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Round-the-Clock
Activities LIFE IN LOOBAN
The day usually begins, around five o'clock in the morning. At this hour, the place slowly comes to life. Storekeepers start business at this time; the magtitinapay (bread-vendors)
make their rounds among the different stores and individual customers. Jeepney drivers likewise start hitting the road for the day's pasada.
Newspaper boys and vegetable and rice-cake vendors also take to the streets, shouting their wares as they go along. By six, the children are up and about and by seven, they are already out in the street.
Older siblings and family heads are also up; the girls generally prepare the breakfast.
There is generally another lull between one and four o'clock in the morning, although street fights often take place during this time. By five o'clock, the usual activities start all over again. Another day has begun. THE STREET (KALYE) No description of Looban is complete if one ignores the role of the street, locally known as the kalye. The street is the heart of slum life. The common expression anak ka ng kalye (child of the street) metaphorically exemplifies the importance of the street to the lives of the people in Looban. It is the hub of social affairs. Always littered with garbage, the streets and blind alleys or callejons are where people from all walks of life and of every conceivable age, looks, grooming, and build, gather. Here they socialize, meet for the first time, renew their acquaintances or simply exchange views about almost all topics, ranging from community problems to political strategies and party affiliations. It can safely be said that life in Looban is actually defined in the street. Some people go to the streets to escape boredom at home or avoid domestic problems; others to do business. At any rate, this is where events are openly discussed, where individual and family statuses are evaluated, and where decisions are reached as to which information should be allowed to leak out or be withheld from the authorities. Information of local activities or events, impending or ongoing, is likewise classified according to whether or not the entire neighborhood should know about them. In other words, the informal meetings in the street provide the people with ample opportunities to know each other better - to know what each one is doing and why. The street, in this respect, is as much a part of slum life as is the makeshift barong-barong. It is a most significant source of knowledge and new ideas. As such, it almost invariably controls much of what the residents know beyond their families or friends. Statuses are defined and roles are enacted in the streets. The moral standards of the entire neighborhood are street-bound. Even mothers, in disciplining their children, often mention the street as a source of social control. "Ibig mo bang idadaldal ka riyan sa kalye?" (Do you want to be talked about in the streets?) In other words, the street has become an important part of the people's lifeways - an extension of their inner view of social behavior. This is so because, in many ways, the street is the yard stick by which an individual's behavior is accordingly measured and his appearance standardized and interpreted. Such reactions are not family-centered but community-centered; individual acts are defined in terms of community norms. Most judgments, while pervasive, are largely influenced by the peer group with which a person is identified, the section of the street he frequents, and the behavioral routine he pursues. Every group or section is taken as though each is a self-contained world where the residents carry out their activities, satisfy their needs and legitimize their roles in society.
Looban is ecologically and socially segmented. Segmentation is cognitive in nature and is based on arbitrary criteria like place of residence, peer group affiliation, sex, and occupation. Each small sector of the neighborhood thinks, for example as a unit by itself. Territorial affiliation is given higher premium in the interpersonal relations of people. Words like na sa kanto, na sa may estero, na sa dulo, na sa gitna and so forth indicate this perceived internal division of units of households into aggregates of ecologically defined residences. Membership in street-corner gangs follows the same order and is restricted to peer group and sex. Sometimes occupation functions as the main source of cohesion among the group as in the case of jeepney drivers.
Each segment in the Looban neighborhood or street thinks independently of each other. In fact, each group has different
ways of perceiving the kind of unit, with which an individual is affiliated. They assess each other in a number of ways. If the norms and interests of a unit, for example, contradict those of another, conflicts result. If their interests are
similar
then alliances are formed.
The preference of the males to stay in the street rather than at home is largely influenced by the fact that the home
is for private affairs. Moreover, the home is conceived to be the female's domain. It is the woman who is supposed to have the last say in matters pertaining to domestic activities. A man who often stays at home is therefore considered effeminate by his peer group. He is labelled "under the saya" (under the skirt, hence, henpecked):
Next to the street, the tianggi (corner store) is another important part of the neighborhood. It is also a place where channels of effective communication are best established. That which is heard or told in the street soon finds its way to the tianggi,
where it is further discussed, edited, expanded, elaborated, and verified before it spreads out to other settings. The tianggi is a variety store. Sometimes it is called tindahan (place where things are sold); at other times it is referred to as the sari-sari (variety) store. Because it serves the economic needs of the people, the tianggi is another place where social, aside from economic, encounter is inevitable. [A newcomer can easily be spotted there and critically appraised as to physical appearance like pangit (ugly) or maganda (pretty), or as to character like mabait (good), masungit (stern, not easy to get along with), gastador (spendthrift) or kuripot (stingy) and so on].
