Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Catapult


I’m an addict,
never could see
when my urges take over
and beat up one of my three
little selves,

High-strung with life’s speedy
Joyrides and
Miscalculations I ask question after question
To your ire
and to my needy
addiction, feeding
And here I thought I was done with
Pointless questioning

Oh how I lose myself too much in the puddle,
and I hate that my spouse and
child settle for my watered-down self on most days.

I miss aimlessness
And hours of un-thinking
And just living.

And so on a catapult I prop my feet
ready to be swung away
to only my Creator knows where –
should be an alright addiction,
free and sweet,
I’ll see you in mid-air.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Amazing!

Amazing!

As I spent time with the Lord just now reading His word, I’ve come to realize something amazing: Jesus remembered to pray for me, and for all of us who believe in Him, even before He died. Even before He gave Himself up to be crucified. Don’t believe it?

In John 17, Jesus prayed for Himself as He knew the time of His crucifixion was nearing. He asked God the Father to glorify Him that He also may glorify the Father. And then right after that, He goes on to pray for His disciples then, as He would leave them behind for the world to persecute and experience all kinds of tribulation. John 17:14-19 says, as Jesus went on to pray for His disciples:

“I have given them your word and the world has hated them, for they are not of the world any more than I am of the world. My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the evil one. They are not of the world, even as I am not of it. Sanctify them, by the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the world. For them I sanctify myself, that they too may be truly sanctified.”

...in the earlier verses, John 17:10-11, He says this, still praying for His disciples:

“All I have is yours, and all you have is mine. And glory has come to me through them. I will remain in the world no longer, but they are still in the world, and I am coming to you. Holy Father, protect them by the power of Your name—the name you gave me—so that they may be one as we are one.”

As I was reading that I thought, wow, what a true friend Jesus was to them. He prayed for His 12 disciples! In the earlier passages He even remembered Judas, who at that point in time was just about to betray Jesus by giving Him up to the soldiers to make the arrest and bring Him to trial. And aren’t we taught that when we pray for someone, we really allow God to work in that person’s life? It’s amazing what happens when God’s people pray for each other, and yet Jesus prayed for his friends, His disciples! Imagine the blessing they would receive, and boy did they receive blessing – the Holy Spirit to begin with, to protect them from the evil one, plus anointing to heal the sick, to speak in tongues.

And as if that wasn’t enough reassurance, John 17:20-21 goes on to show the rest of Jesus’ prayer – this is really the point I’m driving at: He prayed for you and me:

“My prayer is not for them alone. I also pray for those who will believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world will believe you have sent me...”

And then verse 24 goes, “Father, I want those you have given me to be with me where I am, to see my glory, the glory you have given me because you loved me before the creation of the world.”

You may ask why this is important to me, why I should blog about it. I guess because this makes even more real to me the concept of HOPE, more so, hoping in the Lord. I now know more than ever that to hope in the Lord for better days is never in vain, because Jesus Himself already thought of me, even prayed for me, right before He died on the cross for me and my sins. He prayed for you, and all else who believe His word to be true, and accepted Him as his Lord and Savior. So whenever we pray and ask in His name, we know it shall never be in vain. We know we will receive His blessing, at His perfect time. Because He prayed for us first! He prayed for all of us even before we started praying for our own concerns. Think about it. Jesus loves us that much. I say this because I know how hard it is for some to spend time in earnest prayer, what with the busy lives we all lead – I myself find it hard to give God quality time in prayer. But now knowing that Jesus prayed for me brings me joy and encouragement to pray for myself and others. It’s no phony realization whatsoever – you can ask me, even here, to pray for you. What is it in your life do you want me to pray for? Post a comment and I will pray for you.

Hope in the Lord. It will never be too old a truth. And never get tired of praying. Just my two cents.

Saturday, May 02, 2009

It's a mistaken world

always trying to turn you into someone else
or trying to be something else
when it was just fine otherwise
always on its feet
shuffling the Cha-cha
when the tempo's
set for Tango

and a funny one, too
with enough jokes and gags, wrong turns and crashes
to get you laughing lightyears
though ironically
and if you're lucky
or charmed or blessed
however you call it
you can make it through
a tad smarter,
a genius even,
that's affably affected
by years of mistakes
mistaking you
for a big mistake.

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Layoff Psychology – Or At Least How It Happened To Me


It wasn’t the perfect job, but when I got a callback from the online-selling promotional products company back in October 2007 hiring me to be their newest copywriter, I thought just that. Not that my copy editing job prior was that bad—in fact it’s still one of the companies that I’m proud to have been associated with to this day—it just that, well, I felt underpaid and undermined. Thus my eagerness to get into this new company that promised an exciting new work environment, and a host of benefits you can’t find elsewhere!

November 1st was my starting date, basically because the company wanted me to begin right away. Now I’ve never been a superstitious person, though I’m occasionally curious of eerie events, but now when I look back I sometimes find myself thinking, maybe I shouldn’t have agreed to start then.

