SWS survey says there is a huge drop in the percentage of Filipino Catholics going to Mass. The bishops are reported to deny this. They say the number of churches being built and the increased number of church goers each mass, some churches offering six masses each Sunday, just don't add up to support the survey results.
As a Catholic going to church to hear mass albeit irregularly, I can attest to the claim of the bishops. If you don't come at least 15 minutes before the scheduled mass, you will have to stand for the duration of the mass along with hundred others like you. This is true at the Greenbelt Chapel. But definitely there are churches with poor Sunday and Saturday anticipated mass attendance. I can name our parish as one. But poor attendance may be attributed to factors other than a Catholic losing faith in the Church. Who would want to go to a Church whose priest is a drunkard and wakes up late for the mass and who has to be awaken because he was out drinking the previous night? Who would want to go to a Church where the "servants" and "ladies" are blabbermouths? No one. So you go to a decent church.
Yet, faith tells you that the place of worship and the instrument used by God to deliver the good news are of no consequence. He is with you every where.
Pope Francis showed us that. You can hold Mass in a prison with its inmates and God is there. You come from a country that legalizes same sex marriage and God is also there. Pope Francis shows that to us, too.
What the SWS should have surveyed is if Catholics follow what their faith says. The Church does not tell us to be robotics. It tells us to listen to the heart of faith.
If all Catholics going to Church to hear mass follow the faith, (not what they think the Church asks them to do), we will all find life in the living, love in doing the right things, and not count faith by the numbers.
Search My Hamper
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Monday, March 11, 2013
On Progressivism and Successful Undergrads
(This paper I submitted to the Philosophy of Education class.)
I have always
been fascinated by stories of successful people who make it big in their field
and make it on their own without the benefit of higher education. Some of them
went to school only for a few years. In the field of science and technology we
can name Steve Jobs, the man who gave us Apple computers, smartphones, Ipad,
Iphones, and other technologies that changed the world, particularly people’s
lives; Bill Gates, the man who changed the way businesses are run all over the
world with his Microsoft company; Albert Einstein, the Man of the 20th
Century who immortalized the theory of relativity that has become highly
applicable in today’s technology-driven world by way of the Global Positioning
System (GPS) used in airplane navigation, oil exploration, bridge construction, and so more;
Thomas Alba Edison; Henry Ford; the Wright Brothers; Mark Zuckerberg, founder
of Facebook that connects one billion people in the planet; and Larry Page,
founder of Google, the largest library
in the world accessible to everyone with a device connected to the internet.
In the field of the arts, we can name more successful people who did not complete their education but became famous because of their contributions: Nobel Prize for Literature awardees John Steinbeck, Jose Saramago, and George Bernard Shaw; renowned painter Claude Monet; Academy Awards winning director Quentin Tarantino; and American film producer and innovator in animation and theme park design, Walt Disney. In politics, we can name Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin, and George Washington. In business, John Rockefeller, Jr., the self-made billionaire American businessman-philanthropist, is always remembered alongside George Eastman, the founder of the Kodak Camera Company; Harlan Sanders, the founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken; and Frederick Henry Royce, co-founder-designer of the Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Company.
The above are notable people who did not complete their
education but accomplished great things. It can be argued that they may be simply
exceptions to the rule. However, these individuals as documented in their
biographies and what the world knows of them, had the intense passion for
learning but in an environment not bound by specific structures of the academe.
Instead of handing their future over to the hands of professional teachers,
they found themselves curious about the world around them. Their test results
could be failed experiments, non-performing formula, one-dimensional characters,
stories that did not make sense or unfriendly-user applications. Yet, the more
they fail, the more they strive to be better, knowing that tests have no
equivalent GPA, and results are so much more than outputs reduced to mere
numerical digits. They saw problems as opportunities for success and
liberation.
Let us then review what some of these people think of
education. George Bernard Shaw said: “Schools and schoolmasters, as we have
them today, are not popular as places of education and teachers, but rather
prisons and turnkeys in which children are kept to prevent disturbing and
chaperoning their parent.” Shaw’s main complaint about the school is the
standardization of the curriculum, which he believed deadened the spirit and
stifled the intellect.
Steve Jobs, founder and innovator of Apple Company, said of
America’s education system: “was hopelessly antiquated and crippled by union
workers... Teachers should be treated as professionals, not as industrial
assembly-line workers. Principals should be able to hire and fire them based on
how good they were. It was absurd that American classrooms were still based on
teachers standing at a board and using books. All books, leaning materials, and
assessments should be digital, and interactive, tailored to each student and
providing feedback in real time.”
