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random, quirky, weird, wonderfully complicated,energy-absorber, saccharinely-sweet, princessy-brat, perky-bitch, intuitive to the point of freaky-psychic, forever an island girl, climbing walls, stringer of words, paint dabbler, picture-taker, gimmick-thinker, perpetual organizer, proponent of simple joys, amateur tag-liner, meandering old soul, a google girl, a closet martha stewart/emily post, the best coffee-maker and a spa-addict.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

winning bangketa shot

'm so happy about this cover story. I've been working (and stressing) on this for the past couple of weeks just so we could get the cover. I supervised the shoot and interview, researched, and got to meet wonderful and funny people in the process. Since this is my first cover pitch to get approved, it's double the pressure.
Aside from the people I worked with, Joel Calderon himself is inspiring. In his quiet and unassuming ways, he is the embodiment of passionate perseverance. Just what makes him extraordinary? Read his story in Starweek's July 12 issue.
Another job perk? A society columnist asked for his contact details. I don't know why, but hopefully for more publicity, which of course, equals to more sponsorships. Charity just makes you feel so damn good, doesn't it? Especially when I'm actually doing it as part of my job. I'm so happy for him, I hope he wins more races. Next, Tour de France?


And yeah, the chosen cover photo was based on my peg- the bangketa shot. LOL.

Update
Online version now up: http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=485868&publicationSubCategoryId=90
I would like to say welcome to my home, but that's just me needing a good bonk on the head or perhaps a straight IV shot of espresso to wake me up.
I read about this piece of heaven and I've been wanting to live here, or at least spend a week- heck, a month, please! Isn't this place gorgeous? The concept is wonderful, catered to such beach-bum-geeks like myself. Damn! Can I live here? While I hold close to my heart old Spanish/Filipiniana baroque, The Library's

design and architecture really works in its simplicty- some parts very Ikea, which I adore. (I remember leafing through those brochures when I was a kid.) Most notable perhaps is their unique red-tiled pool; they liberally use red as accents to an otherwise monochromatic palette.


One of the best bits about this place? Named The Library, it can't get any heavenly as this.

Check out their website(never mind the funny-cute English.) Their opening line: Real happiness is not complicated at all. Lahvet! ;)

(That and photo cred: http://www.thelibrary.name)

(This is in Thailand, by the way :P)


Very simple, discrete but powerful. I love ads that tell stories.
(I think you need to click on the photo to read the copy. I scanned this Vespa ad from a broadsheet. Yes, I loved it that much.)
----
Edit: Ok, I think clicking on the photo doesn't work. Here's the text. Now, this is a love story.

"She was behind me when I started the band.
Behind me when won my first fight.
Behind me when I aced my exams.
Behind me when I turned down college.
Behind me when I got our record deal.
Behind me when I chose not to fight.
Behind me when I quit the band.
Behind me when I took the job.
Behind me when her parents weren't.
Behind me when I wanted a small wedding.
Behind me when I wanted a big party.
Behind me when I wanted a 52" screen.
Behind me when I mortgaged a house.
Behind me when I started the company.
Behind me when my father died.
Behind me when my partners split.
Behind me when I nearly quit.
Behind me when I restored the business.
Behind me when I reformed the band.
Behind me when I overtook the bus."


Unfolding: An Account of Standing my Ground Amidst a Slippery Slope

Oh, but I've heard lies like those
You may speak your truth, but all I hear are lies,

rotten versions of your truth.

I would have believed in anything and everything.
In something good. I heard your voice, what you were saying.
Even things you couldn't say.
In the expectation of something that may just be right.
But I need to stand my ground.
How easy it is to go down that slippery slope.

For a time you were all I needed to get by.
In the great grand scheme of things, you were the constant.
I would have fallen to pieces for you, and maybe the walls did tumble.
I wanted to be there but you wouldn't let me.

Between the things that you said and did,
that last act of betrayal took the cake.
Erasing all the good that happened
and was bound to happen, had I stayed.
I've never fancied myself a sadist,
and yet there I was stoically bearing every unkind act you have played.

