Posted by: douwefrancis | August 1, 2009

Surf’s Up at San Juan Surf Resort in La Union, Philippines

… journeys …

Surf’s Up at San Juan Surf Resort in La Union, Philippines

25 to 26 July 2009

Riding the waves and enjoying great company! They’re great ways to end the month of July (…and the second quarter with all the sleepless nights doing regulatory reporting). But when you can have both at the same time, it’s plain wonderful!

Anyway, we went to La Union on the 25th of July, together with Italian and South African contacts so they can enjoy a weekend at the beach. Of course we could have gone to a white sand beach or a nearby island, but hey, the forecast for surfing  was good and at 4 in the morning, straight from work, we found ourselves on the road to San Juan Surf Resort in La Union, northern Philippines.

And the more exciting thing for me is, this is my first time to try surfing! I have joined a surfing trip before, but I never dared attempt to even touch the boards! :-D

Let me share with you some of the better pics I had. Let me keep the crazy and embarrassing ones for my self please. :-D

“ready now…paddle….paddle…paddle..faster!!! faster!!!….now stand!!!”

above the crashing waves, i can hear my instructor yelling at me to attempt to stand! @_@ haha

above the crashing waves, i can hear my instructor yelling at me to attempt to stand! @_@ haha

haha… maybe this one’s better…taken on the morning of the second day

i never thought riding the waves can be so much fun

i never thought riding the waves can be so much fun

I wanted to surf some more, but I was injured (I wouldn’t let you know how and where, it’s too embarrassing… X_X).

But all the pain  was worth all the fun! :D

now don't you fly away you heavy board!!! (the winds were quite strong)

now don't you fly away you heavy board!!! (the winds were quite strong)

now let me just pretend that this board isn't really heavy... now smiiiiile!!!

now let me just pretend that this board isn't really heavy... now smiiiiile!!!

Allow me to think first if i’m still going to post the more embarrassing photos.Uhmmm, maybe in another post some time in the future! :-D

Nevertheless, I hope you would, one day, try surfing as well. It’s really a good work out  just going against the waves towards deeper waters, paddling to catch up with them (the waves so you can ride ‘em), and then pushing yourself to stand up and maintaining your balance. No wonder professional surfers have lean (not necessarily buffed up) bodies – something I’ve lways wanted to achieve, but to no avail, just as yet…haha! And yes, for the bachelors like me, there are lots of really nice girls trying out this sport (or hobby) too… ;)

Travel. Explore. Marvel at the wonders of our beautiful islands! “Huwag maging dayuhan sa sariling bayan”!

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 17, 2009

The Duck and The Devil

…  prayers …

Sin gives us a sense of guilt. And this guilt brings us away from the grace of God.

Nevertheless, let us not forget that the love of God is much greater than all our sin. Much as He is a God of Justice, He is also our Friend, and certainly, a God of Mercy.

May we always find comfort and strength in this unchanging Love and may we always avail of his healing and empowering grace in the Holy Sacrament of Reconciliation.

The Duck & the Devil                         

                                                                           

There was a little boy visiting his grandparents on their farm. He was given a slingshot to play with, out in the woods. He practiced in the woods; but he could never hit the target.         

Getting a little discouraged, he headed back for dinner. As he was walking back he saw Grandma’s pet duck. Just out of impulse, he let the slingshot fly, hit the duck square in the head and killed it. He was shocked and grieved!  In a panic, he hid the dead duck in the wood pile; only to see his sister watching! Sally had seen it all, but she said nothing.          

After lunch the next day Grandma said, ‘Sally, let’s wash the dishes’. But Sally said, ‘Grandma, Johnny told me he wanted to help in then kitchen.’  Then she whispered to him, ‘Remember the duck?’                       

So Johnny did the dishes.                                             

Later that day, Grandpa asked if the children wanted to go fishing and Grandma said, ‘I’m sorry but I need Sally to help make supper.’       

Sally just smiled and said, ‘Well that’s all right because Johnny told me he wanted to help’.                                                 

She whispered again, ‘Remember the duck?’ So Sally went fishing and Johnny stayed to help.                                               

After several days of Johnny doing both his chores and Sally’s; he finally couldn’t stand it any longer.                                 

He came to Grandma and confessed that he had killed the duck.         

Grandma knelt down, gave him a hug and said, ‘Sweetheart, I know. You see, I was standing at the window and I saw the whole thing, but because I love you, I forgave you. I was just wondering how long you would let Sally make a slave of you.’                                 

Thought for the day and every day thereafter?                         

