Monday, May 28, 2012

1 Bowl Chocolate Cake



1 BOWL CHOCOLATE CAKE

Ingredients:
1 cup all purpose flour
1 cup sugar
¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 t baking powder
¼ t baking soda
¼ t salt
¾ cup skim milk
1 stick butter
1 T hazelnut syrup
1 egg

Instructions:
In a bowl, beat egg and melted butter with a whisk well.
Add in the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking powder and ¼ teaspoon salt.
Add milk and hazelnut syrup.
I used spatula to beat until combined.
Pour into a greased and floured pan.
Bake in a 350°F preheated oven for 30 to 35 minutes or till a tooth-pick inserted near the center comes out clean.

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Ruth D. Ezra is a culinary queen in her own right through experience and training. She is a bookkeeper by profession at AllState Roadside Services in Northbrook, IL.  Her greatest delight is serving good and healthy food to her husband Heman and only daughter, Isabelle. Kit would love to receive feedback on her recipes, and exchange them with yours at ezraruth@comcast.net.

 

BisayaBabe: A Neophyte Takes Her Art to Times Square

BY MARIVIR MONTEBON

She describes herself as an "Artist in Progress" and would rather be addressed as Bisayababe (read: bisaya babe). Bisaya is an ethnic group in the Visayas islands in the Philippines.

For someone who did not have any formal training or schooling in visual arts or painting, she has gone a long way to celebrate her foray into international art exhibition via the huge group art exhibition called ART TAKES TIMES SQUARE, touted as the most immense exhibition of arts in New York City for 2012.

Organized by a US-based company called Artists Wanted, the ART TAKES TIMES SQUARE competition will present artists from around the world an opportunity to display their works on a massive scale on the most iconic billboards of Times Square on June 18, 2012.

Bisai submitted nine pieces from her art oil and acrylic portfolios, for which online viewers “collected” (or voted for) her pieces and in reaching the requisite number of votes at 77.

She received a premium entry to the VIP Viewing site where her works, along with thousands of art by other global artists will be displayed on the massive LED billboard screens of Times Square.

The same competition will also see the “highest collected” artists awarded with $10,000 in cash as grand prize.

Delighted that her works are included in this massive group exhibition in Manhattan, Bisai is humbly gratified to be selected as one of the few Filipinos that perhaps managed to enter the challenging art contest. “ I know there are so many great artists vying for the top prize, just being here and getting my work exposed to a larger audience and a bigger venue is more than enough for me.”

A self-taught artist who started dabbling in arts at a young age, Bisai has always been fascinated with palettes, paints and paintbrushes. She started with caricatures and sketching then experimented with charcoal and progressed onto mediums like acrylic, oil and quite recently coffee.

In 2010, her piece, a part of the Kinamut ni Bisai series entitled “Ladies Club Arabia,” was recognized as one of the Top 5 artwork for the first Best of Asian Art (BOAA) competition in Singapore, besting over 125 other entries from all over Asia.

In one of the hotels she worked in UAE, Bisai in 2001 painted a wall mural of the hotel’s staff cafeteria as a token of her talent for being a part of the five star hotel’s opening team.

It was from that time on that Bisai Ya’s creative works were slowly exposed to media and public activities. Her works were often written about, reviewed and featured in local UAE publications.

A member of select art groups in Philippines, Bisai Ya shunned away from turning professional and instead became an art hobbyist where she is comfortable at being a Sunday painter (one who paints on weekends) being a busy home school mom to her sons Angelo and Miguel, and who are now also taking the creative inclination on themselves.

Bisai counts Vincent van Gogh, Freida Kahlo, Salvador Dali and Pablo Picasso as having influenced her painting style. Her vivid use of palettes and playful strokes are few indicators of the kind of art she paints.

Many of her private works are now hanged in many villas and homes in UAE and in the hands of top hoteliers who had shown interest in her brand of art.

Her passion for art has resulted to her setting up an online art gallery ‘Bisai Art Café” where emerging artists can exchange works, promote art exhibits, trade art and conduct online art auction to aid charity groups and individuals in their art related events and initiatives.

In May 2012, through her online gallery also organized the first ever Online Art Auction for the student alumnae of her high school alma mater Cebu’s Colegio dela Inmaculada Concepcion’s class 1986 to benefit the Breast Cancer Treatment care of one of the member.

Bisai Ya gathered a total of eight oil and acrylic pieces, which were auctioned off, to the highest bidder online. Bisai Ya’s piece will be joined by works of emerging Filipino women artists namely Glenda Demafeliz, Yolanda Cabuco. Joan Honoridez, Marivel Galang, Jo Balbarado, and Ella Hipolito in the ongoing auction that ends on June 5, 2012.

“I am yet to learn many things about painting and my humble knowledge is not enough and I am just as excited to paint each time. Competitions such as this give us avenues to launch our pieces and network with fellow artists. That's all I ever wanted and anything else above that are bonuses. I thank God for making me no different than what I am now. To God be the Glory,” Bisai gratefully says.

