"If I remember correctly, we graduated from HS on March 21, 1960. ...5 days after March 16...the day Philippines was discovered by Magellan in 1521."-Sari

"O.M.G., We are RICH! Silver in the Hair. Gold in the Teeth. Crystals in the Kidneys. Sugar in the
Blood. Lead in the Ass. Iron in the Arteries. And… an inexhaustible supply of Natural Gas.
We never thought we'd accumulate such wealth."







Monday, December 6, 2010

Sari, Sari


SARI …. SARI

When I first met our PWU classmate, Rosario E. Valenzuela ….. Sari for short, way back in 1956, she was in a black sleeveless dress, still mourning for her late grandfather Dr. Pio Valenzuela, the revolutionary (a place in Bulacan is now named after her grandfather).

I remember Sari during our high school days as a basketball player, giggling while dribbling theball. Then we associated her with then the much acclaimed film “Alexander the Great”. Kamukha niya si Alexander, di ba? Am sure you also remember Sari ringing the bell with her arm outside the window on the 3rd floor to let everyone know the class period was over. And all of a sudden there was no more ringing. Did Sari fall out of the window or did the bell fall apart?

Sari went to college at the State University for her nutrition degree. The next time I was in touch with her was at a PWU HS 1960 reunion in Chicago in the late 1960’s. I enjoyed her company, that of Wena Noble, the late Lourdes Reyes and Olive Abella, among others. Then I stayed overnight at her place in Madison, Wisconsin where she based as a dietitian in 1969. It was also the first time that the first man landed in the moon and who incidentally graduated from the same school which I attended then. Tsismis - na meet ko ang BF niya noon - a pathologist from U.P.

In the early 1970’s, Sari and I found ourselves back in the Philippines as balikbayans together with Cherrie Silva. We would meet on weekends in our parent’s home, in her work place at the Manila Yatch Club or elsewhere. I remember that Sari was always cool as a boss in spite of the accuracy requirements in time, space and quality in the food service business. Sari was always poised, never under stress with the waiters even at peak hours like 12:00 noon on weekends. Let me narrate an amazing anecdote: Circa 1972 the late Mrs. Reyes, our former biology teacher saw Sari and Cherrie at the Makati Shopping Centre and said with astonishment: “You’re still together?”. That was 12 years after high school graduation!

Sari and her relatives have always been hospitable even in many parts of the globe: in 1975 in Pennsylvania; in 1976 in Singapore through her Ditse and late brother-in-law - Mr. and Mrs. Kong; in late 1980s and 1999 in Paris and Brittany, France through her youngest sister Araceli Valenzuela d’Aboville; in Geneva, Switzerland, through her aunt, Dr. Rosalinda Garcia Valenzuela; and in 1999 in New York where she showed a lot of the Big Apple to my German husband Heinz and me. There, I also met Hortense Ramos (after 29 years) and Fe Ilagan. That was fun!

Up to now, Sari tags me along to PWU reunions, etc., etc,, etc. when we find ourselves together in the Philippines (she visited her father in Valenzuela City every year on his birthday) or elsewhere. She can drive in New York, Manila and Europe. She comes to visit us in a rented car to Germany and other parts of Europe. Sari, Sari remember? Thanks for a wonderful friendship.
By Patricia Arroyo Staub

Sari and Sammy (Puri's youngest daughter)

That's Sari with Sammy (Puri's youngest daughter who was 4 years old then) in front of Palm Haven. Sari visited Puri the last week of October in 1987. Puri entertained her beloved kumare like a queen as she is a very gracious hostess. Before she left for New York Sari told Puri that it was her birthday the 31st of that month. So her birthday came and went by without much ado....very much like Sari.....no big fuzz for her.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Puri's Palm Haven




After the war, my young parents Pablo and Laura Capistrano had to return to Manila from hiding from the Japanese at my grandparent’s lanzones farm in San Pablo City. They were homeless and were quite worried about their first born, barely walking with no roof over her head, this child Purisima was clueless with what was going on. Fortunately a cousin of my father, who was renting out stables for horses by the San Lazaro race tracks in Felix Huertas allowed us to stay in one of their horse stalls. Literally, we slept in a haystack of a manger for awhile. Thereafter we lived in so many places as my father took us to his job assignments as a Mining Engineer. I led a nomadic life and was even thrown in the deep muslim island of Basilan off Zamboaga after I got married to Ramon Alano Laconico, Jr. There I had a jeweler, Mrs Remedios Baro who kept coming to our house and eventually became my friend after selling me a few pieces here and there. She was a savvy businesswoman but her words were convincing. What struck me was her story about a client of hers who bought a house in USA just by selling jewelry that she sold. We were then preparing to immigrate to the US in 1973 with 3 kids, Yvonne was 6 years old, Ramon III was 5 and Nikki was almost 2. With no job in place and no house, we lived in the living room of my sister Nati’s studio apt. in Chicago and slept on the floor. My focus was to make Mrs. Baro’s words happen to me. There were many prophets of doom who thought I was too much of a dreamer, laughed at me, burst my bubble and discouraged me. They said we had no job and credit history, and that we had to wait for a least 2 years to establish creditworthiness etc etc. That is the reality of it. That was the truth for sensible people. But I don’t listen to what others say. They said I couldn’t find a job because I had no job history but I easily found employment. Even my sister said none of her friends will buy my jewelry because they use credit cards here and I didn’t even have certificates of authenticity. She was right, yet I still managed to sell enough for a down payment. Well we surprised everyone when within 3 months upon our arrival in Uncle Sam’s backyard, we were able to buy a 3 bedroom brick house with a full basement in Roselle, Illinois. It had 3 maple tress in front and an apple tree and a crab-apple tree at the back with lots of peonies, lilies of the valley and hostas all around. All for $ 43,000. in 1973. Our parish priest Father Keys who monitored our goings on as new parishioners ( upon the recommendation of Bishop Cabanban from our church back home) went golfing with the Manager of the Bank of Roselle who approved our loan! My kids claimed one maple tree each and in the Fall they would pile up the leaves into a heap and jump in them with our cat. At the end of the street was a pond that served as an ice skating rink for our kids and for the neighborhood kids at wintertime. At the other end of the street was their elementary school. It was an idyllic place for kids to grow and quite heaven sent for us.

