Recent Posts

Monday, October 10, 2011

A Relevant Excerpt


Excerpt from "The Diary of a Young Girl"

Wednesday, April 19, 1944


Is there anything more beautiful in the world than to sit before an open window and enjoy nature, to listen to the birds singing, feel the sun on your cheeks and have adarling boy on your arms? It is so soothing and peaceful to feel his arms around me, to know that he is close by and yet to remain silent, it can't be bead, for this tranquility is good. Oh, never to be disturbed again...

Aw...

Evanescence - End of the Dream (Lyrics Video)


Another preview track from Evanescence's self-titled album. Photo courtesy of erase-this of tumblr.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Evanescence - My Heart Is Broken (Lyrics Video)


This is the third preview track from Evanescence's third album. I am still not warming up to this song actually, that's why it took some time for me to do this. Anyway, enjoy!

I Hate Mediocre Teachers


I hate incompetent, mediocre coworkers.

Thank you very much, Daniel for putting my sentiments succinctly into this pic. 

I have this certain coworker who just avoids every work that is flung to her. To start off, one year has already passed but still, she was not able to earn my respect. She always depends on us in everything, be it in visual aids, preparing lesson plans and whathaveyou. And it also doesn't help that she dodges being assigned in the boys' section. Her reason to this was that she was traumatized by handling boys' sections during her first year of teaching. And that logic, for me, is just pure bullshit. I was as traumatized as her in my first year of teaching, since I handled the batch that she handled, but I ended up liking the boys' sections and I am now enjoying teaching another batch of boys.

Boys? I enjoy them.
I enjoy teaching them (the fuck are you thinking?).

So she's stuck there in her little world of girls' sections and I am unimpressed. Whenever I tease her into handling my boys' sections, she always reply with a defiant "no" and a shake of her head. I still remain unimpressed. Seriously, between the two of us, she must be the better one, she was the one with an M.A. degree, she should be able to manuever herself in the boys' sections. And she's an adult, I'm sure as hell that these boys would follow her, seeing that she is way older (and wiser) than I am. But no, she avoids any kind of work aside from the ones she was already assigned to. An example of this dodging of responsibilities is when somebody among us is absent or has an official function outside the school. Usually, we will have to substitute for the said person and give the class activities. So there was this one time that she is supposed to substitute, but lo and behold, she didn't come. And this didn't happen once, it happened twice, and the teacher to be substituted? Me. I was in the city's division office for a meeting and I prepared an activity for my classes. So the next day, I asked her how my students were (since the section that she was supposed to be in was my rowdiest), but lo and behold again! She said she wasn't able to go in my class! My department head said that she was the one who substituted for me. I let the matter rest, but later, I asked one of my colleagues why. According to her, they thought that my colleague already went to the class but fifteen minutes after the official time, a call from the department office told our head that there wasn't any teacher in my class, so they looked for the supposed substitute teacher, but alas, they weren't able to find her. The ending was that thirty minutes after the official time, it was my head who took over, and the supposed substitute teacher only came to the teachers' room ten minutes before the time ends. Upon coming, she was asked by another colleague if she was aware that she is supposed to substitute for me, and she said she wasn't aware and didn't see the reminders posted on my head's notices board. My colleague told her that she should be looking for notices, so as not to be a nuisance to people.

Fuck yeah.
Surely, she was a nuisance to me and my colleagues that day.

I mean, if my head went there thirty minutes after the official starting time, then it means that the quality of their work would be subpar. What am I going to do with those worksheets? Throw it away? If she was so responsible, she should have felt apologetic. But no, I didn't see any trace of it when I asked her about it the next day. And it makes me think that she deliberately didn't go to my class because, well, she feels like it.

I could have forgiven her, but you see, she's very consistent with her incompetence.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Searching for Warmth

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Searching for Warmth
Genre - Friendship/Hurt/Comfort
Rating - T
Characters - Alfons Heiderich and Edward Elric

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Unwelcome and Unwanted

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Unwelcome and Unwanted
Genre - Hurt/Comfort/Angst
Rating - T
Characters - Noah, Edward Elric and Alfons Heiderich

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Follow the Fishes

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Follow the Fishes
Genre - Angst/Hurt/Comfort
Rating - T
Characters - Alphonse Elric and Edward Elric

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Waiting for the Darkness to Come

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Waiting for the Darkness to Come
Genre - Hurt/Comfort/Supernatural
Rating - T
Characters - Alfons Heiderich and Edward Elric

Fullmetal Alchemist Fanfiction - Black Snow of the Airspace

Black Snow of the Airspace - A Fanfiction by Yujinli
Genre - Angst/Tragedy
Rating - T
Character - Edward Elric

Evanescence - Sick (Lyrics Video)


An unreleased track from Evanescence's self-titled album. Enjoy!

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Evanescence - The Other Side (Lyrics Video)


This is the second single off Evanescence's self-titled album. Enjoy!

