Showing posts with label philippines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philippines. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

education and service

on education
one of the best feelings in the world i feel whenever the professor starts handing out those 300 pages or more of course notes for free, or provide you with soft copies of the lecture materials when they could also be bought at a higher price at the student center. it gives you the affirmation that indeed you're here to be taught and to learn and not being exploited as a business opportunity.

on service
back on pedals and butt-aches in 30 minutes! if there's anything i can hardly complain about, it's excellent, no-nonsense service from private and government offices alike. aside from speedy service everyone seems to be so polite, professional and forthcoming i don't even think it's possible to say alstublieft with sarcasm and a scowl the way some people say palihog with an obvious hint of irritation. if privatization of certain government offices is what it takes to lift philippine government office services to this level, then i resolutely support you, rody.

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Monday, September 22, 2014

feminism

here's another issue i know practically nothing yet i should be concerned about seeing that it has a bearing on me being female - feminism. without doing any background research and based only upon prior knowledge, perception, and biases, the idea of feminism for me is akin yet limited to equal rights, gender stereotype, sex trafficking, reproductive health bill, GABRIELA and protests with lots of women shouting and making angry faces. for now, when i say "feminists", let's stick to my current, under-educated notion of feminists and feminism.

don't get me wrong, i AM an advocate for a number of things feminists are fighting for. maybe just not strong enough to call myself a hardcore feminist for a number of reasons. one, i am fortunate enough to be born in a time and in a country where the issue of women's rights is being tackled and acted upon. my parents raised me and my siblings with no gender biases. i was made to hammer away furniture for repair or climb trees or do car maintenance while my brothers are made to clean the house, do laundry or cook and vice versa. gender was never a consideration when choosing which program to pursue in college. in school, all aspects of home economics were taught to both girls and boys. sports was no gender issue and neither did i feel academically discriminated because i am female. i am allowed to run and vote in all sorts of elections. my working experience may be limited but i didn't feel judged based on my gender, rather, on qualifications and achievements. to be fairly honest, in the philippines, the most prominent stereotypes weighing on equality seems to be religious and cultural rather than gender. japan, on the other hand, probably needs more advocates for gender equality in the workplace. they're such a macho society.

two, sex trafficking seems like a world away and i cannot associate myself much to the issue. neither have my time with government or non-government organizations brought me close to the heart of the issue. so, while it clearly exists and while i sincerely condone it, it's hard to fully empathize when i have not actually seen their condition nor talked to victims first hand. while it is true that prostitution is indeed a MAJOR feminist issue, it is definitely also a major issue that has to be addressed by the labor and employment department.

three, i cannot remember what occurred but GABRIELA made such a bad impression on me. perhaps because they seem to be always shouting and making angry faces on national television and i don't want to be associated with them by calling myself feminist. i do commend their action during this one time many years ago about the alleged rape by a US marine. some organization does need to support those kinds of issues so taht it doesn't get burried without making a resolution. perhaps it's high time i look into GABRIELA once again and understand the purpose of their existence.

the concept of feminism has been used too often and too liberally i believe it has somehow lost a part of its true meaning. people often confuse feminism with courtesy, manner, and tradition like holding the door open or paying for a meal or who gets to court who. some also use it to incorrectly interpret things like the RH bill saying "i am a woman and i have the right to my own body..therefore i have the right to decide for abortion" or stuff like that. that's not what the RH bill is about, silly.

feminism seems like such a wonderful word for women: go for women's rights! female empowerment! and all that. but on the other hand, the twisted view of feminism also brought about a noticeable shift of perspective of a woman's role in the society. take for example the movement of empowering women in the workplace. in effect, more and more women are climbing the corporate ladder which requires time, effort, and attention. but that doesn't change the fact that women are still perceived to be the home-maker and child nurturer of the family leading to a lot of people putting working women, especially working moms, on a pedestal with the negative effect of labeling full time housewives as "lang".

so, in the end, i'm not really sure how much of a feminist i am. i can and i enjoy carrying the heavy stuff as much as i enjoy being told to carry the lighter ones. i enjoyed karate as much as i enjoyed gymnastics. i still expect to be treated kindly and gracefully on occasions because i am female and men who do that are good mannered and respectable themselves. i do not get offended when people hold doors open for me, neither do i get offended when told, "be a man!". i would not do the courting though, haha. blehh :P

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Thursday, August 28, 2014

rody for president?

