Tuesday, May 29, 2012

We are the Citizens of the Cosmos!

We are the Citizens of the Cosmos!




By Sharmaine de Guzman
March 3, 2012, Botanical Garden, Baguio City—After a series of heavy reading and prolonged meetings for our regular study group, we finally finished Beradene Jocelyn’s Citizens of the Cosmos. Everyone shared their insights from the book which triggered meaningful reflections and wonderful learnings.
The group started with a moment of silence as each individual invited focus and positive energies. With the help of an assigned facilitator, each member of the group was able to share their insights and explain how those relate to themselves and/or to other events in their lives.
Everyone was amazed by the values the book teaches. The load of intellectual and spiritual learning it offers also fascinated everybody. The realization that we are not separated from anything and that each of us is significantly part of the larger whole—of the universe, reflects the core thought of the book. Understanding life and its relation to the cosmic movements—the journey of the planets, the moon, and the stars—can be overwhelming; however, it creatively helped each of us appreciate the meaning of life’s cycles and struggles as it enlivens our consciousness about the wonderful things around us.
As one of us shared in the group, the book helped us realized that indeed “Life is a constant metamorphosis”. Life is a cycle.  Life is a lemniscate. Realizing this encourages everybody to be more conscious and more appreciative about the wonders of life. The ups and downs, the struggles and successes.
Through the book, we were also able to understand the meaning of death. Quoting from the book, it says “there is death, but death does not end life”. The cycle of life involves death, but death is a wonderful phenomenon that does not end anything but essentially welcomes us to a more beautiful journey.


Death is part of the cycle, just as life is. Everyone is not separated from world. Each event in our lives is significant in forming our individuality. Each of us is significant part of the whole. We are one with the universe. We are indeed, the citizens of the cosmos.
Also, after the study group, we happily shared with one another news and updates about our individual and group initiatives. We also had time to discuss the events and updates coming from the national movement through our nodal representative, Grace Calleja.
With that, we happily end our meeting as we form a circle with our hands holding one another. We offered a moment of silence as we send our energies to the forces in the universe.