Whatever is in your past, whatever you have done, and the devil keeps throwing it up in your face (lying, cheating, debt, fear, bad habits, hatred, anger, bitterness, etc., whatever it is. You need to know that God was standing at the window and He saw the whole thing.  

Reflections

He has seen your whole life. He wants you to know that He loves you and that you are forgiven. He’s just wondering how long you will let the devil make a slave of you.                                        

The great thing about God is that when you ask for forgiveness; He not only forgives you, but He forgets.                             

It is by God’s grace and mercy that we are saved.                                                                           

God is at the window!                                                 

When Jesus died on the cross; he was thinking of you! 

 

Almighty Father, give me the humility to confess my sins and the courage to amend my ways. May I not be discouraged by the many times I have fallen; instead, may Your loving mercy encourage me to keep on standing up and reaching out to You so that one day, I may become the person you have designed me to become; a reflector of Your glory and perfection, and a channel of Your peace and love. Amen.

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 17, 2009

This is Me… Just Checking In Today

…  prayers …

Sharing with you this cute story that comes in a poem. It’s all about a genuine friendship that has been made available to us all! Be inspired and be very blessed! :)

This is Me… Just Checking In Today

 

A priest passing through his church

in the middle of the day,

  

Decided to pause by the altar

and see who had come to pray.

  

Just then the back door opened,

a man came down the aisle,

  

The minister frowned as he saw

the man hadn’t shaved in a while.

  

His shirt was kind a shabby

and his coat was worn and frayed,

  

The man knelt, he bowed his head,

then rose and walked away.

  

In the days that followed,

each noon time came this chap,

  

Each time he knelt just for a moment,

a lunch pail in his lap.

  

Well, the minister’s suspicions grew,

with robbery a main fear,

  

He decided to stop the man and ask him,

‘What are you doing here?’

  

The old man said, he worked down the road.

Lunch was half an hour.

  

Lunchtime was his prayer time,

for finding strength and power.

  

‘I stay only moments, see,

because the factory is so far away;

  

As I kneel here talking to the Lord,

This is kinda what I say:

  

‘I JUST CAME AGAIN TO TELL YOU, LORD,

HOW HAPPY I’VE BEEN,

SINCE WE FOUND EACH OTHER’S FRIENDSHIP

AND YOU TOOK AWAY MY SIN.

DON’T KNOW MUCH OF HOW TO PRAY,

BUT I THINK ABOUT YOU EVERYDAY.

SO, JESUS, THIS IS JIM

CHECKING IN TODAY.’

  

The minister feeling foolish,

told Jim, that was fine.

  

He told the man he was welcome

to come and pray just anytime.

  

Time to go, Jim smiled, said ‘Thanks.’

He hurried to the door.

  

The minister knelt at the altar,

he’d never done it before.

  

His cold heart melted, warmed with love,

and met with Jesus there.

  

As the tears flowed, in his heart,

he repeated old Jim’s prayer:

  

‘I JUST CAME AGAIN TO TELL YOU, LORD,

HOW HAPPY I’VE BEEN,

SINCE WE FOUND EACH OTHER’S FRIENDSHIP

AND YOU TOOK AWAY MY SIN.

I DON’T KNOW MUCH OF HOW TO PRAY, BUT

I THINK ABOUT YOU EVERYDAY.

SO, JESUS, THIS IS ME CHECKING IN TODAY’

  

Past noon one day, the minister noticed

that old Jim hadn’t come.

  

As more days passed without Jim,

he began to worry some.

  

At the factory, he asked about him,

learning he was ill.

  

The hospital staff was worried,

but he’d given them a thrill.

  

The week that Jim was with them,

brought changes in the ward.

  

His smiles, a joy contagious.

Changed people, were his reward.

  

The head nurse couldn’t understand

why Jim was so glad,

when no flowers, calls or cards came,

not a visitor he had.

  

The minister stayed by his bed,

he voiced the nurse’s concern:

  

No friends came to show they cared.

he had nowhere to turn.

  

Looking surprised, old Jim spoke up

and with a winsome smile,

  

‘the nurse is wrong, she couldn’t know,

that in here all the while

  

everyday at noon He’s here,

a dear friend of mine, you see,

  

He sits right down, takes my hand,

leans over and says to me:

  

‘I JUST CAME AGAIN TO TELL YOU, JIM,

HOW HAPPY I HAVE BEEN,

SINCE WE FOUND THIS FRIENDSHIP,

AND I TOOK AWAY YOUR SIN.

ALWAYS LOVE TO HEAR YOU PRAY,

I THINK ABOUT YOU EACH DAY,

AND SO JIM, THIS IS JESUS

CHECKING IN TODAY.’