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Evanescence's Made of Stone


Nothing's gonna stop me from uploading a lyrics video of the new track from Evanescence's self-titled album, "Made of Stone." Rocks harder than "What You Want," actually. :D

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Mideo Cruz's Politeismo

“I wanted to provoke people into thinking. I titled my work ‘Politeismo’ which loosely translates into ‘many beliefs’ or ‘many deities.’ Throughout history, humanity has grown to create new gods and these are not always religious figures but concepts and objects. Some have taken to worshiping money; some see politicians as godsend. People create idols and these idols whether or not they’re deserving of idolatry or worship affect our lives and how we function and see the world,” -- Mideo Cruz


Everybody's angry with Mideo Cruz. And who the fuck is he anyway?


Here's the guy with his controversial work, "Politeismo."
This guy's the one who did the installation art, "Politeismo," which showcased different religious and pop culture icons "bastardized" to a certain level. In what level? There's that crucifix with a penis and there's that Jesus's image with a penis protruding from it. And you can just look at this picture...

Where's the penis? And where's Jesus?



And because of that penis-on-Jesus-face-and-crucifix, the religious and the Catholic Church is churning out words like "blasphemous" and "sacrilegious" like it's the 12th century.

His work suddenly aroused the debate whether the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) should take the installation art down or let it stay and whether should there be boundaries on freedom of expression and morality.

The artwork has long been removed and since then, I haven't heard anything anymore.

"Politeismo" was made ten years ago and was exhibited across the country (if not internationally) and nobody made so much noise about it. It's rather ironic that the creator was branded and tagged as immoral by his own countrymen.

Basically, I don't care whether the Church cries foul or if it was taken down by the CCP. But CCP should have left the fuckin' artwork alone in its place. If the Church felt hurt, then they should feel hurt, but they should not condemn the artist based on their interpretation of the work. They proclaim that they are Catholics and yet the way and speed in which they label the man as "immoral" and "evil" does not really show how a Christian must behave. I thought religion is supposed to make one civilized. If they really want Cruz to feel sorry for what they think is his "sin," then they could have tried a conciliatory approach and not pulling the big guns against him. They should not have pressured the CCP to put the artwork down (again, the soft State, hard Church drama) since it's CCP's mandate to showcase Filipino talents. With the warring approach that they did, they basically just inspired the artist to piss them off all the more in his next project.

As for those people who wonder what could have happened should Mideo Cruz "bastardized" Islamic icons, well, I have this to say: Sure, he'll be beheaded. But apparently, Islam forbids the use of icons or any religious images of anybody, be it Allah, Mohammed, or Jesus. So, there really is no point of analogy. It's only the Christian who like to use "representations" of their God.

Anyway, who dictates what is moral? When do we say that something is immoral? Could we believe these bishops who are as sinful as we are? I think not.

Even if Mideo Cruz intended to piss the Catholic Church off with his 10-year old work, still, it acquires a life of its own. And my interpretation of his work would be as good as the interpretation of those who are throwing tantrums. Apparently, these same people have taken the disrespectful route to tackle the artwork.

Bottomline. Respect.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Evanescence's "The Other Side", "The Change" and "Oceans"

"What You Want," the first single of Evanescence was just released weeks ago and I basically do not know what to feel.

I have so many feelings...
The track is heavy but it's poppy at the same time. I was expecting something heavier, but no, I was greeted with a mixture of drums and Amy's vocals (I'm not complaining) and I could barely hear the guitars. But still, the song has its saving grace like the orchestra in the bridge and the bridge itself.

Anyway, it's just the first single, and knowing Evanescence, their first single is always the poppiest, so I can forgive them for that. I am still so excited for the release of the album. It's already September, you see.

On with the other singles!

Forward, march!
Of course, with the advent of Youtube and people who, instead of uploading the live clip on their heads, would rather record it on their digicams, it's difficult not to stumble upon the other singles off their upcoming album. And based on what I heard, the third album would definitely be interesting.

The Change - This is difficult to sing live for sure (Amy's fucking up in some places), but still, I love the heaviness in it. The chorus is epic. The song is monumental.

Oceans -  If you think "What You Want" is already poppy, then brace yourself for this one.

The Other Side - This should have been the first single. Among the four songs that's circulating in Youtube, this one's the heaviest. 

Now that I have my own money to burn, I am so going to buy all their albums. I'm going to get the 16-track deluxe edition.

So hyped up for October!

Friday, September 2, 2011

Simple Joys of the Profession

A student sent me a message through Facebook this week telling me that her class won in the speech choir competition in celebration of the National Language Month.

And snore while doing it.
She told me that the class thought that I would have been proud if I was there when they won. She added that the class was more cooperative and they attribute this success to me during our own theater presentation practices last year. She ended with thanking me for being a part of their success now.

Oh my god, a fuckin' student remembers me... *hysteria*
Upon reading this, I was elated that even if a year has already passed, these students from the only pilot class I handled last year still appreciate and thank me for their success. But upon reading and rereading the message, I became sadder and sadder.

And was in denial.
It was because I hoped that they became champion when they were still my students last year, I hope that I was their teacher who won with them, I hoped that their success could directly be attributed to me. But no, I was only one of their many pit stops before they reach their finish line this year under another subject; another teacher.

