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27 August 2007

The Instant Blog Meet

After the Taste Asia 2 event, another blog meet happened. It was a spur of the moment thing and was all fun. I bet you didn’t know did you? It was hush-hush.
It happened in what is fast becoming (or is) the Wi Fi city of the Philippines: Davao!

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. I love being in Davao because of the fruits, fresh air fresh catch, and most of all because of its friendly and warm people.

The Davao Bloggers are no exception.

Despite the sudden downpour, I met up with Ria, Andrew (both came in from the rain), Jun M, Dom and Blogie at Hoovenson’s “geekville” SPRO Coffee Shop. I also got to meet Ayeza of Bisayabloggers, who happened to be there with some friends.
The Usual Suspects Davao Bloggers and me

Dominique, Ria, Blogie, Andrew and me. (Jun M. had to go home and give his brother the keys to his room but promised to come back.)

Davao Bloggers 2

Dominique, Blogie (with his trademark beret/cap), Jun M (who came back) and me. Ria and Andrew went ahead to a party.
They were very accommodating as we discussed the Mindanao Blogging Summit, their blogging activities and then some.
The topics swung from blogging, to tech, to education, to books, to personalities, work, the Davao blogging, Mindanao blogging and the apparent lack of a Cebu blogging community, to Manila-based bloggers and so on. They were all passionate about blogging and their respective advocacies.

Uno!

Dom brought out his Uno cards, but forgot the manual. Thanks to Google and SPRO’s free Wi-fi and Wikipedia, we were up and running in no time. Of the four rounds, I lost two. Ria was grrrr-ing at Jun M, Andrew and Dom who made it hard for her to win.

Jun M and Andrew conspiring against Ria

So she vented her angst on me and won. Darn those draw cards. I could say I let her win, but I lost again after she left so it wan not a fluke even if i wanted it to be. In other words, I’m lousy (or unlucky) with Uno.
Dom and Ria

Next time, Guilottine na lang Dom. But I definitely had fun. As the evening wore on, Dom showed some of his wares: World of Warcraft Trading Cards and Talecraft, which apparently are the brainchild of a Filipino (including the artwork) - which are good for creative story-telling and writing. (I really think Talecraft has a great educational potential for communications subjects. I was supposed to bring home a deck but I forgot. Arrrgh!

World of Warcraft Trading Cards

talecraft

The talk shifted like sand in the desert so to speak. From the state of Philippine education, the Omega Man, Nightfall, Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke and Robert Jordan, we could have spent the whole evening until dawn and we would have never run out of things to talk about. Oh, and did I mention that Jun M’s blog traffic spike because of his MF post and he eventually exceeded his bandwidth? And that Blogie didn’t even know what it was about, who just like me rarely watch TV and read the newspaper. (I say, if something gets bad enough, somebody will eventually tell you about it. Like this one.)
It was a pleasant experience meeting the cream of the Davao blogosphere. I am willing to bet that the PR machines will be getting in touch with these guys soon. With the 1st Mindanao Blogging Summit on October 27 in Davao City, their part of the country may become known as the Premiere Blogger’s Destination of the Philippines.

Thanks a lot and i hope to be back soon.

Filed under BlogLight, From the Books, Personal

It pays to bring a business card.

I was not able to join the writing contest but managed to snag a prize. I thought I ran out of cards but was able to get a semi-tattered from my wallet. Just before the first draw, I managed to squeeze in front and hand my card to Marcelle, who apparently is a fellow Bosconian. He probably was in Gina’s (my wife) Biology class in high school. See him victimize, er, I mean mesmerize.

Marcelle aka Mister Vader Magic

And whose name got drawn first? Read more

Filed under BlogLight

26 August 2007

Aim High

The greater danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we reach it.–Michelangelo

To settle. It is one of life’s greatest tragedies. It means to let go of a higher goal which may be harder to achieve and replace it with a lower objective but would entail less inconvenience or risk.

Dream big and aim high. Reach for the stars.

Now approaching midlife, I realize that life is not only about the endpoint. It is also about the journey, and maybe more of it. In longing for lofty ideals, it is inevitable to experience pain and failure. But along the way, we pick up pieces of the puzzle toward our chosen destination. Reaching it is important but it is not the be-all and end-all of life. In case we don’t succeed in finishing, our efforts are not wasted. They are immortalized in the essence of our convictions that life is meant to be lived, that we should be active participants and not passive observers.

