27 Sep 2009

Where to send donations for victims of Typhoon Ondoy? (Off-topic)

I’m not really for asking people to donate because I feel it’s a subtle manner of inducing apathy (give away money, feel good that you don’t need to think of why the problem occurred once it’s no longer over-reported) and that mass donations are often favored only after a disaster has struck rather than before it — but as I’m currently monitoring my plurk account — I was alerted to this site so I felt there’s no harm in spreading it. Source: http://burymeinthisdress.com/blog/2009/09/where-to-send-donations-for-victims-of-typhoon-ondoy/

INTERNATIONAL

1. Send a letter of intent to donate to the PNRC
2. A letter of acceptance from PNRC shall be sent back to the donor
3. Immediately after shipping the goods, please send the (a) original Deed of Donation, (b) copy of packing list and (c) original Airway Bill for air shipments or Bill of Lading for sea shipments to The Philippine National Red Cross–National Headquarters c/o Secretary General Corazon Alma de Leon, Bonifacio Drive, Port Area, Manila 2803, Philippines.


 

FOR THOSE OUTSIDE THE COUNTRY WHO WANT TO DONATE

TXTPower.org has set up a paypal account for donations. Your money will be forwarded to Red Cross.

Kapuso Foundation is also accepting credit card donations. Kapuso Foundation site

Please look at this list and this page too.


Most urgent needs

Food items: Rice, noodles, canned goods, sugar, iodized salt, cooking oil, monggo beans and potable water

Medicines: Paracetamol, antibiotics, analgesic, oral rehydration salts, multivitamins and medications to treat diarrheal diseases

Non-food items: Bath soaps, face towels, shampoo, toothbrush, toothpaste, plastic mats, blankets, mosquito nets, jerry cans, water containers, water purification tablets, plastic sheetings, and Laundry soap


There are more local information where to donate in the page but I think enough Filipinos are already spreading the information so I just narrowed down the international ones.For a preview of how bad the typhoon was, see:

(Don’t worry. I’m unemployed so it’s not like my opinion of donations is keeping millions of cash from being used to help others. Just focus on doing what these threads make you feel of doing and go where your passion leads you to doing.)

 
 

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18 Sep 2009

In Praise of Laziness

More inspirational than strategic, I’m sharing this because there was once a conversation in AnonIB where someone shared a bunch of links of people in support of not working — and at first, I pretty much agreed that the sites were poor and hippie-ish.

(There were literally no specific how to’s on the sites on how to achieve the concept.)

Then another anon came in and argued something I can’t quite remember. (I don’t have the link to refer to that particular conversation.)

Basically though, what happened next was that I ended up pointing out how it wasn’t so much an idealistic thing. That these arguments really do have some more validity and substance than the average lazy person over-simplifies it or generic internet posters feeling these were just a un-formed irrational knee-jerk “pie-in-the-sky” kiddie vision of the world.

At most I remember stating that a huge problem was that at the most basic layman level, people on both sides tend to be ignorant of the Luddite and Neo-Luddite movements (as in they don’t even know of the names and beliefs of those groups) and the discussion gets marred because of that.

None of these has to do specifically with the video but seeing this, it did remind me that were some sections of Hikikomoris that literally push towards a non-employment mode of living and they might appreciate this video.

Edit: Btw here’s where I found the link: http://lazyway.blogs.com/lazy_way/2008/09/in-praise-of—1.html


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18 Sep 2009

My Education
…or the thorough lack of.

I get asked about this a lot during talks and meetups, but the main reason that had me writing this down was probably due to the mails I receive from students saying they were inspired to pursue photography, art, or something else less accepted by majority of the parents out there because of me.

It’s flattering yes, and I’m probably expected to be supportive, but I can’t brush off the feeling that sometimes I think my articles and interviews romanticize my experiences too much. So much so that when people read those they’re given some sort of impression that leads them to think — “She left school and became successful in no time, I don’t feel like I’m learning anything at all either, I wanna quit school too!” — which then somehow helped them convince themselves that education is useless, and that it was ok to use it as an excuse to do something else for the sole purpose of using it as an escape.

