[news] by Roger B Rueda
There's a fine-looking Christmas tree on display in Souk Bolilao this Christmas season for the Bolilao Christmas tree contest on 30 December.
The Christmas tree is created with discarded trash. The lights are strung as well as shiny flecks made from the bottle caps. Then the tree is proudly on display at the corner of a street.
The creators of this tree have spent days constructing the Christmas tree. The tree is made from empty cans, candy wrappers, straws, bamboo, cogon grass, empty bottles, and otherwise.
The Souk Bolilao Christmas tree has malleable stretched foliage that has a brownish colour with just a tip-off of white, which makes the tree a favourite of people about. Sort of strong boughs weep charmingly, being hung with colourful ornaments. Fussy shearing creates a beautiful tree that stands straight and retains its loveliness throughout this Christmas season.
The tree creates a total festive and holiday atmosphere in the area at day and night.
Mr Sam Pasaporte, Bolilao foremost barangay councillor, heading the residents of Souk, Mrs Gemma Villarina, one of the locals here, coordinates the project, smoothing the progress of the creation and embellishment of the tree.
The rationales of making the Souk Christmas tree are to develop innovative designs for rubbish, to hoist awareness of the residents on how to reuse rubbish to make a useful object out of it, to bring in residents to working with rubbish as a recyclable stuff, to uphold a shared vision to craft an environmentally sustainable option in the creating a particular item, to promote unity and teamwork amongst the residents, to promote the neighbourhood as one of the noteworthy spots in Mandurriao, Iloilo City all through Christmas, and to bring cheer to residents.
Visit Souk Bolilao starting tonight till 31 December. For niceties, ring 09293502872.
Saturday, 25 December 2010
Saturday, 13 November 2010
Baby Girl
a poem by Roger B Rueda
About your mouth are your fine lines and wrinkles.
Your hair looks like spider’s silk,
Having your whole life
Away from you.
You don’t have time
To burn like then
When you spent your day
Snogging boys and
Backcombing your hair,
Your skin itching.
With a lovely body, life was agreeable,
And you didn't have
A care in the world.
Now, your life is
Half and a quarter over.
You've been there, done that.
You have dances with drum solos
And the arrival
Of unisex hairdressers
Off pat.
You are up at the top of the hill,
And over the other side again.
But you've earned it.
You take a lot of things
To the dry cleaners,
Have to have your roots done
Every four weeks,
And find it hard
To wear high heels.
And guess what?
Well, I just can't keep a secret.
OK, just read my thoughts.
You still fancy people,
Still have childish little crushes on people
At work, still—shock, horror—have sex, Baby Girl!
About your mouth are your fine lines and wrinkles.
Your hair looks like spider’s silk,
Having your whole life
Away from you.
You don’t have time
To burn like then
When you spent your day
Snogging boys and
Backcombing your hair,
Your skin itching.
With a lovely body, life was agreeable,
And you didn't have
A care in the world.
Now, your life is
Half and a quarter over.
You've been there, done that.
You have dances with drum solos
And the arrival
Of unisex hairdressers
Off pat.
You are up at the top of the hill,
And over the other side again.
But you've earned it.
You take a lot of things
To the dry cleaners,
Have to have your roots done
Every four weeks,
And find it hard
To wear high heels.
And guess what?
Well, I just can't keep a secret.
OK, just read my thoughts.
You still fancy people,
Still have childish little crushes on people
At work, still—shock, horror—have sex, Baby Girl!
Monday, 1 November 2010
1 November
a poem by Roger B Rueda
You
never
consign
to
oblivion
your
putting
forth
flowers
and
lit
candles
for
your
wife
taking
a
nap
under
your
feet
You
never
consign
to
oblivion
your
putting
forth
flowers
and
lit
candles
for
your
wife
taking
a
nap
under
your
feet
Saturday, 30 October 2010
Jaywalkers
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Is there concern that you will soon
become extinct
in the streets?
Of course, never.
This idea is rubbish.
Yes, like the streets
strewn with it
every day. Colourful.
Commercial. Those are
very artistic
streets they have there all over.
The flyovers
are home of old beggars,
Dinagyang families,
and glue sniffers.
Never mind them.
They need to jaywalk.
They are rubbish-like,
aren’t they?
It is a happy choice
for them.
Everyone can feel safe going
out alone at night.
Hey, mind!
You, the ex-jaywalkers,
have mutated
from stupid citizens
into obedient urbanites.
Pedestrian crossings are set
on every mind.
The traffic lights need
a radar.
Do your cars have one?
Or at least
Inside your bags?
Poor jaywalkers,
whose happiness
Are you when
you are gone? What have you done?
Is there concern that you will soon
become extinct
in the streets?
Of course, never.
This idea is rubbish.
Yes, like the streets
strewn with it
every day. Colourful.
Commercial. Those are
very artistic
streets they have there all over.
The flyovers
are home of old beggars,
Dinagyang families,
and glue sniffers.
Never mind them.
They need to jaywalk.
They are rubbish-like,
aren’t they?
It is a happy choice
for them.
Everyone can feel safe going
out alone at night.
Hey, mind!
You, the ex-jaywalkers,
have mutated
from stupid citizens
into obedient urbanites.
Pedestrian crossings are set
on every mind.
The traffic lights need
a radar.
Do your cars have one?
Or at least
Inside your bags?
Poor jaywalkers,
whose happiness
Are you when
you are gone? What have you done?
Wednesday, 27 October 2010
An Advert
a poem by Roger B Rueda
A baby girl with a dummy to suck and being
carried on his back,
a father does the weekly
shopping for the family
at a local shop.
His son about all of five
pushes a shopping trolley,
putting packets
of cereal, biscuits, crisps,
and chewing gum in it,
the father putting them
back to the bottom shelves.
The boy then pushes his trolley
near the shelf crammed
with boxes of chocolates
and candy bars, the father
stopping him to get them,
the baby girl crying herself
to sleep.
The boy cries his head off,
throwing a fit,
squealing with anger,
going wild,
shoppers swarming
onto the aisle,
the father calming him
by rocking him back and forth.
At the end of the film,
the camera zooms in to show
Want respect?
Use a sheath printed
onto a T-shirt. Cut! shouts the director.
A baby girl with a dummy to suck and being
carried on his back,
a father does the weekly
shopping for the family
at a local shop.
His son about all of five
pushes a shopping trolley,
putting packets
of cereal, biscuits, crisps,
and chewing gum in it,
the father putting them
back to the bottom shelves.
The boy then pushes his trolley
near the shelf crammed
with boxes of chocolates
and candy bars, the father
stopping him to get them,
the baby girl crying herself
to sleep.
The boy cries his head off,
throwing a fit,
squealing with anger,
going wild,
shoppers swarming
onto the aisle,
the father calming him
by rocking him back and forth.
At the end of the film,
the camera zooms in to show
Want respect?
Use a sheath printed
onto a T-shirt. Cut! shouts the director.
Saturday, 16 October 2010
La Paz, Iloilo City
a poem by Roger B Rueda
A woman, one evening, was pulled
from the street
near a village green
and raped, the rapist,
who’d offered to bring
her home, stabbing her
several times in the chest
and the back, a voice,
in pity, screaming
and crying for help,
most villagers totally deaf
and busy watching
a soap on TV 6 or TV 10.
The next day, the news
that a nursing student
had been killed took
everyone by surprise.
A driver was shot
dead inside his taxi,
his wife, at home,
looking lovingly
at their sleeping child.
His wallet was gone.
It was a shock
to see him looking
like so alive,
he was bleeding heavily.
Smaller local money
lenders were chasing
after men who had snatched
their bags.
A policeman
was found slain,
his soul must have
been nervous
around multiple
stab wounds
to the neck and
upper body.
A passenger lost
her underwear
and her virginal
innocence
at the rubbish dump, pinning
the blame on her saviour,
a maniacal taxi driver who
brought her, after, to her
destination—
and who is at large following an escape.
A woman, one evening, was pulled
from the street
near a village green
and raped, the rapist,
who’d offered to bring
her home, stabbing her
several times in the chest
and the back, a voice,
in pity, screaming
and crying for help,
most villagers totally deaf
and busy watching
a soap on TV 6 or TV 10.
The next day, the news
that a nursing student
had been killed took
everyone by surprise.
A driver was shot
dead inside his taxi,
his wife, at home,
looking lovingly
at their sleeping child.
His wallet was gone.
It was a shock
to see him looking
like so alive,
he was bleeding heavily.
Smaller local money
lenders were chasing
after men who had snatched
their bags.
A policeman
was found slain,
his soul must have
been nervous
around multiple
stab wounds
to the neck and
upper body.
A passenger lost
her underwear
and her virginal
innocence
at the rubbish dump, pinning
the blame on her saviour,
a maniacal taxi driver who
brought her, after, to her
destination—
and who is at large following an escape.
Saturday, 9 October 2010
His Hair Is Pomaded
a poem by Roger B Rueda
And livid; slanted
Over his brows,
It makes
A keyboard.
And I am all ears.
He doesn't rhyme
His a cappella,
Just opens his chop
And lets
Anguish spill out
All over the solid,
Sliding, scuffing,
Submerging
His miseries
Into my totes.
Flogging dearth
For fifty pence piece.
I scour together
A few wooden
Beams
And let them fly
Into his string casing.
And livid; slanted
Over his brows,
It makes
A keyboard.
And I am all ears.
He doesn't rhyme
His a cappella,
Just opens his chop
And lets
Anguish spill out
All over the solid,
Sliding, scuffing,
Submerging
His miseries
Into my totes.
Flogging dearth
For fifty pence piece.
I scour together
A few wooden
Beams
And let them fly
Into his string casing.
Tuesday, 5 October 2010
Your Needle Knits
a poem by Roger B Rueda
And takes great care
Of the shade,
Sketching graceful bends
Of the span into tacit
Motifs and scruffy
Flourishes.
You scowl and tot up and
Hit it off, plaiting
Woollen vocables
And yielding reproofs
That prickle when stretched
Out across the cradle.
And takes great care
Of the shade,
Sketching graceful bends
Of the span into tacit
Motifs and scruffy
Flourishes.
You scowl and tot up and
Hit it off, plaiting
Woollen vocables
And yielding reproofs
That prickle when stretched
Out across the cradle.
Sunday, 3 October 2010
In the Heavenly Silence of Night
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I opened my eyes to the timepiece
And I slouched there,
Breathing the certain,
Sluggish gasp of slumber
For a second, a few,
Until I came up,
At 5.30, to turn off the radio
Alarm before it slashed the still.
Sliding to my reading,
Nescafe in hand, I paused
At the front flap.
An associate had said,
Have a rest—you've had a busy day.
I had rebuffed it then, but now
I seemed to see eye to eye.
So I went outside instead.
There was not a shudder in the leaves,
No violence to agitate the stars.
The air was a cosset
That indulged me, fresh silk
Touching my ears.
Cross-legged, I parked myself on a bench.
The mantle I had got
To enfold around myself
I swathed across my lap.
Farther the valley to the east
Rose the pulse,
The slow growth
Of a brandish of resonance
Moving ahead like a deluge
Upon the vicinity:
The ooze first, then the swell,
Then the surge that beat
And then the deliberate recessional.
To be wide awake of my life besides
As a throb making headway
Along a thread,
A vibration felt by every bit,
Wheedling from each
A gauge of dew
To moisturise the lips
And enlarge the eyes
Lest there had been something
To utter or make. A clamour never
Died down only if someone was
Snooping. It became, lastly,
The outcome of a ricochet,
The nuance out
Of which the next
Pulsation rang: a cat’s yowl
Thrilling the space.
Like this, don’t revisit to forty winks.
I opened my eyes to the timepiece
And I slouched there,
Breathing the certain,
Sluggish gasp of slumber
For a second, a few,
Until I came up,
At 5.30, to turn off the radio
Alarm before it slashed the still.
Sliding to my reading,
Nescafe in hand, I paused
At the front flap.
An associate had said,
Have a rest—you've had a busy day.
I had rebuffed it then, but now
I seemed to see eye to eye.
So I went outside instead.
There was not a shudder in the leaves,
No violence to agitate the stars.
The air was a cosset
That indulged me, fresh silk
Touching my ears.
Cross-legged, I parked myself on a bench.
The mantle I had got
To enfold around myself
I swathed across my lap.
Farther the valley to the east
Rose the pulse,
The slow growth
Of a brandish of resonance
Moving ahead like a deluge
Upon the vicinity:
The ooze first, then the swell,
Then the surge that beat
And then the deliberate recessional.
To be wide awake of my life besides
As a throb making headway
Along a thread,
A vibration felt by every bit,
Wheedling from each
A gauge of dew
To moisturise the lips
And enlarge the eyes
Lest there had been something
To utter or make. A clamour never
Died down only if someone was
Snooping. It became, lastly,
The outcome of a ricochet,
The nuance out
Of which the next
Pulsation rang: a cat’s yowl
Thrilling the space.
Like this, don’t revisit to forty winks.
Saturday, 2 October 2010
The Road Not Taken Then
a poem by Roger B Rueda
We have lived on busy and quiet roads, which
from here to there have gone
through some beautiful countryside,
some as ugly as sin, blades of grass
growing up against the edges of the roads
or the grass is just coming into leaf—
Some time ago there were long and bloody
battles and many Filipinos were killed, perhaps as
road kills, we carried the wounded
from the battlefields, the roads we took decades ago.
Conditions on the roads were often so bad,
and soldiers were on the point of mutinies.
Crowds marched through the roads carrying
burning effigies of the presidents and flags of the US.
Police arrested several of the demonstrators,
water from their guns was spraying everywhere.
Some were hit in the legs or arms or heads
or bodies by stray bullets. Some buildings
were bombed out. A lot of civilians were
massacred and buried along the road.
Whole communities starved to death
during the long drought or flood. People
needed to put a stop to the plunder of rain forests.