When somebody tells you to stop dreaming, run fast — away from the dream-stealers.  Pursue your dream relentlessly. Put your best foot forward and never waiver.

Dream on.

Just envisioning your success already makes you one.

Aim High

Aim at the sun and you may not reach it; but your arrow will fly far higher than if aimed at an object on a level with yourself.–J. Hawkes

Reach high, for stars lie hidden in your soul. Dream deep, for every dream precedes the goal.–Ralph Vaull Starr

Credits to The Quote Lady.

The tragedy of life doesn’t lie in not reaching your goal. The tragedy lies in having no goal to reach. It isn’t a calamity to die with dreams unfilled, but it is a calamity not to dream. It is not disgrace to not reach the stars, but it is a disgrace to have no stars to reach for. Not failure, but low aim, is a sin. - Benjamin E Mays, former President of Morehouse College, Atlanta

Filed under Good Business, Improve Your Self, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, TEaCHandLEARN, Inspirations, People
• Comment

Leo Buscaglia, in his book Papa, My Father, relates:

“Papa believed that the greatest sin of which we were capable was to go to bed at night as ignorant as we had been when we awakened that day….
So Papa devised a ritual. Since dinnertime was family time and everyone came to dinner unless they were dying of malaria, it seemed the perfect forum for sharing what new things we had learned that day….

In retrospect, after years of studying how people learn, I realize what a dynamic educational technique papa was offering us, reinforcing the value of continual learning.

My daughters Iani and Tesa love the Disney Playhouse show  Jojo’s Circus. At the end each episode, someone asks, “What did you learn today, JoJo?” JoJo explains what she has learned in the course of the episode.

In my travels for work along NLEX, Bamboo asks:

What have you learned today?

I’ve made it a point to learn something new everyday before I sleep.  When I conduct training, I share this daily goal to my class and challenge them to do the same. So when their eyes light up with new knowledge I tell them half-seriously, “You can sleep now. You’ve learned something new today.” Some take it half-jokingly too and fall half-asleep.

Learning need not be confined in a formal setting or the classroom. It can come in all forms and sizes and each person learn differently. Yet we all need to learn, everyday.

When we stop learning, that’s the day our life ends.

Living is learning. Learning is living life.

So, what have you learned today?

Filed under Bright Ideas, Improve Your Self, TEaCHandLEARN, POSITIVE MINDSET, From the Books

This was an email forwarded to me. It speaks of what most of us feel. We may have our own struggles personally and as a country, still the Filipino shines through our core. Though this has circulated and made its rounds, this was the first time I read it. It both hurts and heals at the same time.

Proudly Pinoy

Between Poverty and Paradise
Paolo Mangahas

LAST night, I had dinner with a German friend to talk about her planned trip to the Philippines . She had just completed an internship program in one of the law firms here in Malaysia and wanted to take a short holiday in a nearby country before heading off to Australia to finish her studies. She wanted to know more about the Philippines and asked me for tips on making the most of the two-and-a-half weeks that she had allotted for this vacation.

We planned her trip between bites, armed only with a faded map of the Philippines that we had downloaded from the Internet. My goal was to identify all the “must-see” places in the country (her criteria being beaches and volcanoes), plot them according to distance and flight routes, and then cram them all in 17 days. A tall order indeed, especially for someone like me who has never had a sense of direction even in my own neighborhood. For the life of me, I could not spot where Boracay was on her map. So I took the easy way out and told her to go to Palawan instead.

I carried on with the task like a diligent student trying to remember my geography, starting from the rice terraces in Banaue up north, moving down south to the Mayon Volcano in Bicol and the Chocolate Hills in Bohol. It was an embarrassing ordeal nonetheless as she could see that I was struggling to find all the other attractive
destinations on the map, which in turn made me realize how little I truly knew about my own country. She was very excited about the trip and was eager to learn more about the country and its people.

