Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Bing's 2008 expressions, actions, and moments

Okay, so I'm in China, bored as a weed and sick as a cow. I'm spending New Year's in Shanghai but stuck in the hotel. What to do? Blog, of course. But then, I don't have my blogs anymore so I hope Bing doesn't mind that I'm now sneaking into her blog to write.

Feel free to add. You know me, I have a memory of a goldfish.
  1. Work out session movements
  2. Facilitation lunge on one foot
  3. A half-laugh-half-shriek that I cannot describe (or won't because I do the same)
  4. Playing hooky!
  5. Approving without thinking
  6. Bratinella moments behind closed doors - poor MMLDC guy
  7. MOWing moments
  8. A certain sparkle in her eye when this person walks by... it all started in McDonald's. HULI!
  9. Ready-for-war mode
  10. Matchmaking attempts
  11. Practical jokes on people
  12. Eating. A lot of it. Like spanish sardines and rice from mini stop and endless, consecutive Chicken Ginger and Chow King visits.
This is Sam by the way.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Favorite People 2: Samantha Jones

I got an offline message from Sam requesting me to complete by December 31 my Letter of Recommendation for her admission to Grad School. While I would always gladly help Sam out, part of me (the selfish part hehe) didn’t want to do it…It somehow meant I was slowly but surely surrendering to the strong possibility that she'll leave the company soon to study abroad for the next two years. (Yes, yes, obviously, I still have not accepted it.)

Sam is my teammate in OD, and she’s one of the company’s top talents. I described her to JC back in 2007 as “the only one I want for the role,” to Vince as “a gem in every way” (yiheeee), to Candy as “mature beyond her years,” to Javi as “down-to-earth and street smart,” and to the Employee Data & Rewards Leadership Team as “someone I trust very much.”

Her contributions to the org are significant. Sam makes things happen. Any challenge thrown her way -- whether it be me not taking no for an answer, being stretched beyond what’s comfortable, bringing never-before ideas to life, or getting people who don’t have much in common to work for a common goal -- she always steps up and comes through excellently!

My first impression of Sam when I started working with her on adhoc projects was “standoffish” (this she doesn’t know!). This was quickly dispelled as I got to know her better. How do I begin to describe the comfort of feeling safe with a person, having neither to measure words nor filter thoughts? That’s how it is with Sam. She’s one of the few people at work who knows me really well (including my mischievous and free-spirited side), who has seen me at my worst (a.k.a. MOWing and Dragon Lady moments) and likes me anyway (HAHAHA assuming!). Sam has been and continues to be a great friend to me -- the kind who will move heaven and earth to help, quietly and unpretentiously, but with all sincerity and affection.

I truly hope in the one year we’ve worked together, I’ve managed to convey to her how much I value her both as a partner-in-crime and as a friend, and how grateful I am. I’ll always be rooting for her. And I’ll do so in simple ways, like writing glowing letters of recommendation to her preferred schools...even if it pains me to do it hehehe. :)

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Thoughts From Decluttering

I've made good progress on my goal of decluttering, only my work files and inbox left to be tackled. I've decluttered pretty much everything: my closet, shelves, cabinets, drawers, tables, personal files, boxes in storage, wallet, work bag, car. Here are my thoughts from this exercise:

  • There were certain things I stored because I was waiting for the "best time" to use them, but I’d forgotten I had them in the first place, leaving them frozen and useless all this time. What a waste. They were meant to be enjoyed, not stored! It's just like life, I guess. Sometimes we fail to live for the present because we're on a perpetual wait-and-see mode, or we're hung up on the past...And so, moments pass us by.
  • I realized I own several things I used once or a few times, then never again. So much accumulated stuff, many of them not really necessary. Amidst the decluttering, I made a resolution to invest more on living life fully, than on things. (On cue, Mr. Postman arrived to deliver my 2009 Repertory season tickets! Watching plays is one activity I enjoy and miss, and I intend to resume it next year).
  • I threw away all my stored college stuff, except for this one file I couldn't bear to discard: my notes, handouts, reviewers, and compositions from four sems of Philosophy classes. These classes (all of which I chose to take in Filipino) are without doubt one of the best parts of my Ateneo education.
  • I confirmed (yet again) that I could be ruthlessly unsentimental if I so choose :p
It's definitely good practice to declutter every now and then! Below is an excerpt from my favorite book Letters To My Son, this time on Possessions:

