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I am looking for an honest man. - Diogenes

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Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]
Author imitates the Greek philosopher Diogenes with his
famous pose holding a lamp at midday uttering his words
of wisdom, "I am looking for an honest man."

Light the old lamp, light the way 
through the crowd, over mean faces,
for in the night,
sleep deadens the sense of honesty;

but neither day nor night
makes the difference for the man
long sought for, and Diogenes
put it off and sighed.

and I took the same old lamp and failed, too;
for either the man isn't born yet,
or has long been dead on a Cross,
and in between, goes the crowd.~

Diogenes was a Greek philosopher (born 412 or 404 BCE and died at Corinth in 323 BCE) and one of the founders of Cynic philosophy. Diogenes was one of the few men to ever publicly mock Alexander the Great and live. He intellectually humiliated Plato and was the only pupil ever accepted by Antisthenes, whom he saw as the true heir of Socrates. Diogenes taught his philosophy of Cynicism to Crates who taught it to Zeno of Citium who fashioned it into the school of Stoicism, one of the most enduring branches of Greek philosophy.

His life was a relentless campaign to debunk the social values and institutions of what he saw as a corrupt society. None of his many writings have survived, but details of his life come in the form of anecdotes (chreia), especially from Diogenes Laërtius, in his book Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers. (Wikipedia)


Notes: Stoicism is a school of Hellenistic philosophy founded in Athens by Zeno of Citium in the early 3rd century BC. The Stoics taught that destructive emotions resulted from errors in judgment, and that a age, or person of "moral and intellectual perfection," would not suffer such emotions.

Stoics were concerned with the active relationship between cosmic determinism and human freedom and the belief that it is virtuous to maintain a will called prohairesis that is in accord with nature. Because of this, the Stoics presented their philosophy as a way of life, and they thought that the best indication of an individual's philosophy was not what a person said but how he behaved.

Later Stoics, such as Seneca and Epictetus  emphasized that because "virtue is sufficient for happiness", a sage was immune to misfortune. This belief is similar to the meaning of the phrase "stoic calm", though the phrase does not include the "radical ethical" Stoic views that only a sage can be considered truly free, and that all moral corruptions are equally vicious.

From its founding, Stoic doctrine was popular with a following in Greece and throughout the Roman Empire — including the Emperor Marcus Aurelius — until the closing of all philosophy schools in AD 529 by order of the Emperor Justinian I, who perceived their pagan character as being at odds with the Christian faith. (From Wikipedia)

Wish I were a butterfly

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Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature - School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM 8 to 9 Evening Class, Monday to Friday

Top, Anna wears a pair of butterflies; Anna wears a pair of butterfly wings.  Tagbilaran, Bohol 

I wear a pair of butterflies
     clinging on my hair, 
and they whisper, "Come,
     to our lovely lair
a garden of morning sun
    and every day fair."

Wish I were a butterfly,
     and flutter around,
from flower to flower , 
     sans time, sans bound, 
to see the world from top down,
     for humans to astound. 

Give me freedom, oh butterfly,
    your wings, your lovely pose, 
your scepter, your antenna pair; 
    your secret with the rose;
"Foolish little girl," it whispers,
    "remember Icarus." ~

Surrealism on the Grassroots: Headless Doll Guard

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Dr Abe V Rotor
UST Faculty of Arts and Letters: Photo interpretation on the level of philosophy.
Living with Nature - School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM 8 to 9 Evening Class, Monday to Friday
                    Headless doll (a cross in its place) as a parking sign (Commonwealth Ave., QC)                                          
If art originates from thoughts cum feelings,
     could it also originate from feelings alone,
that creeps into the darkness of life
     gnawing the being to the bone?

If one finds art in a piteous parking sign,
     is it akin to compassion, to a kind soul -
needless that a headless doll speak
     of morbidity, but of a pleading call?

In this corner the artist calls it surreal,
     but the soul rises above reason and heart -
its emptiness filled with some sanity,
     that surrealism is neither fate nor art. ~

The Mystery Child

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Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM 8 to 9 Evening Class, Monday to Friday
-----------------------------------------
UST Faculty of Arts and Letters: Analyze the story.  Who is the Mystery Child?  What is the significance of this story to you? To your future career?
-----------------------------------------

Child with a Dove, painting by Pablo Picasso
In a workshop for adult leaders, the instructor asked the participants to draw on the blackboard a beautiful house, ones dream house ideal to live in and raise a family.