In 1977 we were all very sad to find out Mon accepted a job in San Jose, California. Our kids were crying and no one could understand what in the world was in San Jose to exchange with our Roselle Paradise. His uncle in law Mayor Villegas ( Tita Lydia Alano Villegas was his aunt )offered him to run Cables Electronics, an electronic company he just bought. We had no inkling that era was the onset and beginning of what was to become Silicon Valley. We had no clue that San Jose, once called Valley of Heart’s Delight due to its vast fruit orchards that bloomed profusely like cherry blossoms would someday evolve to become the fulcrum and world capital of Silicon Valley, center of technology. It transformed the vast expanse of exquisite fruit orchards into concrete skyscrapers and urban housing developments whose prices skyrocketed just as fast. Farmers who sold their cherry orchards to developers became instant multi-millionaires. Cables’s early clients were garage operations such as Atari, Apple Computers ( Steve Jobs and Woz Wozniak were mere teen geeks then), Hewlett Packard, IBM, Intel. And luckily I had a job transfer in SFO so I took the train everyday to commute to the city. Meanwhile we lived for 2 months at their castle up the mountain in Portola called Villa Lauriston, a thick book written about the architecture of this marvelous villa. Its onyx pillars were studded with gold dust and gates were from European castles. Hollywood offered to film the Great Gatsby for a thousand a day photo shoot fee but Tito Tony declined. Same architect who did the Fairmont Hotel and other major city buildings. We finally found and bought our first house in San Jose on Viceroy Way where the land beyond our fence were golden yellow mustard fields and apricot orchards. As we were winding down the steep mountainside from their villa to move to our new house, my station wagon’s engine died, turned turtle at the edge of the cliff and Yvonne and I were upside down but alive. Mon and our boys thought we were dead as the car was a total wreck beyond repair. Nothing short of a miracle it was. But then the electronics company shut down due to anomalies of previous owners and Mon had no choice but to start his own garage operation called Aarone Corporation. That’s another story.

In 1982, another miracle happened when I twitched my nose again and worked out ways to get our dream house, an ancestral home. That’s the end of our hopping around from house to house, the longest we have lived in one place. 875 Plaza Drive in Willow Glen is the first suburb of the old downtown in San Jose. Conveniently located by the San Jose Mineta International airport and just 2 miles from downtown and yet has the feel of being tucked away in the suburbs. It’s a much written about house including Sunset Magazine and appeared in a historical book called Old Willow Glen. The contractor built it for himself in 1917 but instead sold it to JS Williams, a clothier for $12,000. Hundreds of palm trees line the streets like giant sentinels. This small enclave is called Palm Haven and our house is right in front of Palm Haven Park. It’s a Spanish style home reminiscent of Villa Montalvo, symbolic of a bygone era. We bought it from its 3rd owner who did a lot of restoration. They stripped off linoleum all over the first floor to expose beautiful hardwood. The entry has a marble threshold and its wooden antique door is encased in beveled glass on both sides and up top. The living room fireplace depicts its period with elaborate mantle and marble base. A Solarium occupies one end, its where I grow my indoor plants and use it as my private phone room as well. At the opposite end is an Aviary which I now use as my office. Between them is a cavernous living room with intricate ceiling and wall mouldings and all original chandeliers and light fixtures remained as part of the house. It has a dumb waiter and laundry chutes too.The Dining room has mahogany walls and pocket doors on one end and mahogany with glass accordion doors on the other end where I entertain sit down dinners. I used to donate sit down Dinner for 12 to the silent auction of the Rotary Club where we belonged and it’s always sold out. They seem to like what I cooked and to see this house which I refuse to enlist for home tours. It has a full basement and an attic where I store old books. The previous owner collected Rolls Royces so it has an 8 car garage, big enough for an apartment. We still don’t own a Rolls Royce. It should come with a chauffer which we can’t afford yet. It sits on a half acre of land which is hard to find in a city so we are fortunate to enjoy the yard. We don’t hire gardeners, just Mon and me. We have lots of fruit trees, redwoods, Japanese maples, sycamores, Italian cypresses, olives, magnolia, a giant fir tree that looks like a hundred years old, etc and my flowering blooms. But gardening is another chapter. In 1984 our youngest daughter Samantha was born and Plaza Drive was her first and only home until she flew the coop to study in San Diego and remained there. We are now empty nesters but this home is so full of treasured memories, it not easy to even think of leaving the spirits that dwell in it. It’s a place our children and grandchildren come home to for family gatherings.

