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[Benguet] ► Former OFW Uplifts Cordillera Farmers Into Exporters

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'GDME Fruits and Vegetables' leads PH highland farmers to global market.

✈ The province of Benguet has been making a mark in the international market as a sourcing hub for premium agricultural products, such as fruits, vegetables, coffee, and other highland crops.

✈ With more than half of its residents or 100,000 farmers toiling on more than 30,000-hectare farms scattered in vegetable-producing towns, Benguet is living up to its moniker as the “Salad Bowl of the Philippines.”


[Benguet Province, Cordillera Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
MANILA FAME
| 1 | [KIBUNGAN] ► MARICEL HERNAEZ, OWNER OF GDME FRUITS AND VEGETABLES TRADING
The province of Benguet has been making a mark in the international market as a sourcing hub for premium agricultural products, such as fruits, vegetables, coffee, and other highland crops.

With more than half of its residents or 100,000 farmers toiling on more than 30,000-hectare farms scattered in vegetable-producing towns, Benguet is living up to its moniker as the “Salad Bowl of the Philippines.”

But the farmers from the province, including most areas in the Cordillera, has yet to realize their full market potential in the lucrative export industry. This difficulty contributes to the economic disadvantage of Cordilleran farmers as the region’s agriculture sector records the least contribution to their economy, despite employing 46 percent of the labor force or 348,000 of its total 766,000 abled bodies.

“The lack of drive from our farmers to export much of it has got to do with their local and limited mindset,” said Maricel Hernaez. “Many of our farmers in the Cordillera are producing crops with the idea of harvesting it only either for their own household consumption or for selling at the local vegetable trading post.”
► Taking Philippine fruits and vegetables from highlands to overseas
A former overseas filipino worker (OFW), Hernaez came back to the Philippines with a dream: to abolish the domestic-centric mindset of the Cordillera farmers and help them penetrate the international market.

KIBUNGAN, BENGUET
| 2 | [KIBUNGAN] ► OVERLOOKING A CARROT AND ROMAINE FIELDS IN ONE OF THE HIGHLAND VEGETABLE TERRACES OF MARIA'S FARM, SITUATED ON OVER 2,000 ABOVE SEA LEVEL IN THE TOWN OF KIBUNGAN.
Born and raised in a farming family in Cordillera, her life-mission sprung during her service as a domestic helper for five years in Singapore, where she has keenly followed the sky-rocketing prices and huge demand for highland fruits and vegetables.

“Grabe ang taas ng presyo ng gulay sa Singapore, for example nalang ‘yung isang malaking patatas minsan umaabot ng two dollars at pati ‘yung cabbage nasa mahigit one dollar ang 250 grams. Dito sa Pilipinas, nasa limang piso lang ang patatas na malalaki at yung cabbage, isang kilo na katumbas ng one dollar mo,” she shared. “Kung produkto lang naman ang paguusapan, competitive ang galing sa Pilipinas pagdating sa laki at kalidad.”

In her last working year as a domestic helper, Hernaez met up with the Philippine Trade and Investment Centre (PTIC) in Singapore to seek guidance on her plan to become a vegetable and fruit exporter. In March 2015, she came back to the Philippines and immediately established her company, GDME Fruits and Vegetables Trading, naming it after her parents: Gilbert Domerez (father) and Mercy Espara (mother).

“My parents who made a living through farming have inspired me to pursue this agenda,” she elated. “They are the foundation of my goal to nurture the country’s agri-export market by tapping the promising farming communities in Cordillera.”
► A Tall Order
Having no land to call her own, Hernaez has been operating GDME Fruits and Vegetable Trading for the past two years as its sole networking, monitoring, and marketing officer for grassroots farmers across the Cordillera region.

KIBUNGAN, BENGUET
| 3 | [KIBUNGAN] ► PATCHES OF SUGARLOAF CABBAGES AT MARI'S FARM
KIBUNGAN, BENGUET
| 4 | [KIBUNGAN] ► FRESH, NEWLY UPROOTED POTATOES
In her networking initiatives with the local farmers, it has always been a challenge for her to explain, innovate, and change some of their farming methods and even their products to suit the demand of the global market.

“Going one by one with the farmers, I always explain that we have the tools to compete with other countries. We are situated at a higher elevation with the perfect soil and climate. Most importantly, our farmers are hard-working,” she stressed. “But, I tell them we should comply with food standards and certifications. I also encourage them to plant the crops that are in-demand because if we plant crops that no one wants to buy then it will just go to waste.”

Without a formal academic background in agriculture, she has always been looking for fresh ideas and new ways on how to improve her technical know-how on the export industry by attending seminars and partnering with government agencies, such as the Department of Agriculture (DA) and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

“I never missed opportunities where I can learn new things. Last May, I joined IFEX Philippines, together with our farmers, where we encountered people who are willing to help us grow,” Hernaez said. “We were also glad to meet foreign buyers that are really interested in our fruits and vegetable products.”

MANILA FAME
| 5 | [KIBUNGAN] ► HERNAEZ POINTS TO ONE OF THE FIELDS OF MARIA'S FARM WHERE A VARIETY OF CROPS ARE PLANTED ALL YEAR ROUND. SUCH AS POTATOES, CABBAGES, CARROTS, ROMAINE, AND RADISH.
For instance, in our cabbages, we are cultivating the scorpio F1 hybrid and sugarloaf varieties. When fully grown, these varieties can reach an average net weight of 2 kilograms each, while your regular lowland cabbage varieties only reach 1 kilograms each. Our is twice the size,” she said.

Her partner farmers are also cultivating strawberry, lemon, parsley, cilantro, kale, mint, basil, alfalfa, arugula, red radish, young corn, fennel leaves, and okra.

Fresh, newly uprooted potatoes.They also have some of the iconic Cordillera processed goods, such as sweet and sour chili sauce, strawberry jam, peanut butter, and kimchi.

Hernaez said an exporting farmer will be able to earn at least 15 pesos more per kilo of their harvest. She added: “Some might even go double the price when depending on their reception on our quality and demand.”

“With these many products, we are targeting the demand in Singapore and other nearby ASEAN countries, as well as those in the Middle East,” she added. “We are also open to offers from other buyers across the globe that can be beneficial to the livelihood of our farmers.”
► Cordillera farmers moving forward
While the high elevation augments the harvest, it also makes highland fruits and vegetables prone to risks of climate change, making its price highly volatile.

“We know that there is a demand for our agricultural products, but the next step is how we can corner that demand? With our talks with people that we met on IFEX Philippines, we should be able to do it if we set our fruits and vegetables at stable prices and produce them at a sustainable rate. It’s a challenge for us here in the highland considering the ever-changing weather conditions,” said Hernaez.

Faced with this predicament, Hernaez is trying to hit two birds with one stone in creating a viable year-round crop rotation system: working on identifying the in-demand varieties crops that are a tolerant to extreme weather and are resistant to pests and diseases.

“With this method, we also can minimize the use of synthetic chemicals and inputs, or apply good farming practices which involve the balanced application of organic and chemical inputs,” she explained.

The former OFW also continues to widen her network to increase their agriculture supply and product selection, allowing small-scale farming communities to accommodate bulk orders from foreign buyers.

KIBUNGAN, BENGUET
| 6 | [KIBUNGAN] ► FIFTY-NINE-YEAR OLD FARMER, DOLORES IGME, SHOS THEIR JUMBO-SIZED WINTER MELON OR ASH GOURD. IGME IS ONE OF THE FARMERS SUPPORTED UNDER THE EXPORT INITIATIVE OF GDME FRUITS AND VEGETABLE TRADING.
At the same time, she is helping Cordillera farmers secure the Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) certification—an accreditation promoted by the ASEAN community and is unanimously recognized in the international market.

Out of the 78 GAP-certified farms in the Philippines, only 4 farms are from Cordillera.

According to the Department of Agriculture - Bureau of Agriculture and Fisheries Standards (DA-BAFS), GAP Certification ensures that a farm is not only in the quality of his crops, but in all aspects of farming.

The GAP standard requires a scrutiny of the history of the farm site and its prior use; the type of soil, and its compatibility with crops and seed sources; the judicious use of pesticides and fertilizers, whether chemical or organic; the sources of potable water for irrigation and washing of crops; the harvest and post-handling procedures; the health and hygiene of the farmer and handlers, and other factors.

“Gusto kong makita sa mga farmers if they can eat their products raw and fresh, ‘yun na kasi uso din because there are a lot of vegetarians. ‘Yung iba kasi they have a lot of pesticide to the point na hindi na pwede makain kasi maamoy or matapang yung chemicals. At least with GAP [certification], we can be one stop closer to this goal,” she said.

Aside from GAP certifications, GDME Fruits and Vegetable Trading is also working to secure Halal certifications for the community farmers as they are targeting the demand for halal fruits and vegetables in the Middle East, particularly in Dubai and U.A.E.

Though the Philippine National Standards for Halal (PNS 2067: 2008), Halal products are at par with international standards to enhance the competitiveness of local industries, and to ensure product quality and safety for the consumers.

“GDME Fruits and Vegetable Trading is committed to prime Cordilleran farmers to become export-ready in the global market so that they would grow together with the company and the booming Philippine food industry,” she said.

If you are interested on premium fruits and vegetables from the Cordillera, please contact Ms. Maricel Hernaez (Owner of GDME Fruits and Vegetable Trading) at 0950-525-1170 or e-mail her at gdmetrading@gmail.com. | end |



Map Showing the Location of Benguet Province

MAP OF BENGUET
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "People." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition, and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try or see the properties or places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time so it's not my responsibility to update all the information on this blog because once published, I already consider it an archive and I won't update my narratives because I want them to become my references of what have happened in the past. I'm very particular of the dates because I want my amazing readers to understand that I am writing stories based on my perspective and insights on the day of my visit. You can see dates almost everywhere on this blog. Exempted from this rule are my travel guide posts that need to be updated.

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[Sto Domingo] ► Family Motorbike Ride to the East (Lao-ingen)

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Getting closer, mountains spoke to my heart. They didn't need words to communicate. Everything was non-verbal. It was a connection of the human soul and nature that oftentimes, leave you speechless.

► The east hosts mountains not well-visited by Ilocanos—except maybe for the mountainside villagers.

► With four motorbikes and eight souls, it was a family convoy.


[Santo Domingo, Ilocos Sur Province, Ilocos Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
▼ COVER PHOTO▼ FACEBOOK▼ TWITTER▼ YOUTUBE
STO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR




This was a day I would like to consider precious. It was a golden opportunity to dive the depth of our family relationship. We know ourselves as much as we know our family. With my two brothers, my two uncles, my aunt, two cousins and our guide who happened to be my aunt's good old friend, we left our home in ▼ #VIGAN
and rode our motorbikes all the way to the municipality of Santo Domingo, Ilocos Sur.

► Mom's Rituals: She Won't Let Her Boys Go...

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► THIS IS MY FAMILY: TWO BROTHERS, TWO COUSINS, AND MY AUNT (MOM'S YOUNGEST SISTER).

LAO-INGEN, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR

My subheading has spoken—my mom won't let us go. No, not the other members of the family but her three boys—that would be me and my two brothers. Everytime her three handsome boys go out for an adventure with their motorbikes, she would start the nag and she'd not let us leave the house. Well, we know her reason.

My mom's afraid something might happen. However, this has been a ritual everytime and we know we'd undergo this stage before we leave home. We've been used to it. We no longer complain and it's been a part of the process for us. We love our mom and we know her pre-adventure acts are a display of love for us. We make her feel calm by assuring we'll be alright.

After the nagging of love we consider as Stage 1, my mom would perform her role on Stage 2. She would double check our helmet if we brought it with us. She would remind us to keep our money deep in our pocket so that we'd have something to use during emergency. She'd refill an empty bottle of water for our journey and makes it sure she'd be along the road as she watches us disappear from her sight. That's my mom and we understand her motherly rituals.

► Vigan-Santo Domingo Ride

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► COUNTRY ROAD, TAKE ME HOME... TO THE PLACE... I BELONG.

LAO-INGEN, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR

With four motorbikes and eight souls, it was a family convoy. We started the ride at 09:00 AM without breakfast but with faith. There'd be ▼ TREKKING
. We'd climb a ▼ MOUNTAIN
. This family may have gone wrong. We knew we weren't physically prepared—my fault. It was an ineffective coordination on my part. We rushed knowing that the guide was already waiting for us that day. With a whoosh, no taking a bath, no time for contemplation, we took a pill of courage and we pushed the adventure. 09:00 AM was already late. The guide may have been waiting since 07:00 AM. I felt sorry.

We reached the municipality of Santo Domingo after around thirty minutes. We had no food prepared so we searched for a carinderia to buy food for our lunch. There were several carinderias at the commercial space of the Santo Domingo coliseum so it saved us. I know myself. It would be hard for me to climb a mountain without breakfast so I purchased a supply of glucose.

I informed our guide about our arrival and after a while, she came to the place where we stopped. The guide was ate Mary Gane Padron. We simply call her "Gane" by the way. She's my aunt's old friend. When they were still in high school, I used to see her in our family house together with some of their friends in their circle.

Ate Gane was very ready. She brought her own motorbike—the fifth unit in our convoy. She had a toolbox attached to her motorcycle. She was fit and looked vibrant. Her spirit of adventure was contagious.

We took the road that led us to the mountainsides of Santo Domingo. This was fun. It was fun. I never did this before. I've only explored the poblacion and the coastline of the town so exploring its wilderness was an opportunity for me that I didn't want to let go. In Ilocos Sur, Santo Domingo is never known (or less known at least) for its mountains. Most Ilocanos would never associate Santo Domingo with mountains so I was thrilled to see the other face of the town.

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► WHEN THE GRASS IS GREEN AND THE SKY IS BLUE, MY LOVE WOULD BE RED TO PAINT A RAINBOW OF HOPE IN YOU.

Lao-ingen, Sto Domingo, Ilocos Sur

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► WHEN THERE'S A ROAD, THERE'S A DESTINATION.

Lao-ingen, Sto Domingo, Ilocos Sur

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► THE ILOCOS MOUNTAIN RANGE OVERLOOKED WITH MYSTICISM AND SILENCE.

LAO-INGEN, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► CITIES ARE GREAT; BUT MOUNTAINS ARE GREATER.

LAO-INGEN, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR


It was getting late that weekend yet it was too early to tell if we could survive the adventure. However, I was positive that we would.

We convoyed from the town center eastward. In Ilocos Sur, both the east and the west have distinct faces. The east hosts mountains not well-visited by Ilocanos—except maybe for the mountainside villagers. The west is more popular because it's more accessible. In Santo Domingo, the same is a ▼ BEACH DESTINATION
[Santo Domingo] ► Ilocos Sur: Sunset at Puerto Beach

The afternoon delight was in this beach. Party goers can just sit back and relax or simply dip your feet in the gentle cool waters of the beach.

PUERTO BEACH, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR
.

Moving on, we passed by some barangays I used to visit for my thesis writing back in college as well as for my fieldwork as a campus journalist of the University of Northern Philippines. I remember the name of places like Nalasin, Quinarayan, and Santo Tomas.

However, I knew Binongan even before my college-related visits because I also used to join my mom in her church ministry as she shared the Words of God to the villagers of Binongan—the barrio before Lao-ingen. I still remember the people who sold a sack of charcoal to us and I even witnessed for myself how they made it.

The road was good and there were some improvements along the way. Somewhere in, or near, Binongan was a fork. We turned left for Lao-ingen and followed the road that ran alongside with the creek. The road at the right goes all the way to Nagbettedan. Both Lao-ingen and Nagbettedan are barangays located at the foot of the Ilocos Mountain Range and the road that split into two directions would end into them.

As we drove farther from the poblacion of the town, the mountains got nearer (and bigger). From the highway, they're a silent roadside display from afar and most of the time, their view are obstructed by roadside structures. Getting closer, mountains spoke to my heart. They didn't need words to communicate. Everything was non-verbal. It was a connection of the human soul and nature that oftentimes, leave you speechless.

► Reaching the Last Sitio of Brgy Lao-Ingen

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► THE END OF EVERY JOURNEY IS THE START OF ANOTHER JOURNEY. WE JUST REACHED OUR BASE.

LAO-INGEN, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR

As our convoy reached the last village, the road reached its last segment too. The last segment of the pavement was laid over a piece of land where the populace dwells. Big smile from unfamiliar and random people would erase the stranger in us. They looked at us passionately as if we were important visitors. The small village knew who were the outsiders. I knew that they knew we were.

Beyond the pavement were open green spaces and a river that twirled to the valley. We were very near the mountains. Farther was a nature reserve devoid of human settlement and traditional comfort.

"Come in.", said by an unfamiliar face. Our guide Gane contacted her relatives in this village to oversee our motorbikes. We entered a property fenced with barbwires. Inside it was a mango tree and we put our motorbikes under it.

[SANTO DOMINGO] ► MY TWO COUSINS HAPPILY REACHED THE LAST SITIO OF LAO-INGEN.

LAO-INGEN, SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR

Where are we going next? Will this family be united as one? Shall we survive the adventure waiting for us? Shall we quit as one or shall we divide the group and leave the quitters? The mountain was waving. We were nine in the group. Only three of us have previous mountain trekking experience at least once. The rest, neophytes. I hoped for an easy trail but how would I know? No turning back. Lord, take care of my family.

By the way, we're not gonna summit a mountain but we need trekking. Where are we going? What's our purpose? | To be continued... |

×

BLOGSERYE 005

UNMASKING THE SECRETS OF THE EAST

Episode 02

Coming Next: We were nine in the group but only three have enough trekking experience to climb a mountain. Will the other six survive or quit? By the way, we're not gonna summit a mountain; but we need trekking. Where are we going? What's our purpose?

Episode 03

Soon!

Episode 04

Soon!

◄ Blogserye 004 | 005 | Blogserye 06 ► (Soon)

CLICK OR TAP GREEN BUTTON ABOVE TO FOLLOW THIS SERIES


Map Showing the Location of #SantoDomingo

MAP OF SANTO DOMINGO, ILOCOS SUR
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ I would like to thank Ms Mary Gane Padron forguiding us in this trip. She's from Santo Domingo, Ilocos Sur too.

✈ This post was filed under the category "Motorcycle Diaries." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition, and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try or see the properties or places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time so it's not my responsibility to update all the information on this blog because once published, I already consider it an archive and I won't update my narratives because I want them to become my references of what have happened in the past. I'm very particular of the dates because I want my amazing readers to understand that I am writing stories based on my perspective and insights on the day of my visit. You can see dates almost everywhere on this blog. Exempted from this rule are my travel guide posts that need to be updated.
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[GP] ► Food Traveling: Top-10 European Dishes for the Bravest

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People travel for different reasons. Some want to be in the mainstream and visit popular sights; some are fans of architecture so they travel the world to quench their thirst for contemplating beautiful buildings.

► Some want to get acquainted with new cultures or practice the languages.

► Some travel for food, that is, for new gastronomical experiences.

