Halo Halong Pinoy

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

UP Singing Ambassadors wins several awards in Europe

The University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors (UPSA), led by its founder/conductor Ed Manguiat, wins several awards during their recently concluded European tour.

The group brought home a grand prize (Prague, Czech Republic) and several first prizes in prestigious competitions in Torrevieja, Spain and Gorizia, Italy.

Awards include: 1st prize, Polyphony category, Best Interpretation of a Habanera, and Premio del Publico (Prize of Public) at the 51st Certamen Internacional de Habaneras y Polifonia de Torrevieja, Spain; Grand Prize winner (Laureate of the Festival), and 1st prize, both in Mixed Choir and Chamber Choir categories at the 3rd International Choir Competition of Sacred Music (Musica Sacra Praga), Czech Republic;

1st prize, Folkloric category and Best Interpretation of an Obligatory Piece at the 44th "C.A. Seghizzi" International May Choir Competition, Italy; and, 4th place, Chamber Choir category at the 28th "Prof. Georgi Dimitrov" International May Choir Competition, Bulgaria.

The group also performed at various festivals like "Arezzo Sbandieratori Medieval Feast" and the "37th Festival Internazionale del Folklore", in Aviano and Piancavallo, Italy, respectively; and the famous 13th Festival Internazionale de Chant Choral de Nancy in France, where UPSA earned accolades and received standing ovations in all their performances.

Other highlights of the UPSA tour were the visits they made at the Home for the Aged in Luzern, Switzerland and Alsace, France; the Cancer Institute in Aviano, Italy; and, the Regional Prison in Strasburg, France.

The group also visited a few schools in Nancy, France and Athen, Greece and conducted workshops.

In the country, the group is set to hold two "Homecoming Concerts" on Oct. 6, 7 p.m., at the Church of the Risen Lord, UP Diliman, Q.C., and on Oct. 22, 7 p.m., at the Philamlife Auditorium, U.N. Ave., Manila.

These concerts will feature some of their winning songs like Toledo's "Alitaptap", Fuentes/ Sanchez's "Tu" and Guiseppe Bianco's "In Laude."

Monday, September 22, 2008

abortion??

This is a case of a 22 year of female patient who sought consult due to abdominal pain. Patient is married to an OFW who is currently working abroad for the past two years. She just underwent a self-induced abortion. The said pregnancy was not fathered by her OFW husband.

It was late afternoon when a woman in office attire accompanied by her female co-worker arrived at the ER. The patient, a deadringer for Diana Zubiri, looked pale and drowsy. Her face was in noticeable pain as she was holding on to her stomach.

"Doc, kanina pa ho kasi sumasakit ang tiyan, namumutla na nga. Muntik pang mahimatay nung pauwi kami," the co-worker initially remarked.

The patient was immediately examined. BP was 80/50. Pale palpebral conjunctiva, cold clammy skin and tender hypogastric area were evident. She was quickly hooked to IV fluids.

"Grabe lang ho siguro buhos ng mens ko. Kung maari po pagkatapos ko masweruhan, resetahan nyo na lang ako't uuwi na ho ko," the patient reiterated.

"Teka, di ganun kadali yun, kelangan muna natin ng mga tests at i-IE pa kita," I responded.

Upon hearing the word "IE" (internal exam), the patient suspiciously looked like a troubled kid whose tooth is to be extracted by a dentist.

Upon IE, passage of blood and meaty tissue were noted. Cervix is conspicuously soft and dilated.

On a physician's clinical eye, the patient exhibited the classic picture of someone who just underwent an abortion----the bleeding, the acute abdomen, the cervical ripening and the patient in denial of her ordeal.

"Siguradong di ka buntis at nagpalaglag, misis? Kelangan kasi magsabi ka nang totoo para magamot ka nang tama," I explained to her.

Yet still, the patient denied, insisting persistently she was just having a menorrhagia (abnormal heavy and long menstrual flow.)

As per protocol, patient was subjected to pregnancy test. I had to insert a catheter to extract urine for the said test, for the patient was too weak to voluntarily void her urine.

The test was positive.

"Misis, umamin ka na kasing nagpalaglag ka!" vehemently interjected by our feisty ER nurse who happens to have a type A personality and is notorious for her Matutina-like demeanor.

Faced with such overwhelming physical evidence, the patient remained steadfastly quiet and just exhibited a poker face.

At that point, I felt like Jack Bauer of 24 confronting a captive terrorist who is stubbornly hesitant in divulging a pertinent information.

The patient's mother finally arrived. She frantically asked, "Anong nangyari sa anak ko?"

I have no course but to tell the mother of the real deal, "Mukhang nagpalaglag ho anak nyo pero ayaw umamin. Baka puwede nyo hong kausapin. Mahirap ho kasi sa pasyente pag di nagko-cooperate."

Upon getting the info, the mother suddenly looked dumbfoundedly astonished, as if a gun was held up against her at point blank.

Seeing "single' at the patient' chart, I then curiously asked, "May boyfriend o kinakasama po ba ang pasyente?"

The mother replied in her rattled voice, "Dalawang taon na hong nasa abroad yung mister ng anak ko."

I almost succumbed to an Ang TV moment and nearly uttered the catchphrase "Niyeeh!"

The dust was starting to settle. With the husband out of the country, it was either divine intervention or some other guy pulled a bantay salakay stunt and knocked the patient up. Obviously, it was the latter.

The mother angrily confronted her daughter. I could not help but overhear their conversation (ok...ok..I eavesdropped.)

"Ano bang ginagawa mo sa buhay mo, anak?!" the sobbing mother uttered as she stomped her foot in disgust.

"Buntis ka daw at nagpalaglag sabi ng doktor. Sabihin mo nang totoo, nanay mo ko," the mother continued.

The patient broke down into tears and finally admitted her deed.

"Sinong ama? Si ________ (some guy's name that the mom probably knew)?" the lamenting mother interrogated.

The patient nodded in affirmation as she wiped her tears with a hanky.

"Sabi ko na nga ba. Ilang beses na kitang pinagsasasbihan!" the mother sorrowfully scorned her daughter.

"Diyus ku pu, Lord!!!" yelled by the mother who highly reminded me of the panicking troublesome "Pris di Lurd" antics of Aling Dionisia (Manny Pacquiao's mom) as seen on a tv news coverage whenever there were a Pacquiao fight.

Apparently, the patient was a G2P1 who terminated her pregnancy by taking Misoprostol (Cytotec-an abortifacient) orally and vaginally. She then experienced a crampy abdominal pain and continuous vaginal bleeding thereafter. The pregnancy was a result of an extra-marital affair.

Upon referral to my OB-Gyn consultant, patient was admitted. D & C (dilatation and curettage-in Filipino, raspa) was done. Blood transfusion was administered. She was discharged four days after.

As the Soul Asylum song goes, "they say misery loves company." During her OFW husband's absence, the patient was lured into infidelity. And that infidelity resulted into a stoic casualty--the killing of an unborn child. True love was what the mother claimed her daughter has for the father of her aborted child for he was a kababata. Whatever it may be, people should be responsible for every action they take. In this case, the patient was not. I cannot help but aimlessly wonder what would be in store for her relationship with the OFW husband once he knows.

Doctors can read charts but we cannot read minds. It's a bummer that clinicians do encounter patients that are elusive despite having a threat to their well-being. Covering up for an infamous and shameful act is indeed human nature, even in the face of a life and death situation.

During the time when the patient was packing her things up as she was up for discharge, I jokingly and satirically confronted her.

