
I’ve been
commuting on board taxis for over ten years, and oh, the dish I can tell you
about my taxi rides!
I figure, since I
don’t see a car in my immediate future yet, I will be hopping into more and
more taxis, I might as well blog about it.
Taxis are a
suspension of reality. When you get into one and you’re on the move, you’re
basically nowhere—no longer in your point of origin, but not yet at your
destination. No wonder everything turns surreal as soon as you close that car
door. For that length of
time that you are mobile, anything can happen.
Taxis have been
unwitting participants to some notable points in my so-called life. I’ve
invented several alter egos in taxis to maintain anonymity in the face of
overly chatty drivers. I got away with just ripped stockings and a few bruises
when the taxi I was in swerved in night traffic on EDSA to avoid an oncoming
motorcyclist, who was drunk and in the wrong lane. I rode a taxi in a 2 am trip
to the hospital in the throes of labor, making a brief stop somewhere on the
way to get cash from an ATM. I lived to tell that tale through the kindness of
a sleepy driver. Years ago, my gal pal and I cut short a taxi ride when we
noticed that the driver was most definitely gassed up on something other than
coffee. I’ve had taxi drivers recommending stuff to me—good movies, grocery
stores, laundromats, multi-level marketing schemes, real estate investments,
the ‘right’ newspapers, diets, yayas, apartments, bars, bistros, boyfriends ("a
nice girl like you!")—oh, the variety is enough to make your head spin.
I’ve been
awe-inspired, angry, amused, alarmed, asleep, annoyed, anxious, amazed,
asphyxiated, and adrift in taxis.
I’ve put on make
up, hummed under my breath, scribbled shopping lists, read a book, escaped from
a boring date, fought, made up, had to explain why I was dressed as a priest
(yes, really), screamed at car drivers, been kissed, bought peanuts, looked up
at the stars, smoked, made up my mind, plotted conspiracies, eaten siopao,
cried angry tears, almost passed out, prayed for guidance, lugged a tank of
LPG, defended feminist issues, twiddled my thumbs, pondered the meaning of
life, in taxis.
See, the amount
reflected on that meter randomly refracts the scenes that transpire. On taxis,
you get more bang for your buck.
Searching for taxi
metaphors, I came upon this:
taxi
dancer
n. A
woman employed, as by a dance hall or nightclub, to dance with the patrons for
a fee.
[
From
the fact that the dancers are hired, like taxis, for a short period of time.]
Thanks,
dictionary.com.
“To dance with the
patrons for a fee.” Oooh, that is so apt. Shake it around a bit and you can let
the dance happen between passenger and the ride. Later tonight, when I am
speeding home on yet another wild taxi ride, I will be sure to save the details
of my dance for this blog.
Wish me luck as I
go off to flag another one down.
.
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