It's even harder to breathe now.
Honestly and strangely, with you I felt something I hadn't in a while.
I may have mistaken it at one time or another for something akin to what?
Infatuation? Falling? I am beyond labeling it now.
It is done.

For a long time, I had so many questions.
Now, I don’t even need to know the answers.
I need to unfold.



(pho
to cred: www.cherrybam.com)

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

meet the speechwriter

how hot is this guy?
(obviously, I haven't finished my drafts and instead
opt to post more eye candy. kapoy to think.)

As the chief speechwriter for the Obama campaign, Favreau has had a hand in nearly every speech Obama has given, including the inaugural address. Today, he's the director of speechwriting for the administration.



Tuesday, January 20, 2009

what a first post...

Melai "introduced" me to this gorgeous creature. Something to look forward to this year- Daniel Henney, playing Agent Zero in X-Men Origin, out sometime this May.

I heart him :D To think, am not a fan of Koreanovelas. I found out he's the guy in My Name is Kim Sam Soon, and that he's British-Korean-American.

How can a man look this good?!

Anyhoo. Lots of drafts to finish and blog backlog. Been tying loose ends, getting really sick, blah blah blah...

Be back blogging pretty soon.




Friday, December 19, 2008

finally!

on a late friday night, first draft = final. what music to my ears :) lahvet.

happy thoughts to send me on my way.

next post, from cebu.

happy madcap christmas, everyone.

finally!


Monday, December 08, 2008

working class

My work is getting me all-schizo, in a good way. Fun. I have to always keep in mind “voices” when I write. I am forced to actually put discipline in writing. My constant source of insecurity is the fact that I didn’t go to school (training) for this, but since this is something that I am passionate about, I am willing to go to great lengths to learn as much as I can. Oh, the things I do for this love of writing- I took a pay cut, I now commute in the smoggy metro and contend with a lot of rude people during rush hour. I know this won’t be the end of it, this constant adjustment, stretching of myself. I don different thinking hats- one minute, its party girl covering a fabulous event, and the next, serious news fit for front page. Work may not be perfect and ideal, but it’s reliable. It isn’t about feeling the love everyday- it is about sustenance, for even when after the glow of falling has waned, I will stick it out and I will choose to stay. That is something I cannot say about a job that I’m not in love with. I was interviewed in several multinational companies; a couple with posts that were connected to my training and HR background. In one, I did the initial interview, exam and the departmental interview all on the same day. I knew if I really wanted to, I would have gotten the job. Except, when I was talking to my potential boss about projects that I had done, I noticed I was telling her my story by rote. In a weird out-of-body kind way, I saw myself talking to her, all prim and proper in my suit, hands clasped on my lap. Just enough of a warm smile, slight nodding of the head. No sparks, no chemistry. Much like a blind date that bombed.Then, the exams. Logical, abstract reasoning and mathematical ability. Number series that required you of what came next after 8, 9, 12. How the hell should I know? I hate those exams, and I hate it even more when numbers and shapes start swimming on the test booklets. Good thing the proctors didn’t see my scratch sheets, or else they’d have seen my doodles. Still a lot like a blind date who insists on bringing you home. Prolonging the agony.In contrast, my interviews for the current job was full of laughter, some retelling of stories and I didn’t even have to take an exam. On the very day of my first and final interview, I got the job and a take home assignment. Now, here I am. Of course, I cannot write about clients here, one thing I promised myself. Common sense, even if I did have to sign a confidentiality agreement. I’m having fun learning. Being continents out of my comfort zone isn’t all that peachy fun, but there are moments. In events, I get all glammed up and prettified, then you’d see us scarfing down fishbols on the sidewalk, right before schmoozing with guests. Sarap.I will not complain about demanding clients; it doesn’t take a genius to realize they’re the reason we have the business. It will only give me more insight on human nature, and hey, more fodder for my future-book material. I will not whine about having to read and scan newspapers and magazines for client monitoring, I already love to read them anyway. It will just mean I will have extended my reading menu. A downside is the abuse I’ve been inflicting on my eyes, having to stare at the computer screen for hours and noticing a need to have my eyes checked. That, and pushing myself to turn out better articles, faster, so my editor will be happier. I don’t mind though. That silly smile I have plastered on my face after seeing my words on major dailies is more than enough. For now. I still want my byline.