She imagined the Philippines to be an eternal fiesta of Spanish and Chinese Third-World flair, filled with warm and accommodating people who all speak with a clear American accent, where all men have the handsome earthy appeal of Jericho Rosales and women the heavenly mestiza charms of Kristine Hermosa (thanks to Filipino soap operas that have become so popular here in Malaysia ). It was certainly one of the most honest cultural impressions that I have ever heard and quite amusingly, one shared by many. In my German friend’s opinion, the Philippines is one of the most open-minded countries in Southeast Asia . I found this view rather interesting, especially since it came from a European who has never stepped foot in the Philippines and whose only direct exposure to the country, was me.

The funny thing about cultural impressions is that they often come from a place of both acute perception and blatant ignorance, split in the middle by what is painfully true. But they are what they are ~ impressions. Quite naturally, my friend and I have come to build our own impressions about Malaysia in the several months that we have been here. Malaysia is a beautiful country that seems to be in a hurry to develop economically, but is hampered by a palpable trace of social reluctance. It seems grounded on an age-old culture that simply does not mix well with progress, or at least the kind dictated and
exemplified by the Western world. I find this true for most developing Asian countries, including the Philippines.

My friend pointed out that she has never seen a beggar in the streets of Kuala Lumpur since she moved here and asked me if it is the same in the Philippines. As a matter of fact, she admitted that she has never seen a beggar up close in her whole life and asked me to explain how it is to live in a poor country like mine.

She wanted to know more about poverty. Her question struck a chord in me because I realized that apart from Jericho Rosales, this woman had absolutely no idea about the country where she was going and how it was out there. Here was someone who came to me wanting to know more about my country and the best I could offer was a geographical
representation of scenic destinations, which I hardly even knew myself.

By this time, I had put down the pen I was holding, set aside the map, and got ready to explain to her details about my country. I did not know where to begin. After all, how does one explain poverty to someone who has never experienced it before? To make things more relevant to her, I started by comparing the Philippines to Malaysia. I told her that blue-collar workers in the Philippines did not have the same opportunities as the ones in Malaysia, who can afford to eat in the same restaurants where executives eat or even shop in stores where their own bosses shop. I told her that unlike the ones I have met in
Malaysia, secretaries and administrative clerks in the Philippines will eat in posh restaurants only on very special occasions and can barely afford to travel to other countries. I then told her about the beggars, young and old, who parade the streets of Manila, the children who knock on car windows selling sampaguita, the mothers who have to forage for food in garbage landfills, and the unemployed fathers who waste their lives on drugs and alcohol. I told her about the shanties that bedeck highways and railroads, the unproductive traffic jams, the garbage-infested streets and sewers, and the regular typhoons that flood the country and exacerbate already poor living conditions. I
told her that poverty in the Philippines unapologetically hits you in the face the very moment you step in. It is an open wound just waiting to be healed.

My friend looked shaken, as if experiencing for the first time a world she has seen only on TV. That was when my tears started to fall. I could not help it. I have never cried in front of a semi-stranger before but for some reason, I cried this time because she was still
not immune to these things.

Her unawareness taught me to see poverty as if for the first time myself, which brought out a lot of pain.  I have become so used to the pain that I have forgotten how it felt until I painted for her the sad face of poverty.

I then found myself having to explain to her that despite all these, the Philippines is still a beautiful country and this you will also feel the very moment you get there. It is a beauty characterized by the indomitable human spirit of a people who have seen better days and
yet still have the capacity to find a piece of heaven in their lives.
It is a beauty defined by the untiring faith of a people who have learned to acknowledge their plight with reverence and yet have never lost the courage to dream big dreams. It is a beauty characterized by the painful history of a people who have been abused and pillaged through the years and yet still have so much of themselves to give.

Now her tears were falling, smearing the map that I had earlier vandalized with circles and arrows. But I knew it did not matter anymore at this point.

I realized that my friend had learned all she needed to know about my country and my people. She thanked me profusely, saying that she came to me wanting to know more about how poor the Philippines is but in the end, she learned how abundantly blessed Filipinos truly are.

A beach is a beach and a volcano is a volcano anywhere in the world, but it is the people who make the difference. I learned in that moment that I may not know the geographical features of my country all too well, but I sure know its heart and its soul because it is who I am.
The real poverty lies in not knowing this.

Indeed, it is the people who make the difference - the heart and soul of a country.

I am proud to be a Filipino.

Thanks to Fr. Chito for the email.

image from Proudlypinoy.org

Filed under InForNation, Inspirations
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