Check her entries at: www.facebook.com/BisaiArtCafe.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Motorino!

Motorino


Sample on its Egg and Beet Salad and Pizza Margharita


Motorino is at


East Village 349 East 12th Street New York, NY 10003.


Sunday-Thursday 11AM-12AM Friday and Saturday 11AM-1AM


Tel. No. 212-777-2644




[caption id="attachment_516" align="alignleft" width="240"] Egg and Beet Salad.[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_517" align="alignright" width="240"] Motorino's Margarita Pizza[/caption]

A Girl Child Shows Triumph of the Human Spirit

EDITORIAL
A GIRL CHILD SHOWS TRIUMPH OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT
By Marivir R. Montebon

When their heads are being shaved, they begin to cry, because what comes next would be the excruciatingly painful mutilation of their clitoris. The tradition in the Maasai tribe in Kenya is such that when girl children enter their pre-puberty age, as early as nine years old, they are being married off in exchange for money and cattle.

Female genital mutilation is done on the rationale (errr, irrational selfishness) for the girls to not ever feel sexual arousal or reduce their libido.  Explicitly, it tells us how women are treated as properties and how they have no control over their bodies.

This is going on to this day, perhaps the worse form of girl child abuse in modern times.  Most girls cry in silence and obey their fathers to marry, others die of profuse bleeding and infection, and others refuse to accept their fate and run away from their tradition.

Captured in film entitled Escape, the 20-minute documentary was gripping as it bleeds your heart in sympathy for the helpless young children of Maasai. The glimmer of hope is such that there is a kind-hearted institution that shelters the children when they decide to escape, and when some of them really have the guts to cry for help and escape.

Written, produced and directed by Marvi Lacar, Escape was among the featured films at the New York Los Angeles International Film Festival last May 5 at the Producer’s Club in Mid-Manhattan. The NYLA cited the film of this Brooklyn-based Filipina filmmaker with the Award of Excellence for this year's festival which featured 27 movies and documentaries.

Escape has indeed captured how crude and cruel the girl children have been treated.  The United Nations and some private individuals have supported the girl children by providing them shelter and education.

FGM is widely practiced in many parts of Africa, the Middle East and Australasia.

For the girls who were brave enough to stand up against what has been predestined for them, there is hope. Their spirit triumphs over their misery.  At the Tasaru shelter where they temporarily seek refuge, the film shows how they begin to laugh and dance and play and weave dreams of becoming a teacher or doctor someday when their wounds heal.

What an awesome inspiration they truly are!

At the film credits, Marvi writes a dedication. The film is for her two sons, who are both toddlers, so that they may grow up respecting girls and women.

OSM! is hats off for Marvi. And so with the other women featured today, Miss Ninotchka Rosca, writer par excellence, and Joy Camomot-Luna, top woman of the hospital she co-founded in Rizal province in the Philippines.

Humanity may be crazed or lost, but we never tire to write and highlight the triumph of the human spirit. OSM! believes that is what we really are made of.


ALPHAY: Create balance in your life!


www.myalphay.com/jeffstern


jeffreystern@gmail.com

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Jessica Garand, Violist: Enchanting Her Audience

BY MARIVIR MONTEBON

Perhaps the sound of the viola is that of the angels’ voice. There is something in this stringed instrument that could lift your feet above the ground when you hear it, electrifying and enchanting.
Definitely, it must be the violist too, Jessica Garand, who could stereotypically be regarded as an enchantress as she gracefully plays the viola.
At the Julliard School of Music at Lincoln Center, the audience of Jessica was held breathless and floating at her powerful performance for her graduation recital for her Master of Music degree. It was a highly charged rendition of the Sonata for the Viola and Piano opus 25 No. 4 by Paul Hindemith, Piece Breve, by Isabel Panneton, Suite No. 4 in E Flat major by J.S. Bach, and Theme et Variations by Olivier Messian.
Jessica was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania but grew up in Montreal, Canada. She said she has the most amazing family with her brothers as cheerleaders and her parents as life coaches. "We all exchange these roles from time to time as well," she remarked.
Jessica is a recipient of the Charles Bernard Cohen Memorial Scholarship and the Alice Hendricks Kuhn Scholarship.
She is also the founder of Opportunity Music Project, teaching viola lessons to young children who could not afford the high cost of education for music. Opportunity Music is supported by the Lovin’ Life Learning Center on Manhattan’s 5th Avenue, RentMyInstrument.com, the Virtu Foundation, MACROBLU, and many others.

Why choose viola as your instrument in music? Who inspired you to make music as a career?

Many lovely opportunities as a violist, and I love being able to play singing warmly dark lines, many times the viola gets this role. However, the role of the viola is constantly evolving, and this is very interesting. My grandfather asked if I wanted to always play the "zing-zing". He got me thinking about music as a life-long pursuit. After pondering the future I soon realized that really, there was nothing I would rather pursue. I am so glad I took this path.

Who is your favorite artist? Why?

My favorite artist is Mstislav Rostropovitch, and also I greatly admire Kim Kahskashian, and Leo Tolstoy.

