Biyernes, Mayo 6, 2016

The Best of Negros Oriental (For May 6, 2016)

Negros Oriental
        Negros Oriental (Cebuano: Sidlakang Negros; Filipino: Silangang Negros), also called Oriental Negros or Eastern Negros, is a province in the Philippines located in the Negros Island Region. It occupies the southeastern half of the island of Negros, with Negros Occidental comprising the north-western half. It also includes Apo Island — a popular dive site for both local and foreign tourists.

Negros Oriental faces Cebu to the east across the Tañon Strait and Siquijor to the south east (which happened to be part of the province). The primary spoken language is Cebuano and the predominant religious denomination is Roman Catholicism Dumaguete City is the capital, seat of government, and most populous city of the province.
        Negros Island, the third largest island in the Philippines, is believed to have once been part of the island of Mindanao, but was cut off by rising waters at the end of the last ice age.
Among the early inhabitants of the island were Negritos and later the Malays, as well as Han Chinese, who are merchants. They called the island "Buglas", a native word which is believed to mean "cut off".




Malabo Falls in Valencia

Lake Balinsasayao


Sans Rival Bistro



Apo Island

Ocean24

Rizal Boulevard

Tejero Island Resort

Bahura

Buglasan Festival

Tierra Alta

Huwebes, Mayo 5, 2016

My Favorite Delicacy (For May 5, 2016)

Chicken Tinola with Corn
Filipino Style Recipe: Chicken Tinola (Tinolang Manok) with corn or Filipino chicken ginger soup with corn is one of the common dish in the Philippines. A simple and easy to cook recipe with corn cobs for more flavorful taste to our dish.
Estimated time of preparation and cooking: 45-50 minutes.
Good for 4-6 persons.

Ingredients :
1 kilo chicken, cut into serving pieces
2 pieces
chayote squash(sayote) or 1 green papaya, cut into serving pieces
2 Japanese corn cobs, cut into 4-5 pieces
1 cup chili leaves or malunggay leaves
1 thumb-sized ginger, cut into strips
4 cloves garlic, crushed
1 onion, chopped
2 tablespoon fish sauce(patis)
1 litre of water or rice washing
4 tablespoon
vegetable oil
salt to taste
Procedures : 1. In a sauce pan, heat oil over medium heat then saute ginger, garlic and onion.
2. Add chicken, fish sauce, ground pepper and continue sauteing until
the color chicken turn to light brown.
3. Pour water then add corn. Simmer for 10 minutes or until chicken and corn are tender.
4. Add in chayote then continue simmering for another 5 minutes.
5. Adjust seasoning according to taste then add chili leaves then turn off the heat.
6. Let stand for a few minutes to cook the leaves then transfer to a serving dish and
serve. Enjoy!


                 I really like Chicken Tinola With Corn because whenever I eat with this kind o food with rice it felt like I'm in heaven. Especially when I sip it's soup, it's like you will say ''Hmmmmmm'' just speechless because it is so delicious. Also the chicken and the corn really fit with each other. They are both sweet and sour. I just really love it. :)

Miyerkules, Mayo 4, 2016

Filipino Poems That Attracts My Attention (For May 4, 2016)

When I Go
by: Merlie M. Alunan

Everything I’ll leave behind of course—
clothes, books, the blue stone I bought
from the gap-toothed gypsy in La Paz,
bottles of perfume languishing unused
for years in dim closets where I’ve kept them,
the basil bush in its corner in the garden
where the sun is sure to find it everyday,
old wine vinegar scented with tarragon,
jars of jams, pickles and conserves—
how long, you think, will they last you?
Who will replenish them? Oh, but really,
should I care about any of these at all?
About the photos, can’t wash them white
or bleed the colors till they faint.

Time will oblige. They’ll breathe on their own
in the dark for a while, keep you company
some gray morning as you sip jasmine tea,
waiting for the cloud to clear. You might try
in that quiet time to gather in your mind
places, faces, words, perhaps my name
inscribed in the rusting empty mailbox.

