Bohol Tribune
Opinion

Amicus Curiae

Kuwentong Peyups

by Atty. Dennis Gorecho

The superpowers of  Choc Nut

To be or nut to be, Choc Nut is the answer.

Eating Choc Nut usually  brings back childhood memories  since many Filipinos grew up eating  this chocolate-peanut candy.

We enjoy every bite with  Choc Nut’s   unique and rich taste of ground peanuts, milk powder, cocoa, and sugar.

Do not underestimate the superpowers of peanuts.

When it comes to keeping your mind sharp, peanuts may hold the key.

Choc Nut was my power food as I was traversing the path of legal education.

Law students   immersed  in law books and cases, faced terror professors, pore through volumes and pages of SCRAs, lined up for photocopying at the law library, hurried through classes, reviewed and crammed through lessons, and survived recitations.

My law school years were indeed difficult moments, but the best and memorable times spent with those who shared the experience.

Patience is a virtue in studying  at the law library  but the daily supply of Pacencia biscuits  and Choc Nut made the ordeal sustainable for me and  my classmates.

Peanuts contain a wealth of benefits for the brain.

Resveratrol, a bioactive found in peanuts, is believed to cause improved  cognitive abilities and short-term memory,  increased verbal fluency (the ability to connect and retrieve words)  and enhanced processing speed (the ability to take in and respond to new information). 

A challenge in reading cases is staying awake.  The unsaturated fat in peanuts  gives one energy, which can help a person to  remain alert and to   ward off fatigue and  sleepiness.

Polyphenols penetrate the area of the brain involved in learning and memory, increase blood flow to the brain (which improves cognition) and has the potential to enhance mood (which may also help to reduce depression.)

I preferred Choc Nut basically for economic reasons as it was within my budget unlike the imported chocolates  by Hershey’s and Cadbury.  

During the  2017 oathtaking of the trustees and officers of the Maritime Law Association of the Philippines (MARLAWPh) before Vice President Leni Robredo, I became curious in the presence of Choc Nut as snacks in the meeting room.

I was then told that it was also her favorite refreshment.  

Her seatmate while she was a congresswoman was from Cavite, where the Choc Nut factory is located.  She was given a year-long supply of Choc Nut.

To adhere to the theme of simplicity, Choc Nut was also served as one of the snacks  during VP Leni’s inauguration in 2016 along with buchi (rice balls), sotanghon, pandesal, maja blanca, pichi-pichi

The iconic delicacy was likewise featured on the Netflix anime Trese series

The  large nearly palm-sized Choc Nut  is  a bribe or  a gift, from the show’s main character  Alexandra  Trese to a sewer-dwelling creature named Nuno.

In Filipino culture, the nuno sa punso is adwarf-like nature spirit who lives in an anthill or termite mound. He is a goblin easily angered that will do harm to those who damage or disturb his mound, and will seek retribution.

Nunos may also   inhabit places such as underneath large rocks, trees, riverbanks, caves, or a backyard.

Instead of living in a mound, Nuno in Trese is more urban, who lives in the sewers, often appearing from under a manhole cover to talk to Alexandra.

“Tabi-Tabi po” is a polite way of saying “excuse me” or “pardon me” which  is uttered as a form of respect to  supernatural beings like the nuno when entering an unfamiliar place.

If one  wants to get a favor or   doesn’t want an earth elemental to bother him,  he  must  give the entity   something sweet.

Trese bribed Nuno with the chocolate-peanut candy to acquire information related to her case.

Trese  investigates theoccult cases in Metro Manila. The Filipino mythical creatures live hidden among the human population where they either adapt or cause chaos. 

In this era of  fake news and historical revisionism., perhaps Choc Nut is the answer.

( Peyups  is the monicker of University of the Philippines. Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, email info@sapalovelez.com, or call 09175025808 or 09088665786).

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