Tell me about the music teacher that you are. Is it part of the requirements at school or a personal endeavor?

I teach because I believe it to be an integral part of creativity. I really have always loved teaching, really: sharing. I started an organization last year called Opportunity Music Project to give kids with passion but lacking financial resources the chance to be classical musicans.

How do you survive being a student in New York? What challenges and inspiration do you have?

I love being a student in NYC! I often go to sleep inspired to wake up. The city is buzzing with energy. There are good smells and bad smells: even if you get a whiff of something nasty, you can just keep walking another few paces, and you can smell the wonderful savory scent of gyro vendors on the corner. I like being able to sit next to someone on a train, and realize, after some moments of conversation, that we are so very similar.

Perspectives as a musician? What is your immediate plan after graduation?

I will go do more school! I will begin pursuing a doctorate of musical arts at Stony Brook University in the fall. I want to research the possibilities for performers to work in the community setting, and expand the scope of Opportunity Music Project.

Pistachio Pound Cake


PISTACHIO POUND CAKE



Ingredients:
• 2 cups self rising flour
• 1 ½ c sugar
• 1 cup vegetable oil
• 1 cup evaporated milk
• 3 egg yolks
• 1 box JELLO pistachio pudding mix (41/2 c serving)

Procedure:
• Preheat oven to 350°F.
• Beat egg yolks, add sugar & mix well.
• Add remaining ingredients & mix thoroughly.
• Spoon into greased and floured bundt pan
• Bake at 350°F for 45 minutes to an hour till you insert toothpick and comes out clean.
• Enjoy & it goes well with tea or coffee.

P.S.
I baked this during our MOMs2011 gathering which we enjoyed over tea, tears & laughter.


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Ruth D. Ezra is a culinary queen in her own right through experience and training. She is a bookkeeper by profession at AllState Roadside Services in Northbrook, IL. Her greatest delight is serving good and healthy food to her husband Heman and only daughter, Isabelle. Kit would love to receive feedback on her recipes, and exchange them with yours at ezraruth@comcast.net.

SILVANA HERMOSA: Mentor Par Excellence

BY BISAI YA

After clocking in over 30 years of teaching in university and high school in Cebu, she embarked on a much-needed sabbatical leave only to find out that her soul-searching journey has taken her right back to the work she dearly loved.

Silvana Lauron-Hermosa is one of those who we can call an excellent mentor. But greatness could be exasperating too, especially by all frustration brought by the system in the workplace. She thought her leave might unlock her loss of teaching appetite and reboot her back to her academe senses.

Silvana went on to Indonesia to enjoy the company of her teaching friends and former students. And as they say old habits die hard, one day she was enticed back to teach English as a second language to secondary students in Indonesia. And here she found herself teaching again, not one but to two leading high schools, whilst serving as a Coordinator for UK's prestigious Cambridge University Qualifying Exam.

Back to her old self, Silvana practices her profession with passion, and what she describes as her greatest accomplishment.

In Cebu, she brought her dynamic attitude and caring ways to many classrooms in Philippines for 25 years. Her hardwork, enthusiasm and generosity have been an inspiration to the thousands of students in the two countries she has served.

Looking back, the likable and good-humored Hermosa started as a mentor to her siblings, before landing a job as an English and Literature teacher. Here she shared her love for writing and the arts, often acting as patron to her fine arts students who could not afford the cost of an exhibit.

Hermosa continues to share her time in helping students prepare for qualifying exams to enter Cambridge University in the US, and in mentoring Filipino teachers in preparation for their teaching jobs abroad.

The 52-year-old mother of three talks to OSM about being a mentor, a friend and a working mother who had chosen to work away from her family in the Philippines.

You have achieved so much. What has been your inspiration?

During my days as a student, poverty was my inspiration. I had my own youthful understanding that if we go to school it will make us rich someday. Reason enough why I wanted my younger siblings to have a good education. On the contrary, my father had wanted me to drop out after finishing high school and encouraged me to work as a salesperson at a store in the city. I needed to prove him wrong and so I pursued college education through a scholarship. I vowed to myself that I would never allow him to achieve his plan for me to work as a salesperson, and instead I worked hard at becoming a teacher.

Tell us about your work.

I teach English in two international high schools in Jakarta. I have been in this job for six years. I am also the coordinator and exam officer for International General Certificate of Secondary Education, a qualification from the University of Cambridge International examinations, where I am an accredited examiner for English as a second language. Being a Cambridge Center Coordinator is both challenging and inspirational for an expat like me who comes from a country where English is only a second language.

Is it difficult to be away from your family?

Coming here was a personal choice I insisted on doing. Thankfully, my family also supported me on this decision. Teaching in Jakarta is fulfilling; aside from being in a new environment, it also allowed me to recharge. Coming here was a fulfillment of a long time dream to teach abroad while earning an experience in an international set up, and being well compensated for it.

How has teaching changed your life and the lives of people around you?

