Archive for December, 2009

BDO recently pledged P1 million to the Philippine Overseas and Employment Administration (POEA) which serves as the bank’s deed of donation to support the agency in the execution of its OFW programs.

In recent years, BDO has been actively participating in the programs and other events organized by the POEA. Aside from offering convenient and reliable remittance service, BDO has been giving them easier access to BDO loans and investment opportunities through its Asenso Kabayan Program.

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Work Abroad Tips

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Barn dancing
I don’t know, 6.5?

phun with photography

more phun with photography

tennis

Garlic growing, soon to grace our kitchen.

Family Camp gone green (check out the solar panels).

Parents need to have fun, too!

Perfect!!!

Fire by Friction

Advice on Family Camps from a Family Camp Director

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Don’t let the title fool you, high school girls read seventeen magazine and subscribe to Cosmo and a decent amount of both of those magazines are devoted to boys, how to understand, how to attract them and how to date them.

You want to be one of the boys their dating. Pick up a seventeen magazine subscription which may be a little less embaressing than picking up the latest issue at the newsstand every month.  You can also go to seventeen.com although it’s not as focussed as the magazine.

Read what the celebrities says about dating. The celebrities in those magazines are emulated. Try to understand what the girls are seeking and importantly what they’re not interested in. It will teach you not to sweat most of what you worry about. The girls will often discuss their comfort level with their boyfriend, or lack of compatability or trust with their ex. Be honest, understanding and unassuming and let the girl be herself.

A girlfriend is a huge help for surviving highschool.

Survive High School

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Dealing with a spouse that is addicted to porn can be a very difficult task. Overcoming this in your
marriage can seem even more daunting…but it is definitely not impossible. With implementing an action
plan and knowing that with God ALL things are possible, you are able to turn a situation that seems
hopeless, into a God-sized [...]
Christian Marriage Advice

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I love love LOVE this song.

I’m sure there are many different meanings to the lyrics… but when I read the lyrics, to me it had something to do with God, love, sex and how all these three things get warped up and mixed together in one big foggy haze. We replace one with the other and end up very confused in the end.

Hallelujah means “praise the Lord.” In this song, I think it represents anything we give our praises to, or anything we desire or are passionate about…

It starts off talking about David, who in his younger years, played the harp for King Saul. His harp was the one thing that gave King Saul relief from the harmful spirit that tormented him. This was right after God chose David as the next King, and so David had much reason to “praise the Lord” because he got his foot in the palace. God blessed him.

I heard there was a secret chord that David played and it please the Lord

Before David was king, he was a shepherd in the wilderness. Although he didn’t have much, he had a strong relationship with God. He lifted his praises to God; his hallelujahs went to God.

Then he became king. He had power. He had a great name. He killed Goliath. His fame spread throughout the land. He married Michal. In a sense he had it all…but he was losing his grip on God.

One day, his eyes feasted on Bathsheba, a woman he saw bathing on a rooftop. He became an adulterer and murderer. He made the figurative move of placing his hallelujahs (praises) from God to lust, to fallen woman… to wanting what he couldn’t have. He went from wanting and desiring God, to wanting and desiring a woman. She became God for him…

Well, your faith was strong but you needed proof, you saw her bathing on the roof. Her beauty and the moonlight overthrew you

And then there was Samson. Another man whose fall from grace was a beautiful woman. This time she was a prostitute. He was another man who made the fatal shift from loving God to lusting over a woman who didn’t belong to him.

She tied you to her kitchen chair, she broke your throne and she cut your hair, and from your lips she drew the hallelujah

How often do men fall into this trap? Beauty, sex, lust, love… they are tangible things we can desire and want. But they can never satisfy a man’s real heart’s desire…they can never draw the lasting “hallelujah.” Men, she is NOT God. She is powerful. Whoever she is, she can change the course of your life for good or for evil. But, she is not God.

One thing unites these two men’s stories. They both fell prey to lusting for a woman that did not belong to them. This song ends on such a sad note…

Love is not a victory march, It’s a cold and broken hallelujah

When it’s adulterous “love” it can never be anything more.

Sex may be powerful, almost divine…

But remember when I moved in you, and the holy dove was moving too, and every breath we drew was Hallelujah

because in essence sex is spiritual, the joining of two people in the most vulnerable way… but taking a spiritual act and defiling it by engaging in it with someone who doesn’t belong to you can only bring confusion. When we are confused about love, we are confused about God because God is love…

Well maybe there is a God above, but all I’ve ever learned from love was how to shoot somebody who outdrew ya

Love on earth is tainted. Instead of it being about a union, it becomes about protecting yourself from another person.

What a sad, beautiful song about how adulterous love can be mistaken for real love and how human love, sex, and beauty cannot replace God….

In reminds me of this taken from 1 Corinthians 6: 13b-20

The body is not meant for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body.
14And God raised the Lord and will also raise us up by his power.
15Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them members of a prostitute? Never!
16Or do you not know that he who is joined to a prostitute becomes one body with her? For, as it is written, “The two will become one flesh.”
17But he who is joined to the Lord becomes one spirit with him.
18Flee from sexual immorality. Every other sin a person commits is outside the body, but the sexually immoral person sins against his own body.
19Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own,
20for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body.

