Janey’s Blog

this is just to exercise my frredom of expression, where i can put up some of my thoughts, may it be happy thoughts or some deep-seeded sentiments…

Last Day at Work

Filed under: sumthing about everyday life... — alphabet at 9:02 pm on Tuesday, August 9, 2005

Haay, last day ko na dito,, mamimiss ko dito, lalu na di na ko makakapag-update ng blog hahaha.,.,.makakapag-aral na kaya ako?

hopefully, yes, kc naman, gsto ko na mag-aral kahit panu..para sure ball na talaga… kkatuwa nga dito kc may lunch out hehehe. kain to the max!

i’ll miss my frendster blog…

eto, sumthing i got from Chicken Soup,,,mganda cia, pwamis!!!

And the Wisdom to Know the Difference
By Carol Davis Gustke


     "Don’t worry about Mark.  You go to Al-Anon."
     I stared at my doctor in disbelief.  "Me?  I’m not the one with the drinking problem."
     "I know that, Carol.  But someone you love drinks and it’s affecting your health in ways you don’t even realize."
     I hurried to the car, climbed in and slammed the door.  Imagine him telling me I need help.
     I turned the key over and gunned the accelerator.  Crunch.  My head jerked.  Behind me sat another car, its red fender bunched up like a wadded piece of paper.
     "Hey, lady, are you blind?"  A tall, lanky teenager with orange-streaked hair jumped from his car and faced me.  "You didn’t even look before you pulled out."
     I scanned his outfit.  Baggy jeans that scraped the cement, a T-shirt that read, "I was born to party," and an image of a cobra ready to strike, tattooed on his left arm.
     "Do you actually have a mother or were you hatched?" I barked.
     After a lengthy confrontation that would have made a juicy piece for the Jerry Springer show, I drove home.  Mark’s car was in the driveway.
     I plopped a sack of groceries on the kitchen counter.  "What time did you get in last night?"
     "I don’t know," he mumbled, pawing through the refrigerator.
     "Well, I do.  It was after one o’clock.  Your curfew is ten on a school night."
     "So?"
     "So you’re grounded."
     Mark rolled his eyes.  "I’m already grounded."
     "Then you’re double grounded."
     "Get a life, Mom," he scoffed, and shuffled toward his bedroom.  I heard the door slam.
     I reached for the bottle of Tums and downed a handful.  What am I going to do?
     The following week went reasonably smoothly.  My hopes begin to rise.  It’s just a phase, I told myself.  He’ll snap out of it.  A late-night call brought an abrupt end to my expectations.
     "Mrs. Davis?"  A deep voice resounded on the end of the line.
     "Yes."
     "Is your son Mark Davis?"
     "Yes." I gripped the phone, fearful of what was coming next.  A car accident?  A death?
     "Mark was found passed out at the mall parking lot.  He’s been drinking."
     "Oh, no.  What shall I do?"
     "I’ll drive him home.  But he will have to appear in juvenile court for sentencing.  If he has no prior record the judge usually mandates a period of time in a treatment center or AA."
     I paced the floor until I heard the police car pull into the driveway.  I’d thought of a million things to say to Mark, but when he walked in I burst into tears.  He looked terrible.  There was vomit on his shirt, and one shoe was missing.  I led him to the bathroom and told him to clean up.  He was in no condition to talk or listen to me.  Later, when he had collapsed into bed, I knelt beside him and stroked his hair.  "Please, God, help us," was all I could manage to pray.
     The following morning I was up early.  It had been a fitful night of sleep and my eyes were red and puffy from crying.  My mind raced for a solution.  Grounding him didn’t work.  He was too big to spank.  Talking, scolding, preaching. . . . I’d tried it all.  Perhaps if he spent time in jail.  The thought terrorized me.  A rehabilitation center?  I had just begun a new job and the insurance wouldn’t kick in for another three months.  Mark’s father had abandoned us years earlier.  I knew very little about Alcoholics Anonymous except it was for drunken bums.  At least that’s what I thought.  How could they possibly help my son?
     Mark stood before the judge and heard his sentence: "Alcoholics Anonymous three times a week for one year."  A counselor was assigned to his case.
     The first meeting I waited in the parking lot.  There must be a lot of alcoholics in our town, I thought.  The parking lot was jammed.  A group of women, talking and laughing walked toward the building.  They seemed to be enjoying themselves.
     An hour later, Mark slid in next to me.
     "How was it?"
     "Okay."
     We drove home in silence.
     The routine continued.  Three times a week I drove Mark to AA meetings.  I’d grounded him from using his car for six months.  Now as I sat in my car watching the snow blanket the ground, I began to have second thoughts.  I saw subtle changes taking place in Mark.  He kept his curfew.  He stayed home more.  But he was still sullen and unresponsive to my questions.
     One cold icy night, a turn of events changed my life forever.  As usual, I was sitting in the car with the motor running, trying to keep warm.  A young woman knocked on my window.
     "Why don’t you come in and share a cup of coffee with us?"
     "No, thanks.  I’m not an alcoholic."
     She laughed.  "Neither am I.  But I do attend Al-Anon.  Wanna give it a shot?"
     Anything was better than this freezing car, I thought.  I climbed out and we hurried inside.
     The Al-Anon room was at the end of the hall.  The front room was for AA.  I seated myself at a long table and gratefully accepted a cup of coffee.
     "My name is