I was part of a team that trained teachers to teach in America and I was happy to see that some did an overnight improvement of the tools they need to survive in an American school. In UP-Cebu, I was a member of the English trainer’s group for the Gurong Pahinungod, a volunteer arm of the university, where I was the coordinator for two years. That role enriched my realization on the value of education in our country, particularly in Cebu where students value education above hunger, poverty and the like.

What was your aspiration?

When I was student, my aspiration was to graduate from university, find work and help send my younger siblings to college. My family did not quite understand the value of education back then so I vowed to myself that I would motivate my siblings to graduate one day.

When I became a teacher, my aspiration was to teach not only English but also human values we need to survive in this world such as perseverance, patience, assertiveness, and positive thinking/optimism to make my students understand the true value of hardwork.

You are passionate about art.

Being an art enthusiast, I serve as a mentor to friends, my students in Fine Arts or other artists. I would extend sponsorship however little it may be and just try my best to help because I know it means a lot to them.

What talents you do believe you possess?

You might say I’m perfect in dealing with people from different walks of life, my sense of humor, my talents in singing and in playing the guitar and piano. These have made me an instant entertainer at small parties. I also scribble some Cebuano short love poems.

What are your plans?

When I feel I have had enough of teaching and my time is up, I would go home for good. Home is where my heart is. I would like to watch my grandsons grow. I am sure it will be a delightful pastime for me.

Is there anything you can do about teachers going out of the country to work elsewhere? This has downgraded the quality of education in the Philippines, because the experienced ones have left the schools, perhaps it is detrimental too to the families that they live behind. What is your take on this?

Teaching anywhere abroad entails better remuneration, newer and more challenging experiences, a different taste of life in exchange of nostalgia, oftentimes broken heartedness being away from the people we value and hold dear in our hearts, in our country, and honestly I can't do anything about this phenomenon of leaving the country "for greener pasture, "braindrain" as it is popularly termed.

I can only share the real-life, bitter-sweet experiences about working abroad and make these teachers who have plans to teach abroad, be made aware that their plan is being packaged with these advantages and disadvantages.

I also agree that most of the teachers who left our country are our best teachers or else adjustment to the new set-up or curriculum would be very difficult to adjust. It takes some amount of intellectual capacity and intelligence to absorb and adapt you know. It takes some good brains, a very good psychological and mental preparation and eventually emotional readiness when all the other requirements have been addressed to. Call me one of the best teachers , that's why am also teaching using an international curriculum, that of Cambridge and the Singaporean curricula.

Teaching outside the country may not have been all associated with success stories but whatever outcome that is detrimental to all we have been used to live with and the challenge of family break up, every Filipino teacher abroad has already learned to embrace and accepted with open hearts and open minds. It is our label, we survive in all adversities abroad, we survive because we are Filipinos. Every Filipino teacher working abroad would wind up saying. I am doing this for the betterment of my family's life back home.

What more positive motivation can challenge this to make these teachers hang on, stay abroad and teach for better salaries and benefits than stay in our country whose educational budget corruption ranks first in the past years among the other types of corruptions our country seems to have been phenomenally popular of. I am a teacher, and I continue to be a teacher wherever I am in this world we live in.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Well, watcha think?

[polldaddy poll=6214731]

A GIRL CHILD SHOWS TRIUMPH OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT

By Marivir R. Montebon

When their heads are being shaved, they begin to cry, because what comes next would be the excruciatingly painful mutilation of their clitoris. The tradition in the Maasai tribe in Kenya is such that when girl children enter their pre-puberty age... (read more)

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Can Journalism Ever be Objective?

CAN JOURNALISM EVER BE OBJECTIVE?

It has always been an impassioned discussion among journalists as to whether journalism could ever become objective. Since my university days, objectivity is quite a cut-throat matter which journalists are confronted with.

Objectivity is generally defined as ‘not influenced by personal feelings or opinions in considering and representing facts, actual existence, or reality.’

In essence, therefore, objectivity rests on the unbiased account of what has truly happened.  One could easily see this in reportage of natural disasters, fires, bank robberies, and other social circumstances.

In this sense, objective reporting has a degree of applicability.

But society is more complex than just its material truth. With the interplay of politics and culture inherent among reporters, the subject of the news, and the owners of media institutions, objective reporting becomes tricky and problematic.  More often than not, the truth is angled or tweaked to the favor of who owns the information and to what purpose this could have helped him/her.

Today we see highly polarized media institutions in the US especially because it is election year, a classic example where politics plays a conscious part of.

Too polarized such that an ordinary reader or viewer of news, based on his or her own political or cultural orientation, chooses which media institution to listen to or watch.  It is no longer simply about the objective reality.

Politics is so thick in the matters of both relevant and irrelevant issues, that the truth gets too muddled for the public to be able to go down to the bottom of the truth.

Unfortunately, the profession of journalism is not as precise as that of the doctor or the accountant. To save lives, the doctor must be able to correctly diagnose his patients. The accountant has to know the real numbers in the books of accounts in order to understand the precise financial condition of a business. The professional writer or commentator, when he opens his mouth or writes an article or editorial, do not necessarily help cure political or cultural malaise, much more lead the readers to understand how an ailing economy could recover.