"But most of all I want you to know that possessions become what you make them. If they increase your capacity to give, they become something good. If they increase your focus on yourself and become standards by which you measure other people, they become something bad. It is in your hands to give them meaning. Periodically purge yourself. Give away what you don't use. Go on a long trip and take only a single pack. Do something to remind yourself that most of the possessions you thought were important are nothing but superficial decorations on who you really are."

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Cebu Trip Highlights

I had the chance to fly to Cebu a couple of weeks back for some fun and relaxation with friends from the office. It was indeed a welcome break. My last vacation was way back in April in Boracay -- too long ago in my book! Here were the highlights of the trip for me:

The Food
We ate as if tomorrow will never come (or at least I did), and I loved every moment of it! Below is my ranking of the places we dined in, 1 being the most delightful of them all:
1) Olio (Crossroads Mall, Banilad, Cebu City): Words are not enough.

2) Tea of Spring (Shangri-la Mactan): Comfort Chinese food - I love.
3) Sutukil (Lapu-Lapu, Mactan): Lafang moments woohoo!
4) Lemon Grass (Ayala Shopping Center, Cebu City): Goody!
5) Kilimanjaro Kafe (Plantation Bay, Mactan) / Tides (Shangri-la Mactan): Both okay!

The Massage
We had our massage at the hotel spa...so soothing. All of us returned for a second session on our last day. Vince even had a third one while the three of us went on a quick trip to the city to get some Cebu Lechon pasalubong!

Taboo!
This was hilarious! There were so many bloopers, documented every step of the way. Even now I can't help but laugh when I recall them wahahaha! Super thanks to MM for lending us her Taboo! It was a great way to cap each day :D

The Company
I told them I'd write about each of them in my blog after Cebu, and I will. But I'll save that for another entry. :)


Elusive No More!

Finally, the stars have aligned in my favor -- I'm going to Macau on New Year's Day! Our plane tickets have been purchased and the hotel has been booked. This is definitely pushing through! :D I'm grateful my Mom allowed me to fly out evening of Jan 1...This is a first, because the whole family traditionally stays at home on New Year's Day. I think she took pity on me.


I'm so excited to try my luck in a casino. My budget is a measly US$2o though, because this is totally out of character for me!! But who knows, I just might win big bucks hahaha! (Fingers crossed.) I swear I'm going to throw a grand party if this happens!



Yipes! I haven't told my Mom that I'm planning to jump off the Macau Tower. Nothing final yet - I'm still mustering enough courage to take that leap. It's possible she will forbid me from leaving when she finds out, unless I convince her that all will be A-ok.

We're definitely going to make a side trip to HongKong. I'm so excited!

Friday, December 19, 2008

Repacking My Bags

Am I change-savvy? In some ways I am. I guess it helps that I'm the type of person who gets easily bored with routine, and who needs new, exciting things happening regularly. I think this is the reason it's not very difficult for me to initiate changes in my life. However, I also know this about myself: if the change is not on my terms, or if I have no choice in the matter (e.g. people leaving), I struggle and I'm not as nimble as I'd like to be.