LIWANAG - What MISSION is all about

LIWANAG - What MISSION is all about



Impressions from the BC meeting in Davao – March 23rd to 25th, 2012

As one of the younger MISSION members (since February 2012) I had the chance to attend the MISSION Birthing Center meeting in Davao as the nodal representative of the newly formed global node.
Coming to the Philippines in order to get to know MISSION, its structure and its ways of operating I can say that I learned a lot during nearly two months of interning, visiting different nodes and getting to know their individuals with their initiatives. Still I was surprised how much more I understood through my participation in the meeting of the BC.
In the following I want to give some glimpses into this meeting by sharing a few of my impressions.
Having learned that food is central to the Philippine culture it didn’t make me wonder anymore that a delicious lunch was the first thing to share when I came to the location of the meeting in the Agri-Aqua P.O. Complex in Davao on Friday afternoon. It was a get together of BC members and those of the Davao node before visiting GAP Farm and Crocodile Park on this afternoon. Together we investigated those two big parks to sense into them and see if they might be useful locations for the upcoming Liwanag festival in January 2013. Back at the P.O. (our conference hall and shelter for most of us) we shared our impressions and talked about the pros and cons of both places.
After dinner most of the Davao node members left and only the BC representatives stayed for the first proper BC session. The theme for this evening was spiritual mastery: Together we did a thinking exercise around a simple manmade object, shared our experiences and talked a bit about the importance of those exercises for everyday life, enhancing our self-awareness and strengthening the presence of our creative self. >>Are we actually thinking or just thoughting?<< Do we think new thoughts through engaging the imaginal self or are those thoughts old ones, just repeated by our programmed thinking?
The thinking exercise we did was the following: After focusing our attention on a simple manmade object (e.g. ball pen, chop sticks, spoon, etc.) we closed our eyes and recreated it in front of our mind’s eye. Then we contemplated the process of its becoming (how is the object produced? What are all the necessary circumstances?) and finally pondered on its purpose (why was it developed in the first place? What is it good for?).
We could experience ourselves: Focused attention leads to concentration which can become contemplation and meditation, wherein our consciousness might become aware of the archetype of the object.
The next day we started with the nodal updates and the simultaneous sensing of the movement. Twelve nodes where represented (Cebu, Baguio, Manila, Iloilo, Bayawan, Gen Santos, Dumaguete, Koronadal, Cagayan de Oro, Iligan, Davao and the global node) by an own member, Laguna de Bay and Zamboanga, both new, by a representative of another city. They all shared about their nodal life and their initiatives, workshops, new members and whatever else was important for the national level of MISSION.
Reflecting on what we heard we realized that the intention of MISSION, which is the creation of a sustainable society, isn’t just an aim far away in the future. Through all the shared experiences we could hear that a conscious cooperation between politics, businesses and civil society already started to happen and is happening right now.
For me personally that is so exciting to witness. Back in Germany where I come from I heard people talking about the so badly needed paradigm shift and newspapers write about the big crisis in all kinds of spheres a lot, too. But it seems that they don’t know what that actually means. They don’t know what this change is about. Coming to the Philippines I do not only learn more about what that means but I can even observe the change. MISSION, as far as I am concerned, is globally the only organization providing a framework for social transformation and implementing it through the means of social threefolding (conscious cooperation between the cultural/civil, the political and the economic sector). It became very clear to me that networking plays a major role in that. Currently the movement starts to develop a life of its own – the dynamics of growth becomes unforeseeable since it is tapping into more and more networks, some being quite big themselves.
Talking about it we understood that there is a danger to it. As every tree risks falling once his branches reach faster towards the sky than its roots grow deep down into the earth, MISSION might lose its power and eventually fall apart if its smaller parts are not deeply connected with each other and thus with the whole. I could really see how important it is that the members on an individual basis really care for their relationships, their connections with other imaginals, the nodal life and understand the movement as a whole. We can’t work effectively and fully committed on our own initiative without being aware of the bigger picture, without knowing what the MISSION is (the carrying bones are articulated in the MODE) and what is going on in the other parts. In order to serve this essential necessity an e-group is actually already existent.
Another realization we had was concerning the nodal life and how much it actually mirrors the societal whole on a micro level. We saw that it is such a beautiful opportunity to understand oneself as an initiative in the context of the node as much as our initiatives and events are the equivalent to it in the context of society at large. If we continue that thought we can even see every single day as an initiative in consciously placing it into the context of our higher aspirations. That showed me once more how much potential is hidden in every moment and how easily I just pass by without recognizing and using it if I am not practicing being conscious in the presence.