commuting casualty

“Give a woman a great pair of shoes and she can conquer the world” (Bette Midler) Unfortunately, not even Carrie and the rest of the SATC girls can account for the fact that walking in heels on concrete is a version of hell on earth. I may have to go back to basics, and I don’t think I’ve ever been a basics kind of girl. Wearing clothes my own way, I didn’t need to previously consider the logistical considerations of outfits. (Yeah, so socially relevant.) I’ve never had to commute this far and if I did, I was always able to get rides. Getting on the MRT was a once in a while treat; almost five years in my stay in Manila, it’s still somewhat of a novelty. Not anymore. In my previous post, I mentioned about tugging hemlines and lowered necklines. I’ve never been one to wear something so attention-grabbing, but I do love to have my own way of dressing up. After years of having school uniforms, fashion was something that I relish. Aside from clothes considerations, my promising love affair with shoes is getting nipped in the bud. I still love my stilettos, but I have also recently learned to be friends with flats, something that I have never imagined doing. I’m sure girls can relate to the power of wearing high heels and I need not go over again the high (literally and figuratively) that women get when in heels. Sure, we walk differently, hips consciously swaying in tune with the staccato beats our walking creates. Try that for, oh, let’s say three blocks, and you’ll be crying for your mommy. Someone, please invent heels we can actually commute in comfortably. Is a confidence-boosting device in the guise of footwear too much to ask of Santa this Christmas? Conquer the world in flats and the height you were destined, in my case, puny? So much for world domination. Forget it. (Oh wait…a certain lady president who stays firmly in place? Sheldon Plankton in SpongeBob? Hmm. There might be hope yet.) Thankfully, the weather has been great. It’s actually cold out, and the MRT’s air-condition is even sometimes freezing. Come summer, it’s going to be another story.

here's another.

procrastinating efficiently. Here's another linked article, this time by F. Sionil Jose (because I can certainly relate, and because I still haven't finished Viajero)

Should our writers globalize?
HINDSIGHT By F Sionil Jose Updated December 08, 2008 12:00 AM

A hundred writers and literature teachers from Mindanao and the Visayas met at the University of the Philippines in Tacloban last Monday. This is what I told them:

Prof. Merle Alunan asked me to comment on “Literature in the Environment of Globalism.” For those of us who write in English, since English has become the lengua franca of the world, our literature will have a global reach even without our intending it. And such megaton words like globalism, globalization, what could they possibly mean to a farmer in storm-lashed Samar, who had slaved to send his children to this university in Tacloban? What can such words mean to us, knowing that the world has shrunk so much with the laptop and television, and of course, with our thousands upon thousands of relatives strewn at random all over the world. Truly, we have become a cosmopolitan people although our roots are embedded deep in the provincial soil of this unhappy country.

We now see our workers here and abroad losing their jobs because of the rapacity of capitalists, and at home, the myopia of those Makati moneybags. These are the sordid realities of the present, the ugly face of globalism staring at us.

We cannot demand of writers, to portray a particular theme, a particular view, although, of course, it was common for Popes and Kings to patronize writers who pandered to them affirming their greatness. But maybe, just maybe, from this impending catastrophe — “Only the event will teach us in its hour…” and, so it must be — from the great conundrums in history have sprung equally great writers. From the Spanish Inquisition emerged Miguel de Cervantes and the world’s greatest novel, “Don Quixote dela Mancha.” Bad times create good if not excellent literature — in living memory, the Great Depression in America in the ’30s brought forth the brightest of American writers, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Steinbeck, William Faulkner.