It is in here that I express concern. The US is in the crossroad of highly crucial times, and if long-standing social issues are so effectively maneuvered by political machineries, including media institutions, having a common direction for economic and social recovery may all go down the drain.

I go back to the ethics that I had committed myself to since the beginning of my profession. Media practitioners are political and cultural agents, I just hope many would regard the conduct of their work as a matter of public interest as larger than any partisan political persuasion.

Marivir Montebon

Executive Editor


ALPHAY: Create balance in your life!


www.myalphay.com/jeffstern


jeffreystern@gmail.com

An Afternoon with Ninotchka Rosca

BY MARIVIR MONTEBON

With the way the weather behaves these days – extremely changeable and swift in a matter of 24 hours – having a pleasant day could just be considered a miracle. The afternoon of mid-April when I first met celebrated Filipino writer Ninotchka Rosca was blessedly pleasant – warm and sunny. It was one of my longest interviews as well, as it was over late lunch in a Filipino restaurant in Queens. I purposely ordered a train of Filipino desserts, for it was a celebration that finally, I met the Ninotchka Rosca.

Ms. Rosca is a two-time recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and frequent contributor to The Village Voice, the Huffington Post, Q, Ms. Magazine, and other US and European periodicals. She authored six books, which includes two bestselling novels, The State of War and Twice Blessed which won the 1993 American Book Award for Excellence in Literature.

Born and raised in Manila, Ms. Rosca studied Comparative Literature and Khmer Civilization at the University of the Philippines.
She founded and was the first chairperson of Gabriela Network, a US-based organization of women and women’s rights advocates which supported the Philippine women’s movement.

A human rights activist at the perilous time of Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos, Ms. Rosca was forced into self-exile when she was threatened a second arrest. She now lives in New York.

But as one would always say, you bring your convictions wherever you are. She was and is still in the thick of organizing and educating women and men into the fold of gender equality and ethics. She has been in vital positions with Amnesty International and the Pen American Center and was actively involved in the Beijing International Women’s Conference.

She is one of the 12 Asian American Women of Hope designated by the Bread and Roses Cultural Project, considered to be role models of youth for their commitment and compassion for change.

Currently busy with AF3IRM, a New York-based organization of women and handful of writing projects, Ms. Rosca continues to be relentless.

[caption id="attachment_617" align="alignright" width="300"] "They each paid me 5 centavos to read aloud periodicals and comic books -- which likely made me conclude that one could make a living doing what I already liked."[/caption]

1. What inspired you to be a writer?

When did you begin to write in the professional sense? I learned to read and write at a very early age, around 5 or 6 years -- and by that I don't mean the usual way children read/write. I was reading college level books, like Cervantes's Don Quixote, etc. Also, the neighborhood domestic help found out I could read/write, so they'd buy comic books, Liwayway and other periodicals and made me read aloud to them in the afternoon when their bosses were asleep. They each paid me 5 centavos -- which likely made me conclude that one could make a living doing what I already liked. I remember writing a poem when I was 7 years old, about galaxies. But my first paid publication occurred when I was 12 years old. Never looked back from then.

2. Who are the writers that you love/respect and regard as models/mentors?

There are thousands of writers I respect enough to read their books over and over again. Can't say I "love" them but I do take pleasure, aesthetically and philosophically speaking, from specific books: all the classics, of course, from the Homeric epics to the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Upanishads, even the Bible; then works by Tolstoy, Babel, Gogol, Dostyevsky and a host of others; plus among the contemporary writers, Le Guinn's The Left Hand of Darkness; Murakami's Kafka on the Shore;Pamuk's Red; then the Latin American writers: Belli, Garcia Marquez, Puig, etc. Just too many to name. I don't regard anyone as a model or mentor. I did learn a lot about writing techniques from Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks & the Magic Mountain.

3. The name Ninotchka Rosca is already a brand name in writing, how did you develop your craft? What attitude should there be to become an accomplished writer?

I am my harshest critic. When my name goes on something that's to be published, the thing usually goes through many, many revisions plus months and sometimes years of intellection.

4. What projects (books/events) are coming up soon with you in the US and the Philippines?

I am trying to finish several short stories plus one long manuscript on the firefly.

5. You are also a women's rights advocate, a prime mover in the women's movement, how do you see the women's movement in the Philippines and the US (compare or contrast) in terms of truly responding to the essential needs of women for growth and recognition? You can cite flaws please, and challenges that have to be dealt with.

The basic difference between the US-based and Philippine-based is simply this: the first is concerned with expanding the definition/scope of rights, privileges and freedoms toward the achievement of comprehensive equality for women. The second is concerned with re-gaining the basic rights, privileges and freedoms lost to colonialism/imperialism toward the achievement of national self-determination. In the focus on the national paradigm, the importance of absolute comprehensive equality for women is often neglected.

[caption id="attachment_618" align="alignleft" width="300"] If you check the projected map of the world after a complete polar melt, there is no Philippines.[/caption]

6. Is there hope for the Philippines to be able to release itself from material poverty and cultural malaise? How? And in what manner are you contributing to it?