[Guest Posts]

However, almost always food and travel go hand in hand, and every tourist has food-tasting on their to-do list. Once you get tired of exploring a new city, it’s time to relax and refresh yourself in a local restaurant. If you think that European cuisine can’t surprise you, you are gravely mistaken. It can even shock you. Try the following dishes during your next trip around Europe. If you have a nerve. This list was prepared by the experts of the site bridesdating.com

Frog Legs (France)
This dainty comes in different degrees of doneness and variations. You can order slightly grilled or deeply roasted frog legs or frog legs pasta. They taste very much like chicken. French ate frog legs during the Hundreds’ Year War when there was a critical shortage of food. Today, many consider it a worthy food for traveling to France.

Schwarzsauer (Germany)
Schwarzsauer is a German blood soup made from pig blood, goose giblets, onions, and vinegar dressed with cinnamon, clove, pepper and other spices. It was a very popular dish during the post-war period due to its cheap ingredients. Today, the black soup is a kind of specialty in restaurants. In terms of energy value, it’s wonderful: one serving contains the daily portion of protein. Though, its strong “flavor” is far from pleasant.

Arroz de Cabidela (Portugal)
Arroz de Cabidela stands out from other blood dishes. Goose giblets are marinated in the vinegar and blood sauce. The Portuguese traditionally cook giblets-containing dishes they had to cook due to famine. Today, instead of giblets, rabbit or chicken meat is used.

Haggis (Scotland)
This traditional Scottish dish should definitely be on this list. Huggis is a meat pudding made from the minced sheep’s liver, heart and lungs mixed with oatmeal and beef meat, dressed with cayenne pepper, onions and salt. It’s served with mashed potatoes or turnips and oatmeal bread. The dish should be complemented with a glass of Scotch whiskey.

Creier Pane (Romania)
When in Romania, eat what the locals eat. For example, Creier Pane. This is a dish of crumbed brains. Pig or calf brains are crumbed and then fried. They are served with fried potatoes or vegetables.

Angulas Baby Eels (Spain)
The weak-nerved may feel unwell even looking at this dish. It’s a small snack that consists of bread, spread and the maggots of freshwater eel called angulas. This delicacy is also called “spaghetti with eyes”. It’s a quite popular dish not only in Spain, but also in England and France. Baby eels are stewed in olive oil with garlic and chili pepper. Angulas are not easy to catch, so you can be served a fake dish made from fish.

Hákarl (Iceland)
Hákarl is definitely for the bravest. This is the jerked shark meat. Raw shark meat is extremely toxic, as their blood contains urea and ammonium. But the locals know how to prepare it right. A disemboweled shark is buried in a pit and left there for several months. Then the bulk is unearthed and left to dry out for a few more months. If you manage to taste it (it smells really bad), it may turn out to be the food worth traveling for.

Casu Marzu (Italy, Sardinia)
In 2010, this “grubby cheese” was recognized as national heritage, although there is a ban on selling Casu Marzu in Italy. The cheese contains the maggots of cheese fly. Some gourmets consider it to be delicious. Casu marzu means rotten cheese. It’s made from the Sardinian cheese pecorino which is brought to putrefaction by the maggots. | end |

► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This is a paid guest post. For partnership with my blog, contact me at ed,aration@gmail.com.

✈ Graphics provided by client.

✈ Contents of this post does not reflect the thoughts, opinion, ideas and perspective of this blog and its author.

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[GP] ► How to become a person? Tips for students on personal development

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Being a person is an indispensable condition for success in the modern world. Because strong, interesting, creative and charismatic people can now succeed. How to develop these qualities in itself? How to become a person?

► Every day we communicate with family and friends, with classmates, comrades, teachers and with completely unfamiliar.

► The way we treat others around us, to a certain extent, depends on whether we are happy or not. The man also needs essential spiritual warmth, understanding, respect, love.

Unfortunately, for many reasons, not everyone has them. It often happens that people concerned and interested in affairs, problems of one person. And anyone is interested in the fate of other people, their affairs, nobody cares for them. And such students often call any writing essay service for assistance.

Throughout your life, you have the opportunity to grow and develop. You can do almost everything you want, be what you want. 

A few writing tips on how to continue your personal development. Take responsibility for your life and your growth, nobody else can do it for you. What you do today determines what will happen to you tomorrow.

  • Every day, find time to do something for your development.
  • Periodically attend some courses and do not miss classes. The new environment and information give impetus to change and better performance of writing paper.
  • Read books or listen to audio records on personal growth. Let it be at least one book per month.
  • Do not look back - you can control your actions only at this moment. Ask yourself what should I do right now?
  • Try to learn more about the experience of other people than to try to master everything on their own. This significantly reduces the time of training.
  • Solving problems will help you find patience and strengthen your mental ability, it is a useful intellectual exercise.
  • Analyze, rather than judge yourself and others for mistakes made. This will help avoid repeating them in the future.
  • Reward you every time you achieve something in your work on important goals.
  • Never say that something can not be done or will not be completed. Continue to look for ways to implement.
  • For any object of acquisition experience, whether reading, reviewing something, thinking or attending events, apply an approach: understand, develop an attitude and apply, if possible.
  • Eliminate your life things and habits that waste your time in vain.
  • Be open to everything that offers you life, and try to find it.
  • Determine what you really want to get and achieve it even with the writing help of somebody.
  • Find the like-minded people with whom you could openly discuss your ideas and problems.
  • Work for yourself as a resource for others. Think about what you can do for others. Everything you get corresponds to what you give.
  • Work on the balance of your life goals: business, family, finance, spiritual goals, entertainments.
  • Always keep your goals in focus when you do something new.
  • Do not be afraid of failure in the performance of any business. You will learn this lesson.
  • The most complex projects are at the same time the maximum opportunities for revealing your abilities.
  • Add pictures depicting your dreams and goals where you might see them quite often. They will serve as reminders and support, focusing on goals and visualizing them.
  • Find one or more imitation patterns. Analyze their lifestyle and behaviour. Do not copy them, but try to learn from their experience.

To become an individual, everyone needs to carefully peer in and in life. It is very important to educate the unity of words and deeds, not to forget that any situation is a kind of school of behaviour in life. | end |


► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This is a guest post. For partnership with my blog, including but not limited to brand ambassadorship, advertising, paid postings, and sponsorship, contact me at edmaration@gmail.com.

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[Quezon City] ► Cubao Tricycle Commuting & My First Month in QC

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I'm already staying in Cubao for more than one month now. This has already breached the record—my longest stay in Metro Manila was my 4-week hospital internship in various hospitals way back in college.

✈ If I could survive the challenging chaos of Manila, then I would be able to survive living anywhere else in the world, an ultimate dream for the outgoing Ilocano in me.

✈ It's a city exploration thing. I love the new things I'm learning here, significantly different from the place where I grew up.


[Quezon City, National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
Cubao, Quezon City

I'm considering leaving Cubao now but this area created some sparks. Now I'm interested to explore and discover more the heartbeat and lifeblood of Cubao. Indeed, there's no 'bad' destination. All you have to do is to unveil the beauty of it. It's a city exploration thing. I love the new things I'm learning here, significantly different from the place where I grew up.

As I left my millennial lifestyle, of being self-entitled, selfish, self-centered but "palamunin ng magulang", I'm now embracing independence, a concept my mom used to frown because she never wanted me go away from home (except for her dream of me to work abroad, it's ironic). But I'm growing older, still a millennial technically but I would like to consider living the old school independence. I think Manila is a nice training ground. If I could survive the challenging chaos of Manila, then I would be able to survive living anywhere else in the world, an ultimate dream for the outgoing Ilocano in me.

Cubao, Quezon City
[QUEZON CITY] ► TRICYCLE QUEUE AT MONTREAL STREET

I'm already staying in Cubao for more than one month now. This has already breached the record—my longest stay in Metro Manila was my 4-week hospital internship in various hospitals way back in college. It was required after all. After that, I've never attempted to stay longer. I only used Manila usually as transit point. I've already played a tourist role in Manila though but never did I stay here as a tourist for more than 3 days. I didn't like staying here for long. I got stressed and I hated the rush.

Anyway, I've already mastered how to commute using a trike here in Cubao. Basically, it' a 24-hour service—for the trike terminal near the Nepa Q-Mart at least. Each street that crosses the Aurora Boulevard to the Araneta Center has its own TODA (an organized group of trike drivers and operators). The trike queue is just located at the corner of every street with Aurora Blvd as the reference point. There is also another one at the corner of New York Avenue and Montreal Street.

Cubao, Quezon City
[QUEZON CITY] ► RIDING A TRIKE AT 03:30 AM ON MY WAY TO AURORA BOULEVARD (HAVE YOU WONDERED WHY I'M TRAVELING THIS EARLY?)
Cubao, Quezon City
[QUEZON CITY] ► TYPICAL INTERIOR OF A WHITE CUBAO TRIKE

Public utility trikes in Cubao are usually painted in white (these are the legit ones). There are also some painted with other colors like red, yellow or green but I think these are either colorum or from a smaller TODA.

If you want the more trustworthy ones, pick the white trikes because they're the established operators with franchise number posted on its body. However, I don't want to assure everyone that all trikes are trustworthy. I also do not want to ignore the fact that not all trike drivers of smaller TODAs and not trustworthy. In every rule, there's always an exception. Always apply your Manila hypervigilance with street smartness.

Cubao, Quezon City
[QUEZON CITY] ► A TYPICAL WHITE TRIKE OF CUBAO

Trike fare is 17 pesos if you picked a tricycle that's in queue. If you waved for a moving tricycle then it stops to pick you, then pay only 10 pesos. Schedule of fares are applicable within Cubao area. If you are already familiar in the every corner of Cubao, then tricycle is a cheap way to move around. Taxicabs may be convenient but expensive. Tricycles are cheaper and more fun. So far, these are my initial stories for Cubao. I won't promise I can do more because I've already said many promises to write but until now I never fulfilled it. However, I hope I could write more about Cubao because there are just so many stories I want to tell here. | end |



Map Showing the Location of Quezon City

MAP OF QUEZON CITY, METRO MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Travel Diaries." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition, and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try or see the properties or places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time so it's not my responsibility to update all the information on this blog because once published, I already consider it an archive and I won't update my narratives because I want them to become my references of what have happened in the past. I'm very particular of the dates because I want my amazing readers to understand that I am writing stories based on my perspective and insights on the day of my visit. You can see dates almost everywhere on this blog. Exempted from this rule are my travel guide posts that need to be updated.

LATEST STORIES COVERING QUEZON CITY | VIEW ALL AS ONE PAGE »

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[Vigan] ► List of (27) Tourist Spots/Attractions to See in the City

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Here's a list of some of the most popular destinations and places to see in Vigan.

✈ For those who have visited Vigan many times, I will reintroduce to you these places from the perspective of a homegrown Bigueño.

✈ For first-timers, you may check this out to help you plan a Vigan trip.

[Vigan, Ilocos Sur Province, Ilocos Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
VIGAN TOURIST SPOTS

Vigan—my hometown—is a UNESCO world heritage site and one of the New7Wonder Cities of the world. I created this list as an introduction to first-time visitors and a reintroduction to former visitors hoping you'll come back. Well, Vigan is just a small, compact city that is easy to explore. However, it's a different story when you want to feel its true culture and heritage—you have to stay longer if that's the case.


Here's a list of some of the most popular destinations and places to see in Vigan. Although there are tour services who could offer best deals for Vigan packages, allow me to help you plan your trip through this post. For those who have visited Vigan many times, I will reintroduce to you these places from the perspective of a homegrown Bigueño. I will also add some little narratives for each destination here to break the 'listicle' monotony and make it more personal and insightful. Please bear with that. 😄 Without too much ado, let's begin this list.
1. Bird Watching in Mindoro
Flocks of white egrets found home in Brgy Mindoro. They occupy the seasonal swamps. With the Ilocos mountain ranges at the background, they decorate the sky with colors of peace and purity.



This site may not be the most popular attraction in Vigan but let's view Vigan in a different perspective. Well, bird watching is not as popular as beach bumming, food tripping, or mountain hiking. However, there's a group of people who will surely love this—the bird watching enthusiasts. The area surrounding the northern part of the Vigan Airport in Brgy Mindoro are swamps. Well, don't expect too much bird variety. It's not a forest anyway. The swamps attract flocks of white egrets. Be cautious though, you may drive them away if you're a little careless or aggressive.
2. Vigan City Hall
Situated near the St Paul Metropolitan Cathedral, the capitol, and the plaza, the city hall lives its rightful purpose with both the Spanish colonial urban planning and Vigan architecture attached in its glory. Don't forget to witness the "paandar" of the Vigan City Hall every Christmas season. The city government has done yearly surprises from a rotating Christmas tree to a digital laser show with the façade as the backdrop. As I said, there is a "pasabog" every year.



As a homegrown Bigueño, I consider the city hall as an epitome of an old soul with a constant change. It has withstood the tests of time. Its façade has been modified since then and has been painted with blue, cream, and white to name a few. Its façade is annually decorated with new designs and artistic crafts but its old soul remains. It's still our city hall after all. Its heartbeat never changed, just the façade. It remains to safeguard our civil identities, our birth certificates, our tax profiles and sometime in the past, my Vigan photos have been posted in one of its bulletin boards.

I frequented this hall when I was still in college because I was once a city scholor (Iskolar ng Vigan) and I have to report here to get my allowance, to process my free tuition fee, and to perform my duties as a scholar. By the way, thanks Vigan for investing in me (I'm pretty sure some workers or elected officials from the city hall will be reading this). I will always be proud to be a hometown boy, doing something for Vigan on my own little way for her to be known, to be loved, and to be desired by more people like what my city made me feel when I was still a student of the University of Northern Philippines.

By the way, the very first winner of the Boklan (seeds) Arts competition of the Viva Vigan Festival of the Arts was the work of a great artist (I forgot his name) and me together with a fellow scholar (during my college days). Basically, we made history for being the first. Our artwork used to be displayed in a gallery in VCTC then it was transferred to the Vigan Convention Center. Right now, I don't know where they've put it. I hope it's still surviving because the last time I saw it, insects locally called "bukbok" have started consuming the seeds.
3. Baluarte Park and Zoo
Our former governor Chavit Singson is a fan of wild exotic animals. His collection grew. From lions to tigers, his 'wild' toys have expanded in great number and variety. His once private home turned into a public park and zoo now called Baluarte.



Baluarte features a multiple daily animal show/encounter, pony riding, event venues, souvenir shops, a golden tower, a butterfly garden, and rumors say a world-class waterpark with dolphin show is opening soon. I've witnessed the dramatic change of Baluarte and it continues to improve. Lately, a taxidermy museum/gallery features bizarre and jaw-dropping wild animal species all in one roof.
4. Mira Hills Park
Mira Hills (collective noun) is the highest point in Vigan poblacion. In a fast-growing tourism-fueled city, the natural landscape of Vigan has constantly modified or replaced by new developments. Thanks to Mira Hills, it's the only remaining ecopark within the central business district. It's the last one standing in harmonizing the relationship between concrete development and nature preservation.



Mira Hills is also known as the Filipino-Spanish Friendship Park. Its main feature is the American-era water reservoir that supplies the city and its neighboring towns. For your information, this towering reservoir could be seen from Iocos Sur National High School and fellow ISNHS students would be able to relate if I say that "we" students of ISNHS at least attempted to climb this tower, aren't we? Yup, we once dreamed to climb this but only a handful brave few made it to the top. Aside from that, ISNHS students would go here for 'dating' and fellow ISNHS alumni could relate to this.

Mira Hills is not popular for tourists but very popular for the locals. Thank God, there's a 'pasyalan' in Vigan devoid of tourists and I love it. Although some tourists have been visiting this place, majority of the people here would likely be the locals attending public events or group parties. Whenever I feel the need to go back to the old Vigan wherein I don't feel the need to deal with tourists, I go to Mira Hills because it makes me feel the old Vigan I used to know back when I was a child. There were some improvements done though but it didn't significantly change. It's still the old Mira Hills park I used to know. So for tourists planning to visit this place, there's nothing to do or see here. Do not enter. Just kidding!

Well, Mira Hills is a picnic park that features a swimming pool, an amphitheater for outdoor activities and the Buridek Museum. Entrance fee is 15pesos per head. Overnight camping or events are not allowed unless you secured a special permit from the management stationed near the entrance gate. Vigan LGU also transformed this park into a child-friendly park (hence the Buridek Museum, a museum for kids, and some child-friendly outdoor activities) as part of its endeavors to maintain Vigan as a child-friendly city. Vigan is a national awardee of "the most child-friendly city in the Philippines".
5. Abel-Weaving Tradition
Wear or use our abel products and be part of our long history of craftsmanship. Some barangays that still have abel weavers are Mindoro, San Pedro and Camangaan.



Walking down Calle Crisologo, the abel-weaving industry may seem so alive because of the numerous stores selling abel clothes. But as a Vigan resident-observer, the main players mostly keep it alive. The smaller weavers who have no capital to make it big have stopped weaving. It would be safe to say this because my great grandmother was an abel-weaver too. No one in the family inherited the skills because it's not profitable anymore especially when you do not have the capital and entrepreneurial skills to tap the tourist market. Some small weavers have stopped the long tradition in the coming of a better alternative income . Some opted to continue though because it's basically their primary source of income. The bigger players actually hire and train weavers for mass production. At least, abel-weaving is still breathing, never a dead industry.

If you want to witness an actual session, head to Cristy's loomweaving center in Brgy Camangaan.
6. Arzobispado Nueva Segovia
The Arzobispado Nueva Segovia is the only Spanish-era archbishop palace in the Philippines, probably in South East Asia too (I theorize) since the Philippines fell under the hands of the Spanish empire that spread Roman Catholicism. The rest of SEA is not predominantly Christian except for the later sovereign state of East Timor.



This old grand structure is simply called 'palacio' locally which literally means 'palace'. It's a very historical building overshadowed by the touristy Calle Crisologo. It has become the headquarter of Gen Emilio Aguinaldo (first Philippine president) in 1898 and of Col James Parker (of the invading American forces) in 1899.

The convent's rear has access to the Govantes River as an easy escape by sea back in the days when Vigan was still a busy shipping port. Now, Govantes River is no longer navigable by large ships. This old building also has a museum with a throne room featuring mainly religious relics.
7. Govantes River Boating Park
Local stakeholders are turning their eyes to Govantes River with the inception of the boating park. Touristy as it may seem but at least people are becoming more aware of the existence of Govantes River.



Once a busy shipping portal, Govantes River crept into oblivion. Some locals don't even know the river's name. Some may have heard about its name but they don't know where to exactly find it. With the great efforts the LGU is doing to bring back the glory of important sites and places that played a role in Vigan's rich and colorful historical past, Govantes River is back on track. Its water quality may have gone worse but efforts are now done to revive its old glory. Dredging, improvements and river clean-up have started. Bridges that goes over it were redesigned the way it was made in the past to accommodate navigating vessels below (the main bridge over Govantes Dike has an arched design). How I wish this river becomes a busy shipping portal again (wishful thinking).

