Wednesday, February 20, 2013

21 FOR 21 ON 21: Wishes #5-2

Sorry for the delayed post. Been busy with GenBuKen affairs during the Sportsfest.


WISH #5: GET ON WITH IT FOR MY CREATIVE WRITING

I'll still continue to write poetry and essays. However...

At the urging of these two literary giants' inspiration...

...I have been brainstorming concepts for this possible series of books I plan to write later on. I don't have any exact story lines for the plot yet, but so far I've been doing some research during my spare time. Momentarily called "Project Imhil", it will be in the high fantasy genre but with a lot more allusions to Philippine Mythology and Filipino History. I gotta polish my story-writing first...

WISH #4: CHANGE PHILIPPINE HISTORY AND USHER IN A RESURGENCE OF FILIPINO CULTURE.

Oh sure, wishful thinking of perhaps playing God and changing a few, but crucial, events in our history can be great. (Like: (1) unleashing an earthquake on the participants of the 1898 Treaty of Paris so that the Philippines wouldn't be sold to those damned Yankee colonizers, (2) letting Bonifacio win the revolt against the Spaniards, (3) sinkng the ships of those pesky Spanish expeditions)

But then, that would make us wear loincloths (bahag),
fend off headhunters from other tribes,
and practice animistic rituals compulsorily TO THIS DAY.

I guess the only thing I (and we) can change is the future. I just wish that we should show more respect and acknowledgement for indigenous culture, though. Our intricate ethnic arts and crafts can equal (or be even greater than) foreign ones.


And our REAL OPM is this awesome.

WISH #3: GENUINE AGRARIAN REFORM AND NATIONALIZED INDUSTRIALIZATION FOR THE COUNTRY I LIVE IN.

Because landlessness, unemployment and poverty are still gaping realities brought about by three things: unequal distribution of wealth, elitist/transnational/foreign agenda, and inherent systemic corruption.

My family from my father's side are small farmers and own a few hectares of land for rice. Though they are fortunate to have their own land to till, government support is not that substantial.  Same thing with other small farmers. (Kag mas kaluluoy gid ang mga waay duta.)

Same thing with the working class in the cities. Anhon mo man ang imo degree sa Engineering, Education kag Medtech kon ang tupa mo man lang, CALL CENTER?! Kag ka-afford man ayhan mag-call center ang mga kargador kag factory worker? Swerte man lang tuod ang makagwa sa Pilipinas, galing kay gaka-brenda[maged] kita tungod sang bren- este, brain drain. :P


Ang hirap ng marami ay sagana ng ilan
Ang nagpapakain, walang laman ang tiyan
Ang nagpapanday ng gusali at lansangan,
maputik ang daan tungo sa dampang tahanan...♫

WISH #2: CHANGE THE SYSTEM

Many decades have passed. Many leaders have come and gone. Still the same social and economic problems. There are some who claim that the foremost solution is to change the individual first, but how can we change the individual, especially other individuals, if the current socioeconomic/political system is preconditioned many of us to get fooled and succumb to their whims?

There are those who claim to bring change if ever they win during the election period. And so they try to come out clean and play nice to everyone who is a potential voter. However, when they are put to power, they tend to succumb to power playing to the point that they are influenced by those already in power who maintain the same old order of things. They are no longer the squeaky clean and nice leaders we thought they were during the campaign period. Thus, things stay the same. Crime, war, corruption, poverty, injustice, suffering, apathy... Same old, same old.

Indeed, changing the individual is also a crucial step to social change, but more important is to change the system. Individuals are imperfect, free and fickle. Try to change each one and there would be a great likelihood that he or she would just ignore you or even deride you. But try to change a system, and people will be more likely to be conditioned to do what is good and proper for themselves and for the system itself.

Of course there are legal and extralegal means. Revolution right away? Not yet, as they tend to get bloody when won, and bloodier when lost. We must first start simple. We can first play by their rules but if they keep playing dirty against us, we have the right and power to drive them away and start playing by our own rules. And it's a game that cannot be played and won overnight. Years, decades or even centuries may pass before we can find that perfect opportunity to win the game. We should take our time, because if we rashly rush, the chance for success might be disrupted.

Change the individual? Ako ang simula bull$#!+? Oh, puh-lease... Society is a collective effort. No particular person and small group should be the focus or center of social attention. Society does not rely on the ego of merely one person or a few people in order to survive. Otherwise, that person or group might become a potential dictatorship while the rest would become cannon-fodder for the wars or sacrificial lambs being herded to the slaughter. The only way for the individual to change is to have the system change the individual.

Thus, the individual must not just change himself or herself. He or she must also change other people in order to change himself or herself. They must change each other. We must change each other. After all, society is not just me OR you OR him OR her OR them OR us. Society is us altogether. We altogether are society. And by changing the system into a better one, we can become better individuals who are part of a better society.

And if the repressive and malevolent continue being makulit with their whims and hidden agendas, well...


Mene, mene, tekel, uprashin...♪
ANG KATULAD MO'Y BABAGSAK DIN! ♫

* * * * *

Daw medyo bug-at gid aw?

Well, good luck, godspeed, God bless! BWAS NAAAAAA! XD

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