The next day was Sunday, the Liwanag day of the week. In the BC meeting we continued working on the topics of our long agenda which we came up with the day before. We got exiting news about a freshly formed group of passionate people who took a creative writing workshop beginning March, helping the MISSION magazine into manifestation. Its task is to spread good news about initiatives and positive change towards sustainable societies from all over the world.
Then the nodes where encouraged to reflect upon their first experiences with the MISSION Volunteer Program (MVP) which created the possibility for international volunteers to get to know the different concepts and parts of the movement “from the inside” and in “real time” and simultaneously contribute to what is going on with heads, hearts and hands. Together with Louisa (D), Mirka (D), Corinna (CH), Pete (AUS) and Philip (USA) I had the chance to be part of the first batch volunteering for mostly a months time. It was decided to collect the written feed backs in the BC and evaluate the nodal situation towards more internees. In the future they shouldn’t just come from abroad. Instead we talked about national volunteers as well. Knowing that the colleges hold a lot of students having to write a thesis each or PhDs, we thought that many of them might be interested to do that with one or several of the MISSION initiatives. Further down the line that could eventually even form a MISSION university in the future.
Another theme that came up was the readiness of MISSION to engage in political debates as a movement. From the very beginning it was part of the idea that it would take responsibility on a broad scale and engage in national activities. The question which immerged quite clearly was: “Is MISSION ready for that? Is the movement solidly enough rooted into a carrying ground? Are the relationships between the individuals strong enough to form the interconnected structures to really BE MISSION?”
In a way this kind of engagement was targeted in the past with the anti-noise discussion which happened on a national level. But now MISSION as a whole was also asked to take a stand for MLC (Movement for a Livable Cebu) and maybe even for the case around Cocoy Tulawie, who seems to be one of the current folk heroes in his fearless fight for justice and human rights in the islands of Sulu. MISSION being a movement of individuals implies that it can just take a stand as a whole, if every individual, which is part of it, takes this stand individually as well. The consequence is that every node has to evaluate first, if all members agree. Then they could take a stand as a node. If then all existing nodes reach this agreement, then MISSION as a whole could take a stand for a certain case/opinion.
Once more, that made me realize how much MISSION depends on its Imaginals, because it can only exist if the whole is much more than the total sum of its parts (the individuals). MISSION is really the formation of a higher collective, made up by smaller collectives being formed by even smaller collectives again or individuals. That is really what being a “Cultural Creative 2.0” is about: Not anymore believing that one is alone in seeing a better world and calling oneself an idealist (as it was with more than 140 million people in USA and Europe according to scientific research in the year 2000 with a strong growing tendency) but actually engaging with others, organizing higher collectives and really doing the work, manifesting the change that wants to emerge.
The last hours before lunch and afterwards until 3.00pm the BC members talked about the upcoming MISSION Liwanag: the Global Festival on Creativity and Sustainability. Together we had a brainstorming on the daily schedule and redesigned the opening day into a real Fiesta. For the rest of the afternoon we again were joined by many Davao node members and looked into different venue possibilities in down town itself. The reason was that we decided to not use GAP Farm and Crocodile Park anymore as the main venues. The main reason was that this way we could more consciously celebrate Davao down town as a real time example of a sustainable city and thus showcasing a future reality we want to live in. This way it might happen that the inhabitants realize: “Wait! Didn't the daily shopping work during the Liwanag Festival without all the plastic bags? Why don't we continue to use only paper bags or backpacks?” or “Actually the proper waste separation wasn't such a big deal. Why don't we do that all the time?” or “I really liked the silent solar powered Jeepneys. Can't we get them back?”, etc.
The brainstorming transformed into “heartstorming” when we realized that Liwanag isn’t only a festival on creativity and sustainability but it will actually inherit those imaginal qualities throughout the whole planning process. It will be an initiative in itself going through the whole lemniscate process several times. Therefore it will be a holy endeavor for those who decide to fully commit – it will change their lives. Through the deep sharing of some participants concerning their own life and its connection to this festival we all became very humble by grasping the deeper meaning and importance of Liwanag for Mindanao, the Philippines and our time in history as humanity. It really will be the first broad scale manifestation of MISSION’s aspirations.
Profoundly moved inside we preceded to watching a movie after some moments of quality silence. It was “Journey of the Universe”, an epic story of cosmic, earth and human transformation written by Brian Swimme and Mary Evelyn Tucker. It touched me how vivid one can tell the story of evolution and I wish that every student gets to see this documentary. It filled me with awe and wonder – just what good science is supposed to do. The main message of the movie was (as we know it also from our MISSION Workshop Courage): Behind evolution (or: world creative process) lays some kind of directionality, purpose or divine intention/intelligence in which we humans are just one of many species the earth gave birth to.
I am very grateful for the opportunity to participate in those three days of BC meeting and I hope it will not be the last one for me. Thanks to all of you who were there, for your resounding laughter, profound depth and your sparkling ideas.
Greetings from my heart, your first MISSION Volunteer
Christian (D)

