16 May 2005

{\*http://www.mariansolidarity.com/articles/03-01-20.html*/}

Last time I checked, this article is still available on the net pala. This was also featured in Phil. Daily Inquirer last January 20, 2003. It was also available in their archives pero since sobrang tagal na, wala na sya.
I tried searching kse my name in google and the first time I laid my eyes on the search results, I was really taken aback..Hehehe.
Check this out:
http://www.mariansolidarity.com/articles/03-01-20.html

Heaven's Kitchen The Varsitarian UST Publishing House, 2002 110 pages

The young writers of "Heaven's Kitchen" choose to reconstitute the family by a return to the traditional basics. By adhering to one's good sense, the Varsitarian seems to say, homes will never be provisional.

Brave thoughts of Pinoy youth on family and faith By Jose Wendell P. Capili Contributor Inquirer News Service

'Nurturing our soul'
AS Manila hosts the World Meeting of Families this month, it would be worthwhile to look into the thoughts of young people about the world, their condition and their aspirations. "Heaven's Kitchen," a book of prayers and reflections, should somehow provide us that peek.

The book collects the inspirational essays and prayers that first came out in the paper's Witness (religion) section under the column that now sports the book's title.
According to seminarian Eldric Peredo, the paper's associate editor, the articles were meant "to provide some relief from the hard-nosed news and feature stories" that the paper usually carried. The column became so popular that, to student circles in and out of UST, it became synonymous with articles passionately dealing with faith and reason.

Several entries in "Heaven's Kitchen" problematize "black" and "white" as signifiers of a fundamental polarization of human worth-superiority/inferiority.
'...But my teacher said if you won't go to Mass, you'll go to hell,' the boy said. The woman smiled and said, 'Better me than you, my son.'

For instance, A.R.Ariola's (my name would go here, i just don't want a lot of people to see my blog when they do a search on the net, hehehe) "Spiritual Makeover" depicts the need to reassemble an identity out of the refractions of material deprivation as it talks about an "impulsive shopper": "My friend... confided that this was her way to compensate for the things that she lacked... We so pamper ourselves with products that can enhance our appearance that we tend to neglect that part of us which deserves the much-needed nurturing-our soul."

Facing fear
It is equally brave for many writers in the anthology, young as they are, to face fear squarely-fear of exposure, the fear that one's deepest emotions would be taken as nonsense.
Law student Marlon Castor's "A Mother's Undying Love" affirms this and betrays a commitment to feminist inflections amid contemporary male politics in the anecdote of a mother who urges her son to go to Mass alone since she will have to do the laundry: "'But my teacher said if you won't go to Mass, you'll go to hell,' the boy said. The woman smiled and said, 'Better me than you, my son.'"
Castor's "Picking Up One's Cross," on the other hand, comes to terms with the masculine persona's deep recesses: "Most of my college buddies were surprised to learn that I was back in school. Before, they had to literally drag me to attend class."

Michelle Jeanne Dompor's "On and Off" moves from silence to coherent speech by cultivating the interior life: "I went to the pew, knelt down and bowed my head. There I prayed in silence..."

In "The Inner Voice," Christian Bautista shows how young people accumulate emotional baggage because of the chaos of never-ending possibilities (the hegemonic world of grown-up people): "At a low point of my life, I once blamed God for not giving me something I sorely wanted. Looking back, I cringe at the fact that I was dumb enough to think that God had it for me."

Marie Carisa Ordinario's "Letting Go" shows how young people need compassion and greater understanding as they undergo rites of passage, like a girl who has to face the prospect of separation from her sister who has married: "Suddenly I felt alone... There is no other way to go around it... my sister may no longer live with us... [but] she is happy and having the 'greatest adventure' of her life."

In discussing faith, families and human worth, some young writers tend to agree with Derrida when the latter deconstructed the opposition between private and public. His trick was to recognize that in every textual production there was the itinerary of a constantly thwarted desire to make the text explain.

Meanwhile, the young writers of "Heaven's Kitchen" choose to reconstitute the family by a return to the traditional basics. By adhering to one's good sense, the Varsitarian seems to say, homes will never be provisional.

"Heaven's Kitchen" concludes by urging readers to find rootedness in faith, family and friends.