"Misis next time magsasabi ka na nang totoo kung buhay na ang nakasalalay. Sabi mo nireregla ka lang. Parang ako ang niregla sa yo eh."

from: http://worldofalbert.multiply.com/journal/item/82/The_Abortion_Case_Of_The_Unfaithful_Wife

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Inaugural speech of President Emilio Aguinaldo

Inaugural Address
by Emilio Aguinaldo
1st President of the Philippines
(President of the First Philippine Republic)
Delivered on January 23, 1899 at Barasoain Church, Malolos, Bulacan

First Inaugural speech of President Manuel Quezon

First Inaugural Address
by Manuel L. Quezon
2nd President of the Philippines
(1st President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines)
Delivered on November 15, 1935 at the Legislative Building, Manila

Second Inaugural Address by Manuel L. Quezon

Second Inaugural Address
by Manuel L. Quezon
2nd President of the Philippines
(1st President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines)
Delivered on December 30, 1941 at Corregidor Island, Manila Bay, Philippines

Inaugural Address by Jose P. Laurel

Inaugural Address
by Jose P. Laurel
3rd President of the Philippines
(President of the Second Philippine Republic)
Delivered on October 14, 1943 at the Legislative Building, Manila

Inaugural Address by Manuel Roxas

Inaugural Address
by Manuel Roxas

5th President of the Philippines
(1st President of the 3rd Republic of the Philippines)
Delivered on May 28, 1946 at the Legislative Building, Manila

Inaugural Address by Elpidio Quirino

Inaugural Address
by Elpidio Quirino

6th President of the Philippines
Delivered on December 30, 1949 at the Luneta Grandstand, Manila

Inaugural speech of President Ramon Magsaysay

Inaugural Address
by Ramon Magsaysay

7th President of the Philippines
Delivered on December 30, 1953 at the Luneta Grandstand, Manila

Inaugural speech of President Carlos Garcia

Inaugural Remarks after the demise of President Ramon Magsaysay
by Carlos P. Garcia

8th President of the Philippines
Delivered on March 18, 1957 at the Council of State Room, Executive Office Building,
MalacaƱang Palace, Manila

Inaugural speech of President Carlos P. Garcia

Inaugural Address
by Carlos P. Garcia

8th President of the Philippines
Delivered on December 30, 1957 at the Luneta Grandstand, Manila

Inaugural speech of President Diosdado Macapagal

Inaugural Address
by Diosdado Macapagal

9th President of the Philippines
Delivered on December 30, 1961 at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila

Inaugural speech of President Ferdinand Marcos 1965

First Inaugural Address
by Ferdinand Marcos

10th President of the Philippines
Delivered on December 30, 1965 at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila


"Mandate for Greatness"



Inaugural speech of President Ferdinand Marcos 1969

Second Inaugural Address
by Ferdinand Marcos
10th President of the Philippines
Delivered on December 30, 1969 at at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila

"To Transform the Nation — Transform Ourselves"

Inaugural speech of President Ferdinand Marcos 1981

Third Inaugural Address
by Ferdinand Marcos

10th President of the Philippines
Delivered on June 30, 1981 at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila


Inaugural speech of President Fidel Ramos



Inaugural Address
by Fidel Ramos
12th President of the Philippines
Delivered on June 30, 1992 at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila

"To Win the Future"

Inaugural Speech of President Gloria Arroyo 2004

Second Inaugural Address
by Gloria Macapagal Arroyo

14th President of the Philippines
Delivered on June 30, 2004 at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila

Inaugural Speech of President Corazon Aquino




Inaugural Address
by Corazon Aquino
11th President of the Philippines
Delivered on February 25, 1986 at the Club Filipino, San Juan, Metro Manila

Inaugural Speech of President Gloria Arroyo 2001

Our beloved leader of the church and father of EDSA, His Eminence, Jaime Cardinal Sin; His Excellency, the Papal Nuncio and the other members of the Diplomatic Corps and the international community; our heroes of EDSA -- you the people and President Cory Aquino and President Fidel Ramos; Senate President Nene Pimentel and the other senators; Speaker Noli Fuentebella and the other congressmen; the Filipino of the year 2001, Chief Justice Davide; other officials of the Philippine government; mga kapatid ko dito sa EDSA at sa buong Pilipinas:

In all humility, I accept the privilege and responsibility to act as President of the Republic.

I do so with both trepidation and a sense of awe.

Trepidation, because it is now, as the good book says, "a time to heal and a time to build." The task is formidable, and so I pray that we will all be one, one in our priorities, one in our values and commitments and one because of EDSA 2001.

Sense of awe, because the Filipino has done it again on the hallowed ground of EDSA.

People power and the "oneness" of will and vision have made a new beginning possible. I cannot, therefore, but at this point, recall Ninoy Aquino's words:

"I have carefully weighed the virtues and the faults of the Filipino, and I have come to the conclusion that the Filipino is worth dying for."

As we break from the past in our quest for a new Philippines, the unity, the Filipino's sense of history, and his unshakeable faith in the almighty that prevailed in EDSA '86 and EDSA 2001 will continue to guide and inspire us.

I am certain that Filipinos of unborn generations will look back with pride to EDSA 2001, just as we look back with pride to Mactan, the Katipunan and other revolts, Bataan and Corregidor and EDSA '86.

I am certain that pride will reign supreme as Filipinos recall the heroism and sacrifices and prayers of Jaime Cardinal Sin, Presidents Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos, Chief Justice Davide, the legislators who fought the good fight in congress, the leaders whose principles were beyond negotiation, the witnesses in the impeachment trial who did not count the cost of testifying, the youth and students who walked out of their classroom to be at EDSA, the generals in the Armed Forces and the Philippine National Police, and the Filipino out there who stood up to be counted in these troubled times.

The Filipino, crises and all, is truly worth living and dying for.

Ngunit saan tayo pupunta mula rito?

Jose Rizal, the first to articulate self-determination in a free society, provides the answer.

Rizal counseled the Filipino to lead a life of commitment. He must think national, go beyond self.

A stone is worthless, Rizal wrote, if it is not part of an edifice.

We are the stones, and the Philippines is our edifice.

On many occasions I have given my views on what our program of government should be. This is not the time or place to repeat all of them. However, I can tell you that they converge on four core beliefs.

1. We must be bold in our national ambitions, so that our challenge must be that within this decade, we will win the fight against poverty.
2. We must improve moral standards in government and society, in order to provide a strong foundation for good governance.
3. We must change the character of our politics, in order to create fertile ground for true reforms. Our politics of personality and patronage must give way to a new politics of party programs and process of dialogue with the people.
4. Finally, I believe in leadership by example. We should promote solid traits such as work ethic and a dignified lifestyle, matching action to rhetoric performing, rather than grandstanding.

The first of my core beliefs pertains to the elimination of poverty. This is our unfinished business from the past. It dates back to the creation of our republic, whose seeds were sown in the revolution launched in 1896 by the plebeian Andres Bonifacio. It was an unfinished revolution. For to this day, poverty remains our national problem. We need to complete what Andres Bonifacio began. The ultimate solution to poverty has both a political and an economic aspect. Let me first talk about the political aspect.

In doing so, I will refer to one of my core beliefs, that of the need for new politics. Politics and political power as traditionally practiced and used in the Philippines are among the roots of the social and economic inequities that characterize our national problems. Thus, to achieve true reforms, we need to outgrow our traditional brand of politics based on patronage and personality. Traditional politics is the politics of the status quo. It is a structural part of the problem.

We need to promote a new politics of true party programs and platforms, of an institutional process of dialogue with our citizenry. This new politics is the politics of genuine reform. It is a structural part of the solution.

We have long accepted the need to level the playing field in business and economics. Now, we must accept the need to level the playing field in politics as well. We have long aspired to be a world class economy. Now, we must also aspire to develop a world class political system, one in tune with the 21st century.

The world of the 21st century that our youth will inherit is truly a new economy, where relentless forces such as capital market flows and advances in information and communications technology create both peril and opportunity.

To tap the opportunities, we need an economic philosophy of transparency and private enterprise, for these are the catalysts that nurture the entrepreneurial spirit to be globally competitive.

To extend the opportunities to our rural countryside, we must create a modernized and socially equitable agricultural sector.

To address the perils, we must give a social bias to balance our economic development, and these are embodied in safety nets for sectors affected by globalization, and safeguards for our environment.

To ensure that our gains are not dissipated through corruption, we must improve moral standards. As we do so, we create fertile ground for good governance based on a sound moral foundation, a philosophy of transparency, and an ethic of effective implementation.

Considering the divisions of today, our commitment will entail a lot of sacrifices among us all, as we work to restore the dignity and preeminence of the Filipino.