Here’s just a little something to better shed light on some stuff that led me to my decisions. It’s just stuff that came to mind, so please do pardon the lack of coherence.

As a child, I always recalled my mother telling me a particular metaphor: if a house breaks out in a fire, the most important things to rescue will be books, for knowledge is power and the most valuable for one’s survival.

It probably sounds a little silly in modern day context, but it puts the point across. Some of you will probably want to argue that it’s money that one can’t live without, sure it’s important, but then we have another metaphor: you can have a mountain of gold and silver and spend it all without knowing how to replenish what you have (due to the lack of the knowledge of how to do it). So there.

I was at the age where parents’ words were absolute laws we children abide by without questions, and I would believe whatever I was told with utter faith. My understanding then, at 4 or maybe 5, was that, knowledge was gained by learning, studying, and that’s why we had to go to school. To learn.

As I grew older, I figured that studying didn’t have to be confined into schools because we were all different. And that sometimes, the world was our best classroom, because certain things, I could only learn from actual experiences.

The thirst to simply find out more about what I liked was my drive, and only much later did I realize that learning was really a lifetime affair.

A lot of things happened throughout my schooldays, outside of school. To cut it short, I was made acutely aware of death at a young age. It led me to believe that I didn’t have many years left. So despite making efforts to get in, I spent my days in a prestigious school not quite studying as I should have been, utterly convinced that my end was near and I had every right to spend the last few years the way I wanted.

I had various interests that weren’t quite academical, and with every additional one I was made all the more aware of not wanting to be in a school studying things irrelevant for my needs. But no, at that time, I didn’t know what I wanted to be.

I was good in air rifle, but I felt that it would one day become dull if I stayed doing sports all my life (no offence to others in the line, it’s just me).

I liked air rifle, but I liked difference, new and change even more. I wanted to do something that will make the next day fresh and challenging all at the same time. Air rifle was about hitting the barely 0.45mm bull’s eye every single shot, about how many times I can repeat the same set of actions without mentally and emotionally wavering. But there’s a limit set to it. You can only get 400/400 for 40 shots in a competition, and no matter how frigging perfect, may you get 109/109 for finals, it’s as far it goes.

I didn’t want something with a pre-set limit.

Along the way I met Yun (aka Arissa, aka Kagetsuki, aka minicloud, who still calls me by the nick I was using 7 years ago after everyone else has stopped), and thought she was possibly the coolest girl I’d ever met in my life. And because she was doing fashion design, I became somewhat interested, and decided to study fashion instead.

I was on leave from school to train for the Olympics selections that year, and with all the extra free time on my hands and interest in fashion, I selected a short course on makeup to learn. The knowledge in it played an important role in my photography later on.

I’m deviating a little from my original point here, but what I’m trying to say is, if you find something of interest, don’t hesitate to learn it. An extra skill never hurt. (Although I don’t know what reading The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space in Primary 4 was gonna help me with, but I guess at least it gave me a dream to live out there… in the future. Like I can do a photoshoot in space or something… Yeah yeah okay I’m having Gundam daydreams again. Hahahaha.)

After various events, with extreme reluctance on my mother’s part, I managed to leave RGS for LASALLE with the blessings of my principal. (Gotta admit having a good standing of achievements in air rifle helped)

I enjoyed my foundation year tremendously. It provided me with a variety of mediums and platforms I could learn about and experiment with, all in the realm of something I was interested in — art. And from there, slowly but surely, sieved through was my interest for illustrative images.

My decision to leave school a second time grieved my mother to no end. She’d thought I really loved school and was enjoying it (which I was, till later, which I’ll explain below), and couldn’t understand why I wanted to quit a semester short to getting my diploma. My ex-step-dad and pals would scorn at her stressing failure as a mother, my maternal family was extremely academic and the whole family would calling my mum from the US and UK all over, repeating just how a degree was mandatory, every other night.

