BANANACUE |
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ARCHIVE #017 |
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You
might guess that there's a Filipino in the house when there's a tabo in
the bath. The tabo is a dipper that can contain a few cups of water.
It's a multipurpose container that can be very handy inside the bathroom.
Well, it doesn't look primitive to me. Only
ancient. Like the casks used by Cleopatra for bathing in ancient Egypt,
or those small jars used way back to the Minoan civilization. These water
dippers were made of ceramics, metals, stones, and were not only
functional but were fine works of art. Cleansing our bodies is a kind of ritual that we perform with delicacy and even leisure. With the tabo, we take control in taking a bath or any ministration in the lavatory that we do everyday. We can gradually wash by sections--just the hair, or from the neck down, or only the extremities--a quite difficult feat to do under the showers. Worse, managing under the faucets is an impossibility. But the most remarkable facet of the tabo is that we can leave those other parts of the body dry when we don't want them to get wet.]
Modern life has its new prescriptions for
bathing, yet the use of the tabo is still a respectful and civilized way
of cleansing that the Filipino listens to in response to the call of his
body and soul.
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