Sex Diary - April | Filipina
This April, the plot thickened. Jasmin found a saved voicemail on Carlo’s phone from the ex: “Miss na kita, Carlo. See you sa beach.” (I miss you, Carlo. See you at the beach.)
I’ve been scribbling in this diary for three Aprils now, and one thing is certain: Walang permanenteng tag-araw, pero may permanenteng sakit ng ulo pagdating sa pag-ibig. (There’s no permanent summer, but there’s a permanent headache when it comes to love.)
This is the April love story I’m actually rooting for. No flights out of the country. No dramatic exes. Just two people, a sari-sari store counter, and a little girl who’s already planning our wedding. By the end of April, maybe I’ll write my number on a pancit canton wrapper. Or maybe I’ll just keep buying pink lighters. Either way, my heart is finally sweating for the right reasons. Final April Reflection: Filipina Sex Diary - April
Then there’s my best friend, Jasmin. She’s been in a “live-in but not labeled” setup with her boyfriend, Carlo, for two years. April is when their story always gets spicy—because Carlo’s ex-girlfriend (the one his family still calls “the one who got away” ) comes home from Dubai every summer.
But then he showed up at 11 PM with a bouquet of wilting sunflowers and a litany of “Sorry, baby, I got caught in traffic.” Traffic? In April? The highways are empty, Marco. But I forgave him. Because that’s the April curse, isn’t it? You let the heat melt your standards. This April, the plot thickened
Let me walk you through the three romantic storylines unfolding this April—mine, my best friend’s, and the one I’m watching from afar like a teleserye marathon.
This April, the romance is in the details. He started saving the pink lighter for me because he knows I hate the green one. He lets Angela draw on the plastic bags, and last week she handed me one with a crayon heart and the words “Para kay Ate, crush ni Daddy.” (For Ate, Daddy’s crush.) See you at the beach
His name is Kuya Rico. He runs the sari-sari store at the corner of our street. He’s 28, a single dad to a five-year-old girl named Angela, and every time I buy pancit canton and C2 , he asks, “May laman na ba ang tiyan mo, Miss?” (Is your stomach full yet?) with this soft, genuine concern that no Bumble boy has ever managed.