It was of course, an exercise, which in the minds of the participants was as easy as copying a model  from experience and memory. Besides it is a universal dream to own such a house, and its concept allows free interplay of both reason and imagination. The participants formed a queue to allow everyone to contribute his own idea on the blackboard.

The first in the queue drew the posts of the house, on which the succeeding members made the roof and floor. The rest proceeded in making the walls and windows.

In the second round the participants added garage, porch, veranda, staircase, gate, fence, swimming pool, TV antennae, and other amenities.

Finally the drawing was completed and the participants returned to their seats. What make a dream house, an ideal house? A lively “sharing session” followed and everyone was happy with the outcome, and none could be happier than the teacher who learned this exercise in an international forum.

Just then a child was passing by and peeped through the open door. He saw the drawing of the house on the blackboard. He entered the classroom and stood for a long time looking at the drawing. The teacher approached him, the participants turned to see the unexpected visitor.

The child pointed at the drawing and exclaimed, “But there are no neighbors!”

In the same village there was a similar workshop exercise, but this time the participants were to draw a community. The participants made a queue on the blackboard and after an hour of working together, came up with a beautiful drawing of a community.

In the drawing there are houses and at the center are a church, a school, village hall, and plaza. A network of roads and bridges shows the sections of the village. People are busy doing their chores, especially in the market area. Indeed it is a typical village.

The participants discussed, “What constitute a community.” It was a lively discussion and everyone   was so delighted with their “masterpiece” that the teacher even wrote at the corner of the blackboard “Save.”

Just then a child was passing by. When he saw the drawing on the backboard through the open door, he entered the classroom. He went close to the drawing and looked at it for a long time. The teacher and participants fell silent looking at their very young guest.

The child exclaimed, “But there are no trees, no birds; there are no mountains, no fields, no river!”

Some days had passed since the two workshops. Virtually no one ever bothered to find out who the child was or where he lived.

Then the whole village began to search for the child, but they never found him – not in the village, not in the neighboring village, not in the capital, and not in any known place.

Who was the child? Everyone who saw him never forgot his kindly beautiful and innocent face, and they pondered on his words which became the two greatest lessons in ecology.


  • But there are no neighbors!
  • But there are no trees, no birds; there are no mountains, no fields, no river! ~

Don't be a victim of unfair trade practices

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Dr Abe V Rotor

Living with Nature - School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM 8 to 9 Evening Class, Monday to Friday
Natural vinegar is safe to health, it has medicinal properties. Beware of glacial acetic acid sold as vinegar. Also watch out for artificial food coloring, and recycled cooking oil.

Wa-is, coming from the word wise, is the local parlance to describe a person who puts one over his fellowmen. It is taking advantage of others of their situation, ignorance or weaknesses . Here are common cases. It is common in trade and industry, in fact in our everyday relations - formal and informal. Here are some examples.

1. It is the culled piglets (bansot) that are made into lechon. The robust ones are grown for meat.

2. Broken and inferior peanut is ground into peanut butter. It is high in aflatoxin. Healthy nuts are sold whole peanut.

3. Coffee is adulterated with ipil-ipil (Leucaena glauca) seeds. The seeds contain mimosin that retards growth and causes baldness.

4. Papaya seeds are mixed with black pepper. They look similar.

5. Inferior quality fruits such as strawberry, orange and mango are made into jam and puree. Some are not recommended for human consumption.

6. Ordinary milkfish (bangos) is passed on as prized Bonoan bangus from Dagupan. Note that the lower tail of Bonoan bangos is shorter than the other tail. Can you differentiate true salmon from sea salmon?

7. Unscrupulous traders add water and salt to bagoong and patis to increase their volume. Genuine and seasoned bagoong has clear patis on top, and has a characteristic pleasant aroma.
Those red light bulbs in the meat and fish sections are deceiving - they make the goods look fresh.

8. Premium grade fruits are arranged on top of kaing (basket); inside are of inferior grade. This is common in mango. This is true with vegetables like cabbage and cauliflower. Ordinary rice is mixed with premium rice, and passed on as premium grade.