Unemployment had fallen again and again.
The land system was crying out for reform.
Terrorists had seized a lot of hostages
and were threatening to kill one a day
unless their demands were met. There were
many scams, insurance and fertiliser. The whole
government was riddled with graft, bribery,
and corruption, children learned by observing adults.
Now this is quite unfamiliar road, it’s a bit
confusing. Eight tourists, held hostage
by the gunman dismissed from his job, died
on the road not taken then. This is quite a difficult road
for novice trail blazer to run on, it is a rough road,
full of stones and huge holes. The straight road,
perhaps, is nothing but a dirty great blot
on the landscape though we can drive fast along it.
But it is envisaged by the trail blazer as if we were
in Elysium, so let’s live in a fool's paradise—
Let’s hope we’ll not find ourselves in a slummy back road.
We have lived on busy and quiet roads, which
from here to there have gone
through some beautiful countryside,
some as ugly as sin, blades of grass
growing up against the edges of the roads
or the grass is just coming into leaf—
Some time ago there were long and bloody
battles and many Filipinos were killed, perhaps as
road kills, we carried the wounded
from the battlefields, the roads we took decades ago.
Conditions on the roads were often so bad,
and soldiers were on the point of mutinies.
Crowds marched through the roads carrying
burning effigies of the presidents and flags of the US.
Police arrested several of the demonstrators,
water from their guns was spraying everywhere.
Some were hit in the legs or arms or heads
or bodies by stray bullets. Some buildings
were bombed out. A lot of civilians were
massacred and buried along the road.
Whole communities starved to death
during the long drought or flood. People
needed to put a stop to the plunder of rain forests.
Unemployment had fallen again and again.
The land system was crying out for reform.
Terrorists had seized a lot of hostages
and were threatening to kill one a day
unless their demands were met. There were
many scams, insurance and fertiliser. The whole
government was riddled with graft, bribery,
and corruption, children learned by observing adults.
Now this is quite unfamiliar road, it’s a bit
confusing. Eight tourists, held hostage
by the gunman dismissed from his job, died
on the road not taken then. This is quite a difficult road
for novice trail blazer to run on, it is a rough road,
full of stones and huge holes. The straight road,
perhaps, is nothing but a dirty great blot
on the landscape though we can drive fast along it.
But it is envisaged by the trail blazer as if we were
in Elysium, so let’s live in a fool's paradise—
Let’s hope we’ll not find ourselves in a slummy back road.
Wednesday, 29 September 2010
Kith
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Two weeks ago on his eleventh birthday,
I was very giving and complaisant.
I went to SM to get some pretty
things on display: I was certain he'd
want a dirndl and a lavender mini,
with some coryphée babouches
and a sequined chemise. I guessed he'd
want many moppets. He likes reading—
so I chose a crimson Ladlad paperback
by Garcia and Remoto. I preferred
a headdress for he were a silky stocking,
who should show off, and a bunch
of flexures and scarves for his curls.
I know I'm much too thoughtful with gifts
but he is worthy of it: four months ago
on my birthday, he bought me a Barbie,
a souvenir from his holiday in Disney.
Then he kissed me with poise, showing
as if he'd been a top model or the real Barbie.
Two weeks ago on his eleventh birthday,
I was very giving and complaisant.
I went to SM to get some pretty
things on display: I was certain he'd
want a dirndl and a lavender mini,
with some coryphée babouches
and a sequined chemise. I guessed he'd
want many moppets. He likes reading—
so I chose a crimson Ladlad paperback
by Garcia and Remoto. I preferred
a headdress for he were a silky stocking,
who should show off, and a bunch
of flexures and scarves for his curls.
I know I'm much too thoughtful with gifts
but he is worthy of it: four months ago
on my birthday, he bought me a Barbie,
a souvenir from his holiday in Disney.
Then he kissed me with poise, showing
as if he'd been a top model or the real Barbie.
Tuesday, 28 September 2010
Matriarchal
a poem by Roger B Rueda
for Nenita
I had been praying to Him to let
You stay until I had carried some
Of the crosses borne by you for years
For our family you raised your own.
And when I had, it all happened
So suddenly, you left home, a home
Where you got lonely then that he
Had left and set his new home.
But by His grace, I wore then a look
Of pure contentment for your relief
And respite at length, I was witness
To how you suffered in silence.
Your leaving your makeshift home
Was laying all your crosses down
Specially the one your blood soaked
Into, your lungs were fairly weak—
Your room was whooping-filled,
You had a very nasty cough—
I knew you’d leave towards your
New home around which and your
Head and Grandfather’s are haloes.
I knew. Even you saw a doctor about
That cough, it didn’t gradually heal up.
It is up there that you get your rest.
Now sorrow felt over your leaving me—
And Mother, your daughter—
Envelops me, I am longing
Of your adobo, dinuguan, and paksiw—
Too, your roaring with laughter
And my giving you a kiss. You’d
Hug me tightly to your heart then.
There's nothing like I knew you.
for Nenita
I had been praying to Him to let
You stay until I had carried some
Of the crosses borne by you for years
For our family you raised your own.
And when I had, it all happened
So suddenly, you left home, a home
Where you got lonely then that he
Had left and set his new home.
But by His grace, I wore then a look
Of pure contentment for your relief
And respite at length, I was witness
To how you suffered in silence.
Your leaving your makeshift home
Was laying all your crosses down
Specially the one your blood soaked
Into, your lungs were fairly weak—
Your room was whooping-filled,
You had a very nasty cough—
I knew you’d leave towards your
New home around which and your
Head and Grandfather’s are haloes.
I knew. Even you saw a doctor about
That cough, it didn’t gradually heal up.
It is up there that you get your rest.
Now sorrow felt over your leaving me—
And Mother, your daughter—
Envelops me, I am longing
Of your adobo, dinuguan, and paksiw—
Too, your roaring with laughter
And my giving you a kiss. You’d
Hug me tightly to your heart then.
There's nothing like I knew you.
Monday, 27 September 2010
To You Who Smile So Well
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I see you
With half any eye
My heart of Cupid
Kept in mothballs
Springs a leak
Of another spell
I lie in my teeth
Though in my somnambulism
Love wells up
In my mouth
I have a skin
Like a rhinoceros
But only in this verse
I see you
With half any eye
My heart of Cupid
Kept in mothballs
Springs a leak
Of another spell
I lie in my teeth
Though in my somnambulism
Love wells up
In my mouth
I have a skin
Like a rhinoceros
But only in this verse
Sunday, 26 September 2010
You Are the Many Fallfish
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Smacking me
In a gleaming fissure
You are gush and spout of me,
As you would have
Thought juice,
Raw of firewood trunk,
Lilac petals dripping
You suture my words
Inside your
Sun-hat for afterward,
A silk tattering
You swathe your mouth
When you chortle, the end
Of the shooter having
Shattered the teeth
And skeleton
Of the past
You cover my mouth
With your
Mouth in the tip of the room,
Tender bauble of lattice,
Button
You are a silhouette stretch
Of brown birds in the dooryard
We are shy of one another
Since the bold patch
You are the tree
And the bashful birds
Roosting, you are the opening
Woods
I am an outbreak
Of plum petals,
Always the lilac blooming,
Lavender periwinkle
By the path you are the lad
Devoid of aside
I am the lass devoid of
Smacking me
In a gleaming fissure
You are gush and spout of me,
As you would have
Thought juice,
Raw of firewood trunk,
Lilac petals dripping
You suture my words
Inside your
Sun-hat for afterward,
A silk tattering
You swathe your mouth
When you chortle, the end
Of the shooter having
Shattered the teeth
And skeleton
Of the past
You cover my mouth
With your
Mouth in the tip of the room,
Tender bauble of lattice,
Button
You are a silhouette stretch
Of brown birds in the dooryard
We are shy of one another
Since the bold patch
You are the tree
And the bashful birds
Roosting, you are the opening
Woods
I am an outbreak
Of plum petals,
Always the lilac blooming,
Lavender periwinkle
By the path you are the lad
Devoid of aside
I am the lass devoid of
Saturday, 25 September 2010
Hunger
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I want to live in my old haunt—
And scathing—
With fins sketched out like post
Of brine heaved
From the bottom,
Flashing up at the flare,
Bleaching in the arid warmth.
Feelers of seaweeds,
Willowy, yielding, pungent,
Reaching out to the rhombus fishes
In the water-hide above.
A tongue like freshets—
Fluff and blast
Talking vigorously,
Smoothing out the subsoil,
And lips like pink polyps.
Words descending inside and elsewhere
Like damsel fish—
Dazzling, nippy,
Dashing though passageways
Of esophagus and lips, swung
By gyrations, made off to the deep.
I want to live in my old haunt—
And scathing—
With fins sketched out like post
Of brine heaved
From the bottom,
Flashing up at the flare,
Bleaching in the arid warmth.
Feelers of seaweeds,
Willowy, yielding, pungent,
Reaching out to the rhombus fishes
In the water-hide above.
A tongue like freshets—
Fluff and blast
Talking vigorously,
Smoothing out the subsoil,
And lips like pink polyps.
Words descending inside and elsewhere
Like damsel fish—
Dazzling, nippy,
Dashing though passageways
Of esophagus and lips, swung
By gyrations, made off to the deep.
Friday, 24 September 2010
In the Back Garden
a poem by Roger B Rueda
He rolled out toxic there. Sometimes he made me savour the shots.
I liked to stare at ants bond
Themselves to gooey rings around the trunks
Of star apple trees.
But this verse tracks away from saying
What it desires to utter.
By the true fruit shrubbery, he had set
Serving dishes filled with snifter: a family formula
For sinking gastropods.
He taunted me to eat one,
Drooping lifelessly athwart a porcelain mould,
And when I said no, he cleaved to the plump grey cadaver
Like a dear heirloom, dulcet nugget, and
Plunged it in his maw. You just play that it’s
An earthnut, the boring snail fell down across his tongue,
Or a bit you like: chewy candy, Glycyrrhiza glabra, a sticky maggot.
This is mock metaphor.
There was no whack. No patch and no goad.
This verse should be set inside the lavatory
Or the poorly lit
Lounge, at the rear windows with drawn gloominess.
This verse is about the darkest enchantment,
Castle in the sky. It knows how tongues can forward roll
Laboured spins. It knows how
Con tastes. He ingested
Hard and put his extremities in my locks: It’s like that with anything
You lay in your maw. I smelled
The toxic on his gasp. I sensed the iciness of the overlay floor
On my naked knees and heard the soar—
There is no creepy-crawly in this view, but the post of a jeer.
He rolled out toxic there. Sometimes he made me savour the shots.
I liked to stare at ants bond
Themselves to gooey rings around the trunks
Of star apple trees.
But this verse tracks away from saying
What it desires to utter.
By the true fruit shrubbery, he had set
Serving dishes filled with snifter: a family formula
For sinking gastropods.
He taunted me to eat one,
Drooping lifelessly athwart a porcelain mould,
And when I said no, he cleaved to the plump grey cadaver
Like a dear heirloom, dulcet nugget, and
Plunged it in his maw. You just play that it’s
An earthnut, the boring snail fell down across his tongue,
Or a bit you like: chewy candy, Glycyrrhiza glabra, a sticky maggot.
This is mock metaphor.
There was no whack. No patch and no goad.
This verse should be set inside the lavatory
Or the poorly lit
Lounge, at the rear windows with drawn gloominess.
This verse is about the darkest enchantment,
Castle in the sky. It knows how tongues can forward roll
Laboured spins. It knows how
Con tastes. He ingested
Hard and put his extremities in my locks: It’s like that with anything
You lay in your maw. I smelled
The toxic on his gasp. I sensed the iciness of the overlay floor
On my naked knees and heard the soar—
There is no creepy-crawly in this view, but the post of a jeer.
Thursday, 23 September 2010
On The Coast
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I being awake at night, the air was so still that not even
The leaves on the trees were moving as I was sitting
Perfectly still on the wooden bench along a coastal
Highway as if someone had been taking my photograph.
My legs were overtaken by a sudden wave of tiredness.
Most houses were lying dark and quiet. The boys’ breaths
Were smelled of rum. Mine as I blew in my hands on my
Mouth was of semen. The rum bottles were taken already
By the children sleeping rough, for recycling. I looked
For the old queens, my companions, but they had disappeared
Into the dark, their shimmering colourful sequined dresses
Were fairly unattractive but the Roxases I’d got on me. I'd got
A lot of mournfully poetic images and I was edgy to leave.
I managed to flag down a passing tricycle. I rode to the city on it.
I closed my eyes and went to sleep. It was still dark by the time
I arrived home. The old queens, in full ceremonial dress, were
Snoring so loudly in bed, wearing a lot of make-up. I wrote down
My ideas on a piece of paper and happily slept the night.
I being awake at night, the air was so still that not even
The leaves on the trees were moving as I was sitting
Perfectly still on the wooden bench along a coastal
Highway as if someone had been taking my photograph.
My legs were overtaken by a sudden wave of tiredness.
Most houses were lying dark and quiet. The boys’ breaths
Were smelled of rum. Mine as I blew in my hands on my
Mouth was of semen. The rum bottles were taken already
By the children sleeping rough, for recycling. I looked
For the old queens, my companions, but they had disappeared
Into the dark, their shimmering colourful sequined dresses
Were fairly unattractive but the Roxases I’d got on me. I'd got
A lot of mournfully poetic images and I was edgy to leave.
I managed to flag down a passing tricycle. I rode to the city on it.
I closed my eyes and went to sleep. It was still dark by the time
I arrived home. The old queens, in full ceremonial dress, were
Snoring so loudly in bed, wearing a lot of make-up. I wrote down
My ideas on a piece of paper and happily slept the night.
Wednesday, 22 September 2010
On A Jeepney
a poem by Roger B Rueda
A man about all of forty and I were facing each other.