But still, I comfort myself to the fact that they thought of me during their time of success, and one, one actually found the time to thank me not only for their success, but for the improvement of the whole class.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

A Lost Generation

I am reading Anne Frank's "The Diary of a Young Girl" and I must say that though it was a tedious read (it's a diary, after all), I think it is a gem.


History through the eyes of someone the same age as my students.


And if it takes a war to come up with a masterpiece like this. I wouldn't mind another war.


I wouldn't mind another war just for the kids today to realize that they are totally fine.
Don't shoot me for saying what I just said.


I always wondered how my students would react if they were put into a situation like Anne. Would they write a diary? Would they study while in hiding? Would they still flirt? Or would they still whine and complain that things are not going their way? I always thought that my students are sheltered spoiled brats that even if they already have all the material things their parents could provide them, still, they are angry.  These children leave the school without their parents and they come home without their parents. They only have their parents' mobile number or Yahoo messenger account, which are poor substitute for flesh and blood parents. These children do not have any direction at all. They're just screaming for help, their angst are their unshed tears, their rowdiness are their imploded frustrations, and they are angry. They are bored, and they do not know what to do with their lives.


But still, I wonder how they would react if we are living in a war. Would a war change their perspective? Would it make them realize that what they're whining about do not even measure up to the sufferings of children who experienced wars?


This generation is a lost generation, and if we need a war to shake these children up into responsibility and discipline. Then let it be.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

James Soriano Rant


After the hoopla that was the arrogance of Christopher Lao, we have now James Soriano. A newspaper columnist in the Manila Bulletin, his article,  "Language, learning, identity, privilege," has earned him the ire of the Filipino people. The Manila Bulletin has deleted his article in its online version, but luckily, some people were able to save it and the article is still circulated among Filipino netizens. The article is basically a reflection of how he, raised and schooled in English, found Filipino difficult, but that his surroundings forced him to learn it, lest he found himself misunderstanding his many nannies and drivers. Before the article ended though, he claimed that Filipino could be a "language of learning" and not the "language of the learned."


Before we judge this man though, here is his article.


_________________________________________________________________


Language, learning, identity, privilege
By JAMES SORIANO

English is the language of learning. I’ve known this since before I could go to school. As a toddler, my first study materials were a set of flash cards that my mother used to teach me the English alphabet.
My mother made home conducive to learning English: all my storybooks and coloring books were in English, and so were the cartoons I watched and the music I listened to. She required me to speak English at home. She even hired tutors to help me learn to read and write in English.

In school I learned to think in English. We used English to learn about numbers, equations and variables. With it we learned about observation and inference, the moon and the stars, monsoons and photosynthesis. With it we learned about shapes and colors, about meter and rhythm. I learned about God in English, and I prayed to Him in English.

Filipino, on the other hand, was always the ‘other’ subject — almost a special subject like PE or Home Economics, except that it was graded the same way as Science, Math, Religion, and English. My classmates and I used to complain about Filipino all the time. Filipino was a chore, like washing the dishes; it was not the language of learning. It was the language we used to speak to the people who washed our dishes.
We used to think learning Filipino was important because it was practical: Filipino was the language of the world outside the classroom. It was the language of the streets: it was how you spoke to the tindera when you went to the tindahan, what you used to tell your katulong that you had an utos, and how you texted manong when you needed “sundo na.”

These skills were required to survive in the outside world, because we are forced to relate with the tinderas and the manongs and the katulongs of this world. If we wanted to communicate to these people — or otherwise avoid being mugged on the jeepney — we needed to learn Filipino.
That being said though, I was proud of my proficiency with the language. Filipino was the language I used to speak with my cousins and uncles and grandparents in the province, so I never had much trouble reciting.

It was the reading and writing that was tedious and difficult. I spoke Filipino, but only when I was in a different world like the streets or the province; it did not come naturally to me. English was more natural; I read, wrote and thought in English. And so, in much of the same way that I learned German later on, I learned Filipino in terms of English. In this way I survived Filipino in high school, albeit with too many sentences that had the preposition ‘ay.’

It was really only in university that I began to grasp Filipino in terms of language and not just dialect. Filipino was not merely a peculiar variety of language, derived and continuously borrowing from the English and Spanish alphabets; it was its own system, with its own grammar, semantics, sounds, even symbols.

But more significantly, it was its own way of reading, writing, and thinking. There are ideas and concepts unique to Filipino that can never be translated into another. Try translating bayanihan, tagay, kilig or diskarte.

Only recently have I begun to grasp Filipino as the language of identity: the language of emotion, experience, and even of learning. And with this comes the realization that I do, in fact, smell worse than a malansang isda. My own language is foreign to me: I speak, think, read and write primarily in English. To borrow the terminology of Fr. Bulatao, I am a split-level Filipino.

But perhaps this is not so bad in a society of rotten beef and stinking fish. For while Filipino may be the language of identity, it is the language of the streets. It might have the capacity to be the language of learning, but it is not the language of the learned.

It is neither the language of the classroom and the laboratory, nor the language of the boardroom, the court room, or the operating room. It is not the language of privilege. I may be disconnected from my being Filipino, but with a tongue of privilege I will always have my connections.