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 17, 2009

In God’s Eyes (by Candace Carteen)

… prayers …

This is quite a long read. But it should be worth it. I need not say much. Yet I have to admit that this has brought tears to my eyes.

IN GOD’S EYES
by Candace Carteen, Portland, Oregon

By the time I was ten, I was totally ashamed of my father. All my friends called him names: Quasi-Moto, hunchback, monster, little Frankenstein, the crooked little man with the crooked little cane. At first it hurt when they called him those things, but soon I found myself agreeing with them. He was ugly, and I knew it!

My father was born with something called parastremmatic dwarfism. The disease made him stop growing when he was about thirteen and caused his body to twist and turn into a grotesque shape. It wasn’t too bad when he was a kid. I saw pictures of him when he was about my age. He was a little short but quite good-looking. Even when he met my mother and married her when he was nineteen, he still looked pretty normal. He was still short and walked with a slight limp, but he was able to do just about anything. Mother said, “He even
used to be a great dancer.”

Soon after my birth, things started getting worse. Another genetic disorder took over, and his left foot started turning out, almost backward. His head and neck shifted over to the right; his neck became rigid and he had to look over his left shoulder a bit. His right arm curled in and up, and his index finger almost touched his elbow. His spine warped to look something like a big, old roller
coaster and it caused his torso to lie sideways instead of straight up and down like a normal person. His walk became slow, awkward, and deliberate. He had to almost drag his left foot as he used his deformed right arm to balance his gait.

I hated to be seen with him. Everyone stared. They seemed to pity me. I knew he must have done something really bad to have God hate him that much.

By the time I was seventeen, I was blaming all my problems on my father. I didn’t have the right boyfriends because of him. I didn’t drive the right car because of him. I wasn’t pretty enough because of him. I didn’t have the right jobs because of him. I wasn’t happy because of him.

Anything that was wrong with me, or my life, was because of him. If my father had been good-looking like Jane’s father, or successful like Paul’s father, or worldly like Terry’s father, I would be perfect! I knew that for sure.

The night of my senior prom came, and Father had to place one more nail in my coffin; he had volunteered to be one of the chaperones at the dance. My heart just sank when he told me. I stormed into my room, slammed the door, threw myself on the bed, and cried. “Three more weeks and I’ll be out of here!” I screamed into my pillow. “Three more weeks and I will have graduated and be moving away to college.” I sat up and took a deep breath. “God, please make my father go away and leave me alone. He keeps sticking his big nose in everything I do. Just make him disappear, so that I can have a good time at the dance.”

I got dressed, my date picked me up, and we went to the prom. Father followed in his car behind us. When we arrived, Father seemed to vanish into the pink chiffon drapes that hung everywhere in the auditorium. I thanked God that He had heard my prayer. At least now I could have some fun.

Midway through the dance, Father came out from behind the drapes and decided to embarrass me again. He started dancing with my girlfriends. One by one, he took their hand and led them to the dance floor. He then clumsily moved them in circles as the band played. Now I tried to vanish into the drapes. After Jane had danced with him, she headed my way. Oh, no! I thought. She’s going to tell me he stomped on her foot or something.

“Grace,” she called, “you have the greatest father.”

My face fell. “What?”

She smiled at me and grabbed my shoulders. “Your father’s just the best. He’s funny, kind, and always finds the time to be where you need him. I wish my father was more like that.”

For one of the first times in my life, I couldn’t talk. Her words confused me.

“What do you mean?” I asked her.

Jane looked at me really strangely. “What do you mean, what do I mean? Your father’s wonderful. I remember when we were kids, and I’d sleep over at your house. He’d always come into your room, sit down in the chair between the twin beds, and read us a book. I’m not sure my father can even read,” she sighed, and then smiled. “Thanks for sharing him.”

Then, Jane ran off to dance with her boyfriend.

I stood there in silence.

A few minutes later, Paul came to stand beside me.

“He’s sure having a lot of fun.”

“What? Who? Who is having a lot of fun?” I asked.

“Your father. He’s having a ball.”

“Yeah. I guess.” I didn’t know what else to say.

“You know, he’s always been there,” Paul said. “I remember when you and I were on the mixed-doubles soccer team. He tried out as the coach, but he couldn’t run up and down the field, remember? So they picked Jackie’s father instead. That didn’t stop him. He showed up for every game and did whatever needed to be done. He was the team’s biggest fan. I think he’s the reason we won so many games. Without him, it just would have been Jackie’s father running up and down the field yelling at us. Your father made it fun. I wish my
father had been able to show up to at least one of our games. He was always too busy.”