His feet were spotlessly clean. His nails were
Cut neatly. His brownish leg hairs looked
Soft and breathtakingly beautiful.
His pair of denim shorts has a good wash,
I thought, and it was ironed properly, its colour
Fading and having no holes or lumps.
His thin polo shirt was a bit old judging
By the look of it.
It wasn't the usual brand of shirt
I used to see when I
Commuted from my house to my workplace.
It was practically transparent.
His shirt was open to the waist revealing
A very hairy chest.
He folded his arms across his chest.
His arms had fair skin but had a lot
Of brownish hair, looking
Healthy enough, he must have put
Sunscreen on his skin to prevent
It from being burnt by the sun.
I admired his rippling muscles.
He had a silver chain around his neck.
He shaved off his beard but kept
His brownish moustache.
He cast a quick look in me.
I gave him a shy smile.
He smiled at me, too, with his eyes.
His incisors were perfectly glistening.
I found his bowed lips,
Which were naturally curving up at the end,
Very attractive. Sa lugar lang, he had such
A manly voice. The jeepney pulled over,
And he got out and walked the rest of the way.
There was a roar and a cloud of smoke
As the jeepney pulled away.
I felt forlorn. I felt I'd broken my heart.
I needed to mend it with a potion
That is forced up into the air through
A small hole of his penis.
I stressed over it. I couldn’t admit defeat.
In my ideal world he is the man of my dreams.
But I just endured it. I martyred my different love.
His feet were spotlessly clean. His nails were
Cut neatly. His brownish leg hairs looked
Soft and breathtakingly beautiful.
His pair of denim shorts has a good wash,
I thought, and it was ironed properly, its colour
Fading and having no holes or lumps.
His thin polo shirt was a bit old judging
By the look of it.
It wasn't the usual brand of shirt
I used to see when I
Commuted from my house to my workplace.
It was practically transparent.
His shirt was open to the waist revealing
A very hairy chest.
He folded his arms across his chest.
His arms had fair skin but had a lot
Of brownish hair, looking
Healthy enough, he must have put
Sunscreen on his skin to prevent
It from being burnt by the sun.
I admired his rippling muscles.
He had a silver chain around his neck.
He shaved off his beard but kept
His brownish moustache.
He cast a quick look in me.
I gave him a shy smile.
He smiled at me, too, with his eyes.
His incisors were perfectly glistening.
I found his bowed lips,
Which were naturally curving up at the end,
Very attractive. Sa lugar lang, he had such
A manly voice. The jeepney pulled over,
And he got out and walked the rest of the way.
There was a roar and a cloud of smoke
As the jeepney pulled away.
I felt forlorn. I felt I'd broken my heart.
I needed to mend it with a potion
That is forced up into the air through
A small hole of his penis.
I stressed over it. I couldn’t admit defeat.
In my ideal world he is the man of my dreams.
But I just endured it. I martyred my different love.
Monday, 20 September 2010
Death
a poem by Roger B Rueda
for Nenita P Biñas, my late grandmother
An image flashed through my dream:
A chair on which leaves and flowers were carved
And with coat of varnish, deserted in a grassy field,
Was left in the rain, its legs almost rotting.
Who created the sculptures? Whose chair is this?
I asked myself.
At midnight,
Death, a seed as though, was blown by the wind
To my heart , it clogged my drain then.
All my instincts told me to wake up, my body like
Dark earth, a plot, and I thumped myself in the chest:
Death sprouted faith, growing up—and flowering.
I closed my window then. My Sculptor,
A dove, perhaps, of a ray of light, was by me.
Then, there I saw I am a chair, too—
I realised then darkness, both within and outside me,
Contrived to hide my soul.
for Nenita P Biñas, my late grandmother
An image flashed through my dream:
A chair on which leaves and flowers were carved
And with coat of varnish, deserted in a grassy field,
Was left in the rain, its legs almost rotting.
Who created the sculptures? Whose chair is this?
I asked myself.
At midnight,
Death, a seed as though, was blown by the wind
To my heart , it clogged my drain then.
All my instincts told me to wake up, my body like
Dark earth, a plot, and I thumped myself in the chest:
Death sprouted faith, growing up—and flowering.
I closed my window then. My Sculptor,
A dove, perhaps, of a ray of light, was by me.
Then, there I saw I am a chair, too—
I realised then darkness, both within and outside me,
Contrived to hide my soul.
Sunday, 19 September 2010
To My Fabulist Facebook Friend
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Your hands have a gift from a powerful evil:
They hunt-and-peck something very bad and
harmful in your mind, on Facebook. I knew
you then to be soft touch. It was all boo-boo:
I know you now, bitch. You are like Ricky,
my other side and the matriarch of repugnance
and the infernal clothes room. So, bide with her
and work fingers to bone there.
"Let's see each other when you have time,"
said you, bitch. I personally replied, "Can I meet you?"
You gazed at your Facebook in mute hissy fit.
Don't keep the truth hidden from me.
I know your green thumb: there is none.
You lie to yourself every day. And I know you
will until you die with it, your cockamamie idea
about turning dumdum ones into dumdum ones
by you, a dumdum scholastic.
Unfold what you have and let it be barely
visible in how your new kids on block
write and speak their English, shyster.
I know your beau ideals: Professors X, Y, Z.
I think it is your classical fire in belly.
My only bum steer: be verecund always and
show the ropes behind their backs.
Your hands have a gift from a powerful evil:
They hunt-and-peck something very bad and
harmful in your mind, on Facebook. I knew
you then to be soft touch. It was all boo-boo:
I know you now, bitch. You are like Ricky,
my other side and the matriarch of repugnance
and the infernal clothes room. So, bide with her
and work fingers to bone there.
"Let's see each other when you have time,"
said you, bitch. I personally replied, "Can I meet you?"
You gazed at your Facebook in mute hissy fit.
Don't keep the truth hidden from me.
I know your green thumb: there is none.
You lie to yourself every day. And I know you
will until you die with it, your cockamamie idea
about turning dumdum ones into dumdum ones
by you, a dumdum scholastic.
Unfold what you have and let it be barely
visible in how your new kids on block
write and speak their English, shyster.
I know your beau ideals: Professors X, Y, Z.
I think it is your classical fire in belly.
My only bum steer: be verecund always and
show the ropes behind their backs.
Saturday, 18 September 2010
To Ricky, My Other Side
a poem by Roger B Rueda
My wounds have almost got well
After years of being despoiled:
Your cohorts, now your other sides,
And you, you know, have minced
My heart and my brain. It is you
Who have made me burn and
Almost breathe my last.
Your glowering at me has made
My wounds weep again. Now,
I am dead duck. Does that make
You fly high? Oh my goodness,
What awful brains. Perhaps yours
Is of the crab or the frog.
Don’t bend their ears, they already
Know you are archangelic, you are
Lily white. But I know, God knows
Too, that inside your chest of drawers
Are your dainty heart and your
Infernal soul. So, when you drop
Off, are you ready to fly in face of
Maker or me word for word?
What pageantry are you drawing up?
Is it not really to be here, but in great
Unknown? Well, it is your spark—
The spark that has cut me to the quick.
My only prayer for you is that you
May pick up your stars soon. Your stars
Have slurs but are glazed with my gore.
Be careful: your stars have fine ground
Spires and they might do me in next time.
Or is it you, and not your stars, who could
Do me in? I know you now, Ricky: You are
Like my frothy sip at Coffeebreak.
Friday, 17 September 2010
Paolo
a short story for children by Roger B Rueda
Jonadel Aguirre was trying to finish her schoolwork. But observably, her seat partner, Paolo Baito, wouldn't let her. He was too busy talking.
"Paolo, be quiet so I can finish my work," Jonadel spurred him.
"You mean you haven't finished it yet? That was simple! Look, see I'm already done." Paolo jostled his completed paper beneath her nose.
Jonadel crumpled her nose. His writing was horrifically messy and he had somehow managed to blotch pencil.
"I don't care," she said prudishly, giving his paper back to him. "Your handwriting looks unattractive." Although Jonadel was only halfway through with her paper, at least hers was tidy and organised, every letter and number written accurately.
Jonadel went back to doing her maths work, and trying to pay no heed to Paolo. He was always trying to get her to talk to him when they weren't supposed to be talking and she just wanted to be left alone. Paolo was just so aggravating! She had wanted to sit with her best friend, May Mart, but of course her teacher Mrs Boglosa had put her with Paolo.
It had seemed Paolo had soon got bored with just watching Jonadel do her work. "Aren't you finished now?"
"No! Go away."
He did for a little while before having to bother Jonadel again. This time instead of trying to talk to her he just began messing with the paper on her desk. Jonadel ignored him. This time he to mess with her clothes, but she still trudged on writing each number completely.
Nothing was getting her attention! Desperate times called for desperate measures, and Paolo was ready to go further than was necessary to get Jonadel to talk to him. So, he resorted to his last measure. He jerked on her black hair.
When Jonadel felt the tug on her hair she was suddenly mad. 'He did not just touch my hair,' she thought. Her big sister Wella had done her hair this morning because Jonadel had been begging for weeks. One piece of her hair was braided and then it was all pulled back into a ponytail tied with a ribbon. Her hairstyle was the same with Jerlyn's today, and no one was messing it up, specially not Paolo Baito, of all people.
"Don't do that another time!" she said frantically, and Paolo felt himself get excited. If this was what got her attention he was going to do it again for sure.
Surprisingly, Jonadel whirled about and slapped him. Smack! That was not part of the plan. Paolo put his hand to his cheek and felt the burning skin there. Their teacher, Mrs Boglosa, rushed over to their chairs.
"Jonadel Aguirre! Why did you do that?" Mrs Boglosa demanded. She couldn't understand this, usually Jonadel was the perfect student. That's why she had put her with Paolo, to even things out.
"He messed up my hair and I told him not to!"Jonadel's eyes were filled with tears now. She didn't want to get going under.
"Well, you still have to go to the principal's office and look for Mr Botavara. And Paolo, well, you need to go to Ms Biboso and get some ice. You need to learn to leave Jonadel alone. Do you understand?" Paolo nodded seriously.
Jonadel paced to the principal's office thinking that smacking Paolo had certainly been worth it.
Jonadel Aguirre was trying to finish her schoolwork. But observably, her seat partner, Paolo Baito, wouldn't let her. He was too busy talking.
"Paolo, be quiet so I can finish my work," Jonadel spurred him.
"You mean you haven't finished it yet? That was simple! Look, see I'm already done." Paolo jostled his completed paper beneath her nose.
Jonadel crumpled her nose. His writing was horrifically messy and he had somehow managed to blotch pencil.
"I don't care," she said prudishly, giving his paper back to him. "Your handwriting looks unattractive." Although Jonadel was only halfway through with her paper, at least hers was tidy and organised, every letter and number written accurately.
Jonadel went back to doing her maths work, and trying to pay no heed to Paolo. He was always trying to get her to talk to him when they weren't supposed to be talking and she just wanted to be left alone. Paolo was just so aggravating! She had wanted to sit with her best friend, May Mart, but of course her teacher Mrs Boglosa had put her with Paolo.
It had seemed Paolo had soon got bored with just watching Jonadel do her work. "Aren't you finished now?"
"No! Go away."
He did for a little while before having to bother Jonadel again. This time instead of trying to talk to her he just began messing with the paper on her desk. Jonadel ignored him. This time he to mess with her clothes, but she still trudged on writing each number completely.
Nothing was getting her attention! Desperate times called for desperate measures, and Paolo was ready to go further than was necessary to get Jonadel to talk to him. So, he resorted to his last measure. He jerked on her black hair.
When Jonadel felt the tug on her hair she was suddenly mad. 'He did not just touch my hair,' she thought. Her big sister Wella had done her hair this morning because Jonadel had been begging for weeks. One piece of her hair was braided and then it was all pulled back into a ponytail tied with a ribbon. Her hairstyle was the same with Jerlyn's today, and no one was messing it up, specially not Paolo Baito, of all people.
"Don't do that another time!" she said frantically, and Paolo felt himself get excited. If this was what got her attention he was going to do it again for sure.
Surprisingly, Jonadel whirled about and slapped him. Smack! That was not part of the plan. Paolo put his hand to his cheek and felt the burning skin there. Their teacher, Mrs Boglosa, rushed over to their chairs.
"Jonadel Aguirre! Why did you do that?" Mrs Boglosa demanded. She couldn't understand this, usually Jonadel was the perfect student. That's why she had put her with Paolo, to even things out.
"He messed up my hair and I told him not to!"Jonadel's eyes were filled with tears now. She didn't want to get going under.
"Well, you still have to go to the principal's office and look for Mr Botavara. And Paolo, well, you need to go to Ms Biboso and get some ice. You need to learn to leave Jonadel alone. Do you understand?" Paolo nodded seriously.
Jonadel paced to the principal's office thinking that smacking Paolo had certainly been worth it.
Thursday, 16 September 2010
Santi and His Dear Tilapia
a short story for children by Roger B Rueda
"Santi, go and put your new tilapia in your room," a caring mother ordered.
Santi, just a regular child from down the street, ran up to his room, carrying a plastic bag in his hand. The bag contained a fine-looking, whitish male tilapia from a close by fisheries college. The fish seemed distressed by all the sudden movement.
"OK, mum!" Santi cast off his new darling into the fish container.
"I'm going to call you Tiwi," Santi beamed and stared at his new favourite.
Although, Tiwi wasn't going anywhere; he was in the same place, staring back at his new owner with his small, yellowish eyes. Santi was getting appallingly uninterested with Tiwi.
"Come on Tiwi, do something! Do a trick, swim about!" The irritated boy cried out, running his fingers through his black hair in an aggravated way.