From Manger to Manse. It’s all in the mind. It was sheer will power. Sharp focus on dreams. We seized opportunities. The truth is we are happy to sleep anywhere, be it on a haystack, on the grass, on a hole in the wall, or on a banig on the bamboo floor. But with lots of pillows……to dream on.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

HEAR YE.....HEAR YE

I almost passed out when I read the email of Sari asking Evelyne to give me posting "rights" in our blog. I was surprised that several of our classmates emailed me and expressed their vote of confidence. I was overwhelmed but I welcome the challenge that I can play even a small role as we embark on this next, very exciting phase of our lives.

Our lives have really been enriched by this reconnection from 50 years ago. Our mini reunions and birthday celebrations in San Francisco, Canada, New York, Maryland, Florida, San Diego, Chicago and of course the major event of 2010, our Golden Jubilee in the Philippines.

I hope with your contributions, this blog "Gintong Daan" will help us record memories of the past, love of the present and dreams for the future.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

INTRODUCING OUR NEW BLOG

"We may long have left the golden road behind, but its memories are the dearest of our eternal possessions; and those who cherish them as such may haply find a pleasure in the pages of this book, whose people are pilgrims on the golden road of youth."- The Golden Road by Montgomery, Lucy Maud View

By Evelyne Dirige Resella:
Right photo from the 50th reunion- (Rhod & Evelyne Resella)
Hi Everyone! Welcome to our NEW blog called "Gintong Daan" (Golden Road). The previous "Gintong Ala-Ala" blog is about the past. It reconnected many classmates after half of a century (50 years) of golden & merry memories.
We are closing the last chapter of our "Gintong Ala-Ala." The "G.A." blog will always be there on the internet for you to see, read & enjoy. Don't be sad! Our new blog the "Gintong Daan" is about the present & future This new blog will pave the way to a a different routes & venues.
"When one door closed, another door opens." Our new PWU blog is called "Gintong Daan" (Golden Road). I thought this is a good name for Part 2. Now, in our sixties we are journeying on the GOLDEN ROAD (a good road, merry road, & long road). If we view it positively we will face victory (tagumpay) in spite of passing through the hard road of aging. Although some of us had left the Golden Road, many of us still remain healthy and alive. At this age we have accumulated many rich experiences worth sharing. This "Gintong Daan" blog will be our connecting road to our past classmates. Here we will be walking through life, excercising & jogging our excess weights to keep us more healthy. Along the way, we will stop to drink refreshing water and linger a while to meet our classmates/friends. We pause and send e-mails or calls. Then we chit chat & share our short life stories or happenings. Be it birtdday celebrations, death, hobbies, travels, short stories, poems, etc.etc.
NEW DESIGN! NEW COLOR! NEW BLOGGER!
When we are all aging, it's good to have green pastures to rest along the way. So GREEN is the new color of our blog. I hope you'll like the changes. Also I am glad to pass the torch to Esther Lejano. I gave Esther the right to do whatever she likes to write & post. She is very talented & have good computer skill. She is the PWU Canadian "poster girl." By that I mean, she beautifully e-mails & posts photos of the Canadian mini-reunions & birthdays. She could actually be a golden poster girl. Esher is still charming even at our over the hill age. I am confident she will be a good replacement and will be a wonderful asset to our blog. She has been doing her own blog for a while, so she's not a rookie. The old bloggers like Sari, Puri, Cherrie & Cora will be standbys. But Esther will do the important job like inputing photos which takes time & skill.
For now, Esther & me will work together on our new blog. I will not leave Esther alone. Starting January 2011, I will be less active in our blog. I will be devoting my self & time to creating & completing the 67 oil paintings I intend to do. I need months to consentrate my effort on this art project. Last year I lost a year due to traveling, blogging & moving. Now that I am settled here in San Diego,California - my priority is to finish the 67 oil paintings before, I could no longer paint. Hopefully, I will do my next Art Show here in San Diego by September. Of course all of you will be invited. Sari gave me an idea, that we could have another reunion here in San Diego. Something to look forward!!!!!!!!!
An Invitation To all Classmates: You are all invited to send your photos & stories to be published on our new blog. If you had e-mailed some photos before of your garden , trips & other activities, we can re-post them here.
Please send them to Esther: estherlejano@sympatico.ca
She will do the rest. Meanwhile, those who are aspiring bloggers, should hone their computer skills. Who knows, you might be our next master blogger.