Paul’s girlfriend came out of the restroom, and he went to her side, leaving me once again speechless.

My boyfriend came back with two glasses of punch and handed me one.

“Well, what do you think of my father?” I asked out of the blue.

Terry looked surprised. “I like him. I always have.”

“Then why did you call him names when we were kids?”

“I don’t know. Because he was different, and I was a dumb kid.”

“When did you stop calling him names?” I asked, trying to search my own memory.

Terry didn’t even have to think about the answer. “The day he sat down with me outside by the pool and held me while I cried about my mother and father’s divorce. No one else would let me talk about it. I was hurting inside, and he could feel it. He cried with me that day. I thought you knew.”

I looked at Terry and a tear rolled down my cheek as long-forgotten memories started cascading into my consciousness.

When I was three, my puppy got killed by another dog, and my father was there to hold me and teach me what happens when the pets we love die. When I was five, my father took me to my first day of school. I was so scared. So was he. We cried and held each other that first day. The next day he became teacher’s helper. When I was eight, I just couldn’t do math. Father sat down with me night after night, and we worked on math problems until math became easy for
me. When I was ten, my father bought me a brand-new bike. When it was stolen, because I didn’t lock it up like I was taught to do, my father gave me jobs to do around the house so I could make enough money to purchase another one. When I was thirteen and my first love broke up with me, my father was there to yell at, to blame, and to cry with. When I was fifteen and I got to be in the honor society, my father was there to see me get the accolade. Now, when I was seventeen, he put up with me no matter how nasty I became or how high my hormones raged.

As I looked at my father dancing gaily with my friends, a big toothy grin on his face, I suddenly saw him differently. The handicaps weren’t his, they were mine! I had spent a great deal of my life hating the man who loved me. I had hated the exterior that I saw, and I had ignored the interior that contained his God-given heart. I suddenly felt very ashamed.

I asked Terry to take me home, too overcome with feelings to remain.

On graduation day, at my Christian high school, my name was called, and I stood behind the podium as the valedictorian of my class. As I looked out over the people in the audience, my gaze rested on my father in the front row sitting next to my mother. He sat there, in his one and only, specially made suit, holding my mother’s hand and smiling.

Overcome with emotions, my prepared speech was to become a landmark in my life.

“Today I stand here as an honor student, able to graduate with a 4.0 average. Yes, I was in the honor society for three years and was elected class president for the last two years. I led our school to championship in the debate club, and yes, I even won a full scholarship to Kenton State University so that I can continue to study physics and someday become a college professor.

“What I’m here to tell you today, fellow graduates, is that I didn’t do it alone. God was there, and I had a whole bunch of friends, teachers, and counselors who helped. Up until three weeks ago, I thought they were the only ones I would be thanking this evening. If I had thanked just them, I would have been leaving out the most important person in my life. My father.”

I looked down at my father and at the look of complete shock that covered his face.

I stepped out from behind the podium and motioned for my father to join me onstage. He made his way slowly, awkwardly, and deliberately. He had to drag his left foot up the stairs as he used his deformed right arm to balance his gait. As he stood next to me at the podium, I took his small, crippled hand in mine and held it tight.

“Sometimes we only see the silhouette of the people around us,” I said. “For years I was as shallow as the silhouettes I saw. For almost my entire life, I saw my father as someone to make fun of, someone to blame, and someone to be ashamed of. He wasn’t perfect, like the fathers my friends had.

“Well, fellow graduates, what I found out three weeks ago is that while I was envying my friends’ fathers, my friends were envying mine. That realization hit me hard and made me look at who I was and what I had become. I was brought up to pray to God and hold high principles for others and myself. What I’ve done most of my life is read between the lines of the Good Book so I could justify my hatred.”

Then, I turned to look my father in the face.

“Father, I owe you a big apology. I based my love for you on what I saw and not what I felt. I forgot to look at the one part of you that meant the most, the big, big heart God gave you. As I move out of high school and into life, I want you to know I could not have had a better father. You were always there for me, and no matter how badly I hurt you, you still showed up. Thank you!”

I took off my mortar board and placed it on his head, moving the tassel just so.

“You are the reason I am standing here today. You deserve this honor, not me.”

And as the audience applauded and cried with us, I felt God’s light shining down upon me as I embraced my father more warmly than I ever had before, tears unashamedly falling down both our faces.

For the first time, I saw my father through God’s eyes, and I felt honored to be seen with him.

 

Loving Father, help us to stop judging people by this fleeting world’s harsh standards. Rather, give us the grace to see everybody, starting with our loved ones,  with Your own loving eyes. Amen.