As you sit in the watery light, a whiff of song
might float by, you might say to yourself,
“That one, I know that one, it reminds me of—”
and stop, your tongue unable to shape it,
the syllables crumbling, murdered by memory.
Then have I truly gone, my love.
Silence has closed over the space I have been,
even grief would not keep it.
Finder Loser
by: Ophelia Dimalanta
More than half of my life
I spend searching for lost
objects ( papers, receipts,
old letters, pills and whatever
else) and causes and the rest,
losing and finding, and losing
them again, found or otherwise;
losing what I have in good
measure, finding what
I can’t almost have-
One perpetual lifetime probe,
Forever rummaging through
Bureaus and drawers and pages
Of my life’s past disarray…
And so when I finally go
keep vault unlidded for I
shall surely sit up and look
around to pursue this search,
holding on to dear life,
or to dear death, does it matter-
they are one in the proper
time but not till then,
I shall go on seeking out
lost faces and faiths in the
cold, collecting, calculating
crowd, sadly aware that later
but an unbreath away
I shall lose them all again;
as I was won’t, losing all
in this final irretrievable
lose of my death time
or perhaps, possibly, yes,
death will be kinder and oh, yes
allow me at last this
flowing final find.
When the Heart Flies from Its Place
by: Eric Gamalinda
The names are the first to go,
then the dates of births and deaths.
It’s as if everything moves on another,
esoteric level, here among the gravestones
where the elements collude so we don’t realize
how we succumb to forgetting. The milkweed unfolds
its damascened leaves and monarch caterpillars
devour them scrupulously, and out of this simple act
something marvelous is already happening,
the promise of a massive and silent migration.
Order is natural progression: a century from now
the sugar maples planted by the pioneers
will still be growing, too ancient to remember
everyone who’s seen them here. This once
was a church, where now two benches meet
in mute conviviality, and this a pound for stray sheep;
one village will be mowed over by another,
one more road will cut through the forest here.
A tractor roars to say the conquest is complete:
we tame the land until it accepts
our habits, our fear of need. When I hear these sounds,
says Stansik, age five, my heart flies from its place.
Just eight months in the country, he is learning
the landscape of language where there is no
fixed geography, and everything
still evokes another memory: cowdung is
smell of village, a pond is primal, rippling
with translucent newts. The stones
say little of these former lives, just that
they once were valiantly loved;
you can almost hear them calling the roll:
Thompson, Merritt, Thayer, each a perfect
solitude, a stilled comet. Stansik again:
Why are there no blacks in Massachusetts?
And: You are not black but gray. Pretty soon he’ll forget
his Russian, the language he is slowly
inventing, the man from whom his mother
had to run away. I wonder if he will remember
this summer, and how the heart feels
when it flies for no reason other than
—what was it? I didn’t know, I had never learned
the word for it, and to this day I walk
the unspeakable territories.
'Sa Aking Mga Kabatà'
by: Dr. Jose Rizal
Kapagka ang baya'y sadyáng umiibig
Sa kanyáng salitáng kaloob ng langit,
Sanlang kalayaan nasa ring masapit
Katulad ng ibong nasa himpapawid.

Pagka't ang salita'y isang kahatulan
Sa bayan, sa nayo't mga kaharián,
At ang isáng tao'y katulad, kabagay
Ng alin mang likha noong kalayaán.

Ang hindi magmahal sa kanyang salitâ
Mahigit sa hayop at malansáng isdâ,
Kayâ ang marapat pagyamaning kusà
Na tulad sa ináng tunay na nagpalà.

Ang wikang Tagalog tulad din sa Latin
Sa Inglés, Kastilà at salitang anghel,
Sapagka't ang Poong maalam tumingín
Ang siyang naggawad, nagbigay sa atin.

Ang salita nati'y huwad din sa iba
Na may alfabeto at sariling letra,
Na kaya nawalá'y dinatnan ng sigwâ
Ang lunday sa lawà noóng dakong una.
Love Makes The World Go Round
by: Simeon Dumdum Jr.
He was wild.
In her sixth month, he had the map of the world
tattoed on her belly.
And then, without saying goodbye,
He left for America.
In her last trimester,
Her belly grew into a tight and shiny globe
The Northern Hemisphere stretched around
The North Pole of her navel.
She would rub the northern slope of her abdomen
And feel the kick of the fetus
Between the United States and Canada.
And then she would wonder
In which of these countries
He would be now.
Since then she'd had five men
In as many years---
And five children.
This was to keep her hands holding the globe
Of her belly.
This was her only way of feeling the world---
And of going
To America.
            My favorite poem among the five, is the first one "When I Go" because we all know that all the things we have and see today are just temporary. We cannot die with those things. So we should live our life worth living because we all know that death is coming. But that doesn't mean that our journey ends there. Death means the entrance of eternity with GOD who really last forever. The love of GOD is eternal.
Biography of Merlie Alunan

Merlie M. Alunan (born December 14, 1943, in Dingle, Iloilo) is a Filipina poet.She graduated in Silliman University with an MA in Creative Writing in 1974. She teaches at the Creative Writing Center, University of the Philippines Visayas Tacloban College. She lives in Tacloban City.

