In this day and age, women are expected to tend to their families and households while, at the same time, excelling in their chosen careers, oftentimes fields dominated by men. It is a constant balancing act that goes unnoticed and undervalued. Thus, this day and age is called the Age of Superwoman. But, I think, deep inside, the Superwoman also yearns to be domicile. To be just the Woman.

In my field of work, men and women play the field equally and competitively. Women are as ambitious as men in boosting their careers. In my part, I exert all efforts possible so that I may have the opportunity to improve my medical career abroad (since my native country does not value much its doctors). I am, somehow, at a disadvantage because, in my pursuit for career improvement, I am giving up most of my fertile years. And, so, the Superwoman trades in her powers to nurture for powers to rule the world.

I dream of sitting back on a rocking chair, happily counting the days before my child is born. I dream of spending the day singing him love songs and reading to him stories of Narnia and Pooh, imagining how he would smile and point at the colorful illustrations if he were there sitting with me. And when he is born, I want to spend my waking hours watching him sleep and blow his soft little snores. I want to walk my kids to school everyday or see them picked up by the school bus, as they would wave excitingly to me, knowing that they would be just as excited to see me when they get back home, waiting for them at the front porch. I want to be there when they sing and dance at the school play and shoot pictures of them as the crowd stands applauding their juvenile, yet heartfelt, performance. I want to be there when my daughter comes announcing she has gotten her period already and I would patiently show her what she should do everytime that her monthly visitor comes. I want to be there when the principal sends for me because my son had a fight in school and I would earnestly listen to him explain why he did so. I want to be there to see my children, all grown-up, packing away their things, preparing to leave for boarding school.

I want to be there in every phase and every stage of their young, promising lives.

But, unfortunately, I cannot do that because the grip of falling economics is far too strong. If I let myself be overcome by this, it will take the future of my children down into the cliffs…down into the all-too familiar abyss of poverty. Of course, I didn’t want that. But, in exchange for temporary safety from this abyss, I have to pull my children into the dreary realm of familial estrangement.

They, too, like many children today, will not know their parents. Parents, for them, will be merely shadows of beings moving about in the periphery of their vision as they prepare to go to school. Or the waxen figure stooped over the night desk, signing forms permitting them to participate in the school play. Or the dull slumberer, tired from an entire day’s work at the hospital, telling it is normal for a young girl to have blood in her underpants every month and goes back to sleep. Or the ghost writing a letter to the principal saying that he/she cannot accommodate such a meeting because he/she is preoccupied with an emergency, sending a personal assistant as a proxy. Or the signatory in the bank check to be used for payment of tuition fees.

I fear that time will come when I know the history of my patients better than my own children. I fear that time will come when I must answer first to the call of others for help and attention rather than listen to my own kids’ plea. I fear that my children would lose their mother, engulfed by the callous machinery of a monster called Work.

Why couldn’t have God just made women’s most fertile years past the age of 40? I believe that, at this age, most women have already reached the pinnacle of their careers and would be more willing to retire and be domicile. But, no…God lets us be stuck with choosing between career and family, or, most of the time, be stuck in a maddening juggle of the two.

Why, oh, why?

As early as now, I ask forgiveness, my yet unconceived and unborn children. May you be wiser and more understanding than the world where you will be born into.

May the day come when this Superwoman will not need to be so super anymore.

Maybe. Just maybe.

But if that day will not come, I may just have to teach my little daughter how she can be the best Superwoman she can be. At the same time, though, I’d still be infusing within her the dreams that Superwoman, someday, will just be the Woman and she’d be happy.

I remember asking close friends of mine this question: do you want to live forever? Some answered positively, with the same scholarly intentions I’ve mentioned. One answered that he did not want to because all of his loved ones would be dead and he’ll be the only one left alive. Such state, he said, would be an eternity of loneliness.

