25 November 2005

tGiF

Thank God, really! Just spending last few minutes of the workweek, for now - have to go to work pa rin tomorrow :-(
Monday is a holiday, kaya have to finish PENDING (i hate that word) matters for Tuesday's board meeting. One plus factor today is, Big Boss seems happy with my reports that he didn't return them with his usual corrections, telling me, "they're fine, I assure you, so don't worry about the Board". Coming from the Big man himself (figuratively lang), it's quite a feat. He's that hard to please, I tell you.
For the meantime, uwi ako nang maaga, drum up my Christmas list, or read a book, or even buy a new book at Fully Booked. Can't decide what to do. Mahirap pala walang ang partner in crime. Bestest friend is in Cebu, trying to hook up some (old) guys while attending an international conference, sponsored by World Bank, or some other intl org.
As for me, I don't want to languish with more work (as I was typing this, a Board member called me up - aargh!!!)...Well, work can wait tomorrow. Rest is what I badly need now, i.e. shopping, book hunting, or simply lounging sa bahay.
Happy LONG weekend everyone!
`STF

22 November 2005

DaY OFF

I’m a bit disoriented at work today. Maybe because of my extended weekend vacation?
Yesterday was not my usual “rainy days and Mondays always get me down” days. It’s always fun to have the day off on a Monday – while everyone is working their b***s off, I’m living the life of bakasyonista, even just for a day.

I woke up late, to the sound of the office cellphone – so much for the vacation this early. One ngarag board member called the office, demanding for the final schedule of our food-tasting at New World Hotel – an info which I emailed last week pa. Ay naku, pasaway! Then another call came while I was luxuriating in my bath – grrr! Another boss called the office, requesting for a copy of the solicitation letter for our ball sponsors – which I in fact emailed in advance last Saturday. So much for my bakasyon really!

Trying to escape office matters, I headed off for a late breakfast and went on with my low-priced spa at our suking neighborhood parlor – I cannot afford The Spa. I had the usual hair spa, then a haircut – which is a luxury for me these toxic days. Then, I proceeded with my foot spa – yikes, it’s been months since I last had one. It was pure bliss. This is the life! Spent 3 hours sa parlor, which is worth every minute. I have to indulge once in a while.

Got home almost 4PM already, after doing the groceries – this is what I picture myself when I become a housewife (Question: why do people really add plain to the housewife? Pwede ba beautiful ang ilagay?)
Tough luck! Happy working (or pagbabanjing) everyone!

`STF

21 November 2005

Something to Smile About

Monday. I had my uniform fixed (thank goodness!). I don't have to hide my hideous uniform and show off my blazer..hehehe. I got durian pastillas and durian jam from my officemate. He does know what I expect from his trip (hehehe)! And I got to see the epol-op-my-eyz this morning. What a way to start your day. Happy workweek everyone!

`alotlikelove

18 November 2005

Tumatakbo

Is this me singing this song? With apoloies to Lougee Basabas.
I'm gonna buy Mojofly's album...And the video rocks too!
EnJoY and maki-emote!

---

Laging bigo, laging sawi sa pag-ibig
Minamalas, o, kay sakit

May balat nga ba ako sa pwet
Mabuti pa ang tindera sa aming kanto
Nakakainggit
TL ang sweet nila ng kaniyang nobyo

REFRAIN 1
Gusto ko lang maranasang umibig, tamaan ni Kupido
Gusto ko lang maranasan ang langit
Tumibok muli ang puso ko

CHORUS
Tumatakbo ang oras
Naiiwan na ako ng panahon
'Di na nagbago'ng bawat araw
Pare-pareho parang kahapon
Tumatakbo ang oras
May birthday cake ka nga

Ngunit wala naman kandila
May Christmas tree na malupet
Wala namang dekorasyong pansabit

REFRAIN 2
Sadyang ganyan ang aking buhay
Walang kasing tamlay
Ayoko sanang tumandang nag-iisa
[Repeat CHORUS]
Tumatakbo ang oras

AD LIB

BRIDGE
Tatanggapin na lang ba ang malupit na tadhana o kaya'y
Tatanggapin na lang ba na ako'y sadyang hindi pinagpala
Tigilan na ang drama
Punasan na ang luha, yeah

Tumatakbo, tumatakbo
Tumatakbo, naiiwan na ako

___
Happy weekend everyone!

`STF

Marshmallows and Patience

HAPINESS TIPS DAMMIT!

