who spoke several languages. Like Cebu, we stayed for a few more days in Davao after the conference. We fell in love with Tabo-an in Matina Town Square. We envied how that place brimmed with art. Ah, I forgot. I went to MTS with other writer friends. Arlan begged off due to sore tummy, and was almost raped (his words, not mine) by his holiday girl.

We braved another 10-hour roadtrip the morning after the holiday girl fiasco without shower, without toothbrush. My travel buddy who was still shocked from the incident of the night before, sent an I Love You text message to the wrong person and in the middle of his panic, sent a cover up which was a lame, I Love Iligan!

I could not fully explain the magnitude of the wrong message and the ridiculous-ness of the cover-up but it was one of the many secrets we swore to keep between us until the end.

Arlan dropped off nursing school after that and taught Biology at a university.  But our escapades didn’t stop there. We conquered CDO on a jeepney and Ozamis on a tricycle in the years that followed, before matters of consequences forced us to be geographically  apart.

But guess what, doors are not meant to be closed for friends. Just months ago, we talked about him possibly paying me a visit here. We never know, I still have to find a wedding singer. He might be happy to volunteer. :)

Arlan Huilar | biologist/mountaineer/photographer

rage-18

Very few people finds romance in sarcasm. But when the time frame is too minute even for the quickest recipe for love, some just have to pull it off through banters.

Latecomers, like denim, are always in fashion. she noticed him through that. Fair-skinned and mestizo, in branded clothes.

“What the hell is he here for?” she muffled under her breath while eating on a sartin plate. they were in some unheard-of mountain, as rebels pretending to be students.

“Rage. Bansalan.” He offered a comrade’s hand to the glaring female on the other end of the table. She was in character in a batik top and a pair of tie-dyed pajamas. “Typical novice,” he thought, noting her diligence to show off.

“Rain. Iligan.” Instead of receiving his hand, she stood up and walked away.”

Later that night, while the group was having a candlelit plenary on the ill effects of the Visiting forces Agreement, her phone beeped. It was a picture message of Kenshin from Samurai X, and below are the words:

“labas ka muna saglit.usap tau.”

When she went out, he was already there, smoking.

“Ang easy mo pala.”

“Always been. but that does not mean i’m cheap.”

“Ow?” he handed her a cig.

“You can’t afford me,” she lit the cig using the Zippo on her pocket.

“Yung lighter mo, isang buwang bigas na yan ng mga mahihirap.”

“Anong problema mo?”

“Tinitingnan kita kanina. Kakatapos lng ng hapunan, ngumunguya ka na naman ng tsokolate. Sabihin mo nga sa’kin, ano yung nandun?” He pointed to an island of lights just below the hill.

“Slums. I’ve been there. Basic Mass Integration kahapon.”

“Alam mo ba bakit kulang ang kinakin nila? kasi sobra-sobra kinakain mo.”

for the first time in 24 hours, she looked at him straight in the eye. “Hoy lalakeng nagpapaaktibista pero anak naman ng kapitalista, wag mo ipamukha sa’kin ang mga bagay na yan. kasi laking hirap ako. hanggang ngayon mahirap ako.”

“Sori ha, hindi kasi halata,” his voice remained monotonous.

“Eto,” she held the Zippo on her palms. bigay to ng kamag-anak galing abroad. “Eto,” it was a bar of Kitkat, “binili ko sa terminal kasi mula ng naimbento ang tsokalteng ito, kanina ko lng natikman.”

“bakit mo pinaliliwanag sa’kin?”

“bakit mo’ko pinalabas dito?”

“dahil ba gusto mo’ko?”

“dahil ba mahal mo’ko?”

“you’ll just bleed.”

“tapos na ang congress bukas. alas singko, sa terminal, uwi na’ko ng Iligan” she stood up.

the next day, at five in the afternoon, she found him there, right beside her, on a bus to Iligan.


to Ryan Yu Silva, wherever you are, happy birthday.