Saturday, September 12, 2009

Ang Alamat ni Mumble

Full Name: Mumble Baby Monster
Nickname: Mumble
Nickname per my Mom: Mumble Bee
Nickname per the City Veterinarian of Antipolo: Manbul
Gender: Male
Breed: Rottweiler

Malaking aso si Mumble. At negro. Bigay sya ni Jeff Khowviset sa amen ng ex ko nung kami pa, way back in 2006. Galing syang Baguio. Sinakay ko pa sa bus pauwi kase wala naman akong sariling sasakyan. Bawal ang pets sa aircon busses kaya tinago ko sya sa loob ng kahon ng Bread Talk. Ang liit nya pa kase nun, parang malaking daga lang. Hehe. Tas hindi rin pwedeng may katabi ako kase baka makita sya, so binilan sya ng sariling ticket ng ex ko (kase wala na akong pera nun). Sinukahan pa nga nya ako nun eh, buti na lang may extra shirt pa ako. Good thing din hindi pa sya marunong tumahol nun kaya hindi kami nahuli. Ü

Sya bale yung yardstick ng career ko kase kakasimula ko pa lang mag-work nun, associate software engineer pa lang ako. Few months pa lang ako nagtatrabaho. Nung na-promote ako to software engineer, malaki na sya kaya medyo gipit pambili ng dog food kase ang lakas kumain nito. Pwedeng pang-contest. Sabi ni Mama, sya raw ang "batayan" ng success ko sa work. Kaya raw ako na-promote this year to senior software engineer kase lagi raw mataba si Mumble. Isa pang wateber. Haha.

May alam syang tatlong tricks: Shake hands, good boy (sit), pati lie down. Nung bata sya tinuturuan ko mag-fetch kaso nawala yung favorite nyang fetch object kaya hindi na natuto sa ibang bagay. Na-depress siguro. Hehe.

Hindi palaaway to. Pag wino-walk around ko sya tas may ibang asong galit na galit makita sya, uupo lang sya tas papanuoring tumahol yung ibang aso. Parang nang-aasar no? Hehe. Mabait din sya sa kids. Pag dumadaan kami sa mga playground dito, nilalapitan sya. "Kuya, can I ride on him like I can on a donkey?" sabi minsan ng isang bata na naka-cowboy costume. Hindi pinayagan ng yaya kase "dengjeros" daw ang dogs. Wateber yaya. Haha. Tinuruan namen syang maging hindi aggressive para hindi delikado sa ibang tao kase pound-for-pound, pinakamalakas ang Rottweiler dogs. Tama, parang sila yung Manny Pacquiao ng all divisions ng dog boxing. Or biting. Wateber. Haha.

Nung nag-break kami ng ex ko, nag-emo to ng ilang araw. Ayaw kumain tas laging nakatingin sa malayo. Ang gara no? Nakaka-miss din pala sila ng tao. Ü

Three years old na si Mumble on December. So 25 dog years na sya ngayong 2009. Sabay kami nag-25. Hehe.

Medyo sikat sya dito sa subdivision. Minsan pag weekends, may group of kids na bumibisita sa kanya. Kasama mga yaya nila tas nagpapa-picture sa may gate namen, background si Mumble "The Big Black Dog" sabi nung isang bata. Hehe.

Meron syang dalawang GF dito sa subdivision, sina Wiggles at Janice. Rottweiler din sila. Hate sya ni Wiggles kase nung first time nila magkita, tinalunan ni Mumble. Immature pa kase sya nun kaya puro laro lang ang alam. Haha. Mula nun pag dumadaan kami ni Mumble kay Wiggles, tinatahulan sya. Haha. Si Janice naman, tingin ko na-TO rin sa kanya kase nung first time naman nila nagkita, pinaliguan ni Mumble ng laway. Haha. Pinagyayabang pa naman nung handler na mabango daw yung dog shampoo ni Janice. Haha. Photos ni Mumble after the jump. Ü

