Up there in Baguio City

Thanks, Nikka Corsino for this photo.

You just can’t please everyone.
Ask residents of Baguio City, the Philippines’ summer capital.
Everytime a couple of hicks from Manila come up and visit, the locals get complaints about the weather.
It’s either too warm or too cold.
If it’s too warm, they rant about congestion — vehicular and otherwise — and how Baguio’s weather, which attracts more tourists than it can handle, has become the city’s very enemy.
If it’s too cold, they complain about coming down with the flu and how people who live in the tropics aren’t really acclimatized to temperate weather.
If you believe these people, it’s never just right, up there in Baguio City.
Of course, I have a different opinion, having gotten parts of my formal and informal education in one of my favorite cities.
When I arrived last month, everything was perfect.
The weather was cool, the air was crisp, and my accommodations were — how do I put this? — on someone else’s tab.
I stayed in a standard hotel that offered a bathtub, hot water, cable television, and enough coffee to keep me awake for fourscore and seven years.
To what do I owe this undeserved privilege?
I was lucky enough to be chosen to participate in an energy conference organized by a non-government organization.
And no, it was far from being a summer junket.
It was — to use the term of my reporter friends — a nosebleed; one that lasted two days and temporarily stanched only by ice-cold alcoholic beverages.
All throughout the 48 hours, resource persons talked about ancillary charges* and indexation** as though these were widely understood by everyone.
The whole weekend allowed me to grasp these two concepts, however superficially.
Unfortunately, since discussions lasted until after supper, I was unable to hang out with my Baguio-based friends unlike last time.
It may have been all for the better.
After all, I had experienced enough misadventures to fill up a slapstick comedy movie a few hours before.
To reach the venue in time, I had to endure the Victory Liner Bus’s ticket lines.
It wasn’t pleasant.
It had the heavy flavor of a train queue during rush hour, complete with the stench of sweat and the stale air of impatience.
After finally being seated two hours later, I had to deal with a passenger who snored like a diesel engine.
And, upon arriving at three in the morning, tired, sleepy and irritable, I lost my notebook. Apparently, it slipped off my pants’ backpocket and fell onto someone else’s seat.
Good thing the bus conductor had the sense to keep it, failing to rid the world of the notes of an unrepentant blogger. [See: Picture of Conductor]
That single act of honesty made my weekend.
As a result, I was filled with good cheer all throughout the conference, helping create another fond memory of the City of Pines.
Up there in Baguio City, it’s always just right, if you ask me.

———————
From the Credit is Good but Her No-Good Friends are Too Cheap to Pay For Anything Dept. Photograph above was taken by Pauline Nikka Corsino. For more of her photos, visit her website. Thanks, Nikka.

From the Nosebleed Dept.

*Ancillary fees
These are collected by the National Grid Corp. of the Philippines (NGCP), the private entity now controlled by Henry Sy Jr. that manages the country’s electricity superhighway. These fees are for costs incurred in keeping contingency power reserves. These reserves are used to ensure that electricity service all across the country remains stable and uninterrupted, even in case of unexpected power plant shutdowns.
There are two kinds of contingency reserves — the first is the spinning reserve, which come from plants already turned on, ready to provide spare electricity at a moment’s notice should service be interrupted. The other, called a stand-by reserve, is expected to be ready to become a spinning reserve should the first be commissioned into service.

**Indexation
Since commodity prices go up due to inflation, companies also pay more for their maintenance and operating expenses, among others. As a result, they are allowed to increase rates to ensure a reasonable return on its investments, a practice known as indexing rates to inflation, a standard business procedure.
However, in certain power supply contracts, generation companies have based — or indexed — energy prices on costs of oil and coal — not inflation — even if there are no valid reasons for doing so.
In one case, a company pegged its local geothermal steam prices to world coal prices when the former, an indigenous energy resource, has no connection at all to the latter.
As a result, whenever coal costs in the world market went up, so did its geothermal steam prices. Result? Higher generation costs — and therefore increased electricity prices — for consumers.

Three reasons to skip Victory Liner’s Manila-Baguio Deluxe buses

Some Victory Liner deluxe buses have wire-type basket bags on seats while some have none.

Let’s say you plan to visit Baguio, the Philippines’ summer capital.

Except you’re unwilling and/or physically unprepared for the long drive to the city (a pity, especially if you don’t have a car.)