(in progress)

i have never done too well with regards to processing political matters. between august and now, october 22, this is all i have concluded so far and i have not even written a concise paper on this subject matter, haha. tsk.



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Saturday, March 15, 2014

sakura (or an attempt to write in proper tagalog)



mahal kong sakura,

alam kong bago ka pa lang sa mundong ito. posibleng magkaedad lang tayo o mas nakakatanda ka sa akin ng ilang taon. pero alam ko rin na dati rati pa, mula nang tinayo ang pasyalang ito, lagi nang may nakatanim na sakura dito. pinapasapasa ba nang nakaraang henerasyon ang kanilang mga ala-ala sa inyo? kung ganon, nais ko sanang malaman - ilang beses mo bang nakita si jose rizal na dumaan sa ilalim ng iyong lilim? ilang beses ba syang tumingala at pumuna sa iyong ganda? talaga bang kasing-tapang at kasing-galing sya tulad nang sinasabi ng mga libro? ilang babae ba ang namasdan mong kasama nya, hawak-hawak ang kanyang braso? ilang gabi mo ba sya nakitang naglalakad pauwi kasama ang mga kaibigan? sabi ng mga libro hindi naman daw kagwapuhan si rizal, pero sa tingin mo kung nagkita kami, magugustuhan ko kaya sya? magustuhan nya kaya ako? :P mabuti ba syang tao? sa tingin mo, maging kasing-galing din kaya ako tulad nya? gusto ko sanang malaman kung paano mag-isip ang isang taong tulad nya. kung sana lang maka-usap mo ako.


(cherry blossoms near frans anneessens' commemorative statue a few meters from where jose rizal stayed while in brussels)

Monday, December 30, 2013

arnis

apparently sepak takraw has no longer been the philippines' national sport for four years now. it's quite sad, i really enjoyed watching sepak takraw games during palakasan in college. not that the sport will no longer be played in the country, it's just..i don't know, the feeling you get when you're awarded something and it's taken away from you. i feel you bro takraw, hahaha. i greatly admire the players for their skill in handling such an inelastic ball of rattan with only their feet and head because i just find it difficult controlling the ball with my feet. i couldn't even do takyan properly, hahaha. and it hurts, too, hitting it with your head. ouch! i particularly enjoy watching more advanced players do amazing spikes. they look like they're doing gymnastics with all the jumps, and splits, and mid-air tumblings (did i get the term right? rotation, or something. where did all my english go?).

meanwhile, our new national sport is called modern arnis. truth be told, i don't find it as interesting as sepak takraw but, looking at it's significance historically, i guess i don't mind arnis being the national sport at all. comapred to sepak takraw, arnis is as authentic as a filipino "sport" can get. of course, it didn't start out as a sport, it's actually a martial art using a stick (or sticks, or even a stick and a knife) for self-defense. coooool, right? i've heard of arnis all my life but we're never really allowed to try it because it's quite dangerous. it would take time to learn how to control how much strength you put in a stroke so beginners might end up bruising their sparring partner unnecessarily. this is why parents don't usually take their kids to summer school learning arnis and instead prefer the "safer" ones like karate and taekwondo which are japanese and korean in origin. so we have this really interesting martial art and it's slowly dying out, being forgotten, because there aren't many filipinos who want to learn it.