But really, attaining a diploma doesn’t mean I’d retain the knowledge from school any better if I hadn’t bothered to study at all. Without that piece of paper, what I’d learnt was already mine, and wouldn’t be taken away from me. Right?


Here’s a somewhat summarized snapshot of the story:

We were starting on a semester of men’s fashion, but I was actually only interested in womenswear. However, the lack of interest was hardly enough to warrant my yearning to leave school.

That semester started almost a month later than scheduled; we didn’t have lecturers for some of the classes; then an incident, a classmate cried and screamed at me in front of class just because of how unfair she felt it was that I got by well enough whilst missing school (for rifle training trips) while the rest couldn’t catch up.

Traumatized on top of the disorganization of classes, I felt that it wasn’t adding up to what I could get out of my own time if I did individual learning.

Also, I was becoming obsessed with photography.

I had a little popularity growing in deviantART, I would receive notes telling me that I had inspired an individual to pick up photography. It made me feel both happy and appreciated because it was something I thoroughly enjoyed, and at the same time seemed to allow a complete stranger to benefit from.

Around the same period I started getting small jobs, it was then that I felt the unstoppable yearning to better myself and my shoots. The want to do more, create more and improve more. Which all demanded more time and efforts than I was already giving, it was the moment for me to shed everything else to focus on photography only, and once that became clear, no one was going to stop me. I wasn’t going to live down a life that wasn’t mine.

A dear friend once said to me:

when we are alive, we need to do things that makes us feel right
things that give us that feeling that we are living our own lives, our own choices
and if we are honest with our own feelings
we ought not feel bad for making others sad
because lying is worse

It wasn’t directed at my studies, but I think this quote can apply for a lot of things, really.

Eventually, when I left school, I’d already done a magazine cover, earned an average of at least roughly 800SGD per job with constant enough job offers.

If we look only at the basic of 1200SGD a month of a fresh diploma graduate, I wasn’t too badly off. (Okay so I don’t really know the exact figure, maybe it’s higher, maybe it’s lower, I didn’t really care anyway, it was just numbers conjured up to explain to my mum I wasn’t gonna starve to death) It definitely wasn’t much, but it’s something.


So no, I didn’t just make my decision based on thoughts and ideals alone.

I knew quite clearly what I needed and wanted, that my learning had to encompass experiences from a working environment which I was already getting, which the school did not and could not provide, which needed more time for than I could have afforded while still being in school.

I knew what I didn’t have and had to work on, and very importantly the simple truth of having to support myself, my overheads, and the fact that I was ready with the ability to face them.

I left school, but I was not runaway from learning.

Pursue your dreams, but don’t use it as an excuse to escape.

So um, there. It got a bit longer than I expected. Sorry. XD

I contemplated about writing the pursuit of dreams, turning pro and experiences, but obviously, that would somewhat turn this entry into an autobiography and make everyone on this page fall asleep. So maybe next time.


PS: Despite the fact that I’d tried self-betaing 98124 times, I’m sure there’re still errors and pointless sentences where I got carried away, so please forgive me.

PPS: But if you made it to the end, even if it doesn’t help you in any way (since it’s more addressed to a small group of people), I still hope you enjoyed reading it somehow… yeah. XD

PPPS: I just realized that this coincides with Obama’s speech to students on education, just a note this was written quite sometime before, and thus is in no way a response or opinion towards his speech. ^^;

http://zemotion.blogspot.com/2009/09/my-education.html

Courtesy of Ashley’s Plurk

Some might argue that this is very unrelated to Hikkikomoris while others might appreciate the theme about art and education.

Nevertheless this was one of those posts where my intention wasn’t to share it for the sake of it being a topic relevant to Hikkis but rather it’s just one of those posts that’s written in such a way where I feel it’s worth sharing no matter what blog you are on.

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