What to do?

Easy: You can buy or rent a car and hire a driver.

But that’s only if you make as much money as a good-for-nothing corporate vice-president, a useless government executive, or a corrupt jueteng lord.

For mere mortals, the only remaining option is to take the bus to Baguio.

But what kind of bus?

Will you take the one that leaves every half-hour, forcing you to scramble madly for seats while burdened with luggage heavier than your teenage daughter’s romantic angst?

Or will you choose a pricier but more convenient alternative?

Depends on your priorities and resources.

If you have cash to spare, you can hop on a Victory Liner Manila-Baguio Deluxe bus, which charges more than half for its regular aircon trips that cost P400.

But is P700 worth the whole trip?

For some passengers, it is.

Why?

Wider seats, faster trip, bragging rights, and yes, toilets. [See: Five reasons to take Victory Liner’s Manila-Baguio Deluxe Buses]

But some may disagree, especially those with limited supplies of cash.

After all, why pay extra for convenience that may last for less than a day? Why indeed?

Here are three reasons why you may want to reconsider the decision to hop on that bus, Gus.*

(Disclaimer: No arrangement, financial or otherwise, has been entered into by Victory Liner, its competitors, and this website.)

1) Prehistoric ticket reservation process.

Has Victory Liner ever heard of the Internet, that nifty gadget invented by former US vice president Al Gore (who also created the myth of climate change)? If it hasn’t yet, then the company should call up the US Embassy and request a free briefing. But seriously, if an airline company which arguably has more complicated operations can allow passengers to book their tickets online, why can’t Victory do the same?

To this day, Victory’s system is laughably prehistoric.

To book a reservation onboard the Manila-Baguio Deluxe Bus, passengers are required to personally pay a visit to its Cubao terminal at least a day before departure date, fall in line at one of the windows, and hope that the clerk gets the time and seat number right.

And passengers better make sure that their dogs don’t eat their tickets. Because if they do, little old Brownie better cough it up.

Since clerks don’t ask for your name during booking, showing proof that you actually paid for a seat is going to be more difficult than taking a crap inside the toilet while the bus is on Kennon. (Fortunately, none of that has ever happened to me yet.)

2) Buses have different standards.

Different buses serve the route.

Therefore, each bus has a different feature.

Others have electricity outlets useful for juicing up your iPod or your netbook. Some do not.

Having said that, only three things stay the same: comfort room, television, and free bottled water and snacks onboard.

Next time you climb onboard, don’t count on charging your phone and/or gadget while en route. After all, you don’t want to miss that incoming spam text message, even while sleeping.

And since cellphones have been brought up: Stewardesses onboard trips – stewardesses, yes, that’s what they call themselves – would do well to ask passengers to put their cellphones on silent mode during the trip. Hearing cellphones go off can ruin perfectly good B-movies shown onboard.

3) Buses lack features and suffer from poor upkeep.

Although seats offer more space, some may not work at all.

As a result, whenever passengers need to recline or push the seats back up, they almost always require staff assistance.

Which actually happened to me on the very first time I got on a deluxe bus to Baguio.

For some reason, the knob that controls my seat’s leg rest was broken off from the whole mechanism.

Whenever I felt the need to put my foot up, I had to call the attendant, who didn’t trust me enough that she kept the knob to herself.

Good thing I’m not a finicky passenger – reader alert: I am talking about myself here – so I let that whole inconvenience issue slide.

That same bus also didn’t have those basket-type wire bags attached to the back of the seat in front of you. (The bus that I took on the way back to Manila did have this though).

As a result, items I wanted to have easy access to during the whole trip was stored improperly.

The book I was reading was squeezed into one of the handles while my bulky, overused smartphone was able to withstand my heft as it snuggled beside me.

I’m happy to report that both items – a Vintage UK trade paperback edition of Martin Amis’ Money and a Treo 650 – survived the trip.

And yes, one other thing: Since the bus provided internet access anyway, is a lap desk for each deluxe passenger who can use them for their laptops too much to ask?

_______

*From the No Need to be Coy, Roy Dept. The phrase was borrowed from the lyrics of Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover as sung by Paul Simon.