9. Forced ripe fruits are not as sweet as naturally ripened ones. Carburo, a ripening chemical, can be detected. Pick fruits like watermelon with the stem (peduncle) still green.

10. Cabbage grown on the lowlands of Ilocos is brought up to Baguio and passed on as Baguio cabbage which commands a higher price.

11. Before a large animal like cow is sold to the auction market it is first bathed with patis which causes its body to swell and appear fat.

12. Tomatoes are forced to ripe when price is high, This is done by uprooting the whole plant laden with fruits and hanging it upside down until all the fruits, including the immature ones, are ripe.

13. Powdered fruit juices are laced with saccharin, aspartame, nutrasweet and the like, which are artificial sugar. Artificial sugar has been traced to the the cause of many ailments. It is now banned in many states in the US and in Europe. Diet carbonated drinks have artificial sugar in place of natural sugar, that's why they are claimed to be calorie free.

14. Refine salt is made to appear more white by adding lime or CaO. Note: This salt is not recommended for making bagoong. Use natural crushed salt instead.

15. Honey is adulterated with cane sugar. Pure honey when refrigerated does not solidify. Sugar forms a distinct layer in adulterated honey.

16. Unsold meat is made into longganisa, unsold fish is dried or made into bagoong. Otherwise they are again placed in ice to be sold the next day.

17. Be wary of taste test, say lansones or orange. Pick a sample yourself. And hand pick those you are going to buy.

18. Shortselling is common - from a fruit stand to a gas station. Common sense helps, but it's good to have a test weight, or pocket scale.

19. Do you recognize fish caught by dynamite? Double dead or botcha pork or chicken? Fish kill bangos and tilapia? Rely on own experience and expert's advice. Learn more.

20. Imitation is getting closer to genuine. Take car parts. Branded RTWs. China made tools with US, Japan or European made - and locally fabricated. Marikina shoes from China. Don't rely of labels. USA may mean usa (deer). Japan design is not made in Japan, so with US design. These are imitations.

21. Outlumber is passed on as regular lumber. Get a good carpenter to assist you. Check the gauge of the GI sheet you are buying. Gauge 26 is thicker than 28, more so, than gauge 30). Do this to plywood. Specify its thickness, and if marine or ordinary plywood.

22. There hardware products you should be particularly careful when buying them, like electrical and plumbing materials. Beware of substandard quality. The consequences are great.

24. How do you know if you are getting the right seeds and seedlings for your farm? Check the supplier if he is accredited by the Philippine Seedboard (eg, rice, corn, legumes, vegetables). Or company's guarantee. Have your own plant nursery, too.

25. The most rampant dilution practices are in shampoo and liquid soap. A range of 20 to 50 percent water dilution can be passed on to the unwary customer through appealing advertisements, promotions and packaging.

This article is an open list. There are many practices that attest to the other side of commerce and industry. Some may be well-meant but not necessarily ethical. Others may be acceptable to an extent for practical reasons. We cannot totally eliminate contaminants, but we can lower it to a safe level. There is no equipment that lasts forever, but we should not design it for premature obsolescence. A commodity may be beneficial to one but not to another, but in no way should it be harmful. All these attest to a growing syndrome spawned by runaway capitalism and consumerism. Knowing these practices is important to warn people from becoming victims, and to campaign for the eradication of these and many other malpractices. x x x


A Mother and Child Version

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 Dr Abe V Rotor
Mother and Daughter version at home. QC

Filial Mother and Child relationship -
 romantic, biblical, pastoral, modern;
  preserved in the genes of all creation,
  poses to humans a great concern. ~   


Resourceful Pedicab Peddler

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Dr Abe V Rotor 

 Pedicab Peddler, photo by the author, Fairview QC 2016
    Peddling is no easy task, but it can be fun,
     and makes others join with a lens on hand;
      a thin line across work and game makes life
     a little lighter, as the world goes around. ~


All the world loves a child

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Dr Abe V Rotor

 Markus 1, at home, QC 2916

All the world loves a child,
the image of innocence,
the epitome of joy
and universal peace;

He laughs with the world,
the world cries even for one;
and stands to honor Him
whose love is profound. ~



Nature on a wall mural builds memories

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"To children, Nature is a beautiful world,
as pristine as they are innocent and pure."

