Sunday, August 31, 2014

Letter: A Letter for Mr. Right

Just to be Different :P

Do you know how much I Love You? 


Dear Mr. Right,

Every day I wake up beside you thinking how lucky I am to have you in my life. You have made all my dreams come true, especially now with our baby Marco. You have given me so much within the last 13 months and I don't know if I will be able to give back all that you have given me. You have been my guiding light when I was lost. You have been my comforter through all my trials and sorrow, and you have been my rock. There has been so many times when I wanted to give up, and then you gave me hope and faith. You made me understand the situation first before making a decision.
Me and My Best Pal



Trials in our relationship made us stronger, we keep on fighting all the circumstances that is on our way. I just want to say thank you for being understanding, having a long patience, giving me all the support that I need, and thank you for being caring. 

My Boyfriends
Without you in my life ill be lonely and unhappy. Thanks for sacrificing, thanks for always being there for me when I needed you most. Sorry for everything that made you feel unimportant or unloved i didn't mean those things, that's just my crazy side, but I know you understand why i'am like that,  I know this would be so cheesy but I just want to express my feelings and gratitude how important you are in my life. I love you so much and Thank you for everything. Words are not enough to thank you I will just Love you the way you love me.

“My love for you has no depth, its boundaries are ever-expanding. My love and my life with you will be a never ending story”.


My Happiness

Politics: My Bosses, My Muse

Politics in the Philippines
The president floats the notion of a second term

In a body politic still scarred by the two-decade dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos, it has long been taboo for a president even to dream of more than one six-year term. Yet President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino, son of Corazon Aquino, who toppled Marcos in 1986, has broken that taboo. On August 13th he said he was amenable to a second term. Mr Aquino’s pronouncement has thrown Philippine politics into a welter. Even members of his own coalition are asking what he is playing at.

The constitution forbids a president a second term. Until now Mr Aquino has opposed any change in the constitution established by his late mother. But Mr Aquino told a television interviewer that amendments might be desirable to curb the powers of the Supreme Court, with which he is quarrelling. Asked if he was open to amending the constitution to lift the presidential term limit, he said he would listen to his “bosses”—by which he means the people. He did not say what his bosses were telling him. Neither Mr Aquino nor his various spokesmen subsequently made his meaning any clearer.

Opinion polls indicate that the president remains popular. But his popularity has been declining as he enters the final two years of his term. His progress in keeping his election promises of reducing corruption and poverty is not all it could have been. The fear that any president might turn out to be another Marcos makes it highly improbable that the voters, who have the final say, will allow him another term.

Absent any delusions that his bosses regard him as indispensable, the most likely explanation for Mr Aquino’s pronouncement is that he hopes the prospect of his staying on will keep his governing coalition together. Their single term and their function as the fount of political patronage make all Philippine presidents lame ducks in their last two years. Supporters desert them for whoever may be the best bet to become the next president and the next source of patronage.

Opinion polls suggest that the man Mr Aquino hoped would succeed him, the interior secretary, Mar Roxas, has a formidable task in stopping the vice-president, Jejomar Binay, who is a member of the opposition, from winning the next presidential election. Politicians in the governing coalition can stick with Mr Roxas and lose influence, or they can switch allegiance to Mr Binay and keep it.

Floating the idea of amending the constitution may be a desperate attempt by Mr Aquino to hold the coalition together for a last-gasp effort to keep his election promises. That would burnish his family’s political reputation—even though his mother would certainly have disapproved of any constitutional amendment.

Tutorials: How to make Double Chocolate and Raspberry Cake

Delicious Double Chocolate and Raspberry Cake

Ingredients :

•          700g pkt Chocolate mud cake mix
•          610g pkt White Wings white Chocolate & raspberry swirl cake mix
•          6 eggs
•          2/3 cup vegetable Oil
•          3 tbs Margarine or soft Butter
•          1 1/2 tbs Milk

•          150g raspberries, to decorate

Procedure: 

1.         Line 2 x 20cm round cake pans with non-stick baking paper. Prepare the cakes according to packet instructions. Set aside to cool completely.