Five reasons to take Victory Liner’s Manila-Baguio De Luxe Buses

This bus isn't the same bus that a certain blogger took to Baguio since he's cheap enough to endure the embarrassment of not getting a digital camera. And his phone camera sucks big time. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Everyone pays a visit to Baguio.
Whether taken during heat wave or high water, typhoon season or tropical depression, the excursion to the summer capital has become a Filipino rite of passage that must be experienced at least once in a lifetime, much like sex, death, and correct income tax declarations.*
This is understandable.
After all, Baguio offers what others can’t: the Philippine version of winter, allowing local visitors wishing for snow to wear stupid jackets warm enough to melt fat.
Despite increasing urbanization, traffic congestion, and worst of all, tourists, Baguio remains a city that even the most jaded, cynical Filipino will have difficulty being ashamed of.
Its arts scene is lively and dynamic, its business prospects never had it so good, and its residents remain too colorful for words.
And just about the best way to visit the country’s summer capital is on a private vehicle driven by someone else (i.e., a hotttie in a halter top and microskirt behind the wheel of an SUV).
However, if you neither have access to Tony Starke’s resources nor to Hugh Hefner’s bunnies, the best way to Baguio is on Victory Liner’s De Luxe Manila-Baguio buses.
The no-stopover service offers three roundtrips daily, probably making it the quickest, most convenient way to and from Manila and Baguio.
But the service does come at a premium.
The current one-way fare is P700 per passenger, nearly twice the price for the aircon bus ticket on the same route which costs around P400.
Is the 300 peso difference worth it? Depends on your expectations.
Here are five reasons why it’s worth paying extra. Other reasons for disliking the Baguio De Luxe Express will be posted in another blog entry for the purposes of fairness and whatever closely resembles objectivity these days. [See: Three reasons to skip Victory Liner’s Manila-Baguio Deluxe buses]

(Disclaimer: No arrangement, financial or otherwise, has been made between this blogger and Victory Liner, its owners, representatives, and/or its affiliate businesses. Or at least not just yet. Hehe. To the ethics police: The previous remark was uttered in a jocular fashion, an example of what is commonly referred to as a joke.)

1) One word: Space.

Those accustomed to flying coach will be happy to discover that the bus seats are larger — slightly smaller than a regular La-Z-Boy recliner — and spaces for legs and elbows are roomier. No elbow contest will ever take place for the dominion of the armrest because — guess what? —  everyone gets two of each, a provision made possible by cutting the number of seats per row to three from four and installing only 30 such seats in a vehicle designed to carry 50.
At any point during the trip, you can stand up, do the Twist, and not touch anything.
However, dancing should be kept to a minimum to prevent any untoward incidents (i.e., forced ejection, murder, etc.) on the Baguio De Luxe Express.

2) Buses leave and arrive on schedule.

And sometimes, even half an hour earlier than expected.
Which is a good thing, especially for those known for always failing to arrive on time.
None of the buses I took during a recent two-day visit to Baguio was delayed.
On the overnight bus back to Manila, we were on warp speed.
During a short but failed attempt at sleep, I closed my eyes, making a mental note that we were in Pangasinan. A few minutes later, we were already making a left toward the SCTEX in Tarlac, a realization that woke me up.
Had our bus not been slowed down by the repair of a viaduct bordering the provinces of Bulacan and Pampanga, the whole trip would have just taken us a record four hours. Despite the delay, the trip took four and a half hours, just long enough to keep anyone from actually falling asleep.

3) Buses offer Wi-Fi.

At least on day trips. (No such provision was announced during a midnight trip I once took.)
But I was unable to test the stability of the connection or the stewardesses’ ability to assist those who might have net access issues because I didn’t bring my laptop.
What I do know — at least from stuff off my Twitter feed — is that certain motorists stay close to Victory Liner buses because doing so helps them filch a free yet temporary connection whenever needed. So next time you find yourself cruising along the North Luzon Expressway and you’re itching to tell your Facebook friends about it, you know what to do. Tip: buy life insurance beforehand.

4) Free bottled water and snacks.

Anyone will accept anything as long as its free. (Which explains why online porn is so popular. But that’s another story.)
In any case, refreshments offered onboard are nothing to scoff at since it’s better than the crap served on local airlines.
Free bottled water is served ice-cold (reminding tipplers of their favorite drinks) and the snacks — medium-sized packets of Bread Pan or biscuits depending on supplies — are just right for the trip.
Refreshments aren’t exactly free lunch though. Don’t risk an ulcer onboard by expecting a feast if you’re famished.