The effort to liberate the Philippines from material poverty and cultural malaise, as you call it, is in a race with global warming and the polar meltdown, which is already starting. If you check the projected map of the world after a complete polar melt, there is no Philippines.

7. Who/what inspires you to write and continue to be an active part of the women's movement?
I don't know what -- inspires is not the right word -- compels me to write. Maybe the certainty that I am good at it. I am compelled to remain active in the women's movement since this is still an open dynamic field of intellection, its ideology has NOT yet congealed and been reduced to citing texts from a hundred years ago. Plus it's really fun to watch the development of young women from timid, romance-ridden creatures to self-aware and self-confident beings who can strut, if need be, with the best of them.

8. A writer has certain quirks, what do you do prior to writing and focusing on it to beat your deadline? Tons of coffee? Impeccable cleaning up of your desk? Yoga?

I have to be physically fine, so my mind can let go of paying attention to my body. But writing or not, I do yoga, clean up the apartment periodically, have coffee, walk the dog. I really have no special rituals to writing as this is so naturally part of me it's like breathing.

9. Describe yourself as a mother and a no nonsense woman.

I can't describe myself as a mother as I have not experienced myself as a mother. I've been told I have been a horrible one -- which by others' standards is probably true, since I'm really not sentimental. All I say is that I've never been violent, physically or verbally; have always been logical and given logical explanations; and never tried to dominate, which does not necessarily mean I lose sight of my own needs and wants. My only wish has been for the other to be able to stand on his/her own feet and thus render my presence unnecessary. That of course is the rule by which I manage all other relationships.

[caption id="attachment_616" align="aligncenter" width="300"] I don't know what -- inspires is not the right word -- compels me to write. Maybe the certainty that I am good at it.[/caption]

Decisiveness, Dedication, and Discipline: Joy C. Luna

BY BISAI YA

So it seemed that being in a male-dominated corporation was meant to be for a woman like Joy Camomot Luna. This Manila-based gifted Cebuana has been on top leadership for a tertiary hospital in a province in the Philippines which she co-established and managed in order to provide the best health care service there is for the locality of Taytay in the province of Rizal.

“As the youngest and the only female member of the Board of Directors in Manila East Medical Center, a tertiary hospital, the initial challenge was how to be heard and taken seriously. In a corporate world that is dominated by males, you have to set your foot down and get your message across that you mean business.”

Joy who previously worked as a top medical representative for a multinational pharmaceutical firm in Manila and after several years, decided to avail the company’s early retirement option. With her retirement savings, she joined a group of 20 professionals, mostly doctors, to help found what is now known as Manila East Medical Center.

Her pharmacy degree and her exemplary work skills got her nominated as one of the Board of Directors of the hospital where she was also tasked to look after three important divisions: pharmacy, procurement and human resource. She initiated work reforms and introduced innovative ways to make her departments profitable, cost-efficient and helped develop a work system nurturing camaraderie between management, staff and patients.

Since the hospital business requires huge manpower support from doctors, specialist providers, administrative and support personnel, an efficient system of daily tasks are required to bring about the operational cost and profitability hand in hand. Joy focused herself in managing the challenges of utilizing these resources in a proper manner whilst also ensuring their patients are happy with the services paid for.

Working with mostly male counterparts can be oftentimes intimidating, Joy observed, as there are still many men in these fields who are unaccustomed to working with women who were either wary or openly resentful of their presence.

But this reality has not daunted her spirit at all, she carried on with her work with professionalism and dedication which has been openly acknowledged by her fellow directors and workers.

“For almost 11 years, I have been successfully managing two important departments at the hospital as the astute Pharmacy Director of the Pharmacy Department, and Head of Central Supplies Department where my good negotiation and analytical skills come in handy.”

Joy’s work experience as sales representative was put to good use when she headed the procurement team. She excelled in negotiating for both minor and major purchases made by the hospital, which has resulted in huge savings for the hospital. In turn, these savings were used  to provide for better compensation and benefits for their workers.

“As a Pharmacist, I would readily know which medicines are best in quality, efficacy, and I am able to easily negotiate a good price from our pharmaceutical suppliers knowing how they work having come from that industry from past. With that experience, I was able to make better buying decisions where we shifted from purchasing to procurement making our cost management highly effective in the long term. That also allowed us to pass on the discounts to our patients so they don't need to go outside to buy their medicines as they can also enjoy competitive pricing from within the hospital pharmacy,” says Joy.

Amidst the presence of three new hospitals that opened in the area, Manila East Medical Centre (MEMC) has remained the number one tertiary medical center in Rizal, in Eastern Manila.

Her corporate life that was mainly spent serving in the medical industry has allowed Joy to realize how challenging their industry is and how the Philippine medical institution fared in today’s business world.

She observed, “Among countries in the ASEAN region, the Philippines rank lowest in spending for healthcare leaving the private sector to carry a significant health-financing burden. Adding to that problem is the unequal distribution of health workers as they congregate in the National Capital Region where healthcare facilities are mostly established, and a dwindling supply of other professionals as the financial opportunity in other countries are better.”