2.         Use a serrated knife to carefully cut the tops off the cakes to flatten. Cut the cakes in half horizontally.

3.         Prepare the mud cake icing according to packet instructions. Set aside for 10 minutes to thicken.

4.         Meanwhile, prepare the white chocolate frosting according to packet instructions.

5.         Place the base of the mud cake on a serving plate. Spread 1/3 of the mud cake icing over the cake. Place a layer of white chocolate cake on top. Spread 1/2 of the remaining mud cake icing over the cake. Top with the remaining layer of mud cake. Spread the remaining mud cake icing over the cake. Top with the remaining white chocolate cake. Spread the white chocolate frosting over the top of the cake. Scatter with the raspberries to serve.


Books and Movie Review: Insidious

Insidious Chapter 1
Story:
Josh and Renai (Patrick Wilson, Rose Byrne) have just moved into a new house with their family, but when their son Dalton (Ty Simpkins) lapses into a deep coma-like sleep, weird things start to happen that intensify to where they start encountering dangerous beings who want their son.

Analysis:

Anyone who thinks a haunted house movie by the creators of "Saw" would be a gory and grim affair clearly aren't aware of director James Wan and screenwriter Leigh Whannell's love for classic horror, specifically their admiration for two classic examples of the haunted house horror sub-genre at its best, "Poltergeist" and "The Shining."

Demon Behind Him
 It takes some time before the influence of those films is felt, since it opens more like "Paranormal Activity" - that movie's director Oren Peli's name is listed conspicuously as producer. Rose Byrne's character, a songwriter, spends time alone in the new family home while her husband, played by Patrick Wilson, is working, and she begins to experience all sorts of odd occurrences. Their eldest son Dalton (Ty Sympkins) has been exploring the attic of their new house but one morning, he just doesn't wake up, though doctors say he's not dead but just in a deep sleep. Months later, the family has gotten somewhat used to their comatose son, but the weird occurrences have continued, getting more and more menacing to the point of them actually seeing frightening beings wandering around their house. Changing houses doesn't rid them of the problem, and by the time they call in a paranormal investigator with her crew, the situation has put you well on edge, not knowing what exactly is going on or what will happen next.

Hand Print of the Demon
"Insidious" is the type of horror movie you'll probably not want to know too much about before going to see it, but without giving too much away, it revolves around the concept of astral projection and the ideas just get wilder and wilder as it goes along leading to a crazy séance scene that needs to be seen to be believed since it's nothing like anything we've seen in previous horror films. The tone of the movie probably most resembles that of Sam Raimi's recent return to horror with "Drag Me to Hell," that perfect serio-comic blend that doesn't bog things down with pathos and exposition, instead letting you know how much fun the filmmakers are having by throwing so much crazy stuff into the mix.

The Old Lady in the Past
A key component to any of it working as well as it does is the perfect casting of Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne, two terrific actors who have proven they can do anything. They're incredibly believable as a married couple and they really pull you into the lives of the characters just as it's disrupted by them being pulled into the unknown. Continuing her glorious comeback, Barbara Hershey plays Wilson's ultra-religious mother who seems to know more than she's letting on, and Lyn Shaye would make Zelda Rubinstein proud with her way of handling the problems. Even screenwriter Leigh Whannell gets into the act, showing up as one of the paranormal investigators named "Specs" (yes, he wears glasses), and it's infinitely entertaining to watch him and his partner Tucker (Angus Sampson) pulling out an odd array of gadgets to investigate the paranormal activities.

Lady in the Past
 Although Wan and Whannell are working in a genre that's been done to death, they're able to keep things from getting too predictable due to their quirky sensibilities, ably avoiding the clichés despite the obvious influences. Sure, there are a few jump scares but they're never done in a cheap way. In fact, most of the scariest moments take place during the most innocuous dialogue sequences, just as you're relaxing from the last one, which just makes the whole freakier, since you never know exactly what might happen next.

The sound design is perfectly integrated into the score to create even more tension, and that mostly maintains a dark tone. "Insidious" may not be the first time that Tiny Tim's "Tiptoe Through the Tulips" made people uncomfortable, but never quite like this.

Some may feel that Wan and Whannell stick the landing a bit by leaving things somewhat open-ended for another movie, but there's enough chills along the way one can easily forgive them for wanting to keep the party going.