Allan asked me yesterday if I'm all ready for the things certain changes will bring in 2009. I shared with him that reality hasn't really sunk in yet (Translation: eek, not yet ready!). There's just been so much going on, and it's essential that I take time out to complete specific activities before the year closes so I could mark endings appropriately, repack my bags, and move to new beginnings. Here they are:

1) Declutter. I absolutely need to declutter my email inbox, my workstation, my text messages inbox, my laptop, my closet, my room, my mind! I want to begin 2009 light in every way.
2) Disengage from work. Work will always be a vital piece of my life, but as soon as the holidays kick in, I resolve to set it aside in the meantime. After all - distance gives perspective, and absence makes the heart grow fonder! :p
3) Frolic and have fun! Woohoohoo! Tis the season to be merry!
4) Rest and carve out quality Me-Time. I'm so looking forward to slowing down, spending some quiet time, and recharging. Also, I'm already anticipating my annual tradition of assessing the year that was and taking stock of my blessings, then mapping out my resolutions and plans for the New Year! :)

Interesting times ahead!

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Weekend Snippets

Yummy!
I had lunch with my friends Mel and Noel -- Noel cooked a yummy meal for us! While eating I came to a sudden realization: I am more in my element being cooked for rather than cooking hehe. Still, I'm bent on becoming a good cook myself. I also found out that Mel's IT guys (good people) got to read my blog recently, and they're wondering what in the blazes I'm doing in cooking school hahaha! Noel encouraged me to have some wine as he shared some wine appreciation pointers...I didn't really get tipsy as I was afraid I would, but when I got home, I just conked out and was dead to the world for several hours! And that was what -- three tiny sips of wine?! Tsk tsk.

Plans, Plans, Plans!
I'm hatching some plans! One is mischievous, and Sam, Riza, and Ron are in on it. It doesn't fall under "Grand Prank for a Good Cause" though. More of..."Resurrecting the Undead" heehee. The wheels of mischief have been set in motion, and all will be revealed in time! The other thing I'm planning is something that popped into my head when I woke up yesterday. Looks like it's going to push through, if the stars continue to align in my favor!

Sloth in Action!
Since I got back from Cebu, my past two weekends have been - as Vince put it - SLOTHFUL. I've pretty much done nothing but eat, sleep, read, lounge around, and go on Las Vegas marathons! I've managed to squeeze in a bit of work, but for that I've had to summon tons of willpower. Eeyikes. Is this because it's almost end of year and my system is naturally winding down? Is this my body's way of forcing me to re-energize and regroup so I could ably tackle 2009? Perhaps. Or maybe I'm just plain lazy nowadays hahaha! I must admit, though, there's also fun in being slothful! Everyone should try it sometime...with a time limit, of course :p

Friday, December 5, 2008

Things I Used To Do (P.S.)

I love to eat. But more than just eating, I love the whole dining experience. I am especially partial to quaint and cozy restos, tucked away where one wouldn't expect to find a delightful restaurant. The search and the discovery, the food, the company, the look and feel of the place, the service -- taken together, these make a dining experience memorable for me.

I recall, during its heyday my friends and I were frequenters of Malate. We would target one resto there each week, we'd leave the office on the dot and just eat the night away! It was during these days that I was introduced to great dining places which didn't have branches anywhere else (at least back then): Cafe Breton, Casa Armas, Sala, Cafe Havana, Garlic Rose, among others.

Food tripping was a regular group activity for us -- we'd go everywhere together, and we all made time for it. When I moved out of Makati, though, somehow this activity faded into the background. Weekends were spent doing other things, and it became increasingly difficult to end work early to gallivant to a far-off resto. Long story short -- the regular group dining adventures became few and far between.

It's only very recently that I realized how much I've missed it. And it's also only very recently that it has become a rhythmic activity again, with the company of good friends at work. It's energy-giving, being able to do this regularly once more, with people I like individually and truly enjoy being with as a group :)


At Antonio's Tagaytay (from left to right):
Grumps a.k.a. Groachy, Marian De la Reva, Nurture Spa Hair, Biik Ram, Gramps

Thursday, December 4, 2008

On Work

I've been racking my brain trying to determine how I will facilitate a session tomorrow entitled Maintaining A Positive Outlook.