If you want to torture someone, make them wait. Waiting is hell.
In fact I think waiting to see if you are going to hell or not is far more torturous than actually being there. So much so, if you really want to curse someone out don’t tell them “Go to hell!”
Tell them: “Go wait to see if you are going to hell!”

Unfortunately in business there exists a few standard career equivalents to this sentence:
We’ll get back to you.”
“We need to do a bit more research.”
“Lets run the numbers a few ways then decide.”

I recognize it’s hard to wait. But if you let impatience influence you in business, you’ll always wind up cutting corners, fudging numbers, and ending up with a product that screams: “Hi! I was cheap and easy!”

Basically, there always 2 reasons to do anything:
1. The RIGHT reason
2. The reason that was motivated by SPEED

And there’s always 2 reasons for choosing the second speed reason:
- Need for CONTROL
- Feelings of DOUBT and INSECURITY

With this in mind, when it comes to impatience there are 3 things to always keep in mind:
  • Fast doesn’t always last.
  • A shortcut is often the longest distance between two points.
  • It’s often better to go for long-term greed that short-term greed.

I believe the best business people know the right answer to the famous marshmallow quandary:

QUANDARY: Would you rather have (a) one marshmallow now (b) five marshmallows later?

ANSWER: Always hold out for the five marshmallow business advantage.

YOUR GOAL FOR TODAY: Be aware of all the one-marshmallows you’re impatiently reaching for…and decide to re-focus instead on the five-marshmallow reward of harnessing patience.


`STF

14 November 2005

- the bouquet -

Message in the card is insignificant already. I should have warned Ellaine and Owe about it. But thanks guys for the effort...and for this traditional HBD bouquet. At least, me natatanggap akong roses on my special day.

`STF

Musings of a 29 YO old maid

I partied last weekend, so this is the price I have to pay?! Stay up late for work? Again? I really do need to get a life, but it’s really hard to do that now. With 2 major events coming up next month, I’m still 70% done with my today’s to-do list, and it’s already 7:30 PM. Waah! Better take some time off and start blogging – such a stress reliever.

I’m up to the neck with tons of work. Not to mention the pressure of having our website up and running before the Nov. 29 board meeting. Ay ambot, di ko alam ano uunahan ko.

***

Thanks guys for coming to our get-together at our lowly house last Saturday – Eileen, Baby, Owe and Ellaine, Glen and Ronald, Minardo, Wilbert and Jessie and Mikey (with the new Altis) – and hope you didn’t suffer from an upset stomach after eating something weird from our South Asian food trip. At least, we had a safe recipe on the menu – Menudo.

For those who missed it – hey Pyke! – it was your loss. Hope you didn’t catch something other than flu. Not that bird flu, I hope. Just kidding. Armelo, you owe me a gift, and your presence was badly missed. Dodong Vince, you’re very much in our theme – nang-Indian ka na naman ha! Vince (yes, you Vince! Eileen's Vince) - too bad your bro didn't go home early, you missed the wines and the other concoctions. Jet, no vote from you this time. Where were you?

We still have leftover beer and some flour for samosas and kulkuls, and gulab jamun so everyone is invited to be victims to our cooking…again.

***

Too much caffeine this morning. Took 2 cups of green tea before work, another cup for breakfast before a meeting, a small Starbucks cappuccino during the meeting, and another cup of green tea after lunch. Grabe, never did I feel groggy in whole life, than this day! It’s been a long time since I had this feeling – nangingig na ewan. To make matters worse on a bad Monday, my computer display is all blue, masakit sa mata. Still mourning over it, and waiting for Lovella to rescue me here at the office. For the meantime, I’m using a much more hi-tech of one of our staff – I’m such a gracious boss! Huh!

***

My eyes are drooping so bad already. I need to stop working, and just shut off…and maybe doze off early tonight. I wish!

Kulang ang walong oras ng trabaho ko ngayon. Ok, ok, I will stop now, before giving in to agonize over 3 meetings with the Boss/es tomorrow.

What a life! I do have a life. ;-)

`STF

11 November 2005

Got this from Glen's email. So true...
`STF
***
GET A LIFE
Jose Dalisay Jr., PhD
Address to the Graduating Class
UP Baguio, 23 April 2005

Former UP President (Francisco) Nemenzo - whom I was privileged to serve - was frankly not too fond of the phrase "iskolar ng bayan" to describe the UP student. We are all, of course, scholars of the people in this university, in the technical sense that our studies are subsidized by the sweat of the poor, whose hopes we bear upon our shoulders.