So I have my education to thank for making English my mother language.


_________________________________________________________________


James Soriano is a 21-year old student of Ateneo De Manila University and has been writing in the Manila Bulletin since 2008. 


First time I read it, I was like, "That was just fucking arrogant!" Here we have a pure Filipino, born and raised and educated in the Philippines, and he dare belittle his own language? Some people say it's satire. Fuck satires, this is not. If he intended this really as a satire, then he did an epic failure, a monumental bastardization of the language and the fuckin' genre. Even I do not understand what he wanted to point out it in this essay. Was he thankful that English was his mother tongue? Does he feel remorse that he doesn't fully grasp Filipino? It seems to me that he doesn't feel any regret for not knowing Filipino. I cannot believe that he would choose not being able to know it since he was just living in a society of rotten beef and stinking fish. So what if Filipino is the language of the streets? It ought to be! By virtue that it is the language of the fucking country. He says that it is not the language of the learned, so what ought he to do? Intellectualize the language, so that it would be what he wanted it to be. He says that with English, he would always have his connections, and he would stop at that? His mind is fucking narrowed by his bourgeouis upbringing.


Learning English per se is not bad, but to deride Filipino in your own country is just plain distateful. He doesn't even look like a foreigner! He was implying that everybody who knows Filipino is a nanny or a driver. This basically shows how narrow his bourgeouis experiences are.  I also do not understand his bragging of his learning of German, was it mentioned just to emphasize that he is educated? Apparently, the very article itself is a work of an uneducated, unrefined, arrogant elitist. Fuck. His way of thinking isn't even elite. 


What a fucking way to end Buwan ng Wika (National Language Month).

Saturday, August 13, 2011

A Son's Love


How would you react if you saw a son kissing his father?
Now imagine an adult son doing this...Can't, can you?
It's rather surreal for my part, really. I was being a nanny to my students last Saturday for an international competition and while I (and the helicopter parents of my students) was loitering around the corridors, I saw this boy of twelve wrap his arms around his father's neck and kiss him. The father looked undisturbed, so it's safe to say that his son really does this.


I cannot accuse the boy of impulsivity, it's his father anyway (and he's a kid, so he doesn't really have a concept of propriety). But for him to show his affection for his father in a semi-public place (there are kids his age in the classrooms; parents and teachers are in the corridors) takes a lot of guts, affection, and childish innocence, of course.

Some of you might be disturbed with this, but for me, it's more an insight of what really goes inside the family. Our society has programmed boys not to show to any signs of affection to their family and other people, so seeing that fleeting kiss from a son shows that yes, society programs us, but sometimes, we need to break that programming and show people how we truly feel.
So how did I react? Nothing. I was unflinched, seeing that any boy who would do that makes the other one a relative. 


But it's rather heartwarming. A son's love to a father is underrated.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

The Christopher Lao Very Late Post

In the very rare event that I watched news, I saw this segment where a man braved the floods of Manila with his car...And well, you know, the car just stopped. Luckily, the people around the streets have been very kind enough to get the car out of the waters.

But you know, when I saw the driver and heard him speak, well, let's just say that I started bitching 'till my housemates told me to shut up.
Dialogue Translation of the video clip:

Reporter: The bystander was surprised when this car descended…The car was helpless….When the driver of the car got out, he was blaming the government.
Christopher Lao:This is..ah..problem with the traffic enforcers.
Reporter: That deep?
Christopher Lao: Who will tell me? Who will tell me? Really? Did you tell me? Did you guys even tell me?
Reporter: Well, We were here 
Christopher Lao: Ok, Who were there? Who were those? (pointing)
Reporter: We were here. We were surprised.
Christopher Lao: So who were those? On that side? (pointing) Did anyone tell me? None. Nobody even stopped.
Reporter: But didn’t you even realized that it might be deep?
Christopher Lao: Wah, why me? Why me? (laughing sarcastically) They should inform, they should inform, I should’ve been informed!
Reporter: He will surely have to spend for all the water that went in to the car.
Mr. Lao is not stupid, since things like that really do happen. But what irked most me was his arrogance, and blaming the government for your own ass is just plain stupid. 
Remember about Existentialism Mr. Philosophy Summa cum Laude Graduate? ("Bakit ako?" means "Why me?" in English)
But I just let the matter pass because, you know, I was tired from a long day's work and I do not want to bitch about a random person. But lo and behold! I never thought that he has actually become a trending topic not only in Twitter but in the whole cyberspace. He was no.8 trending topic in twitter and no. 4 in the Philippines. He even has a hate page on Facebook. I was rather amused that I was not the only one who was irked.
This person is a philosophy graduate and is currently in Law school. And knowing this, he should be the first person who must know self-determinism; your ass, your responsibility; your car, your goddamned responsibility. He must have the hindsight that the fucking road is fucking flooded. His car is not a 4x4, chrissakes. Even a jeepney would give up with that kind of flood.



