Tuesday, April 8, 2008

evol

I wanna tell you what I'm feeling but I don't know how to start

I wanna tell you but now I'm afraid that you break my heart

O how can anything so easy ever be so hard to do

I wanna tell you what I'm feeling and to say I love you



i knew this cutie [eh di syempre dagdag na naman siya sa listahan ng mga crush ko]. i started thinking of him everyday and imagining me with him. alam niyo yun? with him...FOREVER?hay.weird.i felt something which i had never felt for any of my crushes.iba na 'to.

i hated this school [his school] because of 5 persons but when i knew that he is one of them, yung hatred ko sa school na yun, nawala.i don't know.because of one person, nawala yung galit ko sa school na yun.nice.

then...i was thinking.LOVE.this is love.i never felt something like this before talaga.

but when i learned that he is a Catholic, *boom* i was like "ay :( " [FYI: gusto ko talaga Born Again Christian] .then i realized, it was not love AT ALL.well, if it was love, i'll accept whatever his religion is.sayang.

hmm.anyway, it's really impossible for him to love me, like me or even meet me because he's ROBI DOMINGO, the true blue atenista inside the Pinoy Big Brother's House. hehe :)

nag emote pa eh 'no???nadala lang kasi.haha :)


PS gulat kayo?

Saturday, April 5, 2008

on the way

i just notice board signs: YOU ARE NOW LEAVING (towns name). Thank You.

wala lang. it's as if the townspeople really want you to get out of their town. hehe. dagdag ka sa polusyon eh.

would it be better if it reads: THANK YOU FOR PASSING BY. PLEASE COME AGAIN. HAVE A SAFE TRIPP. GOD BLESS.

hmm.but on second thought, reading that sign, that long, would cause traffic. yeah. so stick to the original :)

inferiority complex

i had acting workshop with Ms. Connie Chua for 3 years. [Actors 26]
i had several voice lessons.
i joined a modeling workshop for 3 days.
i was a part of a movie called MGA MUNTING TINIG dir. by Gil Portes [i sang Kailangan Kita and got in :) ]
i acted for one of the science ep. in Eskwela ng Bayan.
i am a certified member of the Kultur Klub in Crossroads 77 (and participated in a beneficiary concert: Small Voices, Big Dreams produced by Isay Alvarez)

okay. i'm not boasting. i just want to share the other side of me that even my best friends don't know. not because i didn't have the time to do all the sharing but because i lack confidence.
well. it was just now that i realize i should be proud of these achievements. i need not to be humble... accdg. to Golda Meir--- "Don't be humble... you're not that great."

well, in college, i'll try to be active...it's my last 4 years in school, i'd give my best shot.


PS ma, para sa'yo 'to!!! 0=]

Thursday, April 3, 2008

to kids...not likely me 0=]

Inspire Your Kids to Live Simply
by Bo Sanchez

Parents complain to me, "My kids are so materialistic!".

This is my answer. If you see your kids splurge on designer clothes, you can't complain if your closet is filled with these too. You've got to
show the way.

Second, not only should you live simply, you should ENJOY living simply. And when kids ask for expensive toys, expensive clothes, don't answer,
"We can't afford it". That's a clear message that says, "We live a deprived life...boo-hoo-hoo."

You have to clearly explain to them that living simply is a deliberate choice. Set them before you and say, "Daddy and Mommy can buy that toy
for you, but if we do, we'll have to work harder to earn money. Perhaps we won't come home for dinner and have to be away for the weekends. Do
you want Daddy and Mommy to be away from you - or do you want them to always be here beside you?"

Don't expect it to sink in right away. Let them see you enjoy the simple things of life - not just those with a high price tag. In the end, a simple lifestyle is caught more than taught. .....a group of little boys has this conversation in a park....

Child A: "My daddy/mommy is a doctor and he/she makes a lot of money and we have swimming pool"
Child B: "My daddy/mommy is a lawyer and he/she flies to Washington and talks to the president"
Child C: "My daddy/mommy owns a company and we have our own airplane"
Child D: "My daddy/mommy is HERE WITH ME!"

When God brings you to a financial desert, He's teaching you the most important lessons in life. Because the desert is God's university.

I know some parents who as kids were raised in poverty, but through struggle and faith, they've now left the financial desert.

But here's the tragedy: Because they now have the ability to give a comfortable life to their children, they give too much of it.

If you're one of these parents, let me speak frankly to you. By giving everything that your children ask - you rob them of the very thing that
made you strong: the desert, the place where you struggled and built your character and made you who you are. Don't give them everything they ask for.

Let them have the desert experience.