The Bottom Line:
"Insidious" is Wan's most effective film as a director and one of the scariest and creepiest movies in some time, and the odd sense of humor that permeates the film's darker moments just makes it that much more enjoyable.

Books and Movie Review: Mrs. Doubtfire

Mrs. Doubtfire
"Mrs. Doubtfire" tells the story of a divorced man who misses his children so desperately that he disguises himself as a middle-aged British nanny in order to be near them. The man's ex-wife and three kids are all, of course, completely fooled by the deception, leading to great poignancy when the man hears himself discussed in what appears to be his absence.


If this plot sounds to you like an elaborate scheme to create a comic role for an actor in drag, you would not be far off; Robin Williams, who is famous for his ability to do voices and impressions, would have had to be carried away kicking and screaming from the project. But the film is not as amusing as the premise, and there were long stretches when I'd had quite enough of Mrs. Doubtfire.

Williams stars in the movie as Daniel Hillard, an actor who specializes in dubbing the voices of cartoon characters. That means we get a title sequence showing him talking like a cat and a mouse, and since he's done such a brilliant job with characters like the genie in "Aladdin," this is fun to see.

But soon the plot machinery begins to creak. His wife Miranda (Sally Field) can no longer endure his little eccentricities, like hiring a private zoo for their son's birthday party. She files for divorce. The judge gives Daniel visitation rights only on Saturdays. And so he turns in desperation to his gay brother, Frank (Harvey Fierstein), a makeup expert, who helps disguise him as the redoubtable Mrs. Doubtfire, a younger but not slimmer Miss Marple.

The disguise is surprisingly good. Not good enough to fool one's own kith and kin, I suppose, but we can allow the movie its premise. Mrs. Doubtfire turns out to be the nanny from heaven, so firm, so helpful, so reassuring, that if Daniel had been at all like this, he'd still be married. The kids love him.



Act two. Time for complications. His wife turns up with a new boyfriend (Pierce Brosnan), and Daniel, in drag, has to stand by and grind his teeth as the romance progresses. Daniel has been ordered to find work by the judge and is employed as a shipping clerk at a TV station. (This is necessary for plot purposes, I guess; otherwise, why would a skilled and experienced voice-over actor not be able to make more money in his original field?).

All this leads up to the movie's climactic comic set-piece, when, for complicated reasons, both Daniel and Mrs. Doubtfire must be in the same restaurant at the same time, at different tables. Is this funny? Sort of. But it doesn't explode with humor the way it really should.

Everyone knows that Williams is a mercurial talent who loves to dart in and out of many different characters and voices. But a little of that goes a long way, and already has. There's a scene here, for example, where Williams "does" a dozen voices for an employment counselor, and the movie stops cold for this vaudeville act, just as the Marx Brothers movies always paused for Harpo's instrumental solos.

Any review of "Mrs. Doubtfire" must take into account Dustin Hoffman's transvestite comedy, "Tootsie," which remains by far the better film: more believable, more intelligent and funnier. "Tootsie" grew out of real wit and insight; "Mrs. Doubtfire" has the values and depth of a sitcom.

Hoffman as an actor was able to successfully play a woman.

Williams, who is also a good actor, seems more to be playing himself playing a woman.


Books and Movie Review: Only Lovers Left Alive

Only Lovers Left Alive

US indie pioneer Jim Jarmusch has been pursuing his laconic strain of cinematic hipsterism for 30 years now, so long that he seems as ageless as the blood-sipping characters in his latest film. You thought there was nothing new to add to the vampire genre? So, apparently, did Jarmusch, which is why Only Lovers Left Alive luxuriates in a curious end of an era melancholy, as if he'd set out at once to make the last ever vampire movie and cinema's last ever love story.

The lovers in question are reclusive rock musician Adam Tom Hiddleston, exuding fastidiously weary cool and Eve Tilda Swinton, pallid and otherworldly I swear, you'd barely recognize her. Centuries old, the couple are married and still deeply in love though living apart she in Tangier, he in a Detroit seemingly reverting to primeval jungle. The pair reunite, only to have their idyll crashed by Eve's wild-child sister a louchely coquettish Mia Wasikowska. Not only that, but the top-quality ruby nectar is getting to be in short supply.