You see, Santi was very intolerant. He was all of six. He has dark hair, brown eyes and some freckles speckled on his face. He was a thin, little boy. After a few minutes of an insipid moment of staring at his fish, Tiwi, Santi sighed and left Tiwi alone in his container. Santi went outside to play with a couple of friends on the block from his school. After a few hours of playing football, Santi came back home.
"Hello Santi," his mother greeted him by the front entrance.
"Hey mum!" Santi greeted back, then running up his timber stairs to go and see his pet, Tiwi.
But still, Tiwi did nothing special for the annoyed, young boy. He still just swam there, as deadly as he could. Santi became goaded with Tiwi.
"Come on Tiwi, do something cool!" Santi shouted at his fish, but still Tiwi did nothing.
Santi growled and opened his fish tank. Santi grunted as he put his dirty finger in the tank, trying to touch the whitish-coloured tilapia. Santi lightly tapped the fish, forcing Tiwi to do something cool, but failed. Tiwi still did nothing. Santi put more force in his finger and tapped his fish a bit harder.
"Come on, Tiwi!"
Still, nothing. At last, the anger that was building within Santi, made Santi put a ton more force on the poor fish, hitting the tilapia quite hard with his finger. Tiwi the tilapia instantly died from the brutal force. Tiwi's unmoving body floated up to the surface of the container. Santi couldn't believe what he had done. This isn't the first time this happened.
This has happened far too many times. Now, as Santi flushed the tilapia down his toilet, Santi was thinking to himself, watching the tilapia go down the cylinder in sadness.
"I should be more unwearied."
Santi, just a regular child from down the street, ran up to his room, carrying a plastic bag in his hand. The bag contained a fine-looking, whitish male tilapia from a close by fisheries college. The fish seemed distressed by all the sudden movement.
"OK, mum!" Santi cast off his new darling into the fish container.
"I'm going to call you Tiwi," Santi beamed and stared at his new favourite.
Although, Tiwi wasn't going anywhere; he was in the same place, staring back at his new owner with his small, yellowish eyes. Santi was getting appallingly uninterested with Tiwi.
"Come on Tiwi, do something! Do a trick, swim about!" The irritated boy cried out, running his fingers through his black hair in an aggravated way.
You see, Santi was very intolerant. He was all of six. He has dark hair, brown eyes and some freckles speckled on his face. He was a thin, little boy. After a few minutes of an insipid moment of staring at his fish, Tiwi, Santi sighed and left Tiwi alone in his container. Santi went outside to play with a couple of friends on the block from his school. After a few hours of playing football, Santi came back home.
"Hello Santi," his mother greeted him by the front entrance.
"Hey mum!" Santi greeted back, then running up his timber stairs to go and see his pet, Tiwi.
But still, Tiwi did nothing special for the annoyed, young boy. He still just swam there, as deadly as he could. Santi became goaded with Tiwi.
"Come on Tiwi, do something cool!" Santi shouted at his fish, but still Tiwi did nothing.
Santi growled and opened his fish tank. Santi grunted as he put his dirty finger in the tank, trying to touch the whitish-coloured tilapia. Santi lightly tapped the fish, forcing Tiwi to do something cool, but failed. Tiwi still did nothing. Santi put more force in his finger and tapped his fish a bit harder.
"Come on, Tiwi!"
Still, nothing. At last, the anger that was building within Santi, made Santi put a ton more force on the poor fish, hitting the tilapia quite hard with his finger. Tiwi the tilapia instantly died from the brutal force. Tiwi's unmoving body floated up to the surface of the container. Santi couldn't believe what he had done. This isn't the first time this happened.
This has happened far too many times. Now, as Santi flushed the tilapia down his toilet, Santi was thinking to himself, watching the tilapia go down the cylinder in sadness.
"I should be more unwearied."
Wednesday, 15 September 2010
To My Other Side
a poem by Roger B Rueda
for A, who disdains Koreans in holes and corners
but has no wings even those of a butterfly
to get free
You appear to be a covert assassin:
time and again you saber me to polish
me off, wearing a masquerade
of a JabbaWockeez.
I won’t be heartrending if I am slain
so long as I know who my slayer is,
my stiff aware whose entozoons
nipping it in stages.
Don’t put your enchanting
respects into words, within which is your vanity,
laying claim how thick as thieves
we are and our favouritism cuts ice.
I’ve caught you on already, curse whisperer
visibly outstretching the lot you loathe.
Slay me personally, don'tt eat the dust.
Tuesday, 14 September 2010
Grasping Reads
an essay by Roger B Rueda
Most people even have complicatedness reading reads that aren’t very difficult. This is possibly because of the lack of practice and fluency. Training our wits to grasp what we read in the fastest means possible is a dexterity we need to have.
Here is how to get better at reading comprehension. Resort to the following three-step progression: The first is previewing. You preview the book by looking through the table of contents to see how the concepts are well thought-out. Too, look for any study aids, such as an answer key at the end of the chapters, glossary, questions…. Preview the chapter by spending ten minutes scanning the subsequence: headings, diagrams, charts, terms in bold, questions at the end, summary, and otherwise. Consider what you already know concerning the topics in the chapter. A preview can help construct your curiosity and centre of attention in the text, much as a movie preview builds concern in a movie
The second is through dynamic reading. How should you read? Certainly, bring to mind the paragraph or the section (three or four paragraphs under a heading) as your unit of meaning. Do not look back over when you are bemused about a word or sentence—read on. The next sentence will often elucidate the meaning. If you are still confused at the end of a section or paragraph, stop at that point to check through or to look up important, unfamiliar words. For a knowledge or procedural book, think of the charts and diagrams as the mind of the text, with sentences basically explaining what is offered visually
In passing, how should you mark books with many headings? Well, turn the heading into a question and read that section to find the answer. Stop at the end of the section and ask yourself what’s most important that you didn’t know earlier. Write a note in the margin, underline the important ideas, or do together. Do not mark as you go or you will end up marking too much. Hold off marking until you finish reading a paragraph or section. Most students find that a mishmash of highlighting and notes in the margin works best. Caution: when you do underline, mark words and phrases rather than whole sentences. Number parts or items (for example, 3 parts of a definition, 4 causes of something, 3 requirements, etc.). Take a look at how other people mark their texts.
After that, how should you mark books that have few or no headings? Find out your professor’s intention in assigning the book (look at the course outline or ask). For instance, the three paperbacks in a history class may have been assigned so that you can learn how historians work and think, not with the intention that you memorize dates. Decide whether you should read the book quickly or more slowly. Ask the professor or simply note how many class meetings are devoted to the book. Stop at the end of each paragraph and ask yourself the most important point. This will help you concentrate because you have something to do besides moving your eyes across the page. In most cases, we do not underline this kind of book, preferring to write notes in the margin or brief notes in a notebook. If you use a notebook, do not stop to write at the end of each paragraph; hold off until you have read a few pages. If you will be writing a paper about the book, include pages references in your notebook entries.
Thirdly, you weigh up: Spend ten minutes scanning back over the headings and your own markings when you come to the end of a chapter or reading session.
Start in on self-testing if time allows. (Turn a heading into a question and try to answer it; then look to see if you are right.) Compare your marked text with your lecture notes. Consider forming a study group to discuss the material with others and to study for exams.
Here is a comparison for the reading progression: So let’s take a jaunt. You foretaste: Look at a map before you go. You need to take a look at the whole territory so you will understand how one part relates to the others. You also need a sense of what you should look for on your trip. For dynamic reading, take pictures as you go. These “pictures” (your highlighting or notes) will not show the entire jaunt but will act as “memory pegs” to help you call to mind your jaunt. You review by examine your “pictures” and recall your trip.
Preview your book by first reading a cut down version (a review book or outline book, a high school text, an encyclopaedia entry, etc.) when you are reading thorny books. For example, if you find that you’re having trouble reading Gémino H Abad or Cristina Pantoja Hidalgo or Jaime An Lim or Danton Remoto or Edith Tiempo or Leoncio Deriada or Rosario Cruz Lucero, stop and read a succinct summary of his/her ideas and then return to the original text. This can help terrifically. If a text is awfully difficult, read it twice rather than doing a single deliberate reading. (If you read too slowly, you may begin to lose sight of the main concepts.) Undertake to read aloud. Get help. Confer with your professor or tutor or fellow student. For a lasting way out, work on building your vocabulary. Take a vocabulary course, buy a vocabulary book, write vocabulary cards, or read a more challenging magazines, such as The New Yorker or Philippine Panorama or The Sunday Times or Home Life. Or read Jose “Butch” Dalisay, my favourite writer in the Philippine Star.
Most people even have complicatedness reading reads that aren’t very difficult. This is possibly because of the lack of practice and fluency. Training our wits to grasp what we read in the fastest means possible is a dexterity we need to have.
Here is how to get better at reading comprehension. Resort to the following three-step progression: The first is previewing. You preview the book by looking through the table of contents to see how the concepts are well thought-out. Too, look for any study aids, such as an answer key at the end of the chapters, glossary, questions…. Preview the chapter by spending ten minutes scanning the subsequence: headings, diagrams, charts, terms in bold, questions at the end, summary, and otherwise. Consider what you already know concerning the topics in the chapter. A preview can help construct your curiosity and centre of attention in the text, much as a movie preview builds concern in a movie
The second is through dynamic reading. How should you read? Certainly, bring to mind the paragraph or the section (three or four paragraphs under a heading) as your unit of meaning. Do not look back over when you are bemused about a word or sentence—read on. The next sentence will often elucidate the meaning. If you are still confused at the end of a section or paragraph, stop at that point to check through or to look up important, unfamiliar words. For a knowledge or procedural book, think of the charts and diagrams as the mind of the text, with sentences basically explaining what is offered visually
In passing, how should you mark books with many headings? Well, turn the heading into a question and read that section to find the answer. Stop at the end of the section and ask yourself what’s most important that you didn’t know earlier. Write a note in the margin, underline the important ideas, or do together. Do not mark as you go or you will end up marking too much. Hold off marking until you finish reading a paragraph or section. Most students find that a mishmash of highlighting and notes in the margin works best. Caution: when you do underline, mark words and phrases rather than whole sentences. Number parts or items (for example, 3 parts of a definition, 4 causes of something, 3 requirements, etc.). Take a look at how other people mark their texts.
After that, how should you mark books that have few or no headings? Find out your professor’s intention in assigning the book (look at the course outline or ask). For instance, the three paperbacks in a history class may have been assigned so that you can learn how historians work and think, not with the intention that you memorize dates. Decide whether you should read the book quickly or more slowly. Ask the professor or simply note how many class meetings are devoted to the book. Stop at the end of each paragraph and ask yourself the most important point. This will help you concentrate because you have something to do besides moving your eyes across the page. In most cases, we do not underline this kind of book, preferring to write notes in the margin or brief notes in a notebook. If you use a notebook, do not stop to write at the end of each paragraph; hold off until you have read a few pages. If you will be writing a paper about the book, include pages references in your notebook entries.
Thirdly, you weigh up: Spend ten minutes scanning back over the headings and your own markings when you come to the end of a chapter or reading session.
Start in on self-testing if time allows. (Turn a heading into a question and try to answer it; then look to see if you are right.) Compare your marked text with your lecture notes. Consider forming a study group to discuss the material with others and to study for exams.
Here is a comparison for the reading progression: So let’s take a jaunt. You foretaste: Look at a map before you go. You need to take a look at the whole territory so you will understand how one part relates to the others. You also need a sense of what you should look for on your trip. For dynamic reading, take pictures as you go. These “pictures” (your highlighting or notes) will not show the entire jaunt but will act as “memory pegs” to help you call to mind your jaunt. You review by examine your “pictures” and recall your trip.
Preview your book by first reading a cut down version (a review book or outline book, a high school text, an encyclopaedia entry, etc.) when you are reading thorny books. For example, if you find that you’re having trouble reading Gémino H Abad or Cristina Pantoja Hidalgo or Jaime An Lim or Danton Remoto or Edith Tiempo or Leoncio Deriada or Rosario Cruz Lucero, stop and read a succinct summary of his/her ideas and then return to the original text. This can help terrifically. If a text is awfully difficult, read it twice rather than doing a single deliberate reading. (If you read too slowly, you may begin to lose sight of the main concepts.) Undertake to read aloud. Get help. Confer with your professor or tutor or fellow student. For a lasting way out, work on building your vocabulary. Take a vocabulary course, buy a vocabulary book, write vocabulary cards, or read a more challenging magazines, such as The New Yorker or Philippine Panorama or The Sunday Times or Home Life. Or read Jose “Butch” Dalisay, my favourite writer in the Philippine Star.
Monday, 13 September 2010
Coaching Students in Writing
an essay by Roger B Rueda
In writing exercises, that students need to be individually involved in order to make the learning experience of long-lasting value is the most important thing. Encouraging student involvement in doing the exercises, while refining and expanding writing skills at one fell swoop, requires a certain hardnosed approach. Intelligibility on what skills a student is trying to build up must be had by the teacher. Next off, the teacher needs to decide on which line of attack (or type of exercise) can smooth the progress of learning of his/her goal. Once the goals and means of implementation are defined, the teacher can then go on to focus on, to guarantee student input, what theme can be employed. The teacher, by sensibly combing these goal, can expect both eagerness and effective learning.
Choosing the target area depends on many factors: what level the students are, what the average age of the students is, why the students are learning English, any specific future intentions for the writing (i.e school tests or job application letters etc.). Other significant questions to ask oneself are: What should the students be able to produce at the end of this exercise? (a well written letter, basic communication of ideas, etc.) What is the focus of the exercise? (structure, tense usage, creative writing). Once these factors are clear in the mind of the teacher, the teacher can begin to focus on how to engage the students in the activity thus promoting a constructive, continuing learning experience.
The teacher can focus on the means to realise this type of learning, having decided on the target area. The teacher, as in correction, must pick the most suitable way for the one writing area. It, if in formal business letter English is required, is of little use to take up a free expression type of exercise. Similarly,when working on descriptive language writing skills, a formal letter is by the same token out of place.