Mural and Quotations by Dr Abe V Rotor 
 

"Boys in a row all eager to discover the world
give them not the computer, but a boat to row"

 

 "Adolescents at the boundary of childhood and  the real world -
one fashioned by man, the other, by Nature alone." 

 
 "Closest to the heart is the will, 
will the prime mover of action -
action in pursuit of dream."



   "Girth is the measure of age of a tree, 
growing to the fullest 
with the least intervention of man
 - or none at all."



"Wonder the child, wonder the hornbill;
who have not really seen each other before."



"Living with nature by a wall mural builds memories -   
memories into archives if we fail to preserve nature."   


"However perfect an image is, it is but a piece of art;
 life has no replica in man's hand."



"A moment of rest by a stream on a grass under the trees,
recharges a tired soul like a whole night's sleep." 


"From a cave opens a world of our ancestors;
beyond, their dreams - and the future of mankind."

"Imagination is more powerful than reason, 
for it has wings that split light not into black and white, 
but into the beautiful colors of the rainbow." 


"Love is primal, love is sweet;
and sweeter still wiith nature."



"There is no generation or diversity gap in nature; 
nature is one roof under which organisms - 
including man -  are knitted by their own life cycles
that form a dynamic order and network."
 
"To a baby Nature is a beautiful world,
as pristine as he is innocent and pure."
  
"To the very young, 
Nature is a bud in spring 
that grows into a crown, 
and flower to bejewels it." 
                               
"The age of make believe,
 is incongruous as it may appear,
with curiosity riding fantacy."

Meet the Creatures of the Sea on the Wall

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 Dr Abe V Rotor
Details of Nature Wall Mural
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]

When life is bigger than you,
take it like a big fish;
don't let it go away, 
for no one will believe you.

The sun never sets, goes the adage
of a once powerful empire;
 it did. 
The sun never sets in the deep blue sea,
phosphorescence the secret,
indeed. 

                    
Creatures communicate in many ways,
including man;
dolphins and birds think sailboats 
are of their kind.
                               
Believe in sea monsters, 
giants, grotesque, fearful,
as they think also of man,
the biggest monster of all!


Once thought extinct millions of years ago,
 the Coelacanth rose from the deep,
exactly the same as its fossil in the museum,
challenging science of its feat.
Camouflaged juvenile shark is safe 
from its enemies,
while it lurks for some unwary prey
 in dual existence.  

                              
A school of fish of two kinds
traveling and hunting
in a treatise beyond science,
and folk understanding,

                              
Banded groupers like three musketeers,
adventure the name of their game;
Dumas could have been more delighted 
to have met this triumvirate in action. 
On the craggy sea floor life is barely perceptible,
the tenants are better when left alone;
if survival to others is transience and agression ,
here a fish can be mistaken for a stone.  
Not all big fish is an enemy,
it may be a guardian, too,
leading a school in its care, 
like the teacher we know.  
                








A niche is defined by species, boundary, and time,
by common friends and enemies;
yet in times of plenty niches are open and free,
to form wholesome communities.  

                   
The rainbow is Cathedral in the sky,
it matters not if incomplete,
or its colors dim, to lovers of Nature,
who pause in prayer and retreat.  
Swarming means danger, sensing enemies down below;
the school forms a circle like the pioneers of the Old West;
the young and fecund in the center, the bold on the guard,
collective survival is universal to evolutionary success.


Have you tried Jumping Salad?

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Dr Abe V Rotor

Living with Nature School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday

  




This is a favorite dish of Ilocanos known as “jumping salad.”


What is it really?

In Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (school-on-the-air) program, five callers phoned to give their answers. Except one who said he learned about this rare dish from a friend, the callers apparently Ilocanos, said they have actually tasted jumping salad.

Newly caught juvenile shrimps, promptly dressed with tomato or calamansi and a dash of salt. Pick them up individually by the head, put it into the mouth in reverse, severe the rostrum (unicorn) and antennae with the teeth to avoid injury. It is the kicking in the mouth that gives this unique dish its name jumping salad. 