the main reason arnis was made national sport is to keep this culture alive. of course, it underwent a few transformation from the original (balintawak eskrima) to make it less dangerous and that's how we have modern arnis, developed by Dr. Remy Presas. one of the big changes, i believe, is that originally one is discouraged to hit the baston itself, treating it like a sacred object, and the main aim is hitting your opponent's hands or body in an attempt to disarm him. in modern arnis hitting the baston is considered acceptable hence making the art less dangerous especially to children. it's almost like fencing but with a purpose hehe.

we had karate when i was around thirteen, i guess. now i want to learn arnis. and beat people with sticks nyahaha. but i want to learn more than just the sport, i want to learn arnis as a martial art itself. i want to learn balintawak eskrima.

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Thursday, November 14, 2013

thoughts on the philippines 1

my news feed is a jumble of pro-pnoy, anti-pnoy, help tacloban, help survivors, find this person, secure this place, donate this, donate that, corruption, and an even more serious jumble of hashtags and tags and people blaming and back-stabbing each other. it's a sadly recurring scenario whenever catastrophic calamities strike that i could forecast to a good approximation what sort of news will come out in the next few weeks following the event. speedy access to information is critical to a lot of operations but the internet has also made a lot of people a master of things they actually have no idea about and it's making accurate information gathering a harder thing to do. indeed, if one wishes to obtain correct data, then facebook is definitely not your go-to source for information. personally i do believe the government is also doing their duty in the best way they can. of course they have their own more secured and faster lines of communication that's why we never get reliable info on social media.

anyhow, i am not discussing the competencies of the philippine government now. what follows is a series of ideas that probably aren't unique, someone might have thought about it before or i might have gotten the exact train of thought from someone else, but it's my work in progress in trying to analyze the cause of the hardships my country is facing. and, of course, one tries to look for solutions.

it does not take much effort to note and understand that the philippines is not a stable country, literally. it stands on the border of the pacific plate making it prone to earthquakes and heavy volcanic activity as opposed to countries located on the interior of the plates themselves which are generally free of earthquakes (take belgium for example, no earthquake in almost 5 years!). furthermore, it stands on the brink of the pacific ocean making it virtually unshielded from typhoons formed over the pacific.

so there you have it, we have nice tropical weather all year round but (as my professor would say) there's no free lunch. we will always be battered by earthquakes and typhoons and volcanic activities until this little group of islands become so scattered apart it no longer resembles the philippines of 2013 or the plates decide it's high time to swallow the philippines.

but until that time we have 97 million people trying to make a living, squeezed into our little group of islands. and what happens in the philippines is this: we go through a certain calamity, we help rebuild the affected areas, then we relax and wait for the next big calamity to strike. the problem is, the threat of these kind of disasters is always imminent. some things you can predict can give you time to prepare but other times calamity strikes without a warning and when that happens we're left helpless once again. the sad thing is, most of the country's remaining funds are being channeled into rescue, relief, and rebuild operations whenever some big calamity strikes it's siphoning funds supposedly allocated for other projects. (okay, i have no concrete evidence for this last part, just intuition and some common sense because where else would the government get funds? yeah, loan, of course, and international aid..but still..)

what can we possibly do to minimize casualties and damage? in my former company, despite the tedious paperworks that go with it, closure and root cause analysis seems pretty effective (when done properly). i strongly believe that once relief operations in this yolanda calamity, for example, has stabilized, the government officials should not pat each other in the back and give themselves a holiday for the good job of helping rebuild a city. no! what needs to be done is to call in order a meeting to discuss what preventive measures failed, what unexpected situations arose, and what needs to be done in order to prevent those kind of things from happening again. talks and investigations like these are being done, yes (like the investigation done after sendong) but somehow it ends with a lot of finger-pointing and implementation of short-term, unsustainable action items and we end up missing the point of coming up with long term action plans. it's like the annoying backlog in your todo list.