Bashers, self-proclaimed tourism icons/experts, and some intellectuals may claim that the boating park is so touristy or just a Burnham Park copycat. However, for a homegrown local like me, I find this exciting. Touristy as it may seem but Govantes River is reintroducing itself to us, Ilocanos/Bigueños (not for the intellectual self-proclaimed non-Ilocano tourism advocates/experts). We see this river daily but like a stone beside a road, many seemed not to care because of its bad reputation of having a dirty water or the home for Hollywood (this refers to a squatter area in Vigan near the Govantes River). It's known for the wrong reason.

With the start of boating activities here, I have high hopes that more Vigan residents will start appreciating the river for the right reason and that more people will start checking-in on Facebook of their visit here. I hope and pray that our LGU will revive its glow and continue the improvements they have started.

Actually, Govantes River is the 'face' of Vigan. It's the first river you're gonna see when entering the Vigan city proper from the National Highway. I'm imagining those days when the Spaniards saw this river for the first time. Did they swim? After all, so many historical events happened here and this section is not enough to mention them all (worthy for a separate series of posts).
9. Sitio Food Park
From the boating park, here's a food park. Of course, Vigan is not only busy preserving its past, it's also catching up with the latest lifestyle trends of the modern world.



The Sitio Food Park is the first urban food park in Northern Luzon. How come it's a tourist spot? You might ask. Tourist spot is a broad concept. Like me, I consider the big malls of Metro Manila as tourist spots because we don't have that scale back home. In this case, it's a tourist spot for food park loving foodies. It's pricey on my personal point of view but if food parks are your passion, I know you won't care for the price as much as I don't care for the price of the boat that will lead me to a childhood island dream. After all, we spend our money for the things we are passionate about (aside from our basic needs), right?
10. Padre Burgos House
If you are familiar of the GOMBURZA squad, BUR stands for Padre Jose Burgos who was born in Vigan. Their role in the history of the Philippines was so poignant that they had to shed blood and sacrifice their lives for the freedom of the Philippines and of its future generation. That selfless act still triggers the nationalism in my nerves every time I think about it.



As a child, I used to see his house as a regular ancestral house in Vigan. But as I became more acquainted of the culture and rich heritage that me, my family, and my ancestors carried through the years, I started to appreciate the importance of every ancestral house in Vigan, not just the Burgos House. But what makes this house very special is the Ilocano heroism that occupies its intangible corners.

The house has undergone renovation. I've seen how it almost gave up. I've seen its worst years when the house faced threats of collapse due to poor maintenance. Thank God the National Museum released funding to renovate it. It's now part of a bigger museum complex called the National Museum Ilocos Regional Complex.

Burgos House features the old Ilocano way of life, the Vigan history in visuals and dioramas, the culture of the Itneg people (who traded with the Ilocanos), and an excellent picture of how the interior design of a typical Spanish-era house worked that time. You'll surely appreciate how the colonial elites lived and managed their big mansions.
11. Old Provincial Jail: Birthplace of Pres. Quirino
Elpidio Quirino is the first Ilocano to become the president of the Philippines, before Ferdinand Marcos and his cousin Fidel Ramos took into power. Pres Quirino was born in a jail because his father was the provincial warden then.



Although Quirino (called ápo Pidiong locally) was from the adjacent town of Caoayan, he was born in Vigan. The jail where he was born served its purpose to contain convicts until just recently when it was handed over to the National Museum to put up its Ilocos Regional Museum Complex. Basically, the Padre Burgos house is just beside the jail.

I was able to visit the old prison back when it was still housing felons so I was surprised to see how it transformed from a congested jail into a state-of-the-art museum with air-conditioned rooms, galleries, and educational visuals. The Quirino memorabilia were also transfered here. His bed, collection of 'baston' (cane), and sepia prints of the peak of his political career were here. Good job, National Museum! The memory of our great Ilocano president lives on!
12. RG Jar Factory
Jar-making in Vigan is an industry we inherited from Sangleys (mainly Hokkien-speaking Chinese traders who came from China's Fujian province) who settled in Vigan. These Chinese now consider themselves Ilocanos, culturally. They speak Ilocano too. They practice mixed Ilocano and Chinese customs.



Burnay (local name for Vigan-produced jars) is a cultural product inherited by Bigueños from their ancestors centuries ago. This industry is one of the reasons why Vigan is a UNESCO World Heritage City. The heritage that we have is not just about the old houses standing in the midst of the modern world, it encompasses too the mixture of different cultures that shaped our way of life.

Think about Georgetown (Malaysia), it's a city shaped by three harmonizing cultures—Indian, Malay, Chinese. In Vigan, it was also shaped by three cultural influences—Ilocano, Chinese, Hispanic—being Chinese as the common denominator of the two cities. Head to Brgy Pagburnayan and visit the RG Jar Factory, one of the few remaining jar factories in Vigan.
13. Syquia Mansion Museum
The greatness and hugeness of this mansion is a testament that some Vigan residents in the past were insanely rich. Their wealth is said to be linked with the Galleon trade.



Syquia Mansion dwarfs all the old mansions and ancestral houses near and around it. This was the house of the Syquia family (of Chinese ancestry). Alicia Syquia was married to Elpidio Quirino (ápo Pidiong) who later became the first Iocano president of the Philippines. During the presidency of ápo Pidiong, this mansion served as the Malacañang of the North.

The furniture, relics, and paintings inside the mansion gave me goosebumps when I learned about them because of the stories linked to it. One of the relics here was a gift of the emperor of China inherited from the Ming dynasty. I was told it was the highest gift an emperor could give to a person as a sign of respect and honor. I saw the 'gift' and it was carved with a dragon with 5 fingers (Chinese symbol of highest honor per Ming Dynasty standard). It was made of bronze.

For security reasons, I'm not going to give a hint on how that 'gift' looks like because it is literally priceless. The caretaker of the mansion who happened to be a descendant of the Syquia clan used to narrate all the unbelievable (yet true) stories covering every item inside the mansion but he decided to taper down the story-telling nowadays because the priceless items became the interest of thieves.

Up to date, the caretaker is also the tour guide (interestingly, I once handled him as my patient). For an entrance fee of 20 pesos (fee for maintenance since this is a private property), you could learn many interesting stories and awesome facts, though the most extreme, immensely awesome information are no longer disclosed to general tourists to stray thieves away.

If you want to learn more about the life of Pres Quirino, don't miss checking out this mansion. It actually tells more than the life story of our great Ilocano president, it also immortalizes the elite life of Spanish-era Ilocanos. The architecture, the interior design and layout of the house, and the historical items inside perfectly depict one of the best examples of the old-school "sosyal". Feel the old life while you learn the old ways in Syquia Mansion. It's so far the best ancestral house I've seen and it has set the bar high for me so I don't usually get impressed with ancestral houses, unless they satisfy the standard of my ego dictated by Syquia Mansion. It's like when I experienced the beaches of Palawan, my standard of a beautiful beach changed. Before I saw Palawan, I was very proud of the 'best' beach here in Ilocos Sur but when I experienced Palawan, that beach I used to adore gave me reaction like, "Ah, ok. Next!" The foregoing explains my standard for a beautiful ancestral house—full of meaningful history and stories that cover each item you see from the floor, to the walls, to the ceiling. The present-day street where the Syquia Mansion is located was named after Pres Quirino—the Quirino Boulevard. The boulevard connects Vigan to the heart of Caoayan, the hometown of the late president Quirino.
14. Crisologo Museum
From the likes of Pres Quirino, there were also other great Ilocano men in our history who rocked the local political scene. One of them is Floro Crisologo whose greatest contribution is the Social Security System law.



His assassination inside the Vigan Cathedral made headlines in national media, hence, his subsequent popularity those times. The bloody clothes he wore when he was assassinated were preserved. It was displayed inside his house, now Crisologo Museum. Do check it out when you visit this museum! Crisologo Museum mainly features the life and works of Floro Crisologo.
15. Hidden Garden and the Damili Villages (Ayúsan Sur and Bulála)
Hidden Garden is no way hiding. Aside from the variety of plants that can be seen here, it also features the terracotta industry of Vigan. The terracotta or earthenware products in Vigan are locally called "damili".



If the Mestizo District is usually referred as the Heritage Village, we also have the Damili Village, referring mainly to Brgy Bulála (but I insist to include Ayúsan Sur) where the Hidden Garden is located. This industry is so close to my heart because my maternal grandmother was an unsung 'damili' folk artist. Her creative damili products and designs are considered to be one of the highest in quality in Ayúsan Sur and were very marketable. I've witnessed how my grandmother worked overtime to meet the demands. I've seen the process of damili-making from the time she dug clays up to the time she 'baked' the clay. It was a tedious process and challenging that's why I consider my grandmother as a superwoman. My grandmother is a widow and she raised her eight (8) kids from her damili income, creating products based on clay.

Vigan's terracotta industry is still alive in the barangays of Ayúsan Sur and Bulála. My grandmother Genoveva del Castillo y Pilorin (one of the daughters of what was considered to be one of the most favorite barbers of Sangleys [Chinese traders] in post Spanish-era Vigan) developed her skills when she lived in Ayúsan Sur upon marrying my grandfather Ernesto del Castillo y Barcellano, son of a war veteran married to a merchant Andrea "Anding" Barcellano y Arce who became popular in her village because of her skills in befriending the Japanese imperial forces by giving them food while other people in the community were hiding. Our neighbors in Ayúsan Sur are still producing damili but their number has diminished. Some of them died already. Gen X and Millennials are seldom interested to continue the legacy. My mom and her younger sisters/brothers are all trained with the skill of damili-making by creating products such as masitera (plant pot), nardillo (clay-based floor tiles or bricks, the same bricks used to build the Vigan ancestral houses), lúsob (used in creating deep wells), ay-áyam (literally means 'toys' but in context, this refers to miniature cooking tools sold as souvenir items), and others. Sadly, no one in the family continued this business. It was not profitable for us after all and the clay mines have slowly been depleted. There's a specific clay used to create damili by the way.

The Hidden Garden is located in Bulála. Most nardillos and lúsob are produced in this barangay, the very core of the Damili Village. If you happened to walk on the sidewalks of Vigan, the red tiles were made in Bulála. In Hidden Garden, earthenwares are sold, aside from plants. Products include terracotta floor tiles, souvenir items, and potteries. Hidden Garden also features a restaurant that offers Ilocano dishes.
16. Govantes Dike
If you are looking for a place where you could both watch the sunrise and the sunset in Vigan, that would be the Govantes Dike. In Vigan, there are three bridges that connect Vigan to the National Highway but these bridges are locally called daya a dike (for the eastern bridge along Quirino Boulevard), tengnga a dike (for the middle/main bridge connecting Vigan-Bantay Road and Quezon Avenue) and laud a dike (for the western bridge along Rizal Street).



You could choose any of these bridges for your sunrise/sunset viewing but the best spot is at the middle bridge (the main bridge near the provincial capitol and Mart1). Just a hint, a growing number of Indian millennials do 'tambay' here in the afternoon until night. These Indians are medicine students of UNP. These are not the kids of Indians who have settled in Vigan. They are purely foreigners who came to Vigan to study Medicine and/or other allied health courses.

By the way, the dike is part of the Govantes River. The water may reflect the sky (see photo).
17. Plaza Salcedo
Plaza Salcedo was named after Juan de Salcedo, the founder of Vigan under the Spanish flag. Before Vigan became a popular tourist destination, this plaza had a bad reputation when night comes. However, the previous infamy was quickly replaced by raves and beautiful comments from visitors when Vigan's tourism industry started to boom. From then, we Bigueños also started to appreciate the role of this plaza in our history. It's now a public landmark all for the right reasons.



The Plaza Salcedo is strategically located in the middle of important edifices—the capitol, the city hall, the Arzobispado Nueva Segovia, the old convent (now replaced by MCDonald's and Plaza Maestro Commercial Complex), the old Rosary College (now Mart1), and the St Paul Metropolitan Cathedral.

This plaza used to have a fishpond and a footbridge that connects the two sides (we didn't have to take the long turn to reach the other side before).

Gabriela Silang was publicly executed here in September 1763 to warn the people planning to resist that Spanish power. Gabriela Silang is the first woman leader of the Philippine Revolution. Plaza Salcedo is actually the centerpiece of the Spanish urban planning in Vigan. Recently, a world-class dancing fountain show repackaged the image of Plaza Salcedo.
18. Vigan Public Market
After the old public market in Vigan was consumed by fire, we waited long before we had a new one. The photo below is the new public market in its new location operating for almost two decades now. The old public market is now a shopping mall.



Located in an area that used to be grass fields, the new public market has stimulated massive growth around this area in a span of 20 years. I'm not yet too old, mind you. 😜 The changes are just clear in my memory because when I was seven years old (studying at Vigan Nan Chong School back then) I started to develop an interest for urbanization and concrete developments. My school building was an ancestral house and I was close to Calle Crisologo. I see old houses everyday so I was curious seeing tall modern buildings in person. I felt a strange good feeling whenever I see new buildings being constructed in Vigan. The taller the building is, the happier I was. It's the same age I developed an interest for maps, atlases, and newspaper clippings of landscape photos of beautiful places. It turned out that those childhood interests were the precursors of my present travel addictions.

Anyway, going back to the topic, the Vigan Public Market is the best place to shop because prices are regulated. Aside from that, you'll be able to experience shopping like a local. If you want to purchase an authentic Vigan Longganisa 'hung' the traditional way under steel bars, be here early. Like as early as 6 or 7 AM. They get sold out early.

For bagnet, they also flee like a flash. You may still have some in the afternoon but to be sure, come early before everything is gone.

The wet market section is located at the second floor. You may also opt to buy vegetables. Oftentimes, you'll see a 'pinakbet package' in the vegetable section—referring to an assorted package of vegetables ready for your pinakbet dish. You no longer need to cut the vegetables, the vendor has done it for you. Just cook. That's real quick pinakbet ingredients—only in Ilocos, where it all started.

At the module 4 is the kankanen section. Kankanen are Ilocano traditional merienda/snacks. Vigan has a long tradition of making these food especially when there are family gatherings or events. Mind you, in terms of snacks/merienda, Vigan is more than the empanada and okoy. Take note, this list is for the snacks. We have a different longer list for non-merienda dishes (like sinanglao, igado, etc). I'm not sure if all the food I'm going to mention are present in Module 4 but I'll enlist it anyway. You do the snack hunting here: 
  • ginitaan/ginittaan
  • pipian
  • sinuman
  • lubi-lubi
  • kinalti
  • kaskaron
  • arroz caldo
  • miki (Ilocano noodle soup)
  • tupig
  • dila-dila
  • lumpianada
  • and dudol to name some.
To those looking for abel fabric, go check out the ground floor of module 1.
18. Leona Florentino Monument
Don't just see Vigan, understand its culture. Leona Florentino is considered to be the greatest Filipina poet, the "mother of Philippine wowen's literature", and the bridge from oral to literary tradition.



She is a poet of both the Ilocano and Spanish languages and a monument dedicated for her was erected at the opening of Calle Crisologo and Calle Plaridel. Her works have inspired others to write.

Near the monument is the Leona Florentino house now occupied by the famous Cafe Leona and the Provincial Tourism Office of Ilocos Sur.
19. Calle Crisologo
Probably the most photographed street in the Philippines (it's a big claim for me so you can rebut it), it's the 'front' Vigan is known for. The ground floor of the old houses are now souvenir shops, restaurants, bars/club, and coffee shops. Some houses have also turned into hotels/inns. It has changed through the years and I'm pretty sure it will change for the coming years to come. I believe the commercial potential of this street is not yet reaching its peak. There's a bigger potential waiting ahead.



The photo above was taken during the Miss Universe 2016/17 event in Vigan where the candidates made Calle Crisologo their runway. I personally chose that photo to emphasize that Calle Crisologo is now becoming an icon. Photos of this street are everywhere right? Sometimes, it represents the Philippines in the international community. Both International and National events have been staged in this street including Miss Universe and the World Costume Festival.

So I'm not going to describe Calle Crisologo like what most people have written in the internet. It's the same description over and over again—cobblestone street, laid back, touristy, nostalgic, commercialized, etc. The thing is, it's no longer just a tourist spot for us, it's a global success symbol anchored in heritage preservation—the very reason why Vigan was recognized globally.

Just a hint: If you would like to see and feel how the Calle Crisologo looked like before the arrival of tourists, head to the adjacent streets of Calle Plaridel or Calle de los Reyes. Not the perfect picture of how Calle Crisologo used to look before but at least you have an idea. These streets depict the true Vigan life happening in the big ancestral mansions. The local Ilocano-Chinese businessmen operate without pretensions. They own most of the ancestral houses here. They don't have to beautify their old buildings to look good for tourists. I mean, it's the true normal Vigan life without the pressure of pleasing the tourists. Take photos of the non-pretentious part of these streets because to be honest, the houses are starting to wear 'make-up', an early process for future tourist-oriented commercial plans. Visit these streets and see the true Vigan local life before they become the next Calle Crisologo (already in the slow process of happening).
20. Plaza Burgos
Plaza Burgos probably made some of the best memories of the childhood of every Bigueño. We go here to watch the popular public events in our town. People gather here to watch the marching band competitions, which later on replaced by comedia, and eventually the numerous showdowns of our five Vigan festivals namely Longganisa Festival, Binatbatan Festival of the Arts, Raniag Festival, World Costume Festival and Solidarity Day Cultural Festival (although Vigan hosts another festival which is under the helm of the provincial government, the Kannawidan Festival, that would be the sixth).



The Vigan City fiesta and the Longganisa Festival are the most anticipated events every January. All the festival's nightly events are staged here. We have the balikatan night, education night, talent shows, and balikbayan night to name a few.

I miss the Miss Virginia Tobacco here though. It's now defunct. I used to watch it as a child with my family and it was very popular back then. It highlights the tobacco industry of Ilocos. It's also the first beauty pageant I've watched.

I've also experienced becoming a performer on the Plaza Burgos grounds surrounded by a thick crowd of locals. I've been a part of the marching band of Ayusan-Paoa Elementary School before and a festival dancer of the Ilocos Sur National High School. I've also tried going to that prestigious stage to receive an award—the same stage where the Miss Universe ladies, American Idol Jasmine Trias, and popular local celebrities performed. I have so much memories here and I'm pretty sure fellow Bigueños have the same beautiful memories like I do whether they are just a part of the crowd or part of the performers. Plaza Burgos made all these memories for us.

For tourist, they may view this as a historical landmark named after Padre Burgos but in the eyes of every Bigueño, it's a nostalgia down memory lane.

Empanada stalls used to surround Plaza Burgos but they've been all placed in one single location along Jacinto Street in front of McDonald's.