All this pondering has led me to think about my work, and how the fact that I genuinely love what I do makes a lot of things easy and fun. This in turn brought to mind one of my favorite books -- Letters to My Son by Kent Nerburn. In his book, Nerburn writes to his son about life's toughest and most important questions which every reader, male and female, can relate to.

There's one letter in the collection that really calls out to me; this is where the author shares his thoughts about work. When I was still teaching, I made it a point to share this article with my graduating students to help them decide what to do with their lives after college. A lot of them found it enlightening and inspiring. Me, I agree with it 100%. How I wish everyone would be lucky enough to be engaged in work that lights them up from the inside out! :)

******************
Work by Kent Nerburn

I often hear people say, "I have to find myself." What they really mean is, “I have to make myself." Life is an endlessly creative experience, and we are making ourselves every moment by every decision we make. That is why the work you choose for yourself is so crucial to your sense of value and well-being. No matter how much you might believe that your work is nothing more than what you do to make money, your work makes you who you are, because it is where you put your time.

I remember several years ago when I was intent upon building my reputation as a sculptor. I took a job driving a cab, because, as I told people, "I want some job that I will never confuse with a profession." Yet within six months, I was talking like a cab driver, thinking like a cab driver, looking at the world through the eyes of a cab driver. My anecdotes came from my job, as did my observations about life. I became embroiled in the personalities and politics of the company for which I worked and developed the habits and rhythms of life that went along with my all-night driving shift. On the days when I did not drive and instead worked on my sculpture, I still carried the consciousness of a cab driver with me. Whether I liked it or not, I was a cab driver. This happens to anyone who takes a job. Even if you hate a job and keep a distance from it, you are defining yourself in opposition to the job by resisting it. By giving the job your time, you are giving it your consciousness. And it will, in turn, fill your life with the reality that it presents.

Many people ignore this fact. They choose a profession because it seems exciting, or because they can make a lot of money, or because it has some prestige in their minds. They commit themselves to their work, but slowly find themselves feeling restless and empty. The time they have to spend on their work begins to hang heavy on their hands, and soon they feel constricted and trapped. They join the legions of humanity who Thoreau said lead lives of quiet desperation - unfulfilled, unhappy and uncertain of what to do. Yet the lure of financial security and the fear of the unknown keep them from acting to change their lives, and their best energies are spend creating justifications for staying where they are or inventing activities outside of work that they hope will provide them with a sense of meaning.

But these efforts can never be totally successful. We are what we do, and the more we do it, the more we become it. The only way out is to change our lives or to change our expectations for our lives. And if we lower our expectations we are killing our dreams, and a man without dreams is already half dead.

So you need to choose your work carefully. You need to look beyond the external measurements of prestige and money and glamour to see what you will be doing on a day-to-day, hour-to-hour, minute-to-minute basis to see if that is how you want to spend your time. Time may not be the way you measure the value of your work, but it is the way you experience it. What you need to do is think of work as a "vocation." This word may seem stilted in its tone, but it has wisdom within it. It comes from the Latin word for calling, which comes from the word for voice. In those meanings it touches on what work really should be. It should be something that calls to you as something you want to do, and it should be something that gives voice to who you are and what you want to say to the world. So a true vocation calls to you to perform it and it allows your life to speak. This is very different from work, which is just an exchange of labor for money. It is even very different from a profession, which is an area of expertise you have been sanctioned to represent. A vocation is something you feel compelled to do, or at least something that fills you with a sense of meaning. It is something you choose because of what it allows you to say with your life, not because of the money it pays you or the way it will make you appear to others. It is, above all else, something that lets you love.