Join me therefore as we begin to tear down the walls that divide. Let us build an edifice of peace, progress, and economic stability.

People power has dramatized the Filipino's capacity for greatness.

Great Filipinos, Filipinos of People Power, I ask for your support and prayers. Together, we will light the healing and cleansing flame.

This we owe to the Philippines. This we owe to every Filipino.

Thank you and may God bless us all.

Inaugural speech of President Joseph Estrada

PASINAYANG TALUMPATI SA BANSA NI PANGULONG JOSEPH EJERCITO ESTRADA

Quirino Grandstand, Rizal Park, Manila
Hunyo 30, 1998

Magandang hapon sa inyong lahat.

Papalubog na ang liwanag, at malapit nang kumagat ang dilim. Gayunpaman, ngayong hapon ay nagsisimula na ang isang bagong araw. Ang araw ng lahing Pilipino. Ang araw ng masang Pilipino.

Sa wakas, mamumuno na sa ating masa ang isang gaya nila, isang kaibigan at kapatid, isang kapwa --- na alam kung ano ang ibig sabihin ng maging maka-masa.

Noong huling tumindig ako dito sa Quirino Grandstand, kasama ko sina Pangulong Cory Aquino at Cardinal Sin, at napakarami ng nanindigan para sa demokrasya. Nakapiling ko rin kayo, at tayong lahat ay napabilang sa mga tunay na kaibigan ng demokrasya. Kaya papaano masasabi na ako raw ay mala-diktador? Noong huli akong tumindig doon sa lumang gusali ng Senado, labindalawa lamang kami.

Nguni't ---

Labindalawa na lumalaban sa mala-higante at makapangyarihang bansa; Labindalawa na lumaban sa pamahalaang patuloy na nagpa-alila sa banyagang kapangyarihan; Labindalawa na lumaban sa public opinion;

Subali't labindalawa na nanindigan para sa kalayaan at dangal ng ating bansa.

Pero mayroon pa ring nangahas na pagdudahan ang ating prinsipyo!

Marahil, ninais kong tapusin sa lalong madaling panahon, ang ilang isyu na matagal nang bumubulabog sa bayan.

Bakit? Upang wakasan na ang lahat ng bagay na dapat nating ilibing sa limot ng kasaysayan.

Sa aking pagmamadali, maaring hindi ko na inisip, na kailangan pang lumipas ang mahaba-habang panahon upang maghilom ang sugat ng ilan, at ang sugat ng bayan.

Tanong ko ngayon: mayroon pa ba kayang sinaktan at nilait nang higit pa sa akin? Mayroon pa ba kayang binastos sa peryodiko o sa radyo o sa telebisyon ng higit? Huwag na lang ako: kahit ang aking ina ay lubhang nasaktan dahil sa mga insultong ipinukol sa kanyang anak.

Ako ay tao lamang, at hindi po madaling magsabi --- forgive and forget, kalimutan na lang. Nguni't kailangan kong tapusin ang yugtong ito; at sa akin ay tapos na, nasa likod na natin, at hindi na dapat pag-usapan.

Pagkat dapat lamang na ako ay makisama sa lahat ng ating mamamayan, kasangga man o katunggali, kaibigan o kalaban.

Bakit? Sapagka't iisa lamang ang ating bayan, iisa lang ang ating landas, at kung hindi tayo magsasama-sama sa isang tunay na bukluran, kanino pa kaya, at kailan pa, kundi ngayon?

Ngayon na --- sapagka't ang hinaharap ng bansang Pilipino ay lubhang mabigat, lubhang malalim. Ang regional currency crisis ay paghamon hindi lang sa ating mga bangko o mga negosyante, kundi sa bawa't pangkaraniwang mamamayan.

Kaya sasabihin ko sa inyo ngayon, at sa buong mundo: Hindi tayo nag-aalinlangan, at hindi tayo nakakalimot.

If I have seemed impatient, it was because you and I wanted peace, and only peace. We must put yesterday behind us, so that we can work for a better tomorrow. I do not say: let us forget the past. No, I don't. But I ask that we should not let the past get in the way of a future that requires cooperation to achieve peace and prosperity for the least of us.

Matagal nang naghihintay ang lahat para sa isang bagong umaga. Heto na, ngayon na, ang panahon ng masang Pilipino.

Panahon na upang mapabilis ang pag-angat sa kabuhayan ng masang Pilipino.

Panahon na upang magkaroon ng lalong malaking bahagi, sa yaman ng ating bansa, ang masang Pilipino.

Panahon na upang sabihin: isang daang taon pagkatapos ng Kawit, limampung taon pagkatapos na kilalanin ang ating kasarinlan sa panahon ni Presidente Roxas, pitong taon pagkatapos tayong tumalikod sa foreign bases, eto na, narito na, araw na natin ngayon.

Alam nating hindi ito madaling gawin. Malubha ang lagay ng ekonomiya. Dapat lamang pagtuunan ng matagalang pansin ang pagsasa-ayos sa pambansang kabuhayan.

May mga nagsasabi: hindi raw maaaring madaliin ang mga gawaing ito. Unahin daw muna ang ekonomiya. Wala akong reklamo diyan, pero ang tanong ko: Mayroon pa bang ibang paraan upang mai-angat ang kabuhayan ng mga mamamayan? Hindi ba puwedeng sabay-sabay? Bakit ang masa ang laging huli at laging nalalamangan, kapag ang pinag-uusapan ay ang kaunlaran ng ekonomiya?

Noong tinatalakay ang mga reporma na ikabubuti ng mga negosyante, halos wala tayong narinig na nagreklamo sa kanila, na masyadong mabilis at malupit ang mga pagbabago. Gayunpaman, hindi ba pawang katotohanan lamang na ang pangkaraniwang mamamayan ang pumasan sa malulupit na epekto ng liberalization at globalization?

Gustuhin natin o dili, ang hamon ng kompetisyon ay kailangan nating tugunan. Ituturing natin itong pagkakataon, nguni't kailangang palakasin ang pambansang ekonomiya at palawakin ang pakinabang ng nakararami.

Sa anim na taon ng pamamahala ni Pangulong Cory Aquino, naitatag ang pundasyon upang muling lumakas ang ating ekonomiya. Sa pangangasiwa ni Pangulong Ramos, nagsimulang magluwal ng dibidendo ang ekonomiya para sa malalaking negosyante.

Ngayon naman, ang maliliit ay dapat makinabang sa ating pagsisikap. Sana, sila rin. Sana, sila naman ay maka-bahagi.

Progress must not be measured by the number of vacation houses of the rich.

Huwag naman sanang masamain, ng ilan sa ating mga mayayaman ang mensaheng ito. Mula't sapul, sila ang nakinabang --- at hanggang sa ngayon ay makikinabang pa rin, sapagka't gagawin natin ang lahat upang maibalik ang katahimikan sa ating bayan, ang katahimikan na kailangan upang umunlad ang ating kalakalan.

Kaya sa ating mga maliliit at mahihirap, narito ang pangako ni Erap: kayo ang unang makikibahagi sa biyaya mula sa ekonomiya, at mula sa pamahalaan.

Sa abot ng aking makakaya, bibigyan natin ang masa ng disenteng tahanan, sapat na pagkain, at pag-asa sa hinaharap. Pag-aaralin natin ang kanilang mga anak, at aalagaan natin ang kanilang kalusugan. Sa kanilang mga pamilya, ihahandog natin ang katahimikan, hanapbuhay at dangal sa araw-araw.

Sa kasawiang palad, dumating ang panahon ng masang Pilipino habang ang ekonomiya ng buong Asya ay bumabagsak. Wala tayong magagawa. Kailangan nating maghigpit ng sinturon, at ipagpaliban muna ang sapat at maagang gantimpala sa ating pagsisikap.

Sa aking mga kababayan, ito ang aking masasabi: sa inyong pagsasakripisyo, ako ang mau-una, at ako ang inyong kasama. At sa paglasap sa mga gantimpala ng ating pagsisikap, hindi kayo mahuhuli.

While I ask you to share these sacrifices with me, I will not impose any more on you when it comes to meeting my duties and responsibilities as president. It is my job now, and I will do it.