With both the target area and means of production, comprehensible in the teachers mind, the teacher can begin to reflect on how to involve the students by considering what type of activities are attention-grabbing to the students— 'Are they preparing for something detailed such as a holiday or examination?,' 'Will they need any of the skills sensibly?,' 'What has been effective in the past?.' A good way to approach this is brainstorming sessions. The teacher, by choosing a topic that involves the students, is providing a perspective within which effective learning on the target area can be taken on.
Finally, the question of which type of correction will aid a useful writing exercise is of greatest consequence. Here the teacher needs to once again think about the overall target area of the exercise. If there is an immediate task at hand, such as taking a test, I don't know, teacher guided correction is the most effective way out.
In writing exercises, that students need to be individually involved in order to make the learning experience of long-lasting value is the most important thing. Encouraging student involvement in doing the exercises, while refining and expanding writing skills at one fell swoop, requires a certain hardnosed approach. Intelligibility on what skills a student is trying to build up must be had by the teacher. Next off, the teacher needs to decide on which line of attack (or type of exercise) can smooth the progress of learning of his/her goal. Once the goals and means of implementation are defined, the teacher can then go on to focus on, to guarantee student input, what theme can be employed. The teacher, by sensibly combing these goal, can expect both eagerness and effective learning.
Choosing the target area depends on many factors: what level the students are, what the average age of the students is, why the students are learning English, any specific future intentions for the writing (i.e school tests or job application letters etc.). Other significant questions to ask oneself are: What should the students be able to produce at the end of this exercise? (a well written letter, basic communication of ideas, etc.) What is the focus of the exercise? (structure, tense usage, creative writing). Once these factors are clear in the mind of the teacher, the teacher can begin to focus on how to engage the students in the activity thus promoting a constructive, continuing learning experience.
The teacher can focus on the means to realise this type of learning, having decided on the target area. The teacher, as in correction, must pick the most suitable way for the one writing area. It, if in formal business letter English is required, is of little use to take up a free expression type of exercise. Similarly,when working on descriptive language writing skills, a formal letter is by the same token out of place.
With both the target area and means of production, comprehensible in the teachers mind, the teacher can begin to reflect on how to involve the students by considering what type of activities are attention-grabbing to the students— 'Are they preparing for something detailed such as a holiday or examination?,' 'Will they need any of the skills sensibly?,' 'What has been effective in the past?.' A good way to approach this is brainstorming sessions. The teacher, by choosing a topic that involves the students, is providing a perspective within which effective learning on the target area can be taken on.
Finally, the question of which type of correction will aid a useful writing exercise is of greatest consequence. Here the teacher needs to once again think about the overall target area of the exercise. If there is an immediate task at hand, such as taking a test, I don't know, teacher guided correction is the most effective way out.
Sunday, 12 September 2010
Threshold
a poem by Roger B Rueda
as if we suffered periods of amnesia, this is, conceivably, our fate:
once we ex-angels or –cherubs take a holiday on verdous world,
we lose the memory of our transmundane home, we lose our wings.
only faith petering out in our hearts is left answering or leaving
out the conundrums of life: fields of lush grass subtly become
carpets of golden grains as the spheroid of light slips down into the ocean
or mountain or horizon and half the world is plunged into the night.
take flopping petals and misleading propitious buds, our minds
are stalled by our leaflike lives—
falling home. according to the theory basal- information-
before-leaving-earth though, by receiving the holy grail, we would
be able to return to our flock, and, passing it over,
it would take us to a place we'd grope and take flight in vain
from piercing darkness—and, i.e., sans relief, sanguinity, and end.
we have to hold fast to it first before making any grievance, thus.
as if we suffered periods of amnesia, this is, conceivably, our fate:
once we ex-angels or –cherubs take a holiday on verdous world,
we lose the memory of our transmundane home, we lose our wings.
only faith petering out in our hearts is left answering or leaving
out the conundrums of life: fields of lush grass subtly become
carpets of golden grains as the spheroid of light slips down into the ocean
or mountain or horizon and half the world is plunged into the night.
take flopping petals and misleading propitious buds, our minds
are stalled by our leaflike lives—
falling home. according to the theory basal- information-
before-leaving-earth though, by receiving the holy grail, we would
be able to return to our flock, and, passing it over,
it would take us to a place we'd grope and take flight in vain
from piercing darkness—and, i.e., sans relief, sanguinity, and end.
we have to hold fast to it first before making any grievance, thus.
Saturday, 11 September 2010
A Gridlock Scene
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Trapped in a gridlock,
I fixed my eyes
on the distant billboard
of collapsing space
on the upper façade
of the outlet mall,
having seen an advertisement
of visual distortion and now
a switch-and-bait
as the cab went to the front a bit.
At the mall,
the Nativity in splendid, indigenous arrays
left everyone breathless.
Neon lights aglow with excitement
and glittering polystyrene angels
were hanging down on the glass windows.
Shoppers were rushing,
carrying their buys.
In the blink of an eye,
my mind collapsed,
the Nativity, whirling,
and flashing angels
through my mind swung
to the museum's garden
in which an Ati family (father, mother,
and child) were begging—
Little children with curly spiralled hair
were knocking on the cab's window
Are they museum's essential,
extant exhibits or did they stray
too far from Dinagyang?
Trapped in a gridlock,
I fixed my eyes
on the distant billboard
of collapsing space
on the upper façade
of the outlet mall,
having seen an advertisement
of visual distortion and now
a switch-and-bait
as the cab went to the front a bit.
At the mall,
the Nativity in splendid, indigenous arrays
left everyone breathless.
Neon lights aglow with excitement
and glittering polystyrene angels
were hanging down on the glass windows.
Shoppers were rushing,
carrying their buys.
In the blink of an eye,
my mind collapsed,
the Nativity, whirling,
and flashing angels
through my mind swung
to the museum's garden
in which an Ati family (father, mother,
and child) were begging—
Little children with curly spiralled hair
were knocking on the cab's window
Are they museum's essential,
extant exhibits or did they stray
too far from Dinagyang?
Friday, 10 September 2010
When you left
a poem by Roger B Rueda
for Rio Q Losaria
Then I sat on the rock and
Splashed riverwater on my feet.
You sang me farewell
Like the riverwater that sings
While it runs away to the sea.
I don't visit the river anymore,
It reminds me of you.
First saw print in Home Life, (February 1998).
for Rio Q Losaria
Then I sat on the rock and
Splashed riverwater on my feet.
You sang me farewell
Like the riverwater that sings
While it runs away to the sea.
I don't visit the river anymore,
It reminds me of you.
First saw print in Home Life, (February 1998).
Thursday, 9 September 2010
Paper Hut
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I am stupefied
By the burgeoning buildings,
Humongous and pleasant to look at.
I can really perceive
The strange appearance of the time—
Staying away from its
Origin,
Wanting to reach the lofty goal.
And it is.
Slowly over a period of time it has been achieving it.
And here am I
Admiring time.
Not surrendering
Following the given
Lavishness and behaviour.
Because this is success.
I can see it in the movies
In the theatres, the computer cafes—
And read it
From scattered trash papers.
I almost believe
I've reached a long way.
That I am a person in the new time.
In the new world.
But it seems it is like a dream—
A dream sticking tightly
For me not to return to my self
Under the canopy of my hut paper
Reserved by destiny as well.
I am stupefied
By the burgeoning buildings,
Humongous and pleasant to look at.
I can really perceive
The strange appearance of the time—
Staying away from its
Origin,
Wanting to reach the lofty goal.
And it is.
Slowly over a period of time it has been achieving it.
And here am I
Admiring time.
Not surrendering
Following the given
Lavishness and behaviour.
Because this is success.
I can see it in the movies
In the theatres, the computer cafes—
And read it
From scattered trash papers.
I almost believe
I've reached a long way.
That I am a person in the new time.
In the new world.
But it seems it is like a dream—
A dream sticking tightly
For me not to return to my self
Under the canopy of my hut paper
Reserved by destiny as well.
Wednesday, 8 September 2010
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
an essay by Roger B Rueda
I have learned that in highly developed countries, plastic bag use is getting unpopular. For one thing, consumers bring their own containers when they shop. They have their bags or reused plastic bags. Their governments back plastic bags yet these are not for free but for sale. That way, shoppers think to put aside their bucks just for a plastic bag.
Fast-food restaurants abroad have tried to make use of real utensils made of aluminium and porcelain. This way, the problem of disposing of rubbish is being reduced.
Consequently, this must be what the Filipino should do, too.
Unbroken glass containers can be colour sorted for recycling. Beverage bottles like of cola can be sold to a nearby shop. Plastic ones can be used as plant pots. I tried it for bonsais, bougainvilleas, and some hibiscuses. Brandy bottles can be used to refrigerate drinking water.
Clean dry newspapers and newspaper inserts. Bundle newspapers securely in large sacks or tie with twine. Keep dry. Or else, it will decompose. This can be used for starting a charcoal to smoulder—or to wrap anything. Used newspapers can be used to clean glass windows and tables. Local shops in local markets buy these by the kilo to wrap fragile products or ice cream.
Empty metal cans, caps, lids, bands, and foil can be recycled repeatedly. These days, there are roving buyers who buy junks.
Don’t throw grocery bags. Use again bags until they are torn. Use old bags to pick up dog or cat waste, or when going to buy some vegetables, fruit, fish, and meat from a wet market.
Computers, eyeglasses, household goods, clothes, toys, and books can be donated to charity. Give them to a repair shop. These may be behind the times, yet to others these can still be useful.
Recycle our resources. Recycle our future. Anyhow, recycling is not too much work,we do not have to clean cans, jars, and bottles or take away labels before we recycle them—we just empty out the gluts. Recycling is as simple as trashing, but so much more responsible.
I have learned that in highly developed countries, plastic bag use is getting unpopular. For one thing, consumers bring their own containers when they shop. They have their bags or reused plastic bags. Their governments back plastic bags yet these are not for free but for sale. That way, shoppers think to put aside their bucks just for a plastic bag.
Fast-food restaurants abroad have tried to make use of real utensils made of aluminium and porcelain. This way, the problem of disposing of rubbish is being reduced.
Consequently, this must be what the Filipino should do, too.
Unbroken glass containers can be colour sorted for recycling. Beverage bottles like of cola can be sold to a nearby shop. Plastic ones can be used as plant pots. I tried it for bonsais, bougainvilleas, and some hibiscuses. Brandy bottles can be used to refrigerate drinking water.
Clean dry newspapers and newspaper inserts. Bundle newspapers securely in large sacks or tie with twine. Keep dry. Or else, it will decompose. This can be used for starting a charcoal to smoulder—or to wrap anything. Used newspapers can be used to clean glass windows and tables. Local shops in local markets buy these by the kilo to wrap fragile products or ice cream.
Empty metal cans, caps, lids, bands, and foil can be recycled repeatedly. These days, there are roving buyers who buy junks.
Don’t throw grocery bags. Use again bags until they are torn. Use old bags to pick up dog or cat waste, or when going to buy some vegetables, fruit, fish, and meat from a wet market.
Computers, eyeglasses, household goods, clothes, toys, and books can be donated to charity. Give them to a repair shop. These may be behind the times, yet to others these can still be useful.
Recycle our resources. Recycle our future. Anyhow, recycling is not too much work,we do not have to clean cans, jars, and bottles or take away labels before we recycle them—we just empty out the gluts. Recycling is as simple as trashing, but so much more responsible.
Tuesday, 7 September 2010
Carabaohood
a poem by Roger B Rueda
They dawdle like a soft black bench someone
has cast off in the rice field. Their tone
of voice has ancient lilts and synchronisation
we have to twist to grab.
They would not kiss you for a dialogue
about the character, the oblique, echinated psyche.
Their longing grief is expressed by standing at a standstill.
Under their own steam is their skill. For them it is
an earthly travail which, for the moment, they stoop
to continue spinning.
They traipse along outer reaches of the countryside
continually, from moorings to ponds,
and peacock on cards wreathed in flowers
considerately.
Their countenances gawk into the vague
shadows. They jiggle their heads like slothful
mechanism, mutely in favour with themselves.
They dawdle like a soft black bench someone
has cast off in the rice field. Their tone
of voice has ancient lilts and synchronisation
we have to twist to grab.
They would not kiss you for a dialogue
about the character, the oblique, echinated psyche.
Their longing grief is expressed by standing at a standstill.
Under their own steam is their skill. For them it is
an earthly travail which, for the moment, they stoop
to continue spinning.
They traipse along outer reaches of the countryside
continually, from moorings to ponds,
and peacock on cards wreathed in flowers
considerately.
Their countenances gawk into the vague
shadows. They jiggle their heads like slothful
mechanism, mutely in favour with themselves.
Monday, 6 September 2010
Incompetence
an essay by Roger B Rueda
The news of the accident last 23 August shocked the families of Hong Kong tourists deeply. This was the deadliest attack on visitors in Philippine history.
The video footages of Hong Kong nationals held hostage taken by ABS-CBN and GMA shocked us into empathising with the victims. It was perhaps because, based on my scrutiny, the Arroyo government was able to negotiate with terrorists, who are always intimidating us by their threats, but , oh well, almost all negotiations were successful, evidently.
But why was the hostage stand-off on a commandeered Philippines bus ended in bloodshed and that it lasted for twelve hours? Where was the President when the thing turned out? Doesn’t the leader of the government have a duty to make certain that a particular problem is solved? Perhaps, if we are going to think about or discuss a problem in an intellectual way, without involving our emotions or feelings. But could we stand all that pointless intellectualising about the preference of his secretaries and advisers that the president should ignore the wishes of the majority to intervene personally to stop the problem as soon as possible? For myself, I think their bungling assessment of the situation was a sign of their lack of common sense. It was a crazy advice. See, the negotiators had demonstrated almost unbelievable incompetence in their handling of the problem, and this could be traced back to who took on them. What brains does he have in taking people into service? See, the Philippine National Police's assault team which tried to rescue the tourists from Hong Kong was inadequately trained, armed, and led.
