Thursday, July 31

an introduction to life after college

okay, i refuse to call the world after college "the real world"
maybe because the ego in me refuses to believe that any of the goodness and crap i'm dealing with today are less "real" than what i will be forced to deal with soon.

this belief has led me to make this reminder years ago.


(shameless plug: not-so-recently updated site of creations is here)

but i acknowledge that it is a different world out there, free from the comforts i'm immensely having fun with today, my second senior year. and because it is my second, i get more time to smell the flowers.

one flower is the uaap, particularly uaap basketball.
being introduced to the uaap kind of basketball is like being introduced to life after college.
you will be beaten, be cheated on, be warned for wagging your tongue.
but you will fight, you will scream, you will curse the stoic kids in front of you.
for one good or bad reason or both. just take your pick.

point is, you picked a fight.
okay, enough analogies.

point is, catch the games.
you'd be surprised how the flower smells like.

from signspotting.com

Tuesday, July 29

Statement of the Moment #13

Let’s face it, there weren’t too many of y’all who thought we were going to pull this off.

-Barack Obama

Sunday, July 27

Learning how to be Pinoy

below is the response of Gilda Cordero-Fernando to the Gawad Tanglaw ng Lahi bestowed on her by the Ateneo de Manila University. i find it very insightful and i honestly think every Filipino should read it (got it from the Ateneo webpage here).

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Gilda Cordero-FernandoOne of the realizations I had when advised that this Gawad Tanglaw ng Lahi award had to do with preserving Filipino identity was that being Filipino wasn’t natural with me, I had to learn how to be Pinoy.

Like other middle class Filipinos, I had a Western upbringing, I studied in a convent school run by Belgian nuns. My doctor father was a two-time Cambridge pensionado all fired up about American democracy. Mommy adored Shirley Temple and tried her damnest to make me look like her. We ate meat loaf and mashed potatoes and apple pie. My first book had a lot of snow and fir trees, squirrels and children with blonde hair. I had no idea I was Filipino.

One day when I was eight, I had a glimpse of the primer of my playmate who studied in a public school. It had an illustration of a boy on a pair of high stilts and a girl walking with two coconut shells under her feet connected to strings in her hands. The drawing was by Amorsolo. I did not recognize the provincial games but immediately related to the obviously Filipino scene. I remember being terribly envious of my playmate’s beautiful book.

Talaga kayong “mental colony,” as my apo would say. Realizing that one is Filipino can be a “Eureka” moment. Most continue valuing their identity, others just maintain their foreignness.

Gilda Cordero-Fernando (center) at the Academic Convocation
The author (center) flanked by fellow awardees, Dr. Fernando Hofileña (left) and Eugenia Duran-Apostol.

Lately, however, I have come to the conclusion that being a foreigner in your own land is not such a bad beginning-hopefully one gets over it. When Filipinos migrate, they somehow get more attached to their roots and research even more about them. All of the early 20th century reportage on Filipino life was done by foreigners who must have found us exotic or cute-like Lambrecht, Fansier, Vanoverberg, Cooper Cole and also the Thomasites.

Another realization is that after you have learned to be Pinoy, you have to protect it and fight for it, against other Filipinos who think everything’s wrong with our culture and find the need to apologize for it constantly.

When we were raising our kids in the early ‘50s, there was not a single Filipino song being aired on radio, no OPM (Original Pilipino Music) yet and hardly any Filipiniana books. (“Noli Me Tangere” was on a list of volumes condemned by the Catholic Church). I remember being so protective of the Filipino I wanted my family to be that I prohibited them from listening to Bing Crosby’s “I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas” for a long , long time.

I would acquaint the children with things Philippine, once, with some reluctant help from my husband, even taking them on a freight boat to Mindanao (where we knew no one) so that they could observe what was loaded and unloaded at every port. Such was my reaction to my colonized upbringing that I dragged them yearly to the haunting but bloody Holy Week rituals in Bulacan and Pampanga until they felt like nailing me, too, on a cross. We attended many town fiestas to experience regional food and local color.

It is so easy, after all, for children to imbibe notions of “native” being “inferior” and “Pinoy” being “baduy.” But isn’t it incredulous and outrageous for adults to perpetuate the notion that “world class” can only be Western (shouldn’t we be Pinoy first before going global?), that we have no culture because culture is only opera, and ballet, and big museums, and auditoriums of glass and steel, that the best cultures are in the west when India and China are far older and richer civilizations?