You could not blame the people who ganged on him. But I think the reason people bitched about him is not really because of him, it was his arrogance. He underestimated the flood, and now that the car stopped, he blamed the enforcers and the government? Any person can experience that, we have news like this before, but the drivers are not arrogant enough to blame the fucking traffic enforcers and the fucking government. 
There have been people who defended him, and of course, that is good. It was said that he was rushing to his 3-year old daughter because his wife is also stranded from the office. Well, it puts things in perspective, but that does not give an excuse to flare up and to blame everybody in his mishap.
And to that friend of his who was talking about suing people, well, who can they sue? It will just validate the belief that he is arrogant. 
He has forgotten that he is living in a third world country, and that nobody will really inform him unless something bad already happened (he has a point in that part), but his concern about flooded roads and information dissemination was diminished by his bitching and blaming spree. And in the end, he wasn't able to get his message across to the authorities while being a laughing stock of the people.
Lessons learned:
1. Eat vegetables so that you'll have clear eyesight and you will see flooded roads clearly without anybody informing you.
2. The government might be the eternal scapegoat for everything, but fuckin' don't blame them if it was you who put the car in the flood in the first place.
3. Never bitch on national television.
Good thing for Mr. Lao here, he issued an apology. At least he has the common decency to admit that he has indeed been arrogant.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Life Lessons For Twenty-Somethings


1. Learn how to drive.

But learn not to wreck cars.
2. Move out from your parents' house.

Chrissakes, move out!

Very important. We cannot be forever sucking the life out of our parents.

3. Live life and live it according to your age.


Don't postpone being a teenager in your teenage years because you might end up acting like one in your adult years.

4. Once you start comparing your youth's time to this generation's time; you're well on your way to becoming old.

Well on your way to smelling the flowers and tending to some Nazi grandkids.

5. Man up and be responsible with the choices you make.


This is actually my concern with our schools. The school culture of blaming everything to the teachers doesn't teach the students accountability at all. If you get drunk and wind up waking at somebody's house; don't blame the bartender. It is you who chose to be drunk so shut you lazy fat-ass mouth up and own your actions.

6. Treasure your friends
Keep in tabs. Call them. Find a way to make them feel that you still care.

7. Learn to fucking take a break

Learn to live

There will always be work and it will sprout up as many times as you want to pee, but you will only have one life, so enjoy it while you're at it.

8. Document your life

Be a camera whore

So you know that you happened and that you are not just a name on a birth certificate and a tombstone.

I have a lot to learn, yes, but I also have a lot to offer.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Eargasm!


I am excited for the upcoming third album of Evanescence, and very much so for the release of their new single off that self-titled album called, "What You Want." As I was browsing through EvThread though, some fans are talking about a song, "Halfway Down the Stairs," and I wondered whether that would be a song from the album. So I checked out youtube and found the original Halfway Down the Stairs performed by Robbin the Frog and Amy Lee's rendition.


As you can see here, the original version is very much kiddie. Amy Lee's version will not be found in the upcoming album but (as some people from youtube says) in The Green Album (some sort of a Muppets album). Amy Lee made the song very sexy, it's as if you want to have sex while listening to it. And speaking of sex, it doesn't help my weird imagination that I can already see some subtext from the lyrics and that's saying something. The song's otherworldly, authentic Amy Lee.




I never really understood people who would say their ears had an orgasm while listening to a song; I considered that ridiculous, but now that I heard this song, I think it's time to change perspective, really.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Class Vignettes

Lesson: Adverbs
Teacher: How do you lick an ice cream?




Student: I lick it up and down.
Class: *laughter*


Lesson: Sentence Errors
Before prayer.
T: You button your polo shirt up; you're not a pornstar.




S1: (buttons his shirt)
S2 at the back: I am a pornstar (sing and dance)


Now imagine this guy in a school uniform...And gyrating like a worm.
T: Oh, so you wan't to be a pornstar? Come here on the platform, strip off your clothes. You want a demonstration here in front?
Class: *laughter*


S2: *blushes* No, ma'am.
Lesson: Simple Past
T: What did you do last night?
S: I jerked off.


The legend of Boy Jerk Off...
Class: *deadly silence*
And the girls suddenly looked interested.


Seriously, these students are too sex-deprived.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Happiness Must Be Short-Lived In Order For It To Be Enjoyed

I went with my college friends yesterday and it was much refreshing. All of us are already in the profession and it felt so good to catch up with them that it seems unfair that we need to separate ways at the end of the day.


As I was talking with them though, there was something amiss, it was as if I didn't miss them at all and I do not feel any excitement while talking with them. Maybe because three of them wasn't really my closest friends, they're more like acquaintances. We just took the same subjects before, that's all. And we're only linked to each other because of a mutual friend. I felt guilty that I did not feel anything.

Luckily, my closest friend and I bid the three others goodbye as we took them to the bus stop. And with the three gone, I realized that all I really wanted to see that day was her. And I felt happy.

It didn't feel like a year has passed. It felt as if I just talked to her, flesh and blood, the other day. It was envigorating to know that, yes, I can live without them, but what was more empowering was that time and distance would never destroy us.