Well, for me, no amount of damage control after that drama can disengage the smash up done or even just to soothe the aggravation felt by the Chinese bureaucrat and the rest of the Chinese society. Mr Aquino’s image has been ruined and he is now seen as an ineffectual chief by the rest of the world, not because of himself, but his own advisers and the media realm held and run by his connections.
Mr Aquino’s failure to do anything which might provide a solution to that problem at some point in and noticeable inattentiveness after the heartbreaking occurrence were a total image management disaster here and out of the country.
I think most Filipino voters have bad taste!
It was so scarey an occurrence, nine Hong Kong tourists were dead along with the discontented ex-policeman who seized their bus in a bid to get his post back. We'd have given it some serious consideration if we were Mr Aquino!
Most of us, understandably, are clear, that any negotiator has no control over strategies and options, he or she is involved in buying time for the hostage taker to consider other options—but had they been experienced and all set to that problem, such butchery of eight lives of Hong Kong tourists (and of Mendoza) could have been avoided. It was the mistreatment of the situation that caused that to happen.
I wonder how the negotiators actually communicated with the hostage taker. Was a dispassionate perspective kept? On TV, I observed that the police actions were negative.
There could have been other choices for the hostage taker. He could have negotiated with the police for a flee route, and could have laid down his arms—an M-16 assault rifle, small firearms, and grenades—to the police. But the saddest thing he did was he chose martyrdom, he killed the hostages. Was safety of the lives of the hostages prioritised? Well, we can surmise or wait for the Hong Kong police investigation result.
The drama began just about 10 A.M. that day of 23 August when Mendoza, wearing a military uniform and carrying a gun with a long barrel, flagged down the tourist bus and asked for a ride. He seized the bus carrying no less than twenty Hong Kong people and no less than three Filipino workers in the historic neighbourhood of Manila. He agreed to free nine people all through negotiations. That meant that Mendoza was at that time sane. So I wonder why such conflict we were seeing on TV went downhill when if truth be told Mendoza was not belligerent just then. They could have conciliated him rather.
But instead, policemen wearing flak jackets, clothing worn by the police to protect them from bullets and weapons, some clutching assault rifles, undertook to storm the bus. After about an hour of unsuccessful attempts, in which random barrage of bullets would be heard and bullet holes were sprayed in the side windows of the bus, the sniper fire claimed Mendoza’s life. I am afraid that there might be victims who were taken life by friendly fire. And how about if there had been victims who just acted as if they were lifeless to mislead the hostage taker?
By the way, does the government have a move to revitalise the culture of despondency and hopelessness that moved in a threatening way towards the late Rolando Mendoza after by all accounts being unjustly discharged from the police? I think this culture is Mr Aquino’s, too: he just wants to discharge people without due process. You remember, Mr Aquino wanted those appointees of former president Arroyo to leave their job. One very distinguished is the appointment of the present chief justice of the Supreme Court. And in regard to playing the blame game over corruption and other Philippines problems, Mr Aquino is the person who I admire and whose behaviour I try to copy in blaming other people especially Mrs Arroyo.
The news of the accident last 23 August shocked the families of Hong Kong tourists deeply. This was the deadliest attack on visitors in Philippine history.
The video footages of Hong Kong nationals held hostage taken by ABS-CBN and GMA shocked us into empathising with the victims. It was perhaps because, based on my scrutiny, the Arroyo government was able to negotiate with terrorists, who are always intimidating us by their threats, but , oh well, almost all negotiations were successful, evidently.
But why was the hostage stand-off on a commandeered Philippines bus ended in bloodshed and that it lasted for twelve hours? Where was the President when the thing turned out? Doesn’t the leader of the government have a duty to make certain that a particular problem is solved? Perhaps, if we are going to think about or discuss a problem in an intellectual way, without involving our emotions or feelings. But could we stand all that pointless intellectualising about the preference of his secretaries and advisers that the president should ignore the wishes of the majority to intervene personally to stop the problem as soon as possible? For myself, I think their bungling assessment of the situation was a sign of their lack of common sense. It was a crazy advice. See, the negotiators had demonstrated almost unbelievable incompetence in their handling of the problem, and this could be traced back to who took on them. What brains does he have in taking people into service? See, the Philippine National Police's assault team which tried to rescue the tourists from Hong Kong was inadequately trained, armed, and led.
Well, for me, no amount of damage control after that drama can disengage the smash up done or even just to soothe the aggravation felt by the Chinese bureaucrat and the rest of the Chinese society. Mr Aquino’s image has been ruined and he is now seen as an ineffectual chief by the rest of the world, not because of himself, but his own advisers and the media realm held and run by his connections.
Mr Aquino’s failure to do anything which might provide a solution to that problem at some point in and noticeable inattentiveness after the heartbreaking occurrence were a total image management disaster here and out of the country.
I think most Filipino voters have bad taste!
It was so scarey an occurrence, nine Hong Kong tourists were dead along with the discontented ex-policeman who seized their bus in a bid to get his post back. We'd have given it some serious consideration if we were Mr Aquino!
Most of us, understandably, are clear, that any negotiator has no control over strategies and options, he or she is involved in buying time for the hostage taker to consider other options—but had they been experienced and all set to that problem, such butchery of eight lives of Hong Kong tourists (and of Mendoza) could have been avoided. It was the mistreatment of the situation that caused that to happen.
I wonder how the negotiators actually communicated with the hostage taker. Was a dispassionate perspective kept? On TV, I observed that the police actions were negative.
There could have been other choices for the hostage taker. He could have negotiated with the police for a flee route, and could have laid down his arms—an M-16 assault rifle, small firearms, and grenades—to the police. But the saddest thing he did was he chose martyrdom, he killed the hostages. Was safety of the lives of the hostages prioritised? Well, we can surmise or wait for the Hong Kong police investigation result.
The drama began just about 10 A.M. that day of 23 August when Mendoza, wearing a military uniform and carrying a gun with a long barrel, flagged down the tourist bus and asked for a ride. He seized the bus carrying no less than twenty Hong Kong people and no less than three Filipino workers in the historic neighbourhood of Manila. He agreed to free nine people all through negotiations. That meant that Mendoza was at that time sane. So I wonder why such conflict we were seeing on TV went downhill when if truth be told Mendoza was not belligerent just then. They could have conciliated him rather.
But instead, policemen wearing flak jackets, clothing worn by the police to protect them from bullets and weapons, some clutching assault rifles, undertook to storm the bus. After about an hour of unsuccessful attempts, in which random barrage of bullets would be heard and bullet holes were sprayed in the side windows of the bus, the sniper fire claimed Mendoza’s life. I am afraid that there might be victims who were taken life by friendly fire. And how about if there had been victims who just acted as if they were lifeless to mislead the hostage taker?
By the way, does the government have a move to revitalise the culture of despondency and hopelessness that moved in a threatening way towards the late Rolando Mendoza after by all accounts being unjustly discharged from the police? I think this culture is Mr Aquino’s, too: he just wants to discharge people without due process. You remember, Mr Aquino wanted those appointees of former president Arroyo to leave their job. One very distinguished is the appointment of the present chief justice of the Supreme Court. And in regard to playing the blame game over corruption and other Philippines problems, Mr Aquino is the person who I admire and whose behaviour I try to copy in blaming other people especially Mrs Arroyo.
Sunday, 5 September 2010
Some Vocables To Vocalise Your Viewpoints
an essay by Roger B Rueda
Today, I've put down for some of my preferred expressions to parlay or step your vocables up.
"Like billy-o" means "a lot or very quickly, strongly, etc." "The staff worked like billy-o to get the paper finished."
"Vice-like" (adjective) means "very tight." "He holds his tennis racket in a vice-like grip."
"Go like a bomb" means "to move very quickly." "His new car goes like a bomb."
"Drink like a fish" means "to drink too much alcohol." "Zenbie drank like a fish last night."
"Be like chalk and chees"—well, if two people are like chalk and cheese, they are completely different from each other. "My brother and I are like chalk and cheese."
"Drop like flies" has two meanings. One is if people are dropping like flies they are dying or falling down in large numbers. "The typhoon was overwhelming and people were dropping like flies." And, two, it means "to stop doing an activity in large numbers." "There used to be over twenty of us in our aerobics class but they're dropping like flies."
"I'd like to see..." is said to mean that you do not believe someone can do something. "He said women have an easier life than men, did he?—I'd like to see him bring up children and go to work at the same time."
"What are you like?" (also "What is she/he like?") is used when someone has said or done something silly. "Of course Patrice's only worry was whether her lipstick had smudged. ~Patrice! What is she like?"
"Sink like a stone means to fail completely. His latest novel sank like a stone."
"Spread like wildfire" is used if disease or news spreads like wildfire, it quickly affects or becomes known by more and more people. "Once one child in the school has chickenpox, it spreads like wildfire."
"Be a victory for common sense" means "to be a very reasonable result in a particular situation." "There is no doubt that the court's decision is a victory for common sense."
"Laugh like a drain" means "to laugh a lot, very loudly." "Bex laughed like a drain for the first time."
"Write something off" means "to damage a vehicle so badly that it cannot be repaired." "Walt's car was completely written off in the accident."
"Hostage to fortune" means "an action or statement that is risky because it could cause you trouble later." "The President is not cautious, saying a lot inflammatory and giving hostages to fortune."
"Scream/shout blue murder" means "to show your anger about something, especially by shouting or complaining very loudly." "Iver will scream blue murder if he doesn't get his way."
Happy Sunday!
Today, I've put down for some of my preferred expressions to parlay or step your vocables up.
"Like billy-o" means "a lot or very quickly, strongly, etc." "The staff worked like billy-o to get the paper finished."
"Vice-like" (adjective) means "very tight." "He holds his tennis racket in a vice-like grip."
"Go like a bomb" means "to move very quickly." "His new car goes like a bomb."
"Drink like a fish" means "to drink too much alcohol." "Zenbie drank like a fish last night."
"Be like chalk and chees"—well, if two people are like chalk and cheese, they are completely different from each other. "My brother and I are like chalk and cheese."
"Drop like flies" has two meanings. One is if people are dropping like flies they are dying or falling down in large numbers. "The typhoon was overwhelming and people were dropping like flies." And, two, it means "to stop doing an activity in large numbers." "There used to be over twenty of us in our aerobics class but they're dropping like flies."
"I'd like to see..." is said to mean that you do not believe someone can do something. "He said women have an easier life than men, did he?—I'd like to see him bring up children and go to work at the same time."
"What are you like?" (also "What is she/he like?") is used when someone has said or done something silly. "Of course Patrice's only worry was whether her lipstick had smudged. ~Patrice! What is she like?"
"Sink like a stone means to fail completely. His latest novel sank like a stone."
"Spread like wildfire" is used if disease or news spreads like wildfire, it quickly affects or becomes known by more and more people. "Once one child in the school has chickenpox, it spreads like wildfire."
"Be a victory for common sense" means "to be a very reasonable result in a particular situation." "There is no doubt that the court's decision is a victory for common sense."
"Laugh like a drain" means "to laugh a lot, very loudly." "Bex laughed like a drain for the first time."
"Write something off" means "to damage a vehicle so badly that it cannot be repaired." "Walt's car was completely written off in the accident."
"Hostage to fortune" means "an action or statement that is risky because it could cause you trouble later." "The President is not cautious, saying a lot inflammatory and giving hostages to fortune."
"Scream/shout blue murder" means "to show your anger about something, especially by shouting or complaining very loudly." "Iver will scream blue murder if he doesn't get his way."
Happy Sunday!
Saturday, 4 September 2010
Cloudburst
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Every day
As the warmth
Goes up,
I flourish—
Prosperous and sweet-smelling—
Cavernous casts,
Pulsating
Next to the arid terrain.
My being rises and
Falls
Like icing
On a quiche
I once made for him
Who disdained
Sugared fare.
Reminiscences
Swirl
As I plunk
By myself
Alongside the heavens
Casting a shadow,
Waiting for
The downpour.
Every day
As the warmth
Goes up,
I flourish—
Prosperous and sweet-smelling—
Cavernous casts,
Pulsating
Next to the arid terrain.
My being rises and
Falls
Like icing
On a quiche
I once made for him
Who disdained
Sugared fare.
Reminiscences
Swirl
As I plunk
By myself
Alongside the heavens
Casting a shadow,
Waiting for
The downpour.
Friday, 3 September 2010
Two-sided
a poem by Roger B Rueda
Can you and I be grazing for all time?
What I mean is that even times when we're
Ensconced in the sofa and reading
Separate paperbacks, utterly engaged.
Can we stay put yet with no interval
By some means, like our legs slowly stroking
Up against one another's
And our toes can play footie?
And when we meet and hee-haw one day
In chairs at the beach,
Wearing shades,
Earless to the sea swishing,
Our hands might start burrowing
Through the sand and channel together,
One final give and we'll burst through.
We could be caroming, after that.
Place your hand quiescently there.
No thinking makes me at an advantage
Than extremities covered in dust,
Clasping in the breezy moist.
Can you and I be grazing for all time?
What I mean is that even times when we're
Ensconced in the sofa and reading
Separate paperbacks, utterly engaged.
Can we stay put yet with no interval
By some means, like our legs slowly stroking
Up against one another's
And our toes can play footie?
And when we meet and hee-haw one day
In chairs at the beach,
Wearing shades,
Earless to the sea swishing,
Our hands might start burrowing
Through the sand and channel together,
One final give and we'll burst through.
We could be caroming, after that.
Place your hand quiescently there.
