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Maj Guanzon

Maj Guanzon

Flowers for Maj Guanzon

October 26, 2011, Wednesday
Today we have a final mass for you at Ascension Columbary, our place of peace and solace for the past few days. We took pictures of our sleepless selves, because we knew you would want to capture even those moments. We threw white flowers over your coffin and sent white balloons to the heavens to welcome you there. The sun took to hiding and it was a clear afternoon, just the way you would have wanted it.
Today, we are all forced to move on. Until we meet again, hun.

With all our love, 
Anj, Mariel, Pao, Jill, Mayor. Flowers from myself, Stel and Chris
Maj Guanzon

Goodbye, version A

My friendship with Maj Guanzon started with a cancer diagnosis. I guess when two seemingly opposites meet, it requires a spark to weld a real bond. In our case, it was not so much a spark as it is clap thunder. I remember my first attempt to offer her a text of support, drawing strength from my own share of cancer stories, fearing she will reject it because she did not know me, because I did not have any right to tell her: ‘Don’t worry group mate from Quanti whom I had never spoken to before. It’s all going to be okay.’ Such lame and stereotypical words of comfort. But reject me, she did not, and I guess that is the starting point.

And so we battled through the tense days of her treatments and our toxic final paper, to the day of her graduation from hospital confinement, to the return of the workaholic. From April onwards I had a high definition view of her passion and her kindness, her uprightness and loyalty, her quirks and her stubbornness. We got very close, very fast, and I would often wonder and ask her if she’d grow tired of me soon. She’d say, ”Of course not, you are awesome!” I’d roll my eyes and say, “You are biased.”

Thinking back, was my unease then a premonition of this early end?

There is no point in answering that question now, same as there is no point in denying the truth that she is, in fact, now a WAS. And in my first step towards acceptance, I go back to that first attempt. So that when people ask me how I’m coping with Maj’s death—and I enjoin all of you who love her in this—we’ll say, “It’s all going to be ok,” because “Ok” is such a general term, and that will do for the present. Tomorrow, we’ll still love you very much Maj, but we will be a little bit better.

Maj Guanzon

RIP Maj Guanzon

On this day I went to church and said your name, I had that Zagu crème brulee that you used to drink in high school, and I scrolled my calendar to the dates we’ve marked, my heart breaking because I was scheduled to crash your brother’s birthday on the 29th then sleepover at your house like high school kids do. In between were the moments when  I go back to staring at a blank wall, because that is exactly how the world looks like to me now without you—a long stretch of empty static space.

You are vibrant and strong, intelligent and confident, and endlessly awesome. You had the gift of making people around you feel special, and to me, you are the most beautiful person in the world.

I am happy you are at peace with the Lord now, where you will no longer feel pain. But I will miss you every day, and I will not forget. I love you hun.

Maj Guanzon

Channels

I did not even like this person. I thought she was brash and loud and a bit of a show-off, member of those types who speak first before thinking. I feared she was sweet to my face, but harsh behind my back. So I smiled at her in class when I should, then averted my eyes.

It did not feel fake though, when she wrote us an email explaining her condition, then promising that she will see our team through until the end. It did not feel fake to me either, when her name graduated to my prayer list during my morning commute, and at night if I don’t pass out before saying them. I give her words that may sound empty under threat of a spreading illness, but will give hope if linked with sturdy faith. I give her words that I wish I can say to my mother, if only we were wired with a little bit more closeness.

In a strange way I am grateful. And I do like her now, a little.

Maj Guanzon

Normalcy

I would think the same way too. It’s just like forcing yourself to go to work when you have a raging fever. No different from the drive to finish a marathon even when already crawling on all fours from exhaustion.

Even with burns on your forehead, dormant dizzy spells, and a tumor pressing against your eyes, you’d still want to take the final exam too. Like every other healthy person in that class. It’s a want for normalcy, and it makes sense to me.