I woke up to
the sounds of a hundred half starved dogs barking and one thousand roosters
trying to do their best to wake me up. They succeeded but after spending 48
hours flying and driving half way around the world with no sleep, it took me a
minute to realize where here was. Finally the cobwebs in my brain started to
release their grip and I realized that here, was four stories down in a bunker
of a room in Baguio City, Philippines.
The partially renovated house where I was staying consisted of five stories
tenaciously clinging to the side of an extremely steep ravine wall high up in
the mountains of northern Philippines. The main level had just been completed
on the roof of the existing structure (to raise it to the same level as the
nearby road) along with an attic beneath a steeply pitched roof. Below the main
level stood the gutted remains of the old main level, beneath that was my
concrete bunker, and beneath that was yet another level that was rented out to
another Filipino family. Climbing from my bunker room up to the main level
meant taking a flight of stairs outside the house that had been built into the
ravine wall at such an angle, that I could reach out and touch the stairs at
head level as I was walking up them. In other words, it was more like a
concrete ladder than a staircase.
I greeted my mother-in-law and family and ate a quick breakfast of sauteed
hotdogs and cold cereal (much to my wife's embarrassment) because my
mother-in-law thought that was what all Americans ate for breakfast. I have to
admit they were the best tasting sauteed hotdogs I have ever eaten but not the
ethnic local food that I had been looking forward too. They would soon come to
learn that I was willing to try about anything and for the rest of my stay, I
enjoyed many local foods cooked by my hosts. Being that it was a Sunday in one
of the most religious countries on this earth, we were soon walking up the
mountain to the local mass and then hurrying right back home for a reason that
was yet unknown to me.
Once back home, my hosts immediately started chopping, dicing, cutting, slicing
and cooking mountains of food and I doing what anyone would do in a room full
of women all armed with knives, tried to stay out of the way. They soon put me
to work running a large antique (by American standards) floor polisher that
looked brand new out of the box and I polished all the floors of the house. I
was able to corner my wife on one of her trips outside the kitchen area without
her knife and learned that the reason for all this flurry of activity was not
in celebration of my recent arrival as I might of hoped but because the newly
completed house renovation (the upper two levels anyway) were going to be
blessed by a priest while everyone, specifically my wife from London who provided
most of the financing for the renovations, were here to attend.
At noon, the local priest dressed in his vestments and two assistants carrying
armfuls of bottled holy water, arrived at the door. Candles were quickly passed
out and lit among the witnesses and the priest said a quick prayer. Assistant
number one handed him an uncapped bottle of holy water and the priest stepped
into the living room area that was lined with us witnesses. I expected the
priest to pour some of the water on his hand and touch things he wanted to
bless but on hindsight, I should have realized that method would have left vast
portions of the house unblessed. Instead, the priest like a racecar driver who
was now in victory lane after winning the race, raised the bottle over his head
and shook it dousing everything and everyone in the immediate vicinity with
holy water. The floors were wet, the ceiling dripping, the walls, books,
pictures, people and literally everything were drenched in holy water. The
priest traded the empty for another full bottle from one of his two assistants
and proceeded through the house with machine gun efficiency drowning everything
in his path. If satin had been present, he was no longer. Finally the last
bottle of holy water ran out on the lowest level of the house and the machine
gun blessing by the priest clicked on a few empty chambers/bottles and the
blessing ended.
Holy Water

I looked
around the room through my newly blessed glasses still dripping of holy water
and saw that all the candles were still miraculously still lit. All the human
candleholders were grinning from ear to ear and laughing, including the priest.
I began to suspect that maybe this had all been some fabulously executed prank
by the priest to see just how wet he could get everything and everyone and
still not have them angry at him. As I wiped the holy water off my glass, I was
thinking that the priest would have to douse holy water by fire hose if he
hoped to make this crowd angry. I got my glasses cleaned and back in place in
time to see the priest leading the charge toward the tables heaped with
recently blessed food. Dang, this priest was a really smooth operator!
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