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Tuesday, October 6, 2009

What It Takes To Be a Man

By Bobbie Labastilla


I was six years old then when someone came knocking at our door around seven in the evening. I was asked to open it and so I did. After that, I saw myself standing in front of a huge man wearing a police uniform. That man was one of the people whom I feared the most, admired the most, and wanted to surpass the most – my father. He’s huge, strict, and a man who had once killed a lot of people as a member of the army’s elite force – an existing sample of this society’s sickening idea of a real man.

“He’s back”, I said to myself as he stepped inside the house. He always left during the night for an operation and came back during the next night. But that time it was different; I noticed him trying to get something from his bag and giving it to me. It was the first time he gave me something after one of their operations so I excitedly tore the plastic cellophane that was covering it. After doing so, there it was, in my little hands – a bunch of M16 bullet capsules. I didn’t ask him where it came from; I knew those were from the bullets they used while pursuing a criminal. I heard them talking about that mission moments before father and his companions left our house. I also didn’t bother to ask him why he gave it to me; I just played with it along with all of my other toys just like how kids should do it.

I never imagined him giving those to me. I’ve always felt that he didn’t like me. I don’t blame him though; he had this super macho image to maintain while his son was playing with his sister and her paper dolls. I had no choice because my elder brother didn’t live with us back then and I wasn’t allowed to go out of the house – I had to play with someone. There was also this time when he caught his gay brother putting make up on me while he was babysitting. But the worst reason of all was the fact that I was named Bobbie by mother – the exact name of my mother’s nail polish. He always told me that a person’s name is one of the things that determine a person’s personality and future. He said all of my siblings have beautiful names because he was the one who gave it to them. He also said that my name will lead me nowhere and the only reason why my mother kept on denying it was because she was the one who gave it to me.

Even until now father always seem to prefer my elder brother Mike over me. Mike is the kind of guy who likes to hide his emotions from others, has a very promising career in politics, and is physically strong – the exact kind of guy that I will never become. One day while everyone in the house was looking at me playing, Mike arrived because finally he was going to live with us. In an instant I saw everyone around me left and went to him instead. As I saw his fat body approaching the house, the air was suddenly filled with the scent of competition – it smelled like fire and gunpowder mixed together.

“Left, right, left, right, left!” I can still hear those words I once shouted as father taught me how to march while I was wearing that mini-sized army uniform I got during Christmas. He was preparing me to become a boy scout but my mother told me my body can’t endure being a scout. Right then and there I saw the disappointment that was instantly engraved on my father’s face. I felt so helpless; there was nothing I could do to change the fact that I have a weak body.

I felt father’s attention slowly leaving me and going to Mike instead. Day by day it depleted until I could barely feel it at all. I wished I could endure hits from my father’s belt buckle just like Mike.. I longed for his punishments so he could spend time with me. I missed those fading memories like when father and I were sitting on a bleacher watching those basketball games which I didn’t actually enjoyed.



I knew he disliked me because he was afraid that I would become gay; I had to prove myself but I didn’t know how. Every time I’m with my brother and father I’ve always felt I couldn’t connect to them. It was like I have to pass through a locked door that would lead me to them; I had to force it open. Those were the times which made me realize that I should struggle to regain the things that I lost and the things that I want. I learned that one must struggle to become a man. It was those times of loneliness which made conclude that a man’s life is a continuous struggle to prove himself to the world.

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