The ‘tsinelas’ testament

YOU DO NOT need to be an anthropologist to know that tsinelas — those humble, often weather-worn slippers — carry more than soles. For many of us, they carry memories. They are not just footwear. They are symbols of childhood, tools of discipline, signs of hardship, and even unexpected sources of authority.

Who could forget the sharp pak! of a slipper flying through the air from a nanay chasing a child who would not bathe? Or the quiet act of removing one’s tsinelas before entering a home — instinctive to us, shaped by both Japanese and Spanish influences. As Mona Magno-Veluz, a.k.a. Mighty Magulang, puts it: these everyday objects are storytellers of class, culture, and change.

 The tsinelas did not begin as ours. Japanese migrants in the 1700s brought the zori; the Spaniards discouraged barefoot living and introduced a social hierarchy based on what was on one’s feet: bakya for the poor, chinelas for the middle class, and leather shoes for the elite. What you wore said a lot about where you stood.

 After World War II, Japan’s cheap rubber slippers found their way here — simple, durable, and perfect for a tropical country trying to rebuild. By the 1950s, they even reached American markets as “flip-flops,” an allegory of how it sounds.

Here at home, that flopping sound usually followed a shout — either from a child caught sneaking out or from sheer joy during tumbang preso.

 Even before branding, tsinelas were already loaded with meaning. In many homes, they were both playmates and punishers. A 2011 FEU study found that over 70% of Filipino parents had used slippers as tools of discipline — not out of cruelty, but as a normalized part of parenting.

I once heard a mom joke that her kids feared her bending down — not because she was picking something up, but because they thought the tsinelas was coming.

Psychologists like Dr. Lisa Fontes note that we often laugh at these memories as a way to process the love-fear blend many of us grew up with.

But tsinelas are more than implements of discipline or status. They’re signs of resilience. Worn by workers in floods, vendors on long shifts, and kids walking kilometers to school, they keep us moving. In Liliw, Laguna, tsinelas-making has become a proud local industry — part craft, part community, part livelihood.

 And yes, they carry political weight too. The late Jesse Robredo made his rounds in slippers, not leather shoes. His widow, VP Leni Robredo, turned that image into a leadership model: “Tsinelas Leadership” — governance that walks with, not above, the people. In their view, slippers stood for empathy, simplicity, and service. The poor man’s footwear became a symbol of democratic power.

 In homes today, tsinielas are everywhere: pang-kanto, pang-banyo, pang-kwarto. We have good pairs saved for guests and worn-out ones for watering plants. In hospitals, they wait silently outside wards. In public schools, many kids arrive in slippers — some worn to the bone. In their quiet presence, they remind us of who we are.

Our beliefs around them linger too. Some parents still scold children for leaving slippers flipped over — superstition or not, it is proof that tsinelas carry more than foam and rubber. As Mighty Magulang says, traditions are not always factual, but they carry family, memory, and meaning.

And still, tsinelas face bias. Many establishments treat them as “improper,” forgetting that most Filipinos wear them daily. It is ironic — how something so common, even essential, can be seen as undignified. Why must we hide what grounds us?

Even in games, tsinelas had a role. Think of patintero or tumbang preso, where they became flying tools of strategy and fun. Those games taught grit and teamwork — long before any values class did.

What makes tsinelas powerful is how they ground us. In a society obsessed with imported brands and shiny shoes, tsinelas quietly say, “I am enough.” They walk with farmers, vendors, teachers, guards, parents, and leaders. They go to baptisms, barangay assemblies, and Sunday palengke trips. They show up. They endure.

Ignatian spirituality speaks of being “grounded” — not in punishment, but in presence. Slippers do not lift us above others; they walk with them. They help us feel the world beneath us. They remind us to stay rooted, aware, and human.

So the next time you slip on your tsinelas — whether bought from the tiyenda, ukay-ukay, or a designer brand — remember: you are not just wearing something. You are walking with history, philosophy, and quiet power. In a noisy world, the tsinelas speaks softly — and still leaves a mark.

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Doc H fondly describes himself as a ”student of and for life” who, like many others, aspires to a life-giving and why-driven world grounded in social justice and the pursuit of happiness. His views do not necessarily reflect those of the institutions he is employed or connected with./PN

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