Thus do we overlook the quality leaps that art, theater, music and indie movies are making right in our midst because we never bother to look for them. It’s like someone saying “There’s no such thing as a UFO because I never saw one.” But you ask, “Did you ever look up at the sky?” And they never have.

As recently as two weeks ago, at a cocktail party, I ran into a wealthy and very influential culture vulture whom I admired. “I now go to Hong Kong for my culture fix,” he said. “There are three cultural festivals a year with the works-classical and contemporary, even Cirq de Soleil-everything you can dream of.”

Then he followed it up with “Dapat naman tayong mahiya! How backward we are! Our shows are so ramshackle, the CCP is getting so shabby, the government does not support the arts” etc, etc. I almost lost my cool. I wanted to lash out, “And what have you, with all your money and power and taste, done about it?”

It is the same privileged class who, when you are promoting something Filipino-whether book, performance, painting, bamboo house-will say, “Don’t impose it on me, please!” Implying, I’m perfectly fine with a Broadway play, a Korean telenovela, a Mediterranean house and “Sex and the City.” Why would I want to contribute ( or buy a ticket) to whatever weird project you’re up to? People who complain never put their money where their mouth is.

Being Filipino is considered by many average educated Pinoys as such a lowly calling-the bahay kubo, the aswang, the sinamay, the sinigang, the kundiman, the moro-moro. Note that even some of the powers-that-be of culture itself rarely show our lumad in costumes other than as curiosities and with as little respect as they were once displayed in the St. Louis Exposition of the 1920s.

And how many times have we been asked, “Aren’t you migrating? Think of your children, what future do they have here?” What future indeed, as the eminent Prof. Jun de Leon would say in his landmark UP centennial speech “when the cultural sources of our education are Western and it is inevitable that the expertise graduates acquire is better applicable to a Western industrialized society than to a rural, agricultural setting which most of the Philippines is.” And Florentino Hornedo adds, “It looks like the Philippines is spending money for the training of our country’s citizens to become another country’s assets.”

Filipinos have always been a special race beloved by God-creative and beautiful, graceful and multi-talented, a connecting, resilient, hard-working and big-hearted people, loyal to the max. After finding one’s particular calling as a Filipino, one must never let go of it. Everything is interconnected and into one’s life will spontaneously drop all those helpful occurrences, chance encounters, coincidences and synchronicities to cheer one on. Don’t be impatient. Because five or so years down the line, or maybe when you’re old like me, there will be a convergence. Suddenly you are no longer the underdog. The time for your initiative-whether arnis, saya, aswang or bamboo house, has ripened. And its fruits are very sweet. The convergence is what brings me here today.

Friday, July 25

power forward | RIP Mr Pausch

i used to think that the coming year's roster of movies won't be as cool as the previous year's. and each year i would be forced to eat my words.

it's exactly the same feeling i got back in grade three when i thought that grade five mathematics was just too complicated and that i would never ever get it.

it's a good eating of words. it's so good i wish i could taste them myself if only to warn me never to be too caught up in the moment, and just stay in that little area between too bored and too amazed. it's a great little area. there's not too much company, just right. the drinks aren't too expensive too and the bartenders are helpful but never overbearing.

and you never run out of words to say. nor to eat.

here's to the many fellow humans who are not so shy to share their talents to the world, and get paid doing it! from hans zimmer's wonderful score to heath ledger's wonderful shlurps.

and i thought mamma mia was goood. apparently...

it only gets better.

here's the theme track performed live:

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

on a different note, Randy Pausch died today. (CNN article here)

may he rest in peace! his book was good.

from his book: if you're a head-fake specialist, your hidden objective is to get them to learn something you want them to learn. that's when you teach somebody something by having them think they're learning something else.

plus this: if you wait long enough, people will surprise and impress you.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

try listening to that song while reading Obama's speech in Berlin (full script here)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

if people would want to look back to the goodness of Randy Pausch, this video is a good place to start (with Eric Hutchinson's good song called "Back To Where I Was"):


Thursday, July 24

guitar zero

i have a new found respect for guitarists.

22 hours since shanon and jobo shared their talents and taught me my first five guitar chords and my fingers still hurt. wow. imagine them band people who do it for life.

small wonder "rock band" is such a hit.

