Making myself feel at home again

I’ve been so disconnected to this place for a long time. Maybe because I wanted to stay away from my family while I was with J. I distanced myself from my home because I didn’t know at that time what lies ahead. Where will my future be? So I was already training myself to detach from the safe and familiar.

I walked this morning around the campus for some exercise and to buy fresh milk (the real fresh milk) and some yoghurt. I walked through the former “dirt road” adjacent to our high school’s former building.

The fire exit where I used to get to the roof to skip Literature class. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

This complex is now occupied by the Math Department and my high school transferred off-campus to a new building complex. This fire exit was my escape from the oppressive Literature class when I was in my third year in high school. The teacher that used to handle that class had put me down so much that I never once forgotten how bad I really felt when she did that. I was compared to my siblings and she basically said I didn’t amount to anything compared to them.

So guess what, Ms. A? It seemed like amounted to SOMETHING that you didn’t even imagine I could ever be.

The quadrangle is now so overgrown. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

This side is just a third of our high school building (now Math Dept). This quadrangle was where bands used to jam. The concrete stage can no longer be seen because of the overgrown weeds. There’s a sign outside of this complex that says this will be reconstructed (or torn down???) to give way to the new Registrar building.

Umali Freedom Park. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I walked around this oval because it was a nice morning.

Mussaenda in full bloom. It thrives during the rainy season. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
The kapok tree that spews cotton during the summer months. It used to be just a sapling when I was still a student. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Choco fresh milk and coffee milk. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Yoghurt. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
Little children playing football. That’s where I used to play when the lower field is too muddy for the football to roll. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
A nice picnic spot. This used to be a place where some fraternity rumbles started. Stupid. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
The chamber of torture. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

This classroom was where I had one of my least favorite subjects of my life, Plane Trigonometry. I hated it with a passion.

The Humanities Steps. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

During my undergrad years, this was the Humanities Building and its steps were once the hangout of the Communication Arts majors, who happened to be (more often than not) the rich kids of the campus or those who are also more fashionable and the party kids. Mere mortals like me back then wouldn’t dare sit on these steps. Like “hey, you can’t sit here. You’re not as cool as the rest of us.” I used to sit on the benches inside while waiting for my next class. More often than not, those were occupied by the social science majors, not as hoity-toity as the CommArts people.

The Biological Sciences wing. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

I literally grew up here. After classes in elementary, I would walk from my school to go to my mom’s office or lab here to wait for her so we can go home together (back when we lived off-campus). I played every afternoon here and the field beside this was where I used to play with the children of other faculty members. We used to catch dragonflies and play with freshly cut grass there. Now the molecular biology building sits there.

In my undergrad years, I used to sit on these steps and also on the concrete benches around this wing because I had a lot of biology subjects then (I thought of pursuing environmental science journalism, that’s why I majored in science communication then). I also waited for my crush to pass by every Tues and Thurs at 3 pm. He was a biology major. My friends and I would wait at these steps so I could have a glimpse of him. Hahahaha! I don’t know if he was one of my mom’s students but most of the pre-med students didn’t take her courses.

The concrete bench where I used to sit and review my notes before going to my Botany class. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
I haunted this area for 20 years—from elementary until my undergrad years. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

There are three four wings in this building complex: the biology institute, plant pathology, entomology/zoology, and molecular bio. I ran around the corridors of these wings when I was a kid and I remember encountering pressure cooker-type autoclaves outside the labs, hissing angrily at me. I was often afraid the clamps would suddenly pop and hit me on my face or temple when the steam became too much for them to handle. Until today I am still afraid of autoclaves.

This used to be a well-kept garden. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

In between the wings were gardens. I used to play pretend here, like it was my secret garden and I was in my own fantasy world, weaving stories inside my head while I waited for my mom to finish with work. It’s quite disheartening to see this fall into this state. Well, what can you expect after two years of no one going in here?

The college where my brother is dean now. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
There was an ongoing photo shoot when I took this and the guy seems annoyed at my intrusion.
Cosmos, my birth flower. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
The flower named after the female anatomy in Tagalog. Heeheehee! Photo hy CallMeCreation.com
Mariang Banga. According to local ghost stories, this statue moves and Maria carries her clay pot in different positions. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
This used to be a swampland. Every time it rained heavily, the rainwater got stranded here and this entire area will get flooded since it was just grassland back then. Photo by CallMeCreation.com
They are renovating that park in front of the Humanities building and make it similar to the one we have in UP Diliman. Photo by CallMeCreation.com

It’s nice going down the memory lane today. All these reminded of me why I called this home. Why I feel safe here and why I also think my girls will be freer here. Today I let Twin A walk around the campus by herself. It’s about time anyway.

That’s why my older sister felt at home in Brisbane, in UQ campus. She said the vibes are similar and both are laid back. People here are more outdoorsy, like in UQ.