Our roots run so deep, man.
But I felt frustrated that we weren't able to spend much time alone together, since we are also bound home. I felt a sudden urge to make time slow down just so I could be with her longer. She is one of the people who was able to tear the wall I built between me and the world. So, it was just sad that we had to part ways. Suddenly, nostalgia for our carefree, idealistic college days hit me, and I was sad. I realized that we are adults now, with responsibilities and burdens, and no matter how much I want to make time stop, it will always, of course, fly away.

I went home still refreshed by that meet, but still, there could have been more. I think I would just set a date for the two of us.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

The Travesty That Was Conqueror Of Shamballa

I'm very partial to the canon of the first anime of Fullmetal Alchemist. And even if the movie, Conqueror of Shamballa, sucked big time; Alfons Heiderich wouldn't suck at all. He's the one saving grace of the whole f*cking movie even if Bones killed his character.
They fuckin killed this adorable boy. Fuck you, Bones.
What's the cause of this partiality anyway? It's simply because I'm shipping Edward and Heiderich and that pairing is the reason why I can't bring myself to read the manga or Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood. There is no such thing as a parallel world in Arakawa's canon. Which is sad. Makes us shounen-ai/yaoi fangirls sad. But if I think about it, the manga canon ending is much more satisfying. Ed gets his arm back, Al gets his body back, Ed and Winry get married;(I'm not a fan of this canon-pairing, but you know that the majority of the anime's fans are canon purists, so...) everybody's happy, basically. It was very unlike the mess that was Shamballa wherein the brothers are stuck, Ed is stuck with his automail and Al's is still a 17-year old soul in a 13-year old body, Roy and Winry are left behind and most importantly, Alfons is dead. So, I still laud Arakawa for making the ending of the manga satisfyingly great.


Still, I want Alfons back. But since Arakawa ended the manga without the parallel world thing, well, I think I would just wallow in grief together with other EdHei fans. It's such a rare pairing.
Eherm.
Geez. I'm such a hopeless EdHei fan.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

User-Friendly (Acidic Post)

I really hate user-friendly people.
I won't fucking to that fucking competition because our head didn't say so. Who are you to tell me that I must go? Are you a god? I keep on substituting for you. I will not join that fucking competition.
To hell I care with those people.
As if I will be given incentive if I become their nanny.
No way.
I will be nannying for these kids and you will be the only one who will receive money.
Fuck you and your work evading ways.
I won't join that.
I won't be asked to join.
Fuck you.
Die.
You always think that other people think of you as an obnoxious person and you terribly hate that, well, just look at your attitude. You are one rude, obnoxious, proud person. Somebody must bring you to your knees.
I hate you.
Die.
User-friendly.
You keep on passing your work to other people.
No wonder you do not have any friends at all.
Look at yourself.
Nobody wants to be around you.
You always wanted to be loved, but you keep on veering the people away from you with your obnoxious ways.
No one wants to be with you.
Die.
You will die.

Monday, July 25, 2011

On Troy McLawhorn's Return to Evanescence

I think it was early this year when I read that Troy McLawhorn, who was a former Evanescence guitarist, who ditched Ev for Seether, went back to the former. And this is the case if we are going to believe Shaun Morgan's, Seether's vocalist, tweets.


Here's your papa.
"Interesting news about our old guitarist. Can anyone guess? He went to another band."
"Little anti-Shaun club. Any more guesses?"
"Just wanted you guys to hear it from me first, I am hurt and offended. We will go on and we will make ya'll proud."


Fuck you, Shaun. Fuck. You. And your face.


I think Wind-Up denied the rumor. And then suddenly...


What. The. Fuck. Don't. Fuck. With. Me.
But this didn't really surprise me, because Ev and almost all bands wants to jerk off with their fans. But bitching aside, I have always thought that Troy is meant for Ev. However, my biggest concern is why did Troy ditch Seether?


I searched for some answers and of course I found this really phony reason: Shaun did a very personal invasion of trust against Troy.


So what exactly is this? I searched again.


I found this.


Oh. 
Whatyathink?


But still, whether or not Shaun did fuck Troy's wife, it is clear that Troy's switching back to Ev is a big fuck you to Shaun.


Kudos to Troy!
Welcome back to Ev!

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Sleep Well, My Angel, a fullmetal alchemist fanfic - FanFiction.Net

Sleep Well, My Angel, a fullmetal alchemist fanfic - FanFiction.Net

Friday, July 22, 2011

Evanescence's Sneak Peek!

Evanescence released a sneek peak of their new singles off their new album. The album, titled Evanescence, will be released this October 11 and the first single, "What You Want", will be released this August.

Gettin' so excited!


I really cannot wait for this new album. I have been waiting for more than five years.

Here's what I think of the songs previewed during Amy Lee's interview in MTV.

Amy Lee and the news guys from MTV (Sorry, dude, Amy's more important). 


"What You Want" - It sounds so poppy and heavy at the same time. It's a sure hit.
"The Other Side" - My favorite so far. It kind of reminds me of "The Only One," because of the drums. But you have to admit that it also sounds like Korn in some parts. This I think is the heaviest among the tracks previewed.
"Lost Paradise" - This one's just heavenly refreshing. Amy Lee's voice always takes you into someone's soul. She just doesn't sing for the sake of the record. She sings her emotions, her real self. 