Martes, Mayo 3, 2016

My Favorite Filipino Hero (For May 3, 2016)

ANDRES BONIFACIO

  
        I choose Andres Bonifacio as my favorite Filipino Hero because the way he fought for our freedom under Spanish Colonization.
      Andrés Bonifacio y de Castro (November 30, 1863 – May 10, 1897) was a Filipino nationalist, revolutionary leader, and the first president of the Philippine archipelago which he preferred naming "Bansa ng Katagalugan" or Tagalog Republic instead of Philippines due to its origin was derived from the Spaniards. He is often called "the Father of the Philippine Revolution and Filipino Nation". He was a founder and later Supremo ("supreme leader") of the Kataas-taasan, Kagalang-galangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan or simply and more popularly called Katipunan, a movement which sought the independence of the Philippines from Spanish colonial rule and started the Philippine Revolution. He is considered a de facto national hero of the Philippines, and is also considered by some Filipino historians to be the first President of the Philippines (through the revolutionary government he established), but officially he is not recognized as such.
      Andrés Bonifacio was born in Tondo, Manila, the son of Santiago Bonifacio, a native of Taguig, and Catalina de Castro, a native of Iba, Zambales. He was the eldest of six children. His siblings were Ciriaco, Procopio, Troadio, Esperidiona and Maxima. His father was a tailor who served in the colonial government as a teniente mayor of Tondo, Manila, while his mother was a supervisor at a cigarette factory in Manila and was a mestiza born of a Spanish father and a Filipino-Chinese mother. As was custom, upon baptism he was named for the saint on whose feast he was born, Andrew the Apostle.
             

Lunes, Mayo 2, 2016

My Favorite OPM (For May 2, 2016)

BULONG BY: KITCHIE NADAL
Ikaw ba'y nalulungkot?
Nababalut pa ng poot,
Maraming hinanakit sa mundo.
Di alam anong gagawin kundi ubusin ang oras sa kin.
Akala mo'y iya'y may mararating.

Hoy kaibigan ko!
Pakinggan mo ang mga bulong sa 'yo.
Ito'y di galing sa mundo.
Patungo sa pangakong paraiso.

Nasaan ang talino mo?
Diskarte kamo ng kano!
Apakan ang lahat kahit pa kapwa mo!
Minsan ang kagitingan ay wala sa bigat ng pinapasan.
Sa pagsuko't pagharap ng kabiguan.

Hoy kaibigan ko!
Pakinggan mo ang mga bulong sa 'yo.
Ito'y di galing sa mundo.
Patungo sa pangakong paraiso.

Tumatakbo ang oras.
Gumising ka't bumangun na.
Pagka't hindi na ikaw ang biktima.

Hoy kaibigan ko!
Pakinggan mo ang mga bulong sa 'yo.
Ito'y di galing sa mundo.
Patungo sa pangakong paraiso.

Hoy kaibigan ko!
Pakinggan mo ang mga bulong sa 'yo.
Ito'y di galing sa mundo.
Patungo sa pangakong paraiso.

Kitchie Nadal's Background:

Kitchie Nadal-Lopez (born September 16, 1980) is a Filipino singer-songwriter from Manila, Philippines, formerly the lead vocalist for the alternative rock band, Mojofly. Kitchie's popularity in the female OPM niche grew after she released a self-titled solo album featuring her chart-topping single, Huwag na Huwag Mong Sasabihin. The album has since achieved double platinum status (over 80,000 copies sold) In support of the Millennium Campaign, Kitchie Nadal and 26 other Filipino artists contributed to the album entitled Tayo Tayo Rin Sa 2015 - Sing the Songs. Find your Voice. Change the World. It's your Choice, released by the United Nations (in the Philippines).
Kitchie, is an alumna of St. Scholastica's College, Manila. While currently touring and preparing for her next album, Kitchie also completed a double degree major in Education and Psychology at DeLaSalle University-Manila.

My Reaction:

              I really like this song because it reminds me how to be strong and brave. Everytime I hear this song, I feel so inspired and it feels like I'm not alone. Sometimes, when there are problems and struggles I've been facing, when I hear this song, I remember that I'm not the only one who is facing the same problems. Also, this song always reminds me on how to stand up whenever I stumble down by the obstacles I've encountered through all my journey in life because I know that these problems and obstacles are just trials of God for me to be strong.   GOD BLESS :)