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 13, 2009

On Absence…

… random thoughts …

This is another re-post from my Multiply account dated December 19, 2007. All these re-postings are part of a plan to reorganize, and probably, to ultimately sunset my Multiply account. I must admit that this really sounds cheesy. As a matter of fact, I ended up laughing (with a little pinch at the heart) after reading this again more than a year and a half after I first published it.

On Absence…

“Absence does to love what wind does to a flame….

it feeds the strong, and extinguishes the weak…”

That’s it!… Maybe that should say it all… :D …I simply ran out of other things to say. But if I were to talk to the person who is the reason why I am deeply affected (or even bothered) by these words, this might be what I will be telling her:

“I’m afraid to read your blogs, I’m afraid to look at your Multiply and Friendster accounts. It’s because I know that it will give me a subtle but deep pain to see that lately, I haven’t been a part of your life. That I never had any chance to spend moments with you which are worth blogging about or pictures worth posting in your web pages. In all humiliating honesty, yes, I’m afraid to check them out because I might only get jealous. I could have been with you…I could have invited you out, took you to dinner, do some fun stuff, spend precious time and priceless moments with you…just like the good old days. Your presence in my life has kept me together for so long…and now, I feel like falling apart because you are not here with me. I miss you, more than you think I do.”

Geeeeez…I never thought I could feel this way; moreso, be this public about how I feel. But I guess when you’re really into someone, you just seem to forget what other people might say just to be able to speak your heart and let the world know what it is that you truly feel.

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 13, 2009

Missing Someone So Badly…

… random thoughts…

This is a re-post from my Multiply website. Take a peek at how I was feeling on December 9, 2007. :)

Missing Someone So Badly…

When someone is so near, and yet so far, that’s when it begins to hurt so badly.

When all that you want is to give yourself more to someone, but circumstances would dictate otherwise and not give you the chance, that’s when it really breaks your heart.

When all that you need is to share your self to a most special one, but destiny just pulls you apart, that’s when your life falls painfully apart.

I MISS SOMEONE SO BADLY.

I miss the days when life was more forgiving; when time to share abounds; and when feelings were pure.

But I guess nothing stays the same. We can only hold on to something for so long. If I could beg her to stay and take a chance with me, I humbly would. If I could have the chance and the courage to let her know how I really feel, I honestly would. If I could get the chance to give myself to her and share my life with her, I gladly would.

But life isn’t a fairy tale. And there is not much room for wishful thinking.

I never thought I had to learn to let go of someone I have learned to love.

I never thought it would hurt this much.

I had been hurt before.

Thought I would never love again soon.

But I realized one day that someone already means so much to me.

And when I looked into her eyes, all I saw was a glimpse of someone I want to take care of, someone to laugh and cry with, someone to hold and to cherish.

I found myself once again believing that somehow, someone is going to take me into her life and give my life more meaning and make it more worth living.

Because of her, I dreamed once more.

I hoped once more.

I loved once more. 

And I am in pain once more.

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 13, 2009

Closing Cycles (by Paolo Coelho)

… random thoughts …

Nope, for those who are accountants like me, this is not related to our highly technical work during monthends. (Sorry for disappointing the nerds out there :-D ) This belongs to the realm of the human heart and emotions… Kidding aside, please read on and have a glimpse of the wisdom of this highly-celebrated novelist.

Closing Cycles
by Paolo Coelho, author of “The Alchemist”

One always has to know when a stage comes to an end. If we insist on staying longer than the necessary time, we lose the happiness and the meaning of the other stages we have to go through.

Closing cycles, shutting doors, ending chapters whatever name we give it, what matters is to leave in the past the moments of life that have finished. Did you lose your job? Has a loving relationship come to an end? Did you leave your parents’ house? Gone to live abroad? Has a long-lasting friendship ended all of a sudden?

You can spend a long time wondering why this has happened. You can tell yourself you won’t take another step until you find out why certain things that were so important and so solid in your life have turned
into dust, just like that.

But such an attitude will be awfully stressing for everyone involved: your parents, your husband or wife, your friends, your children, your sister, everyone will be finishing chapters, turning over new leaves, getting on with life, and they will all feel bad seeing you at a standstill.

None of us can be in the present and the past at the same time, not even when we try to understand the things that happen to us. What has passed will not return: we cannot for ever be children, late adolescents, sons that feel guilt or rancor towards our parents, lovers who day and night relive an affair with someone who has gone away and has not the least intention of coming back.