Locals also go here to play chess, to attend an 'eyeball' event, and for punk-looking self-tagged emo guys, it's a skateboarding paradise.
21. Saint Paul Metropolitan Cathedral
Saint Paul Metropolitan Cathedral (Vigan Cathedral), locally known as Simbaan-a-Dakkel (literally means 'big church'), has interesting stories to tell. Chinese elements are part of its wholeness because the Chinese (Sangley) settlers of Vigan are said to have helped in its construction.



Theories tell that the sculpture of the saints inside the church were done by the Chinese as evidenced by their narrow eyes. The immense Chinese cultural influences are honored during Tres de Mayo where they perform dragon dances, traditional Chinese stage plays (kaw-kah), etc. Take note that these old traditions are performed not for a touristy show. These have been done long before tourists came and it's still alive until now. In fact, this Ilocano-Chinese theater play are not well-known because they perform it as conformity for traditions.

Going back to the topic, don't be surprised if you'll see Chinese characters inside the cathedral. This church is not at all the brainchild of the Spanish.

The greatest event that ever happened in this church was when Vigan was declared as a New7Wonder City of the World. I was surprised of the state-of-the art projection and laser show on its façade. Indeed, this cathedral once played a role in world history.

If you want to see more historical events in this church, they are all there in Google. For this particular post, I'm giving readers a personal touch of our tourist attractions.
22. Simbaan-a-Bassit
Simbaan-a-Bassit literally means 'small church' in contrast with the bigger Vigan Cathedral. This church plays its main role during the Tres de Mayo de Vigan.

VIGAN TOURIST SPOTS

The church venerates the Black Nazarene (Apo Lakay). Local stories would tell that the black image cured two plagues that affected Vigan. Its architecture is similar to the mission churches in Mexico and Southern California. It also has a dome.
23. Mindoro Black Beach
My hometown Vigan is more than just the cultural heritage, we also take pride of our natural heritage. Our beachline is black, rich in magnetite and some claim it is also rich in 'gold dusts' carried downstream by the Abra River from its tributaries in gold-rich provinces of Benguet and Abra. This probably explains why there are occasional (but easy to detect) sand grains that sparkle like a diamond.

VIGAN TOURIST SPOTS

Locals go to Mindoro Beach every New Year's Day and every Sabado Gloria. It's not your typical white sand beach. Black in. White out. The sand is fine, smooth and coral-free so you don't have to worry for your feet getting hurt. Run all the way, along the shoreline.
24. Jar Factory by Fidel Go
I've given you some insights about the burnay-making industry in Vigan above through the RG Jar Factory but let's don't treat this next jar factory lightly. This is actually epic.

VIGAN TOURIST SPOTS

This Jar Factory which is also located in Pagburnayan is owned by no other than a National Folk Artists. If we talk about the right way to make the best Vigan burnays, Fidel Go is the authority.

A descendant of early Chinese migrants, Fidel Go is a pillar of Vigan's burnay industry. If you're lucky on the day of your visit, you could witness him doing the art. One of his sons inherited the skill but he would be quick to admit that his dad is still the best burnay-maker in town. His National Folk Artist recognition speaks a lot.

You could also try making one with hands on.
25. Vigan Heritage River Cruise
Cruise the Mestizo River and learn the history of Vigan the enjoyable way. On board a boat, an audio guide will narrate the history of Vigan. Giant tableaux were erected along the river as visual guide for the history lesson.

VIGAN TOURIST SPOTS

It's a fun way to learn history. The cruise dock is located near the Celedonia Garden in Brgy Beddeng Daya. Regular fee is 100 pesos per cruise per head. Discounts apply to students and senior citizens.
26. Vigan Fiesta Carnival (Pagkarnabalan)
The Fiesta Carnival opens in the month of January (after New Year's Day). Circus shows, thrilling rides, shopping stalls (known as bargeynan), and food stalls are all here.

VIGAN TOURIST SPOTS

It's our 'baduy' version of the Enchanted Kingdom but it's full of fun. This Fiesta Carnival is a family destination for every Bigueño. Its last day has the power to paralyze traffic flow around it because of the massive number of people who come here.

Whenever you're in Vigan during its fiesta season, join the locals at pagkarnabalan. For us, our Vigan fiesta isn't complete without the pagkarnabalan.
27. Vigan Dancing Fountain
The Vigan Dancing Fountain is part of the newly repackaged Plaza Salcedo but it deserves another mention. This dancing fountain is so historical that it's the first of its kind in Northern Luzon, and probably first outside Manila.



It was done with sophistication backed-up by fat funds. After its first few days of operation, there was a local rumor that the reason for the alleged sudden hike of household electrical bill in Vigan was allegedly due to the operation of the dancing fountain and that the residents have to pay for it. Of course this isn't true at all. It's a public joke but some had a sad life for believing a myth.

The dancing fountain's success is remarkable. It's open for the public every night at 7 PM. Since its opening, it has been a favorite place for viral wedding proposal videos and photos for Filipino and non-Filipino couples.


This ends my Vigan Tourist Spots List. Don't hesitate to ask me if you have more questions. Use the comment section for queries so that my answers will be seen by everybody/ With that, I don't have to send individual email replies. Actually, one of the reasons why I wrote this is to lessen my 'replying job' in email exchanges with people asking me tips and guides for Vigan. Thanks! (Up next will be the travel guide post. Hang on because this will be pasabog.). | end |


Map Showing the Location of #VIGAN

MAP OF VIGAN
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "#TownExplorer Collections." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try or see the properties or places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

UPDATE HISTORY:
+ 07 December 2017 (16:07): Added Vigan Dancing Fountain

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[GP] ► Wise ways of combining travel and education

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Travel is a dream of many people, especially youngsters. There is something hopelessly romantic in spending time at different locations, spending days or nights in trains, planes, and buses, looking at various countries and cultures with a foreigner’s eye and getting acquainted with new traditions from time to time.

✈ But wait a minute! Aren’t the best young years the time of receiving education, obtaining a good diploma, and investing time into career-building?

✈ es, these limitations and conventions usually stop many people from travel, and they have to sit writing numerous college papers and attending lectures instead of seeing the wonders of the world.


Do you want to travel without interrupting your education? Or wish to receive education at some destination country? Learn some simple hacks here.
Education During Travel: Is it Possible?
Sounds quite depressive, right? But what if we say that there is a way out? You can easily combine travel and education, thus spending your precious youthful years with maximum joy and utility. Don’t sacrifice one for the other – education and travel are a perfect combination if you know how to do that. And we are going to teach you some secret life hacks here.
Select a Travel Destination
The first and easiest way to combine travel and education is to seek an overseas educational program or degree provided by your educational institution. It is a very common approach of most contemporary colleges and universities that have numerous partners abroad and foster students’exchange of experience. Thus, you may consider numerous volunteering, language studies, or science-based projects and programs that your establishment provides and contact the administration with an official request to join the program. Obviously, after your return, the studies may be hard, and you may need to close the gap in some courses and lectures that you missed, but the trip itself will also serve as an additional credit in your diploma. Moreover, the knowledge and experiences you will receive in a foreign country during that program are invaluable and really worth some hardships upon return.
Seek Other Travel Sponsors
If none of your university’s programs fits you or you have already utilized those opportunities, look further and expand your outreach to NGOs and museums. These organizations are also frequent sponsors and promoters of travel programs for students, and if you find the one fitted to your specialty, you may easily be approved for such a program. Such tours are usually accompanied with a lecturer who guides you through the sightseeing places and actually promised educational program.
Summer Travel
The hardest about combining travel and studies is to manage everything with high quality. Once you are in a new, interesting country, it’s natural to wish to spend more time outdoors, to see local highlights, and to enjoy time communicating with local people and trying the local cuisine. However, studies are uninterrupted, and you most often have to sit down to read and learn something, prepare and submit written assignments, etc. As a result, both the quality of your travel and your studies may deteriorate and cause unnecessary stress for you.

So, what is the way out? Summer travel, of course! The typical schooling year lasts from September to May/June, so you get at least 2 months of free summer time that you may spend the way you like. It’s the best time to travel to your dream destination without the need to worry about lectures and assignments. However, to organize everything wisely and manage your travel well, make sure to prepare everything in advance:

● Start selecting the summer program early at the start of the schooling year – even before the New Year. Many students select to travel in summer, so if you start looking for a place in such a program late, there may be no places left for you.

● Consult your academic advisor or the college’s administration – they may advise you free volunteering or educational programs for which you are eligible. It will be a great chance to save some funds and spend more money there instead of paying for the tour. Moreover, if the transfer to the destination country is not covered by your college or school, buying plane tickets long in advance may cost you 2-3 times cheaper.

● Once the country and the program is selected, start your research – it is better to travel to a country with some background knowledge about its culture and tradition, some basic linguistic skills. It will be ideal if you find some friends in that country or at least among peers at college who have also enrolled to the program. In such a way, you will not get into trouble there and will never feel lonely during the travel.
Here are the main pieces of advice for making a perfect combination of study with travel, without excessive expenditures and with a strong focus on excellence in both activities. We wish you good luck and a realm of positive impressions! | end |


► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This is a guest post. For partnership with my blog, including but not limited to brand ambassadorship, advertising, paid postings, and sponsorship, contact me at edmaration@gmail.com.

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[GP] ► Reasons why The Exumas in the Bahamas should be in your bucket list

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Did you ever imagine as you will be laying on the top of the white sand beach listening to the waves of crystal clear water break at your feet? The sun will be all beaming down, and hence cool ocean breeze will make you feel so heavenly impression. If you want to catch such taste of vision in reality, then you must visit the Exuma Bahamas. It is truly the perfect beach location. You can also look for the Exuma rentals that are worth to visit around this pleasant, exotic place to catch the best vision of the paradise. There are just tons of things to do and see in this place, read on to find out.

Mesmerizing Clear Waters

These amazing 360 islands make up the Bahamas, and each and almost every one of them is surrounded by crystal clear and so as the almost impossibly blue water. It looks like attending on with the impression as if the ocean was filled with bottled water. You might have visited around with so many of the seas and oceans, but hence the water in the Exumas is by far the clearest.

2. Swimming Pigs


On the Exuma water sports, you will be getting into the fun entertainment of the swimming pigs as well. Just as apparently in lieu of Y2k, as so many of the locals on Exuma were worried that if online systems shut down, they might have an issue in the medium of the food supply. Every single day any person could have to visit the island and feed the pigs to take care of them as the pigs are intelligent animals motivated by food as they eventually began to associate the sound of the boat engines with supper. You should not miss out visiting this place!

3. Snorkeling



The water in Exuma is so much crystal clear as you can literally put on some goggles and also the snorkel anywhere you want. It is all placed as in between the colorful fish, sea slugs, turtles, starfish, and sharks as your snorkeling adventure would not get to have a dull moment. This place is also better known by the name of the Thunderball Grotto. It is interesting to note that this island was used as a filming location for the two James Bond films: Thunderball and Never Say Never! As in the outside of the limestone island, you will be finding it to be beautifully surrounded by the Bahama Blue water Exuma. It is all equipped with a large hallow cavern with holes in the ceiling with the sun’s rays shining through the medium of the lighting up the cave and hundreds of colorful fish swimming below. You would love exploring this place for sure.

4. Swimming with Sharks at Compass Bay



You can also make the visit to this place as if you are fond of swimming with the sharks. Compass Bay is the best destination for such kind of the activities. But they are much harmless as the nurse sharks are slow moving bottom feeders who prefer fish, shrimp, and squid. However, they do have very small but strong jaws and will bite much of the defensively if they are stepped on or bothered, so it is important to be respectful. Enjoy the adventure of this location right now!

Did you ever plan to get yourself on the solo backpacking trips on the Exumas in the Bahamas? Well, many of the people would not be much aware of the concept term of taking any kind of the destination. Traveling alone is fun to do. But most of the time it does happen that for the beginners it can be a daunting task because you become so stressed out and upset when no one is present to help you in need of the hour. The very first thing which you need to keep in mind is about the booking for Exumas. As you would be traveling alone for the very first time, therefore, you should be staying very much alert and conscious about your flight booking as well. Traveling out without making any plans to some destination is always exciting and exciting to do all the time. A sudden change in the place would come about to be very much disturbing for you.

Therefore, you should not be changing your plans as you meet other travelers. You should make an effort to learn about new cities along the way. If you are traveling alone, then you should be very much conscious of the investment too. You should be investing your money by making a decent sum of planning and budgeting in mind. If you are finding the best hotel accommodation at cheap rates, then there is no need to make your way into the five-star hotels. You should not be taking transportation to visit the places that are nearby your hotel. Walking by foot would not be a bad idea at all.

As you do step out alone from your hotel to roaming around here and there, you should not miss out carrying your accommodation card with the address. Mostly the international roads and homes are constructed with the same designing and building that would instead make you confuse even though if you have visited that place so many times. Keeping the card would make it easier to hop in a cab and get home. It is best to even though if you are a trap into some uncomfortable situation.


[Feature] ► How I Traveled in Crete Island as a Child?

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Photo above: Messara Plain in Crete Island by Jebulon.

Why Crete?

I was that child who often slept with the Atlas book. I virtually toured the world. I could recognize the location of the Rocky Mountains, the Caucasus mountain range, the lonesome Easter island, the Arctic coast of Russia, etc. 

In the Mediterranean, I was also fascinated with the islands off the coasts of Africa and mainland Europe. Remembering those days is resurrecting the sweet moments. As a child, I wasn't traveling. However, the fact that I enjoyed browsing the Atlas with some NatGeo worthy photos associated with the places featured was one of the sweetest moments in my life. I found it a luxury--being able to see those pictures and at the same time, locating their positions on the map.

The Peninsulas of southern Europe were some of my favorite features. The Atlas was printed that way I could see it from above with my naked eye. You could recognize the plains, the forested regions, the ridges and high-altitude locations. 

The easternmost of the three great peninsulas of Europe is the Greek peninsula that looked astonishing because of its extremely irregular shape. I didn't know how Greece looked like those days but just looking on the map, I could say that this country has a lot of beautiful places to unveil in the right time. At the Aegean Sea, clusters of irregularly shaped islands dotted the waters--some even extend near the coast of Turkey. At first I thought these islands were already part of Turkey but I was surprised that they still belong to Greece even though they are extremely nearer to Turkey and hundred folds away from Mainland Greece.

Greece's geographic features are indeed fascinating. The island of Crete is no exemption. Crete lies in the heart of Mediterranean like a gem with commanding presence. Before I came to know about the internet, seeing its location on the map was already enough. The heaps of curiosity in me made me want to stick my eyes on the printed pages as I day-dreamed of myself engaged in teleportation. What a sweet day that was! My mere imagination made me live my childhood days the fullest.

Fast forward, it's 2018. I've already accessed the internet multiple times but my Crete childhood fantasies still remain. The internet showed me the beauty of the island that I thought I would never see. 

I brought my childhood dreamworld to the present. Being a motorbike aficionado, I'm day-dreaming  of motorbiking the island with friends, or even in my solitary moments. With the advent of technology, traveling has become easier, cheaper, and more convenient. Renting a car in Crete would be a good option too. For car aficionados, I think this would be a great option to enjoy Crete island with family or with friends. 

How did I know it would be enjoyable to rent a car or a motorbike in exploring Crete island? During those days when I was not yet introduced to the internet, I have already enjoyed the island by just seeing its shape on the map with my creative imagination working. What more now that we already have the internet in our fingertips? Today, we could access the beauty of Crete (my childhood fantasy) and even the beauty of the world. Going back, the Rocky Mountains, the Caucasus mountain range, the lonesome Easter island, and the Arctic coast of Russia are no exemption of this fascinating technology we already enjoy.

So how I traveled as a child in Crete island? I traveled in my imagination.

[Insights] ► Travel Thoughts in the Last Quarter of 2018

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Traveling has exposed me to many realities that trained me to think broadly and outside the box—now I’m applying them to my new chapter.

► It’s not the same life anymore. Some have to be sacrificed in exchange of expanding other areas of my development as human...

► I made a major decision in life in 2017 as part of my adulting process that has changed the way I acted and reacted to my life’s primary passions...

[Insights, Feature Posts]
SPRATLY ISLAND, SOUTH CHINA SEA
[SPRATLY ISLANDS?] ► A SOLITARY ISLAND IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SOUTH CHINA SEA/WEST PHILIPPINE SEA. COULD THIS BE A PART OF THE DISPUTED SPRATLY GROUP OF ISLANDS? I DON'T KNOW WHICH COUNTRY OWNS THIS ISLAND.
It’s been almost two years since I last traveled outside the ▼ PHILIPPINES
. My last was in February 2017. Due to major decisions in life as part of my ‘adulting’ journey that recalibrated my personal priorities and plans, I have conditioned myself to accept my fate this year in terms of traveling.


I started traveling outside the Philippines in 2016. Since then, I’ve wanted to travel yearly to at least one country. In 2017, I was successful to visit ▼ INDOCHINA
and in that year, I transformed my dream overland travel from Saigon to ▼ #BANGKOK
for 7 days into reality. I was able to visit three countries. It was as enjoyable as my ▼ MALAYSIA
-Thailand motorbike adventures in 2016 and I had the chance to circle the whole island of Penang via motorbike among others. As much as I wanted to continue this streak up to 2018 (and beyond), it is true indeed that everything in this world changes except for constant change.

I found myself busy at the last quarter of the year 2018 without any plans for an out-of-the-country trip. I’ve accepted the reality though that my personal leisure travel in the name of finding wisdom and the truth has come to record low this year (2018)—or probably, to an end—since I started to fervently travel several years back.

This November, I was able to secure a total of fourteen (14) days of vacation leaves (including holidays, weekends, and days-off in between) from two (2) separate occasions. It was unexpected. I used some of these precious days going home back to ▼ #VIGAN
to have quality time with my family for my birthday week. I realized it was serendipity. Spiritually, I considered this a clear sign to reboot and do the thing that recharges and motivates me in everything thing I do—traveling.

Yes, cliché as it may sound but traveling restores me in my default setting—enthusiastic, creative, passionate, joyful, optimistic, compassionate, and grateful. These are the qualitative specs of my default DNA factory setting. It’s like a car, that after changing its oil, its engine goes back to work efficiently.

With limited time to plan, everything was like a rush hour in a city full of green space. My mind was calm and excited but the short time remaining to plan this trip was scary. I’ve ditched all the promo fares because I still wasn’t sure if the cheap fare I would get would fall into vacation leave dates that would be approved. My life has changed dramatically. Two years ago, I could manipulate (legally) my schedule and vacation leaves. I had the liberty to ‘book now get a leave later’ even if that would be for a week or two. It was easy for me then. But like I said, I made a major decision in life in 2017 as part of my adulting process that has changed the way I acted and reacted to my life’s primary passions—travel and writing (blogging).