Walang dahilan upang lumaganap ang krimen sa ating lipunan; mangyayari lang ito kung ang gobyerno mismo ay kumukupkop sa mga kriminal. Walang organisasyon o gawaing kriminal na kayang lumaban sa pamahalaan, kung ang pamahalaan ay tapat sa pagnanasang durugin ang kriminalidad.

We know that the major crimes in this country are committed by hoodlums in uniforms. We know they are protected by hoodlums in barong tagalog, and acquitted by hoodlums in robes. We know that the most damaging crimes against society are not those of petty thieves in rags, but those of economic saboteurs in business suits; the dishonest stockbrokers, the wheeling-dealing businessmen, influence-peddlers, price-padders and other crooks in government.

Ipinangangako ko ngayon: gagamitin natin ang buong kapangyarihan ng pamahalaan upang labanan ang krimen --- maliit man o malaki. Walang makalulusot. Walang itatangi. I will use all the powers of government to stamp out crime, big and smal.

There will be no excuses, and there will be no exceptions. I have sent friends to jail before, and I can send them again.

No government is so powerless that it cannot protect its citizens, especially when they are victimized by government agents.

No government is so helpless that it cannot prosecute criminals, especially when the officials are criminals operating in the open.

Hindi makatarungan na sa isang bansang karamihan ay nagugutom at walang hanapbuhay, ang kaban ng bayan ay winawaldas at ninanakaw. Ang likas-yaman ay pinaghahati-hatian ng malalakas sa gobyerno.

So let me tell you today: There are things that a real government, even in the worst economic conditions, can do.

This government will do it.

Kaya nating sugpuin ang lumalaganap na krimen. Ginawa ko ang magagawa ko noong ako ang tagapangulo ng PACC. Gagawin ko ngayon ang lahat, ngayong Pangulo na ako. At walang sinumang makapipigil sa akin.

What I did in PACC, I will now do, and more, as President of the Philippines. And when I succeed this time, nobody, nobody, nobody can clip my powers!

Kaya pa rin ng pamahalaan ang magbigay ng mahahalagang serbisyo: mga lansangan, mga paaralan, mga health centers, sapat na bilang ng mga pulis at sandatahang lakas na sadyang katahimikan ang likha at alaga. Gagawin natin ito. Magagawa ng gobyerno ang lahat ng ito, huwag lamang saksakan ng nakawan at pork barrel.

Hindi mapapakain ng pamunuan ang lahat ng mga nagugutom sa ating bansa. Pero uusigin natin ang sinumang kukupit sa pondo na nakalaan sa pagbili ng pagkain.

Hindi kaya ng gobyerno na pagbigyan ang lahat ng mga lugar na nangangailangan ng kalsadang konkreto at aspaltado. Pero hindi natin palalampasin ang sinumang magnanakaw ng perang nakalaan sa paglikha ng mga tulay at kalsada.

Hindi kaya ng pamahalaan na agad pabalikin ang milyun-milyong overseas contract workers, at bigyan sila ng hanap-buhay sa ating bayan. 'Ramdam natin ang kalungkutan at pighating dala ng paghihiwalay, subali't pangako natin sa kanila na 'di pababayaan ang pamilya at mga anak nila rito. At lalong 'di natin kaliligtaan ang kapakanan nila sa ibang bansa.

Hindi kayang bigyan ng sapat na edukasyon ang lahat ng mga kabataang Pilipino, tulad nang itinadhana ng Saligang-Batas. Pero hindi natin palalampasin ang sinumang magwawaldas sa pondong nakalaan para sa mga libro at paaralan.

I appeal to the coming Congress to search its conscience for a way to stand behind me, rather than against me, on the pork barrel issue. I appeal to every legislator: Let us find a way to convert pork into tuition subsidies in both public and private schools. Let us use it to better the lives of our people, rather than to improve our chances of re-election.

There are crimes that I will make my personal apostolate to punish:

--- low crimes in the streets, by rich and poor alike;

--- high crimes on Ayala Avenue and Binondo;

--- graft and corruption throughout the government, whether in the executive, the legislative or the judiciary.

Ngayon pa lamang, ang mga kamag-anak ko ay nilalapitan na ng kung sinu-sino. Kung anu-anong deal at kickback ang ipinangangako.

Binabalaan ko sila: ang kanilang inilalapit ay ebidensiyang gagamitin ko sa pag-usig sa kanila, kapag itinuloy nila ang kanilang maruming balakin. Tandaan nila ito. Lalong mabuti, maghanda sila. Huwag nila akong subukan!

Sa aking administrasyon, walang kaibigan, walang kumpare, walang kamag-anak.

Hindi naman napakabigat ng mga ipinangako ko. Simple lang ang aking hinahangad. At simple rin ang ating hinahangad, subali't pagkatagal-tagal nang hindi natutupad. Nais kong maihatid ang kapayapaan sa ating buhay, at katiwasayan sa ating lipunan.

Nais kong isa-ayos ang gulo sa ating mga lansangan, at itatag ang katarungan sa ating mga institusyon.

Nais kong bigyan ng bagong lakas ang ating ekonomiya, at patas na pagsasabahagi ng mga bunga nito.

Nais kong isipin ng bawa't Pilipino, mahirap man o mayaman, na ang pinakaligtas na lugar sa buong mundo, ay ang kanyang lupang tinubuan.

I want every Filipino, rich or poor, to feel, that the safest place in the world for him, is his own country.

At sa dakong huli, umaasa akong mapagsasama-sama ko ang lahat ng mga Pilipino, upang matamo nila ang kapangyarihan na buhat sa nagkakaisang hangarin. Sa ganitong pagkakaisa, maiiwasan natin ang krisis sa ating rehiyon, at makakamit natin ang pangarap ng ating sentenyal.

Kalayaan.

Kalayaan sa isang mapang-aping kahirapan.

Isang bayang ligtas sa takot, at ang lahat ay pantay-pantay sa pagkakataon.

Nasa diwa at puso ng bawa't Pilipino ang kalayaan. Sa bansang ito, isang daang taon na ang nakararaan, nasulyapan sa Asya ang unang liwanag ng kalayaan.

Samahan ninyo si Erap, upang bigyan natin ng kakaibang ningning ang kalayaan sa buhay ng masang Pilipino.

Nitong huling labindalawang taon, malimit tayong nanawagan sa kapangyarihan ng sambayanan, sa people power, alang-alang sa demokrasya, at sa kaunlaran, at sa iba't ibang bagay.

Ngayon, ang kapangyarihan ay nasa kamay na ng bayan. Wala nang dahilan upang ipagkait pa sa nakararami at sa maliliit --- ang magandang kinabukasan.

Sa wakas, bayan ko, atin na ang tagumpay. Isa sa inyo ang ngayon ay Pangulo na.

Ito na ang hinihintay na bagong umaga. Narito na ang ating panahon.

Walang tutulong sa Pilipino, kundi kapwa Pilipino.

Maraming salamat po.

Charice sing with the stars: Celine Dion


Celine Dion and Charice Pempengco
Sept. 16, 2008-Madison Square Garden

Charice sing with the stars: Andrea Bocelli


Charice Pempengco and Andrea Bocelli "The Prayer"

Tuscany, Italy July 2008




Paeng Nepomuceno


Rafael "Paeng" Nepomuceno (born January 30, 1957 in Manila) is a Filipino and is a 6-Time World Bowling Champion and is acknowledged as the greatest international bowler in the history of the sport. He has won the World Cup of Bowling four times in three different decades:

Nepomuceno's two other world titles are from winning the World's Invitational Tournament which was participated by the World's best bowlers and was held in Sam's Town bowling center in Las Vegas, Nevada on August 8, 1984 which was a global event to showcase the sport in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Paeng also won the World Tenpin Masters championship in London, England on March 7, 1999. He is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records for three records: 1) for being the only athlete in the world to win world titles in three different decades- 70's,80's and the 90's, 2) for being the youngest ever to win the Bowling World Cup (at 19 years of age), and 3) for having won the most number of career championship titles worldwide. In total, Paeng has won 118 career international championship tournament titles in five continents. Paeng who still actively competes up to this day is the only bowling athlete to have won championship titles in the Americas, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

Paeng is the Philippines' most decorated athlete. He is the only bowling athlete in the world who has received the prestigious International Olympic Committee President's Trophy which is the highest sports award that can be given to an athlete. Paeng was the first international male bowling athlete to be enshrined in the International Bowling Hall of Fame and Museum based in St. Louis, Missouri in 1993 and his seven foot image is displayed at the entrance of the International Bowling Museum and Hall of Fame .In November 1999, the Federation Internationale des Quilleurs (FIQ) named Paeng as the "International Bowling Athlete of the Millennium."