Stalinist repression from the Thirties to the Seventies did not extinguish the creativity of Russia’s authors; from those horrendous decades of imprisonment, torture and death sprang Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Boris Paternak, poets like Osip Mandelstam who died in prison and my favorite poet, Anna Akhmatova whose poem, permit me now to recite, is a tribute to those who stayed behind and braved the lash:

I am not one of those who left the land

to the mercy of its enemies.

Their flattery leaves me cold,

my songs are not for them to praise.

But I pity the exile’s lot.

Like a felon, like a man half-dead,

dark is your path, wanderer;

wormwood infects your foreign bread.

But here in the murk of conflagration

when scarcely a friend is left to know,

we, the survivors, do not flinch

from anything, not from a single blow.

Surely, the reckoning will be made

after the passing of this cloud.

We are the people without tears,

straighter than you, more proud.

In the last hundred years — think back, momentous watersheds — in our history; the revolution of 1896, the Japanese Occupation in 1942 and the dictatorship of Marcos in 1972; these tested us, and we were found wanting, but at least, the twilight of Spanish colonialism brought us the Noli Me Tangere and the El Filibusterismo — the two great novels that have loomed brightest in this tumultuous past to remind us the necessity for writers to be contextual, if our writing is to survive and prevail. For in the end, although we cannot wait that long, time is the ultimate — and the best critic.

Let me digress and be personal.

In a couple of days, I will be 84 — a very old man. I have earned the privilege of saying what I please because now, I know so much — and yet, I also know so little. Indeed the whole of living is a learning experience. I have seen how this nation has decayed, how our leaders betrayed the Filipino dream. I think I can also question now without quibbling what Ninoy Aquino said, that the Filipino is worth dying for.

With my background, then I hope I can impart to you some thoughts about writing — shortcuts, perhaps, in the craft which will spare you some trouble.

Early enough answer some basic questions which all writers should ask of themselves, like, what is literature? Why do I write? What will I write about? And who is my audience?

Before doing so, let me salute those of you who are teachers or who plan to teach bearing in mind that teaching, like writing, is a vocation.

I owe so much to my teachers, my mother most of all who taught me patience and industry, and my grade school teacher Soledad Oriel who introduced me to literature, to the novels of Rizal, Miguel de Cervantes and Willa Cather and thereby opened a vast new world for me. And Paz Latorena in college who defined for me the difference between telling a story and writing one. And the Dominican, Juan Labrador who taught me clarity.

First, what is literature? So many of us and even teachers at that do not realize how valuable literature is, not just as entertainment or history, but as a shaper of culture and of ethics for as I have so often stated, it is only literature which can teach us ethics.

And this very personal question, why do you write?

Globalism? Forget it — we will infuse our literature with what we are, our gonads, the odors of our bodies and the verdure of our land. We will write as Filipinos, free from the influences of our colonizers, from the canons they imposed on us. In this way, we will not be swept under by the dulcet enticements of McDonald’s, Toyota and Harry Potter. It is the Filipinoness, this particularity which will identify us, from which the universal begins.

And for whom are we writing? This is such a simple question which demands a simple answer but if we think a little bit more, then we realize that our answer will embrace so much.

We are writing for ourselves and for our own people.

What then should we write about and what do we tell our people? We will entertain them, that’s for sure but writers are also teachers so we will teach them our history, about ourselves. We will do this bearing in mind that we can dig into the rich lode of our folk traditions, the mud at our feet if need be. We must remember that we are creatures of geography, of our colonized history which shaped us not as Asians but as Westerners, Latinos, perhaps, people given to flamboyance, to hyperbole, to rococo excesses — all of these which we must refine and infuse with more depth for this is also a fact about us — we are shallow, without the philosophical profundity of Buddhism and Hinduism — the two great religions of Asia that did not touch us. We are Christians, most of us, without a profound knowledge of Christianity itself and its roots in the Greco-Judaic past. Depth, and more depth, that is what we need in our arts, in our literature — not just the purely visceral which characterizes our response to the arts.

To acquire that depth requires of our writers more knowledge, a keener understanding of the social process, and of art itself.