Dating Advice From A Girl

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Let’s face it…Sex is part of marriage and it should be the best intimacy of your life. Sexual intimacy in marriage is the “new sexy” in my book. It is the purest form of intimacy and it was God’s intention for husband and wife to enjoy to the fullest [...]
Christian Marriage Advice

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Breathe deeply. LSAT day will arrive no matter what you do. A lot of your success in the next 5 days is mind over matter. Will you let the LSAT get to you, or are you excited to prove what you can do and show off all of your hard work preparing for it? Here’s [...]

Related posts:Ready for…



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Law School Expert

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It is funny how love is described by many people. While they are so focused on hearing bells and flashing lights, truth be told, love comes quietly, so quiet that you will only notice it when you’re hooked and fall out of love. Saving a marriage is likewise similar with how love strikes. It should [...]
Save Marriage Advice & Help

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Finally! Something helpful by LSAC: a list of schools that want Evaluations. For my previous post on what the heck these evaluations are all about, see this Law School Expert article. Subscribe to the comments for this post? Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Post this on Diigo Post on Google…



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Law School Expert

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Book snobbery takes many forms in my life. For example, when I worked in bookstores, thinking my life was over because all my friends were lawyers, I spent a lot of time mumbling “Philistines!” as I reshelved A Hundred Years of Solitude under G instead of M.

But the truth is that if you reshelve a book like that to its proper spot, no one can find it. This is true of Out of the Dust, as well. (Hold it. Have you not read this book? It’s the best depiction of dust bowl life that I’ve ever read.) It’s a book for kids, written in verse. But you cannot sell any children’s books by putting them in poetry, so the world is a better place if bookstore workers (who are all literary snobs) would put the book in the young adult section.

Speaking of young adult books, I don’t think I have ever mentioned here that I still read a lot of those. As far as I can tell, the only difference between them and adult novels is that the author explains subtle emotions a little more explicitly in young adult novels. Perfect for someone with Asperger’s, right?

I saved all my childhood books thinking that I’d read them to my kids. But when I offer my girl books, my boys don’t bite. I thought this might happen, but I still carried all my books with me from Chicago to LA to Boston to LA to NY to Madison to the farm. Maybe I was hoping the boys would be gay. I think gay boys might be into reading Ode to Billie Joe.

So I have all these books that I am never going to share with my kids. I am thinking I can share them with your kids. Send me an email with a list of five books that your daughter likes, and I’ll send your daughter one of my books. And I’ll even do book group with her if she wants. Although now I won’t be able to read the book again because she’ll have my book, but whether I can remember the content of a book has never stopped me from discussing it.

I am thinking now that maybe I’ll get thousands of emails. So, there’s a deadline: you have to send me an email within 24 hours of the publication of this post.

(Which, now that I think about it, is a great way to get people to subscribe to my blog. So, all you people who are reading this post more than 24 hours later, you missed out on a great giveaway probably because you aren’t subscribed. Subscribe now to get the opportunity to receive other packages of stuff I saved that no one wants!)

Back to my books. I try not to be a snob. Because I think it just closes doors. For example, I have written before about not being a language snob. If you are, then you stop yourself from learning about language. And being a snob about copyediting perfection is terrible, too — you end up never writing anything because it takes too long. Even career advice snobbery is bad, because people who fail give the best advice. So it's no surprise that I find book snobbery self-destructive as well; when I'm a snob about books, they take over my house.

You can tell a lot about yourself by how you organize your books. I used to cultivate my lesbian book section. That was in my early twenties when I was surrounded by women in bikinis playing volleyball, and really, who wouldn’t wonder if she was gay, spending days like that? But then I tried it: I answered an ad for a woman who was a ballerina with the Joffrey and she had just retired and gotten breast implants. Try to imagine this. She was so incredibly hot. But lesbian sex was boring to me.

And, please do not tell me that I should have tried someone else. Because I did. It was during my bulimia days. I went to a lesbian bulimic overeaters anonymous group, and everyone was gorgeous, and I got picked up. But still, it was not all that satisfying.

So I moved Annie On My Mind to young adult novels, and Oranges Aren’t the Only Fruit to literature, and Nice Jewish Girls to Judaica, and then I was not a lesbian any more.

But for decades, books took over every apartment I had. I never had furniture or decorations, only books.

In New York City my books were in storage, but I always knew I’d take them out sometime. I ended up taking them out here, on the farm. The farmhouse is not that big—only two bedrooms—but if you’ve lived in New York City for a decade, a two-bedroom house is huge. I didn’t want the books to take over everything though.

I thought of giving all the books away. But I remember how much I learned when my parents left for-my-age-inappropriate books all over our house. I want to make sure that my boys grow up with access to Willie Master’s Lonesome Wife.

So I started sorting books by color.

And then I did it by size. Like a Philistine. Suzan-Lori Parks next to Donald Barthelme. This has never happened here before, but it seems okay. There’s a reason that plays are published in the same dimensions as short stories.

It used to be that I would identify myself by my books. I wanted people to see me as someone with incredibly wide-reaching knowledge. Now I identify myself with my house—I want it to look fun and interesting, and to be a place where my kids will have that magical sort of childhood that combines safety and surprise.

You will notice there are not any work-related books. Anywhere. Which is odd because I receive at least one in the mail every day. I don’t save those books because they bore me. I wish I didn’t have to write that. But I think they bore you, too. That’s why you read this blog.

The best advice about how to conduct yourself at work is to know yourself, and get new information—from outside your own experience—about what is possible in the world. And that is what fiction, and plays, and poetry, and this blog, are about.

Penelope Trunk’s Brazen Careerist

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