This dish is prepared from newly caught small to medium shrimps from the estuaries and rivers, and while they are still very much alive are served right there and then with calamansi and salt, momentarily agitating the ill-fated creatures.
Pronto! The shrimps, on removing the cover, frantically jump out of the plate, save the dazed ones. You should be skillful in catching them from the table (and even on the floor) deftly picking them by the head, taking caution so as not to get hurt by their sharp rostrum. You can imagine the danger you face as the creature makes its last attempt to escape. You must get a firm hold before putting the struggling creature into your mouth, tail first and quickly bite off the head, severing the sharp dagger in your hold. The creature wriggles in the cave of your mouth and you can actually feel its convulsion fading as it undergoes the initial process of digestion.
Being an Ilocano myself, eating jumping salad is an adventure and rarely do you experience having one nowadays, unless you are living near the sea, river or lake, or a good friend brings live shrimps to town in banana stalk container to keep them alive.
Try jumping salad. It’s one for the Book of Guinness.~

Acknowledgement: Internet images 

When was the last time you built a sandcastle?

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Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday

Oh, you should build 
sandcastle again! 
And keep young always.  
Keep close to children. 
To while time away. 
Keep the innocence 
of not all knowing. 
To be yourself again.

Building Sandcastles on Morong Beach, Bataan


Build sandcastles, they make dreams come true,
on a flying magic carpet’s view;

Build sandcastles and copy the clouds,
faces of creatures behind a shroud;

Build sandcastles and meet the Martians,
the Aztecs, the cowboys and Indians.

Build sandcastles, poet Milton long aimed:
Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained;

Build sandcastles along the river,
playground of Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer;

Build sandcastles, and meet Peter Pan,
Casper, Nemo, in the world of fun;

Build sandcastles and hunt for treasure
in the Pyramids and Aegean shore;

Build sandcastles for pleasure and pain
in Great Expectations by Mark Twain;

Build sandcastles, they bring back the past,
when you're young and never cease to ask;

Build sandcastles, while in tender years;
grownups who did, live up in good cheers;

Build sandcastles, tall as the Eiffel,
until the sun sets and the winds chill;

Build sandcastles and reach out to sea,
to the unknown and risk to be free;

Build sandcastles, fairy tale or true,
for life's but a passing review. ~

Don't be a victim of unfair trade practices

$
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  Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM 8 to 9 Evening Class, Monday to Friday
Natural vinegar is safe to health, it has medicinal properties. Beware of glacial acetic acid sold as vinegar. Also watch out for artificial food coloring, and recycled cooking oil.

Wa-is, coming from the word wise, is the local parlance to describe a person who puts one over his fellowmen. It is taking advantage of others of their situation, ignorance or weaknesses . Here are common cases. It is common in trade and industry, in fact in our everyday relations - formal and informal. Here are some examples.

1. It is the culled piglets (bansot) that are made into lechon. The robust ones are grown for meat.

2. Broken and inferior peanut is ground into peanut butter. It is high in aflatoxin. Healthy nuts are sold whole peanut.

3. Coffee is adulterated with ipil-ipil (Leucaena glauca) seeds. The seeds contain mimosin that retards growth and causes baldness.

4. Papaya seeds are mixed with black pepper. They look similar.

5. Inferior quality fruits such as strawberry, orange and mango are made into jam and puree. Some are not recommended for human consumption.

6. Ordinary milkfish (bangos) is passed on as prized Bonoan bangus from Dagupan. Note that the lower tail of Bonoan bangos is shorter than the other tail. Can you differentiate true salmon from sea salmon?

7. Unscrupulous traders add water and salt to bagoong and patis to increase their volume. Genuine and seasoned bagoong has clear patis on top, and has a characteristic pleasant aroma.
Those red light bulbs in the meat and fish sections are deceiving - they make the goods look fresh.

8. Premium grade fruits are arranged on top of kaing (basket); inside are of inferior grade. This is common in mango. This is true with vegetables like cabbage and cauliflower. Ordinary rice is mixed with premium rice, and passed on as premium grade.

9. Forced ripe fruits are not as sweet as naturally ripened ones. Carburo, a ripening chemical, can be detected. Pick fruits like watermelon with the stem (peduncle) still green.

10. Cabbage grown on the lowlands of Ilocos is brought up to Baguio and passed on as Baguio cabbage which commands a higher price.

11. Before a large animal like cow is sold to the auction market it is first bathed with patis which causes its body to swell and appear fat.

