Do not go gentle into that good night , Old age should burn and rave at close of day ;
Rage , rage against the dying of the light .
I have always associated this Dylan Thomas poem with my longtime friend and colleague Gerry Partido . I sometimes think he authored it . Gerry casually blurted it out when I consulted him on the title of an article I had just written . We were both editors at Marianas Variety then .
Gerry , or “ Parts ” as we fondly called him in the newsroom , was one of the most literate people I knew . Without any tinge of pomposity , he would slip literary references or cite authors into casual conversations . For Gerry , literature was a way of life . He was an unapologetic bohemian , surrounded by books that packed his tiny apartment in Tamuning . They were his friendly companions during the months of Covid lockdown .
Tasking myself to write his obituary was intimidating . Where do I even begin ? I wasn ’ t sure I could do him justice .
I was stupefied when my friend Louella Losinio , Gerry ’ s longtime partner , called in the early morning of New Year ’ s Eve . Gerry is gone , she said , sobbing .
It was unexpected . He managed to call 911 . No , he wasn ’ t going to give up that easy . There were more stories to write , more books to read .
When the first responders came , it was too late . Gerry , 56 , had died from cardiac arrest . He tested positive for Covid-19 , the treacherous enemy we are all trying to dodge and the story he had been covering for nearly two years .
A sad twist of fate , Gerry ’ s last byline appeared on a Covid story for the Pacific News Center , where he worked
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From the beat as a digital editor . One of Guam ’ s finest journalists , Gerry was committed to this thankless profession until his last breath .
In the pseudo newsroom forcibly created by the pandemic , Gerry was the epitome of what work-from-home can achieve .
He attended virtual press conferences and single-handedly produced the PNC digital edition on a daily basis , writing four to five stories with deadline-driven stamina . He called himself an “ armchair journalist .” Yet , he sometimes scooped the rest of us .
Whoever takes his place has a big shoe to fill .
Gerry studied journalism at the University of the Philippines , a staterun institution that produces the nation ’ s intellectuals and elected officials .
We both belonged to the Philippines ’ first generation of post-martial law reporters in the late 1980s , navigating the country ’ s newfound freedom after emerging from Ferdinand Marcos ’ 14 years of dark rule . We were working for different publications , which at the time had newsrooms that pumped out the news with the ticky-tock-ticky-tock of old-fashioned typewriters .
Gerry was a business reporter for the Philippine Star . We met at the National Press Club , the hub for Manila ’ s news creatures who lingered through the night , rewarding ourselves with post-deadline drinks after turning in our last story for the day .
In 1992 , Gerry moved to Guam to join his mother , the late Cory Partido , who was then an editor at the Pacific Daily News . Gerry worked for the Guam Tribune . In 1997 , he worked as a Guam correspondent for the Marianas Variety-CNMI and became a
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In the pseudo newsroom forcibly created by the pandemic , Gerry was the epitome of what workfrom-home can achieve .
full-time reporter-editor for Marianas Variety-Guam edition in 2003 . He was the managing editor of the Guam Daily Post before joining PNC .
Unperturbed by the noise in the newsroom , Gerry worked quietly , comforted by a stash of junk food in his desk drawers .
Gerry had always been a free spirit with a Jack Kerouac sensibility . He was never attached to materialism . He was the kindest of souls who lived a life of substance , anchored on the printed word , music and the arts .
He wrote the weekly column “ Island Stir ” for Marianas Variety / Guam Daily Post , which examined local politics with a distinct voice , clarity and objectivity . His sharp mind and literary wealth would turn the most vapid subject into a provocative piece that would compel one to think .
Sadly , he wrote -30- too soon . But he had a life well-lived , a great story well-told .
Now , go gentle into that good night , Gerry .
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