John Steinbeck had once said when a friend of his, upon
reading a just completed chapter of The Grapes of Wrath, told John that his
punctuation was terrible and his spelling was worse. Steinbeck smiled and
nodded and said he didn't worry very much about either of those skills. He knew
his publisher had a roomful of college kids who got paid forty dollars a week
to correct spelling and punctuation but he doubted if any of them could have
written Of Mice and Men.
Jose Saramago, the 1998 Nobel Prize for Literature awardee
said, “The wisest man I ever knew in my whole life could not read or
write." In his Nobel lecture,
Saramago talked about his grandparents, both illiterate farmers, who during
winter nights when the cold grew to freezing point, would go out into the sty
and fetch the weakling among the piglets to take them into their bed.
"Under the coarse blankets, the warmth from the humans saved the little
animals from freezing and rescued them from certain death."
These brilliant minds never got to march to "Pomp
and Circumstance" to get their degree diplomas. Instead, these people took
education in their hands and invited the best teachers in the world: hardship, opportunities,
failure and everyday people. Surely classroom teachers need to
learn from them. What was it that these people did outside the school that
teachers can bring into their classrooms?
Having studied the different philosophies of education,
the closest one can get to mirror this kind of phenomenon is what the
educational progressivism offers. Looking back as a student, this philosophy
ought to have been what my school offered me. I was not interested in high
school because I was not interested in most of what my teachers talked about in
class. I hated our textbooks so I read the bulky anthology books I borrowed
from our next-door neighbor. I hated memorization but my teacher kept on asking
us to memorize whole chapters of terminologies. I wanted to do things with my
hands. I loved to cook, to sew, to crochet, to write stories. But my school thought
otherwise.
Based on that, I decided to become a teacher “that the
child I was would like to have learned from” as Bliss Cua Lim laments in her
poem “Chalk Dust on My Fingers.” Like the progressivists’ view, I believe that
the goal of education is “to enhance individual effectiveness in society and
give learners practical knowledge and problem-solving skills.” Students need a
strong foundation where they can stand on to survive regardless where they end
up in. They are supposed to be taught skills which can help them to
metamorphose into something they need to be given our society’s shifting
situations.
I believe in a non-authoritarian student-centered
approach to education where a teacher is one with the students in their
individual objectives, skills and beliefs.
In school, I hardly use the prescribed textbooks and
outlines. The bases of my being a teacher are my students. Still, the challenge
is to know what makes the individual student tick. However, if the teacher
always thinks of the end in mind, she will know exactly what to look for and
how to draw out the interest of the individual child.
Progressivism as an educational philosophy may seem impractical, but the world tells
us that the best and the brightest thrive on impracticality defying the norms
and those that are easy. As one teacher once told me, the student does not
remember what you taught him in class, but he will always remember what he did
in your class.
.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Discovering Rickman
A friend gave me a copy of the complete Harry Potter audiobooks which I listened to over the holidays and finished about a week ago.
My friend was right in saying I might have missed some points in my reading of the books and/or watching the films and listening to the audiobooks might just help me bridge the gap. How right he was!
But more notable than that is my subconscious adaptation of the British sound what with Stephen Fry stuck on my ears for weeks!
And another miracle happened. I fell in love with the character Snape who turned out to be The Other Hero in the series.
I started watching the HP movies if only to rediscover Snape. But instead of rediscovering Snape I discovered Alan Rickman.
I started with Sense and Sensibility which also featured the pre-Titanic Kate Winslet and Emma Thompson. The movie is so good I had to read Jane Austen herself. It was weird hearing Snape reading romantic verses to Marianne (Winslet) but he was so good! So darn good! And that scene when Emma Thompson realizes that the character played by Hugh Grant is not married after all was remarkably and emotionally explosive it broke my heart and sent torrent of embarrassing tears to my eyes.
Next I watched The Search for John Gissing where Rickman played John Gissing, then Truly Madly Deeply, and followed by Blow Dry. What a gem of films those are. And Rickman! He dominates almost every scene he appeared in. Fantastic!
Next on my Rickman movie list are:
Closet Land (Watched some scenes)
An Awfully Big Adventure (Watched some scenes)
Dogma (Done)
Love Actually (Done)
Die Hard (Done)
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (Done)
Close My Eyes (Done)
Dark Harbor (Done)
Something the Lord Made (Done)
Snow Cake (Done)
Nobel Son
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Done)
Bottle Shock (Done)
Mesmer
Rasputin (Done)
Michael Collins (Done)
The Winter Guest (which Rickman directed)
Given enough time, I will definitely write reviews of these Rickman films. I swear most of them deserve to be written about.
My friend was right in saying I might have missed some points in my reading of the books and/or watching the films and listening to the audiobooks might just help me bridge the gap. How right he was!
But more notable than that is my subconscious adaptation of the British sound what with Stephen Fry stuck on my ears for weeks!