5) And best of all, buses offer restrooms.

If, at any point during the trip, you happen to feel like doing either numbers one, two, or worse, both, you can walk —  very casually, just like the experienced tourist you pretend to be — to the toilet, located in the middle or at the end, depending on the kind of bus you’re on.
Buses with toilets at the end are better than those with ones at the middle.
Why?
Toilets at the middle are located three or so steps below the passenger cabin.
Have you tried to climb down a flight of stairs — however short — located inside a vehicle moving at 100 kilometers per hour while in a hurry to get the pressure off certain unsavory organs ready to burst on any given second?
Easier said than done, my friend, easier said than done.
In any case, built-in toilets are a relief for the diarrhea-prone, those with weak stomachs, and gifted individuals who pee enough to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool after drinking a glass of water.
On both trips to and from Baguio, I tried the facilities out.
Good thing the bus wasn’t on any of the long and winding roads leading to and from the city.
Because if they were, my aim would be severely weakened, much like the guys with guns during the Manila hostage crisis. [See: Manila hostage crisis]
And the toilet would suffer a different kind of massacre.

———————

*From the Give Credit Where It’s Due Dept. That was paraphrased from a Woody Allen joke.

Second life

Just one of the many structures in Baguio city leveled by the 1990 earthquake. (http://www.cityofpines.com/baguioquake/quake.html)

(In which our supposedly indefatigable protagonist remembers the experience of being on Kennon Road en route to Baguio city during the July 1990 earthquake. Apologies to those who might be offended by this piece’s light treatment of the tragedy.)

No, it’s not the online role-playing game.

It’s more like the meaning of — and I say this literally — my existence.

Twenty years ago, I could have done a favor to my enemies, past, present, and future.

I could have died, leaving many entities sad, not least of which include my future creditors whose call center agents have my number on speed dial.

Yes, I could either been buried under tons of rock, trapped inside a crumbling edifice, or swallowed up by the earth during the 1990 Baguio earthquake.

Instead, I lived, proving to one and all — friends, foes, felons, and freeloaders — that life is unfair, people live and die without any reason whatsoever, and I could yet be a prospective contestant on Survivor: Baguio City, Earthquake edition.

God — or whoever the hell is up there — may have had a special plan for me, details of which I will disclose as soon as I tune into the 700 Club (and that may take some time.)

On the afternoon of July 16, 1990, I was on a Baguio-bound bus with V., the girlfriend of my friend, confident that both of us would reach the Philippines’ summer capital by four in the afternoon.

At that time, V. and I were both Manila-based sophomores at the University of the Philippines in Baguio City and we were looking to catch our 4:00 to 5:30 PM Political Science 114 class taught by Professor Athena Casambre-Rood.

We never arrived.

When the earthquake struck, our bus was nearing Camp 2 along Kennon Road, considered then and now as the shortest but the trickiest route to the City of Pines.

Sleep proves elusive

Minutes after our bus left the stop-over in Urdaneta, Pangasinan — a mid-end restaurant called Villa Fernandina — I decided to catch some shut-eye, even if we only had an hour or two to go until we reached our destination.

Sleeping was the best option available to me at that time.

The small TV set and VCR lodged at the center of the bus was showing whatever remained of the Jean Claude Van Damme movie, whose plot nor protagonist failed to catch my interest.

Although I brought a cheap paperback — I forget now whether it dealt with Kurt Vonnegut’s chronosynclastic infindibula or Robert Ludlum’s Carlos — reading proved difficult.

The bus swayed to the curves of Kennon Road, making it hard to focus on the printed word as rendered on newsprint using a font no bigger than my brain.

The only other activity available to me involved making the moves on my traveling companion, an effort that would be viewed in bad taste, then and now.

Which is not to say that the thought never entered my mind.

On the contrary, it occurred to me with a numbing regularity.

After all, I was the first one to ask V. out, the first in my series of unsuccessful, amateurish attempts to get some serious action during my teenage years.

However, she later chose to date J., my college buddy, driving me to drink and desperation and turning me into — at that time — the world’s youngest amateur pseudo-philosopher who eased pain and heartache by ingesting various substances, alcoholic and otherwise.