A priest who is an excellent writer of both fiction and non-fiction, not too long ago, confessed that he was no longer as prolific as he was in his younger days and that now, he found difficulty in creative writing. I asked if it was his vocation — the priesthood that was inhibiting him. For a while, he seemed in deep thought, then he said quietly, it was, indeed the priesthood that was in the way.

Indeed, art is very demanding — and it is difficult if not impossible for any man to serve two masters. Think about this dilemma, too.

A writer’s life is harsh. First there is the very tedious struggle to put down on paper the fires that burn in our bellies, the honing of craft into art, the total immersion into what we are writing, the shutting off the outside world so that we enter the new world of the imagination with clarity and anxiety.

And then, there are the iron demands of the other world wherein we actually live, the need to provide three meals a day for family, a roof that does not leak, and hopefully, a future that is free from drought and storm.

And we know that the stuff we produce does not earn us money, and that integrity cannot really be translated into milk for the children. What then?

All of us know only too well these grim realities not as masochists who thrive on suffering, but as reminders of the risks to limb and to the spirit most of all which we must take.

Let this sign be before every writer’s desk: write at your own peril.

What can an old man tell young Filipino writers, their eyes ablaze with purpose, their hearts bursting with conviction? Why should someone grow old writing when there is no reward to it? I have seen so many of my contemporaries, many of them more gifted that I with the magic of words and creativity, go into more lucrative enterprises. Why then must we continue writing?

The world demands that we go global, that our vision should extend beyond the confines of our national frontiers.

Yes, but in the end, if we are to prevail, we have to have that passion to do so. Call it commitment, or just plain doggedness or stubbornness of which we have a lot.

But to sustain it means only one thing, that we are rooted tenaciously and affectionately in the native soil — that though our minds may soar to the ether, our feet are on solid ground, this earth we call Filipinas.

Sure, there is going to be Elysium, and Nirvana, and Utopia where justice exists and happiness is all around for everyone to share.

But even when that moment comes, the artist in us will still be, seeking, not just perfectibility, but the eternal essence of art, that which transcends our puny selves, that which will exist for always, and which sustains us and drives us to act, although we with our infantile minds cannot quite define or grasp.

We are a very young nation; we don’t have the august megalithic monuments that adorn our neighbors’ lands, edifices which remind them of their noble traditions. How difficult it would be for us as creative writers if there was a Confucious looking over our shoulders, or for that matter since we are in a sense Westerners, illustrious writers like Homer, Cervantes or Shakespeare.

In the beginning of this presentation, I had sounded apocalyptic by citing the coming depression that has already afflicted the industrialized countries. It has already started to batter our very shores, and vaulting difficulties await us in the coming year and even beyond 2009. Our leaders say we can weather this economic tsunami and they are partly right because subsistence economics such as ours can take a lot of punishment. There is also a saying in the army that you cannot demote a buck private any lower because he is already there.

But even without this disaster brought about by greed and capitalism gone wild—we would still have troublous times ahead. Just remember this — we are now ninety million; some 10 year ago, more than half of our grade school children stopped schooling at grade 5 — we now have millions of young adults illiterate and ill trained for any job which modern industry demands. Our natural resources are depleted and they are not renewable. It is not just physical poverty which condemns us to penury — it is poverty of the spirit, the endemic corruption, the gross and obscene irresponsibility of our elites which will bring about the implosion that will destroy this nation — not the ongoing communist rebellion or the Moro separatist impulse.

Before this terrible challenge, what can the individual do, least of all those of us who write?

Let us hearken to those hoary panegyrics that he who stands alone is the strongest, that the pen is mightier than the sword.

Brave words, but meaningless, and even foolish. Can a poem, a beautiful essay, or even an epic novel stem this creeping rot, or like some magic drug, stop the metastasis?

Though our futile craft and intention will humble or even humiliate us, we also know that we have to plod on, to write as best as we can, to build that one brick, lay it down with our sweat and blood and shape that noble foundation on which this nation will stand and, hopefully, endure.

