| Welcome to the 197th issue
of Nueva Ecija Journal.
So you live in Cabanatuan
City.
Congratulations. You're in
one of the three top cities in the country as rated by the highly respected
Asian Institute of Management.
I hate you, too, because
you live in a much better place than I do, though admittedly I spend most
of my waking/working hours in your city, too.
Consider these:
1. In Cabanatuan
City, you hold on tightly to the drinking glass before opening the faucet;
it could fall and break due to the high water pressure. Here where
I live, I hold on to the drinking glass when I open the faucet; it could
fall and break when I doze off while waiting for the trickle of water to
fill it up. The water district here brags about how it has extended its
service to nearby barangays, and seems to forget that right in the city
proper, household faucets connected to the American era distribution pipes
buried neck deep under the paved streets are dry most of the day.
2. In your city you are served
by a very efficient power company with a fleet of service trucks and crew
at its disposal whenever the need arises. In my city, I can't quite understand
why I have to call up the electric cooperative's main office in the next
town whenever a blackout happens on my street, when the cooperative maintains
a branch office only two blocks away from my house. My street, barely three
blocks long, is also possibly the place most often affected by blackouts
in the entire city and the cooperative can check this out in their records,
if they bother to keep them. Yet no one has ever come up with a final solution
to the problem.
3. Just like there, yes,
it's peaceful here, too -- a few fatal ambuscades, a cockpit raid and a
market fire notwithstanding. But no, it's not peaceful where my house stands.
Bored drivers at a tricycle queue in front of the city plaza just three
houses away, while away their time until midnight listening to loud music
from stereo sets installed in their cabs, with no one -- not a cop or even
just a barangay tanod -- reminding them that they are in a mostly residential
area at a time when residents are already in bed. My next door neighbor
opened a videoke bar, but the law of marketing and economics, and possibly
God Himself, intervened and closed down the project before the profits
even started to roll in. Then, somebody at city hall had this dumb idea
to give free physical fitness lessons at the city plaza early in the morning.
Music blares as early as 4:30 AM, and a fitness instructor starts to bark
his orders from the public address system at about 5:00 AM. I'm sure
that compared to the obese matrons doing their routines at the park, I've
lost more weight just lying in bed at that hour, no thanks to lack of sleep.
I'm sure, too, that the person behind this program, the public address
system operator, the fitness instructor and the obese matrons gathered
there are glad that their families live far from that area and are able
to sleep at that hour undisturbed.
But it's not too late.
One of these days, I just might make the daring move to sell my 75 year
old house and lot -- termites, dry rot and all -- leave my city and move
to YOUR city, and enjoy the AIM-certified benefits of living there.
One question, though: Is
it illegal in Cabanatuan to maintain 13 cats -- none of them neutered --
at home?
Have a fruitful visit!:-)
About the Publisher/Editor
and Nueva Ecija Journal
|