Things pass, and the best we can do is to let them really go away. That is why it is so important (however painful it maybe!) to destroy souvenirs, move, give lots of things away to orphanages, sell or donate the
books you have at home. Everything in this visible world is a manifestation of the invisible world, of what is going on in our hearts and getting rid of certain memories also means making some room for other memories to take their place.

Let things go. Release them. Detach yourself from them. Nobody plays this life with marked cards, so sometimes we win and sometimes we lose. Do not expect anything in return; do not expect your efforts to be appreciated, your genius to be discovered, and your love to be understood. Stop turning on your emotional television to watch the same program over and over again, the one that shows how much you suffered from a certain loss: that is only poisoning you, nothing else.

Nothing is more dangerous than not accepting love relationships that are broken off, work that is promised but there is no starting date, and decisions that are always put off waiting for the ideal moment. Before a new chapter is begun, the old one has to be finished: tell yourself that what has passed will never come back. Remember that there was a time when you could live without that thing or that person. Nothing is
irreplaceable. A habit is not a need . This may sound so obvious, it may even be difficult, but it is very important.

Closing cycles. Not because of pride, incapacity or arrogance, but simply because that no longer fits your life. Shut the door, change the record, clean the house, and shake off the dust. Stop being who you were, and change into who you are.

“Live as if you were to die tomorrow.
Learn as if you were to live forever.”

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 13, 2009

I Am a Filipino (by Carlos P. Romulo)

… visions …

Today, let me share with you this profound essay written by Carlos P . Romulo.

Whatever spiritual creed you profess (if you do profess one), whatever your native dialect is, wherever you are right now, and whether you are pure-blooded or mestizo/mestiza… as long as your heart remains with the noble race of the Far East, you remain to be a child of the sun… a people set apart by its glorious past, its colorful present and its uncertain future…

Despite and in spite of everything, I hope that you will always remain to be proud of being a Filipino! And being proud does not end with the feeling of pride, but should translate into action – into a constant and conscious effort to uplift the lives of our dear countrymen and to work together towards creating a better future, a feat that we owe to future generations.

This is quite a long read but I do hope you will like it.

I AM A FILIPINO

by Carlos P. Romulo, former Secretary-General of the United Nations

I am a Filipino – inheritor of a glorious past, hostage to the uncertain future. As such I must prove equal to a two-fold task- the task of meeting my responsibility to the past, and the task of performing my obligation to the future. I sprung from a hardy race – child of many generations removed of ancient Malayan pioneers. Across the centuries, the memory comes rushing back to me: of brown-skinned men putting out to sea in ships that were as frail as their hearts were stout. Over the sea I see them come, borne upon the billowing wave and the whistling wind, carried upon the mighty swell of hope- hope in the free abundance of new land that was to be their home and their children’s forever.

This is the land they sought and found. Every inch of shore that their eyes first set upon, every hill and mountain that beckoned to them with a green and purple invitation, every mile of rolling plain that their view encompassed, every river and lake that promise a plentiful living and the fruitfulness of commerce, is a hallowed spot to me.

By the strength of their hearts and hands, by every right of law, human and divine, this land and all the appurtenances thereof – the black and fertile soil, the seas and lakes and rivers teeming with fish, the forests with their inexhaustible wealth in wild life and timber, the mountains with their bowels swollen with minerals – the whole of this rich and happy land has been, for centuries without number, the land of my fathers. This land I received in trust from them and in trust will pass it to my children, and so on until the world is no more.

I am a Filipino. In my blood runs the immortal seed of heroes – seed that flowered down the centuries in deeds of courage and defiance. In my veins yet pulses the same hot blood that sent Lapulapu to battle against the alien foe that drove Diego Silang and Dagohoy into rebellion against the foreign oppressor.

That seed is immortal. It is the self-same seed that flowered in the heart of Jose Rizal that morning in Bagumbayan when a volley of shots put an end to all that was mortal of him and made his spirit deathless forever; the same that flowered in the hearts of Bonifacio in Balintawak, of Gergorio del Pilar at Tirad Pass, of Antonio Luna at Calumpit; that bloomed in flowers of frustration in the sad heart of Emilio Aguinaldo at Palanan, and yet burst fourth royally again in the proud heart of Manuel L. Quezon when he stood at last on the threshold of ancient Malacañang Palace, in the symbolic act of possession and racial vindication.

The seed I bear within me is an immortal seed. It is the mark of my manhood, the symbol of dignity as a human being. Like the seeds that were once buried in the tomb of Tutankhamen many thousand years ago, it shall grow and flower and bear fruit again. It is the insigne of my race, and my generation is but a stage in the unending search of my people for freedom and happiness.