Monday, July 21

Bat-icipation

i'd love it if you'd blame me for that term but no, it was Time (yes, the magazine; here) who first used it.

me no seen it yet. been bat-icipating all summer. soooon. real soon. yes. yes. yes!
always have been a batman fan.
my lunchboxes were never emblazoned with the other guy's S.
got me black with yellow ones instead.

me loved it.
had trouble appreciating batman begins though.
especially cause the dvd was dubbed in russian and had no subtitles.
or maybe i just didn't like mrs. cruise that much, i felt she had no place in a supposedly dark movie. dawson's creek was never dark.

so i'm hoping all my bat-icipation this time around is worth it.
(and maybe mr. ledger, wherever he is, can convince me that two face ain't batman's best frenemy)
because i'm not so dawson's creek-y anymore.
and like my childhood superhero, i've grown...

darker, at least.


Friday, July 18

keep walking

the following is an excerpt of Father Ben's citation read during the conferment of the Ozanam Award to the Sumilao farmers and Atty. Bag-ao. i got it from a gmanews.tv blog (here) and it was nice to their cause on the homepage of that news site. the blog mentioned that they got a standing ovation too. neat.

the walk of a nation has not ended just yet.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

“The Sumilao farmers’ story is not just about the land case or about the land. It is about a long arduous walk that was gallantly done with faith. It is about the journey for justice that a community of powerless farmers collectively pursued, and the solidarity that it engendered.

“The march was a walk to uncertainty. There was no assurance that upon reaching Metro Manila, the farmers would have a favorable resolution of their case. The only thing certain was their resolve to seek justice and to present their case and their cause. This enabled them to overcome the hunger and the fatigue, and to endure the heat and the rains. They were determined to reclaim their land and they strongly believed that somehow they would.

“The march was a call for solidarity. Throughout the march, the Sumilao farmers attracted the attention of people from all walks of life. Bystanders were transformed into supporters. People from both the rural and urban areas, religious and lay alike, joined the marchers as they walked, ate, and rested, and as they discussed their quest for justice.

"The destination of the march that started in Sumilao, Bukidnon was not the streets of Metro Manila. The march was not just the walk of the farmers; it was the walk of an entire country. The destination of that journey for justice was the farmlands of Sumilao, Bukidnon. It was the walk of a nation seeking to correct an age-old injustice. It was a journey to bring home the Sumilao farmers to the land that is rightfully theirs.”

“The word ‘Sumilao’ refers to ‘shining light’. As farmers walked, step by step, day after day, they served as beacons of hope and inspiration, of faith and justice, traversing the dark straits of our country.”

Tuesday, July 15

library as friend

my ultimate dream of putting up a university in cebu now has an add-on:

the ultimate library.

what a friend. the time spent in that library in school these past few weeks sure makes up for all the stressful time of my first senior year. though i admit i do miss some of the lethargy, them stupors of that year.

God has a fine and dandy way of slapping people. my second senior year is one pretty fine and dandy slap.

Friday, July 11

those green things

she was superman.
you were kryptonite.
she loved you for it.

Tuesday, July 8

if Indians could do it...





KAYA NATIN 'TO!
SERYOSO!

Monday, July 7

surprises

i tend to be really cautious when a sentence begins with the word "life" but here goes:

life sure can hit you with a good load of surprises sometimes.

i can now resist the temptation of a drinking spree or an upper a ticket (when my body signals the slightest hint of an illness). though i still can't resist a a maple syrup-y pancake's screaming of my name. i can now enjoy a book that i am required to read. i can now walk to mass even without company. i can now demand an A from my groupmates because this time i'm quite sure i deserve it. so far.

but on other less sappy surprises, i enjoyed hancock despite its poor reviews. i enjoyed blueREP's summer of '42 (and found out that Fr. Danny did too [so all the rest of you should go and see, 2 more weekends worth of showdates!]).

but the biggest surprise for me was entablado's Tarong! i demand that you watch it! if only to make your time and money be worth more than it actually is. seriously.


i think i'm watching TA's play this weekend. i have a feeling i'll like it.
sometimes, just having a lighter shade of sunglasses makes things look more likeable.

it's the finding out if they actually are that makes for better surprises.

Sunday, July 6

TED on the brain(s)

Jill Bolte Taylor: My stroke of insight


what do you choose?

TED on the brain, and on the lack of creativity in education


Jill Bolte Taylor: My stroke of insight





Sir Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity?


Thursday, July 3

OPEN CALL FOR SATURDAY LUNCHMATES!

Hi, so you free for lunch this Saturday?