Basically, it's their heaviest album yet.

So excited for October!

Go Evanescence!



Monday, June 20, 2011

I Feel Like A Fraud

Academic discussion in my school, I have observed, are always rather limited, if there are any. And I think that this limitation which is supposed to foster academic camaraderie and critical thinking is the reason why my school is gasping for air of excellence. This is the reason for my school's culture of mediocrity. I have always felt gagged in this school, living always with the fear that somebody from my classes will tell my ideas to other teachers. I always have to watch my mouth because I might say things that other people, being numbed by conservatism, might find wrong. I cannot even say, "fat" anymore without a colleague making it a big deal. I also think that this is the reason why I can't write decently anymore. I've been suppressing my beliefs at the expense of my way of thinking. I've been denying myself my beliefs for a mere $300 a month.

It's hard to f***** shut up, you know.
My students have always viewed me as their most free-minded teacher and they want it that way. But you see, we are in a conservative institution, so I need to dilute the things that I say to them to cover up. And I feel like a fraud. I am covering up things that I believe will show to my students the other side of the coin to the things that they believed, or things that they were lead to believe, all their lives. I want to show them that the world is so rich that they need not to only see one of its facets, but they need and would always want to see its entirety. I went in their glass-stained cage voluntarily, hoping that I will shatter that cage. In a way, I have been a little successful; my "diluted" opinions were became cracks in the mirror. I want to give more, but I am as much as inside the cage as they are.

Friday, June 17, 2011

The Shackles Of Our Mind

Written while attending a boring seminar.


I have always believed that this institution, instead of cultivating a culture of excellence, is actually propagating a culture of mediocrity.



This started with a statement from one of my colleagues. She was recalling her experiences to me as a newbie teacher in our school. She was one of the stars of her batch. She was usually given tasks such as conducting basic grammar lectures to the faculty, writing scripts for emcees, to being an emcee herself.  It was also during this time when another of her colleagues told her not to bring too much attention to herself because other members of the faculty might always tell her to do her usual extra work. Why? Aside from the fact that these extra work is unpaid, people will always be dependent on her, asking her to do favors, so in the process, becomes a hindrance to what her real job is, teaching. This is the reason why only a few teachers in our department want to show their talents.

This, I think, should not be the case. Yes, the school gives the faculty opportunities, but not everybody wants it. It's because even if they depend on these talented people, deep down, they resent that quality, they resent the achievement that the person has, and that they are just waiting for that person to make the tiniest of mistakes so they can ravish that person together. Bringing him or her down. Suddenly, being talented is a sin here. So the person, not wanting to incur the sneers of her colleagues, clam up.

You don't see me. XD

We are always told to deliver, but we are not given the supportive environment for us to really grow. Our colleagues would depend on us, but we would always have this feeling that they will be the first ones who will step on us the moment we slip.

It is rather stunting. The negative energy of the academic community stifles the growth of the teachers. And it is hypocritical of ourselves to force our students to be the best when we ourselves stunt each other's talents and scoff.

This is sad. I believe that a school will never be a cradle of critical thinking and excellence if the teachers themselves are not allowed to explore and celebrate their beliefs and ideas.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Struggling for the Remote Control


The strum of the guitar and the hum of the violin circle around our living room’s airspace while I listen to “Requiem”. However, I hear not only the melody; I also hear my parents’ whines about my choice of music.


I  swear I will fit in my mother's mouth.

You're just making noise. My father comments, and tries to press the Stop button. I whine, It's better-off like that than me rapping in a hysterical voice while blocking his way with my arm. I feel the force on my arm disappear, and with a frown he steps back; leaving me in my world of history, politician bashing, and my penchant for instrumental, j-pop and j-rock and European pop.

The history of my family is, was, and (I think) will always be a history of dominating our 14 year old mini-component. But I never pay attention to it and whatever genre my father listens to, whether it is slow rock, 50’s, or 80’s disco. I turn my attention to my dominion –the television.

My first favorite songs were “What’s up” by the Four Non-Blondes and “Ode to my Family” by The Cranberries, I was four then. But I gained complete music consciousness by the time I thought Alanis Morisette was a guy, and when the Backstreet Boys were actually mainstreet and are larger than life. It was 1996, which I considered as my baptism to the world of music industry, coinciding with my first day in Grade One.



As a young girl, I thought of myself a Spice Girls expert (in terms of knowing the lyrics) that my seatmates just stared at me in disbelief. Once, I heard my neighbor sing “Stop” in videoke with a voice like the braying of a donkey, and I decided to snatch the microphone from her hand, though my plan failed. I casually walked from the living room and out of our house, but I made the biggest mistake while putting on my slippers: I looked up at my mother who had a “look” that told me to behave myself. Scratching the back of my ear, I went inside, and endured letting my neighbor butcher my favorite song.

I'll kill the bitch who's killing the song!