In a way, the tianggi functions as another link between the individual resident and the rest of the neighborhood and between the neighborhood and the bigger society. National economic problems, as reflected in the fluctuation of prices, are immediately felt in Looban in terms of increase or decrease in prices of staples and other basic foodstuffs sold in the tianggi.
As an economic institution, the tianggi carries all kinds of
consumer items. These include vegetables like tomatoes, garlic, kangkong and string beans as well as dried fish and other commodities. The basic foodstuffs sold are rice, sugar, salt, noodles, and canned goods. Other less important items consist of cigarettes, areca nuts, tobacco, ropes and toys.
Aling Inciang, another tianggi owner, was different, however. She refused to lower her price. Soon customers started accusing her of jacking up her price. She therefore went over to Aling Felicing and inquired why she had priced her bananas that low. The latter answered she could do whatever she liked and if Aling Inciang had any complaints, she had better quit business or move somewhere else. A heated argument ensued as a result. Soon the entire neighborhood was out in the street, listening to the verbal battle. Some commented that Aling Inciang should not have done what she did; others defended Aling Felicing. At any rate, the two protagonists continued to shout at each other. The original issue was soon forgotten and the behavior, moral values, and personal background of each were brought to the open, argued, analyzed and dished out to the eagerly listening neighborhood. Within twenty minutes or so, everybody had learned the personal secrets of both protagonists. To prevent the quarrel from becoming any worse; the older male members of Looban intervened. They had to stop what otherwise would have been, as observers predicted, a street brawl between the two and their respective' families.
Often, the social relations taking place in the tianggi are similar to those taking place in the street. In front of most stores are benches strategically constructed for customers to sit on any time of the day) These benches serve a purpose because,
as Aling Tacia, another store-owner observed, "When people
sit down to rest or to gossip, they will soon buy something either to eat, drink, or nibble at as they socialize." Carved into the benches are checkerboards known locally as damahan.
This seems to be a sport exclusively for men. The players usually hang around
the whole day. As the game begins, kibitzers start gathering around. And
sometimes, as expected, this either leads to verbal tussle, or, if heated
arguments are not settled, to fist fights. As one of the channels of neighborhood communication, the tianggi is a crucial source of information. Here people congregate to share each other's company - in a hearty laugh, in an argument, ill sympathy or in confiding troubles. Some people spend a good portion of their day bantering with local wits or simply sitting around idly and making comments about passers-by. Sometimes they buy something before leaving; at other times they do not. It can he said, in any case, that business transactions in the corner store are often treated as a kind of afterthought, a social obligation to the owner for having allowed one to stay longer than necessary.
Personal connections are seized upon to attract customers. Such favors as extending credit, catering to someone's particular tastes or hanging pictures of favorite movie stars are ways of converting new buyers into regular customers. However, the easiest and most common competitive device is to grant customers the privilege to make purchases on credit.
A
customer granted such a privilege becomes known as a suki. The dominant economic features of the suki relationship are patronage and credit. To become a suki, the customer has to be a regular buyer first. Regularity is the way to the creation of favorable atmosphere that will lead to the establishment of suki ties. This is on the part of the customer. On the part of the sari-sari or tianggi owner, it is the ability to extend credit and to be easy in the demands for payment. In any case, both the customer and the seller profit from the suki relationship and transaction. For the seller, the relationship insures him a regular outlet and a rapid turnover of goods. For the customer, the relationship enables him to meet his needs even during fiscal exigencies. It is through the extensions of credit that the suki relationship is strengthened and the regularity of patronage maintained. Socially the term "suki" encompasses both the patron and the customer. Each one uses it to address the other. On the basis of available data, the term is seen purely in economic context. The obligation incurred once the suki relationship is established however involves non-economic considerations. For example, each one is expected to speak well of the other. If possible, it is implicitly assumed that, as a customer, a suki will recommend the suki's (seller) store to others in the neighborhood. He should not, in any way possible, buy from or patronize any other store, except when the suki himself so suggests. Such recommendations are made by the storekeeper when he does not have the items that the buyer needs for the moment.