12. Tomatoes are forced to ripe when price is high, This is done by uprooting the whole plant laden with fruits and hanging it upside down until all the fruits, including the immature ones, are ripe.

13. Powdered fruit juices are laced with saccharin, aspartame, nutrasweet and the like, which are artificial sugar. Artificial sugar has been traced to the the cause of many ailments. It is now banned in many states in the US and in Europe. Diet carbonated drinks have artificial sugar in place of natural sugar, that's why they are claimed to be calorie free.

14. Refine salt is made to appear more white by adding lime or CaO. Note: This salt is not recommended for making bagoong. Use natural crushed salt instead.

15. Honey is adulterated with cane sugar. Pure honey when refrigerated does not solidify. Sugar forms a distinct layer in adulterated honey.

16. Unsold meat is made into longganisa, unsold fish is dried or made into bagoong. Otherwise they are again placed in ice to be sold the next day.

17. Be wary of taste test, say lansones or orange. Pick a sample yourself. And hand pick those you are going to buy.

18. Shortselling is common - from a fruit stand to a gas station. Common sense helps, but it's good to have a test weight, or pocket scale.

19. Do you recognize fish caught by dynamite? Double dead or botcha pork or chicken? Fish kill bangos and tilapia? Rely on own experience and expert's advice. Learn more.

20. Imitation is getting closer to genuine. Take car parts. Branded RTWs. China made tools with US, Japan or European made - and locally fabricated. Marikina shoes from China. Don't rely of labels. USA may mean usa (deer). Japan design is not made in Japan, so with US design. These are imitations.

21. Outlumber is passed on as regular lumber. Get a good carpenter to assist you. Check the gauge of the GI sheet you are buying. Gauge 26 is thicker than 28, more so, than gauge 30). Do this to plywood. Specify its thickness, and if marine or ordinary plywood.

22. There hardware products you should be particularly careful when buying them, like electrical and plumbing materials. Beware of substandard quality. The consequences are great.

24. How do you know if you are getting the right seeds and seedlings for your farm? Check the supplier if he is accredited by the Philippine Seedboard (eg, rice, corn, legumes, vegetables). Or company's guarantee. Have your own plant nursery, too.

25. The most rampant dilution practices are in shampoo and liquid soap. A range of 20 to 50 percent water dilution can be passed on to the unwary customer through appealing advertisements, promotions and packaging.

This article is an open list. There are many practices that attest to the other side of commerce and industry. Some may be well-meant but not necessarily ethical. Others may be acceptable to an extent for practical reasons. We cannot totally eliminate contaminants, but we can lower it to a safe level. There is no equipment that lasts forever, but we should not design it for premature obsolescence. A commodity may be beneficial to one but not to another, but in no way should it be harmful. All these attest to a growing syndrome spawned by runaway capitalism and consumerism. Knowing these practices is important to warn people from becoming victims, and to campaign for the eradication of these and many other malpractices. x x x


All the world loves a child

$
0
0

Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]

 Markus 1, at home, QC 2916

All the world loves a child,
the image of innocence,
the epitome of joy
and universal peace;

He laughs with the world,
the world cries even for one;
and stands to honor Him
whose love is profound.

A Mother and Child Version

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0
0

Dr Abe V Rotor
 Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]
Mother and Daughter version at home. QC

Filial Mother and Child relationship -
 romantic, biblical, pastoral, modern;
  preserved in the genes of all creation,
  poses to humans a great concern. ~   


"Lola and Apo'" by a Waterfall Wall Mural

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Dr Abe V Rotor 
 Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]
Siling and grandchildren, Lagro QC, 2016

"There is no generation or diversity gap in nature; 
nature is one roof under which organisms - 
including man -  are knitted by their own life cycles
that form a dynamic order and network."~

I Love the Kapok Tree

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Dr Abe V Rotor

Towering kapok trees, University of the Philippines, Diliman QC

I love the kapok tree for its towering height few trees can attain, clearly outlined against the sky, solid crown during monsoon, and skeleton with dangling pods in summer;


I love the kapok tree for its grotesque trunk, fortress roots shaped like walls, running in great length, and forming into troughs and cubicles by nature's magic of inarching;

I love the kapok tree for the gong music its buttresses produce when struck by horned animals in passionate beat and rhythm during mating season, as war drums in battle, or warning in imminent danger;