But the President's point was that scholarship remains a distinction to be earned not merely by scoring well in an entrance examination, but by adopting a lifelong attitude of critical inquiry and rational judgment.

This, sadly, is something that many of us lose upon our entry into the University and our immersion in its life - not only its intellectual and academic life, but also its social and professional life. The curiosity ends, the magic fades, the writing dries up, and we retreat to a cocoon - to a dimly lit room marked "Me & Myself" - there to spend the rest of our career sulking over the next fellow's promotion and so-and-so's research grant.

"Get a life" has been one of my lifelong mantras. I have always believed that while a formal education is a wonderful thing, what I call an active life - with all its serendipitous detours and little accidents - is even better. It is a cliché by now to say that there are many things we can never learn in school - but for those of us who are in school, it is even more important to remember this.

Some of the best things happen when we step outside of our own lives and begin to be engaged in those of others. Often, the answers to our own problems lie in others, and in their larger predicaments. While involvement in a great cause can also create its own kind of blindness to everything else, I believe that, at least once in our lives, we should embrace a passion larger than ourselves; even the disillusionment that often follows can be very instructive, and will bring us one step closer to wisdom.

One of the best ideas I ever heard came from a friend whom I used to play billiards with until the wee hours of the morning: "Everyone," he said while cleaning up the balls on the table, "should be entitled to make at least one big mistake."

I would not have been the writer I became if I had chosen the safe path and stayed where I was supposed to be. It took me two years to finish my MFA, and only three to finish my PhD. But before that, it took me 14 years to get my AB.
At 12 - like your chancellor - I entered the Philippine Science High School. As my parents never tired of telling anyone who cared to listen (and even those who didn't), I was the entrance-exam topnotcher of my batch, No. 1 of about 6,000 examinees. However, what my parents didn't say was that after my first year in Science High, I was going to be kicked out - with a 1.0 in English and a 5.0 in Math.

What happened? Well, you might say that I got a life. From the grade-school nerd who read two books a day in our all-boys Catholic school, I suddenly discovered girls, parties, and fun. What did I do? I used my 1.0 in English to save my 5.0 in Math, by writing a letter of appeal that began with "At the outset, let me say that I bear malice toward none." I guess it worked, because they put me on probation for a year, and I survived PSHS by the skin of my teeth.

At 16, I entered UP as an industrial engineering major - and promptly got a 5.0 in Math 17, for too many absences - the bane of the arrogant Science High graduate, even the perennial flunker like me who thought he already knew more Math than he needed to know.

At 17, still a freshman, I quit college - over the tears of my mother, whose fondest hope was for me to graduate from UP just like she did. I wanted to join the revolution, like many of my comrades; at the same time I was impatient to get a job.

At 18, I was working as a newspaper reporter covering hospital fires, US embassy rallies, suicide cases, factory strikes, and typhoon relief operations.

I spent most of my 19th year in martial-law prison.

At 20, I was a husband and father.

At 26, I took my first foreign trip.

At 27, I learned how to drive - and went back to school.

At 30, I got my AB, and decided that what I wanted to do was to write and teach for the rest of my life, so here I am.
I have been shot at, imprisoned, and worst of all, rejected by more crushes than I care to remember. Aside from my abortive career in journalism, I once worked as a cook-waiter-cashier-busboy-janitor, cutting 40 pounds of pork and chicken every day before turning them into someone's dinner.

Much earlier, I worked as a municipal employee, checking the attendance of Metro Aides at seven in the morning, and then I studied printmaking and sold my etchings cheaply by the dozen in Ermita. Incidentally, it was at that printmaking shop that I met my wife June, who's here with me today, and for whose patience with my colorful moods I am forever grateful.

Some of these events have found their way to my writing; most of them have not and never will. I believe that creative writing should generate its own excitement, beyond whatever may have happened to the author in his or her own life. But neither can I deny that my outlook has been influenced by what I have seen out there, as bright, as indelible, and as disturbing as fresh blood.

If we are to abide by the Phi Kappa Phi motto to "let the love of learning rule humanity," we should first ourselves be ruled by the love of learning - learning from books, and learning beyond them.

On the other side of the equation, let me observe that there is, today, a nascent but disturbing strain of anti-intellectualism in Philippine politics and society. The vulgar __expression of this sentiment has taken the form of the suggestion that we can dispense with brains and education when it comes to our national leadership, because they have done us no good, anyway.