No thinking makes me at an advantage
Than extremities covered in dust,
Clasping in the breezy moist.
Thursday, 2 September 2010
Sobriquets
an essay by Roger B Rueda
Filipinos are fond of sobriquets as they are palpable in their show business—"Superstar," "Star of All Season," "Megastar," and "Diamond Star." Well, without telling the names of the actresses, I know, you know who they are. Kris Aquino is otherwise known as "the Queen of All Media." Nina is "Diamond Diva." Boy Abunda is "the King of Talk."
Iloilo City has got two sobriquets, one is “the City of Love” and the other is "the Most Noble City," a title given by the Queen Regent of Spain. Of course, it was widely known since 1855 as “Queen City of the South.” Now it is Cebu City that has that sobriquet. Possibly, because of the slow progress and poor political influence then, Iloilo City lost its beautiful sobriquet. Bacolod City is known as “the City of Smile.” Perhaps because of the permanent smile the mask flaunts to people—though, perhaps, the wearer's heart is bleeding heavily. Yet, that is Bacolod’s individualising characteristic. Baguio City deserves its sobriquet as “the City of Flowers.” When in Baguio, I feel I am in a paradise. The flowers there are exotic and their sizes are really amazing because never have I seen flowers of jarring colours and sizes so unusual, some are huge, that the first time you see them the pupils of your eyes will dilate and your mouth agape wordless. Most Baguio flowers have a wide tube and flared lobes while others widen gradually from the base, ending in an open or flared shape. Too, common flowers there are those that start as a narrow tube, but widen into a flared mouth, where the petals often turn back. What I like most, however, in the city are flowers with a long, thin tube, that widen suddenly into a flat-faced flowers, they are very common in "the City of Flowers."
In our homes (and even amongst our peers), we call ourselves with sobriquets. Because, perhaps, of the intimacy and the deeper effect it has on us. I mean when our peers call us of our nicknames there is a very congruous feeling that we transude from our within and it really builds a feeling of certitude and inwardness. And the moment we are called with our sobriquets we can know then who the people surrounding us are.
Our university where we graduated is called as our alma mater. The term is from Latin, and it means fostering mother—and I really agree with it.
How about the biggest pond, “The Pond”? Well, it is the sobriquet to mean the Atlantic Ocean. It really looks as one as it is surrounded by masses of lands.
I disdain the Old Nick. It must be the cause of all the sufferings in the world. Deceit started here, remember, in Eden, revealed in the Holy Bible.
Joan of Arc has a sobriquet of “Maid of Orleans.” Washington, D.C., the US capital, is called "Chocolate City," so named because of its majority African-American population. Of course, very well-known as a myth, the Philippines is called "Pearl of the Orient." We knew it first time from grade school textbook. But wait, does the Philippines have the creamy white shiny colour? I've heard that if a person sports a pearl, he or she may soon get a good fortune.
"The Governator" is a sobriquet given to Arnold Schwarzenegger, the 38th Governor of California. Well, does that mean he is half governor, half cyborg? Yes, he is a hyper-alloy combat chasis surrounded by living tissue, sent back by Skynet to become California's governor.
Ronald Reagan, the 40th President of the United States of America, is called "The Great Communicator" because he delivered his innumerable lies in words of one syllable. His genius lay in the manipulation of symbols to convey powerful messages that could no longer be voiced openly in polite society—messages of hate, envy, fear, and violence.
We often hear China as "the Dragon." In China, excellent and outstanding people are compared to the dragon while incapable people with no achievements are compared with other, disesteemed creatures, such as the worm. A number of Chinese proverbs and idioms feature references to the dragon, for example: "Hoping one's son will become a dragon."
Rome is called "the Eternal City." Rome was best known for its gladiators. Have you watched the movie "Gladiator"? Don't you know that Roman gladiators were condemned criminals, prisoners of war, or slaves bought for the purpose of gladiatorial combat by an owner of gladiators?
Elvis Presley is known as "the King (of Rock and Roll)." Oprah Winfrey is called "the Queen of Talk Shows." Miriam Defensor-Santiago has a sobriquet "the Iron Lady of Asia." Isn't it obvious. She is such that her words are very powerful. I love to watch her talk. Imelda Marcos, the Philippine former first lady, has been called colourful "Steel Butterfly." I am her fan. In fact, I love collecting her quotes. They are so beautiful. One of them is "God is love. I have loved. Therefore, I will go to heaven." And then her "People say I'm extravagant because I want to be surrounded by beauty. But tell me, who wants to be surrounded by garbage?"
"The Land of a Thousand Lakes" is the sobriquet given to Finland, the home country of our Nokia mobile phones. Jaipur, the capital and largest city of the Indian state of Rajasthan, has the sobriquet, "Pink City." Since it's called "Pink City," are gays welcome there? Oh well, perhaps. Why not? The British Parliament is commonly called as "Westminster." "The Fourth Estate" is the sobriquet of the press. Barotac Nuevo, a town in Iloilo, is known as Philippines “Football Capital." Here most people love playing football even if they have basketballs. Barotac Nuevo, too, is home of the famous Iloilo State College of Fisheries.
Now everything is in its new-sprung state of being, some writers follow the Bard of Avon’s writing style. How sure are they that their pieces can rivalise Shakespeare’s classical works?
Filipinos are fond of sobriquets as they are palpable in their show business—"Superstar," "Star of All Season," "Megastar," and "Diamond Star." Well, without telling the names of the actresses, I know, you know who they are. Kris Aquino is otherwise known as "the Queen of All Media." Nina is "Diamond Diva." Boy Abunda is "the King of Talk."
Iloilo City has got two sobriquets, one is “the City of Love” and the other is "the Most Noble City," a title given by the Queen Regent of Spain. Of course, it was widely known since 1855 as “Queen City of the South.” Now it is Cebu City that has that sobriquet. Possibly, because of the slow progress and poor political influence then, Iloilo City lost its beautiful sobriquet. Bacolod City is known as “the City of Smile.” Perhaps because of the permanent smile the mask flaunts to people—though, perhaps, the wearer's heart is bleeding heavily. Yet, that is Bacolod’s individualising characteristic. Baguio City deserves its sobriquet as “the City of Flowers.” When in Baguio, I feel I am in a paradise. The flowers there are exotic and their sizes are really amazing because never have I seen flowers of jarring colours and sizes so unusual, some are huge, that the first time you see them the pupils of your eyes will dilate and your mouth agape wordless. Most Baguio flowers have a wide tube and flared lobes while others widen gradually from the base, ending in an open or flared shape. Too, common flowers there are those that start as a narrow tube, but widen into a flared mouth, where the petals often turn back. What I like most, however, in the city are flowers with a long, thin tube, that widen suddenly into a flat-faced flowers, they are very common in "the City of Flowers."
In our homes (and even amongst our peers), we call ourselves with sobriquets. Because, perhaps, of the intimacy and the deeper effect it has on us. I mean when our peers call us of our nicknames there is a very congruous feeling that we transude from our within and it really builds a feeling of certitude and inwardness. And the moment we are called with our sobriquets we can know then who the people surrounding us are.
Our university where we graduated is called as our alma mater. The term is from Latin, and it means fostering mother—and I really agree with it.
How about the biggest pond, “The Pond”? Well, it is the sobriquet to mean the Atlantic Ocean. It really looks as one as it is surrounded by masses of lands.
I disdain the Old Nick. It must be the cause of all the sufferings in the world. Deceit started here, remember, in Eden, revealed in the Holy Bible.
Joan of Arc has a sobriquet of “Maid of Orleans.” Washington, D.C., the US capital, is called "Chocolate City," so named because of its majority African-American population. Of course, very well-known as a myth, the Philippines is called "Pearl of the Orient." We knew it first time from grade school textbook. But wait, does the Philippines have the creamy white shiny colour? I've heard that if a person sports a pearl, he or she may soon get a good fortune.
"The Governator" is a sobriquet given to Arnold Schwarzenegger, the 38th Governor of California. Well, does that mean he is half governor, half cyborg? Yes, he is a hyper-alloy combat chasis surrounded by living tissue, sent back by Skynet to become California's governor.
Ronald Reagan, the 40th President of the United States of America, is called "The Great Communicator" because he delivered his innumerable lies in words of one syllable. His genius lay in the manipulation of symbols to convey powerful messages that could no longer be voiced openly in polite society—messages of hate, envy, fear, and violence.
We often hear China as "the Dragon." In China, excellent and outstanding people are compared to the dragon while incapable people with no achievements are compared with other, disesteemed creatures, such as the worm. A number of Chinese proverbs and idioms feature references to the dragon, for example: "Hoping one's son will become a dragon."
Rome is called "the Eternal City." Rome was best known for its gladiators. Have you watched the movie "Gladiator"? Don't you know that Roman gladiators were condemned criminals, prisoners of war, or slaves bought for the purpose of gladiatorial combat by an owner of gladiators?
Elvis Presley is known as "the King (of Rock and Roll)." Oprah Winfrey is called "the Queen of Talk Shows." Miriam Defensor-Santiago has a sobriquet "the Iron Lady of Asia." Isn't it obvious. She is such that her words are very powerful. I love to watch her talk. Imelda Marcos, the Philippine former first lady, has been called colourful "Steel Butterfly." I am her fan. In fact, I love collecting her quotes. They are so beautiful. One of them is "God is love. I have loved. Therefore, I will go to heaven." And then her "People say I'm extravagant because I want to be surrounded by beauty. But tell me, who wants to be surrounded by garbage?"
"The Land of a Thousand Lakes" is the sobriquet given to Finland, the home country of our Nokia mobile phones. Jaipur, the capital and largest city of the Indian state of Rajasthan, has the sobriquet, "Pink City." Since it's called "Pink City," are gays welcome there? Oh well, perhaps. Why not? The British Parliament is commonly called as "Westminster." "The Fourth Estate" is the sobriquet of the press. Barotac Nuevo, a town in Iloilo, is known as Philippines “Football Capital." Here most people love playing football even if they have basketballs. Barotac Nuevo, too, is home of the famous Iloilo State College of Fisheries.
Now everything is in its new-sprung state of being, some writers follow the Bard of Avon’s writing style. How sure are they that their pieces can rivalise Shakespeare’s classical works?
Wednesday, 1 September 2010
Under the Bridge
a poem by Roger B Rueda
for Crissy Bex Lee, a poet friend and muse
Clematis creeping underneath the bridge,
her eyes nearly popped out of her head
when you two first met, you having bloody
soft skin, an accoucheuse, perhaps, an eye
witness. Yes, you were as if an earthquake
causing great damage to the bridge, its
surface with a huge hole.
Then you cried yourself to sleep.
Over the bridge she looked down,
Touching your bald little head.
Now, you being conscious of yourself,
don’t ask her where you are from or who
you really are, she’ll always say
There, under the bridge.
for Crissy Bex Lee, a poet friend and muse
Clematis creeping underneath the bridge,
her eyes nearly popped out of her head
when you two first met, you having bloody
soft skin, an accoucheuse, perhaps, an eye
witness. Yes, you were as if an earthquake
causing great damage to the bridge, its
surface with a huge hole.
Then you cried yourself to sleep.
Over the bridge she looked down,
Touching your bald little head.
Now, you being conscious of yourself,
don’t ask her where you are from or who
you really are, she’ll always say
There, under the bridge.
Pumpkin
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I like him in keeping
Once he bends forward
Jagged xanthous
Beside an enthused piece
Of the blue.
Before long
When he's malevolent
And gigantic,
Making terrorisation to me—
Being pendent.
He never seems
Sluggish rather
For his being—
Or for what intention
He dishes up.
Maybe it's barely me
Blowing Parokya ni Edgar,
Slouching under his siblings
Playing playhouse,
Having hitches
With his lifing
In any way.
I like him in keeping
Once he bends forward
Jagged xanthous
Beside an enthused piece
Of the blue.
Before long
When he's malevolent
And gigantic,
Making terrorisation to me—
Being pendent.
He never seems
Sluggish rather
For his being—
Or for what intention
He dishes up.
Maybe it's barely me
Blowing Parokya ni Edgar,
Slouching under his siblings
Playing playhouse,
Having hitches
With his lifing
In any way.
Monday, 30 August 2010
Witching Hour
a poem by Roger B Rueda
I care for lolling
Next to a name
As he saws wood,
To hear
His wary gasp
Twirl to an uninhibited pulse,
Like a rogation,
To sense his upper trunk
Blow out and distend
Like an unspoken troth
Of brio, to snoop
So keenly
To his throb,
Pounding
Like an olden berceuse,
And then leisurely,
To take in your clock
Is pounding too,
Carefully first,
But shortly flouting,
Into an enticing efflux,
Like the quiet dithering
Of a colossal bird’s pinion,
Yet as serene as the aubade.
I care for lolling
Next to a name
As he saws wood,
To hear
His wary gasp
Twirl to an uninhibited pulse,
Like a rogation,
To sense his upper trunk
Blow out and distend
Like an unspoken troth
Of brio, to snoop
So keenly
To his throb,
Pounding
Like an olden berceuse,
And then leisurely,
To take in your clock
Is pounding too,
Carefully first,
But shortly flouting,
Into an enticing efflux,
Like the quiet dithering
Of a colossal bird’s pinion,
Yet as serene as the aubade.
Sunday, 29 August 2010
Dogs the City Over
an essay by Roger B Rueda
Dogs, for our body and psyche, are enjoyable, pleasant, or interesting: they fire up our happiness and peace of mind. But look about, anyplace, drifting dogs are out of their owners’ residences. Thus, their muck is everyplace, reeking on the corner! They're a terrible nuisance!
Having dogs at home has this reason to a lot of us, dogs, principally to persons who are living alone, give security. The barking of a dog helps to keep unwelcome visitors away and puts off the coming up of feelings of lonesomeness and seclusion.