Joy personally believes that if healthcare establishments are also highly developed in central and southern Philippines, health workers and graduates from these locations needn’t have to come to the capital region.

“They can serve locally and in turn will result to allowing many people to avail of health services right in their hometowns instead of traveling to main cities like Manila or Cebu. That would save them time and money. This development would also greatly help our government where more jobs are generated for the populace instead of encouraging them to work abroad.”

She makes perfect sense, indeed. Until that day, health care system in the Philippines remains to be one of the most challenged service sectors of the country.

Joy was born in Cebu in August 1967, the seventh in a brood of eight. She is the youngest and the most adventurous amongst the five girls in the family. Her parents Florentino Camomot, a Retired Sales Manager and her late mother Amparo Camomot, a Grade One Public School Teacher named her “Joy”, a perfect description of the bundle of joy she brought to the family that year.

She studied at the premiere exclusive girls school in Cebu, Colegio de la Inmaculada Concepcion (CIC) and was a member of the graduate class of 1984. After high school, she took up Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy at the leading University of San Carlos in Cebu.

Not content with that degree, Joy pursued a post-college degree with a Master’s Degree: Masters in Business Administration (MBA) at the Ateneo Graduate School of Business. She was in the Dean’s List in 5 out of 8 trimesters.

Asked what was her dream course in college and why, Joy was honest to admit, “My dream course, which until now remained a dream, was to take up Medicine and become a Cardiologist or an Ophthalmologist. Due to financial challenges of sending many kids to college, my parents sent me to take up Pharmacy course instead. My ultimate goal is a PhD, but I feel so old and too busy to study.”

Her educational background has landed her to acquire a post-college career as a Medical Representative in one of the leading pharmaceutical firms in the country. She did well in her work that she consistently ranked as one of the top sales performers of the firm and was often rewarded incentives and trips abroad.

Her excellent work attitude also endeared her to colleagues, superiors and clients. In 1991, she married Dr. Rudy Luna, a Pediatrician, also a business partner at Manila East Medical Center where they co-found together with 19 other founders who are also taking executive management roles in the hospital operation.

Brought up by devoted Catholic parents and coming from a clan that produced nuns, priests and an Archbishop who is now next in line for beatification by the Vatican (the Late Archbishop Teofilo Camomot from Carcar, Cebu), Joy also expressed having a dream vocation that she had wished she pursued.

Joy shares, “There is this silent call of becoming a nun ever since I was in high school at CIC that persisted even when I was already working and in a relationship. Always a true blue Inmaculadista, my Vincentian and religious upbringing figured strongly in my character, and had I pursued, I would have been running an orphanage or a home for the aged by now.”

For not materializing her intended vocation, Joy instead focused in putting aside a portion of her time and resources towards volunteer works for some of her specially chosen charities.

Asked what sort of fulfillment does she find in volunteerism such as her causes at “BISAYABABE” (a charity community group advocating free education for poor Filipino youths in Visayas and Mindanao) and other charity activities she engaged, Joy gleefully remarked, “When I see the happy faces of our volunteer teachers and learners at Alternative Learning System (ALS), I feel a different sense of purpose and fulfillment that I cannot derive from my career. It is nice to be able to help people by enabling and empowering them through the support that I can extend. It is such a feeling of bliss!”

Already wearing many hats from her corporate, community and family roles; Joy gladly tells us her other aspirations in life, her hobbies, and activities that gives her fulfillment, “My responsibilities at work are already enough to keep me busy, but I still find time to do other activities outside of the company, like conducting personality development lectures for friends and their companies. I also dabble in painting as my relaxing therapy. This is one passion I never discovered until recently when my best friend gifted me a canvas and a set of acrylic paints and prodded me to paint, now I am addicted to this passion.”

Joy plans to publish her own book “The Living Joy” which is about hope, survival, loving and living. “This book will chronicle my life as a young student from a struggling family who wants to do good and amidst the many personal challenges I faced, especially after a life-changing accident that almost took my life, the heartbreaking experiences I’ve been through and how I stood up for it with a strong heart, hope and love reigning in my heart - the message I would like to impart in this book.”

Asked as to who inspired her to do good and be successful and easily she replied, “My parents, especially my late mother Amparo, still remain as my inspiration in life. They struggled and managed to raise a brood of successful God-fearing professionals who are well rounded and grounded.”

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Bisai Ya is an artist in progress who dabbles in writing. She holds an Entrepreneurial Management degree from the Philippine Women’s University in Manila. She works as a marketing services consultant, Social Media professional in Cebu, Philippines. She can be reached at angelodominic@yahoo.com.

Nutritiously Yummy Soy Puffs!


NUTRITIOUSLY YUMMY SOY PUFFS!
An incredibly simple recipe that works wonders on the Ezra family's collective taste buds; I can hardly wait to prepare this one for when my daughter comes home for summer vacation from college!