This is a film guaranteed to affect some viewers the way garlic affected Bela Lugosi. Some will find it unbearably arch and the lovers relatively self-satisfied and above it all. And it might be objected that the vampire-junkie parallel has already been done to death, notably in Abel Ferrara's The Addiction. But what makes Jarmusch's film so distinctive is that he pushes all the Anne Rice cliches to their limits, wryly acknowledging their creakiness, yet still finding humour and grace in them. And, despite the lofty exclusivity of Adam and Eve's bond, the pair also have a wit, warmth and raffish flamboyance that makes them oddly endearing.

The film is packed with Jarmusch's diverse preoccupations: Einsteinian physics, vintage guitars, the strangeness of fungi. A sumptuously narcotised atmosphere is conjured up, with many a rotating overhead shot, by cinematographer Yorick Le Saux. Jarmusch's band SQÜRL compose the score, together with experimental lute player Jozef van Wissem, and there's a show-stealing, intensely sexual live number by Lebanese singer Yasmine Hamdan.

Bound to appeal to the more discerning, literary-minded strain of young goth, Only Lovers is a droll, classy piece of cinematic dandyism that makes the Twilight cycle redundant in one exquisitely languid stroke.





























Latest News and Trends: Samsung Unveils Smartwatch that can make Calls

Samsung Smartwatch

Samsung Electronics unveiled what is said the first Smartwatch capable of making and receiving calls without a mobile phone nearby, in the South Korean firm's latest effort to find a new growth driver.
Samsung Galaxy Gear
 The world's biggest smartphone maker has been pushing hard to develop the wearable devices market as it looks to counter slowing earnings in its mobile division, which led to weaker-than-expected second-quarter earnings.
Samsung is developing a smartwatch to
rival possible Apple iWatch


Samsung is hardly alone in pushing wearable, which have yet to catch on with consumers. Rival Apple Inc is expected to launch its own device this year and LG Electronics Inc on Thursday announced its new G Watch R smartwatch featuring a circular plastic OLED screen, a stainless steel frame and leather strap.

Samsung's new smartwatch, called the Gear S, differs from its predecessors with a bigger 2-inch (5 cm) curved display and offers features like WiFi connectivity, pedestrian navigation and a built-in GPS. This device will run on Samsung's nascent Tizen operating system.

Samsung said the Gear S will start selling from October. It did not give details on pricing or where it will be available.

LG said its G Watch R will launch in key markets in the fourth quarter, without indicating a price.

This is such a cool device, specially when its emergency you can just make a call immediately without any hassle at all. I recommend this product because it can be very useful to have. 

Latest News and Trends: MRT-Metropolitan Rapid Transit

Metropolitan Rapid Transit

We all know that (MRT) Metropolitan Rapid Transit, (LRT) Light Rail Transit are the most convenient, affordable, fast and helpful mode of transportation here in Manila, there is no traffic, you can go to the place you want to go in less than 10-15 minutes, but nowadays the performance of the MRT is getting poor! There will be a time that you will experience long line for getting the magnetic ticket, no train is available because its either under maintenance or there is no available seats or its full that you cannot fit inside the train,  sometimes you'll get stranded and stuck for like 30 minutes in the middle of the rail, and  the worst part is you will have an accident like what happened a few weeks ago which held to people get injured etc. 

How can we ensure the safeness of the people who are riding the MRT everyday? 

It is easy to think as a normal person without any authority in the government, that the best solution to improve or fix the problem of the MRT is to have an operation to make the MRT brand new, 1. fix the damages, 2. check for the missing parts/old parts, 3. have a regular maintenance check up for every single train, 4. make a new train which is nice and faster, 5.  have more cashier counter so that there will be no more long ques, EASY TO THINK RIGHT? BUT HARD TO DO. Putting all those money inside their pockets without thinking how hard the people work hard and pay for the tax for the government for a better service but what do we get? Sometimes nothing!

I'am not blaming anyone, I didn't mentioned names, i'am just sharing my thoughts and experience on how bad the everyday life of the Filipinos who are working, traveling, and making money for the government. We have to open our heart and mind to do better for our country, respect  the opinions of other people do not take it negatively but learn from it.




