In a ceremony held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates during the World Championships, an FIQ official cited Paeng with these words: "No international bowling athlete is more deserving of recognition than Paeng. In addition to his long list of well-known achievements as a world champion in three decades, Paeng truly has been and continues to be an extraordinary ambassador for Filipino sport."

Paeng is the only athlete in the Philippines who has been given the highest award to a Filipino by three Philippine presidents. In 1984, Paeng was awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit by President Ferdinand E. Marcos. In 1999, President Joseph E. Estrada awarded the Philippine Legion of Honor and in 2008, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo awarded Paeng, the Order of Lakandula with Class of Champion for Life and was declared Best Filipino athlete of all time. Both the Philippine Senate and House of Congress has declared Paeng the "Greatest Philippine Athlete of All Time".

In its September 2003 issue, the Prestigious Bowlers Journal International named Paeng as the Greatest International Bowler of All Time.

Paeng was named Athlete of the Century by the Philippine Sportswriters Association in the end of 1999 and Athlete of the Millennium in 2000. He was also named Philippine Athlete of the year 5 times by the Philippine Sportswriters Association which is a record in most number of times named Athlete of the Year. He was the first athlete to be inducted in the PSA (Philippine Sportswriters Association) Hall of Fame in 1993.

Paeng has been honored by being chosen to be the Philippine Flag Bearer of the Philippine Delegation in various World Games, Asian Games and the South East Asian Games.

Paeng was named World Bowler of the Year three times (1984,1985 and 1992) by the World Bowling Writers. He was also a TOYM awardee for sports in 1978 and he is the youngest up to this date to have received this prestigious award given by the Philippine Jaycees.

At present Paeng has been designated by the USBC (United States Bowling Congress) as its International Bowling Ambassador for Bowling and promotes bowling around the world and he also Certifies Coaches for USBC. He is available for clinics and appearances.

(from www.wikipedia.org)

Manny Pacquiao



Born as Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao (born December 17, 1978), Manny Pacquiao is a Filipino professional boxer. He is currently the WBC Lightweight Champion and the WBC Super Featherweight Champion, and was the former Ring Magazine's featherweight champion, world champion at IBF Super Bantamweight, and WBC Flyweight divisions. Manny is the first Filipino and Asian boxer to win four world titles in different weight divisions. He took over as the Ring Magazine pound for pound number 1 ranked boxer in the world on June 9, 2008 after Floyd Mayweather, Jr. announced his retirement from boxing.
(from www.wikipedia.org)

Biography: Charice Pempengco



Charice Pempengco

Charice is the eldest of two children of Ricky and Racquel Pempengco. She has a younger brother named Carl. Her parents separated when she was only a toddler and she stayed with her mother since then. She started singing at age 4 with Racquel acting as her primary voice coach.

At age 7, she started joining amateur singing contests mostly in town fiestas in their province of Laguna. She also had joined several competitions on TV thus making her a veteran in this field at a young age. She had joined over 80 contests in total.

In 2005, she joined Little Big Star, a reality-talent show in the Philippines that is being hosted by the Asia's Pop Princess Sarah Geronimo, loosely patterned from American Idol. She was eliminated right away after her very first performance. But she was later called back as a wildcard contender and eventually worked her way up until the finale show. She placed 2nd Runner Up with Sam Concepcion winning the grand prize.

Charice was vocally trained by her mother and was said to have never received any formal training. The New York Post once called her a vocal prodigy for being able to sing 'big songs' even in her tender age.

David Foster once mentioned in his interviews that Charice has the capability of mimicking others voices which he said, is a good characteristic of a better singer. Moreover, Josh Groban said that Charice's voice is one of the most beautiful voices he has heard in a long time.

Her voice is said to be in the mezzo-soprano vocal range, though her upper register can also be categorized as a dramatic soprano. Her vocal power and tone has always been compared to Whitney Houston, her vocal timbre and quality to Celine Dion, her R&B influence to Mariah Carey, and her belting style to Regine Velasquez. In many of her interviews, she has referred these divas to be her musical influences.

To date, one of her highest belted note is a G#5 in her live performance of "One Moment In Time".

Her favorite singers include Whitney Houston, Celine Dion, Mariah Carey and Regine Velasquez.

International performances

In 2007, a series of YouTube videos of Charice's performances posted by an avid fan called FalseVoice brought her to the attention of Ten Songs/Productions based in Sweden. On June 2007, she flew to Stockholm, Sweden and recorded seven songs for them.

Another video performance influential in her internet stardom was her cover of the Dreamgirls' anthem And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going. This particular video became a hit in UCC, Korean's version of YouTube, which gained her an invite to perform on StarKing, a famous talent show in South Korea on October 2007. On the show, she also performed a duet with popular Korean group, Super Junior's member, Kyuhyun, with the song, 'A Whole New World' from Aladdin. She also sang a short rendition of 'U' by Super Junior. She later appeared on another episode of Star King and performed I Will Survive and did another duet with Korean female singer, Lena Park, singing Whitney Houston's I Will Always Love You. She also sang a short version of Listen.

In December 2007, she flew to the US for the first time after being personally invited by Ellen DeGeneres to come and guest on her show. She performed Whitney Houston's I Will Always Love You and her popular cover of And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going.

Right after she came back from Ellen, she became an instant celebrity in the Philippines becoming one of the most sought-after young singers in the country.

In April 2008, she wowed the UK audience as she guested in London's The Paul O'Grady Show where she performed two songs and earned standing ovations, the first to happen since the show started.

In May 2008, Charice guested on The Oprah Winfrey Show in their World's Most Smartest Kids episode. She sang Whitney Houston's I Have Nothing that left Oprah and the audience in awe.

In the same month, Charice was introduced to the international concert arena by no less, David Foster on his tribute concert called David Foster and Friends at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas.

In July 2008, she was personally invited by Andrea Bocelli to be one of his guests on his birthday concert titled The Cinema Tribute which was held in Lajatico, Italy. Aside from her solo performances, she also did a soulful duet of the song The Prayer with Andrea Bocelli. On September 6 2008, she performed before more than 50,000 football fans at Feyenoord's Centennial Anniversary titled Festival of the Century in The Netherlands where she sang the team's theme song, You'll Never Walk Alone.

On September 9 2008, she once again guested on The Oprah Winfrey Show on the 'Dream Comes True' episode where Oprah referred to her as 'The Most Talented Girl in the World.' She sang My Heart Will Go On with David Foster on piano. After which, Oprah surprised her when she had the chance to meet Celine Dion via satellite to receive a special proposal to sing a duet with her in Madison Square Garden.

On September 15, 2008, Charice finally sang a duet with Celine Dion. They dedicated the song Because You Loved Me to her mother who was also in the audience. Their duet brought the audience to their feet and received raving applause.


(from www.wikipedia.org)

Rik Cordero


Fredric Joseph "Rik" Cordero (born March 21, 1979) - is an independent music video, commercial, and film director of Filipino descent. He was born and raised in Queens, New York and is known for applying unusual, non-traditional shooting methods in his work. He is also the founder and executive producer of the New York based production company Three/21 Films, founded in 1999.

