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Personal blog of Jessica Zafra, author of The Collected Stories and the Twisted series
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Archive for August, 2012

Death by Boobies

August 25, 2012 By: jessicazafra Category: Childhood, Psychology 9 Comments →

From Emotional Weather Report, our column every Sunday in the Philippine Star

Blue-footed boobies are a boon to conservationists. How can you argue with a slogan like “Save the Boobies”?

My friend and I were talking about the sense of guilt and how we blame ourselves for things that are not even our fault. Being of a control freakish disposition, we regard accidents and random occurrences as things we could have prevented. When something goes wrong, we assume that we’d been careless. Yes, we expect ourselves to be psychic.

In contrast, corrupt politicians are apparently incapable of guilt or the slightest sense of responsibility. They seem blissfully unaware that what they’re doing is wrong. If they are, they have the uncanny ability to forgive themselves.

The sense of guilt is probably acquired in childhood, when the most casual remarks from our parents are engraved on our psyche. For instance, mothers often tell their children that giving birth ruined their figure. Even if they’re joking, their kids won’t forget it. (Of course the church lays the first and biggest guilt trip on its flock via the doctrine of original sin. You can’t escape the guilt. You’re doomed.)

When I was a kid my mother used to say that her breasts were my fault. (She died ten years ago but she used to tell these stories to everyone so I have permission to repeat them.) My mother was one of those extremely well-endowed women whose boobs walked into a room a full minute before she did. Shopping for brassieres in the era before globalization and open markets was hell: none of the products in department stores could give her the cantilevering she wanted. For that kind of lift she would’ve needed the jet propulsion lab at NASA.

So my mother waged a losing war against gravity, and I was to blame. Apparently her 42Ds had held up well enough until I was born, whereupon they began to sag. She had plenty of milk so I didn’t have to ingest a single drop of infant formula.

Unfortunately when my teeth started growing, I rejected rubber teething toys and used her nipples instead. In her description I had almost bitten through them, so they were hanging on by a sliver of skin. Not only that, but I was supposed to have amused myself by clamping my teeth on her flesh and pulling it in every direction. While this was happening, she said, I would cackle madly, like an overacting Damien the child in The Omen. Imagine a rubber band that is stretched until it loses its elasticity. That’s what happened to her boobs, she said—not time, not gravity, not genetics, but me.

The boobies tried to retaliate by killing me.

According to family legend, when I was six months old my mother’s breasts attempted to murder me. Not by poisoning or asphyxiation, but drowning. My mother was lying in bed, breastfeeding me, when she fell asleep. I continued feeding, and when I’d had my fill I turned away. The milk kept leaking, and soon there was a pool of milk on the bed. When my mother woke up, the puddle was almost touching my nostrils—if I’d moved my head an inch, I would’ve suffocated in milk. Death by boobies.

What is the point of this story? None, really, except to note that our personalities are formed in childhood. The tiniest details and offhand remarks take root in the memory and never go away. These are the things that make us what we are. Yikes.

And across Westeros was there wailing and gnashing of teeth

August 24, 2012 By: jessicazafra Category: Television 3 Comments →

as Game of Thrones fans learned that Kit Harington who plays Jon Snow and Rose Leslie who plays Ygritte are dating in real life. Our in-house stalker research department brewhuh sent us the report from that solid, indisputable news source TMZ, the hardworking journalists who broke the story of Prince Harry’s loss at strip billiards.

Brewhuh was so moved by the news that she emailed us in all caps with several dozen exclamation points; our virtual ears are still ringing. In the Game of Thrones fan universe there is keening and great desolation (But not rending of clothes because you know how hard it is to find a modista who can make a proper Dothraki costume?) because many were rooting for the Kit Harington-Emilia Clarke (Daenerys) scenario while others were hoping for a Kit Harington-Richard Madden (Robb Stark) pairing. Which would seem like gay incest if you do not subscribe to the most popular theory of Jon Snow’s parentage. Which would make the Jon Snow-Daenerys coupling incest-y too, but you know those crazy Targaryens!

Tyrion and Bron forever.

Totally Forgettable

August 23, 2012 By: jessicazafra Category: Books, Movies 1 Comment →

We have a special fondness for the 1990 Paul Verhoeven adaptation of Total Recall—not for the acting (although Ah-nuld Schwarzenegger’s particular brand of…acting is perfect for playing a guy who doesn’t know what the hell’s going on), not for the depiction of Philip K. Dick’s ideas about memory and identity (If the filmmakers had been faithful to the source, the short story “We Can Remember It For You Wholesale”, the hero would look like Steve Buscemi) or the thought-provoking science-fiction, but for the gross, grotesque, fun bits that make Paul Verhoeven movies worth watching.