This reminded me of the horror-comedy, “Death Becomes Her”, starring Bruce Willis, Goldie Hawn, and Meryl Streep. In the movie, Helen Sharp (Goldie Hawn) and Madeline Ashton (Meryl Streep) are two vain women vying for the attention of plastic surgeon, Dr. Ernest Menville (Bruce Willis). Madeline won, at first, and steals him away and Helen disappears. Helen returns years later, looking very young and fit. She has stumbled upon a “fountain of youth” spa, owned by Lisle Von Rhumans (played by Isabella Rossellini). Madeline was also able to seek the services of Madame Von Rhumans. Now both immortals and still rivals, they managed to “kill” one another only to find out that they are still living, even if Madeline blasted a big hole in Helen’s abdomen with a shotgun and Helen crashed a steel bar over Madeline’s head, resulting into a broken cervical spine. This series of events horrified the poor Dr. Menville and wanted escape from his two lovers. The two vain women convinced him to “repair” them cosmetically, in exchange for his freedom. He did so, unknowing that the two women were planning to take him to Madame Von Rhumans to make him an immortal. They needed someone to “repair” them once in a while and, if Menville dies, no one would be able to do so, unless they divulge their secret. Menville vehemently refused a taste of the elixir of long-lasting life, even at the threat of his own life. He survived though, and began his life anew. In his wake, his priest said something like this: Ernest has, indeed, found the secret of eternal life. It is love for his wife, his kids, his grandchildren, and for the people surrounding him. It is because of this that he will be remembered forever.

So, do I begin tearing my list of “things to do if I’ll live forever” in pieces? Nah. I think I still want to have a taste of what the Vampire Lestat has. And be as beautiful.

1.  Build a Library
 
I do not really want a big house but, if I were to house a huge collection of books, I would need to live in a manor or a castle.  Probably like that of Lara Croft would do.  I want my library to contain the following: books on Greek, Roman, Egyptian mythology, arts, literature, and history; versions of the Bible; history of Christianity; history of the Vatican; books on different languages; books on Wicca, Paganism, and the New Age; books on Philosophy, from the pre-Socrates era to the Modern Age.  And since I’ve been trained as a physician, I want to have all the modern medical books, all specializations included.  I want all kinds of maps and artifacts from any time in history. 
 
Obviously, my passions include the arts and history.  I cannot claim that I am a dutiful student, but I’ve always craved for its knowledge.  By being an immortal, I would have the opportunity to devote my endless time to its study, something that is not possible in this age when survival and economics takes precedence. 
 
2.  Travel, travel, travel
 
Unlimited resources?  Ok, I got to have that jet plane and stealth helicopter (how is it called?  I dunno.  I’m not really a techie).  All state of the art.  I want to be able to travel to all the cities of the world.  B ut the first few places I’d go first are:  Glastonbury, England, famous as a historical and religious center and also identified with Islands of Avalon, where legends said King Arthur was brought for his wounds to heal; Vatican, Rome where most of the religious artifacts are lodged; French Quarter in New Orleans because it has been one of the settings used in Anne Rice’s novels; Pyramids of Giza and the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, simply because I am fascinated with pyramids and ancient Egyptian history and mythology.
 
3.  Learn the languages
 
I want to be able to converse properly with the native people in the places I’d be travelling to and to be able to converse with them in their native tongue.  I want to glean their culture from their native books.  
 
4.  Put An End to World Poverty
 
Such an ambitious statement.  If giving all my wealth to all the impoverished people in the world would end poverty, then I would gladly do so.  However, I know it isn’t the definitive solution.  The problem is in the System.  Right now, I do not yet fully comprehend how the System can be corrected.  All intricate processes involved are deeply rooted in our history as mankind.  But perhaps, with my resources, I’d be able to pull on the right strings, remove the unnecessary parts so as to make the System more equally functional for everybody.  It isn’t Utopia where people do not have ownership rights and must work for the benefit of a nation.  I envision the end of world poverty as each person getting everything he needs for survival and for a productive life as a human being, as he sees fit, and in parallel with common virtues.
 
5.  Conduct Research on How To Eradicate Cancer and Other Life-threatening Diseases
 
Mortality…it is the biggest problem, perhaps, of most brilliant and wholehearted scientists.  Life is too short, especially for those who aim to do good for humanity.  Some researches have to be prematurely terminated either because their mentors cannot pass on the knowledge to another or no one is willin to receive the burden and responsibility of knowledge.  Perhaps my “immortality” would be of help in such instances.