As a seller, the suki is, by custom, not supposed to take advantage of the customer. He is not expected to overprice his items when a suki is buying; in fact, it is expected that he lowers his price. He may mark up but not so much as to earn a big profit as to recover the cost of investment and to pay for the labor. In return, the suki customer is implicitly not supposed to haggle or tawad. In other words, the economic aspect of the entire transaction becomes only a means of achieving
social relations in an atmosphere of satisfactory gains for both the seller and
the buyer. This particularized way of doing business however makes commerce with strangers somewhat
awkward - an odd transaction. The other place where most Looban adults congregate is the neighborhood kainan or restaurant. There are four such establishments in the vicinity. The one closest to the main street outside Looban proper is the busiest. A number of Looban girls work there. The restaurant opens at 6:00 a.m. (sometimes earlier) and closes at 1:00 a.m. the following day. Some drivers eat their breakfast there. By 7:00 a.m., a group of policemen on foot patrol normally comes in for coffee. They often hold their briefing inside and sometimes their drill formation in front of the eatery. Then they proceed to their respective beats. It has been rumored that they do not pay for their meals but in return, they provide protection to the establishment. No member of any local gang hangs around the place. Toward the eastern side of Looban is another restaurant. It is smaller than the one just described. It is controlled by the OXO gang but many informants say that it also enjoys protection from the police. The wife of the owner, most Looban residents say, is having an affair with one of the policemen. The husband, it is further rumored, knows about the affair but "turns his face the other way" because he runs a bawdy house in one of the sections of the district. This establishment, too, is said to have "political and police protection." Two of the girls working in the restaurant admit that their boyfriends are members of the police force. This may explain why even the notorious Bahala Na boys do not bother the place. Another restaurant, the New Moon, located near the western side of the neighborhood, is said to be under the protection (hawak) of the Bahala Na gang. Every evening, members of the gang congregate nearby. They see to it, however, that they do not stay very close to the place, otherwise they may scare prospective customers away. The owner pays the gang a certain amount of money plus free meals every day.
The most notorious bar-restaurant, according to the residents, is located at the northeast side of the neighborhood.
It is said to be under the protection of a political ward-leader of a "big" City Hall politician. This ward leader is said to be
in connivance with the Sigue-Sigue Commandos. Everybody in Looban knows that this bar-restaurant called D'Place, is a front for prostitution. In the house next to the eating place are rooms where customers who are known to the management can have liaison with prostitutes. The dining area and the bar are well-kept and
air-conditioned. This joint is frequented by businessmen and city workers even
at noontime and in the evening, it is usually "full-house." Most bars or cocktail lounges, as others call them, have the same lay-out. There is a main section where drinks are served. It is generally narrow and consists of cubicles which can accommodate only two persons - the hostess and the customer. The lights are subdued and the place is almost dark. In some bars the drinks are served on tables conveniently placed close to each other in the open space. A jukebox is placed near the entrance where the cashier sits before a cash register. There is a little space near the counter where the bartender attends to the needs of the customers. In some bars, there is a space allotted for dancing. Bar frequenters do not usually go there to dance. They stop for a drink and to have "happy-happy" - meaning to enjoy the company of the bar girls, which involves occasional necking and petting. Although management does not as a rule permit it, a liaison may be consummated depending on the agreement between the customer and the bar girl. "Nasa babae na yan (It's up to the girl)," is the usual reply of the floor manager when asked about the possibility of having sexual intercourse with any of the girls. Actually, the management can pressure the girl to have sex with the best paying customer. And ordinarily, it only takes a persuasive customer to consummate sexual relations with the girl. The management generally does not object provided this is discreetly done outside the joint. However, some girls claim that "nakakayari din sa upuan (it can be done inside the cubicle)." In exchange for her "favors" the girl often asks if she "can order drinks." A refusal would place the customer in an embarrassing situation. If he allows her, then the evening starts to be an expensive one. The price of lady's drinks is often twice that of the ordinary order. And as she induces the man to drink some more, at the same time allowing him to hold her hands, caress her, or kiss her on the cheeks, the girl also keeps ordering her own drinks. To avoid getting drunk, the girl generally takes only water or soft drinks. But the charges on the chits are for hard liquor like martini or lady's drink. Some customers are said to spend over a hundred. pesos within only a few hours.
Most bars in Looban enjoy the protection of the local policemen, some politicians,
and, as informants add, other law-enforcement agents. The barbershop is another well-known source and channel of information. People gather there daily. They are seldom empty of customers or bystanders who drop in to gossip, makibalita or play dama. Most barbers live in neighborhoods close to Looban. Ten reside within the neighborhood itself. Almost everyone in Looban knows all the barbers just as they know by name most of the residents in the neighborhood. Information about local events are transmitted either by the customer while he is having his hair cut or by the barber himself as he does his job.
In many ways, the barbershops may be considered collectively as one of the important institutions in Looban where the traffic of information flows from the neighborhood to the larger society and vice-versa. From what we have just described, it is clear that the social environment of Looban includes the major ecological units of the neighborhood - the streets, the tianggi, the barbershops, the restaurants and the bars. In these places, Looban norms and values are defined, developed, modified, or discarded. These points of references establish, reinforce, and stabilize existing values. They are therefore key points in appraising Looban life style since they provide the proper stimuli for coping with the pressures of everyday life. Anyone who enters into the neighborhood to become a resident also enters into a social world already established in the past, shared by almost all residents, and embodied in 'the existing beliefs, attitudes, and values of the people. The places mentioned above are the bridges through which one can be linked into the inner world of Looban and through which this inner world can be known, in all its complexity and dynamism. |
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