And another miracle happened. I fell in love with the character Snape who turned out to be The Other Hero in the series.
I started watching the HP movies if only to rediscover Snape. But instead of rediscovering Snape I discovered Alan Rickman.
I started with Sense and Sensibility which also featured the pre-Titanic Kate Winslet and Emma Thompson. The movie is so good I had to read Jane Austen herself. It was weird hearing Snape reading romantic verses to Marianne (Winslet) but he was so good! So darn good! And that scene when Emma Thompson realizes that the character played by Hugh Grant is not married after all was remarkably and emotionally explosive it broke my heart and sent torrent of embarrassing tears to my eyes.
Next I watched The Search for John Gissing where Rickman played John Gissing, then Truly Madly Deeply, and followed by Blow Dry. What a gem of films those are. And Rickman! He dominates almost every scene he appeared in. Fantastic!
Next on my Rickman movie list are:
Closet Land (Watched some scenes)
An Awfully Big Adventure (Watched some scenes)
Dogma (Done)
Love Actually (Done)
Die Hard (Done)
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (Done)
Close My Eyes (Done)
Dark Harbor (Done)
Something the Lord Made (Done)
Snow Cake (Done)
Nobel Son
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Done)
Bottle Shock (Done)
Mesmer
Rasputin (Done)
Michael Collins (Done)
The Winter Guest (which Rickman directed)
Given enough time, I will definitely write reviews of these Rickman films. I swear most of them deserve to be written about.
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Unorthodox Jukebox Review
Released in December 2012, Bruno Mars' Unorthodox Jukebox' album shouldn't be played in a rickety old DVD player which emits raucous mono sound as I had the mistake of doing! The songs came out awful, I shelved the CD in disappointment until days later when I found it under a heap in my room. But it sure was not a cheap trash! It says P450 on its label!
Mars’ sophomore album definitely deserved a second hearing if only for its tag. I took the CD out from the gorilla-by-the-jukebox covered case and plugged it in the Macbook on the bedside table. Then there was magic, an enchantment, a spell, a charm, a curse, a hex you thought only JK Rowling could conjure! From the first track to the tenth, all were songs that had the vibe and soul of a world, the only world I’ve known: from the 60s Michael Jackson Motown to the groovy 70s of Cool and the Gang to the reggae-by-the-beach of Bob Marley to the Umberto Tozzi’s late 70s rock (Am in love with this Italian, that’s what.) to the 80s Police’s Roxanne. It’s punk, it’s rock, it’s R&B, it’s reggae, thank God, no rap! No wonder there because Bruno Mars can sing anything including The Constitution, The Bible (All Editions), and of course, Randy Jackson’s Dictionary!
But note to parents, this album reeks of sex it has parental advisory stamped on it.
Be that as it may, here’s the track list and why I love it!
1. Young Girls
“All these roads steer me wrong/But I still drive them all night long, all night long/All you young wild girls/You make a mess of me/Yeah, you young wild girls/You'll be the death of me, the death of me.”
The mark of a Bruno Mars song is a story in its fabric, a mouthful of lyrics in the tradition of Meatloaf, Queen and yes, Air Supply! Not that memorizing them was an effort. Oh, no! They float with the melody that sticks to you like a plague, a nice kind of disease!
Young Girls acknowledges a sin and its repentance. (The sin part was from another review. The repentance part, totally mine.)
2. Locked Out of Heaven
“But swimming in your world is something spiritual/I'm born again every time you spend the night “ sounds like Freud’s “ I am Oedipus and I am going back to the womb” sexual longing. As Mars sings: “Cause your sex takes me to paradise/Yeah your sex takes me to paradise/And it shows, yeah, yeah, yeah/Cause you make feel like, I've been locked out of heaven.”
This Roxanne-inspired number goes far into the metaphor begging “Open up your gates cause I can't wait to see the light/And right there is where I wanna stay.”
Consciously or subconsciously, Mars and company know their Freud, De Beauvoir, and Sophocles!
3. Gorilla
And comes more sex.
“Look what you're doing, look what you've done/But in this jungle you can't run/Cause what I got for you/I promise is a killer, you'll be banging on my chest/Bang bang, gorilla.”
It is the rock vibe that fills an auditorium like a surging orgasm. The Umberto Tozzi’s “Ti Amo” magic that hooked me from the back of my navel like the sensation of an apparition spell in Harry Potter. (Note to readers: I am on a fresh journey with Stephen Fry with the seven Harry Potter audiobooks as I write.)
“I bet you never ever felt so good, so good/I got your body trembling like it should, it should/You'll never be the same baby once I'm done with you/Oh you with me, baby, making love like gorillas/You and me, baby, we'll be f-ckin' it like gorillas/You and me, baby, making love like gorillas.”