When you find a vocation, embrace it with your whole heart. Few people are so lucky. They begin their search for work with an eye to the wrong prize, so when they win, they win something of little value. They gain money or prestige, but they lose their hearts. Eventually their days become nothing more than a commodity that they exchange for money, and they begin to shrivel and die. I often think of a man I met on the streets of Cleveland. He was an assembly-line worker in an automobile plant. He said his work was so hateful that he could barely stand to get up in the morning. I asked him why he didn't quit. "I've only got thirteen more years to go to retirement," he answered. And he meant it. His life had so gotten away from him that he was willing to accept a thirteen-year death sentence for his spirit rather than give up the security it earned. When I spoke with him I was about twenty. I was young and free; I didn't understand what he was saying at all. It seemed incomprehensible to me that a man could have become so defeated by life that he was willing to let his life die as he held it in his hands. Now I understand too well. Lured by what had seemed like big money at the time, he had chosen a job that didn't offer him any inner satisfaction. He lived a good life, rolling from paycheck to paycheck and getting the car or the boat that he had always dreamed of having. Year by year he advanced, because businesses reward perseverance. His salary went up, his options for other types of employment went down, and he settled into a routine that financed his life. He married, bought a house, had children, and grew into middle age. The job that had seemed like freedom when he was young became a deadening routine. Year by year he began to hate it. It choked him, but he had no means of escape. He needed its money to live; no job he might change to would pay him as much as he was currently making. His fear for the health and security of his family kept him from breaking free into a world where all things were possible but no things were paid for, and so he gave in. "I've only got thirteen more years to retirement" was a prisoner's way of counting the days until the job would release him and pay him for his freedom.

Most people's lives are a variation on that theme. So few take the time when they are young to explore the real meaning of the jobs they are taking or to consider the real implications of the occupations to which they are committing their lives. Some have no choice. Without money, without training, with the pressures of life building around them, they choose the best alternative that offers itself. But many others just fail to see clearly. They chase false dreams, and fall into traps they could have avoided if they had listened more closely to their hearts when choosing their life's work. But even if you listen closely to your heart, making the right choice is difficult. You can't really know what it is you want to do by thinking about it. You have to do it and see how it fits. You have to let the work take you over until it becomes you and you become it; then you have to decide whether to embrace it or abandon it. And few have the courage to abandon something that defines their security and prosperity.

Yet there is no reason why a person cannot have two, three or more careers in the course of a life. There is no reason why a person can't abandon a job that does not fit anymore and strike out into the unknown for something that lies closer to the heart. There is risk, there is loss, and there likely will be privation. If you have allowed your job to define your sense of self-worth, there may even be a crisis of identity. But no amount of security is worth the suffering of a life lived chained to a routine that has killed all your dreams. You must never forget that to those who hire you, your labor is a commodity. You are paid because you provide a service that is useful. If the service you provide is no longer needed, it doesn't matter how honorable, how diligent, how committed you have been in your work. If what you can contribute is no longer needed, you are no longer needed and you will be let go. Even if you've committed your life to the job, you are, at heart, a part of the commercial exchange, and you are valuable only so long as you are a significant contributor to that commercial exchange. It is nothing personal; it's just the nature of economic transaction. So it does not pay to tie yourself to a job that kills your love of life. The job will abandon you if it has to. You can abandon the job if you have to.

The man I met in Cleveland may have been laid off the year before he was due to retire. He may have lost his pension because of a legal detail he never knew existed. He may have died on the assembly line while waiting to put a bolt in a fender. I once had a professor who dreamed of being a concert pianist. Fearing the possibility of failure, he went into academics where the work was secure and the money was predictable. One day, when I was talking to him about my unhappiness in my graduate studies, he walked over and sat down at his piano. He played a beautiful glissando and then, abruptly, stopped. "Do what is in your heart," he said. "I really only wanted to be a concert pianist. Now I spend every day wondering how good I might have been." Don't let this be your epitaph at the end of your working life. Find out what it is that burns in your heart and do it. Choose a vocation, not a job, and you will be at peace. Take a job instead of finding a vocation, and eventually you will find yourself saying, "I've only got thirteen more years to retirement," or "I spend every day wondering how good I might have been."

We all owe ourselves better than that.