Friday, August 29, 2014

Latest News and Trends: When Seeing Is Not Believing

When Seeing Is Not Believing

In this age of digital photo manipulation, it can be hard to tell what's real and what's not. It's common to get forwarded e-mails with attached photos of everything from freakishly large fruits to gruesome accidents. While some look obviously fake, others make you wonder if they are real. But these fake photos, as they've come to be known, are not just by product of the Photoshop era. They've been around since the early 1900s and they've fooled countless people in the last few decades. Admittedly, those were far simpler times and people had more faith in what they saw and were a lot less cynical. 

The Loch Ness Monster
This turns out the famous black and white photograph of the Loch Ness monster taken in 1934 is a fake.Despite being fake, many people still believe in the existence of the creature.




















FAIRIES Irrefutable proof that fairies exist?  Have you ever seen a fairy before? We all know that Fairies are only make beliefs by our ancestors who's imagination is playing around. 





ENTER PHOTOSHOP
With digital imaging software, there are now even more fake photos circulating the Web.

Giant Human Skeleton
This Larger than life purports that a giant human skeleton had been unearthed in Saudi Arabia by a gas exploration company. The truth is a massive letdown the doctored photo was actually created for a contest on the Website called "Archaeological Anomalies" using free design software from aviary.com The site runs different types of creative contest daily. 


We all know that photography is a  part of lives nowadays, everything we do we capture. Every moment for us is worth having a photo, but sometimes we cannot recognize what is fake or not. We tend to edit our photos to look nicer and more presentable for others to see. But sometimes when we come up to being creative we create things beyond our limits we explore on things like the photo shop, picture editor and many more. Making Collages for the photo that we made, putting captions to make fun etc. We are having fun making our pictures look prettier and nicer. Also, sometimes when we get bored we just edit our photos just to surpass the time. 

"Photography is a way of feeling, of touching, of loving. What you have caught on film is captured forever... it remembers little things, long after you have forgotten everything".






























Sunday, August 24, 2014

Developmental Feature Articles (Educational Program): Teaching for Change


Teaching for Change

How can we achieve Teaching for Change? 

Teachers and Parents create schools where students learn to read, write and change the world. By drawing direct connections to real world issues, encourages teachers and students to question and re-think the world inside and outside their classrooms, build a more equitable, multicultural society, and become active global citizens.

Think about what needs to be changed before deciding on a change.

As teachers in the future we have to be more enthusiastic on how we teach our students, we must give our 100% best for  the students to learn more in our prepared lessons, we must motivate them and know what they are interested about. If ever we noticed that our students doesn't have the interest in what we are talking about we must change our way of teaching or the strategy that we are using. It is also nice to ask our students on their expectations of you and your expectations as a teacher to your students.


Lay the groundwork for change.

The motivation is admirable but every instructional situation is unique. Teachers are different, students are different and we don’t all teach the same content in the same kind of courses. Whatever a teacher does must be adapted so that it fits the peculiarities of the given instructional situation. Don’t just do it before having given careful thought to how the change will work with your content, your students, and when you use it.

Incorporate change systematically.

Beyond adapting the change, teachers need to prepare for its implementation. This means considering when it fits with the content, what skills it requires and whether students have those skills. If they don’t, how could those skills be developed? It also means valuing the change process by giving it your full and focused attention so as to ensure the new approach has the best possible chance of succeeding. 

Change a little before changing a lot.

Too often faculty have conversion experiences about themselves as teachers. They go to a conference or read a book, get convinced that they could be doing so much better and decide to change all sorts of things at once. They envision a whole new course taught by an entirely different teacher. Unfortunately, that much change is often hard on students and equally difficult for teachers to sustain.

Determine in advance how you will know whether the change is a success.

It’s too bad that assessment has come to carry so much negative baggage, because when it’s about a teacher trying something new and wanting to know if it works, assessment provides much needed of objectivity. If you determine beforehand what success is going to look like, then you are much less likely to be blinded by how much everybody liked it. In this giant review of the change literature I mentioned earlier, only 21% of the articles contained “strong evidence to support claims of success or failure.


