AS TIME GOES BY

       The perils of being old(er) I watched Don Lemon’s interview with Clive Davis, Whitney Houston’s agent/record producer. He was 90 years old. I asked myself, would I be so lucky to be as smart and coherent as this man? There was no hint of him being a pre-boomer generation of older people. The man insists that retirement is… Read More »

FRIENDSHIP, CONNECTION, AND MEANING

JANUARY 2023. The first month of an odd year feels forebodingly hopeful. A bit contradictory, isn’t it? But that’s the feeling I have after a rough couple of years but now facing a more promising and encouraging prospect in the year ahead. What caused this optimism could be a natural response from the relaxation of COVID rules for… Read More »

EXISTENTIAL CHALLENGES OF OUR TIME

DECEMBER.  It’s a month of significance for a lot of us. It is the time of the year of thoughts of another year past. I don’t know you, but for me, this time around is not like any other December.  Could it be that I have ended three-quarters of life and now heading to the final quarter that… Read More »

BIO-TECHNOLOGICAL (R)EVOLUTION

PART  II Ten thousand years ago, there was no such thing as corn, just a wild grassy plant called Teosinte.  Farmers started domesticating it by selecting seeds for planting.  Maize, as it was later called, then had an ear ( cob) 2 cm long with eight rows of kernels. From that lowly start, the corn has steadily transformed… Read More »

BIO-TECHNOLOGICAL (R)EVOLUTION

PART I In Newfoundland in the early seventies, a local hennery (egg-producing chicken farms ) would advertise in a local paper “laid out” ( known in the mainland as stewing chickens ) chickens for 0.25 cents apiece or five for a dollar ( yes, five live chickens for 1 dollar ).  At the end of the sale period,… Read More »

The state of Philippine Education: revisited 

A recent commentary, ” Our Interconnected Crises,” by Cielito Habito of the Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 9, 2022, took my breath away. I thought our 2018 PISA ( Programme for International Student Assessment ), in which we placed last among 79 countries tested in reading and 78th in Math and Science, would be so tough to our national… Read More »

Towards a lasting legacy

What do you remember about your great-grandparents?  I have talked to many, and for the most part, the answer was nothing.  It is academic to ask what one remembers about their great grandparents, other than what had been related by a grandparent.  But of course, if family history is kept, future generations can avail of the many extraordinary… Read More »

REMINISCING MY YEARS AT THE REZ

PART II Anything above zero in this part of the north is tropical.  At 52 deg. North and just below the tree line, by mid-Oct.  ice starts forming in the lakes.   By Nov., the kids are already playing hockey.  So by late December, it is hard to find open water in any of the lakes surrounding this Reserve. … Read More »

REMINISCING MY YEARS AT THE REZ

REMINISCING MY YEARS AT THE REZ and the perils of early retirement PART 1 Working full-time in a stressful job was just the recipe for thoughts of early retirement, a “seven-year itch”  three times over, especially for one who’s been at it for more than three decades.  Even for school teachers, long summer breaks, in my case, meant… Read More »

CONSPIRACY THEORIES: 

HOW AND WHY DO WE FALL FOR THESE ABSURDITIES: Amusing and laughable,  frivolous, and ludicrous are just some of the characterizations that I share with people who hear about outlandish theories proposed by equally nonsensical people invested in Conspiracy Theories. We will examine the origins and explore why a particular population segment believes them. Early humans understood their… Read More »