anyway, on a side note, what i have learned, and i shall never forget, is that in root cause analysis one cannot implicate an individual or the lack of time. this means, you cannot say the relief operation failed because mr. so-and-so doesn't know what to do. instead, you say, the responsible person is untrained in relief operations, for example. you see, it works positively in two ways. one, you're not stepping on somebody else's foot. you may be questioning his capabilities in some way but you're not stepping on his dignity. everybody makes mistakes, it's our moral responsibility to help him not to make the same mistakes twice. two, it's more objective, i suppose. as an action item you can therefore say "train personnel in relief operations" as opposed to "remove mr. so-and-so from office" or "train mr. so-and-so in relief operations". get what i mean?

some action items i have come up with (in no specific order) are the following:
1. short term: train a considerable number of personnel for relief and rescue operations that should be able to be deployed and operate within a day of a calamity. in the best case, the team should be ready by december considering we get a considerable amount of strong typhoons in december too.
2. short term: develop a process for the speedy implementation of relief and rescue operations. we must have some existing process, i suppose, so i'd like to add: furthermore, specify how and where in the process civilians and other non-government aid can enter. (this is a long and tricky item, it needs to be broken down further)
3. long term: educate and train all citizens on what to do when calamity strikes. yep. i read somewhere about how people used to really prepare for typhoons in the past. i agree that in the modern times people are getting too used to the comfort of city living and too dependent on the safety provided by man-made structures we sometimes forget practical rules for survival. plus, having modern infrastructures means we have a slightly different sort of emergency plan compared to before. so yep, we should be re-educated time and again.
4. long term: improve and develop infrastructures that is strong enough to withstand typhoons but flexible enough to withhold earthquakes. this is a huge engineering problem. let's look at cold countries, countries that experience winter, like belgium for example. they had houses made of timber wood and the like in prehistoric times. in order to get warmer in winter they developed tools and techniques and over the course of hundreds of years, improved their infrastructures. now most (if not all) houses in belgium are made of thick stone and concrete. glass windows are aptly layered and framed to keep the cold out whilst keeping it's aesthetic value. my point is, winter is inevitable. it comes yearly so might as well develop infrastructures and technologies that can help ward off the cold. like i said, it's a huge engineering problem. it might take years to develop, but might as well start now, right? on the other hand, you might say, they can have stones over their heads if they want, they don't experience much earthquake anyway. well, yes, so i suppose we can also observe how japan does it. why japan? japan is also in the ring of fire and is constantly ravaged by typhoons. why are their infrastructures still standing? can we implement those kinds of methods here in the philippines? i believe the government should put a serious amount of focus into improving our infrastructures (particularly sewerage).

(TBC)

Friday, August 23, 2013

ishi the idealist

one of the classes i enjoyed going to the most when i was in college was the course on philippine government and constitution. on one occasion we were made to write a "blueprint for change", our idea of what actions the government must take to effect change in the country. here was mine:

"Blueprint for Change"
The following will have a higher percentage of efficiency and effectiveness if the leaders of this government are themselves competent for the leadership positions they hold. 
  • Effect a shift from unitary to federal form of government. This way it will be easier for the government to recognize regions which needs assistance the most.
  • Implement a moral recovery program. This could be done through giving importance to subjects such as GMRC, History, and Filipino in all academic levels and by recognizing the efforts done by NGO's like CFC's GK777 and others.
  • De-privatization of some companies and building government-owned companies. This is to provide job opportunities to Filipinos who have not earned college degrees, hence, they cannot find jobs in private corporations. These companies shall train employees for administrative positions also and implement programs that would sustain local economy. This shall hold until such time that it would seem fit for the government to sell these companies to private corporations provided they are not foreign investors.
  • Prioritize agrarian reform programs. Host conferences and training workshops for farmers.
  • Send rockets to the moon! But, seriously, focus first on applying science and technology in finding ways to reuse the country's abundant natural resources.

..then send rockets to the moon :P

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