Dogs replace the contact to other human beings, but people do not become out-of-the-way but rather remain fascinated and full of zip and thus also are ready to establish contact to other people and to stay in contact with them.
Most senior citizens I meet give a lot of details that their dogs give them the feeling of being useful, of being able to look after somebody, of not being alone and isolated; their dogs help them overlook themselves and their problems and live their free time in a meaningful and interesting way. All this urging is of immense value for their reaching the later stages of their lives.
Dogs, to these older people, help to fight against droopiness and lack of concern. Having their dogs beside, they start to get interested once more to a greater degree in events in their neighbourhood and in their surroundings.
But it seems only a few of Ilonggos really love their dogs—and only those elderly folks. A lot of Ilonggos principally those slum-grown never think about their dogs. Hence, dogs scatter about, famished and dirty.
I know dogs have great roles in everyone’s life, they help to get over sad events by representing for instance a living role model to a dead person or by becoming a new point for fondness, they foil or cut forgetfulness or panic by communicating the sense of time and by maintaining a pace of the day—but I presume adopting dogs in our cities must be given a parameter. Mutt or rare breed, our city government must compel people who want to own dogs an agreement paper and to be liable if something bad happens to their pets.
People should be oriented of many things they can have for having pet dogs. And not everyone can own a dog. So that it will not come to pass that this city has to euthanise our canine population sometime as it is growing radically over the years.
For my part, having our dogs at home I am pushed to physical bustle. Be it by playing with them, cultivating cleanliness, or going on a stroll with them—or when we have them nosh. My dogs keep me amused, make me laugh, recover my moral. So I hope we should love our dogs and let’s end all rough treatment that our dogs go through from our horrific hands.
Dogs, for our body and psyche, are enjoyable, pleasant, or interesting: they fire up our happiness and peace of mind. But look about, anyplace, drifting dogs are out of their owners’ residences. Thus, their muck is everyplace, reeking on the corner! They're a terrible nuisance!
Having dogs at home has this reason to a lot of us, dogs, principally to persons who are living alone, give security. The barking of a dog helps to keep unwelcome visitors away and puts off the coming up of feelings of lonesomeness and seclusion.
Dogs replace the contact to other human beings, but people do not become out-of-the-way but rather remain fascinated and full of zip and thus also are ready to establish contact to other people and to stay in contact with them.
Most senior citizens I meet give a lot of details that their dogs give them the feeling of being useful, of being able to look after somebody, of not being alone and isolated; their dogs help them overlook themselves and their problems and live their free time in a meaningful and interesting way. All this urging is of immense value for their reaching the later stages of their lives.
Dogs, to these older people, help to fight against droopiness and lack of concern. Having their dogs beside, they start to get interested once more to a greater degree in events in their neighbourhood and in their surroundings.
But it seems only a few of Ilonggos really love their dogs—and only those elderly folks. A lot of Ilonggos principally those slum-grown never think about their dogs. Hence, dogs scatter about, famished and dirty.
I know dogs have great roles in everyone’s life, they help to get over sad events by representing for instance a living role model to a dead person or by becoming a new point for fondness, they foil or cut forgetfulness or panic by communicating the sense of time and by maintaining a pace of the day—but I presume adopting dogs in our cities must be given a parameter. Mutt or rare breed, our city government must compel people who want to own dogs an agreement paper and to be liable if something bad happens to their pets.
People should be oriented of many things they can have for having pet dogs. And not everyone can own a dog. So that it will not come to pass that this city has to euthanise our canine population sometime as it is growing radically over the years.
For my part, having our dogs at home I am pushed to physical bustle. Be it by playing with them, cultivating cleanliness, or going on a stroll with them—or when we have them nosh. My dogs keep me amused, make me laugh, recover my moral. So I hope we should love our dogs and let’s end all rough treatment that our dogs go through from our horrific hands.
Thursday, 26 August 2010
My Palate is a Purple Pomme du Lait
a poem by Roger B Rueda
My palate is a purple pomme du lait
It takes the weight off my feet profound and muted
Beating like a dream you can grasp in your hand
Silky-smooth, balmy, and murmuring
Gaze infinitely enough and you can glimpse
My cruor is strewn with trusses of Olea europaea
And Pogostemon cablin
And the untainted onyx aqua
And if you stare even more fiercely
When the lambency hits me on the nose—
I am utterly lucent
And shorn of all that is physical and able to be enclosed
For that instant
Even if you can't snare me
I can snare you
In nothing flat I am whole nine yards and hard
My impulse now obscure
By now the musing is only snippets of noise
Pecking my lobes and cincturing my skull
My palate is a purple pomme du lait
It takes the weight off my feet profound and muted
Beating like a dream you can grasp in your hand
Silky-smooth, balmy, and murmuring
Gaze infinitely enough and you can glimpse
My cruor is strewn with trusses of Olea europaea
And Pogostemon cablin
And the untainted onyx aqua
And if you stare even more fiercely
When the lambency hits me on the nose—
I am utterly lucent
And shorn of all that is physical and able to be enclosed
For that instant
Even if you can't snare me
I can snare you
In nothing flat I am whole nine yards and hard
My impulse now obscure
By now the musing is only snippets of noise
Pecking my lobes and cincturing my skull
Wednesday, 25 August 2010
Hayseed
a poem by Roger B Rueda
His stairs crackle on the paved thoroughfare,
Pattering remarks on the eager range.
A scuff of sun slid like a yellow dog in the breach,
Illuming the charm of his hues.
He went down on his knees before the flurry of fresh godly
Downpour ascending from the entrails of the terrain,
Corralled sacrament from the stein of his holds,
And vanished at the rear of the assemblage of fiery spire.
I took notice of him again as the steppe blistering verge
Swung in the reaped gluten, his stifling heat.
His stairs crackle on the paved thoroughfare,
Pattering remarks on the eager range.
A scuff of sun slid like a yellow dog in the breach,
Illuming the charm of his hues.
He went down on his knees before the flurry of fresh godly
Downpour ascending from the entrails of the terrain,
Corralled sacrament from the stein of his holds,
And vanished at the rear of the assemblage of fiery spire.
I took notice of him again as the steppe blistering verge
Swung in the reaped gluten, his stifling heat.
Tuesday, 24 August 2010
Plasticscape
an essay by Roger B Rueda
Wherever one turns his/her eyes, he/she sees prismatic plastics of variegated brands and materiel used. Anyway, they are all plastic and not pompons. Accordingly, while crossing on the Forbes Bridge or Jalandoni Bridge or any Iloilo bridge, we can right away mouths off that those floating drecks are plastics, which have been used in almost everything, and they are not typic components of the water.
I myself am a “plastic” person, too, I drink coffee with a plastic cup, I eat with a plastic plate and sometimes with a plastic spoon and fork, and most of my utensils at home are made of plastics.
Anywise, what are plastics? Well, they are polymers which are just very long chains of atoms which repeat over and over again. By the way, that’s the chemist’s thing when it comes to its knotty brown study, not ours.
Well, the development of plastics according to my review has come from the use of natural materials (e.g., bubble gum, shellac varnish) to the use of artificially modified innate materials (e.g., natural rubber, nitrocellulose, collagen) and finally to wholly synthetic molecules [e.g., epoxy, poly (vinyl chloride), polyethylene].
Ever since the development of plastics earlier this blue moon, they have become trendy stuff used in a wide array of ways. These days, plastics are used to make, or wrap around, many of the items we buy or use. We use plastics when we shop and they are complimentary. Actually, their cost has been toted up to the cost of what we buy. Our malls and grocerterias are staking us to plastic bags. Perhaps, this period has to be called Plastic Age.
The botheration comes when we no longer want these items and how we dispose of them, mainly the off the cuff plastic material used in wrapping or packaging. Plastics are used because they are easy and cheap to make and they can last a long time. Sorry to say, these same useful qualities can make plastic a huge pollution problem. The cheapness means plastic gets discarded with no trouble and its long life means it survives in the environment for long periods where it can do great damage. Because plastic does not go moldy, and requires high energy ultra-violet light to break down, the amount of plastic waste in our seas is bit by bit increasing.
The plastic waste found on beaches near our city tends to start off from use on land, such as packaging material used to wrap around other goods. On in the sticks provincial beaches the rubbish tends to have come from ships, such as fishing gears used in the fishing business. This plastic can affect marine wildlife in two key ways: by enmeshing living things and by being scoffed.
The plastic pollution is serious and requires extra pondering. Instantaneous action is essential more than how we are busy studying grammar or mathematics or fashion.
Cutback of the quantity of plastic used in packaging which is by and large immediately thrown away must be done. Re-use of plastics should be pushed (by businessmen). Plastic wrapping and bags should carry a warning label stating the dangers of plastic pollution, and shoppers should be encouraged to use their own bags, or recycled paper bags.
When you go to concourses in the city proper or in La Paz or Mandurriao, you must buy products with less plastic packaging and tell store persons why you are doing so. You should use your own bags or recycled paper bags though you wouldn’t look rakish. You must support recycling schemes and promote support for one in your local area.
Malls which are really concerned with this problem must grubstake the environment to eco-friendly bags without any conditions like buying this and that—which is specious! Of course, they are robber barons, no wonder!
Fishermen throughout this conurbation and province should not throw away waste line, net, or plastic waste, this causes vast suffering and many deaths. Practice and promote correct disposal of plastics in your home and at the beach. Always remember that garbage spawns garbage. Never dispose of plastics in the sewage system.
At the beach you dispose of plastics and other garbage in the cans provided. If these facilities are laughable, speak with the local authority responsible and lodge a plaint. Take your garbage back home with you if there are no containers on the beach. Pick up any plastic litter you may see on the beach or in rock pools in the surrounding area in which you are sitting or walking. Encourage kids to do similarly.
In the street never throw plastic or other trash out of the jeepney or drop it on the roadway or in the drain or in our plazas. Set an example to others and encourage them to help.
My last word on plastics is that they are not themselves a problem. They are useful and popular materials which can be produced with pretty little damage to the environment. The problem is the disproportionate use of plastics in uncommon uses together with sloppy discarding.
Wherever one turns his/her eyes, he/she sees prismatic plastics of variegated brands and materiel used. Anyway, they are all plastic and not pompons. Accordingly, while crossing on the Forbes Bridge or Jalandoni Bridge or any Iloilo bridge, we can right away mouths off that those floating drecks are plastics, which have been used in almost everything, and they are not typic components of the water.
I myself am a “plastic” person, too, I drink coffee with a plastic cup, I eat with a plastic plate and sometimes with a plastic spoon and fork, and most of my utensils at home are made of plastics.
Anywise, what are plastics? Well, they are polymers which are just very long chains of atoms which repeat over and over again. By the way, that’s the chemist’s thing when it comes to its knotty brown study, not ours.
Well, the development of plastics according to my review has come from the use of natural materials (e.g., bubble gum, shellac varnish) to the use of artificially modified innate materials (e.g., natural rubber, nitrocellulose, collagen) and finally to wholly synthetic molecules [e.g., epoxy, poly (vinyl chloride), polyethylene].
Ever since the development of plastics earlier this blue moon, they have become trendy stuff used in a wide array of ways. These days, plastics are used to make, or wrap around, many of the items we buy or use. We use plastics when we shop and they are complimentary. Actually, their cost has been toted up to the cost of what we buy. Our malls and grocerterias are staking us to plastic bags. Perhaps, this period has to be called Plastic Age.
The botheration comes when we no longer want these items and how we dispose of them, mainly the off the cuff plastic material used in wrapping or packaging. Plastics are used because they are easy and cheap to make and they can last a long time. Sorry to say, these same useful qualities can make plastic a huge pollution problem. The cheapness means plastic gets discarded with no trouble and its long life means it survives in the environment for long periods where it can do great damage. Because plastic does not go moldy, and requires high energy ultra-violet light to break down, the amount of plastic waste in our seas is bit by bit increasing.
The plastic waste found on beaches near our city tends to start off from use on land, such as packaging material used to wrap around other goods. On in the sticks provincial beaches the rubbish tends to have come from ships, such as fishing gears used in the fishing business. This plastic can affect marine wildlife in two key ways: by enmeshing living things and by being scoffed.
The plastic pollution is serious and requires extra pondering. Instantaneous action is essential more than how we are busy studying grammar or mathematics or fashion.
Cutback of the quantity of plastic used in packaging which is by and large immediately thrown away must be done. Re-use of plastics should be pushed (by businessmen). Plastic wrapping and bags should carry a warning label stating the dangers of plastic pollution, and shoppers should be encouraged to use their own bags, or recycled paper bags.
When you go to concourses in the city proper or in La Paz or Mandurriao, you must buy products with less plastic packaging and tell store persons why you are doing so. You should use your own bags or recycled paper bags though you wouldn’t look rakish. You must support recycling schemes and promote support for one in your local area.
Malls which are really concerned with this problem must grubstake the environment to eco-friendly bags without any conditions like buying this and that—which is specious! Of course, they are robber barons, no wonder!
Fishermen throughout this conurbation and province should not throw away waste line, net, or plastic waste, this causes vast suffering and many deaths. Practice and promote correct disposal of plastics in your home and at the beach. Always remember that garbage spawns garbage. Never dispose of plastics in the sewage system.
At the beach you dispose of plastics and other garbage in the cans provided. If these facilities are laughable, speak with the local authority responsible and lodge a plaint. Take your garbage back home with you if there are no containers on the beach. Pick up any plastic litter you may see on the beach or in rock pools in the surrounding area in which you are sitting or walking. Encourage kids to do similarly.
In the street never throw plastic or other trash out of the jeepney or drop it on the roadway or in the drain or in our plazas. Set an example to others and encourage them to help.
My last word on plastics is that they are not themselves a problem. They are useful and popular materials which can be produced with pretty little damage to the environment. The problem is the disproportionate use of plastics in uncommon uses together with sloppy discarding.
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