I love the kapok tree for foretelling El Niño, by profusely bearing pods as if it were its last breathe, its assurance to its species' survival, and we, humans heeding it as warning against a coming famine and death;

I love the kapok tree for its shade against sun and rain, keeping the soil moist, air cool and grass green, its crown taming gusts of wind into cool breeze, whistling, whispering, lulling;

I love the kapok tree for its thick and layered foliage on multistoried boughs, that muffle noise around, yet resonant to the songs of birds, fiddling of crickets, and shrill of the cicada;

I love the kapok tree for its many tenants from earthworm that feeds on its litter, termites and beetles on its pruned branches, gecko lizard ensconced in its hallowed limb, relief station of countless transient guests;

I love the kapok tree when its flower pods open in fragrance at sunrise, and when ripe and dry, dehisce into the air countless lints floating soft as silk, to the thrill of children at play and lovers meek in the park;

I love the kapok tree for its silky lint, its inside the trapped air makes it the best pillow filling in the world, ever resilient, springy, and soft, and makes sleep deep and dreams sweet;

I love the kapok tree for its seed, source of natural detergent and cosmetics, its meal rich in food value, and curative power, too - from emollient, catarrh to Cupid's potion;

I love the kapok tree even in its barest state, for I see heaven through its frame in the like of the Tower of Babel, when the Angelus tolls at the end of day - or in requiem for my beautiful, stately tree. ~

Images of Fireworks in the Sky

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Deathly mushroom, Frankenstein's monster, Icarus wings, Big Bang
Matthew Marlo R Rotor
Fiery mushroom in radial symmetry,
a deathly bloom to its last ray,
ghost from Hiroshima 70 years ago
  roams with inaudible echo.
A giant in the sky by serendipity, 
Frankentein's monster in a hurry.   
Feathers of fire, wings of ill-fated Icarus,
wispy like rainless cloud drifting across. 

 Big Bang in the beginning, or at the end of the world,
all creation exists under an omnipotent Democles sword.
(Internet Photo)

"Lola and Apo'" by a Waterfall Wall Mural

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 Dr Abe V Rotor 
 Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]

Siling and grandchildren, Lagro QC, 2016

"There is no generation or diversity gap in nature;
nature is one roof under which organisms -
including man - are knitted by their own life cycles
that form a dynamic order and network."~

Berlin Wall Mural - A Unifying Art Movement in History

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The longest and most meaningful mural 
the world has ever seen.
Dr Abe V Rotor 
 Living with Nature - School on Blog [avrotor.blogspot.com]
Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio
 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday [www.pbs.gov.ph]
Berlin Wall at the height of the Cold War (1945-1989) 
Acknowledgement: Photo from Internet

Freedom has wings, no wall can hold;
not The Great Wall or the Berlin Wall;
long imprisoned the human spirit be,
just a crack leads to its eventual fall.
 
More powerful is faith that breaks it
in figures, colors, symbols they convey,
the interconnectedness of humanity
through mural - art in visual story. 

Tearing down walls in world's history
is more difficult than building one;
as empty as space, or as high as Eiffel,
time the greatest element 'til it's gone.

And the ruins talk of human triumph
and defeat, of human folly and frailty,
enshrined in his art, the universal
language of man's greatest story.

NOTE: The Berlin Wall fell in 1989 when the divided city and nation were re-united. The year marked the beginning of post-Cold War era, released from the polarization of two superpowers and their allies - America and USSR (now Russia after its dissolution). On both sides of the wall murals of common themes and subjects were discovered. It marked a new movement in the Arts.

Irrespective of ideology - democracy or socialism - man's common desire for freedom remains unconquerable. Whatever happened to most parts of the wall can be gleamed from fragments of it, so with the murals, now being kept as precious souvenirs in many nations. I personally saw and touched a brick from the wall in a remote village in Israel. It was a beautiful feeling to be part of Humanity's Neo-Renaissance.

Nation and Capital divided during the entire Cold War Period.



Wall appears like giant streamers, in collage of posters on 
buildings, stairways, and slabs.


Painting the wall in action. Height of wall in certain areas is
augmented by other barriers and detection devices.
Murals on trash cans and windows.

Murals extend longer than the eye can follow.
Acknowledgement: Photos from the Internet.
      
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