The same guy who came out with Cee Lo Green’s monumental 2010 “F**k You” hit, Bruno Mars couldn’t be persuaded to not call spade a spade.
4. Treasure
In the tradition of “Just the Way You Are,” Bruno Mars sings an ode to the ladies:
“I know that you don’t know it, but you're fine, so fine/Oh girl I’m gonna show you when you're mine, oh mine/Treasure, that means what you are/Honey you're my golden star/I know you can make my wish come true/If you let me treasure you.”
Sounds Motown. Sounds like Cool and the Gang Meets New Edition with Bobby Brown. The lyrics high-schoolish, but what writer hadn’t gone through it?
Here is where I forgive Bruno. But this one’s better than “Count On Me.”
5. Moonshine
A couple of weeks ago, I caught Notting Hill on HBO and yes, did watch it for the 8957367th time. This song’s opening could have very well been William's reply to Anna Scott in this after sex dialogue:
Anna: Rita Hayworth used to say, "They go to bed with Gilda, they wake up with me."
William: Who's Gilda?
Anna: Her most famous part. Men went to bed with the dream, they didn't like it when they'd wake up with the reality. Do you feel that way?
William: …
“Hello, you know you look even better/Than the way you did the night before/And the moment that you kissed my lips/You know I start to feel wonderful/It's something incredible/There's sex in your chemicals/Ooh, let's go, you're the best way/I know to escape the extraordinary.”
6. When I Was Your Man
Need I say more?
7. Natalie
I’d like to think that this song is an allegory to his arrest for cocaine possession in 2010.
“Oh, I never done this before
Never wanna do this again
Long turn on a dusty road
I did it too much so I cant pretend
“Well, I learned just a little too late
Good God, I must've been blind
'Cause she got me for everything
Everything, everything, alright
“Like my daddy I'm a gambling man
Never been afraid to roll the dice
But when I put my bet on her
Little miss snake eyes ruined my life.”
His revenge was that of a phoenix coming back to life after a fatal fall. He has learned his lesson and paid the price.
8. Show Me
It’s reggae, it’s tropical, it’s sexual. Instead of saying “F**k me," he sings “Show me.”
“Your eyes say amazing but your lips came to ask/No need to fight it, when you know it feels alright/You say you're a woman who knows what she likes/Then show me, you gotta, you gotta show me/And tell me all day that you're lonely/But show me show me, show me tonight, yeah.”
A perfect Boracay song, this should come with a couple of tequila shots leading to a dance of lust.
9. Money Makes Her Smile
Musically this is my favorite song from the album, tied with Gorilla. I just dislike the thought that it is also a perfect strip club anthem. It is one those songs a girl could dance to herself in the mirror, door and windows closed.
This one makes Bruno the boss!
“It's not complicated, so this won’t take a while/You see music make her dance, and money money money make her smile/Money money money make her smile.”
10. If I Knew
This is one song that our mothers would fall in love with. Old school, crude and return to innocence.
“Baby I, I wish we were seventeen/So I could give you all the innocence/That you gave to me, no, I wouldn't have done/All the things that I have done/If I knew one day you would come.”
Sigh.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
2012 Musings
Hello, World!
I've been too busy to be all lame about it. I've gone back to school in November. As to why I did that, I don't recall anymore but no regrets.
Looking back to 2012, what say I?
Well, I was right about saying Pacquiao to quit boxing after the Bradley loss. An opinion over an opinion, of course.
This year has also proven to the skeptics that I was right about trusting Noynoy the presidency. To those who say that all the good news about the rise of Philippine economy are just press releases from the government, you probably don't go to supermarkets to notice that the prices of goods have gone down over the holidays. It is one good indicator that at least the middle class is feeling the effects of good governance. I'm positive that in no time, those in the lower class will feel the effects too.
Lastly, I hope Henry Sy will be more grateful to the Filipino people who have made him a billionaire, by paying his endo employees better, and eventually giving them regularization papers. And not sending them to jail when they are caught eating P23-potato chips while on duty.
Well, I was right about saying Pacquiao to quit boxing after the Bradley loss. An opinion over an opinion, of course.
This year has also proven to the skeptics that I was right about trusting Noynoy the presidency. To those who say that all the good news about the rise of Philippine economy are just press releases from the government, you probably don't go to supermarkets to notice that the prices of goods have gone down over the holidays. It is one good indicator that at least the middle class is feeling the effects of good governance. I'm positive that in no time, those in the lower class will feel the effects too.
Lastly, I hope Henry Sy will be more grateful to the Filipino people who have made him a billionaire, by paying his endo employees better, and eventually giving them regularization papers. And not sending them to jail when they are caught eating P23-potato chips while on duty.
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