Alice

," the young woman smiled.  Several other women welcomed me.  I noticed one woman who looked my age, and also an older gentleman.
     The meeting opened with the Serenity Prayer:
          God, grant me the serenity
          to accept the things I cannot change,
          the courage to change the things I can,
          and the wisdom to know the difference.

     I immediately felt more peaceful.  What’s going on? I wondered.
     The topic was "detachment."  I didn’t have a clue what that meant, but as I listened to the group share their stories, and apply one of the Twelve Steps to their situation, an overwhelming sense of belonging washed over me.  I was not alone.  I was not crazy.  My doctor’s words flashed before me.  "Don’t worry about Mark, you go to Al-Anon."
     From then on, I was hooked.  I couldn’t get information fast enough.  I learned that I was an enabler, someone who saves the alcoholic from the consequences of his own behavior.  How many times had I laid down a rule and then backed off when Mark begged for another chance?  I’d even finished his school work when he was too tired.  When he said he’d lost his paper route money I bailed him out.  How could I be so blind?  The group assured me they had all been where I was and to just keep coming back.
     The next thing I did was to get a sponsor, another woman who had been in the program for at least a year and who seriously applied the Twelve Steps to her life.  I asked Ellen to be my sponsor.  She was close to my age and her son was an alcoholic.  She agreed and we met each week over coffee.  It was wonderful to have a friend who knew exactly how I felt.  Ellen was not afraid to correct me if she saw me slipping back into my old ways of thinking.  And often times she asked for my advice.
     A strange reversal began to take shape.  It dawned on me one morning that I wasn’t obsessing about Mark’s drinking.  Not so long ago that’s all I thought of.  Now, it was me I was focusing on, and it felt wonderful.  My biggest pat on the back came from Mark.  One night after coming home from a football game he paused on the way to his bedroom.
     "Thanks for not grilling me about what I did tonight."
     I look up and smiled.  "Ultimately, I have no control over your choices, Mark.  But regardless of what you do, I will always love you."
     Where did that come from?  Al-Anon.  It was kicking in.
     Mark had a couple of slips.  Through it all I clung to my support group and my sponsor.  The day came when Mark was admitted to a long-term halfway house in

Minnesota

.  It was there he faced his demons.  Tough?  Yes.  For both of us.  But we survived.  Today, he is a grown man with a successful business and a loving family.  Me?  I’m still attending Al-Anon.  A friend asked me why I was still a member seeing that Mark was sober now.  "Because," I replied, "it’s not about Mark.  It’s about me.  Sometimes I get the two mixed up and I need the wisdom to know the difference."

————————————————————————————————

do comment if u want…

sUrVeY…whew!!!

Filed under: sumthing about everyday life... — alphabet at 11:04 pm on Sunday, August 7, 2005

Dito ko lng ipost ung mga walang kamatayang SurVey!!!! hehehe!!!

Part 1.

1.Who did you last go out with?
- woody, pnta kme sa haus nila kgbi

2.What do u want to receive on your
birthday?
- anything na galing sa puso ng mga taong malapit sa ken

3.Reach your hand out to the right. What do you
touch?
- telephone

4.What time did you sleep last night?
- 11.30pm

5.What’s the wallpaper on your computer?
- a baby sleeping

6.What are you going to do 5 hours later?
- ewan, uwi na

7.Is there anyone you’re thinking of now?
- yes

8.What was the last thing you touched before the computer?
- fone ko

9.When was the last time you browsed through the bible?
- several months ago

10.What can you hear besides the computer?
- printer

11.Why did you answer this?
- wala lng

12.Name 5 people you saw yesterday besides the people who live in your home?
- umm, cla sir padi, vlad, joy, erna, leni

13.Do you agree to the saying "Forgive is to forget"?
- u forgive but not totally forget,,

14.When, where was the last time tears started to roll down your cheek? Why?
- a week ago, ndatnan ko ung haus na wlang tao, ako lng sa bahay mag-isa,..natakot ako eh..