• Bago kami umuwi sa Antipolo from Baguio Ü



• Mumble at eight months



• Pareho kase kami ng shampoo : þ



• Eto yung nag-emo sya, pumayat : (



• Tas tulala madalas : (



• Tapos na sya mag-emo nito, medyo tumaba na ulet Ü



• Malaking maitim na aso



• Pag pagod na sya mag-walk, bigla na lang sya dadapa : þ



• Papanoorin lang nya mga galit na aso Ü



• Isa sa friends nya dito sa subdivision, si Lahar



• Kasama Mama ko (lola nya)



• Walang hustisya : þ

Mga Aso

Full Name: Yuki the Polardog
Nickname: Yuki
Gender: Male
Breed: Japanese Spitz



May alam syang trick: Shake hands. Hehe. Masungit na aso si Yuki, ayaw nyang hahawakan sya pag kumakain. Nasa Uncle Manny ko na sya ngayon pero pag bumibisita kami dun, kilala pa nya kami. Maspaborito nyang kumain ng tinapay kesa kanin. Wirdong aso. Ü Six human years na sya ngayon, so 37 dog years na sya per this site: http://www.onlineconversion.com/dogyears.htm

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Full Name: Yuna
Nickname: Yuna
Gender: Female
Breed: Pug



Sa barkada ko to. Hindi ko alam kung kay Lukas ba or kay Bevs or sa kanilang dalawa. Hindi ko rin alam kung kanino dapat ang custody ayon sa batas ngayong hindi na sila. Peace sa inyong dalawa. Hehe. : þ

Makulet to. Sobra. Yung buntot nya, "cinnamon" ang tawag kase daw nakakulot. Tas rare daw kase twice naglu-loop. Ewan kung totoo or pauso lang ni Bevs. Hehe. Twice na sya nabuntis kaso parehong failure. Sayang yung pups. : (

Sa Baguio sya nakatira. Next next week magkikita ulet kami. Pati nina Lukas at Bevs. Separately. Hehe. : þ

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Full Name: Potchay De Guzman
Nickname: Potchay
Gender: Female
Breed: Shih Tzu







Kay Uncle Ben ko si Potchay. Marunong mag-smile. Tas ang taas tumalon! Parang kuneho. Haha.

Plano syang kidnapin ng Ate ko. With all due honesty, nagpaplano pa sya ng paraan kung pano para hindi malaman ni Uncle Ben. Ina-apply nya ang mga natutunan nya sa CSI: Las Vegas to come up with a "Master Plan" sabi nya. Para daw hindi ma-trace ng tiyo namen kung sino ang nangidnap. Wateber. Wirdo. Haha.

Fossils: Project Outing in La Luz

A pause from the more-serious blogs, here's something for nostalgia (April 2007). Ü

This served as a farewell outing for most of us because a few weeks after this event, most of the teams in the project ended their contracts (including ours) and got assigned to different other engagements. The place is real nice, with comfy loft-type rooms for accommodation, lunch and dinner buffet, and perfect for snorkeling. Just watch out for the jagged rocks near the shoreline. We swam and played frisbee all day long then we were kept busy by the booze we won as prizes in our version of The Amazing Race during the wee hours of the night. The following day was hangover day. : þ




This one, I entitled "I Need More Endurance". Haha. : þ



Dito rin ako unang nangako sa alak na mamahalin ko sya magpakailanman -- Absolut, I'm keeping my promise. My drinking buddies can attest to that. : þ




Hangover.

Someday I'll post these on my wall. : þ

Quit Often To Succeed In Life

Excerpts from a forwarded email from CC. Ü Long read pero worth it. Credits to Bo Sanchez. Ü

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Are You A Quitter?

I know it sounds shocking.

But I’m serious.

Unless you learn how to quit, you won’t reach your dreams.

I don’t say that because I read it in a book. I say that from personal experience. I’m successful now because I know when to quit, how to quit, where to quit, and what to quit.

By the way, do you have Problems?

Today, I’m going to teach you how to solve your Problems by quitting.