Working there wasn’t quite as I imagined it would be, but it was okay. I was treated decently, I gave them what I was asked of—copy for all new merchandise to be uploaded in company website’s online catalogue, pretty much. The team I got assigned to wasn’t necessarily my idea of friends, but then I’ve always been complimented to have the talent of making friends anywhere. What I looked forward to everyday were the coffee breaks and lunch hour, where I would get together with two of my colleagues whom I’ve become friends with during my previous employment – actually we resigned from there at around the same time, too, and got jobs in this new company. To that end I guess it was almost the perfect job, working with friends.

Three months into the job, and things started getting shaky. The company was US-owned, and with the economical recession then in the advent of burgeoning into the gaping hole it is today, the execs were all on their toes, panicky. Soon talk of “cutting costs,” “making ends meet,” and eventually, “company-wide layoff” became everyone’s daily gossip.

It was funny, because I didn’t feel that much affected – not that I had zero fears of getting fired, after all I was one of the newest ones onboard – but somehow, for some weird reason, I was indifferent about the whole thing. Sure, I engaged in talk of so-where-do-we-go-next-if-ever among close friends, but not every two seconds like the others.

A week passed, and indeed, the layoff happened. First two, then four, sometimes even almost a dozen people at a time, one department after another. Accounting. Sales. Art. Marketing. Still not feeling the tension.

Then that evening came. I got to work pleased that traffic wasn’t half-bad when it was in fact Friday night, ergo congested EDSA night. I ran into my supervisor on my way up the building, talking in a hushed tone with two of my other colleagues. I thought nothing of it and went straight to the elevators.

Mindless hours later and into my coffee/cigarette break, I went out and there’s my supervisor again, this time she told me, “Joan, they’re asking me to pick three people.”
I honestly thought my heart sank, but it didn’t, although I pretended to be devastated. It was really funny, this feeling of distance from all the panic. She went on about assessing performance, tenure and all that, but I could really care less, I thought then. Maybe it was an instant defense mechanism? I didn’t know. But I remember just thinking then, if it’s going to happen to me, then let it. I’ll manage. Or maybe, I was really convinced at the back of my head that I was going to stay. I mean, I did a kickass job at copywriting, why would they want to kick me out?

Conference call, everyone in the team was in the room. The VP from offshore rambled on and on from the loudspeaker about how she didn’t see this whole thing coming, how she thought each one of us was valuable and indispensable. It was all white noise to me. And then finally, the names. Three people.

She said my name last.

I swear, I did not expect to be the least bit stirred. But I was actually floored to the hilt! I realized then that the reason why I was indifferent all the while was because I really did not expect to get fired, and I really did not want to be, no matter the countless times I’ve said the words “there are so many other jobs out there, anyway.” And just about then, when everyone was consoling me, even telling me the company made a bad call kicking me out and that I deserved to stay, the reality of being “jobless” started to hit me like one thick hardbound thumping on my head after another. I thought about my baby girl just about to turn one that year, my mom and my two brothers still studying who depended on me, especially since my dad had just died two months prior. My husband had a decent job, sure, but his salary alone would not be enough.

I kept cool going through the paperwork that very same day. No more coming to work Monday, they said, but I’ll be paid for a whole month on top of my last paycheck.

It wouldn’t be until two months after that I’d find another job. Not the same benefits, what with all other companies tightening belts as well I guess, but decent enough pay, not to mention more challenging. But the days that followed the layoff were grueling, I must admit. It wasn’t easy to find a new job with the description and salary you want, and start from scratch again when you’ve just settled in. I found myself busying with other things besides applications, like my mother’s small business that sadly didn’t do well, and taking a work-from-home stint that ended up not so well either. I had to brave myself to face everyday knowing I did not have the security I used to have, reassure myself that I was worth a company’s trust and investment. And I had to learn to fully, even blindly, trust God to take care of things for me.

I turned out okay, and it’s been over a year. I’ve put the experience behind me, and I look back to it with a smile now and a lot of gratitude – I still have that same job and it paid the bills. Getting laid off and being able to go through it and survive has permanently reshaped my character, I must say. I’ve learned to adapt better, to hold on, to value what I have. It taught me to be prepared for any jab and that sometimes it can be an uppercut from nowhere, and how to cope when it does hit hard on the nose. And now that recession continues to happen and affect many others – would you believe, my husband got laid off just last week! – I know better than to care less and rather, prepare for the worst. Prayer has never failed me too, I learned, and so I continue to trust Him and let Him be God. Yes, never mind if my next job come another year or so signs me up to start November 1st again.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Here's to World Domination, one shirt at a time!


Musselli, my bandmate, former blockmate, thesis mate, kainuman and soul brotha has finally launched his own T-shirt store, ThinkInk Design Clothing (a couple of designs are mine, and sheesh i owe him a dozen more)! A dream come true -- well at least one of his/our dreams come true, conquering the world one rockin' T-shirt at a time -- but the best is yet to come! Soon we shall dominate all you earthlings and remotely have control even over your morning rituals, mwahahahahaha!

Visit http://thinkink.multiply.com/ and add as your contact -- you can get the store's profile from there, what it's all about and how it ROCKS. You can order, even personalize a shirt for yourself for that comfort and gratifying feeling of having absolutely NO ONE else wearing the exact shirt you have on. Be cool for once and buy a shirt from ThinkInk, OK?! :D