EDMARATION
[QUEZON CITY] ► THIS IS A SCREENSHOT TAKEN FROM ONE OF MY VIDEO FILES WHILE RECORDING A VLOG FOR THIS 2018 LAST QUARTER TRIP.
It’s not the same life anymore. Some have to be sacrificed in exchange of expanding other areas of my development as human, son, brother, nurse, citizen, member of different communities, and as a dreamer. All areas should be developed I believe, but in my case, it’s just hard do two things at the same time as I have to only choose one priority that would benefit most (if not all) areas of my existence. I think it was a wise decision somehow to embrace the different life I have now. I would like to mention though that this major decision I am facing now was a result of the many wisdom I gained from traveling. Traveling has exposed me to many realities that trained me to think broadly and outside the box—now I’m applying them to my new chapter.

With a limited time to utilize, I scouted for the cheapest airfare. I found myself delving into disappointment. The cheapest I could get was 4-5x more expensive compared to what I could have gotten if I grabbed the numerous promo fares that I ignored due to vacation leave uncertainty.

Enough for the drama, I have always looked at the positive side of the story. I was grateful enough to have traveled this long with full payment although the airfare was expensive. Before, I had the liberty of time but I was never paid this way I am paid now while I’m enjoying a vacation. Those days, I go home with full spirit but broke. Now is a different story—I go home with full spirit and still could afford to chill with an overpriced coffee on my right hand. Indeed, there’s always a positive side of the story. Amen!
This is my introduction for my next blog series “Into the Southwest Corner of Southeast Asia.” | to be continued... |

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► This post was filed under the category "Insights." See more posts related to this below.

► All photos are mine.

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[Vigan] ► Cobblestone Streets of Vigan, an Expanded Version

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...these intersections are surrounded by massively preserved and elaborate ancestral houses that show you that unique townscape you cannot see anywhere else in the world due to the unique mixture of cultural elements that's uniquely Vigan.

► Having a limited knowledge on how heritage conservation works, I thought before that putting contemporary cobblestone on these narrow streets would endanger the authenticity of the place.

► We were the kids from the barrio and our perspective of a personal play space has changed into a shared space.

[Vigan, Ilocos Sur Province, Ilocos Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
▼ COVER PHOTO▼ FACEBOOK▼ TWITTER▼ INSTAGRAM

Writing this piece put a grin of pleasure on my face. Dang! I can't believe it has been more than a year since I wrote my last blog about Vigan. Significant events in my life have changed my routines, plans, and priorities. My life as an Ilocano blogger wasn't spared. I had to hush. However, tons of ideas were stored in my creative vault during my silence and I was just waiting for that right time to unleash them. This day is surreal. Yes, I'm blogging again and there's no better way to pour out my spirit of excitement than to write about my hometown that I dearly love.

In this blog post, I would like to share to you my thoughts and observations as a homegrown Bigueño about the changes happening at the streets of my hometown now.


Of Cobblestone Streets and Street Memories


You know what, as that little Bigueño growing in our idyllic town, I didn't care about cobblestone streets. What I remember was the poor road condition in our barangay (Ayusan Sur) when I was a kid. I was so delighted when they paved our road. My cousins and I even played on the semi-hard, wet, newly paved road. When it fully dried, we laid our back and felt the cold, hard pavement. We used it as our playground.

PLARIDEL STREET, VIGAN CITY
| 1 | [VIGAN] ► MY CHILDHOOD PLAYMATE/BROTHER STANDS AT THE CORNER OF SALCEDO AND PLARIDEL STREETS.
Gone are those careless and candid childhood moments as the street we used to play at is now a busy road linking the city proper to the Vigan Airport and to the tourist spots of Vigan's southwest area. It's no longer a playground for the kids of Ayusan Sur but a danger zone that parents fear for their kids. Tourist vans, tourist-laden calesas, tour buses, and tricycles are regular mainstays of our road.

For Calle Crisologo's cobblestone street, I didn't care. I even didn't care about the old houses. All I knew was I grew up seeing those. They were just 'normal' houses that I see everytime we go to the poblacion to play at Plaza Burgos' playground for kids. Everybody was fellow Bigueño kids. Faces were no stranger. All we did was to enjoy ourselves—no social media, no smart phones, no selfies, no cameras, no drones. We went home with dirty feet, dirty clothes, and sometimes, with abrasions on our elbows and knees.

Fast forward, our streets will never be the same again. My perspective of our streets and old houses changed when other non-Bigueño kids—with fairer complexion and dressed differently compared to us—started to join us in our old 'play territories' with their parents. They had colorful toys, we had bamboo guns emitting young "kapas sanglay" fruits as bullets. They wore light-emitting shoes, we played in barefoot. We were the kids from the barrio and our perspective of a personal play space has changed into a shared space. More and more people kept visiting our place of birth, our personal spaces. That time, I didn't realize I was already experiencing first hand a phenomenon called 'tourism' that our town was embracing.


Calle Plaridel and Calle V Delos Reyes


Together with my two brothers and childhood playmates, we visited our old playgrounds and our childhood "pagpasyaran" (a place for leisure and play) to see what has changed. Take note that I was sporadically away from Vigan for more than a year and I was just so eager to revisit our old spaces to see what has changed.

We visited the popular Calle Crisologo but my main purpose was to see the two other streets that run parallel to it—Plaridel and V Delos Reyes. When I started appreciating the addition of cobblestone at Calle Crisologo (we stereotypically called as "Heritage Village" although Vigan as a whole, is a heritage village itself) that complemented well with the ancestral houses, I also wished that V Delos Reyes and Plaridel Streets would also be like Calle Crisologo. Those were wishful thinking that came true today. I was so glad to see in reality the look of Vigan that only happened in my imagination during those days.

Having a limited knowledge on how heritage conservation works, I thought before that putting contemporary cobblestone on these narrow streets would endanger the authenticity of the place. I was wrong. As I embrace the changes happening in my hometown, I'm also learning new lessons about our conservation measures, rich culture, and heritage, that I am naturally part of but unaware that I'm actually part of it.

CASA FERIL, VIGAN CITY
| 2 | [VIGAN] ► CASA FERIL STANDS AT THE CORNER OF CALLE CRISOLOGO AND SALCEDO STREET.
VIGAN CITY
| 3 | [VIGAN] ► THIS ANCESTRAL HOUSE STANDS AT THE CORNER OF SALCEDO AND V DELOS REYES STREETS.
VIGAN CITY
| 4 | [VIGAN] ► THIS CHINESE HARDWARE SHOP STANDS AT THE CORNER OF PLARIDEL AND SALCEDO STREETS.
VIGAN CITY
| 5 | [VIGAN] ► LOCALS KNOW WHERE TO AVOID THE TOURIST CROWD.
VIGAN CITY
| 6 | [VIGAN] ► THIS COUPLE GAVE WAY FOR A CROSSING VEHICLE AT THE PLARIDEL AND SALCEDO STREETS INTERSECTION.
VIGAN CITY
| 7 | [VIGAN] ► THE SEGMENT OF SALCEDO STREET CONNECTING CALLE CRISOLOGO AND CALLE PLARIDEL IS NOW A COBBLESTONE STREET.
Indeed, the changes in the streets of Vigan is remarkable especially those near and connecting to Calle Crisologo. In my point of view, this move would stimulate tourism activities in these streets too and would help disperse the tourist-concentrated Calle Crisologo.

We walked along V Delos Reyes and Plaridel Streets and saw new shops opening at the ancestral houses lining these relatively ignored streets overshadowed by the well-lighted and highly-advertised Calle Crisologo.

PLARIDEL STREET, VIGAN CITY
| 8 | [VIGAN] ► CALLE PLARIDEL IS NOW MADE OF COBBLESTONE.
PLARIDEL STREET, VIGAN CITY
| 9 | [VIGAN] ► I SPOTTED THIS NEW RESTAURANT ALONG PLARIDEL STREET.
PLARIDEL STREET, VIGAN CITY
| 10 | [VIGAN] ► WELL-RESTORED ANCESTRAL HOUSES LIT THE BONIFACIO-PLARIDEL INTERSECTION.
BONIFACIO, VIGAN CITY
| 11 | [VIGAN] ► TOURIST ACTIVITIES ARE ACTIVE AROUND THE CALLE CRISOLOGO-CALLE BONIFACIO INTERSECTION.
My hometown is getting lovelier and lovelier. I'm so happy that the people who started to advocate for our culture and heritage conservation were the best people to do it so. We've been recognized internationally for our excellence in handling our conservation programs. Indeed, ours is a success story that has inspired other cities to also preserve their culture and heritage not just in the Philippines but also around the world.

Sooner, the cobblestone-street-image will no longer be associated solely with Calle Crisologo as it has expanded to nearby streets. It will no longer be just Calle Crisologo. It will be Vigan, as a whole.

PLARIDEL STREET
| 12 | [VIGAN] ► PLARIDEL STREET IS NARROW YET HOME TO MANY OF VIGAN'S MASSIVE ANCESTRAL HOUSES.
PLARIDEL STREET
| 13 | [VIGAN] ► MY HOMETOWN IS WHERE THE OLD AND THE NEW INTERTWINE.
PLARIDEL STREET
| 14 | [VIGAN] ► LEONA FLORENTINO MONUMENT IS SITUATED IN BETWEEN CALLE CRISOLOGO AND CALLE PLARIDEL.
PLARIDEL STREET
| 15 | [VIGAN] ► MY BROTHER STANDS BESIDE THE LEONA FLORENTINO MONUMENT.
The beauty of the houses along Plaridel and V Delos Reyes Streets was accentuated with their new Calle-Crisologo-feels. During my walk, I've seen several intersections that were paved with cobblestones and I've never seen like these before.

I love the intersections of Bonifacio Street and Plaridel Street as well as of Calle Crisologo and Bonifacio Street as these intersections are surrounded by massively preserved and elaborate ancestral houses that show you the unique townscape you cannot see anywhere else in the world due to the unique mixture of cultural elements that's uniquely Vigan.


Cobblestone Streets Around Plaza Burgos and Plaza Salcedo


We exited Plaridel Street from its northern opening (beside Leona Florentino Monument) which is connected to the Leona Florentino Street—one of the four streets surrounding the Plaza Burgos.

FLORENTINO STREET
| 16 | [VIGAN] ► LEONA FLORENTINO STREET IS ALSO A COBBLESTONE ROAD NOW!
It was a big surprise for me to see that the Plaza Burgos segment of Leona Florentino Street has also transformed. It looked visually appealing for me at night. The texture and feel of the cobblestone-paved street made me want to just walk and advocate Vigan to be a pedestrian city.

plaza burgos
| 17 | [VIGAN] ► THIS ICONIC MONUMENT IN VIGAN STANDS IN THE MIDDLE OF PLAZA BURGOS.
ARZOBISPADO NUEVA SEGOVIA
| 18 | [VIGAN] ► THE PALACIO ARZOBISPADO DE NUEVA SEGOVIA SHOWS TO US THE SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS.
PLAZA SALCEDO
| 19 | [VIGAN] ► LOCAL VENDORS SELL STREET FOOD EAST OF THE PLAZA SALCEDO.
PLAZA SALCEDO, VIGAN
| 20 | [VIGAN] ► COBBLESTONE PLACEMENT IS UNDER WAY ON BURGOS STREET.
E JACINTO STREET, VIGAN
| 21 | [VIGAN] ► THE OLD PAVEMENT OF JACINTO STREET IS UNDERGOING COBBLESTONE REPLACEMENT TOO.
E JACINTO STREET, VIGAN
| 22 | [VIGAN] ► COBBLESTONE STREETS WILL SOON SURROUND THE PLAZA BURGOS.
I also visited all the streets surrounding Plaza Burgos and Plaza Salcedo. The dancing fountain was currently on display when I was in Plaza Salcedo. Street vendors were present in front of the Vigan Cathedral. I noticed that the Plaza Salcedo segment of Burgos Street is also undergoing a face lift including the very short road connecting it to Nueva Segovia Street.

Speaking of Nueva Segovia Street, it was also undergoing cobblestone replacement when I was here. Nueva Segovia Street is where the Arzobispado Nueva Segovia and Mart1 (old Rosary College) are located. The latter street runs north of Plaza Salcedo perpendicular to Quezon Avenue.


Ending Thoughts


In my travel blogging journey, I've met amazing people in the industry who happened to be very knowledgeable of conservation. I've learned from them that a truly living culturally rich destination is something that is dynamic and continuously evolving yet the the strong elements of the past is still strongly felt and very present.

E JACINTO STREET, VIGAN
| 23 | [VIGAN] ► THIS IS MY 2018 YEAR-END PHOTO IN VIGAN (TAKEN BY JOAN TACUD).
As a resident, I didn't care about all of these before. But upon knowing that there are so many non-Bigueño people who love my hometown and even fight for its preservation to death, my eyes were opened of the value of my birthplace. If these people are willing to selflessly fight for my hometown, who am I not to join the force? I mean, as a resident who is continuously learning and appreciating the big role of my hometown in nation building, I came out with a Spiderman-ish perspective—being a Bigueño is both a great honor and power but it also comes with a great responsibility. | end |

The comment section is located below. Feel free to start or join a conversation or discussion.



Map Showing the Location of #VIGAN

MAP OF VIGAN
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Special Features." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

LATEST STORIES COVERING #VIGAN | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW »

MORE STORIES COVERING ILOCOS SUR PROVINCE | SEE OLDER STORIES »

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[Metro Manila] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts and Reflections

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Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations!

► ...many Filipinos still complain about our train systems but having traveled to several countries in Southeast Asia, the Filipinos are still lucky for having this kind of infrastructure.

► In terms of transportation, some of our neighbors in Asia have gone far.

[National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
CUBAO LRT STATION
| 1 | [QUEZON CITY] ► LIFE IS A VAULT CONTAINING REPLENISHING FIRST-TIME ITEMS. WHEN YOU TAKE SOMETHING, IT WILL BE REPLACED BY ANOTHER.
Life is a never ending first time. I thought before that getting older would mean that your exposure to first-time experiences becomes lesser. It was the other way around. As I age, I've found out that the world has infinite undisclosed data ripe for harvest. Becoming older for me means having a wider perspective of the world and a deeper understanding of our existence, hence, we tend to decode more answers for our ever growing curiosities of our ever growing consciousness of the complexities of the universe. Are you willing to unlock them?

I've always been a sucker of first-time experiences. God knows how I treasure my first plane ticket, my first message from my newly opened email account and even the first cotton ball used from my very first blood extraction. If you are a friend or a follower of my personal Facebook account, you probably have noticed that I love posting first-time experiences of my life, ridiculous or not. I even have a special FIRST-TIME-STORIES label on this blog that I highlighted in my homepage. Below are screenshots of my recent first-time posts.






I don't know, but these first-time experiences happening in my life mean a lot to me; and now, here I am again, writing about my first LRT ride in the Philippines.


► Pre-Ride Thoughts and Impressions


I've commuted in Metro Manila countless times using MRT though, but not LRT. I failed to 'properly' document my first MRT ride so I wanted to make it sure that my first LRT ride would be well-documented.

CUBAO LRT STATION
| 2 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THE CUBAO LRT STATION IS THE FIRST LRT STATION IN THE PHILIPPINES THAT I ENTERED.
My pre-ride impressions about the LRT of Metro Manila were not really good. My first train ride in the Philippines was an MRT ride. I remember how I almost cried to experience such drastic set-up inside the MRT when I commuted for the first time. It was very hot inside and I was wearing a jacket. I couldn't remove my jacket because inside was too crowded that I couldn't move. I was also carrying a heavy luggage that time. Before I entered the train, I was thinking it would be very comfortable inside to my dismay. I was drenched in sweat (and tears) with regrets of riding the train. My first MRT ride was somehow a traumatic experience. It was the longest 15 minutes of my commuter life.

Having experienced the train systems of Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, and Bangkok, the Philippines' MRT was my worst experience. I couldn't help myself but to shake my head everytime I think about it so I concluded that the LRT would be the same.

My standard of a train ride experience in the Philippines was based on my MRT experiences so I was surprised when I entered the platform of Cubao LRT Station for the first time! I personally think that the LRT station in PH is better than Kuala Lumpur's elevated monorail system. Per Cubao LRT experience, ours have more spacious platforms. The ceiling was also high and the train was well-air-conditioned. I really thought before that the LRT in Metro Manila is the same with MRT so my expectation was exceeded.

One thing I love about my previous train rides outside the Philippines is the 'voice-over'. While inside the train, a recorded voice would play to guide commuters of the next station. In the Philippines' MRT, I never experienced this. Most of the time, there is a live voice-over informing the commuters of the current station and God knows how I despise the live voice-over because foremost, the speaker (whoever he is) doesn't speak clearly. He also doesn't pronounce the words clearly. It's like he is chewing something while speaking. Is it hard to speak slow and clear? Huh! P.S. This also happens inside the plane of AirAsia PH and Cebu Pacific. When they speak inside the cabin, it appears like they are rushing, or they have limited time to speak that they speak so fast and so unclear that the announcer/speaker becomes so annoying to my nerves!

Anyway, because of my bad experiences at the MRT of Metro Manila and having experienced the beautiful train systems of Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand, I concluded that all trains in the Philippines would be like the MRT.


► Exceeding My Expectations and Personal Reflections


Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations! Yay! There were LED screens inside to inform the commuters of safety measures which is similar to Singapore. There was also a recorded voice-over of a woman that was so lovely and sweet informing commuters of the next station. Wow! I underestimated our LRT system a lot.

CUBAO LRT STATION
| 3 | [MANILA] ► RECTO STATION WAS THE FIRST LRT STATION I ENTERED IN MANILA.
Inside the train (LRT) was a delight. Surprisingly, it was not crowded, in Tagalog, we would say, "Sakto lang!" The train is more spacious compared to the EDSA-based MRT and it reminds me of Singapore. However, one thing that caught my attention was the massive advertising of a Netflix series called Sex Education. I watched the trailer for the purpose of this blog post and if you were to ask me, my instinct was true that this film is NOT for everybody. I've seen so many minors inside the train seeing the word sex everywhere. I'm not KJ, but try to put yourself in other's shoe. If you are a parent, would you like your minor kids to be exposed to this kind of advertising that promotes a film not suitable for them? Please don't put your political correctness to an idiotic level by telling that it's the duty of the parents to take care of their kids. Shut up! Our kids should live in a healthy society. It's everyone's duty to be a good example to all kids everywhere!

Anyway, heavy advertising is not new in Southeast Asia's train systems so this encounter wasn't surprising for me.

Yeah, I know, many Filipinos still complain about our train systems but having traveled to several countries in Southeast Asia, the Filipinos are still lucky for having this kind of infrastructure. Sometimes we delve too much of the 'colonial mentality' concept that we fail to find the silver lining of the not so pleasant situations that we may experience. Yes, I also like to demand for the best infrastructure in the world, even better than Japan if possible, but I try not to complain at all times because we also need to entertain the concept of 'being grateful' in our hearts once in a while.

It's our right to rant and throw grievances against our government but you can never go wrong of having a grateful and cheerful heart. If you cannot be grateful all the time, try to experience it at least once in your life. The feeling of being grateful is so precious and abundant like diamonds but becomes very rare because only a handful of people are willing to wear its prestige. When you think you don't need to wear the prestige of gratefulness, it's ok. Life is a matter of choice. If you choose to live a life full of hatred, dissatisfaction, disappointment, and/or burden in your heart, so be it.