15.What/who makes you happy?
- everything..

16.What makes you sad?
- marami eh..

17.What are your favorite books?
- paperbacks dati. Ngayon hmmmmmm…

18.What would you like to have right at this very second that seems totally impossible?
- ewan ko..

19.Who will you turn to if you have a huge problem that not all your friends know about?
- GOD, of course..

20.What’s your favorite song at the moment?
- "once in a lifetime”

21.What was the last song that kept ringing on your mind last night before you slept
- masterpiece

22.What was the best event that happened this year?
- ah,,,eherm…I think committing myself…


23.what do you like about yourself?
- sikret hehe!!

24.who was the last person who took you out?
- woody

25.where do you wanna go this summer?
- tagaytay

26.One reason for living?
- its good to live

27.Do u think your partner is sexy?
- hahaha…

28.Ever donated blood?
- Not once

29.Fave color/s?
- lahat ata eh hehe

30.Accessories you usually wear?
- none

31.One song to describe a heartbreak in the past?
- "steep” by nina

32.Last place you went? with who?
- sa bahay nga nila woody eh, kulit

33.Last person who disappointed you?
- sikret

34.The most boring sport?
- Chinese checkers?di ako marunong nun eh wahaha

35.Ever had a baby?
- u wish!

36.The funniest movie you watched in the past week?
- wala..

37.The most romantic gift?
- wala pa naman

38.Sang on stage before?
- nope

39.Struck by lightning before?
- u see, im still alive..pretty obvious dib a?


40.Danced with a loved one before?
- yup…

Part 2.

1.WHAT DATE IS IT?
- August 8, 2005 ( inabutan na ako ng umaga)
hahaha

2. WHAT TIME DID U WAKE UP?
- 5 am

3. DID U GO SOMEWHERE ELSE?
- sa intel, now and2 ko

4. WHAT DID U DO THERE?
- work/ojt

5. HOW OLD ARE U?
- 21

6. ARE U MATURE OR IMMATURE?
- I may be child-like in soo many ways, but I’m mature enough to handle things.

7. WHAT DO U CALL

UR

MOM & DAD?
- ma, tatay

8. ARE U AN ONLY CHILD?
- no

9. WHERE DO U GO SHOPPING?
- sm/divisoria/greenhills/atc

10. DO U

LIKE

SCHOOL

?
- yeah

11. DO U LIKE BOOKS?
- little

12. DO U WANT TO GET MARRIED?
- yes, in the future

13. WITH WHOM?
- with the one i love so much

14. ARE U SPOILED?
- no.

15. WHATS THE MOST FLATTERING COMPLIMENT U EVER GOT?
- sikret

16. ONLY GIRL/BOY IN THE FAMILY?
- no

17. IF U WERE TO MARRY A CELEBRITY, WHO WOULD IT BE?
- ewan, don’t like famous people, their lives are open book to the public..

18. WOULD U LIKE TO MEET JoSh Hartnett?
- sino cia?

19. where do u think

ur

bestfriend is?
- define bestfriend..hehe

20. WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME U TALKED TO

UR

BESTFRIEND?
- hmmmm

21. U THINK SHE/HE NEEDS U NOW?
- `~~~~~~~`

23. WHAT DO U WANT FOR

UR

BIRTHDAY?
- sikret

25. IF U WERE TO BUY A CAR , WHICH CAR WOULD IT BE?
- gusto ko ung ford e

26. A DUET WITH HEART EVANGELISTA?
- nope

27. DO U WEAR MAKE-UP?
- pag klngan

28. WHAT LIP BALM DO U USE?
- wala.

29. WOULD U GET A TATOO?
- yoko

30. BELLY PIERCE?
- ayaw

31. HOW MANY KIDS DO U WANT?
- 3-4 kids

32. DO U HAVE ANY HOMEWORK?
- ala

33. ANY SONG THAT YOU’RE LISTENING?
- ala

34. DO U BELIEVE IN SPELLS?
- naah..

35. WHERE DO U WANT TO GO NOW?
- sa sm hehe

Part 3.