Let me give you a hint: Most of the time, the best way to solve your Problems is not by solving your Problems. The best way to solve your Problems is by making them irrelevant.

And the way to do that is to quit.

I hope I’ve confused you by now.

Let me now tell you my first story: A love story. A tragic love story.

But I’m going to ask a favor. Notice whenever I use these three words in my story: Purpose, Path, and Problem.

Let me define them for you:
• Purpose is the final destination
• Path is the road going there.
• Problem is the barrier on that road.

Ready?

My love story is about Jenny, a beautiful single woman with many dreams.

Like many single women, her big Purpose is to have a happy marriage.

Which includes a lovely wedding, romantic dates each week, cuddling in bed every Saturday morning, and hugs under a starlit sky.

One day, Jimboy walks into her world and offers a Path to her Purpose.

He has good looks. Dresses smart. Speaks well. Has what Filipinos call “arrive”.

She meets him, likes him, and walks home with her feet on the clouds.

She also has many profound signs from Heaven that they’re meant for each other: They’re fans of the same artista.

She’s excited. She believes she has found the man of her dreams.

Unfortunately, the dream turns out to be a nightmare.

The Problem of Jimboy

She discovers that Jimboy is an irresponsible bum.

He always doesn’t have money. His wallet is thick, but it’s filled with old receipts, discount cards, and an expired driver’s license that he can’t renew because he has no money.

He hasn’t held a steady job for the past five years. When Jenny asks him why, he says he’s a free spirit. But since his spirit is still trapped in a physical body that gets hungry three times a day, Jimboy has to borrow money from Jenny.

Jenny also discovers that Jimboy has mixed blood. He’s 25% Filipino, 25% Chinese, and 50% Alcohol. When she asks why he drinks so much, he says, “When I drink, I fall asleep. When I fall asleep, I don’t sin. When I don’t sin, I go to Heaven. So I drink to go to Heaven.”

Finally, she also discovers that Jimboy flirts with anything that moves with a skirt. She finds he has other girlfriends. “In case of emergencies,” he laughs.

Let’s review the three elements of our story.

Her Purpose is a happy marriage.

Her Path is Jimboy.

Her Problem is his character flaws: being a bum, an alcoholic, and a playboy.

What should Jenny do?

Wouldn’t it be so much simpler if she just quit this Path and take another?

But from my experience, many women don’t. They just keep on trying to solve their Problem — in this case — Jimboy’s character flaws.

I see two reasons why people don’t quit…

1. When You Confuse Purpose and Path

Jenny must see boyfriend Jimboy as a Path.

Just a Path, not the Purpose.

Because if she’s confused between Purpose and Path, she’ll be attached to Jimboy. If Jenny confuses Jimboy to be her Purpose, then she’ll try to solve the Problem of his character flaws head on—by trying to change him.

That may include emotional manipulation, sexual blackmail, dragging him to prayer meetings, forcing him to counseling, and driving out demons via exorcism.

Or she may just marry him and hope that marriage will change him.

Which is a huge mistake. Here’s the truth: Marriage doesn’t change anyone, it simply magnifies what’s already there.

But okay, I admit. There are rare exceptions. A few guys do change after their wedding day.

But that’s like playing Russian Roulette. With a gun that can hold 100 bullets — and 99 are loaded. Do you really want to take that risk?

2. When You Become Unclear with Your Purpose

Emotionally, the Jennys of the world are discombobulated.

They will keep their Jimboys because marriage is no longer their Purpose.

For example, if Jenny has a strained relationship with her parents, and her parents told her that Jimboy wasn’t good for her, Jenny will keep him as her act of rebellion. In this case, her Purpose isn’t marriage anymore. It’s to get back at Mama and Papa and declare her total independence.

Another example.

If Jenny has a broken self-image and believes — in her subconscious — that she deserves a jerk, then she’ll keep him too. Again, the Purpose is no longer to get married. The Purpose is to inflict self-punishment for being such a terrible person. Even if Jimboy leaves her, Jenny will continue to search for other jerks. She will be a jerk-magnet for the rest of her life.