And to do this, we know that we have to transcend our puny selves, shatter the towering egos that prop us, and seek beyond ourselves the sublime meaning of what we do, to make this life more meaningful as well.

We will write in spite of our knowledge that we can do only so much and we do this as duty if we are to accept that duty as did our most heroic writer, that exemplar Jose Rizal, in whose shadow we work. The salvific resonance of his work and life affirms us for Rizal redeemed us.

We may now pause and ask ourselves — are we worth redeeming at all?

typing without a clue (linked article)

taray, di ba. but this is so true. i wonder who's gonna read that crap. Typing Without a Clue Anyone who abuses the English language on such a regular basis should not be paid to put words in print.'); } function getShareKeywords() { return encodeURIComponent('Writing and Writers,Books and Literature,English Language'); } function getShareSection() { return encodeURIComponent('opinion'); } function getShareSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent('Guest Columnist'); } function getShareSubSection() { return encodeURIComponent(''); } function getShareByline() { return encodeURIComponent('By TIMOTHY EGAN'); } function getSharePubdate() { return encodeURIComponent('December 7, 2008'); }
Published: December 6, 2008

The unlicensed pipe fitter known as Joe the Plumber is out with a book this month, just as the last seconds on his 15 minutes are slipping away. I have a question for Joe: Do you want me to fix your leaky toilet.

I didn’t think so. And I don’t want you writing books. Not when too many good novelists remain unpublished. Not when too many extraordinary histories remain unread. Not when too many riveting memoirs are kicked back at authors after 10 years of toil. Not when voices in Iran, North Korea or China struggle to get past a censor’s gate.

Joe, a k a Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, was no good as a citizen, having failed to pay his full share of taxes, no good as a plumber, not being fully credentialed, and not even any good as a faux American icon. Who could forget poor John McCain at his most befuddled, calling out for his working-class surrogate on a day when Joe stiffed him.

With a résumé full of failure, he now thinks he can join the profession of Mark Twain, George Orwell and Joan Didion.

Next up may be Sarah Palin, who is said to be worth nearly $7 million if she can place her thoughts between covers. Publishers: with all the grim news of layoffs and staff cuts at the venerable houses of American letters, can we set some ground rules for these hard times? Anyone who abuses the English language on such a regular basis should not be paid to put words in print.

Here’s Palin’s response, after Matt Lauer asked her when she knew the election was lost:

“I had great faith that, you know, perhaps when that voter entered that voting booth and closed that curtain that what would kick in for them was, perhaps, a bold step that would have to be taken in casting a vote for us, but having to put a lot of faith in that commitment we tried to articulate that we were the true change agent that would progress this nation.”

I have no idea what she said in that thicket of words.

Most of the writers I know work every day, in obscurity and close to poverty, trying to say one thing well and true. Day in, day out, they labor to find their voice, to learn their trade, to understand nuance and pace. And then, facing a sea of rejections, they hear about something like Barbara Bush’s dog getting a book deal.

Writing is hard, even for the best wordsmiths. Ernest Hemingway said the most frightening thing he ever encountered was “a blank sheet of paper.” And Winston Churchill called the act of writing a book “a horrible, exhaustive struggle, like a long bout of painful illness.”

When I heard J.T.P. had a book, I thought of that Chris Farley skit from “Saturday Night Live.” He’s a motivational counselor, trying to keep some slacker youths from living in a van down by the river, just like him. One kid tells him he wants to write.

“La-di-frickin’-da!” Farley says. “We got ourselves a writer here!”

If Joe really wants to write, he should keep his day job and spend his evenings reading Rick Reilly’s sports columns, Peggy Noonan’s speeches, or Jess Walter’s fiction. He should open Dostoevsky or Norman Maclean — for osmosis, if nothing else. He should study Frank McCourt on teaching or Annie Dillard on writing.

The idea that someone who stumbled into a sound bite can be published, and charge $24.95 for said words, makes so many real writers think the world is unfair.

Our next president is a writer, which may do something to elevate standards in the book industry. The last time a true writer occupied the White House was a hundred years ago, with Teddy Roosevelt, who wrote 13 books before his 40th birthday.