I am a Filipino, child of the marriage of the East and the West. The East, with its languor and mysticism, its passivity and endurance, was my mother, and my sire was the West that came thundering across the seas with the Cross and Sword and the Machine. I am of the East, an eager participant in its struggles for liberation from the imperialist yoke. But I also know that the East must awake from its centuried sleep, shape of the lethargy that has bound his limbs, and start moving where destiny awaits.

For, I, too, am of the West, and the vigorous peoples of the West have destroyed forever the peace and quiet that once were ours. I can no longer live, being apart from those whose world now trembles to the roar of bomb and cannon shot. For no man and no nation is an island, but a part of the main, there is no longer any East and West – only individuals and nations making those momentous choices that are hinges upon which history resolves.

At the vanguard of progress in this part of the world I stand – a forlorn figure in the eyes of some, but not one defeated and lost. For through the thick, interlacing branches of habit and custom above me I have seen the light of the sun, and I know that it is good. I have seen the light of justice and equality and freedom and my heart has been lifted by the vision of democracy, and I shall not rest until my land and my people shall have been blessed by these, beyond the power of any man or nation to subvert or destroy.

I am a Filipino, and this is my inheritance. What pledge shall I give that I may prove worthy of my inheritance? I shall give the pledge that has come ringing down the corridors of the centuries, and it shall be compounded of the joyous cries of my Malayan forebears when they first saw the contours of this land loom before their eyes, of the battle cries that have resounded in every field of combat from Mactan to Tirad pass, of the voices of my people when they sing:

Land of the Morning,Child of the sun returning…Ne’er shall invaders, trample thy sacred shore. 

Out of the lush green of these seven thousand isles, out of the heartstrings of sixteen million* people all vibrating to one song, I shall weave the mighty fabric of my pledge. Out of the songs of the farmers at sunrise when they go to labor in the fields; out of the sweat of the hard-bitten pioneers in Mal-ig and Koronadal; out of the silent endurance of stevedores at the piers and the ominous grumbling of peasants in Pampanga; out of the first cries of babies newly born and the lullabies that mothers sing; out of the crashing of gears and the whine of turbines in the factories; out of the crunch of ploughs upturning the earth; out of the limitless patience of teachers in the classrooms and doctors in the clinics; out of the tramp of soldiers marching, I shall make the pattern of my pledge:

“I am a Filipino born of freedom and I shall not rest until freedom shall have been added unto my inheritance – for myself and my children’s children – forever.

 

*Just a footnote: The National Statistics Office (NSO) has projected the Philippine population to be at 92.23 million by 2009. As of the August 2007 census, we are at 88.57 million.

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 9, 2009

The Day Shay Got To Play (by EJ Nolan)

… random thoughts …

Perhaps most of you have already read this story being circulated around through emails. Nevertheless, let me once again share this story of unselfish love and unconditional friendship. No wonder the Lord said, “I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 18:3, NIV).

 The Day Shay Got To Play

 by EJ Nolan

 Chush is a school in Brooklyn, New York that caters to learning disabled children. Some children remain in Chush for their entire school career.

 

At a Chush fund-raising dinner, the father of one student delivered a speech that would never be forgotten by all who attended. After extolling the school and its dedicated staff, he cried out, “Where is the perfection in my son, Shay? Everything God does is done with perfection, but my child cannot understand things as other children do. My child cannot remember facts and figures as other children do. Where is God’s perfection?”

The audience was shocked by the question, pained by the father’s anguish and stilled by the piercing query. “I believe,” the father answered, “that when God brings a child like this into the world, the perfection that he seeks is in the way people react to this child.”

He then told the following story about his son Shay:

One afternoon, Shay and his father walked past a park where some boys Shay knew were playing baseball. Shay asked, “Do you think they will let me play?”

Shay’s father knew that his son was not at all athletic and that most boys would not want him on their team. But Shay’s father understood that if his son was chosen to play it would give him a comfortable sense of belonging. Shay’s father approached one of the boys in the field and asked if Shay could play.The boy looked around for guidance from his teammates. Getting none, he took matters into his own hands and said “We are losing by six runs and the game is in the eighth inning. I guess he can be on our team and we’ll try to put him up to bat in the ninth inning.”

Shay’s father was ecstatic as Shay smiled broadly. Shay was told to put on a glove and go out to play short center field. In the bottom of the eighth inning, Shay’s team scored a few runs but was still behind by three. In the bottom of the ninth inning, Shay’s team scored again and now with two outs and the bases loaded with the potential winning run on base. Shay was scheduled to be up. Would the team actually let Shay bat at this juncture and give away their chance to win the game?

