Pinay File
I still cook adobo in the same pan my mother used; the taste is memory. I still say “mano po” when I enter a room of elders, and I still hand the best piece to guests. But I have also learned to reclaim the language of my life—to speak up at town meetings about flood walls, to run for a seat in the municipal council, to demand that the mangrove be replanted. I learned that dignity is not only in rituals but in policies that stop children from being hungry.
There is no singular way to be pinay. Some of us wear our joy like a dress and dance in the rain; others keep it close like a talisman. Some leave and send money; others stay and hold the line. We are fisherfolk and lawyers and nurses and poets; we are quiet in prayer and loud in protest. We carry songs that older generations taught us, and we add verses as we go. I still cook adobo in the same pan
The first time I left, it was to work as a caregiver in a foreign city that smelled of diesel and wet pavement. The airport lights looked like a line of lost stars. I carried with me a small aluminum pot and my grandmother’s rosary; my mother pressed a photograph into my palm—our house, captured in a single, sunburned print. In the new country my name became a string of vowels that did not belong to anyone; strangers asked where I was from and then repeated it as if it were a curiosity they might collect. I learned to make adobo in a tiny kitchen that held the echo of my mother’s hands. I learned to fold hospital gowns the way monks fold robes, smooth and precise, a ritual that kept anxiety at bay. I learned that dignity is not only in