Monday, April 16, 2012

Dumaguete MISSION Initiatives

Dumaguete Initiatives


Buglas Bamboo Institute

The reason for the establishment of Buglas Bamboo Institute was to provide additional income to the subsistent farmers in the southern part of Negros Oriental and at the same time to contribute to help diminish global warming. After 4 years of study about bamboo and discussing with small farmers in the country side about its feasibility, it became clear that setting up such organization was not an easy task. And indeed, after 10 years of hard work and deep reflections the reality is still that the processing of bamboo takes a long commitment of farmers and community workers, but also clarified that the task is not impossible. There is income and money in bamboo if certain conditions are fulfilled. A great contribution to minimize global warming can be made at the same time.
Buglas Bamboo Institute (BBI) in Dauin, Negros Oriental was recognized by the Philippine Government on August 7, 1999. Since then it has worked hard to use bamboo for the production of construction materials, accessories, panels and even paper. In more than 10 years BBI has evolved into a social development organization, providing the local population with additional income of more than 2 million pesos a year. The slogan of a social organization is People, Planet, Profit. BBI has been successful in the People and the Planet aspects. In the Profit aspect BBI has suffered serious setbacks to the extent that it has great difficulty to make the program self-supporting.

Friday, April 13, 2012

We are the Citizens of the Cosmos!

We are the Citizens of the Cosmos!



By Sharmaine de Guzman
March 3, 2012, Botanical Garden, Baguio City—After a series of heavy reading and prolonged meetings for our regular study group, we finally finished Beradene Jocelyn’s Citizens of the Cosmos. Everyone shared their insights from the book which triggered meaningful reflections and wonderful learnings.
The group started with a moment of silence as each individual invited focus and positive energies. With the help of an assigned facilitator, each member of the group was able to share their insights and explain how those relate to themselves and/or to other events in their lives.
Everyone was amazed by the values the book teaches. The load of intellectual and spiritual learning it offers also fascinated everybody. The realization that we are not separated from anything and that each of us is significantly part of the larger whole—of the universe, reflects the core thought of the book. Understanding life and its relation to the cosmic movements—the journey of the planets, the moon, and the stars—can be overwhelming; however, it creatively helped each of us appreciate the meaning of life’s cycles and struggles as it enlivens our consciousness about the wonderful things around us.
As one of us shared in the group, the book helped us realized that indeed “Life is a constant metamorphosis”. Life is a cycle.  Life is a lemniscate. Realizing this encourages everybody to be more conscious and more appreciative about the wonders of life. The ups and downs, the struggles and successes.
Through the book, we were also able to understand the meaning of death. Quoting from the book, it says “there is death, but death does not end life”. The cycle of life involves death, but death is a wonderful phenomenon that does not end anything but essentially welcomes us to a more beautiful journey.
Death is part of the cycle, just as life is. Everyone is not separated from world. Each event in our lives is significant in forming our individuality. Each of us is significant part of the whole. We are one with the universe. We are indeed, the citizens of the cosmos.
Also, after the study group, we happily shared with one another news and updates about our individual and group initiatives. We also had time to discuss the events and updates coming from the national movement through our nodal representative, Grace Calleja.
With that, we happily end our meeting as we form a circle with our hands holding one another. We offered a moment of silence as we send our energies to the forces in the universe.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

The art of trying

The art of trying

by Paulo Coelho on March 14, 2012

 

Pablo Picasso once said, “God is really only another artist. He invented the giraffe, the elephant and the cat. He has no real style. He just keeps on trying other things.”

When we start working on our dreams, we always feel afraid. We wonder if there are rules to follow. Who comes up with these rules, while we all live such different lives? If God created the giraffe, the elephant and the cat, and we try to learn from his example, then why would we try to follow one rule or another?

Sometimes rules help us avoid the mistakes others have made before our time, but more often than not a rule will only make us repeat what someone else has already done.

Rest assured. Trust the universe, and look forward to surprising yourself. The apostle Paul said, “God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong.” The wise know some actions repeat themselves. They regularly encounter the same problems and situations they have dealt with before. Knowing that makes them sad. They start to think they’ll never be able to grow, since whatever they experienced before is happening again.

“I’ve already been through this,” they complain to their hearts.
“That may be true,” their hearts reply, “but you haven’t mastered it yet.”

The wise understand that repetition has a cause: to teach the lesson that still needs teaching. Repetitive situations require different solutions every time. The one who fails must not see this as a mistake, but rather as a step toward greater self knowledge.

It’s like Thomas Watson said, “Would you like me to give you a formula for success? It’s quite simple, really. Double your rate of failure.”

Soft Sculpture Exhibit to Open At Bliss Cafe

Soft Sculpture Exhibit to Open At Bliss Cafe

by Sarah Mae Sabado



Mica Cabildo, artist of works like Tawasman and Metaphysical Sickness, Kadua and Regret is Useless is coming back to Baguio to open her solo exhibit entitled Seeline Woman. The exhibit features crocheted craft about dreams and myths.