Then join us. I am from the Marketing Team of IamChange2010 and we're having lunch this Saturday, July 5, 2008 12nn at Shakey's Katipunan to get to know each other (if people actually come otherwise I will forever be working with people online, sigh) and to generate ideas to make IamChange2010 the BIGGEST voter reg & ed drive EVER!

You see, IamChange2010 seeks to reach the entire country and convince them to register, vote well and be involved. IamChange2010 will do this through a program roster which includes concert tours, sports tourneys, arts competitions, coffee sessions, a PRIVILEGE CARD, and so MANY MORE.

IT WILL BE BIG.

And since it will, the Marketing Team needs people willing and able to help us raise funds and raise awareness. Yey.

So see you Saturday?
July 5, 2008 12nn at Shakey's Katipunan
Yey.


I won't mind if you can't make it. But in case you know others who can, do tell me. Thank you and have a great lunch this Saturday. With or without me :)

Wednesday, July 2

Statement of the Moment #13


“Yes we can. Maraming salamat po." This was a portion of a letter that was from a Filipino, but not just from an ordinary Pinoy. Eddie Charmaine Arivan Manansala wrote to leaders, family, and friends last June 24 encouraging them to help ensure Barack Obama’s victory in the 2008 US presidential polls.

-GMANews.tv (link here)

I am change, are you?

IamChange2010 has posted its second article at the Inquirer.net. Every week we will be contributing a blog entry on Philippine Elections. Please help us out by clicking the link below and reading the article:

http://blogs.inquirer.net/philippineelections/2008/07/02/i-am-change-are-you/

We welcome article suggestions and contributions. Just email kai.pastores@yahoo.com (or me).


I am change, are you?

07/02/08

Posted under 2010 Elections

By Harvey Keh
Team RP

LAST March, I was invited as commencement speaker of the Western Mindanao State University (WMSU) in Zamboanga City, one of the biggest state universities in the Philippines. During my brief stay, I was able to sit down and talk with some student leaders. I started our discussion with a question. “Who among you here still believes and supports President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo,” I asked. About a third of them raised their hands. “Who among you here wants the President to resign and step down,” I continued. About half of them raised their hands. I pressed on and asked again, “Who among you here is still undecided?” still some few raised their hands. But when I asked, “Who among you here wants change and reforms in our country and government?” All of them raised their hands.


When I got back to Manila, I held the same discussion with some student leaders from Miriam College in Quezon City and I got a similar response. What am I trying to say?


1. Yes, our country is divided on how we view President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. You have on one side, a group supporting Arroyo despite all the anomalies, allegations of corruption and scandals that have rocked her administration, while on the other, you have groups and highly-influential leaders which have called for her immediate resignation and ouster from power.


2. However, it seems that judging from my experiences in dealing with these student leaders, the people I talk to and the e-mail I get from Filipinos here and abroad, we all want to see positive and lasting change and reforms happen.


That is why I think that if we want to help in bringing our nation together towards a common vision to move our country forward, this unity should not be based on certain personalities like President Arroyo or other politicians. Rather, we need to work together towards building, strengthening and transforming our democratic institutions; that would make them more responsive to the needs of the poor and the powerless in our communities.


Isn’t it sad that we are now facing a food crisis when we were once one of the world’s top agricultural countries? This could be an indirect effect of the one-billion-peso fertilizer scam that was allegedly used to fund President Arroyo’s election. If it was used properly and for the right purpose, then we might not be facing this crisis now or if we do, the effect wouldn’t be as worse.


We at TEAM RP believe that a fight for change and reforms continues regardless of who becomes the president, vice president, senators, congressmen, etc. We are doing this because we believe that many of our government leaders have failed us and that its time for all of us to take control of our own future and work together for that genuine and lasting change that we all want to see in our country.


Let’s quit making excuses, being inactive, hopeless, indifferent and whiny; these all amount to nothing if we ourselves don’t participate in proactive solutions. 2010 is a big deal for all of us. We will vote for the Philippines’ next top leader in less than two years. Our decision on who will lead us to progress and prosperity is a very important one that could potentially change the course of the country’s future.


Change is now. Hope lies not in our country’s leaders and those in power but in every Filipino. Change does not happen overnight, but when we work together, it can happen in 22 months.


IamChange2010 is a joint project of the Ateneo de Manila School of Government and Team RP. It aims to get young Filipinos to register and vote in the coming 2010 Presidential elections and educate them on various issues concerning elections. For inquiries, you may also contact Kai at +63 2 4265657.