"Heaven's Kitchen" is available at the UST Bookstore (tel. 731-3522/3101 local 8252 or 8278), Varsitarian (731-3101 local 8235) or selected bookstores.

| 5/16/2005 06:02:00 pm


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{*RACHEL was graceful and beautiful.*}

(Genesis 29:17)

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{*In a NUTSCHELLE*}

Just turned 23. Not that young anymore and not too old either. One of the few reasons why she had a good excuse to mess up her life and still get away with it. She is a self-confessed blog addict. The blog design reflects the total opposite of her personality. She is innocence personified - prim and proper, goody-two-shoes but could turn your life into a nightmare at the least provocation. Nothing is too complicated that her not-so-average mind could comprehend.

{*Profile*}

I took delight in trivial things. I could cry bucket of tears over light drama flicks while feel-good movies make me feel fuzzy all over. Despite the sheer crappiness of horror stories, I still hate those gory and morbid scenes that will leave anyone with that sick to the gut feeling. I love the sound of the waves crashing into the shore and the heavy downpours on lazy afternoons. Although i'm almost always caught with a bunch of people, I savor moments in solitude--staring into blank spaces, totally leaving the worldly troubles behind and just lingering in silence. I'm a self-confessed bargain hunter. New finds never fail to fascinate me--it make my melatonin levels shoot sky-high.

{*Career*}

Corporate girl who commutes from three to five hours on daily basis; started being a corporate slave a few weeks before graduation; she's been working for two years; just a few months shy of getting that much-coveted MBA degree from an international academe. She wants to carve a niche in her pursuit for world domination (as if she's bent on it!). Future career plans include being a financial journalist or lifestyle writer; preschool teacher, etc.

{*Capricorn woman *}

The Capricorn woman has a strong ability to understand human nature the way no one else does. She has the ability to analyze and understand any concept well and possess a good memory. It is not easy to deceive her. She has a very business savvy nature. Conservative by nature, prudent and economical - a Capricorn women can amass a lot of wealth in her life. However it is also not uncommon for Capri woman to indulge in sporadic spending spree - leading to temporary financial hassles.

{*Random Things*}

RAVES :-)

1. people who could carry a good conversation 2. combing beaches 3. furred pets 4. nice bed to retire every night 5. Shopaholic series by Sophie Kinsella 6. Body Shop's Moonflower scents 7. Marks and Spencer's Waterlily line 8. serendipity (not the movie) 9. a bowl of hot soup 10.moments in solitude 11. mango shake 12. chocolate chips 13. white sandals 14. pearl earrings 15. flared-cut denim 16. McDonalds 17. free invites to special events 18. good, old love songs 19. herbal teas

RANTS ;-(

1. heavy traffic 2. appointments delayed at the last minute 3. people who hate me for who I am 4. long queues 5. allergies 6. oil prices shooting up 7. boring seminars you've spent a good amount on 8. racial discrimination 9. bad hair days 10.carbon monoxide 11.sold-out tickets 12.freezing temperature 13.clutterd spaces 14.Calculus subject 15.excessive politicking 16.mismatched outfits

{*....*}

I'd so love to go to Boracy after few years of blowing my chance to go there on a free acommodation basis.*** I want to go on 5,000 shopping spree for free or get all the books on my must-read list at Power Books w/o shelling any bucks.*** I want to enrol in yoga class.** I want to hone my culinary expertise by going to cooking classes.* I want to do a commentary on a place long-forgotten.** I want to be involved again on a project funded by international organization.** I want to explore caves and tell the difference between stalactites and stalagmite up close.*** I want to build the world and furnish it with love (from a song).*** I wouldn't mind doing undercover job.* I'd trade places with a wanderlust stuck in some chic city.

{*Personal Links*}

@. Heaven's Kitchen article.@
@. My Friendster profile.@
@. My Grad Pics.@
@. Googlism: What is Rachelle?.@

{*What's in a Name?*}

ANNA

Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Italian, German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Polish, Russian, Czech, Bulgarian, Icelandic, Catalan, Breton, Biblical
Pronounced: AN-a (English), AHN-nah
Latinate form of HANNAH. It appears briefly in the New Testament belonging to a prophetess who recognized Jesus as the Messiah. It was also borne by an 18th-century empress of Russia and by the the main character in Tolstoy's 'Anna Karenina', a woman forced to chose between her son and her lover.


RACHEL

Gender: Feminine
Usage: English, Jewish, French, German, Biblical
Pronounced: RAY-chel (English), ra-SHEL (French)
Means "ewe" in Hebrew. She was the favourite wife of Jacob and the mother of Joseph and Benjamin in the Old Testament.

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{*Links*}

@. Lekats, giving frienship a new name .@
@. Mervyn, the ex-seminarian .@
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@. Mark, the Thomson hunk '04 .@
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