Ingredients:
• 1 package soy puffs (cut in cubes)
• 2 tablespoon olive oil
• ½ tablespoon dried onions
• 3 tablespoon soy sauce
• ½ tablespoon dried garlic
• 1 thumb size ginger julienned
• 3 tablespoon sweet rice wine
• 3 tablespoon oyster sauce
• Crushed red pepper to your taste
• Lettuce leaves (optional)

Directions:
• Combine well in a cup the soy sauce, sweet rice wine & oyster sauce & set aside.
• Heat olive oil on medium heat & sauté ginger till transparent looking.
• Then add the soy puffs and sauté them for a minute or two on both sides.
• Sprinkle the dried garlic and onions & crushed red pepper & pour the mixture till blended all together.
• Enjoy alone or wrap it with lettuce leaves.


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Ruth D. Ezra is a culinary queen in her own right through experience and training. She is a bookkeeper by profession at AllState Roadside Services in Northbrook, IL. Her greatest delight is serving good and healthy food to her husband Heman and only daughter, Isabelle. Kit would love to receive feedback on her recipes, and exchange them with yours at ezraruth@comcast.net.

Love is in the Brain


LOVE IS IN THE... BRAIN


BY DEBBIE ALMOCERA

It was probably close to my last years in grade school when I got hooked on romance novels that epitomize hopelessly-in-love heroines and the ever so-stoic out-of-this-world-drop-dead-gorgeous heroes. Reading these books took me to new heights of imagination and expectation that someday I would be swept off my feet by one such unbelievable charming prince.  I was constantly daydreaming, awaiting for that moment to arrive.

And arrive he did, (admittedly a few more after), along with a boat-load of disappointments and irrational expectations that tumbled-over like a pile of dominoes.

At first glance the overwhelming ecstatic emotional high that one experiences when in love, tend to dominate every part of one’s brain and sensibility.  New research in the neurochemistry of love done at the Emory University and Albert Einstein College of Medicine, to name a few, have shown that the notion of romantic love only goes as far as the reward and reinforcement circuits of the brain are being activated.  This reward and reinforcement circuit appears to be facilitated by a bundle of nerve cells, called the medial forebrain bundle (MFB).  When “activated”, this neural bundle appears to trigger activity in other areas in the brain, including the four areas referred to as the “love circuit”, namely, the ventral tegmental area (VTA), the nucleus accumbens, the ventral pallidum and the raphe nucleus.  These are the areas associated with the release of Dopamine, Serotonin and Norepinephrine, which are fondly called the “feel good” neurotransmitters.  When these neurotransmitters are released, you’re on “cloud 9”.

The rest of the body reacts accordingly, sending “butterflies” in one’s stomach, and causing the heart to beat a mile a minute.
There will come a time however, according to these studies, approximately between 12-15 months, when this neural activity goes back to normal, and the excitement of romance gradually diminishes.  Sadly, there is a chance that you may wake up one morning only to realize that you are no longer madly in-love with the person you’ve been sleeping with.  By then, one can only hope that there is something more in the relationship aside from blind devotion and heart palpitations.

As the brain quietly settles down, and the heat of passion subsides, thinking processes goes back to “normal”, and rationality seeps through.  These supposed rationale thinking patterns eventually in fact, determine the lifespan of one’s relationship.
It is interesting to note that the frontal lobe, which is that part of the human brain primarily responsible for rational thinking, is also the last part of the brain to develop.  (Thus I could understand why teenagers engage in impulsive and irrational behaviors). Fronting the frontal lobe, is the prefrontal cortex, which is the “head honcho” of decision-making, the seat of willpower, the “conscious mind”.  Unfortunately, it is also the slowest.

The prefrontal cortex takes its time when making decisions.  It has to consider a significant amount of information, such that, sometimes, decisions are made, even without it knowing.  One might be able to deduce that when other areas of the brain are activated, such as the four areas known as the “love circuit”, the prefrontal cortex may not even know about it, or at least, haven’t thought enough about it to make a smart and logical decision.  When one is madly in love, you can bet they just might have lowered their IQ levels, and currently experiencing a “dumb as a box of rocks” moment.

When the prefrontal cortex finally catches up with the rest of the brain, the love-struck person gradually realizes the consequences of his or her actions, and perhaps would thank his or her lucky stars for having found a perfect mate, or for the unlucky ones, to dig deep for reasons to stay in the relationship, and make it last.  For where romantic love ends, real life begins.

I am not trying to diminish the value of love by reducing it into a bundle of neural circuitry.  After all, I’ve heard people profess undying everlasting love to each other, over the years, numerous times.  However, just because sparks don’t fly and there are no more fireworks in the background, doesn’t mean love is gone. It is simply replaced by intelligence and wisdom – knowing that the person you’re with is THE ONE, whether they look like your imagined hero or heroine, or having not the slightest resemblance.

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Debbie Almocera is a licensed therapist working in the behavioral medicine department of one of the largest hospitals in St. Louis, Missouri. For her, there has not been a more fulfilling and rewarding career than the one she has now. She can be reached at dholderle@yahoo.com