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What Happened When I Returned To Moscow With A New Passport

Behind The Glass Partition Domodedovo Airport, Moscow, the Russian Federation. I got up from my seat and dragged my weary body out of the plane, where I had sat for almost five hours of a peaceful flight from Dubai. Pacing myself, I walked straight to the long tube that led to the long queues, which led to the immigration officers who would stamp my PILIPINAS passport, granting me access to enter this bolshoi nation—a place I sometimes fondly call Mother Russia. Moscow that evening had a welcoming temperature of -3 degrees Celsius, and I thought that it was not so bad, coming from +27 degrees back home in Manila. As I stood there acclimatizing myself to the weather, I realized that the temperature inside the airport was actually rather toasty, as always. I stared at the people's expressionless, perfectly contoured faces and tried to mentally rehearse what to do next when my turn came. First, I would remove my eyeglasses; second, I would approach the immigration officer and give he...

In the Midst of Separateness: An April 2020 Reflection

In my recent blog posts, I briefly shared my insights on the seasons of togetherness and separateness . It's a process, an ongoing journey that I embrace wholeheartedly, as underscored by what's going on in the world now. Every country is on a preventive COVID-19 lockdown. It is important to mention that as I labor and pounce on the keyboard, my husband, my children, and I are in three different geographic locations, namely Moscow, Batangas, and Mindoro. What a way to illustrate "separateness" and "growth" when you are actually living it! I think that I will never be the same once this pandemic is over. Businesses were closed and millions of jobs were lost. Then, suddenly, we found every student homeschooling and most workers at home — working. Words like "social distancing," "quarantine," "hoarding," "panic buying," "flattening the curve," and "lockdown" have become just a few of the operative wor...

"How Can I Miss You If You Never Go Away?" Part 2 of 2 - SEPARATENESS

  "Every marriage is made up of two ingredients, togetherness and separateness. In good marriages, the partners carry equal loads of those. Let's say there are 100 points of togetherness and 100 points of separateness. In a good relationship, one partner expresses 50 points of togetherness and 50 points of separateness, and the other does the same. They both do things on their own, and that creates some mutual longing for the other, and the togetherness creates some need for separateness." —Boundaries by Dr. Henry Cloud Part 2 The Season of Separateness As quoted above, Dr. Henry Cloud described a healthy togetherness and separateness in marriage. But it is interesting to note that this also holds true for a healthy parent-child relationship—especially for home-educating families, presuming that they have a close relationship with each other. This is the kind of perspective that helped you process and prepare for what would inevitably happen in the future as your daughter...

"How Can I Miss You If You Never Go Away?" Part 1 of 2 - TOGETHERNESS

Part 1  The Season of Togetherness How do you wrap your mama-heart around the thought of your daughter leaving home for college in Manila, Philippines? From nursery, kinder 1, and kinder 2, to grades 1 through 12—we are talking about 15 wonderful years of preparing her for this season of going to college. "She's finally on her own now and away from your leash" was a joke that somehow felt like reality. But would those 15 years be enough to train her to overcome the challenges of university life, and eventually, the real world for which she was called for a purpose? Yes. You think so. You will worry and you will be scared naturally, thinking about how she will survive living mostly on her own in the big city. But that is not how you're going to take this season of your life. It's not about worrying or doubting, although you can't deny that this struggle is real. What is this all about, then? This is all about your posture—how you're going to welcome the ine...

When the Unthinkable Hits: Responding to James 1:2-4

"Consider it all JOY, brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect result, so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing." James 1:2-4 Consider it all JOY, my brethren, when you encounter various trials... such as the tragedy that struck my family last October 3, when two gun-wielding criminals riding a motorbike fired multiple shots at my eldest brother and his 15-year-old son. It happened so fast—in a split second—that both of them died on the spot in broad daylight, right in the driveway of their own home. It was difficult watching the news on national TV and on the internet in the following days. It was a double-murder tragedy. I've seen hundreds of news stories like this before. But this day was different. This was my brother. This was my nephew. You and I both know that a tragedy is a tragedy; it is unthinkable, it cuts so deep, and the shards of glass feel perma...