JessicaRulestheUniverse.com

Personal blog of Jessica Zafra, author of The Collected Stories and the Twisted series
Subscribe

Watch Spanish film classics online for free, then join us at Cineclub Pelikula

July 02, 2020 By: jessicazafra Category: Movies


Jessica Zafra presenta «El espíritu de la colmena» (audio en inglés) from Instituto Cervantes on Vimeo.

Instituto Cervantes de Manila and the Embassy of Spain invite you to enjoy Spanish film classics with «Clásicos contigo / Classics with You». On the weekends of July, enjoy free online screenings of selected masterpieces from Spain through the Instituto Cervantes Vimeo channel. The five films are: The Spirit of the Beehive (1973) and The South (1983) by Víctor Erice; The Holy Innocents (1984) by Mario Camus; La vaquilla (1985) by Luis García Berlanga; and The good star (1987) by Ricardo Franco.

The Spirit of the Beehive will be available on the Instituto Cervantes Vimeo channel on July 4 and 5. To access the link to the movie and password, log on to Instituto Cervantes de Manila’s website: http://manila.cervantes.es

Along with this film cycle, Instituto Cervantes and the Embassy of Spain in the Philippines are launching Cineclub Pelikula, an online cinema club. Video discussions conducted by writer and cultural activist Jessica Zafra will take place every Sunday on the Zoom platform. The first webinar, on El espíritu de la colmena (The Spirit of the Beehive), is scheduled for 5 July at 5pm.

The films, presented by Instituto Cervantes in collaboration with the Embassy of Spain in the Philippines, and the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain, will be shown in Spanish with English subtitles. Admission is free. For further information and updates on this film series, please check out http://manila.cervantes.es or Instituto Cervantes’ Facebook page: www.facebook.com/InstitutoCervantesManila

Journal of a Lockdown: And suddenly, it’s July

July 01, 2020 By: jessicazafra Category: Books, Cats

Half the year gone, and one-third of the year so far spent in isolation. The inconceivable has become the usual: we are living in science-fiction times. My friend pointed out that if you’re writing science-fiction, you don’t even have to imagine the future. Write about the now. He’s holed up in his apartment with a view of Manila Bay, counting cruise ships. The QE2 was there recently. Why are they even operating when no one is supposed to be taking cruises? (Except maybe the Americans, all that clamoring for everything to go back to the way it was in pre-pandemic times because, you know, they’re immortal.) Crew can’t alight in the Philippines? Are they stranded, unable to go home? In quarantine? Preparing for mass evacuation, some naval version of Battlestar Galactica? Nothing is surprising anymore. Coronavirus has upended everything, including our capacity to be shocked.

In June when lockdown was relaxed—I haven’t kept up with the levels of Community Quarantine, the nomenclature is unwieldy—I resolved to remain isolated for two reasons. One: Without mass testing, we have no idea just how many people are infected. Coronavirus is a sneaky fucker, you could feel perfectly fine but be infecting everyone around you. No surprise that the covid rates have doubled now that private companies have started administering tests to their employees. They’ve always been high, we were just in the dark.

The second reason is that I’ve always known I would be a recluse, it just happened sooner than I expected. I’ve never been much of a people person. I mean, I love humanity as a concept, it’s individuals I have trouble with. So in June I resumed my pre-pandemic existence, which wasn’t that much different from lockdown except for walks, movie theatres, brick and mortar bookstores, conversations, and meals with friends. Instead of walks I do a workout that makes me feel stupid but which is apparently effective because I can zip through the half-hour without huffing and puffing. Thanks, it’s my great achievement. Instead of lurking in bookstores, I am going through my massive tsundoku (Too bad you Marie Kondo-ed yours, fake sympathy). Instead of conversations I clean the house, it’s excellent therapy.

My cleaning lady Linda was able to show up today for the first time since March, and I was so stressed out from choreographing social distance and ensuring proper ventilation that after she finished cleaning the bathroom, I said I’d do the rest and sent her home. I’m not firing Linda, she needs the job, but one or two visits a month should be fine, and at the same salary because my expenses are low.

The other week I had my first restaurant meal in three months. We sat outdoors, it was wonderful, though it was totally 28 Days Later as we were the only people around. The food revived my taste buds, which were dying from all those microwaved leftovers. If you’re planning to go to a restaurant, outdoor dining is safer. The memory of that great lunch will have to sustain me for the next three weeks, because I don’t intend to go out more than once a month.

I used to post this journal every day, but since last month I’ve been writing stories instead. I have been writing like a maniac. Most of it is crap, some of it is okay, but the important thing is that writing keeps me from losing my mind. Don’t feel bad if you haven’t been writing, it just means you have other things to keep you occupied, and writing is all I’ve got.