RIK CORDERO wrote and directed the prescription drug drama “Mend”, and has shot and directed several music videos, short films and documentaries including the recent “Be A N****r Too” (Nas) for Def Jam, “Neva Have 2 Worry” (Snoop Dogg) for Interscope Records, “Black’s Reconstruction”, “Get Busy”, “Birthday Girl - feat. Fallout Boy”, “Rising Up - feat. Chrisette Michele and Wale” (The Roots) for Def Jam, “Blue Magic Trailer” (Jay-Z) for Roc-A-Fella Records/Def Jam, “Brooklyn Bull****” (Joell Ortiz) for Aftermath Entertainment, “Uncle Rahiem” (Consequence) for Sony Music, the breakup comedy “This Actually Happened” and the surreal “Buru Sera”, about the trafficking of used panties by schoolgirls in Japan. He’s also a two time Asian American International Film Festival Best Music Video Award Winner for “Park, Park” (The Mighty Sweet 2005) and “I’ve Been Lost” (Plus/Minus 2006). Rik’s work has screened in numerous festivals including the Los Angeles International Short Film Festival, Canada’s Antimatter Underground Film Festival and more. He holds a BFA in Computer Graphics from the New York Institute of Technology and worked as a freelance graphic designer at various production house in New York City. In 2007, Rik pioneered the landscape of independent Hip Hop music videos by directing major recording artists such as Jay-Z, Nas, Snoop Dogg, The Roots, Ghostface Killah, Consequence, Beanie Sigel and John Legend and underground favorites such as Joell Ortiz, Joe Budden, Wale, Smif-N-Wessun, Buckshot and Big Lou. Fader Magazine has proclaimed his music videos as “miracles” while the wildly popular Hip Hop blog nahright.com has called him “The only Hip Hop video director on the planet”. He is currently in post production with his second feature film “Inside A Change”, a joint Three/21 Films / Fader Films production.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Elvis Presley is Alive

viewers of America's got talent 2008 got a surprised of their life when Joseph Hall auditioned and sing and dance ala Elvis Presley. I haven't born yet when the king of rock n roll reign supreme but I been a fan of elvis since i'm a child with the influence of our kapitbahay(neighbor) who do Elvis impersonation. I even tried to impersonate him for a school program but it went bad.
Joseph Hall move like Elvis, dance like elvis, sing like elvis but he's a little tinner than the real Elvis.

Here are the videos from AGT 2008 and judge for your self.







Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Religions are Toxics???

Does Your Religiosity Worsen Your Hidden Addictions?

Find Out By Looking For The 5 Symptoms Of Toxic Faith.

Is your Faith Toxic?

Instead of healing, it kills.

Instead of blessing, it harms.

Instead of giving, it robs.

No, I’m not talking about your Brand of Religion. You could be Catholic, Born-Again, Muslim, Buddhist, or Hindu. It doesn’t matter. In each of these, you could have Toxic Faith.

It’s not the Brand of Religion, but the poisonous way you carry out your religion. It poisons you and it poisons others around you.

One of the clear signs that it’s Toxic Faith is that it fuels our hidden addictions.

I know of a significant number of religious people who are addicted to sex, alcohol, food, anger, materialism, and obviously, to religion itself.

In recent years, sex addiction has become a huge problem among religious leaders. I should know. As a 13-year-old boy, I was molested by a religious leader.

And in the process, I became a porn addict.

I wanted to run away from the pain within. I didn’t want to face my internal problems. So I sought solace in my religious activities. And in pornography.

This is my story.

But this is also the story of many people in the Church…

The Facts That Tell Us

There’s Something Terribly Wrong

In the US alone, there are 4,392 priests being accused of sexual abuse.

The problem is so acute, that in 2007, the Diocese of Los Angeles alone already paid $660 Million to over 500 victims of sex abuse. In total, the American Catholic Church has already paid over One Billion Dollars to sex abuse victims—and the numbers continue to grow.

But these statistics don’t compare to meeting a victim. To come face to face with a person sexually violated by a religious man.

I was a 13-year old boy when I went with my youth group to San Pedro, Laguna. We gave a Life in the Spirit Seminar in the parish. By evening, all of us retired to a private home. In the middle of the night, I woke up to discover a naked man on top of me. He was my religious leader. In my shock, I couldn’t move. I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t shout. I cried myself to sleep.

The next morning, I saw the bedroom empty.

I walked to the living room to see the most repulsive sight I have ever seen. I saw my youth group in a circle praying their morning prayer, with my religious leader at the center, playing the guitar and leading them into prayer.

My leader was not a priest, but he looked like one. He loved wearing a large crucifix around his neck. He liked carrying a big Bible wherever he went. He preached well. He prayed well. He sang well.

He also molested boys well.

I never told anyone what happened to me that night.

But one day, one of the friends in that youth group asked me, “Did he touch you?” Immediately, I understood. “Yes, he did,” I said. My friend said he was abused as well. We found out that he had molested almost all of us in the youth group like we were little plastic animals in a firing range.

Please hear me out.

I still believe the majority of our priests are wonderful human beings and holy men of God. But the problem is real and leaders can no longer sweep it under a rug.

Catholics and Protestants—We’ve All Got Problems

Sex scandals among Christian evangelists and pastors are not any different. How can one forget the scandals of big names like Jim Baker, Jimmy Swaggart, and most recently, Ted Haggard?

Jim Bakker, President of the Praise The Lord (PTL) empire, was accused raping his secretary Jessica Hahn and paying her $265,000 to remain silent.

Jimmy Swaggart, the biggest televangelist when I was growing up, called Jim Bakker on Larry King Live a “cancer in the Body of Christ” for his sexual indiscretions. He also exposed Pastor Marvin Gorman of having an adulterous affair with one his parishioners. In retaliation, Pastor Gorman hired a private detective to follow Swaggart, who photographed him leaving a motel with prostitute Debra Murphree. Swaggart tearfully spoke to his church and apologized. But in 1991, he was found again with another prostitute, Rosemarie Garcia.

Ted Haggard, senior pastor of a 14,000-member church and president of the National Association of Evangelicals, was accused of enjoying the services of Mike Jones, a male prostitute for 3 years and taking shabu to heighten the experience. Ironically, before this, Ted Haggard condemned homosexuality very strongly in his TV appearances.

Again, let me make this clear: I also believe most pastors and preachers are wonderful people and great servants of God. But these scandals call us to look deeper into our soul. Because whatever made Swaggart, Bakker, and Haggard fall is lurking within all of us. No exemption.

Why do religious people have hidden addictions?

There are many causes.

One of the major ones is Toxic Faith.

The 5 Symptoms of Toxic Faith

What is Toxic Faith? How do you know if you have Toxic Faith?

Frankly, this requires an entire book to explore (and I’ll probably do that one day), but here’s a brief exploration of this very explosive, highly controversial subject.

Find out if your faith is Toxic.

Let me describe five symptoms of Toxic Faith:

· You have a Distorted Image of God: He’s Judgmental

· You have a Distorted Faithfulness: You’re Legalistic

· You have a Distorted Image of Self: You Feel Condemned

· You have a Distorted Faith: You Practice Hyper-Faith

· You have a Distorted Faith System: You’re Spiritually Abused

Let me describe each of them one by one…

Symptom #1:

You Have A Distorted Image of God:

He’s Judgmental

One day, a man came up to me and said, “Bo, I’ve been feeling guilty. I feel God is angry at me today…”

“Angry at you? Why?” I asked.

“Because I missed my prayer time today. I’m afraid that He’ll punish me and cause bad things to happen today.”

Friends, I know that feeling very well. Because for years—no, decades—I used to feel this way.

Yes, I once had Toxic Faith. (And if I’ll be honest, I still feel its residue in my soul.) Toxic Faith is based on a distorted image of God. For 20 years, I worshipped a judgmental, wrathful, vindictive, vengeful, and legalistic God. Though I would never admit that then. During that time, I was even preaching on God’s Love!

Why? Because our intellectual image of God is very different from our subconscious image of God. The latter is much deeper and more difficult to change.

A person with Toxic Faith will imagine God telling him, “Aha! You missed your prayer time today. Tsk, tsk, tsk. What an ungrateful creature you are…”

I used to pray daily because of fear.

Do you know how absurd that is?

Imagine a father calling up his son by phone and growling, “Ingrate! How dare you forget me? You don’t visit me anymore. I’m warning you. I’m going to put a curse on you if you don’t visit me right this minute…”

We call those fathers abusive monsters. And yet I imagined God to be like that.