It's your right to choose a miserable life. It's freewill. But if you ask me, I choose to live a life full of gratefulness, contentment, joy, and peace. It's been my choice to live this way. I may had a bad experience during my first MRT ride but I've learned to adapt, adjust and appreciate how our MRT system is helping many commuters daily in spite of the imperfections. You see? This first-time LRT experience of mine is giving me a lot of insights. I told you, I'm a sucker of first-time stuff because they give me wisdom.

Anyway, I was also surprised to see the ticket-vending machines located at every station which was, and is, convenient. To be honest, I never thought these ticket machines existed in our LRT at least.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 4 | [MANILA] ► LIFE IS A SINGLE JOURNEY TOWARDS AGEING, NO TURNING BACK. SO DO YOUR BEST WHILE YOU ARE YOUNG.
When I was in Singapore, my heart was full of joy to experience their sophisticated subway system. What I liked about Singapore's MRT was the easy-to-follow map. There were several lines illustrated on the map, color-coded, that were easy to understand. God knows how I prayed for the Philippines to have this kind of system. Back to Metro Manila, I learned that we also have different lines, color-coded too. I found out later that the Cubao Station belongs to the LRT Line 2 or the purple line. I love the fact that we also have the same color-coding scheme like Singapore. Although we are far from the level of Singapore yet, it felt good to learn that we also follow the same system because it's simple and easy to understand.


► Ending Notes


In terms of transportation, some of our neighbors in Asia have gone far. It's sad, knowing that the Philippines' LRTA system is the first metro system in Southeast Asia, earlier than the Singapore MRT by three years. We've been stuck. SMH...

The reason why I experienced the train systems of other countries first before the Philippines is because I've always ditched to explore Metro Manila. Coming from Vigan, my usual route was to alight at Cubao then ride a taxicab to the airport. I've never stayed in Metro Manila for more than a month (not until in 2018) so I wasn't familiar of the routes and directions in Manila. The most convenient way for me has always been a point-to-point transport. I was able to experience the train systems outside the Philippines because friends of mine who are/were based in these cities introduced me to these transportation systems. My friends became my tour guide, hence, my exposure to these train systems. My train experience in Kuala Lumpur was different though which I wrote here in details.

So where this first LRT ride of mine brought me? What's the reason why I finally decided to try the LRT? These questions will be addressed soon in the Part 2 of this series. | end |



Maps Showing the Location of METRO MANILA

MAP OF METRO MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Train Stations and Railways." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

LATEST STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE STORIES COVERING LUZON ISLAND | SEE OLDER STORIES

LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

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[Quezon City] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH

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"I was with fellow nurses. We were going somewhere, a place where we could do the first step of maximizing the potential of our nursing career and this LRT station was part of that journey."

► I'm not a virgin in terms of train rides but for the LRT system of the Philippines, particularly in Metro Manila, I never tried it until 16 January 2019.

► It's adulting for me. Yeah, this LRT ride is a significant part of my adulting life.

[National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
CUBAO LRT STATION
| 1 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THE TYPE OF JOURNEY YOU CHOOSE DOES NOT DEFINE YOUR ABILITY TO SUCCESSFULLY ACHIEVE THE DREAMS YOU CHASED IN THAT JOURNEY.
For this blog post, I'm giving the Cubao LRT Station in Quezon City a spotlight. You know, this was the first LRT Station I entered in the Philippines so I'm writing this post now because first-time encounters and experiences are big deal in my nerves.

I'm not a virgin in terms of train rides but for the LRT system of the ▼ PHILIPPINES
, particularly in ▼ METRO MANILA
, I never tried it until 16 January 2019. I've frequented Cubao, in fact I've even become a temporary resident here, but I have never attempted to give the LRT a try because...

...first, I'm afraid to get lost. Yes, that's how stupid I am. My ridiculous experience of traveling via trains in ▼ #KUALALUMPUR
in 2016 made a big impact in my life that traveling 'alone' in metro trains for the first time has become my fear. Yes, I got lost in KL, rode the wrong train, alighted at the wrong destination, and wasted my money going to a place I'm not supposed to be visiting. My train rides in Singapore and Bangkok were good though because they were introduced to me by friends living and working in these cities so I was able to figure out how their train systems work. On my second try, I aced the system and the routes like a bad-ass local.

Second, I have no businesses to do in the places serviced by the LRT lines so I had no reason to use it. In fact, taxicabs, though more expensive, has always been my primary choice for convenience sake.


► Cubao-Araneta LRT Station for the First Time


The reason why I finally decided to use the LRT will be narrated in details on my next post. Meantime, Let's focus on Cubao LRT Station.

Cubao LRT Station is attached to a mall (Gateway Mall) and a shopping arcade on the other side (Diamond Arcade) so you can conveniently access the station after your mall activities. The LRT station is accessed from the third floor of both Gateway Mall and Diamond Arcade. It's part of the Line 2 (purple line) that services the Santolan (Marikina)-Recto (▼ #MANILA
) route. The Cubao LRT Station is an elevated station over the Aurora Boulevard.

CUBAO LRT STATION
| 2 | [QUEZON CITY] ► I TOOK THIS PHOTO IN 2017. CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION IS ELEVATED, ABOVE AURORA BOULEVARD.
I was with fellow nurses. We were going somewhere, a place where we could do the first step of maximizing the potential of our nursing career and this LRT station was part of that journey. After ignoring this train station many times, I've finally experienced it.

It was around 02:00 PM. Fellow nurse Alex took a one-way ticket from the red ticket machine that looked old. I saw a a touch-responsive screen showing the stations serviced by this line. It took Alex about three (3) attempts before she was able to choose her destination on the touch screen. I observed her carefully how she did it so that I could also purchase a one-way ticket correctly. Lourdes (we call her mommy Lou), also a fellow nurse in her 50s, had a more convenient life because she has a beep card.

After purchasing our tickets, we proceeded to the platform which appeared chill and peaceful at 02:00 PM. The Manila rush and 'siksikan' I was expecting was non-existent. We entered the station via Gateway Mall after series of security checks.

CUBAO LRT STATION
| 3 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THE TRAIN HAS ARRIVED. THIS WAS A MEMORABLE JOURNEY.
In Tagalog, I would describe the station as 'maaliwalas". The ceiling was higher than I expected so it looked so spacious. After a few minutes, an eye-candy train arrived and that signaled not just the start of our physical journey but also a baby step for our career as nurses wanting to bring out the best in us. It's adulting for me. Yeah, this LRT ride is a significant part of my adulting life. It may sound funny but it's real. It's too personal and all details will be revealed on the next part of this series.

Where did my first LRT ride bring me? | to be continued... |
| BLOG SERIES: My First LRT Ride - Up Next, Episode 03...

▼ BLOG SERIES▼ MORE FROM CUBAO
MY FIRST LRT RIDE SERIES: You're on the Episode 02 of this series.
▼ Episode 01
[METRO MANILA] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts And Reflections | Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations!

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 02
[QUEZON] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH | You are currently on this page.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
MORE STORIES FROM CUBAO
Discover more stories covering Cubao below.
▼ Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH
[QUEZON CITY] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH | You are currently on this page.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Cubao Tricycle Commuting & My First Month In QC
[QUEZON CITY] ► Cubao Tricycle Commuting & My First Month In QC | I'm already staying in Cubao for more than one month now. This has already breached the record—my longest stay in Metro Manila was my 4-week hospital internship in various hospitals way back in college.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION

Maps Showing the Location of QUEZON CITY

MAP OF QUEZON CITY
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Train Stations and Railways." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

LATEST STORIES COVERING QUEZON CITY | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE OLDER STORIES

LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

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[Metro Manila] ► Cubao to Recto via LRT: Symbolic Ride for the Nurse in Me

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This story is episode 03 of a blog series.
You cannot be your old self all the time. You need to transform for the better and powerful new you.

► I've worked all my life in the province and God knows how I enjoyed the previous set-up of my hospital career.

► I blog because I want to save feelings and emotions in words. I want my blog to serve as my memory vault.

[National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 1 | [MANILA] ► EVERYTHING ARRIVES AT THE RIGHT PLACE AND AT THE RIGHT TIME. IF YOU THINK YOUR LIFE IS MESSING UP, CHEER! GREATER THINGS ARE YET TO COME.
It was around 02:00 PM in Cubao LRT Station when the train arrived. This train ride was mixed emotions for me. Aside from the fact that it's my first time to ride an LRT train, this train ride would also initiate some baby steps of my nursing career.

I've worked all my life in the province and God knows how I enjoyed the previous set-up of my hospital career. I wasn't receiving a huge salary (your friend nurses working at a provincial hospital would know that) but I received much favor from them (my hospital bosses). I had a flexible schedule allowing me to go to work as early as 7 AM or come in as late as 10 AM as long as I complete the 8-hour duty. I mean, not everyone working at the hospital in the Philippines could have that privilege. I could even arrange my schedule and days-off as well and apply week-long (even month-long) vacation leaves one week before that actual leave.

Below photo is one of the old photos taken when I was still very new in my profession and I was assisting a high-caliber surgeon for breast mass excision during a medical mission in collaboration with the ISMMGH, the hospital where I worked in ▼ #VIGAN
.

ISCMMGH, VIGAN CITY
| 2 | [VIGAN] ► YOU CANNOT BE YOUR OLD SELF ALL THE TIME. YOU NEED TO TRANSFORM FOR THE BETTER AND POWERFUL NEW YOU.
The foregoing are just some of the reasons why I miss ISCMMGH (Ilocos Sur Cooperative Medical Mission Group and Hospital), my former workplace. But for some reasons, I realized I should not stick with these perks and privileges because in adulting, I also need to accept greater responsibilities, new roles and challenges for me to grow.


► This Train Ride is Symbolic for my Nursehood


With me were two fellow nurses. One was Alex (she's a mom with one kid) and mommy Lourdes (widowed in her 50s with 3 kids). These two fellow nurses are Metro Manila dwellers for a very long time now and they were the friends who introduced to me the use of LRT in Metro Manila. Alex and Lourdes were two of the people who encouraged me to pursue my nursing career to a whole new level. I would say that this train ride is symbolic for my journey as a professional nurse that's elusive of a fat professional salary. During seasons when advertising is so lucrative for digital influencers, I could even earn money more than what I receive from the hospital by just doing my passion of writing, blogging and photojournalism. I mean, I know my capabilities. I know my potentials. But I think I couldn't be a young millionaire alone by being just a professional nurse at the hospital. You have to mix your nursing career with business for you to achieve your financial goals.

Anyway, as I said, this LRT journey is symbolic—symbolic for the journey I'm taking now for my nursing career. I mentioned above about being a millionaire but money is not really my motivation. I just used the word millionaire to emphasize the difference of achieving financial richness for a hospital-working nurse versus a nurse-businessman who is not practicing his profession at the hospital anymore.

Alex and Lourdes pushed me to add different flavor to my nursehood. I'm a US-registered nurse and I'm currently working here in the Philippines for an American client involved in medical necessity review. I have resigned from my hospital job for adulting reasons. Alex and Lourdes wanted to facepalm me the reality that my license is powerful and that could lead me not just to lucrative opportunities but also the American passport that could bring me to many countries around the world. Because of the helpful hints they gave me (God knows I just want to live and die in the Philippines all my life), I had to think twice and compromise. I gave it a try. To start this career journey, we took the LRT from Cubao to an agency that would assist me for my migration to the United States with an assured nursing career waiting for me—in the Land of Milk and Honey (if I will not change my mind, because 2 years is a long time and many can still happen).


► LRT Ride and Baby Steps


We entered the train, interestingly not crowded for 02:00 PM. The interior was spacious packed with LED screens and heavy advertising. The air-conditioning was working well too. I wasn't able to secure a seat so I just stood up in front of Alex and Lourdes. Nevertheless, the space inside was still healthy.

We left Cubao station and went through several stops in ▼ #QUEZONCITY
with station names that aren't familiar to me. I could only remember one station and that is the Pureza Station. Anyway, our destination was the real ▼ #MANILA
(not Metro Manila).

Along the elevated trail, I saw the beautiful Metro Manila skyline. Yeah, I appreciate its beauty although it has imperfections and homeless people scattered elsewhere. I realized I was already in Manila when I saw the Manila City Hall that was so beautiful. I never thought I could see it on this LRT ride. I wanted to stop to take a photo but I realized I wasn't on a motorbike that would allow me to stop anytime. It gave me chills. There's something spiritual about Manila that it causes me to be high in spirit and diving into deep introspection everytime I enter its jurisdictions. I think I'm seeing a beauty in a different dimension that even though Manila is so infamous for many reasons, I love her because she's non-pretentious.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 3 | [MANILA] ► TWO HEADS ARE BETTER THAN ONE. MOMMY LOURDES AND ALEX ARE MY CURRENT COLLEAGUES IN A US-RN JOB IN THE PHILIPPINES AND THEY TOO ARE MY SUPPORT SYSTEM IN THIS BIG DECISION I AM MAKING NOW.
Alex and Lourdes know how I love to blog. On this journey, my priority has shifted from reaching the agency to documenting this moment. I blog because I want to save feelings and emotions in words. I want my blog to serve as my memory vault. This isn't really meant to impress but I'm sharing it anyway just in case I could touch somebody's heart who has the same story as mine.

We reached Recto LRT Station in Manila. I've heard about this place many times and I think it's a popular area/district in Manila. What's the next step? Why this ride for me is so symbolic? What are my thoughts and discoveries in Recto? Why Alex and Mommy Lourdes are with me in this journey and what is their role in this big decision I am making now? | to be continued... |

▼ BLOGSERYE 006
► BLOGSERYE 006: MY FIRST LRT RIDE | You're on the Episode 03 of this series.
▼ Episode 01
[METRO MANILA] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts and Reflections | Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations!.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 02
[QUEZON CITY] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH | I was with fellow nurses. We were going somewhere, a place where we could do the first step of maximizing the potential of our nursing career and this LRT station was part of that journey.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 03
[METRO MANILA] ► Cubao to Recto via LRT: Symbolic Ride for the Nurse in Me | You are currently on the Episode 03 page.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION
▼ Episode 04
[MANILA] ► Recto LRT Station: Why I Felt So Rich? | The pathway we took revealed to me a reality that's facing Manila's urbanity now. Manila is the capital city of my beloved country but she is facing challenges right now.

RECTO LRT STATION


Maps Showing the Location of METRO MANILA

MAP OF METRO MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "En Route." See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

UPDATE HISTORY FOR THIS BLOG POST
► 04-February-2019: The tab title "BLOG SERIES" was changed to "BLOGSERYE 006 for the series tracker." The link to Episode 04 was added in the series tracker after the end of the story. Tooltip added for #VIGAN. Twitter metadata was added.
► 03-February-2019: This post was published.


LATEST STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE STORIES COVERING LUZON ISLAND | SEE OLDER STORIES

LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

MORE TOWNS YOU MIGHT LIKE TO EXPLORE:
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[Manila] ► Recto LRT Station: Why I Felt So Rich?

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This story is episode 04 of a blog series.
The pathway we took revealed to me a reality that's facing Manila's urbanity now. Manila is the capital city of my beloved country but she is facing challenges right now.

► The Recto LRT Station has shown me realities in life. I felt privileged. I felt lucky. I felt grateful. I felt the luxury...

► I've never seen in person a sad reality in this scale. There's so much people sharing a space that's less than enough for them

[Manila, National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
RECTO LRT STATION, MANILA
| 1 | [MANILA] ► SOME PEOPLE (NOT ALL) WHO HAVE MORE IN LIFE ARE NOT GRATEFUL BECAUSE THEY DO NOT KNOW HOW IT FEELS LIKE TO HAVE LESS IN LIFE.
We reached the Recto LRT Station in Manila and I was so happy. I thought this train ride was done, but Alex and Lou told me we need to transfer to the other station called Doroteo Jose LRT Station that's already part of the Line 1. I found out later that Recto LRT Station is the last station for Line 2 for this side of Metro Manila.

We walked through an elevated pathway connecting the two stations and there I saw the glaring overt poverty displayed in Manila's key areas. I saw slums located very near the Recto LRT Station and this scenario put me into random introspections.

MANILA SQUATTER, SLUMS
| 2 | [MANILA] ► IT'S NOT ABOUT THE BEAUTIFUL HOUSE. IT'S ALL ABOUT THE BEAUTIFUL HOME.
MANILA SQUATTER, SLUMS
| 3 | [MANILA] ► TRUTH HURTS, BUT TRUTH SETS US FREE.
I subscribe to the belief though that the slums of Manila do not necessarily define the economic standing of our country (Canada and the USA also have homeless people) because homelessness and poverty issues are complex issues that could not be solved overtime. Take note that the poverty rate in the USA is 13.4% (2017) while 34.8 percent of Greeks (in Greece) live in poverty or in danger of poverty (2018). The Philippines has 21.6% poverty rate in 2015.

Although the Philippines has a bigger figure per capita, USA would still overtake us in numbers if we talk about the quantity. The 13.4% in the US translates to ~43 million poor Americans vs ~22 million poor Filipinos.


► Thoughts from Recto LRT Station


Moving on, these slums do not necessarily reflect our economic standing because some people living in the slums also have smartphones and television sets. Probably, some reasons like scarcity of living space could be considered. Some people would just want to stay in these areas because it's near their place of livelihood or for reasons of sentimentality. I am not an expert but I'm just entertaining the substance of other points of view.

I'm telling the above observations because I witnessed it myself. We also have a squatter area in ▼ #VIGAN
but the residents have motorbikes, appliances, concrete homes, smartphones, and some are studying at the private schools. They are not really poor, they are just living in a squatter area. So when the government offered them a new place to live, they obeyed because they could afford to buy the lots offered to them. Yes, Vigan is not Manila, I'm just justifying my above statement that the slums of Manila do not define the standing of our whole country because it's a different thing here in ▼ ILOCOS
. Anyway, poverty figures should not be a subject for debate here. Let's just hope for zero poverty, whether here in the ▼ PHILIPPINES
, United States or elsewhere in the world.

RECTO LRT STATION, MANILA
| 4 | [MANILA] ► OUR FACE IS MAGICAL. IT REFLECTS WHAT WE FEEL. IT MAKES US UNDERSTAND EMOTIONS.
Reaching the Recto LRT Station, I couldn't help myself but to document this journey. Lourdes and Alex were observing. I didn't know what's running inside their heads that time but I was pretty sure they wanted to tell something.

We exited Recto Station and there was a pathway leading to the other LRT Line. I thought it's already the end of my first LRT ride but my companions told me we have to transfer to the other line. Ok, I got it. Recto is the last station in this other side of Line 2 and we needed to transfer to the other line to reach our destination.