Then my consciousness fell on Britney Spears, and I always thought in Grade Five that those who like her were lower life forms. But Grade Six was a different thing. I heard one of my classmates sang “Stronger” while the class was doing a seatwork:

Now I’m stronger than yesterday / Now it’s nothing but my way

And I found my self singing along. I stopped and widened my eyes in terror, realizing I became one of whom I thought were lower life forms. I shook my head, trying to concentrate on my notebook, though without success. Frowning, I thought, “Hah! So what?”, and sang with the girls, my loneliness is killing me no more/ I’m / I’m stronger.

But while my classmates already started to think of painting their faces, I thought of something different; something that would set me apart from other girls. And I found a new genre: nu - metal. The drum solos, easy-to-follow lyrics and mind-blowing vocals hooked me. And again, I found my self singing Shinoda’s rap solo in Linkin’ Park’s “In the End” with the boys during recess.

Yes, some time here we rocked and rapped. Believe me. :D

With this music background, one might think that the CD rack of our mini-component was full of my CDs, and that I hold the remote control. No. Conquering the component was still far from my mind; it was still my father’s. I kept holding on to the television until when I was in high school, as this was my MTV, MYX, and Channel V days. I literally spent my weekends and afternoons watching Jennifer Lopez, Christina Aguilera, Mandy Moore, t.A.T.u., and being amused with how big Steve Tyler’s mouth was (which left me wide-eyed in shock when my friend told me in college that he was the father of Liv Tyler).

In awe with the power of Tyler's mouth.

One day while watching, I stared for a long time at the television which swarmed with images of four long-haired guys who called themselves F4. Another boyband, I thought, and I ignored them. Whenever their faces appeared on MYX, I switched to MTV and would see their faces again, I switched to Channel V and it was showing Vic Zhou’s video. Dejected, I tuned in to the news saying that Jerry Yang will come to my country. I pouted and turned the TV off, fighting the urge to scream unless I wake my mother from her nap.

Spare me,

from
gaybands.

But before the F4 mania, my classmates were warring against each other for protecting the cause of A1 or Westlife. One camp said that the former’s lead guy looked gay; the other camp said that the latter’s members don’t know how to dance. I waited for 10 solid minutes, and the girls were rolling on the classroom’s floor with their hands on each other’s head. Then come second year high school, and they fainted and sang F4’s songs together. Foreign boybands are something, I thought. I never liked them, but if I got something from not liking them, it was coming to the conclusion that the music industry thrived and bloomed because of swooning (and fighting) fangirls (and looking at my students now, fanboys).

While everybody was singing their songs, I was discovering j-pop and Celtic music through Utada Hikaru and Enya. Both were not very convincing singers though. I always felt that I will lose my breath whenever Utada tried to belt a note, and Enya never tried to go higher than her signature monotone. But with them, I discovered the most creative songs around. Their songs were not commercial success stories here, but their songs showed that music should make the world a saner place and must shake cultural barriers. However, the fainting fangirls and the rocker boys tagged me as the resident music geek. As for me, I know a wider range of songs, and didn’t go with the dictates of music labels. I wore the tag as a badge of honor.

The music channels on free TV went off-air and I started to relieve my self of our television. I turned my eyes at the thing below our TV, and finally infected our mini-component with j-rock (Ikimono Gakari), European pop (t.A.T.u.), and anime orchestra soundtracks. Thus, I started my domination of the mini-component, the DVD player and the remote controls. However, my domination was not without opposition. My father kept on blasting Bon Jovi, and reaching for the Stop button. My mother kept on telling me that I am not Japanese or Russian, so may I turn it off now? As for me, I told them that “Our country is a democratic country”.

One day while I was playing one of my favorite tracks, my father asked me what its language was. Russian, I answered, he said it was good and reached for the remote control. I snatched it first; I smiled and turned the volume higher. It was the first time that he liked the song that I raved for, and I ended up playing it every time I turn on the component. But because my parents just couldn’t stand and understand a foreign word, I had to partially go back to Pussycat Dolls out of necessity, but I still sneaked my songs in between and owned the component again.

If only parents would take the time to sit and listen to the “weird” music stuff of their estrogen-oozing and testosterone-driven teenagers, then they wouldn’t be trapped forever in a time when Elvis was gyrating his hips and Diana Ross was telling us it’s her turn. At the same time, if kids and teenagers like me won’t go screaming from the living room (Eww! That’s so dinosaur era!) whenever they hear 60’s music that their parents loved, then they will know who their parents were before. If these happened, I’m very sure it will lead to saner households and quieter homes, because the only thing that will be heard will be the music that everybody enjoys, and not the bickering of the family members who are debating which genre (and generation) is better.

Whenever I look back at my life, I realize that it was a preparation for taking over the remote controls of our appliances. And now that I am competing against my parents for our mini-component, I notice that our house became noisier, not only because of my whining and my parents’ protests and comments, but also because of the mixing of disco music to j-rock and slow rock to OSTs: the old and the new’s cusping.

As I hear the strum of the guitar slowly fade, I run from the bathroom to the living area, and I hold my mother’s hand turning the volume knob.