Cabildo’s works reflects her deepening understanding of society, man and his many dreams and beliefs. She describes the Seeline exhibit as an exploration of “Joseph Campbell’s idea of dreams as personal myths”. In this view, dreams serve as a reflection of a person’s perception of himself – his success or failure depends on what he believes are his strengths and weaknesses.

Seeline woman is a song by Nina Simone. In the song, the woman changes her clothing and through this change, she creates different effects on men. The song is based largely on the seal wife folktale where the seals turn into women when they remove their pelt.

Using the title Seeline Woman, Cabildo hopes to merge art and mythology through her soft sculptures and show the different factors that influence an individual’s personal myth. It depicts the need for an individual to identify his beliefs and ,worldviews and the importance of transforming them so that they serve the society as a whole.

Cabildo, born and based in Manila works as a graphic designer for Team Manila Graphic Design Studio. She has participated in a number of exhibits including the 1st AX(iS) Art Project held in Febreuary 2011. Her work was also featured in the WAPAAK (Women's Artistic Production and Action Kickstarter) exhibit held in VOCAS last August 2011. She has been a member of the Pointe Foundation since November 2010.

Seeline Woman opens on October 15 and runs until November 18, 2011 at Bliss Cafe, Hotel Elizabeth, J. Felipe cor. Gibraltar Road, Baguio City. Proceeds of the exhibit will benefit MISSION (Movement of Imaginals for Sustainable Societies through Initiatives, Organizing and Networking).

First UP Baguio MISSION Workshop Courage

First UP Baguio MISSION Workshop Courage






By: Sharmaine de Guzman

“It's not because things are difficult that we dare not venture. It's because we dare not venture that they are difficult.”- Seneca

Indeed, one cannot know hardship if one will not dare overcome it.
February 4-5, 2012—MISSION Workshop Courage was held among members of Philosophy Circle in University of the Philippines Baguio co-facilitated by Andy Veridiano and Francis Caguioa. The workshop was full of burning insights and challenging questions which led the group to very interesting debates especially on the first day of the workshop.  However, difficulty and disappointment came in when on the second day, only one was left to participate.
With initially seven participants on the first day, only one came back the next day to finish the workshop.

Armed by critical minds and thought-provoking insights, the group shared their ideas about the meaning of life. Shaded by the existentialist way of thinking, they defined life and individual existence as a medium of potentiality and freedom of actions and as itself a means to know its essence. Also, everyone shared interesting ideas about their view of the Philippine society re-echoing the downside of our corrupt politics and culture. A striking thought eventually summarizes their views about society as they recognized and presented the idea of inter-relatedness among social structures and individual actions.

A culminating idea also stands out as each participant recognized the fact that everybody has his or her own creative moment/s and that creativity for each individual is unique, boundless, timeless, and somewhat magical. The energy during the discussion about their individual creative moments was very high that nobody in the group can deny that every single human being experiences its magic.
At the end of the first day, everyone seemed to be excited and astonished by the thought of the workshop. Although only one of them came back the next day, we feel that each member of the group was touched by the wonderful ideas and concepts the workshop presented. On the second day, with the insightful questions of the lone participant, the energy stayed high as we responded to her questions and thoughts attentively. The discussion on the lemniscate journey was for her very interesting and challenging.

We end the workshop with content as we know that eventually, considering their great thoughts and performances, the participants will be the seeds of a better future. Also, we feel very thankful that we were able to have this kind of experience that really challenged us. The experience helped us recognize some weaknesses of the workshop framework especially as it somehow overwhelmed minds that are just on its way to knowing a larger social reality. Also, this experience helped us evaluate our ways and preliminary means in conducting the workshop. Hopefully, through this experience, we would be able to incorporate our new learnings in designing and initiating our next Workshop Courage.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Tuburan holds Steiner Education Seminar facilitated by RStEP