MANILA squatter slum
| 5 | [MANILA] ► THE HIGH BUILDINGS ARE SYMBOLIC OF THE HIGH HOPES OF THE POOR TO ESCAPE POVERTY.
MANILA squatter slum
| 6 | [MANILA] ► IN LIFE, THERE IS A ROAD TO POVERTY BUT THERE IS ALSO A ROAD TO SUCCESS. THE ROAD YOU SHOULD FOLLOW IS NOT A MATTER OF CHANCE, BUT A MATTER OF CHOICE.
MANILA squatter slum
| 7 | [MANILA] ► THE CLEAR BLUE SKY CONSTANTLY REMINDS US THAT BEHIND THE CLOUDS, THE SUN IS STILL SHINING. WE CAN WIN THE POVERTY WAR BECAUSE WE CAN.
The pathway we took revealed to me a reality that's facing Manila's urbanity now. Manila is the capital city of my beloved country but she is facing challenges right now. I saw a polarizing scenario as I walked on the elevated pathway. From afar are business districts with imposing high rises showing the wealth of Manila. Just below the elevated pathway is a slum showing the poverty of my dear country.

I felt bad about what I saw (and I think no sane individual would be happy with this). I've never seen in person a sad reality in this scale. There's so much people sharing a space that's less than enough for them; a space they could call their home, but not their own.


► Ending Notes


The Recto LRT Station has shown me realities in life. I felt privileged. I felt lucky. I felt grateful. I felt the luxury of having our own house (although our house is not that beautiful or big).

Poverty may be a pressing issue facing our country today but I believe in the saying that "If you are born poor, it’s not your fault, but if you die poor it’s your mistake". The display of poverty near the Recto LRT Station made me realize how blessed I am. I felt rich compared to the set-up I saw, hence allowing me to feel that sympathy and compassion to people who have less in life in terms of financial status. I specified that these are the people who have less in financial status because the scarcity of their resources doesn't necessarily make me "more" or "better" than them. I'm pretty sure that people living in dire situation like this have also more in life. They are resilient. They are strong. They are capable of living happily without the convenience we experience. The foregoing qualities I mentioned are already enough to consider them as people who also have more in life because they possess the qualities that people with better financial status may not have. That means that if they will escape this kind of situation, they will be wiser because they already experienced how it feels like to live in a dire situation. Surely, their standard of happiness will be very low and I believe they will find happiness in every simple things they never had before once they escape poverty.

After the Recto LRT Station, we transferred to the other line. Where are we going? This LRT ride is taking so long. Again, what is the significance of this LRT ride in my nursing career? | to be continued... |

▼ BLOGSERYE 006
► BLOGSERYE 006: MY FIRST LRT RIDE | You're on the Episode 04 of this series.
▼ Episode 01
[METRO MANILA] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts and Reflections | Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations!.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 02
[QUEZON CITY] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH | I was with fellow nurses. We were going somewhere, a place where we could do the first step of maximizing the potential of our nursing career and this LRT station was part of that journey.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 03
[METRO MANILA] ► Cubao To Recto Via LRT: Symbolic Ride For The Nurse In Me | You cannot be your old self all the time. You need to transform for the better and powerful new you.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION
▼ Episode 04
[MANILA] ► Recto LRT Station: Why I Felt So Rich? | You are currently on this page.

RECTO LRT STATION








Maps Showing the Location of #MANILA

MAP OF MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Train Stations and Railways" See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

UPDATE HISTORY FOR THIS BLOG POST
► 04-February-2019: This post was published.


LATEST STORIES COVERING MANILA | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE OLDER STORIES

LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

MORE TOWNS YOU MIGHT LIKE TO EXPLORE:
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[Manila] ► Doroteo Jose LRT Station: "Grabbing an Opportunity"

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This story is episode 05 of a blog series.
*Disclaimer: A sponsored link may appear somewhere in this post.

...listening to the words of the experts is fascinating but hearing the stories of normal individuals is more heartfelt and genuine because they share stories based on what they feel and what they have experienced.

► In our careers, opportunities are but a few. Individuals wanting to clinch that opportunity are overcrowding the space.

► In life, we need to make the right choices, or else, you'll end up at the wrong place.

[Manila, National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 1 | [MANILA] ► OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONLY ONCE.
This series is getting so long. Forgive me if you hate long stories divided into series. I just don't want to miss any detail. Now that these details are still fresh in my memory, I wouldn't let them escape out of my brain. So here I am again, writing narratives of real experiences, real lives, real happenings, real emotions, and uncensored point of view. Anyway, here's the continuation...

From Recto LRT Station, we crossed an elevated pathway that would connect us to the LRT Line 1's Doroteo Jose Station. I knew Lourdes and Alex were observing me and I could feel that they wanted to tell something. When they had the best opportunity to do so, they warned me to keep my gadgets out of public view. It appears like the route we were taking was not safe for a person like me who is carefree, careless, and taking lots of photos.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 2 | [MANILA] ► THIS WAS THE PATHWAY CONNECTING LRT LINE 2 (RECTO) AND LINE 1 (DOROTEO JOSE).
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 3 | [MANILA] ► LOURDES AND ALEX LOOKED SO HAPPY AS WE TRANSFERRED TO THE LRT LINE 1.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 4 | [MANILA] ► IN LIFE, WE NEED TO MAKE THE RIGHT CHOICES, OR ELSE, YOU'LL END UP AT THE WRONG PLACE.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 5 | [MANILA] ► LET HISTORIANS AND EXPERTS SHARE THE TECHNICAL DATA BUT THE SPIRIT OF A PLACE WILL ALWAYS COME FROM THE PERSONAL, UNSCRIPTED STORIES OF NORMAL PEOPLE.
Our way to the Line 1 was not at all crowded (in our case). As we took our way to the other side, mommy Lourdes was so passionate about sharing her knowledge of Manila. She did not possess the knowledge of a history-dedicated travel blogger or a geographer to know all the history and technical details but she was sharing to me her insights and wisdom based on her capacity as a normal resident of the greater Manila area. She's seasoned—about to retire soon but still full of dreams. As a young adult, whenever I read retirement blogs, I'm reminded of mommy Lourdes.

You know, listening to the words of the experts is fascinating but hearing the stories of normal individuals is more heartfelt and genuine because they share stories based on what they feel and what they have experienced. The perspective of normal residents about a place is always personal, real, and true.

Lourdes pointed her fingers to show me the location of an abandoned hotel. She doesn't know the technical details like what a historian does but she sure represented the genuine perspective of locals who are not keen of the technicality but of the spirit of the place.

► Thoughts from Doroteo Jose LRT Station

We reached the Doroteo Jose Station and a multitude of commuters welcomed us. We purchased a one-way journey ticket from the counter this time (not from a machine). Alex also advised me to purchase a ticket to Cubao because there'd be a longer queue later in the afternoon.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 6 | [MANILA] ► THIS WAS THE TICKET COUNTER AT DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 7 | [MANILA] ► MOMMY LOURDES JUST ENTERED THE DOROTEO JOSE STATION PLATFORM BECAUSE SHE HAD A BEEP CARD.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 8 | [MANILA] ► MOMMY LOURDES AND ME SELFIE-D INSIDE THE DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 9 | [MANILA] ► COMMUTERS PATIENTLY WAITED FOR THE TRAIN.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 10 | [MANILA] ► THIS WAS MY ONE-WAY TICKET TO MY NEXT LRT STATION.
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION, MANILA
| 11 | [MANILA] ► THE TRAIN ARRIVED JUST WHEN WE NEEDED IT THE MOST.
This time, the LRT station appeared more crowded than in Cubao. There were long queues and the action of securing a 'space' inside the train was so intense. While joining the action, I could no longer see my friends because I swear securing a space inside this train was a matter of self-focus and survival. If you want to be with your friends all the time, you may lose the opportunity to secure that space inside the train. When I say space, I am not referring to the seats inside. I'm literally referring to that space where you could insert your body in the sea of human sardines—like packed inside a can.

God knows how I struggled to maintain a grip on that pole with other individuals' hands. I secured a space on that pole, sadly, I got the higher part so I had to raise my hands for a part of this symbolic journey just to reach that space where a could grip to maintain my balance.

This sardines-can-like journey is again symbolic. In our careers, opportunities are but a few. Individuals wanting to clinch that opportunity are overcrowding the space. To get that space of opportunity, you need to be self-focused and smart as you grab that opportunity quickly the moment you see it. If you have second thoughts, that space could be taken away by another person from the crowd real quick.

► Ending Notes

I romanticized my first LRT station experience in Cubao but reaching this station in Manila, I experienced the not-so-good side. Again, I'm still grateful that we have an LRT Line so I was able to reach my destination more efficiently as to time.

However, the not-so-comfortable experiences I had don't necessarily define my first LRT experience. I would say this LRT ride was more beautiful than awful. Rush hour was starting to peak so this would be an acceptable reason because obviously, Metro Manila lacks an extensive metro train system to decongest the already busy lines and stations.

Moving on, this journey is actually about me realizing the concept of 'grabbing the opportunity when it knocks'. I was on my way of seizing it. I'm off to the final station. Which station? Where am I going? What is this opportunity I am referring to? My true destination will be revealed in the next part of this series. | to be continued... |

▼ BLOGSERYE 006
► BLOGSERYE 006: MY FIRST LRT RIDE | You're on the Episode 05 of this series.
▼ Episode 01
[METRO MANILA] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts and Reflections | Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations!.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 02
[QUEZON CITY] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH | I was with fellow nurses. We were going somewhere, a place where we could do the first step of maximizing the potential of our nursing career and this LRT station was part of that journey.

CUBAO-ARANETA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 03
[METRO MANILA] ► Cubao To Recto Via LRT: Symbolic Ride For The Nurse In Me | You cannot be your old self all the time. You need to transform for the better and powerful new you.

DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION
▼ Episode 04
[MANILA] ► Recto LRT Station: Why I Felt So Rich? | The pathway we took revealed to me a reality that's facing Manila's urbanity now. Manila is the capital city of my beloved country but she is facing challenges right now.

RECTO LRT STATION
▼ Episode 05
[MANILA] ► Doroteo Jose LRT Station: "Grabbing an Opportunity" | You are currently on this page.

RECTO LRT STATION


Maps Showing the Location of #MANILA

MAP OF MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Train Stations and Railways" See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

UPDATE HISTORY FOR THIS BLOG POST
► 14-February-2019: Some grammar errors corrected.
► 13-February-2019: This post was published.


LATEST STORIES COVERING MANILA | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE OLDER STORIES

LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES


MORE TOWNS YOU MIGHT LIKE TO EXPLORE:
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[Feature] ► 4 Benefits to Taking a Small Group Tour in Ireland

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Small traveling groups can be made up of families, friends, colleagues, or strangers looking to explore similar destinations.

► Ireland is known to have visitors and locals tour in groups to various destinations.

► Tour companies also offer group tours. They seem to be on the rise as this touring trend gains popularity.
DOWNTOWN DUBLIN, IRELAND
| 1 | [DUBLIN] ► DOWNTON DUBLIN, THE CAPITAL OF IRELAND
The reasons behind the success of tours of small groups can be associated with the benefits they enjoy. These benefits include...

► 1 - Affordable Packages at Discounted Rates

For a small group tour, one gets to spend less for more. A small group gets to enjoy pre-arranged packages set by the tour companies. The groups can also get a personalized package at affordable rates. This is because they share costs, which helps reduce expenses greatly. There are also minimal unexpected expenses as the cost of your trip is always predetermined. This protects you from unexpected hiked costs too due to changes in other external factors. Repeat clients also get to enjoy more discounts in the form of loyalty rewards from the tour companies.

DOWNTOWN DUBLIN, IRELAND
| 2 | [DUBLIN] ► THE OLD ALLEYS OF DUBLIN, THE CAPITAL OF IRELAND
Go Irish Tours offers affordable small group tours. With the Lucky Charm 8-day package, you will get a driver guide to take you to some of the best Ireland destinations, with some surprises of areas you may have never heard of.

► 2 - A Pre-Arranged Tour Structure

While looking to make a tour, your main aim is to make the most of the tour days by visiting the most places. While traveling solo, it can be hard to make plans and stick to them while touring a new place. These groups have a pre-arranged tour structure that ensures that they utilize their time accordingly. The structure lists activities meant to be completed each day. This helps save on time and lets you explore more. Accommodations and transfers are also included in such structures. This makes the tour easy and less stressful.

► 3 - Instant Company and Safety

Traveling to a new place alone can be boring and unsafe. Travelling as a group makes this enjoyable as you get to interact. At the end of the tour, some people even form strong and beautiful bonds of friendship. The tour is safe. A group sticking together can be hard to mug or rob.

DOWNTOWN DUBLIN, IRELAND
| 3 | [DUBLIN] ► GRAFFITI WALL AT THE STREETS OF DUBLIN, THE CAPITAL OF IRELAND
You are less of a target for criminals. The group also offers a sense of security while traveling in beaten tracks and unpopulated places that might get scary and lonely if explored by individuals. They also make some plans such as mountain climbing and rock climbing easier by offering support and help to you when needed.

► 4 - Guided Tours

Traveling alone can be hard especially when trying to navigate in unknown spaces. For group tours, a tour guide is provided which might be too costly to hire as an individual. The tour guides make it easier to move to destinations as you do not need to figure the location and systems first as they guide you through them. Guided tours also eliminate the language barrier that might be experienced making your trip easier and enjoyable. | end |


LATEST GUEST POSTS | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE FEATURE STORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

[Manila] ► Why My Principles Changed from Y.O.L.O to REALITY?

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While it isn't bad to travel non-stop, the question is could you sustain it without compromising your future?

► Now that I'm getting older, my responsibilities also sank in all of a sudden.

► I'm the eldest child in the family and I found myself riding the bus-of-life without money to pay for my fare.

[Manila, National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
SANTA CRUZ CHURCH, MANILA
| 1 | [MANILA] ► NONE IN OUR PAST IS A MISTAKE. IT HAPPENED BECAUSE WE NEED TO LEARN AND GROW.
Everything has an ending and this first LRT ride of mine was not spared. After all the encounters it has allowed me to experience—both gave me grin and frown, I had to wrap things up and call it done. Nothing is permanent, much less infinite.

The jam-packed train from Doroteo Jose LRT Station brought me to my final quest—of career, future, and adulting. This train journey, as I mentioned in the previous episodes, was both a literal and a metaphorical journey. It's about reaching a certain destination in Manila and reaching my aspirations in the middle of uncertainty.

UN AVENUE LRT STATION
| 2 | [MANILA] ► OUR LAST STOP WAS THE UNITED NATIONS AVENUE STATION.
The train ran with chaos inside—under the vividly calm blue sky. The train apparently accommodated a multitude more than it could handle. The space inside shrank. Everything became a shared space in a sea of strangers, including the air we breathed.

The rush hour, on the contrary, reminded us not to rush. We had to take it slowly or else we would lose our focus and vigilance. This was it.


► Changing my Principles


Mommy Lourdes guided us on our way to Aguinaldo agency, a legitimate recruiter of nurses wanting to work in the United Sates. The moment I left the LRT station, I had mixed emotions because I ate my own vomit. I swallowed my own words. You know, I've always told my friends I don't want to work in the United States but now I'm here losing my words of honor.

Money-wise, I'm ok. I mean, I'm easy to please. I was trained by my father to be contented of what I have. My standard of living is low. I can live without the expensive extra convenience as long as I can do the things that I love. Doing the things I am passionate about are my driving forces to live my life to the fullest. As long as I have resources that could sustain my simple passions, I'm fine with it. These are the reasons why I said I don't want to work in the United States (aside from their toxic society full of extreme ideas that create unnecessary ways to be offended: e.g. manspreading, feminism, sexism, breastfeeding in public, etc).

However, I realized I was too selfish. Everything I did was for myself. I earned just enough to satisfy myself so I didn't need to have more because I was already happy for myself. I was blinded by the wrong concept of Y.O.L.O that taught me to become irresponsible of myself and my future.

About two (2) years ago, my father turned 60 years old and he is now a senior citizen. I was caught off guard all of these years that I was frigid, selfish, and insensitive from the realities of life. My parents are ageing and I felt like I have never done anything yet to give back.

Again, one of the worst 'American ideals' that influenced me was to believe that children are not required to give back to their parents because it is the responsibility of the parents to raise their kids well. While it's somehow true, this principle was way too extreme now that I'm already an adult seeing my parents getting older. I found out that my Asian culture prevailed and it was more enriching than following the Western culture of leaving their parents at home care facilities while they focus for their individual work or businesses.

I was there, riding on that LRT from Cubao, to execute my baby steps as I also regain my consciousness back to reality after I was hypnotized by unrealistic social media posts I saw—like quitting your job to enjoy life to the fullest because of the You Only Live Once (Y.O.L.O) concept of giving it all now and not thinking of the future! It's a crazy idea to quit your job now and come what may! So beware of the lies of social media. As a travel blogger, my exposure to these ideals is plenty. While it isn't bad to travel non-stop, the question is could you sustain it without compromising your future?

Now that I'm getting older, my responsibilities also sank in all of a sudden. I'm the eldest child in the family and I found myself riding the bus-of-life without money to pay for my fare. I was sure I was heading somewhere but everything was unplanned with no direction at all. I didn't know what's waiting ahead of me in the future and I have not made any effort yet to at least become future-proof.

My parents are ageing. I'm getting older, planning to settle down, and wanting to build my own family. My younger brothers see me as their savior. My little cousins regard me as their role model. What the...! I felt like I was so un-ready and nasty at the same time. The pressure on me is high!

I took a sigh as we crossed the busy streets of Manila on our way to the recruitment office along General Luna Street in Ermita because this moment was indeed a big decision on my part.


► A Change of Heart + Ending Notes


While me and Alex used our millennial skills to look for the location of the agency using our gadgets, Lourdes, on her 50s, used her instinct to find the right direction. We, millennials, failed to see it from our digital maps while Lourdes was able to locate the office by seeing the position of the sun and the elevation of the birds.

EMILIO AGUINALDO COLLEGE, MANILA
| 3 | [MANILA] ► THIS IS AN ALLEY LEADING TO THE EMILIO AGUINALDO COLLEGE CAMPUS WHICH IS VERY NEAR THE AGUINALDO AGENCY.
The agency was located inside a fenced compound. Inside the compound was a group of Indian students in white uniform. They probably are here in the Philippines to study. I was curious why they were inside the compound. I approached the store where they were staying and found out that it was a restaurant offering Indian dishes. Ah, ok. It made sense.

After a while, we entered the office and found myself still hesitant to file my application because my previous YOLO self was telling me many "what if-s". Applying for a job in the United States seemed so easy for nurses now because the demand is really high as long as you survive the most difficult part—passing the NCLEX examination which I already did.