When the Purpose is messed up, our lives are messed up as well.

Sadly, I see this tragedy again and again.

Oh, if only we learn to quit!

But our Problem is that we think there’s only one Path.

So when a Problem blocks our way, we try to solve it head on.

Not understanding that sometimes, the best way to solve a Problem is to make it irrelevant. For example, Jenny can make Jimboy’s character flaws irrelevant by simply dumping him — and choosing someone with better husband-potential.

Life will be much simpler. And happier!

Tell Yourself: There’s More Than One Path

People don’t know how to quit.

I’ve met otherwise wonderful people who’ve been stuck in dead-end relationships for years — because they don’t know how to quit.

I’ve met great employees who — for the past 10 years — have been stuck in a job they don’t like, working for a boss they don’t like, and receiving a pay they don’t like—because they don’t know how to quit. (I’m not saying you quit tomorrow. Apply at another job first before you quit.)

I’ve met entrepreneurs who’ve been stuck in a business that doesn’t earn much or that isn’t in line with their passion — because they don’t know how to quit.

I’ve met people who — for the past 10 years — have been stuck in abusive religious groups that kill their spirit — because they don’t know how to quit.

A friend of mine showed me this principle at work…

There’s Got to be Another Way

A couple of years ago, my friend said he was taking up nursing to go abroad to earn for his family. Though he and his wife owned a school, they still couldn’t make ends meet. Because the school had very few students and many parents weren’t paying or were delayed in paying their tuition fees.

So the guy went abroad to work.

But after a year, I met him again. He told me something beautiful. A line I want you to say often. He said, “Bo, there’s got to be another way!”

“What happened?” I asked.

“My kids need me. And I was so lonely out there. I don’t want to go abroad again!” he said.

My friend and his wife decided to work on their little school. They did massive marketing and doubled their enrollees. They also did the unthinkable: They raised their tuition fees. (In the past, their tuition fees were very low.)

Today, this couple is happy to report that the school is doing so much better. And wonder of wonders, the parents now pay regularly. Why? Because they were able to reach parents of a higher economic bracket who don’t have Problems paying tuition fees.

Filipinos think that there’s only one Path to financial abundance: Go abroad. Be an Overseas Filipino Worker.

But the Problem to that Path is huge — leaving your children.

Hey, don’t solve that Problem. Make that Problem irrelevant by choosing another Path. Yes, there are other Paths to financial abundance!

You can be wealthy here in this country!

One last story…

Choose Another Problem — A Problem You Can Handle

Four years ago, I wanted to build the first Catholic homeschool provider in the Philippines. At that time, all homeschool providers in the country were non-Catholic.

For those who don’t know what homeschooling is, let me give you a simple definition. Homeschooling is when parents teach their own kids at home and try their best not to kill them before the day is over.

Just kidding. I believe in homeschooling so much because kids learn with fun. When done correctly, homeschooled kids can have a broader intelligence than kids from regular schools. And ironically, they can have greater social skills too. Today, two million kids in the US are being homeschooled because it’s a fantastic alternative.

I love homeschooling. But my Problem was that the Department of Education didn’t love homeschooling. (Yet!)

They had this iron-clad condition: If I wanted a license for homeschooling, I needed to build a physical school — complete with a few concrete building, an army of teachers, yellow school buses, a nice tall flagpole, and a security guard named Mang Jun — before they gave me a go signal to open my homeschool center.

That was the giant Problem in my Path.

Now I could have bulldozed my way through that big Problem by simply building a physical school. I knew I could do it. I’ve built stuff before.

But my goodness! First, I’d need millions. Second, I’d probably become bald from stress — and I don’t like to be bald because my head is shaped funny. But more importantly, why build a traditional school if my heart was in homeschooling?

I took one step backward and prayed.

That’s when I found another Path with a much smaller Problem: I could partner with an already existing school and work out a joint-venture agreement with them.

That’s when I remembered my dear friend and fellow-preacher Alvin Barcelona and his wife Tess. They owned a wonderful, multi-awarded school called PowerKids. The only Problem was whether we could work together on the project.