Have realistic expectations for success.

No matter how innovative, creative and wonderful the new idea may be, it isn't going to be perfect and it isn't going to be the best learning experience possible for every student or the pinnacle of your teaching career. Everything we do in class has mixed results; any new approach will work really well for some students, in some classes, on some days. Know that going in, remind yourself regularly, and don’t let it discourage you from continuing to make positive changes.










Sunday, August 10, 2014

Poetry: Glosa Poetry and Gothic Poetry


Poetry: Glosa Poetry and Gothic Poetry


Glosa Poetry

A Spanish form also known as mote or retruecano, closely related to the cantiga.
In its strict form it is a poem consisting of a line or a short stanza called cabeza (or texto), stating the theme of the poem and followed by one stanza for each line of the cabeza explaining or glossing that line and often adding a refrain as the first or last line, or both.

The cabeza may be any length or rhyme scheme and the poet is free to choose any other form. Loosely the glosa is any poem expanding in the theme presented at the opening stanza and usually repeating one or more of the lines of that stanza.


Texto:

As I sleep alone in this distant town.
An ethereal blanket keeps me safe and sound.

Glosa:

The lonely night draw swiftly down
Covering the world in a deep black gown
Creeping softly in without a sound
As I sleep alone in this distant town.

I close my eyes, but sleep can't be found
Till your loving spirit wraps itself around
Then I'm covered and warm wrapped in love
An ethereal sheet keeps me safe and sound.



Gothic Poetry

Pause for a moment and think! Have you ever felt that you were not alone whilst walking out late at night. Have you heard the howling of a wolf, the hoot of an owl, or that sound that you just can't make out and on hearing that sound rushed to the safety of your home. Once the door is locked and bolted feeling the relief of escape.

Night

And the word created flesh
And the flesh created fear,
But the flesh could not fear itself
And so created fear of the night.

In the redness of the full moon
You waken and remember your fear
The creaking movements in the house
Then the cold, fearful sweats start again
Breathing hardens, eyes wide in fear.

Then the moon breaks through the clouds again
You see the creature stalking you.
The silver grey shining fur, inching closer.
The bloody red eyes and slavering mouth.
It leaps at you, feel the jaws bite.
Redness!!!!
Screaming you wake up in a cold sweat
Above your pounding heart, hear the sounds.

My Own Poetry Making

Glosa Poetry

I chose Glosa Poetry because I found the word “Glosa” unique. In Medical Term “Glosa” means the Tongue, in poetry it is used as any poem extending with a theme. The glose originated in Spain, where it is known as the glosa. It has two parts, which are normally written by different authors.

The first part - the texte or cabeza - consists of a few lines which set the theme for the entire poem. Typically this will be a stanza from a well-known poem or poet - although it is perfectly permissible to write your own texte.

The second part - the glose or glosa proper - is a gloss on, or explanation of, the texte. It takes the form of an ode, with one stanza per line of the texte. Each stanza in turn expands upon its corresponding line of texte, and ends with a repetition of it.

Title: Love Bug

By: Diana Gracia M. Tumolva

Texto:

Oh how I wonder what will happen,
If I catch that love bug and I will get bitten.

Glosa:

There was once a love bug
Sitting on a brown long log
Wondering if I’m going to catch it
Or just let it adjunct

Poor little thing, staring at me
I wonder what will happen to me
If I catch that love bug
Sitting pretty on the brown long log


Gothic Poetry

As we hear or see the word “Gothic” what comes to our mind is the “dark side” of something, but let take it positively this time. It is always said in the dark (for effect) though it is very hard to read in the dim lighting. Thus is the challenge of the poet and venerable individual reciting the literature. Gothic Poetry specifically doesn't have a pattern, and actually doesn't rhyme.



Title: Black Heart
By: Diana Gracia M. Tumolva

I am a product of a black heart
But that doesn't mean I am going to hurt,
I also know how to love unconditionally.
Just don’t hurt me please or else you’ll see
The evil part of me.

I can make you feel heaven,
But don’t betray me or else you’ll see hell,
Once again I am a product of a black heart,
But I know how to love and be caring,
That can be an angel saving you from pain.