Writing and cats. My three feline housemates are in excellent health and are sitting in front of me, judging me. (Why are you writing on a keyboard, too lazy to write longhand, huh huh huh? Note: I know I am anthropomorphizing, I am aware of my issues.) The other week two of my outdoor ampon died of some mysterious illness, leaving three cats downstairs. I just dewormed them yesterday with a nematocide syrup I bought on Shopee. These days my retail therapy needs are met by Shopee: walis, tsinelas, bond paper, book-binding kit, coffee filters. One complaint: my orders arrive mummified in plastic wrap, cardboard, and then more plastic wrap, and it takes ten minutes and some violence to unwrap them. Think of the plastic waste, there has to be a better kind of packaging. My tsinelas doesn’t have to be secured like the Ark of the Covenant.

Cats are my companions 24/7, and I love them more than people. I understand that not everyone adores cats, and some people hate them with a passion. It’s their right. Fortunately I don’t know any of them, but a cat lady friend who feeds and takes care of the community cats in her neighborhood showed me some comments on their rich people chat group. They were wild. “Those cats just sit there waiting to be fed, acting like they own the place.” Uhh…they’re cats. Wait, are we sure they’re talking about cats? The level of personal animus—it’s as if the cats were taking their food away from them. (In fact they do not contribute to the feeding of the cats.) Another person said cats were filthy creatures who ate rats and licked their own butts. Uhh…they’re cats, and their rat-hunting is a good thing. Again, are we sure we’re talking about cats? Why take issue with the licking of butts in particular? Still another person suggested that the cats be rounded up and exiled to the provinces where “they can poop and pee wherever they want.” So the stuff you consider garbage, you send to the provinces, because the provinces are garbage dumps? Sounds like the p-word: PRIVILEGE.

Yes, millions of people are dying of covid and the world economy is kaput, so let’s demonize cats! The last time cats were demonized, The Black Plague happened. This is all very distressing and triggering to ailurophiles (We have vocabularies, thank you very much), and their uninformed statements are easy to disprove (the psychological projection is more complicated), but the important thing is that haters no longer dare suggest that the cats be rounded up and killed. Because there are laws against harming cats. The haters can loathe cats all they want, they can be consumed by hatred if they choose, but if they hurt a cat, they are going to jail. So watch them.

On our Podcats podcast: Jessica Zafra’s Irwin Memorial Chair lecture at Ateneo in March 2020

June 24, 2020 By: jessicazafra Category: Books, Podcast


Two weeks before lockdown began, I delivered the Fr Henry Lee Irwin, S.J. Memorial Lecture at the Ateneo. My lecture was entitled Fiction Vs. The Apocalypse, and I dedicated it to my late friend, Uro Q. de la Cruz. I talked about how I became interested in writing, how I found my voice, my influences, the hell of writing for a living, and why I cannot think of doing anything else. I also advised people to live alone, so I guess I am psychic.

Thank you to the Ateneo de Manila University School of Humanities, headed by Dean Jonathan Chua, for the honor. The pandemic cancelled the workshop that was supposed to follow the public lecture; hopefully the workshop will be held when schools reopen.

The first voice you will hear is that of Louie Jon Sanchez, assistant professor, who helped me put my presentation together and answered all my questions about the professorial chair. The photos are by Mickee Escueta. Slightly edited for length.

Part 1

Read the rest of this entry →

Life Stories and Family Dramas, our next Writing Boot Camp in August

June 22, 2020 By: jessicazafra Category: Announcements, Workshops

You’ve been doing a lot of thinking in isolation. About who you are and the face you show the world. About your old life and what your new life might look like. About how you got to this point, and where you want to go next. About the times when you were happy or miserable or yearning or fed up, but never stopped to figure out what was really going on.

Write it all down.

Sign up for Jessica Zafra’s Online Writing Boot Camp. Saturday afternoons, 3-5pm from August 8 to 29. The objective is to finish writing a personal memoir by the end of the sessions. Workshop fee: P10,000. Early bird offer until July 5: P5,000. Email saffron.safin@gmail.com for details.

Participants have to be over 21. No writing experience required. No one has ever had a nervous breakdown at our workshops.

Journal of a Lockdown, 18 June 2020

June 18, 2020 By: jessicazafra Category: Current Events, Journal of a Lockdown


Photo of Mercury from the National Geographic.

Have been feeling particularly useless since Monday. Nothing like an official confirmation of powerlessness to bring on the gloom. A burst of righteous anger would’ve perked me up, but I’m too tired.

I figured I’d read, sleep, and watch videos until the black cloud passed. (Always bear in mind that the black cloud passes, just keep yourself entertained and wait till it does.)

Yesterday I sent some money to my cleaning lady Linda on Smart Padala. She still can’t come to work, but I’ve been sending her money since March. I don’t have a Smart account, so I sent the funds to my friend, who sent it to Linda’s Smart Padala number. Then I called Linda and told her the funds had been sent, and she could pick up tomorrow.

When I went to bed I had an idea for a story about my powerlessness so I slept soundly.

At 7am my phone rang. My phone never rings at 7am because I put it on silent mode. In fact it was on silent mode so I don’t know why it rang.
Read the rest of this entry →

Journal of a Lockdown, 16 June 2020

June 16, 2020 By: jessicazafra Category: Current Events, Journal of a Lockdown