But on that bus to Baguio, when I felt that I had an opportunity to steal a kiss or — better yet — cop a feel, my pretensions to being a gentleman and a good friend won out.

I didn’t make any advances before, during, and after we stared death in the face.

The earthquake strikes

All my romantic notions disappeared as soon as I attempted to sleep.

Not long after, romantic thoughts were sublimated by snoozing, pea-sized pebbles came raining down on the bus windows, in what appeared to be a miniature landslide.

The occurrence supposedly indicated that the earthquake had started (or so someone told me much later).

However, since we were cruising along, no one onboard felt any of the tremors of what would become one of the country’s strongest earthquakes.

I saw it but I ignored it.

Extended travel time on a bus was far too precious to be spent awake, a belief that I hold to this day, disaster or otherwise.

But sleep would not be possible until hours later.

Ten or so minutes into the trip, the bus lurched and made a complete stop, interrupting whatever passed for my reverie.

As soon as the door opened, the conductor jumped out, animated by what appeared to be an overzealous urge to reach the scene of the action.

From my window seat, I was able to figure out what the disruption was all about.

A boulder the size of a small planet crashed into another bus that was in front of us, splitting the vehicle into two.

The accident precluded road travel to and from the scene, unless you were riding a small vehicle (i.e., a bike, a tricycle, or a motorized piece of luggage).

Immediately, improvised stretchers — made up of nothing more than a blanket whose corners were tied up on both ends of a stick — started shuttling between the carnage and the road’s shoulder, presumably a safe spot.

Safety was relative.

Powerful aftershocks rattled our location, confusing volunteers who transported survivors.

Was it prudent to place survivors along the road shoulders, which in turn, might leave them unprotected from large falling rocks? Or should they be allowed to seek refuge inside structures — such as roadside neighborhood stores, which in turn, might collapse with another tremor and are no match for large, falling rocks?

No one knew.

However, that didn’t discourage the volunteers from helping out.

They proceeded with their heroic, thankless tasks and I just watched them, an otherwise healthy, able-bodied but nevertheless helpless college student.

From the bus window, I saw a victim’s bloodied arm hanging from one of the makeshift stretchers. I drew the curtains and sat tight, deciding that I had enough action — such as it was — to last me a year.

To this day, blood — whether in amounts big and small, imagined or otherwise — makes me dizzy, an unexplained predisposition.

This explains my lifelong aversion for slasher films, horror movies, and similarly-themed TV shows, despite their awards and critical acclamations (i.e., True Blood, Dexter).

But that, as they say, is another story.

A night inside the bus

Common sense (or whatever remained of it) prompted me to stay inside the bus at that time.

It helped prevent a fainting spell, which would have compounded the disaster and bring embarrassment to my companion and myself.

While my sense of sight was shielded from the developing tragedy outside, my sense of smell wasn’t.

The bus’ open door welcomed fertilizer fumes inside the vehicle’s interior which were released when the earth split open. Throughout the afternoon and night, the strong scent — akin to the mixture of warm soil and heavy rain — came and went like aftershocks.

At certain times during the night, the odor engulfed the cabin, its intense earthy smell a reminder of what lay beyond the fragile shell of our bus: death and devastation.

Before nightfall, some of the passengers decided to proceed to Baguio, mistakenly thinking that the city was intact.

They had the surprise of their lives when they arrived.

The city was disconnected from the outside world, accessible only by helicopters.

And since the earthquake damaged the city’s power and phone lines, the only forms of communication possible were through carrier pigeons, smoke signals, and mental telepathy.

Singing, clapping, and shouting were also available but were disallowed for fear of waking up the neighbors.

Mobile phones first made their inaugural appearance during the days after the earthquake, arguably their first in a Philippine disaster relief operation.

However, since V. and I had no access to such technology and neither of us were clairvoyants, we chose to wait it out for the night.

Manila was four or so hours away and we barely had any idea what the trip back, let alone traveling conditions, would be like.

So we were fated to spend the night inside the bus.

The only other accommodation available was a makeshift eatery — a simple affair composed of a G.I. sheet tethered on a four wooden poles covering a long table and a bench.

It was staffed by people whose hospitality we were already unwilling to test.

With nothing but goodwill, the staff was prompted serve us supper, using up more than their monthly reserves of food, patience, and Tagalog phrases.

