The Second Kind
(This piece was written on my second night at a Quezon City apartment I had rented last year.)
I only recently found out that there are two kinds of cockroaches in Manila.
Both emerge from a room’s blackest corners, or invisible cavities, when at night you’re lying in bed and sweat is forming at the back of your neck, or at your back. They come when there is nothing left to sense but darkness and nothing left to feel but the sweltering effects of our city climate and its dust and doggedness and quiet restlessness. When your cheeks don’t feel the air from the night outside, the air that you hope might penetrate your space through the window screen but which doesn’t anyway, not even scantily – well, that’s when the first and second kinds of cockroaches make their appearance.
Proceeding as stealthily as possible, and concealing the location of the rotten little hiding place from where they had come out, these creatures are always irritatingly, senselessly wary of being seen by a human eye; senseless, for what else might their agenda be but be seen by a human eye?
Now I don’t know about other countries and cities. But a cockroach in Manila is the only thing that can make me reach the higher octave I’ve otherwise never been capable of since undergoing tonsillectomy. (And how do I know I am Filipino? Always I am equipped with Baygon.)
The first kind –the kind I’ve encountered many times at home– will, after its initial display of bravery, be terrorized by the sight of my size-11 Nike Zoom Generations. Soon as I’ve forgotten my having shrieked like a girl, the second war will be waged, and cockroaches of the first kind shall crawl or fly away, retreat, dash almost funnily in a kind of mad panic to the nearest shadow. Damn it if they even find the time to mourn over a freshly squashed cousin whose innards would serve as Exhibit A on the outsoles of my shoes.
My dreadful discovery of the second kind of cockroaches in Manila took place several days ago during my first night at the new apartment, where I had forgotten to initially bring an electric fan. I found that these crawlers were infinitely creepier and –consumed perhaps by deeply familial ties– downright suicidal. They kept coming and coming, in between chapters of Colm Toibin, the first one taking off from the edge of a splintery closet door and fluttering straight to the wild hairs of my left leg. After getting it off with a violent jerk, I began chasing the cockroach, whereupon its short life came to an end with the vicious smack of a Pony sandal. And yet how many of them had followed!
My mass murdering these devil-may-care insects made me unspeakably queasy, not only because of their inherent anatomical ugliness but also because their kind seemed to find gratification –just immense, even obscene gratification– in infuriating a human being and then dying. Theirs is the kamikaze way.
Neither the subsequent pleasant dream about a day in the beach nor the arrangement of having my own bathroom could excise the horror of that first night. I didn’t even have coffee the following morning; no, no bitter beverages please. It may be the strange case that I’ve begun to sense, vaguely, a kind of nostalgia about the cockroaches from the L-shaped bedroom in which I had lived for the past twenty-two years – those which prowled the dry floorboards my bare feet now miss, especially the spot with permanent specks of dust underneath the Yamaha piano that father had bought more than a decade ago and which the bared parts of my heart and memory just as badly miss. Now –a nocturnal hour wherein a soap opera on cable TV can be heard from the adjacent room, though only distantly, as though it was being played in another world– now I remember that cockroaches of the first kind would disappear whenever someone would knock on the door but no one knocks anymore.



Well I knew Manila was prone to violence, but Migs I never knew you were.
When I was in Manila it was always being swarmed with Cockroaches and I expected to see them here in great numbers and to be honest I do not and in the main I think that’s down to the general cleanliness of the City.
Also I have a great anti-Cockroach system….MY SINGING!!!
Hi my friend - as always: a great post. You are really a great writer (poet). btw, I hate cockroaches. And, I never found some one who love them
. CHEERS!!!
G’day Migs,…I do hate cockroaches and flies..just to think where they crawl and the germs that they bring in..(but aren’t we the human who bring this to happen, did the damage, pollution..etc ?..got respect for them as one of the oldest creature on earth to survive before us…)..
anyway us who also live here in the city..found the best way to control it…CATS..we got 3 cats who do the jobs..(And it really works.DARWIN theory)..
The moment i saw one.I shout .kits do your job…Kill.
..
Have a good day…
Hi Jocelyn: So the cats eat the bugs? That’s a very non-toxic way of exterminating the cockroaches! I wish I could use the same solution as you do, but pussycats make me feel queasy, too….
Cheers!
Hi Migs,
i agree with your sentiments about roaches but why? they are small, creepy and yes you are right deserve to be squashed, the way your story was going i was expecting a human cockroach to appear but you settle for the conventional type, i like Jocelyns solution above, Migs, get over your feelings about cats, seems like you need one, good luck
Hi Rick: Yes, I need to be less queasy. Last night I was dreaming when suddenly I felt a cockroack crawling up my leg. It made me scream, in the middle of the night, and now I’m thinking of getting a cat.
hey people I stayed in manila for a week and i never saw a cockroach anywhere I went .. Go figure ..???….Phil R.