Martes, Mayo 22, 2012

Day 2 of WCWD


You can't love without risk. 
Sometimes love is a terrible idea, 
except that it's not an idea. 

Sometimes love leaves suddenly and it's
as if you were lying to the other person all this time,
or they were lying to you.

Sometimes you want to be loved back and you think
if they'll just here your case,
if you present the evidence before them
as if in a court of law,
they will concede to your argument and
love you the way you love them, forever even,
and you'll both get to be happy. 

But that's not how it works. 

You jump from the plane and hope you're parachute opens.
The other person is that parachute. 
So if you can, jump over water, 
and from not too great of a height. 

Lunes, Mayo 21, 2012

Biyernes, Mayo 18, 2012

Brilliant or Fool

Every heart has a pain.

We only have different ways of expressing it. 

The fools hide it in their eyes,

while the brilliant hide it in their smile.

Are you the brilliant or the fool?

Well, are you?

I know they haven’t got us completely figured out. 

I know that some things belong to only us.

Then I would raise one eyebrow, smile brilliantly and say,

 “Well, are you in?” 

Huwebes, Mayo 17, 2012

Love is in the air

December 22, 2011 

First flight with T. 
Love was literally in the air. 


My Captain. 


























At the Baguio Airport Runway.


Surviving Any Long-Distance Relationship

Source: Thought Catalog 
         



It’s the kind of love that we can imagine compensates for the time you don’t get to spend together, for the extra effort one has to make in every gesture. And almost always, it’s romantic love. 

But as anyone who’s moved away from family and friends can attest, there are many kinds of relationships — and many kinds of love — which can suffer at the hands of distance and conflicting time zones.

We often forget just how much relationships are built on the small, quiet moments between us: laughing and passing a bowl of popcorn over a movie, car rides together, the happy silence of two people who love each other enough to not have to make small talk when the food arrives. 

And when these moments are eroded, when simple geography keeps us from speaking this quiet, almost entirely unconscious language of love and friendship, it can make maintaining any kind of relationship an act of constant upkeep.

It’s up to us, whether with family, friends, or a lover, to make that extra effort to make the other person feel special, feel remembered. And this seems obvious in romantic relationships — you wouldn’t expect a long-distance relationship to work out well if you weren’t investing time and energy into making them a part of your day. 

There will always be love between you, but we all need to feel that the few people who are really there are still thinking of us, even when far away.

There is something so beautiful, so reassuring, about being able to turn on a video chat or pick up a phone and be back in the warmth and familiarity of old friends and family. You can lose hours if you let yourself, laughing at stupid videos, eating dinner together over a computer screen, and gossiping about the day’s activities — every silly little thing that makes up your love to begin with. 

And knowing that there are people who will still get excited when they see your call pop up, who will look forward to catching up and planning the moment you’ll see each other again, can make even the most lonely moment in a new city bearable.

There is a certain level of maintenance required for every relationship, a moment here or there of simple pleasures and unspoken jokes that exist between people who miss each other. We have to remind each other — and ourselves — that distance is easily overcome these days, and that even a small effort can yield so much happiness and comfort. Just because the relationship is platonic doesn’t mean that it doesn’t need tending to every now and again, and we owe it to ourselves to maintain the beautiful things we started — even when we’re away for a while. 




Can love start this early?





Childhood love.


As fate would have it


K&T.
As fate would have it. 















Effort is my middle name


EFFORT 

Definition: An exertion of strength or power, whether physical or mental, in performing an act or aiming at an object; more or less strenuous endeavor; struggle directed to the accomplishment of an object; as, an effort to scale a wall.