As we wolfed down our meals that night, tremors broke out more than once, interrupting our impromptu dining experience. These aftershocks forced us to run to the middle of the road, with the mistaken notion that it was safer than being inside the shack.

It wasn’t.

During one powerful aftershock that lasted five seconds, I waited for V., ran outside, stumbled, and nearly stabbed myself with a spoon.

After two or three times of playing earthquake hide and seek, we finally managed to finish our supper.

With nothing else to do, we boarded the bus, settled in our seats, and tried to sleep.

Despite our exhaustion, sleep wasn’t easy, thanks to the occasional aftershock and whatever remained of the Van Damme movie.

Here comes the judge

Early the next day, V. and I chose to go back to Manila, a decision that would later prove prudent.

Radio reports aired at that time indicated that among the cities badly damaged by the earthquake were Baguio, Cabanatuan, and Dagupan.

As we retrieved our luggage, the driver and the conductor both bid us a safe trip, telling us that they were duty-bound to stay with the bus.

V. and I walked along Kennon until we reached an area that was served by tricycles in a peculiar, ad hoc fashion.

These tricycles ferried passengers up to a point where the road was blocked by rubble.

As soon as travelers walked to the other side of the rubble, another set of tricycles plied the route until the next roadside blockade.

Drivers on both routes charged us P25 apiece, worth roughly $1 at that time. (A dollar in 1989 is worth $1.79 in 2010, which makes the fare P45, going by my own estimates.)

After traversing both routes, we reached Rosario in La Union, where we got on a regular Olongapo-bound Philippine Rabbit bus.

Since we were too stressed to travel to Manila, we decided to get off at Urdaneta in Pangasinan, where J.’s dad — and my companion’s prospective father-in-law at that time — was a judge.

We arrived shortly after lunch, when our host was finished with his duties for the day.

Pleased by his two unexpected visitors, His Honor decided to drive us to Dagupan, which was an hour away.

With very little explanation, the judge — who at that time was already nearing retirement age — motioned us to the used but nevertheless elegant golden brown Opel Rekord.

With a single hand gesture, he ordered us to climb inside.

We did as we were told since we were in no position to disobey, let alone risk being charged with contempt.

During that late afternoon drive, we saw a stretch of highway ripped asunder, rendering it unpassable.

Blocks of concrete lay scattered on the brown earth, jumbled pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that would take months to repair.

Beyond the rubble was a clear and undamaged stretch of highway as far as the eye could see.

The Opel Rekord, the pride of German automotive engineering, could have crept along the uneven road.

However, I no longer recall whether the rubble discouraged us from proceeding to the Dagupan.

What I can distinctly remember is that the disaster sharpened my sense of being alive.

As we drove back to Urdaneta that afternoon,

I relished that sensation, the feeling of security and safety, while on the front seat of a roomy, mid-sized sedan, a cool wind blowing into my face.

It was unforgettable.

(In which our supposedly indefatigable protagonist remembers the experience of being on Kennon Road en route to Baguio city during the July 1990 earthquake. Apologies to those who might be offended by this piece’s light treatment of the tragedy.)

No, it’s not the online role-playing game.

It’s more like the meaning of — and I say this literally — my existence.

Twenty years ago, I could have done a favor to my enemies, past, present, and future.

I could have died, leaving many entities sad, not least of which include my future creditors whose call center agents have my number on speed dial.

Yes, I could either been buried under tons of rock, trapped inside a crumbling edifice, or swallowed up by the earth during the 1990 Baguio earthquake.

Instead, I lived, proving to one and all — friends, foes, felons, and freeloaders — that life is unfair, people live and die without any reason whatsoever, and I could yet be a prospective contestant on Survivor: Baguio City, Earthquake edition.

God — or whoever the hell is up there — may have had a special plan for me, details of which I will disclose as soon as I tune into the 700 Club (and that may take some time.)

On the afternoon of July 16, 1990, I was on a Baguio-bound bus with V., the girlfriend of my friend, confident that both of us would reach the Philippines’ summer capital by four in the afternoon.

At that time, V. and I were both Manila-based sophomores at the University of the Philippines in Baguio City and we were looking to catch our 4:00 to 5:30 PM Political Science 114 class taught by Professor Athena Casambre-Rood.

We never arrived.