Tuburan holds Steiner Education Seminar facilitated by RStEP



Question: What's the first sign that a child is ill? Answer: s/he isn't playing. The lifeblood of a healthy child is natural, self-directed free play. And they do not need many toys for this; just a few simple ones made of cut up wood, for instance, that can be transformed into a boat, a car, a house, or a plate.
Next question: What should a teacher do if his/her students are uncharacteristically unruly? Answer: The teacher should ask himself/herself first, "How am I today?" Wouldn't that be just wonderful - schools where teachers continually assess themselves and asking, "Am I thinking kind thoughts?" "Am I feeling happy?" "Am I being gentle and kind?" Steiner teachers are exactly like that. They understand that young children are like sponges, absorbing their surroundings as sense impressions. Young children don't just copy the teacher outside but also mirror the teacher's feelings, attitudes, and thoughts - even if these aren't "transparent."
Creative indoor and outdoor free play and kindergarten teachers' great personal mastery - these were some of the things discussed by more than 50 parents, teachers, administrators during the two-day Steiner Education Seminar held on March 3-4, 2012 at the Food Cove Conference Room, 2nd floor NCCC Mall, Davao City. Guest speakers Bella Tan and Jake Tan from Rudolf Steiner Education Philippines (RStEP) also talked about the twelve senses; the image of a willing, feeling, thinking human being; the development of a child from conception, pregnancy, to birth; educating the willful child; nurturing the dreamy consciousness of the child; creating the best learning environment that optimize children's creativity and imagination and draw out their full potential; etc.!

Aside from the potential Tuburan parents and teachers who came, there were colleagues from various schools in Davao City and Koronadal City: Ateneo de Davao University, South Point School, Tender Years, Green Valley School, Notre Dame of Marbel University, Values School Davao, Beacon Learning Center, Assumption College of Davao, Jose Maria College, LCB Performing Arts Center, and Circular Home Child Development.

Thank you Tito Jake and Tita Bella and all those who came!





Because of the success of this Steiner Education Seminar, Team Tuburan is inspired to bring more facilitators, mentors, and experts to Mindanao for trainings, workshops, seminars, and lectures - which will be open to all!

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Quantum Leaps in Farming

Quantum Leaps in Farming


A part of Nature, A Part of Ourselves


To see a part of nature
is to see a part of ourselves.

To understand a part of nature
is to understand a part of ourselves.

To love a part of nature
is to love a part of ourselves.

To share part of nature
is to share a part of ourselves.

To help a part of nature
is to help a part of ourselves.
-Rick Lougren-

What we do to nature we do to ourselves…


Modern Agriculture has cut our ties with mother earth.  Most of our farmers are frustrated by low yields despite the heavy use of fertilizers and pesticides.  It was such a relief to find out that there are so many things that we can do to bring back soil vitality and multiply its yield a thousand times using quantum techniques and practices in Agriculture.
Let us heal mother earth and be healed. Let us enrich our lives and the generations to come by engaging in effective farming practices that will ensure more and healthy harvests with just minimum input and effort. This was the challenge posed at the “Quantum Leaps in Farming” orientation that was organized and offered by MISSION Cebu and was led by Pam Fernandez of the University of the Philippines, Los Baños. The workshop was held last January 20, 2011 at the Pagtambayayong Office in Private, Cebu City.
The orientation was opened with the above prayer read by Gingging Balisacan, followed by a touching and inspiring introduction by Mario Gasalatan and an information-rich and passionate presentation by Pam. It was a well attended event not only by farmers and farm enthusiasts but by people from different walks of life – a medical doctor, an ex-councilor, students, community organizers and a nun -- who left so amazed and hopeful to know that more and more farm owners and farmers were transforming their practice towards the sustainable framework of agriculture and were rediscovering the ancient, time tested methods and practices in farming like biodynamic farming and agnihothra.



Time was too short to digest everything that had been presented but much had been learned and much more are yet to be done. A few new connections to start biodynamic farms in Cebu together were made and there was a lot of interest and energy towards having a second, more intensive and hands-on experience with quantum leaps in farming.