Today, I still pray daily, but I do so because I love to pray. He blesses me, nourishes me, and fills my heart with love. If I do miss my prayers, He doesn’t throw lightning bolts on me. When my image of God changed, my whole world changed as well.

Why does Toxic Faith worsen addictions?

Remember what I said in an earlier chapter: Any addiction is a hunger for true love. I want to be loved, and because I can’t find real love, I search for a palliative. An anesthesia, to cover up the pain. When my image of God is judgmental, legalistic, vindictive, and vengeful, what was supposed to perfectly address my hunger for love (God’s Love) makes the hunger more acute.

Do You Worship The Judgmental, Wrathful,

Vindictive, And Vengeful God?

According to Toxic Faith, God is judgmental, wrathful, vindictive, vengeful, and legalistic. If a person has a distorted image of God, your subconscious beliefs are as follows… (Check if you have any of them.)

· “God will love me only if I behave.”

· “God hates sinners and is angry with me.”

· “He wants to punish me. He’s written down all my sins.”

· “God is never satisfied with me.”

· “If I sin, God will throw me to Hell forever.”

· “I’m now sick with cancer. God is punishing me for not being good enough.”

· “Our business flopped. God must be punishing me for forgetting Him.”

· “We just met a car accident. You know why? We failed to pray…”

When you have Toxic Faith, it seems as though God is preoccupied with your sins. All He does the whole day is waiting for you to make a mistake. He’s also fickle and moody: When you don’t sin, He likes you. When you do sin, He doesn’t like you.

Their entire relationship with God is based on shame. He has ever-increasing demanding standards, like a target that keeps on moving, and they can never quite satisfy Him.

Symptom #2:

You Have A Distorted Faithfulness:

You’re Legalistic

My friend “Melanie” believes that God wants her to pray at the exact time everyday—5:00AM. She’d feel very guilty if, because she woke up late or had to do something else, was forced to pray at 5:30AM. To Melanie, that wasn’t honoring God.

Toxic Faith produces very faithful people, but its expression of faithfulness is distorted: It’s legalistic and painfully scrupulous. Legalism in itself is an addiction.

To confirm whether Melanie had Toxic Faith, I checked for two signs: Did it lead to shame or to self-righteousness? (In other words, it’s either she felt shame herself or she shamed others.)

When Melanie was able to keep her 5:00AM prayer each day, she felt good about herself. She felt God accepted her and liked her—so she liked herself too. But she looked down on others who didn’t pray, who prayed late, or who prayed shorter than her. She became self-righteous. “You’ll grow up too one day,” she’d say condescendingly.

When Melanie was late with her 5:00AM appointment with God, she was filled with shame. She felt God frowned on her. She felt bad about herself. She was an ungrateful, undisciplined, insect before God.

She is the modern-day Pharisee that needs to hear again Jesus’ words: What sorrow awaits you teachers of religious law and you Pharisees. Hypocrites! For you are careful to tithe even the tiniest income from your herb gardens, but you ignore the more important aspects of the law—justice, mercy, and faith.[1]

St. Paul has powerful words for the legalist and the scrupulous: So why do you keep on following the rules of the world, such as, “Don’t handle! Don’t taste! Don’t touch!”? Such rules are mere human teachings about things that deteriorate as we use them. These rules may seem wise because they require strong devotion, pious self-denial, and severe bodily discipline. But they provide no help in conquering a person’s evil desires.[2]

I’ve found this to be true. I recall a Bishop who was known to be very strict on others, almost rigid in his exacting ways, was exposed to have a mistress on the side. It was unimaginable when the news broke out. How could that be?

The external rigidity was a subconscious projection. He was trying to control what he couldn’t control within.

When Jimmy Swaggart was exposing Jim Bakker’s and Marvin Gorman’s sexual sins on national TV, he was really subconsciously exposing his own sexual sins which he couldn’t accept. When Ted Haggard was condemning homosexuality in the political arena and on television, he was condemning the homosexuality he couldn’t face within himself.

Are You A Religious Addict?

Legalism can be an addiction.

Rigidity can be an addiction.

Religiosity can be an addiction.

You can be addicted to anything. As long as it can give you an escape from your inner pain. And religion is the easiest thing to be addicted to because it’s something acceptable and highly admired.

How do you know if you’re a religious addict? If instead of facing your past wounds or resolving personal issues head on, you ESCAPE from your inner pain by drowning yourself in religious activities—prayer, bible reading, doctrinal studies, ministry meetings—then most likely you’re a religious addict.

Let’s move to the third symptom of Toxic Faith.

Symptom #3:

You Have A Distorted Image of Self:

You Feel Condemned

A person with low self-worth will be damaged by Toxic Faith.

I have talked to many whose language expresses a very negative picture of themselves. They say something like this, “I’m bad. My body is bad. I’m ashamed of myself. God wants me to disregard my feelings (because it’s of the flesh) and give up my valid and legitimate needs (because that’s selfishness).”

Toxic Faith will never allow us to love ourselves. Instead, it will urge us to call ourselves a wretch and a worm—and urge us to treat ourselves that way.

Some people actually pray in this way: “Lord, I’m a worm, a despicable, ugly, sinful worm. I don’t deserve your love. I’m so repulsive in your sight. I’m a beast, a infestation, a virus, a wretch like no other…”

Don’t get me wrong. I love singing that classic song, Amazing Grace, which goes, Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me…

It’s a beautiful song, but someone with a distorted self-image will focus on the “wretch” part and will not look at the other beautiful parts of that song.

Same goes with the prayer after the Rosary, Hail Holy Queen. One part says, To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve; To thee do we send up our sighs, mourning, and weeping in this valley of tears…

Someone with low self-worth we latch onto those words like a leech and live on them for eternity. “I’m a banished child of Eve, sighing, mourning, and weeping…” But before we’re children of Eve, we’re children of God. How could we forget that?

Toxic Faith will distort how you look at yourself.

It will also distort the very beliefs you believe in…

Symptom #4:

You’ll Have A Distorted Faith:

You Practice Hyper-Faith

I’m a preacher that gives hope to people. It’s my mission.

Every Sunday, I preach to a people that are tired and burdened from the daily grind of life. In our dark world, we need hope badly.

So I tell people to dream big dreams and pray for them everyday. I tell people that they’re surrounded by God’s abundance—and at anytime, they can tap into that overflowing resource for all that they need.

But there’s a thin line that I dare not cross: The realm of Hyper Faith.

Hyper Faith is a common ingredient of Toxic Faith.

Hyper Faith preaches, “If you only have faith, all your problems will be solved. If you just believe and pray, God will fix everything magically.”

That’s not true. I tell people that while they’re breathing, problems are a part of life. They don’t disappear just because we’re close to God. But in every problem, God will accompany us.

Real Faith heals, but Toxic Faith kills.

How? Let me give you a few examples…

When You Don’t Get Healed,

Is There Something Wrong With You?

My friend “Ren” has cancer. For some time, she’s been praying for healing.

One day, she was prayed over by a Pastor of the Hyper-Faith variety. After praying over her, this Pastor declared to her with the authority of an Old Testament prophet, “The only reason why you’re still sick is because you lack faith.”

Ren was devastated. She felt guilty. Sad. Confused. And angry.

She felt guilty that she had little faith.

She was sad that she couldn’t make it grow after all these years.

She was confused because she didn’t know what to do.

And she was angry at God that He was giving her healing but placed it beyond the reach of her small faith.

But what was the truth? I knew Ren. My friend has great faith.

She trusted in God even in the midst of her sickness.

But Hyper-Faith will not allow that.

If You Want To Be Wealthy, Just Tithe?

This is their belief: If you’re close to God, you’ll be healthy and wealthy. You’ll never get sick and you should never be poor.

I don’t teach Hyper-Faith. Instead, I preach real hope.

I also preach the practical things that people need to do to reach their dreams. Some people call me a Prosperity Preacher. I’d rather that they call me a Practical Preacher. Because not everything happens just by praying. (People criticize me for that too. They say I’m too practical. Oh well, you can’t please everyone all the time.)

For example, some preachers say that tithing is the key to prosperity. I once read an entire book of financial prosperity, and for 11 chapters straight, the author just talked about giving and nothing else.

