Ang Kalatas Volume IV April 2014 Issue | Seite 11

THE MESSAGE. BRINGING INTO FOCUS FILIPINO PRESENCE IN AUSTRALIA www.kalatas.com.au | Volume 4 Number 7 | April 2014 EDITORIAL & OPINION 11 ORKS? I use social media and Facebook in catching up with clients, family and friends. I get to see shows, community events and know other people’s views and insights about it. It’s a great tool for shopping, movies or e-business’ with special offers’ hints around various retails stores in town. I love the FB photo albums and its controlled settings. Being a pop singer-songwriter, social media links me to my fellow composers, artists, family and friends. It informs all generations about heritage, arts and culture, news, shopping or various entertainment updates. Social media can actually empower the talented youth, although an excessive use also has its disadvantages and drawbacks. I use it for catching up with the professional and business’ linked-in updates, touching base with family, friends and acquaintances in my privacy. It’s a fast tool to get upcoming events, hear other people’s perspective on changes. Rosemarie Ujmiakova Charity Balila Maria Barlan Melbourne Bligh Park Arndell Park PROCEED WITH CAUTION LEARN to say yes and no with conviction and finality. This is a vital life skill. when you will not think of them, no matter how old they already are. 15. Teach your kids rituals, values, customs, family and social traditions. It will give them a sense of who they are and their place in the world. 16. Learn to say yes and no with conviction and finality. This is a vital life skill. 17. In matters of love, there are very few who are wise. And even the wise will make huge mistakes. 18. As much as it is fashionable to disdain politics, it is important to understand and engage in it. Politics affects us in every way and so we cannot leave it to politicians alone. 19. Don’t wait for apologies or thank yous. If they come, great! Even if you never hear them, it does not mean that people did not feel remorse or gratitude. Just be content in knowing you did the right thing. 20. Do not remain in your comfort zone. Pretty soon, it gets stale and can become a toxic zone. Move forward. Embrace the unknown and meet the “you” you haven’t met. When you engage the un- known, you realize that, more often than not, you can actually handle it. 21. Do not identify yourself with your feelings, moods, status, wealth. They come and go. Identify with things that have never changed and will not change. It may take you a lifetime to awaken to what these are. But you must know them. 22. Religion is a franchise on God which, when you think about it, is way too big and complex a reality to brand. If your religion works for you, great. But even if you have never joined a formal religion, you will still experience God. God is inescapable. What’s important is to just love and be kind to people. That’s the best way for others to know there is a God. 23. Avoid the literal, uncreative life. Literalism strangles and kills. A life lived without poetry or art is hardly a life. It is the same when reading holy text. Don’t read it literally. It is not so much about science or history, but more about opening us to the greater truth, the sacred mystery of what we can never measure or completely explain. 24. Sex and lust are part and parcel of being human and we will deal with them throughout our lives. Learn when to control them and when to let go. Learn appropriateness. Give selflessly and receive with gratitude. 25. As much as you cultivate your taste, mind, manners, faith, make sure you put as much effort into cultivating and expanding your sense of humor. It is the reset button of life. JIM PAREDES is a multifaceted creative. He sings, composes, writes articles and books, teaches at the Ateneo De Manila University, designs and facilitates various types of workshops. He is also a writer of books, a widely read columnist for the Sunday Life section of Philippine Star, and a well-known photographer. This article was also published by the Philippine Star. neration ia? pino migrant in the West Coast of America said The Philippines is “in the heart.” For the later-generations, the Philippines is perhaps a remotely colourful collection of stories - heard somewhere in the past. It may also be simply a congregation of islands somewhere across the sea. Or the Philippines may have taken root deep in the hearts among our next generation, forging a living – albeit different interpretation or a rhapsodised interpretation perhaps – Filipino identity nonetheless; or what it is to live with Filipino blood in Australia. Merlinda Bobis, herself a Filipino-Australian wrote a story “The Fruit Stall” where she integrates )ɕ