It is easy to see how this perception came about, and how its attractiveness derives from its being at least partially true. Many of our people feel betrayed by their best and brightest - the edukado, as we are called in our barangays - because we are too easily bought out by the powers that be. Marcos and Estrada had probably the best Cabinets in our political history, well-stocked with prestigious PhDs from places like Oxford and Stanford; but in the end, even they could do nothing against their President and his excesses.

For us UP graduates, the seductions of power will always be there. Power and wealth are also very interesting games to play, and few play them better than UP grads - the power side more than the wealth, as I suspect that Ateneans and La Sallites are better at making money than we are.

But even these can put you out of touch. I have friends in Malacañang and Makati who seem to have lost all sense of life, thought, and feeling on the street, beyond what their own commissioned surveys tell them. Worse, they seem to have lost touch with their old, honest, self-critical selves. They forgot all about Sophocles and poetry and mystery and music you can't buy at the record store.

To be a UP student, faculty member, and alumnus is to be burdened but also ennobled by a unique mission - not just the mission of serving the people, which is in itself not unique, and which is also reflected, for example, in the Atenean concept of being a "man for others." Rather, to my mind, our mission is to lead and to be led by reason - by independent, scientific, and secular reason, rather than by politicians, priests, shamans, bankers, or generals.

You are UP because you can think and speak for yourselves, by your own wits and on your own two feet, and you can do so no matter what the rest of the people in the room may be thinking. You are UP because no one can tell you to shut up, if you have something sensible and vital to say. You are UP because you dread not the poverty of material comforts but the poverty of the mind. And you are UP because you care about something as abstract and sometimes as treacherous as the idea of "nation", even if it kills you.
Sometimes, long after UP, we forget these things and become just like everybody else; I certainly have. Even so, I suspect that that forgetfulness is laced with guilt - the guilt of knowing that you were, and could yet become, somebody better. And you cannot even argue that you did not know, because today, I just told you so.

08 November 2005

She is Turning 29

29 to other people means
having a family, kids running
around, climbing the corporate
ladder, drinking 'til the sun
is up and/or having flings.

She might not be raising kids
at the moment or whining on
how prices of basic
commodities are skyrocketing
(oops!) or going for the kill
for that much coveted
promotion or sobering up after
a night of partying or waking
up in someone's bed (!) but
she sure does have lots of
stories to tell.

beinte-nuebe means more
frolick under the sun,
collecting air miles, dancing
in main street usa with mickey
and friends, more hearts to
break (wrong grammar kasi :D),
families to help, dvds to
watch, events to organize,
reggae music to dance
to and a whole lot more. Oh,
did i mention more families to
help?

for me, she is more than
vingt neuf. not that she looks
like 30. she is more than the
28 things i listed in her
friendster testi plus one (she
DOESN'T eat lanzones!). She is
my soul sister. my friend of
the heart. my bestest friend.

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

girl, i am so damn lucky that
you are my best friend. you
are ohana. and family
means...you know the line.

have the happiest birthday ever!

xxoxx love

p.s. to live up to the
european thingie...happiest
birthday also means
gelukkigste verjaardag (in dutch),
le plus joyeux anniversaire (in french),
alles Gute zum Geburtstag (in german),
ευτυχέστερα γενέθλια (in greek),
più buon compleanno (in italian),
o feliz aniversario (in portuguese),
and el cumpleaños más feliz (well, spanish!)