MISSION Sends Off Workshop Courage Soldiers

MISSION Sends Off Workshop Courage Soldiers




Seeing MISSION reach the tipping point in two years’ time does not seem to be an elusive feat with twenty more members committing to propagate MISSION Workshop Courage all over the country and the world. Apart from the workshops that Nicanor “Nick” Perlas himself is conducting to open twenty new nodes in the country before the year ends, the newly-formed global node and the existing Philippine nodes are bound to grow in numbers with more facilitators ready to conduct the workshop in their respective nodal territories.
Nick shares his excitement about the meeting of the different representatives from the different nodes who come from different sectors of society—business, government, civil society, activists, students, teachers, and young professionals—in the Facilitators’ Training. “I can remember exactly how each of you has manifested and continues to manifest your imaginality in so many different inspiring ways,” he said in e-mail sent to the participants a few days before the training.

The participants share not only MWC-related insights but also their knowledge on group dynamics, relationships and conflict resolution manifesting the emergence of a collective intelligence—"the wisdom of the whole." It is critical for everyone to participate, otherwise, “we won’t have an overview of the different ideas sitting in this room,” Nick explains in reference to drawing out input from the participants in a Workshop Courage.

What does it take for a facilitator to be ready? "Clone Nick,” the group offers. The joke proves to hold a rather profound meaning as the discussion goes along. It is evident in the questions, reflections and group interaction that facilitating Workshop Courage is “laden with responsibility” and “a sense of service.” The group resolves that one must have the right inner condition and must be constantly in touch with his imaginality. They coin the phrase “charismatic facilitation of Nick.” The group bursts into laughter. The best way to prepare, somebody says, is to be creative. The group agrees.

Being able to listen and being present in the true sense of the word are two critical points being highlighted in order for a facilitator to connect with the participants and be able to draw out their truths—thoughts, feelings, experiences. Workshop Courage, after all, is about the emerging realities and system of causes that create them as well as tapping into the True Self, sometimes called the Real Self, Higher Self and Creative Self depending on the input from the participants. Writing down what they say and using their language is essential, Nick emphasizes. He also cites some scenarios where the facilitator will have to reinforce the rules or simple agreements made before the workshop has started in order to keep the imaginal mood alive.

The profoundest of the discussions in the training is, probably, on the Journey of the Birthing of the Imaginal Self that is captured in the Lemniscate Process. It captures the same metaphor in the Inverted “U.” In that “gap” between Chaos” and “Enlightenment,” the group falls silent.

“All profound things and emotions of things are preceded and attended by Silence,” wrote Herman Melville.
Silence, said Pico Iyer, is "something more than just a pause; it is that enchanted place where space is cleared and time is stayed and the horizon itself expands." It is in the gap where the self communes with the authentic, with the real, with the creative. It is where the self taps into a Higher Source, a Higher Creativity, a Higher Purpose. It is where we start to feel the oneness—the non-duality of existence. It is where we clarify our intentions. Questions came after the silence—like, what of people who choose to go on retreat, in the mountains or in any higher place or dimension, to live a meditative life and not come back to the world? One of the participants believes that there are people whose duty is to pray for the world. “If you don’t return, you become irrelevant to the world,” Nick asserts. The I.O.N. in MISSION stands for Initiatives, Organizing and Networking. It is the container of imaginality. It is the image of the creative self.
Workshop Courage facilitation is a sacred task. It is where one realizes that change is possible— that there is a creative power to make it happen. It is a place where one realizes that true purpose has nothing to do with the self and that Providence moves when one commits to it.

The newly-trained facilitators committed to conduct the workshop within a month from the Facilitators’ Training last February 28, 2012 at Brgy. Libongcogon, Zarraga in Iloilo. They are: Corinna Zuckerman, Peter Crowe, Christian Gmelin, Philip Burroughs, Mirka Hurter and Louisa Mittmann of the global node; Asela Delariarte-Pe, Jose Pepito Pe, Jason Gonzales, Sam Prudente, Aurora Hugo, Frances Lacuesta, Joseph Teruel and Atho Dela Cruz of Iloilo; Felcon Rivera, Jude Cabangal and Ritchie Mortillero of Bayawan; Rico Colayco of Manila, Ma. Clara Rowena Ebdani of Cebu and Nerieza Suyom of Koronadal.

As of writing time, Corinna, Peter and Christian have already conducted their first workshop in Alegria, Cebu; Philip, Mirka, Louisa and Rowena in Cebu City and Ritchie and Jude in Bayawan.

