7 July 2019

The Mentor: Remembering the brilliant Dr. Rodolfo T. Abastilla


(I am currently in a proposal preparation cum technical writing workshop and there was a mention of Dr. Abastilla and his “antics” in mentoring students in Technical Writing. I was suddenly nostalgic (natzukashi!!). I suddenly remembered that I really never paid a tribute to this one man (aside from my Dad) who has influenced me in many ways, but whom I have had no chance to thank. (He died while I was in Japan doing my Ph.D. and I mourned for a little while). Anyway,…)

Who is Dr. Abastilla?

He is “the mentor” in the full sense of the word. Not a few of his “drinking-mates” said that even while they were in their drinking sessions, they are still learning from him. His name will almost always come up whenever one talks about technical writing or writing in genera. And his “teachings” remain embedded to people he mentored and inspired.

He is “the writer”. I remember back in my PhilRice days when in our division “Social Science and Policy Research Division (SSPR), later Socioeconomics Division”, almost all the SSPR ladies were single and getting older, and biotechnology especially in-vitro fertilization was becoming more common (or that a single person can give birth). Anyway, the question during one of our coffee breaks, was, “Kanino ka mangunguha ng genes?” (of course napaguusapan lang) and without batting an eye, I said “kay Dr. Abastilla”. And they all asked “Sino yun?”  I said, a talented writer who has the genes for talented writing and mentoring.

He is more remembered in technical writing, but he is also a story writer. I remember he was boasting non-arrogantly showing his published short story in GRAPHICS, a magazine with national circulation.

He was my first employer after graduation. “Cheryll, cheryll, be patient…”, “That is false modesty!!” I still remember those words when I was trying to ask permission from him that I will not finish my two-month contract at DOST because I just got a plantilla position at PhilRice. He was then a consultant at DOST on information packaging, and he took me as assistant. “What if I continued working with him, and not have moved to PhilRice?”. I don’t have an answer to that. Whatever, one thing, at least maybe I was able to attend his wake somehow.

What is the Dr. Abastilla legacy?

He is probably the last person who would be interested in thinking about legacy, but he has definitely influenced a lot of people – highlanders or lowlanders, and students. He will always be remembered always with a “prick in the heart”.

This may end up underrating him, but if there such thing as a “Father of Mentoring on Technical Writing in the Cordillera Region”, he would be that. He has produced almost all the good technical writers in the Cordillera: Dr. Grace Bengwayan, Mr. Victor Loakan, Mr. Robert Domoguen, Ms. Zyla Macasieb+, Ms. Lily Ann Lando, Ms. Betty Listino… just to name a few I know. There are even those I do not know. Of course, in their heart of hearts, they know who mentored them.

Thank you, sir. I miss that smile and raised hand, saying my name as your form of greeting. Just speaking out and thinking out loud sir, because you taught me well that there is no phrase “voicing out”. Always, hats off, sir.

(I am not doing a good job here writing about him; if he is around he would probably crumple this and throw it out the window. But he cannot do that now; he is probably just smiling, saying "come come, Cheryll, give justice and listen to your speaker! Yes sir.)