When the earthquake struck, our bus was nearing Camp 2 along Kennon Road, considered then and now as the shortest but the trickiest route to the City of Pines.

Sleep proves elusive

Minutes after our bus left the stop-over in Urdaneta, Pangasinan — a mid-end restaurant called Villa Fernandina — I decided to catch some shut-eye, even if we only had an hour or two to go until we reached our destination.

Sleeping was the best option available to me at that time.

The small TV set and VCR lodged at the center of the bus was showing whatever remained of the Jean Claude Van Damme movie, whose plot nor protagonist failed to catch my interest.

Although I brought a cheap paperback — I forget now whether it dealt with Kurt Vonnegut’s chronosynclastic infindibula or Robert Ludlum’s Carlos — reading proved difficult.

The bus swayed to the curves of Kennon Road, making it hard to focus on the printed word as rendered on newsprint using a font no bigger than my brain.

The only other activity available to me involved making the moves on my traveling companion, an effort that would be viewed in bad taste, then and now.

Which is not to say that the thought never entered my mind.

On the contrary, it occurred to me with a numbing regularity.

After all, I was the first one to ask V. out, the first in my series of unsuccessful, amateurish attempts to get some serious action during my teenage years.

However, she later chose to date J., my college buddy, driving me to drink and desperation and turning me into — at that time — the world’s youngest amateur pseudo-philosopher who eased pain and heartache by ingesting various substances, alcoholic and otherwise.

But on that bus to Baguio, when I felt that I had an opportunity to steal a kiss or — better yet — cop a feel, my pretensions to being a gentleman and a good friend won out.

I didn’t make any advances before, during, and after we stared death in the face.

The earthquake strikes

All my romantic notions disappeared as soon as I attempted to sleep.

Not long after, romantic thoughts were sublimated by snoozing, pea-sized pebbles came raining down on the bus windows, in what appeared to be a miniature landslide.

The occurrence supposedly indicated that the earthquake had started (or so someone told me much later).

However, since we were cruising along, no one onboard felt any of the tremors of what would become one of the country’s strongest earthquakes.

I, for one, saw it but ignored it.

Extended travel time on a bus was far too precious to be spent awake, a belief that I hold to this day, disaster or otherwise.

But sleep would not be possible until hours later.

Ten or so minutes into the trip, the bus lurched and made a complete stop, interrupting whatever passed for my reverie.

As soon as the door opened, the conductor jumped out, animated by what appeared to be an overzealous urge to reach the scene of the action.

From my window seat, I was able to figure out what the disruption was all about.

A boulder the size of a small planet crashed into another bus that was in front of us, splitting the vehicle into two.

The accident precluded road travel to and from the scene, unless you were riding a small vehicle (i.e., a bike, a tricycle, or a motorized piece of luggage).

Immediately, improvised stretchers — made up of nothing more than a blanket whose corners were tied up on both ends of a stick — started shuttling between the carnage and the road’s shoulder, presumably a safe spot.

Safety was relative.

Powerful aftershocks rattled our location, confusing volunteers who transported survivors.

They were caught between a rock and a hard place.

Was it prudent to place survivors along the road shoulders, which in turn, might leave them unprotected from large falling rocks? Or should they be allowed to seek refuge inside structures — such as roadside neighborhood stores, which in turn, might collapse with another tremor and are no match for large, falling rocks?

No one knew.

However, that didn’t discourage the volunteers from helping out.

They proceeded with their heroic, thankless tasks and I just watched them, an otherwise healthy, able-bodied but nevertheless helpless college student.

From the bus window, I saw a victim’s bloodied arm hanging from one of the makeshift stretchers. I drew the curtains and sat tight, deciding that I had enough action — such as it was — to last me a year.

To this day, blood — whether in amounts big and small, imagined or otherwise — makes me dizzy, an unexplained predisposition.

This explains my lifelong aversion for slasher films, horror movies, and similarly-themed TV shows, despite their awards and critical acclamations (i.e., True Blood, Dexter).

But that, as they say, is another story.

A night inside the bus

Common sense (or whatever remained of it) prompted me to stay inside the bus at that time.

It helped prevent a fainting spell, which would have compounded the disaster and bring embarrassment to my companion and myself.

While my sense of sight was shielded from the developing tragedy outside, my sense of smell wasn’t.