Surprisingly, Shay was given the bat. Everyone knew that it was all but impossible because Shay didn’t even know how to hold the bat properly, let alone hit with it. However, as Shay stepped up to the plate, the pitcher moved a few steps to lob the ball in softly so Shay should at least be able to make contact.

The first pitch came and Shay swung clumsily and missed. One of Shay’s teammates came up to Shay and together they held the bat and faced the pitcher waiting for the next pitch. The pitcher again took a few steps forward to toss the ball softly toward Shay. As the pitch came in, Shay and his teammate swung at the ball and together they hit a slow ground ball to the pitcher.

The pitcher picked up the soft grounder and could easily have thrown the ball to the first baseman. Shay would have been out and that would have ended the game. Instead, the pitcher took the ball and threw it on a high arc to right field, far beyond reach of the first baseman.

Everyone started yelling, “Shay, run to first. Run to first.” Never in his life had Shay run to first. He scampered down the baseline wide-eyed and startled. By the time he reached first base, the right fielder had the ball. He could have thrown the ball to the second baseman who would tag out Shay, who was still running. But the right fielder understood what the pitcher’s intentions were, so he threw the ball high and far over the third baseman’s head.

Everyone yelled, “Run to second, run to second.” Shay ran towards second base as the runners ahead of him deliriously circled the bases towards home.

As Shay reached second base, the opposing shortstop ran to him, turned him in the direction of third base and shouted, “Run to third.” As Shay rounded third, the boys from both teams ran behind him screaming, “Shay run home.”

Shay ran home, stepped on home plate and all 18 boys lifted him on their shoulders and made him the hero, as he had just hit a “grand slam” and won the game for his team.

“That day,” said the father softly with tears now rolling down his face, “the boys from both teams helped bring a piece of the Divine Plan into this world.”

Shay didn’t make it to another summer. He died that winter, having never forgotten being the hero and making me so happy, and coming home and seeing his mother tearfully embrace her little hero of the day!

Some random thoughts on this story…

We all have thousands of opportunities every single day to help realize the ‘natural order of things.’

So many seemingly trivial interactions between two people present us with a choice:

Do we pass along a little spark of love and humanity or do we pass up those opportunities and leave the world a little bit colder in the process?

A wise man once said that every society is judged by how it treats the least fortunate among them.

May your day be a Shay Day! :-)

Source: http://www.baseball-almanac.com/poetry/po_shay.shtml

Posted by: douwefrancis | July 8, 2009

…a thousand paper cranes…

… random thoughts…

Let me share with you this painful, yet truly wonderful, love story.

There was once this guy who is very much in love with his girl. This romantic guy folded 1,000 pieces of paper cranes as a gift to his girl. Although at that time, he was just a small fry in his company and his future didn’t seem too bright, they were very happy together. Until one day, his girl told him she was going to Paris and will never come back. She also told him that she cannot visualize any future for the both of them, so they went their own ways there and then…

The guy agreed with a broken heart. But when he regained his confidence, he worked hard day and night, slogging his body and mind just to make something out of himself… Finally, with all the hard work and the help of friends, this guy was able to set up his own company…

You never fail until you stop trying.

One rainy day, while this guy was driving, he saw an elderly couple sharing an umbrella in the rain walking to some destination. Even with the umbrella, they were still drenched. It didn’t take him long to realize they were his girl’s parents. With a heart in getting back at them, he drove slowly beside the couple, wanting them to spot him in his luxury sedan. He wanted them to know that he wasn’t the same any more; he had his own company, car, condo, etc . He made it!

What he saw next confused him. The couple was walking towards a cemetery, and so he got out of his car and followed…

And he saw his girl, a photograph of her smiling sweetly as ever at him from her tombstone and he saw his paper cranes right beside her.

Her parents saw him. He asked them why this had happened. They explained that she did not leave for France at all. She was ill with cancer. She had believed that he will make it someday, but she did not want to be his obstacle. Therefore, she had chosen to leave him.

Just because someone doesn’t love you the way you want them to, doesn’t mean they don’t love you with all they have.

She had wanted her parents to put his paper cranes beside her, because, if the day comes when fate brings him to her again, he can take some of those back with him.

Once you have loved, you will always love . For what’s in your mind may escape but what’s in your heart will remain forever.

The guy just wept…

The worst way to miss someone is to be sitting right beside her knowing you can’t have her, see her or be with her ever again.

And finally…

Find time to realize that there is one person who means so much to you, for you might wake up one morning losing that person whom you thought meant nothing at all.

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