We solved that small Problem over a nice dinner of boneless Bangus and quezo ice cream in my home. That night, we signed the papers, and kaboom—we launched the www.CatholicFilipinoAcademy.com the next day.

Today, PowerKids CFA serve almost 150 kids and their very brave parents.

Here’s the key to great success: Be unflinching with your Purpose, be flexible with your Path.

Never give up on the dreams that God has placed in your heart.

But you can experiment in various ways in fulfilling them—until you find the right one.

Just like Peter…

Fill Your Nets!

One day, Jesus asked Peter to fish. Peter said they’ve been fishing all day and have caught nothing. But Peter said that he’d still do it.

But Jesus said something curious.

He just didn’t tell them, “Lower your nets one more time.”

He said, “Lower your nets in the deeper water. And lower your nets on the other side of the boat.”

In other words, quit the old way of doing things and take another Path.

Result? Peter’s nets were so full of fish they almost broke. That’s abundance.

Friend, do you want your nets to be full? Do you want abundance too?

Don’t quit your Purpose. Still lower your nets.

But quit where you lower your nets.

Quit when you lower your nets.

Quit how you lower your nets.

Find another Path.

Are you going through some Problems now?

Ask yourself:
1. What is really my end Purpose?
2. Is there another Path to this Purpose whose Problems I can handle?

And take new Paths.

And may your nets almost break with your abundant harvest.

http://bosanchez.ph/quit-often-to-succeed-in-life

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Not a Bad Year After All Ü

My 2009 kicked off with a freaking dark cloud over it. Last January, a relationship that stood more than four years ended because of reasons any person won't be proud of. : ( February witnessed my thinnest physique, an aftermath of the January ordeal. March provided a pain-in-the-arse closure to what went floating for a couple of months. In April, we tried again but not a single thing got fixed, prompting a final break-up in June. I experienced stress that I never thought existed in my life's script. Peace of mind was so scarce. I lost one good person this year. I like to believe she lost two -- the person she was before, and me. Then again, that's just my opinion.

Now, the happy stuff. Ü I've been to a lot of places and events this year. By "a lot", I mean: Hot Air Balloon Fest in Subic, Flower Fest in Baguio, Anawangin Cove in Zambales, Intramuros tour, horseback-riding in Taal Volcano, another trip to Baguio, tried out the famous Empanada in Laoag, holy week road trip to Pagudpod, saw Kabigan Falls in Ilocos, saw the windmills in Bangui, visited some friends in Pangasinan, celebrated my mom's 50th birthday in Tagaytay, watched the Pacquiao-Hatton fight in Tagaytay Country Club, stayed in an office-sponsored hotel in Makati for some weeks, went to a lot of parties, dined in Zuni, People's Palace and Felix, ate in a floating resto in Loboc River, went crazy dancing in a floating stage in Bohol, went "crazier" dancing in Laguna : þ, rode an airplane for the first (second, third and fourth) time, saw Hinagdanan Cave in Bohol, went swimming in Bohol Beach Club, went swimming in the cheaper resort beside BBC : þ, saw Prony the insanely-huge-phyton-who-didn't-give-a-damn-about-us-being-in-his-cage-even-if-we're-acting-like-chicken, put a Tarsier on my head, saw Chocolate Hills, went to Magellan's Cross, went to a lot of churches in Cebu, rode the Edge Coaster up in the 38th floor of Cebu Regency Hotel, swam and jumped in Kawasan Falls, experienced Boracay, finished a whole 15-inch pizza in Cebu by myself, went to a Greece-like place in La Union, went to Baguio another time, went to Anawangin another time, scaled Mount Pundaquit, saw the Capones Lighthouse, did skimboarding a lot, played frisbee a lot, I also tried dragon boat rowing, among other things. I can go on all day with all the stuff that I did. Hehe. Ü I gained more cronies whom I drank troubles away with. I turned quarter-of-a-century this year. I discovered that I have this long list of real people around me. Ü Ties between my immediate family got stronger. I learned a lot about life and fun and plenty of cheesy stuff. : þ I got the chance to play with my favorite inaanak all day last Fathers Day. Ü I was given the chance to teach. I was given the chance to help charities through my passions. I was blessed with opportunities and resources to help my friends in need. I got promoted at work! Ü I got to go out with someone so dear and important to me. Mushy, I know. Hehe. Go away and create your own blog unsupportive readers! : þ

