Saturday, August 18, 2012

WATERPROOF SPIRIT

I COME across once in a while pictures that snag my attention and really give me that good belly-laugh. Just like jokes, funny pictures can lift everyone's spirit, and are sure to divert the attention of some Facebook addicts, quite like me before, for a few seconds at least. And for that we should be grateful.

Everytime I scroll down my FB page, funny pictures would pop up like zombies of a popular video game, along with so many invites, unwelcomed tagging of images, and feel-good-for-me kind of posts. The Net is a highway of these sorts being thrown at you. But I tend to seek out more of these funny stuffs, almost becoming like a lifelong quest for me to find things that really make me laugh. I copied some of these funny pictures, from the witty to the outrageously funny, for my personal file (No, I don’t usually share or repost other FB user’s wall post). And I really found more every time I use the Net, and indeed they were just as good.

It’s not strange that most of these pictures are made by Filipinos, a known race in the planet that can easily have a good quick laugh despite the hardship of life. They can be about stupid government officials, about Manny Pacquiao, her mother Dionisia with her candid ways, sarcasm on daily life, and popular movies; and even those images that barely fit into the topic of the day, they still somehow find life on the Net, dipped in humor.

And just recently, during the intense and prolonged monsoon rain (now dubbed as “a storm with no name,” or simply habagat or southwest monsoon) that ravaged Metro Manila and nearby provinces, and while the closing of the 2012 Olympics in faraway London was about to end, this picture came out and began circulating around the Internet like virus.


Translation: You’re only a flood; I’m a Filipino.

Apparently, this serves as a proof of the Filipino’s unique ability to cope with just about anything. Three cheers for his sunny personality!

The Filipinos could withstand anything nature throws at them. A flood may be as high as their rooftops, almost a yearly or monthly occurrence in their place, anyway, or no matter how dire the situation is, the every resourceful and flexible Filipinos would just easily raise themselves above water. The Filipino, indeed, has acquired the “waterproof spirit”, a quality that impressed even Canadian singer Nelly Furtado in her recent visit to the country.

Now we can really understand why millions of us, even during a disaster, could still enjoy communicating with relatives and friends, sending jokes, particularly captured images of what is pretty fun, and ventilating their views on whatever strikes their fancy. And those photos that they circulate are also a big validation of the kind of Internet user the Filipinos are.

We Filipinos are known for our easy going attitude and good sense of humor which reflect strongly through the pictures that they Photoshop to suit their fun personality. And if there is one thing that can be a source of Olympic gold for the country, then it’s got to be their artistic bent of Photoshopping pictures, and their Usain Bolt-speed of sharing their LOL-worthy masterpieces and tagging and liking and tweeting them in worldwide web. Filipinos, a very social people despite their poverty, were born to entertain.

Before these waterproof-spirit-themed photos, Facebook and other social network pages are also abuzz with images depicting what makes the Philippines “more fun” using the tagline of the Department of Tourism latest campaign pitch “It’s More Fun in the Philippines.” This “Fun” theme did not escape some of Filipino netizens—so what do you expect?—as they take the idea to a new level, like using it to make fun of their situations during the intense rain and flooding in the country.

What makes these images stand out for me is the razor-sharp truth, as well as its perfectly timed theme (tayming na tayming, as we love to say in Filipino). They really drive the message home. Well, there is life to comedy in this country, after all, even after the death of Dolphy. Just look at these samples I gathered from the Net. Now if a picture is worth a thousand words then these photos are worth a thousand laughs.


There are some of our countrymen, however, who don’t agree or are really disappointed by this tag “Filipino waterproof spirit.” To them it is clear evidence that we are not a serious people. It manifests a weird culture in our midst: That we rather make fun and create jokes of our misfortunes than to think of a solution. It’s like saying “Since we do it very well, then we love doing it.” They bemoan the fact that we seldom hear an outrage or none at all about our pitiful condition, when in truth, much of what contributes to the devastation of the metropolis are the result of years of neglect and lack of foresight by our leaders, from MalacaƱang all the way to the barangay council halls. 

But for now, everyone would just love to find reasons to laugh. As they say, when the world gets really crazy, the Filipinos always find the need to watch comedy. Come hell or high water, nothing can take that smile or laugh (that malutong na tawa we always love to hear) away from them. They make light of it, shrugging off every disaster as another chapter in our sordid life.

I don’t think there’s problem seeing the smiling faces of Filipinos as they helped each other out. The government anyway has already expressed its concern to us, as it has done almost every year, and we hope our leader could see our vulnerability to natural calamities as reason to create a comprehensive drainage masterplan, and not just mere laughing matter.

Well, until next year then!

Images used in this post are all shared photos. Acknowledgement is due to their owners, creators, or original sources. 

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