02 November 2005

Diary of a Self-confessed Bakasyonista - DAY1

October 29
3:20 AM Woke up, with dreams of being late at the pier
3:25 Alarm clock’s frantic sound
3:30 Did some stretching para magising
Cooked eggs for our sandwich, boiled water for tea
3:45 Quick shower
3:50 Quick change of clothes – leggings, shirt and slippers
4:00 Made egg sandwiches
4:10 Packing of last-minute items for trip, i.e. slippers, toothbrush, deodorant
Drank tea and ate piaya
4:20 Called MGE for taxi, no taxi available
Frantically looked for cash (just in case…)
4:30 Naglakad papuntang kanto, at sumakay ng jeep
4:45 Bumaba sa Kamuning EDSA
5:00 Aboard Tritan Bus, on the way to Batangas Pier
5:30 Chika chika with Lovella, with matching emote sa bus
Nagbayad P286 kay Mamang Konduktor
5:45 Nakaidlip, then nagising kaagad
6:20 Ate sandwiches and biscuits
6:35 Natulog ulit
Bumili ng panutsa kay Lola dahil naawa ako. She’s almost 80 y.o. at nasa daan pa rin naglalako ng paninda nya. Maawain talaga ako, pwera na lang sa mga beneficiaries naming alam ko na ang mga gimik.
7:00 Are we there yet? Malapit na sa Pier!
7:30 Pumila sa MB Brian ticketing booth. Paid P300 for 2 tix
7:45 Nagbayad ng boarding fee (P20) for 2
Nag-CR, uminom ng cappuccino worth P75 from Rocks Café
7:50 People watching while waiting for our boat
Saw mag-jowa, magkabarkadang maiingay at pa-sosyal, nagliligawan, magkapamilya at magkapuso. Kaso walang akong cute na nakita
8:00 “Lovella and Shirley, you’re the first team to arrive.”
Kami ang pinakauna sa pila while boarding MB Brian
8:30 Were in the high seas between Batangas and Mindoro already. Maalon, but were amazed, people-watching. What else is there to do, anyway?
9:00 Another “are we there yet?” moment
Chika-chika with Love.
9:20 Sumakit ang tyan ko sa kakatawa. Me napansin si Lovella – isang shy sleeper. Natulog nakatakip ang mukha with both hands. OK lang sana, pero take note, nakaupo…can you imagine that?!
9:40 “Are we there yet?” Di pa rin ako makatulog sa boat…Si Lovella, nakaidlip na.
10:05 Docked at White Beach. At last!
10:15 Checked in at Myra and Medelaine’s – Paid P2,000 as deposit
10:30 Agonized over our room – a small room at the back, with no TV! Waah!
Nag-meeting muna kami ni Love. We needed an upgrade of our room
10:40 Approached the owners and asked for an upgrade near the beachfront.
Wait and see daw muna
10:50 Nag-ikot ikot muna kami, surveying the scene at this peak season!
Dami talagang tao. Daming nag fashion show.
11:20 Back to our lodge. Yehey, we were upgraded to a room near the beachfront, with TV!
11:40 Went to our old room, and “repacked” our things for the transfer
11:50 Were in our new upgraded room. Got the key, and paid additional P400.
12:10 Had lunch: chicken kebab, rice, and some chichiria
12:50 Another stroll on the beachfront. Same pa rin. Madaming nag fashion show. Bought bracelets and branklets.
1:20 Tinamad na kami. Back to our room.
Watched TV, and ate some more, and drank green tea
2:10 Natulog.
3:20 Nagising. Nakatulog ulit while watching Travel and Living Channel
4:20 Nagising, at naghahanap ng food.
Grabe, buhay bakasyon talaga
4:40 Ate meryenda in the room
5:00 Watched TV till sumakit ulo naming
7:00 Nagutom ulit kaya lumabas ng kwarto
7:10 Nag ikot ikot ulit, and did some people-watching
Some bars were full already
7:20 Ordered food at M&M – pork kebab naman ngayon.
Love just had grilled hotdog.
7:50 At last, our food arrived! Ganon kadami ang nag-order!
Place was jampacked. Just did some people-watching.
8:00 Ordered 1st bottle of San Mig Light
8:20 Love ordered her 1st bottle. SF ordered 2nd bottle
8:30 Nagmuni-muni while people watching.
Made up stories for interesting people seen as they passed by us.
8:40 Got a bit tipsy na. Consumed two and a half bottles of SML.
8:45 Matao na masyado sa labas, so we decided to go back to our sanctuary and just watched TV. Corny no?
9-something Nakatulog na!!

Phew! Day 1 pa lang yan…How detailed can I really get? I’m a Bree Van de Kamp!
Day 2 to come..

`STF

Rated PG

We’re all back to a 2-day workweek. Hay, bitin ang bakasyon. GMA should have declared the whole week a vacation, and that would have endeared me to her. I miss the bakasyon already, and I miss the sand, sun, water, waves, food and the long afternoon naps during our PG vacation. One and a half days to agonize work, and off to a long weekend again, but this time, at home, taking care of our little beads biz.

Work consists of running around to meet deadlines, website deconstruction (we really have to deconstruct this), dealing with different personalities, Board resignations, petty quarrels over the emails, reports, looking for buried and lost files, and other what-have-you’s of some of our Board members. And oh, I forgot to mention meetings. Just finished preparing for a 3 PM meeting today (and I expected a ho-hum day today because of the vacation mode, but I was wrong!). Another board member thought of dropping by tomorrow morning at 830 AM to discuss some crucial matters, as he is the new Social Welfare Committee chair. Talk about vacations really!

My blog is entitled Rated PG, but here I am whining again! I will leave our PG review to fellow blogger, La Bella.
Waaah! Bring me back to Puerto. Promise, I will be a good company.

`STF










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