Like the scene where Ah-nuld removes a bug from his brain.

These brilliant gifs are from jest.com

And the one where Ah-nuld tries to get past the police in a fat lady suit.

Yes, everyone was going on about the hooker with three boobs, but what about Kuato!

And the scene towards the end where Ah-nuld and Rachel Ticotin are on the surface of Mars gasping for air.

Don’t forget the way Sharon Stone in pink, in her first major film role, kicked Ah-nuld’s ass. The more we recall the original movie, the less we like the new remake directed by Len Wiseman (those Underworld flicks). The new movie is so dull, it isn’t even worth hating. All our favorite scenes: gone. In their place: atmosphere that is supposed to be “gritty” but just looks like bargain basement Blade Runner. It’s not even set on Mars!


We adore Colin Farrell, but we don’t have to see him as some cheap Jason Bourne guy who discovers he’s a secret agent. Colin, darling, fire your agent, fire your manager and call us. Or don’t fire anyone, just call us!

Bryan Cranston who is pure genius as Walter White on Breaking Bad is the evil despot, and he wouldn’t scare a kindergarten class. Bill Nighy is the leader of the resistance—for one brief moment we thought he would unbutton his shirt to reveal the tiyanak-like Kuato, but Wiseman quickly dashes our hopes. Jessica Biel plays the good girl, Kate Beckinsale the bad girl—she’s married to the director so her role is expanded with many chaotic action scenes that reveal a total lack of imagination (the synthetic police look like the stormtroopers in Star Wars). We don’t know if it’s the cinematography or the special effects, but the characters’ faces have a plasticine look, like someone went bonkers with Photoshop. Instead of Mars we get The Fall, a device that transports passengers through the earth’s core, and there’s this reverse gravity bit that’s supposed to impress us. Zzzzzzz.

Viewers, if you need a Colin Farrell fix just watch the Fright Night remake—that movie should’ve been a hit.

On our next trip to the cinema we’re doing a seniors double bill: The Expendables 2 and Hope Springs.

Too many comics (Here’s Podcast episode 1)

August 22, 2012 By: jessicazafra Category: Books, Contest 44 Comments →

The podcast will be uploaded shortly; we’re just figuring out how to take away the echo. We sound like we’re in the Batcave, which is appropriate because we ended up babbling about comics. (Note to self: For the next episodes prepare script outlines. Listeners can only take so much spontaneity.) We have read a lot of comics lately, and by “a lot” we mean “All the comics that friends have recommended over the years, devoured in a two-month spell of excruciating boredom.” If it hadn’t been for Moore, Morrison, Millar, Ellis, Whedon et al, we would’ve gone berserk. Thank you, comics.

In the meantime, tell us what comics you’ve read over the years and which titles you like. Jimmy Corrigan? Ghost World? Little Audrey? Asterix? Does anyone have any old Zuma komiks they want to trade? Does anyone besides Chus remember that komiks series Goombooroomboo where creatures pop out of someone’s boils? Post your answers in Comments. Randomly-selected commenters will receive these comics, which are all available at National Bookstores.

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Click on the Podcast button on top to see all episodes.

Jessica Rules the Universe Podcast
Episode 1. 17 Aug 2012. Jessica and co-host Budjette attempt a proper introduction to the series but quickly disintegrate into comics-induced chaos.

We’re still tweaking the site, feeds, etc. It will be available on iTunes shortly. For now you can listen to the podcast or download it.

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Ejia, you or your rep can pick up your prize at the Customer Service counter, National Bookstore, Power Plant Rockwell. Just give them your full name.

Roger Dodger

August 22, 2012 By: jessicazafra Category: Places, Tennis 4 Comments →

From Robin in New York:

So we were at Lady M, a cakeshop on the Upper East Side, kinda near were we saw Aling Martha Stewart…and who walks in?

RF in the flesh!

An avid fan asked for a picture with him but he politely declined.

In fairness, mabango siya and malinis ang paa…

Reminds us of a gag from high school.
– May ipagtatapak ako sa yo.
– Ano yon?
– Paa.

And of Tennis Mike’s rankings of players’ feet at the Shanghai Open. (Gay Tennis Mike, not Het Tennis Mike. We must know 100 Mikes. Not, alas, Magic Mike.)

Oh good, Roger’s eating cake. No Anna Wintour in the entourage?

Send sightings, photos, questions, and stuff that doesn’t fit in the posts to saffron.safin@gmail.com.

Winter is meowing.

August 21, 2012 By: jessicazafra Category: Cats, Television 1 Comment →

The Game of Thrones theme meowed by a cat. via io9.