But here’s the big question: Why is it that there are people who tithe and remain poor? Lack of faith again?

Here’s why: Because tithing is only one of the keys to prosperity. There are other practical keys that one has to do to become prosperous. Like what? Like living simply; And saving regularly; And learning how to invest and knowing where to invest; etc… That’s the stuff that I love to teach people.

That’s another distorted belief of Toxic Faith: Having true faith means not doing anything but waiting on God to do it for me.

Let me give you other distorted beliefs…

Other Distorted Beliefs Of Toxic Faith

Have you heard this before? “God will find me a perfect mate and give me signs that it’s him or her.”

No, He won’t. He’ll ask you to think and use your mind.

I met a woman who’s married to an incredibly irresponsible guy. He doesn’t have a job, lies to her constantly, and is addicted to gambling.

“We met in the prayer meeting,” she said, “and when he courted me, I prayed to God if he was the man for me. I knew he didn’t have a job when I met him, and couldn’t keep one for a few years. So I asked for sign from God. And He gave them to me. So I thought it would be a great marriage…”

So what if you met in a prayer meeting? That means only one thing—that he’s charismatic. But is he responsible? Is he honest? Is he faithful? Use your mind, sisters! Find out for yourself. Don’t depend on supernatural signs. Look for natural ones! The mere fact that he couldn’t hold a regular job for years was a natural sign to choose someone else!

Here are three other insane beliefs of Toxic Faith I have no time to explain:

· A strong faith will protect me from problems and pain.

· I should accept everything that happens to me as God’s will.

· If it’s not in the Bible, it not true or relevant.

There are others, but let me now go to the fifth symptom…

Symptom #5:

You’ll Have A Distorted Faith System:

You’re Spiritually Abused

Toxic Faith is usually supported by a Toxic Faith System.

Which is spiritually abusive.

I must confess that my community, Light of Jesus, had, at one time in our history, elements of this Toxic Faith System. Why? Because I was the leader of the group, and I had Toxic Faith. When the leader of a group has Toxic Faith, he creates a Toxic Faith System in his group. I think any religious group is open to such tendencies, and we need to be very careful. (I have asked for forgiveness for being spiritually abusive from my community many times.)

To find out if your group, family, community, ministry, organization, or church has a Toxic Faith System, look for these 7 Elements:

1. The Leader claims special access to God and maintains control and authoritarian rule

Only he or she (or they) can make decisions for the group and the individuals within the group. You can’t question this Leader or you’re seen as questioning God. You need to totally agree with the Leader or get out.

2. The Leader is punitive, judgmental, and castigating

There is a constant purging from the ranks. If you ask a question that is deemed questioning his authority, you’re labeled a rebel, someone with a critical spirit, and will be removed.

3. The Leader isn’t accountable to anyone

This is very dangerous. Even the Pope has a College of Cardinals and Bishops—and his teaching authority is linked to them.

4. No real Communication between Leaders and Members

Someone or some people—the Leader’s inner circle—shield the top Leader from what the members are actually saying or experiencing.

5. Members feel it’s their group “Against the World”

The members feel that their group is in the cutting edge of God’s work in this sinful world. That their group is the best. That their group is especially chosen by God as either the only way of Salvation, or at the very least, His hand-picked SWAT team against evil. Other groups simply cannot compare.

6. Members are suffering

But in reality, members are suffering. Emotionally, they’re burned out; Physically, their tired; Financially, they’re not growing (the organization may be getting richer, and the Leader is getting richer, but the members are not); and spiritually, they’re stagnant—because their highest loyalty is not to God anymore but to their Leader and the System.

7. The priorities taught to members are as follows:

· Submit to the Leader at all times.

· Don’t ask, don’t doubt, don’t think. (This is what submission means.)

· Never express feelings except positive ones.

· Don’t trust outsiders. (Just listen to our teachings.)

· Don’t do anything outside your role.

· You need to give money or else.

· Protect the image of the organization at all costs.

Jesus said, Beware of the false prophets, who come in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly are ravenous wolves.[3] False prophets don’t have to be cultic leaders or strange guys who call themselves Messiah. When any leader-a priest, a bishop, a pastor, a lay leader-robs people of their ability to think, controls them by his use of guilt and fear, manipulating them to strengthen his power or to enrich himself, he is a false prophet.

When a Leader creates his own exacting standards and tells people that unless they follow them, they’ll not enter the Kingdom of Heaven, he is shutting Heaven’s gates to them. About them, Jesus said, Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You shut the kingdom of heaven in men’s faces. You yourselves do not enter, nor will you let those enter who are trying to.[4]

God, a Woman, and a Tiger

Let me end this chapter with a beautiful story.

One day, a young woman went to the mountain Hermit seeking help.

“I need a potion for my husband’s depression,” she cried to him. “He came from war and doesn’t speak to me. He doesn’t listen to me. I try to caress him but he brushes me aside. I serve him food and he pushes it and angrily leaves the room. He then goes up a hill and just stares out to sea… Oh kindly sir, make me a potion so that I could give it to my husband and heal his depression!”

The Hermit closed his eyes and thought for a long while. After what seemed like a very long time, he then said to her, “I will make a special potion for your husband. But it needs a special ingredient. Get me a whisker of a live tiger.”

The woman was shocked. “Sir? I cannot get that…”

“But if you want your husband to get well, you will,” said the Hermit.

The woman ran home, prepared a bowl of food, and carried it deep in the forest—where a tiger lived inside a cave. She placed down the bowl of food at the opening of the tiger’s cave and called on the tiger. “Tiger, I brought food for you. Come and eat!”

But the tiger did not come out.

The next day, the woman came again with a bowl of food and called on the tiger to eat. But the tiger did not come out again.

She kept doing this everyday, and tiger was getting used to her voice.

After one month, the tiger would peek through the opening, but he still would not eat her bowl of food.

After two months, the tiger finally left the cave and felt secure looking at the strange woman giving him food.

After three months, the tiger would finally eat the food as the woman watched from the distance.

After four months, the woman could actually sit beside the tiger as he ate.

After five months, the woman could wrap her arms around the tiger as he ate. She was now a friend and he was totally at peace with her.

After six months, as the woman caressed the tiger and as the tiger playfully rested his head on her lap, she whispered to his ear, “I hope you won’t get angry, but I will get something from you—for my husband whom I love.” She then snipped one of his whiskers. The tiger did not even flinch.

After which, she ran to the Hermit and said, “I now have the whisker of a live tiger! Please make the potion for my depressed and angry husband…”

The Hermit took the whisker from her hand and threw it into the fire behind him.

“Nooooooo!” the woman screamed, “why did you do that?”

“You don’t need a potion,” the Hermit said, “because you are the potion to your husband.”

“I don’t understand,” the woman asked.

“What is more fierce? A tiger or a man? A tiger of course. But for six months you learned how to tame his anger. You were able to bring him out of his cave. With patience. With care. With love. Now I want you to use all that and bring your husband out of his cave and heal his depression.”

Do You Know The Difference Between

Toxic Faith And Real Faith?

I share you this story because I believe that God is like that woman.

We are that tiger. We are in darkness. We are in that cave. Like that woman, God comes to us with a lot of gentleness and a bowl of food. The food of His love. The food of His grace.

He will not force us to eat His food. He will not impose His power, His rule, His authority over us. Instead, He will wait, patiently and gently, for us to learn to trust Him. Day after day, week after week, month after month—year after year.

When we are ready, He will feed us.

When we are ready, He will wrap His arms around us.

That’s the difference between Toxic Faith and Real Faith.

Toxic Faith imagines God as a Judge that condemns and forces us to follow Him, using threats and intimidation. Toxic Faith requires that His followers do the same—impose, judge, label, pull rank, and intimidate.

Real Faith is very different. It imagines God as a woman patiently waiting for the tiger to leave his cave, so she could feed him and caress him. Real Faith requires that His followers do the same—love, forgive, share, care, bless, and serve.

I choose Real Faith.

Real Faith heals my addictions. Toxic Faith worsens them.

Choose Real Faith.

I remain your friend,


B. Sanchez


Popular Posts