CARRIEDO FOUNTAIN, MANILA
| 4 | [MANILA] ► THIS IS OUR 'DREAM CIRCLE" COMPOSED OF LOURDES, ALEX, AND ME. OUR CIRCLE SHOWS THAT AGE IS IMMATERIAL IN DREAMING FOR A FUTURE YOUR ARE ABOUT TO BUILD. MOMMY LOURDES, IN HER 50S, IS EVEN MORE ENTHUSIASTIC THAN US, MILLENNIALS.
As I had second thoughts, I was reminded of my ageing parents and also my actual age. I guess I made the right decision although this would sacrifice all the things I have already planned for my future here in the Philippines. After all, when you become an older adult, your mindset also changes. I'm now in a critical period in my life where I need to take responsibility for my parents, build my own stable career, and prepare for a future family of my own at the same time. It's hard, but challenge accepted. So I took my first LRT ride to build my future and here I am, starting this journey. It's no longer just for myself. It's for everyone I could possibly help and inspire. Goodbye YOLO! Hello reality! I just had a change of heart. | end of Blogserye 006 |

▼ BLOGSERYE 006
► BLOGSERYE 006: MY FIRST LRT RIDE | You're on the Episode 06 of this series.
MANILA LRT STATION
▼ Episode 01
[METRO MANILA] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts And Reflections | Imagine that good feeling when I experienced the Metro Manila LRT for the first time and it exceeded my expectations!
▼ Episode 02
[QUEZON CITY] ► Cubao LRT Station: My First LRT Station in PH | I was with fellow nurses. We were going somewhere, a place where we could do the first step of maximizing the potential of our nursing career and this LRT station was part of that journey.
▼ Episode 03
[METRO MANILA] ► Cubao To Recto Via LRT: Symbolic Ride For The Nurse In Me | You cannot be your old self all the time. You need to transform for the better and powerful new you.
▼ Episode 04
RECTO LRT STATION[MANILA] ► Recto LRT Station: Why I Felt So Rich? | The pathway we took revealed to me a reality that's facing Manila's urbanity now. Manila is the capital city of my beloved country but she is facing challenges right now.
▼ Episode 05
DOROTEO JOSE LRT STATION[MANILA] ► Doroteo Jose LRT Station: Grabbing an Opportunity | ...listening to the words of the experts are fascinating but hearing the stories of normal individuals are more heartfelt and genuine because they share stories based on what they feel and what they have experienced.
▼ Episode 06
SANTA CRUZ CHURCH, MANILA[MANILA] ► Why My Principles Changed from Y.O.L.O to REALITY? | You're currently on this page.


Maps Showing the Location of #MANILA

MAP OF MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Travel Diaries". See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition, and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

UPDATE HISTORY FOR THIS BLOG POST
► 11-March-2019: This post was published.


LATEST STORIES COVERING #MANILA | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW

MORE STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE OLDER STORIES

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[Quezon City] ► EO Executive Optical: How to Get Eye Glasses in 3 Easy Steps

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There's a time for everything and how you lived your life few years back may not be appropriate today.

► I've come to a point where I've become conscious of what I speak, eat, do, or try.

► Becoming an adult exposes you to many realities and realizations in life.

[Quezon City, National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
*If you're a hater of narratives and introspection from random introvert people, you could skip the narrative part and learn the process of getting eyeglasses from Executive Optical by scrolling down.

EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL
| 1 | [QUEZON CITY] ► SEE THE MISTAKE OF OTHERS AND YOU'LL BE DISAPPOINTED. SEE THE BEAUTY AND STRENGTH OF OTHERS AND YOU'LL BE INSPIRED. WHAT YOU CHOOSE TO SEE IS WHAT YOU BECOME.
Becoming an adult exposes you to many realities and realizations in life. In my case, I've started to value things I used to take for granted and one of them is my vision. I didn't want to wear eye glasses or contact lenses before because I've always been a believer of minimalism—the less objects, the less hassle.

You know, I've always wanted to be maintenance-free and carefree. I have always wanted to focus on minimal things that matter most for me so you wouldn't expect me to talk about the life of the neighbor you hate; or the break-up of a celebrity couple—it's too much for my time. Take note that I also follow some celebrities whom I like and those who inspire me but I would not spend much time talking about their personal life. Come on, less problems, less hassle.

I've come to a point where I've become conscious of what I speak, eat, do, or try. I've really changed a lot. When I was younger, I just wanted to just be myself and focus on the fun and living life to the fullest. I think, that chapter of my life is over. I'm now on an era in my life where every move that I make or every word that I speak is self-censored because modesty and decency should also come with age.

While it's so cool and fun to 'be yourself', this should not compromise your dignity and decency. For a guy like me who is new in adulting, it's important to be yourself but I believe I should act and speak my age. There's a time for everything and how you lived your life few years back may not be appropriate today.

Speaking of being minimalist, I'm still that person today but I've personally modified that concept. There are simple things in life that we should also pay attention to. As I become older, I've valued the importance of health and wellness—this includes a healthy vision so I decided to get my eyes checked once again and get those eyeglasses back because my vision is getting worse each time. As an avid traveler, I still want to appreciate the beauty of places and people with my optimal vision.


► How to Avail Eyeglasses at EO (Executive Optical) in 3 Easy Steps?


Yesterday, I went to the Gateway Mall-Cubao Branch of Executive Optical (optometry clinic) to have my eyes checked. The clinic is located at the Aurora Boulevard side of Gateway Mall, ground floor, below the LRT station of Cubao.

EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 2 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THE EXECUTIVE OPTICAL CUBAO BRANCH IS LOCATED JUST BELOW THE LRT STATION AT GATEWAY MALL.

► Step 1: Choose a frame and the type of lens.

A cheerful sales attendant assisted me and showed to me the frames on sale (assuming I'm in need of new glasses). However, I didn't like the frames of the the items on sale so I checked the frames located inside a locked glass storage. I saw two frames with green temples so I checked those two. These frames are branded so they are much expensive with costs starting from 4,000 pesos.

Ask assistance from the sales representative after you've chosen one.

EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 3 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THIS SALES REPRESENTATIVE CHEERFULLY ASSISTED ME IN CHOOSING MY FRAME.
EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 4 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THE BRANDED FRAMES WERE DISPLAYED INSIDE A LOCKED GLASS CONTAINER.
For the lens, I chose the photochromic lens commonly known as the the transition lens. The price was ~1900 (discounted). It's more expensive than the other lenses but I wanted something that is more convenient and of course, minimalist and less maintenance—like I don't have to change for sunglasses in very bright places.

Take note that you don't need to get a branded frame. For fellows running short of budget, they have incredibly cheap choices. I chose the branded frame for personal reason (I was after the green temples).

Step 2: Wait for the optometrist to check your eyes.

After I've chosen the lens and the frame, I waited a little for my session with the optometrist. I entered the refraction room and my vision was assessed using the Snellen chart and other equipment I'm not familiar with.

EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 5 | [QUEZON CITY] ► I TOOK THIS SELFIE INSIDE THE REFRACTION ROOM WHILE WAITING FOR MY PRETTY OPTOMETRIST.
EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 6 | [QUEZON CITY] ► I TOOK THIS SELFIE INSIDE THE REFRACTION ROOM WHILE WAITING FOR MY PRETTY OPTOMETRIST.
EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 7 | [QUEZON CITY] ► INSIDE THE REFRACTION ROOM WAS A SINK, DISPLAYED OPTOMETRIC STUFF NEXT TO THE MIRROR, AND VISUAL ASSESSMENT EQUIPMENT AND TOOLS.
EO EXECUTIVE OPTICAL, CUBAO
| 8 | [QUEZON CITY] ► THIS IS HOW A TABLE OF AN OPTOMETRIST LOOKS LIKE.
An equipment was placed on my eyes. The optometrist manipulated the equipment then assessed my vision by asking me if my vision was clearer. After I've found out the clearest vision, she took note of the calibration and chose the right grade for my eyes—50 on my right eye and 100 on my left eye. The optometrist told me to walk and test if I would get dizzy. Unfortunately, the 100 lens got me dizzy so it was reduced to 75. I was diagnosed with astigmatism.

Step 3: Pay at the cashier

After the optometrist scaled the right lens for me, I was asked to pay at the cashier then I waited for 20 minutes before my eyeglasses was released.


► Ending Notes


1. Take care of your glasses by wiping it only with the clothe given to you. Avoid alcohol, perfume, and other liquids and chemicals as these may damage the lenses.
2. Take care of your eyes as much as you take care for your heart after a heart break.
3. Do you want your brand to be featured on my blog or interested to hire me as a brand ambassador? Shoot me an email and I will reply as fast as lightning.

Below: Doing the #BuwanChallenge by Juan Karlos Labajo with my new glasses from Executive Optical.


Executive Optical has branches nationwide. Get your eyes checked and have that eyeglasses in 20 minutes. | end |


Maps Showing the Location of #QUEZONCITY

MAP OF QUEZON CITY
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Sponsors and Featured Brands." You want your brand to be featured? Shoot me an email at edmaration@gmail.com.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ The insights, condition and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

UPDATE HISTORY FOR THIS BLOG POST
► 14-March-2019: This post was published.


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MORE FEATURE STORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES

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[Manila] ► Binondo & Sta Cruz Visit 2019, the Fourth Streak

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If you search for the right reason, you will find it with passion.

► It may be sweeter the second time around and the third time could be a charm but the fourth time for me is more on introspection.

► To search for the right way would require you to exercise wisdom, independence, and sound discretion.

[Manila, National Capital Region, Luzon Island, Philippines]
SANTA CRUZ, MANILA
| 1 | [MANILA] ► SEARCH AND YOU WILL FIND. SEEK YOUR PASSION AND IT WILL REVEAL ITSELF TO YOU.
In our lives, we have a lot of longings and emptiness. We search for so many things that would either fulfill our emptiness or break our integrity. It's great to search because it's the only way we could find what we are looking for. However, we sometimes search for the wrong reasons. But when you apply righteousness in your search, you'll never go wrong searching for the right reason.

These are the insights and wisdom I gained from my recent visit in Binondo.


Fourth Time in Binondo



It may be sweeter the second time around and the third time could be a charm but the fourth time for me is more on introspection.

I tend to reminisce my first visit to a place, rekindle the sweet feelings of the second, and celebrate the memories of the third.

For the fourth time, it's more on reflection as I love to figure out what has changed in a place, what has changed in my life, and what has changed in my perspective as compared to my past experiences.

SANTA CRUZ, MANILA
| 2 | [MANILA] ► IN OUR LIFE JOURNEY, WE OFTEN LOOK FOR A SIGN. OFTENTIMES, THESE SIGNS ARE MISLEADING. IT WOULD BE WISER TO SEARCH FOR THE RIGHT WAY, WITH OR WITHOUT A SIGN. TO SEARCH FOR THE RIGHT WAY WOULD REQUIRE YOU TO EXERCISE WISDOM, INDEPENDENCE, AND SOUND DISCRETION. TO SEARCH FOR THE RIGHT SIGN WOULD ONLY TEACH YOU TO BECOME DEPENDENT ON HINTS, NOT ON TRUTHFUL WAYS.
The excitement I felt the first time I visited Binondo never faded. Time is immortal but it failed to slay my candid feelings. My emotions, for this particular moment, were as immortal as time. My feelings became my link to the first, second, and third Binondo encounters. The streak was meaningful—as timeless as time.

So for the fourth time, I visited Binondo for a random reason. It wasn't planned, but new experiences would definitely fit my bowl full of tito wisdom and insights.


From My First LRT Ride to Sta Cruz and Binondo



Just recently, prior to this blog post, I wrote a series of narratives covering ▼ MY FIRST LRT RIDE

[Metro Manila] ► My First LRT Ride: Thoughts And Reflections


experience. This Binondo encounter I'm talking about now is actually a continuation of that first LRT ride. Both happened the same day.

It was already rush hour and the streets of Manila were congested (and stressful for me). From UN Avenue LRT Station, we took a jeep and a tricycle on our way to Binondo.

The jeep was fully-packed with commuters that I had to sabit (stand at the back of the jeepney, see image | 3 | below) because I no longer had a space inside. No choice. We tried to be as fast as we could because we would like to go home before dark but the traffic woes of Manila didn't want to align with our stars. The two persons with me needed to go home to Rizal Province as early as possible. Me? I needed to assume the bow position for several minutes while the jeep was running.

SANTA CRUZ, MANILA
| 3 | [MANILA] ► THIS WAS MY FIRST SABIT EXPERIENCE IN MANILA. (PHOTO TAKEN BY
FLORENTYNA ALEXANDRA SANIN)

At a certain point, I was able to grab a seat hence giving my spine and back muscles a great relief from bowing.

Inside the jeep, it was such a comedic scene to see two zillennials facing each other but communicating through Messenger.

Yes, they didn't want to use their voice to communicate. They enjoyed chatting via Messenger which makes this generation kind of weirder than ever. They didn't even want to laugh with their voice. They laughed by sending "hahaha" via Messenger.

I could see on their faces they wanted to laugh but they chose not to create a sound because it needed to be delivered via emojis through Messenger.


Hey Santa Cruz, Manila! I'm Back!



When we were near the Santa Cruz Church, we opted to alight from the jeep that was running like a turtle as we could no longer bear wasting our time inside a jeep waiting like forever so this meant we had to walk our way to Binondo.

This Manila walk reminded me of my first three visits in Manila which were all done on foot. Ah! Seeing the Santa Cruz Church again was such a delight. In front of the church is the Carriedo Fountain which speaks of the very historical events in Manila. I didn't miss the chance to take selfies with the Carriedo fountain as like an old friend, it's good to catch up!

SANTA CRUZ CHURCH, MANILA
| 4 | [MANILA] ► THE SANTA CRUZ CHURCH IS A PRICELESS HERITAGE GEM IN MANILA.
CARRIEDO FOUNTAIN, MANILA
| 5 | [MANILA] ► HEY CARRIEDO FOUNTAIN! HOW'S LIFE GOING ON?
SANTA CRUZ CHURCH, MANILA
| 6 | [MANILA] ► WE TOOK A GROUFIE WITH THE CARRIEDO FOUNTAIN AND SANTA CRUZ CHURCH AT THE BACKGROUND.
The Santa Cruz Church remained imposing. If I remember well my first visit, sampaguita vendors are prohibited to stay inside the church perimeter so it made sense that I saw sampaguita vendors in front of the church. The rule appears to be still active until now.

The Carriedo fountain appears more tidy-looking this time. It was my blogger friend Paula O (https://www.themermaidtravels.com) who first introduced this landmark to me and its history.


Entering Binondo



From where I was standing (Carriedo Fountain), the Oriental-looking welcome arch across the street vividly provided us hints that we were already entering a distinct district—a Chinatown—called Binondo.

The reason why we were here was to eat in a restaurant named "Sincerity Restaurant" for dinner. It was Mommy Lourdes (you can learn her different roles in my blogger life in my Blogserye 006) who introduced the idea of eating in Binondo for a dinner after we finished our business in Ermita.

The Binondo vibe was a breath of fresh air from the grueling traffic jam on our way here from Ermita. We entered Binondo via the Ongpin Street, a relatively narrower street but less congested.

There's so much culture in this street. There's so much traditional trades not present in most Philippine modern CBDs (central business districts) like the BGC (Bonifacio Global City) in Taguig or Eastwood in Quezon City. The Ongpin Street, its main artery, has the face of a modern residential district with its high-rise condominiums and the nostalgia of an old commercial district. The mixture of anything was mind-blowing for me. Apart from the Chinese elements present in Binondo, you would also see plenty of Filipino and Western cultures co-existing harmoniously.

ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 7 | [MANILA] ► THE STREETS OF BINONDO IS FULL OF COLOR AND CULTURE.
ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 8 | [MANILA] ► THIS BINONDO ENCOUNTER GAVE ME PLEASANT SMILE.
ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 9 | [MANILA] ► THE STREETS OF BINONDO IS FOR EVERYONE UNLIKE SOME MODERN CBDs THAT ONLY ALLOW PRIVATE CARS OR SPECIFIC VEHICLES.
While red Chinese lanterns hovered over the streets of Binondo, Filipino Christmas lanterns (parol) also had their presence at the corners of the streets and sidewalks (this Binondo encounter happened in January 2019).

Street vendors co-existed with modern boutiques and many Chinese stores. You have the option. Business type is diverse and has a wide range—from street stalls to big players. It's generally for everyone.

ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 10 | [MANILA] ► BINONDO IS AN OLD BUSINESS DISTRICT THAT OFFERS VARIOUS OPTIONS, FROM CHEAP STREET FOOD TO EXPENSIVE FINE DINING.
ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 11 | [MANILA] ► BINONDO IS NOT THE BINONDO WE KNOW WITHOUT THESE RED CHINESE LANTERNS.
ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 12 | [MANILA] ► FROM OLD-FASHIONED TRADING TO MODERN BRANDED STORES, BINONDO STAYS AFLOAT ON ITS GAME.
I'm not a history or anthrophology major so I could only see the surface of this lovely district. I could only share my thoughts based on my shallow perspective of Binondo but this shallowness is already too much for me. I'm still overwhelmed of the things I observed. If I'd become an expert someday, that would expose me to overwhelming information that I think I could not handle—I could probably write fifty (50) articles for a single Binondo visit if that would be the case.

I have a lot in my head right now about this Binondo trip but I couldn't transform it into words—writer's block. I'm afraid it would be a lousy article to describe a beautiful district so I'd rather keep my mouth shut—one of the reasons why I haven't written yet my first Binondo visit because I think I couldn't make an acceptable article for it due to my limited knowledge of Binondo and my lack of confidence to justify in words a wondrous, surprising, and insightful first time visit in Binondo (ang OA ko 'no pero ganyan talaga eh).

By the way, after getting lost of our direction, we found the restaurant we were searching for, the Sincerity Restaurant!

ONGPIN STREET, BINONDO, MANILA
| 13 | [MANILA] ► THE SEARCH IS OVER.
Our search for the Sincerity Restaurant was not an easy task. Yes, we had gadgets and digital maps but that's another story. We were so tired (and exhausted) but we searched for the right reason so we were successful and happy of finding what we were really looking for.

If you search for the right reason, you will find it with passion. We found Sincerity Restaurant and that dinner was one of the best dinners we had as a group. Apart from the great food, it was the experience and moment well spent that made this search meaningful and memorable. Now, the search is over.

Sincerity Yours,
Edmar | end of story |


Maps Showing the Location of #MANILA

MAP OF MANILA
► FOOTNOTES, DISCLAIMERS, ACKNOWLEDGMENT, ETC

✈ This post was filed under the category "Travel Diaries". See more posts related to this below.

✈ The maps I used on this post are from maps.google.com.ph.

✈ All photos are mine.

✈ The insights, condition, and name of places or properties I mentioned here are based on the facts and situation on the day of my visit. Take note that you may have a different experience when you try the activities or see the properties/places mentioned here. Names of places and properties may also change by time.

✈ If you see errors in this post, let me know. I stand corrected.

UPDATE HISTORY FOR THIS BLOG POST
► 25-March-2019: This post was published.


LATEST STORIES COVERING #MANILA | SEE ALL IN A SEPARATE WINDOW


MORE STORIES COVERING METRO MANILA | SEE OLDER STORIES


LATEST STORIES COVERING THESE CATEGORIES | SEE OLDER STORIES








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