Barack Obama’s first book, the memoir of a mixed-race man, is terrific. Outside of a few speeches, he will probably not write anything memorable until he’s out office, but I look forward to that presidential memoir.

For the others — you friends of celebrities penning cookbooks, you train wrecks just out of rehab, you politicians with an agent but no talent — stop soaking up precious advance money.

I know: publishers say they print garbage so that real literature, which seldom makes any money, can find its way into print. True, to a point. But some of them print garbage so they can buy more garbage.

There was a time when I wanted to be like Sting, the singer, belting out, “Roxanne ...” I guess that’s why we have karaoke, for fantasy night. If only there was such a thing for failed plumbers, politicians or celebrities who think they can write.

Friday, December 05, 2008

about face

When you're capable of speaking softly and being kinder, do so. The world needs more thinking people and charity. It's not easy, but it does make things less complicated. People being the way they are, we are intent on seeking our own uniqueness and fixated on leaving our heavily stamped footprint on the pavement. We are absorbed in our obsessive excesses, in feeding the ego that we shut out all our inner voices. Sadly, it is these voices that we need to listen to. The softest caress of an ego stroked makes us purr like cats. When the need is left unrecognized, it turns us into growling bitches with hurtful words to spare. Such is the dilemma of an imperfect human. Left alone we retreat into oblivion and yet seek out addictions to balm our soul. Strength is terrifying, but I fear courage even more. Because audacity teaches me to recognize faults and yet be able to sing about it. Because I learn to walk alone and be unafraid, to draw the line and be able to say that I am happy. Because I can walk away, or towards something, and know that everything is predesigned. Because even if the cold is blasting from all sides, there is a fire in the pit of my stomach that says I am right. I just have to sit. And stay.

Thursday, December 04, 2008

cute alert!

this is too cute-

check out the link to msn news. make sure you read the cartoon strip with his excerpts :)

(thought aside: sheesh. a 9-year old already had his book published?! aarrgh.)

Little ladies man pens dating primer

9-year-old Alec Greven advises boys of all ages how to get the right girl


Tuesday, December 02, 2008

bookbound

My inner geekydorkdom is stoked with my recent book buys. I had a crappy Friday night and I went over to Powerbooks, stories being the perfect salve for my soul. (That, and great music, which I luckily had a fill of when I later decided to go to a friend's gig.) I know, I promised myself I wouldn't be buying new books, until '09, and until I finished the few unfinished ones I had. I think I was possessed and promptly bought two. Never, never leave me alone in a bookstore- or at least grab hold of my purse when my eyes start to get that glazed over expression.

Last Saturday's room makeover, I had to rearrange my shelves to make room for all my magazines and books...until it looked more like a library than a bedroom. I wanted a library in my future home, NOT live in one- though that wouldn't be such a bad thing. :P


But WAIT there's mooore. I used to pass by Bound Bookshop a lot, but haven't really had the time to go in. I just found their site, and oh, be still my heart.

So, how IS thees?! I can't wait to go and shop. I was going to be a holiday miser because I'm broke, but hey, with these prices? Never mind the stuffed shelves and my broken promise to myself. :D I'll be the girl on her knees scavenging for great titles.

(linked below their website)

Black Christmas update- Get Wolfgang's new Villain

Yay, am getting my own copy of Villains, the new Wolfgang album, delivered right at my office.
How?
Email : jeepneyrockstop@gmail.com
You may pay through
Paypal, Gcash, Banco de Oro/ Unionbank deposit.

Courier Deliveries will be sent out on Dec. 10 - 11, 2008.

You can also claim reserved CDs at the gigs: Eastwood- Dec. 10 and Cebu City - Dec. 11.

Those who reserved copies and pay on time (on or before Dec 5) will receive a special Wolfgang sticker and a card with 2 stamps. Freebies!

And-- if you didn't notice text above- they're playing in Eastwood Dec 10 AND in Cebu Dec 11. (Too bad I can't go to both shows, boohoo.)