The icing on the cake? I have a pending US assignment before the year ends. I hope this one pushes through to cap off a surreal year chock full of necessary experiences. God is really good indeed. Ü

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Marquardt KOs Maia in UFC 102

Demian Maia (10-1-0 overall, 5-1-0 in the UFC) is one of the best ground gamers, if not the best, in MMA. He has won four Submission of the Night Honors out of his six UFC fights. This made him visible in the grappling domain of the UFC, aside from making him hundreds of thousand dollars richer (SOTN Honors have corresponding cash prizes).

However, he fell down hard in UFC 102 courtesy of the right fist of Nate Marquardt (29-8-2 overall, 8-2-0 in the UFC). This happened in just 21 seconds of the first round, giving Maia his first MMA loss and Marquardt KO of the Night Honors plus 60K USD.

To describe things in detail, Maia started off with a good high kick. At 20 seconds, he steps in and Marquardt quickly finds a home for his right hand, making Maia spin then land face first on the canvas, dazed.

I'm still a follower of Maia's grappling magic but kudos to Marquardt for showcasing one of the finest KOs in UFC I've ever seen. He also demonstrated sheer professionalism and sportsmanship when he stopped his follow-up punch when Maia was already down.

I was rooting for Maia in this fight, but since every fight starts standing up, he has to do some more preps so he can come out stronger in his next bouts.

Conquering a Desert Mountain

Mount Batulao
Nasugbu, Batangas
811 MASL
Minor Climb
Difficulty 4/9
Trail Class 3

Burnt soil, blazing trees and grass, dust everywhere. That's Mount Batulao in Nasugbu, Batangas.

This is my second climb with Accenture Outdoor Club as a trainee, dating back to April of 2007. A night ascend trek surely prevented us from the punishment of this barren land but when day came, we felt global warming first hand. Hehe. It was summer and some parts of the mountain are literally in flames because of the immense heat.

No water source is available back then, just a makeshift store of buko juice that's attended to only in the morning. With that, we made sure our hydro packs and bottles are full of it before hitting the trail for an assault of the summit at dawn. Ü

The path up to Camp 10 (summit) is intense. Rocks are loose, temperature was soaring even before sunrise and there are paths inclined up to 70 degrees, giving the trek a hint of rock climbing. Ü

Yet we still managed to fool around. : þ

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Mission Failed : þ

Nag-forward ako ng quote kahapon sa maraming tao sa fonebook ko. Nag-reply agad ang isa.

Recipient: Sino sila? Nabura kase fonebook ko, hindi po ako nakapag-backup.

Gusto kong mantrip kase nabo-bore ako sa ginagawa ko sa office. Minsan masarap asarin mga kakilala mo pag hindi nila alam na ikaw pala yung kausap nila tas mato-torture sila kase pilit nilang iisipin kung sino ka pero hindi ka pa rin magpapakilala hangga't magmura na sila, mag-off ng fone or minsan pa magbabago ng number maiwasan lang ang pamba-bad trip mo. Hehe. Kaya ayun, nag-reply ako.

King: Isa akong salamangkero na binasbasan ng pinakamahusay na ermitanyo.

Sumagot ulet sya. Mabilis ang reply.

Recipient: King?

Mission failed.

King: Amp naman oh. Sana naman nanghula ka muna ng mali.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Boom Tarak Tarak

Tarak Ridge
Mariveles, Bataan
1,006 MASL (Ridge)
1,130 MASL (Summit)
Major Climb
Difficulty 4/9
Trail Class 3






This trek is my first with Accenture Outdoor Club (AOC), dating back to March 2007.