The bus’ open door welcomed fertilizer fumes inside the vehicle’s interior which were released when the earth split open. Throughout the afternoon and night, the strong scent — akin to the mixture of warm soil and heavy rain — came and went like aftershocks.

At certain times during the night, the odor engulfed the cabin, its intense earthy smell a reminder of what lay beyond the fragile shell of our bus: death and devastation.

Before nightfall, some of the passengers decided to proceed to Baguio, mistakenly thinking that the city was intact.

They had the surprise of their lives when they arrived.

The city was disconnected from the outside world, accessible only by helicopters.

And since the earthquake damaged the city’s power and phone lines, the only forms of communication possible were through carrier pigeons, smoke signals, and mental telepathy.

Singing, clapping, and shouting were also available but were disallowed for fear of waking up the neighbors.

Mobile phones first made their inaugural appearance during the days after the earthquake, arguably their first in a Philippine disaster relief operation.

However, since V. and I had no access to such technology and neither of us were clairvoyants, we chose to wait it out for the night.

Manila was four or so hours away and we barely had any idea what the trip back, let alone traveling conditions, would be like.

So we were fated to spend the night inside the bus.

The only other accommodation available was a makeshift eatery — a simple affair composed of a G.I. sheet tethered on a four wooden poles covering a long table and a bench.

It was staffed by people whose hospitality we were already unwilling to test.

With nothing but goodwill, the staff was prompted serve us supper, using up more than their monthly reserves of food, patience, and Tagalog phrases.

As we wolfed down our meals that night, tremors broke out more than once, interrupting our impromptu dining experience. These aftershocks forced us to run to the middle of the road, with the mistaken notion that it was safer than being inside the shack.

It wasn’t.

During one powerful aftershock that lasted five seconds, I waited for V., ran outside, stumbled, and nearly stabbed myself with a spoon.

After two or three times of playing earthquake hide and seek, we finally managed to finish our supper.

With nothing else to do, we boarded the bus, settled in our seats, and tried to sleep.

Despite our exhaustion, sleep wasn’t easy, thanks to the occasional aftershock and whatever remained of the Van Damme movie.

Here comes the judge

Early the next day, V. and I chose to go back to Manila, a decision that would later prove prudent.

Radio reports aired at that time indicated that among the cities badly damaged by the earthquake were Baguio, Cabanatuan, and Dagupan.

As we retrieved our luggage, the driver and the conductor both bid us a safe trip, telling us that they were duty-bound to stay with the bus.

V. and I walked along Kennon until we reached an area that was served by tricycles in a peculiar, ad hoc fashion.

These tricycles ferried passengers up to a point where the road was blocked by rubble.

As soon as travelers walked to the other side of the rubble, another set of tricycles plied the route until the next roadside blockade.

Drivers on both routes charged us P25 apiece, worth roughly $1 at that time. (A dollar in 1989 is worth $1.79 in 2010, which makes the fare P45, going by my own estimates.)

After traversing both routes, we reached Rosario in La Union, where we got on a regular Olongapo-bound Philippine Rabbit bus.

Since we were too stressed to travel to Manila, we decided to get off at Urdaneta in Pangasinan, where J.’s dad — and my companion’s prospective father-in-law at that time — was a judge.

We arrived shortly after lunch, when our host was finished with his duties for the day.

Pleased by his two unexpected visitors, His Honor decided to drive us to Dagupan, which was an hour away.

With very little explanation, the judge — who at that time was already nearing retirement age — motioned us to the used but nevertheless elegant golden brown Opel Rekord.

With a single hand gesture, he ordered us to climb inside.

We did as we were told since we were in no position to disobey, let alone risk being charged with contempt.

During that late afternoon drive, we saw a stretch of highway ripped asunder, rendering it unpassable.

Blocks of concrete lay scattered on the brown earth, jumbled pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that would take months to repair.

Beyond the rubble was a clear and undamaged stretch of highway as far as the eye could see.

The Opel Rekord, the pride of German automotive engineering, could have crept along the uneven road.

However, I no longer recall whether the rubble discouraged us from proceeding to the Dagupan.

What I can distinctly remember is that the disaster sharpened my sense of being alive.

As we drove back to Urdaneta that afternoon,

I relished that sensation, the feeling of security and safety, while on the front seat of a roomy, mid-sized sedan, a cool wind blowing into my face.

It was unforgettable.