Friday, March 9, 2012

PONCE SUITES, Kublai's Artwork is Awesome!


 PONCE SUITES, Kublai's Artwork is Awesome! 
by: YanYan Simba 


 PONCE SUITES, Kublai's Artwork is Awesome! 
you can check also in youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAxeRM5qdHQ



It was March 08, 2012, when I visited, on the first time, the artworks of KUBLAI MILLA in Davao City. It is really awesome and great to have MISSION Davao "Kamustahanay" with Kate Estember, Tina Suelto, Avvy Silva, Kristine, and Monica. Plus, ofcourse, I took pictures since I really appreciate Arts in any form! whew! 













































































Kublai Milla


kampilan Kampilan
kampilan
the phenomenal Davao Artist Kublai
One of the most volatile workers in the art trade of Davao is a young man named Kublai Millan...Kublai's energetic sculptures generate their own energy that necessarily affects the viewer.
For one thing, they are larger than lifesize and have no timidity about it.
They are fantastic also for their range of subject matter. We are of the opinion that if these Millan pieces were placed strategically throughout the city—at the airport grounds, at city parks, public playgrounds, mountain resorts, or in front of public buildings, that people from other cities and environs would take trips just to look, touch, paint, and photograph them.
mebuyan
The Durian at the Davao International Airport

There is for instance this giant, partly open clam shell with a family of eagles looking out at the viwer through the opening.
And where are they situated? A small hotel called Ponce Suites...is now hemmed in by several pieces of Kublai's sculpture, appropriating the sidewalk on two sides of the island on which the hotel is situated.

As a matter of course, NGO meetings converge there, and poets and writers and yuppies of the first water, singers and musicians who come in from Manila, and strange folk who are attracted by this unusual burst of artistic energy.Birds and Bees: Kublai's Energetic Sculptures by Tita Lacambra Ayala / Mindanao Times

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Kublai perched on his giant eagle sculpture
Kublai Ponce-Millan, who created all these giant works, was born on July 8, 1974 in Cotabato City. He finished schooling at the University of the Philippines with a degree of Fine Arts. After which, he dedicated his life back in Mindanao, sculpting the culture from which, where which he grew up, as a human being and as a soul. The massive pieces magnify calm, passion and grief proportonately in the stone-grain finish accomplished with the five-year technique developed through various weathers accompaning their inceptions and growth, from steel and wiremesh underpinnings above and below ground, to the finishing of the last detail of the gesturing hand.





Done in classic proportions, they exude grace, vigor, elegance, compassion and dignity of the human spirit. So much lightness and beauty from so much mock and sweat and strain. The everlasting irony of the making of art.


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Mebuyan
Kublai's sculptures feature the current tendencies and involvements evolving in the receptive imagination of the elfin sculptor. Looking at some of them, one is apt to wonder whether these are not spirits of all the huge ancient fallen trees that have disappeared into the rivers of commerce, recaptured and come to life again in a different form, to oversee the natural landscape and remind us of the lost presences that had wandered through the dead rivers and forests: the diwatas, the babaylans, the ninunos, the spirits of land, sea and air that have been banished by a new wave of culture and religion in the history and mythology of Mindanao, embraced into a resurgence of memory and identity. —Sculpting Culture: Kublai Millan Sculptures in Mindanao by Tita Lacambra Ayala / Road Map Series



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Kublai and his Dragonfly 
Kublai....makes these works of art hoping to "create a spark" in Mindanao—to start the fire burning so that the young ones can strive harder and move forward...He wants to inspire those young artists to pursue their love for their craft.

Kublai now sculptures (sic) in every city in Mindanao. His most recent project...is the biggest church in Mindanao located in Tagum City. He will make the main sculptures of the church, including a 50-feet risen Christ...

So far, Kublai's tallest creation is the sword or ikampilani of Sultan Kudarat located in Sultan Kudarat Municipality, Maguindanao Province...The huge piece of art stands 50 feet! And would you believe he finished it in 16 days? Amazing!


source: http://www.poncesuites.net/artist.htm
check in youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAxeRM5qdHQ

by: Casper_Cute