1. Popularly known as?
~~ jane

2. AGE?
~~21

3. BIRTHDAY?
~~may 12, 1984

4. WHAT’S YOUR ZODIAC SIGN?
~~ taurus

5. Who is your cutest friend na Girl?
~~ c erna bonita

6. Can’t live without…
~~family

9. Choice noise (music)?
~~senti/old songs

10. Food trip?
~~anything edible

11. Fantasy female/male?
~~none

12. What kind of girlfriend/boyfriend are you?
~~ makulit ata..

13. What will make you fall for a guy/girl?
~~nice personality, bsta may ma-feel kang iba, un n un…

14. Turn-offs?
~~ arrogant, bragger, liar

15. If you had a million bucks, what would you spend it on?
~~ business na click

16. Longest time you’ve ever spent on the phone?
~~3 hrs

17. Did you get tired of it?
~~di nmn, sarap kwentuhan e

18. The one thing you try to do everyday?
~~ read book

19. Vegetables or fruits?
~~ both

20. Favorite soundtrack
~~ wla

21. Night out or night in?
~~night in

22. What’s scarier, ghosts or aliens
~~ghosts

23. Finish this sentence: If I could be anyone in the world for a day, I’d be..
~~ president GMA…wahaha

25. what happened on your last birthday?
~~ wala nmn. Nanglibre ako..himala!

26. Yesterday?
~~ pumasok sa review

27. Last weekend?
~~ review agen

28. Last X-mas?
~~ haus as always

29. Last New year’s eve?
~~ ditu lang den sa bahay

30. Last Halloween?
~~haus

31. Last Valentine’s day?
~~wala

32. What’s the last thing you ate?
~~ madami..fruit salad ung latest (dessert)

33. Thing you drank?
~~ C2

34. Thing you wore?
~~green shirt, black jacket, jeans, esd shoes


35. Last place you went to?
~~kina woody

36. Last person you saw?
~~ mga tao sa bahay

37. Last person you talked to?
~~jida

39. Last person you sent an instant message?
~~ woody

40. Last song you heard?
~~ forgot

41. Right this VERY SECOND what are you eating?
~~wala

43. What are you wearing?
~~ damit

45. Any shoes on?
~~ yeah

46. Listening to?
~~ wla

47. Talking to anyone?
~~ none, txting lng

48. Are you a vegetarian?
~~ no

49. Are you a b!tch?
~~ no

50. Are you artistic?
~~sa kin nlng un hehe

51. Do you write poetry?
~~ yes

52. Are you a fast runner?
~~ slight

53. Can you ski?
~~don’t know how to

54. Did you ever cut a barbie doll’s hair?
~~nope

55. Are u naughty?
~~ nope

56. Are you short?
~~no

57. Are you tall?
~~ mejo

58. Do you own a hot pink shirt?
~~yes

59. How about orange pants?
~~ orange shorts

60. Are you evil?
~~ sometimes

Part 4.

PAANO:
1.ka nag aaral?:
=== inaantok nga ko hehe

2.ka umarte kung nanjan ang crush mo?:
=== wala lnh

3. ka matulog?:
=== nakapikit, nkahiga.

4.ka gisingin?:
=== bsta marinig ung alarm

5.ka magdasal?:
===nakapikit

***ANO…

1.kulay ng kurtina mo?:
=== puti

2.ginawa mo ngayon?:
=== wala

3.gagawin pagkatapos?
===wala

4.kulay ng shirt mo?:
===green

5.ang love para sayo?:
=== beautiful warmth one person can bring to

ur

heart (naks!)

6.fave mong kulay?
=== white, pink

7.fave banda mo?:
===madami

8.fave mong kainin habang nanonood ng sine?:
===fries


9.fave mong kanta?
=== bsta maganda, ok n un.


10.fave mong gawin pag nagiisa?
===mag isip-isip, muni-muni

11.fave mong hang out place?:
=== wala

12.fave mong gawin pagbroken into pieces heart
mo?
=== makinig ng kanta

13.fave mong gawin pag gusto mong umiyak pero pinipigil mo?
=== magkulong sa kwarto

14.fave mong laruan?:
=== wala

15.fave mong linya sa isang pelikula?:
==="omission is betrayal” sa little black book

***BAKIT…

1.nagmamahal ka?:
=== kc nararamdaman mo un, bakit mo pipigilan?

2.nagmamahal ka ng isang taong alam mong di ka
kayang mahalin?
=== n/a

3.mas matalino mga gurls kesa sa boys?:
=== kasi tamad mga lalaki (di lhat)

4.nagsitataas na ang mga bilihin ngayon?:
===  economic problems

5.masarap mabuhay?
=== kc may pag-ibig wahaha

6.may masasamang tao?:
===kc di pa nila nakikita ang goodness ni God..once they’ve realized that, they’ll soon know how nice it is to be good hehe..

***KAYA MO BANG…

1.mabuhay ng wlang cellphone?
=== hahaha, ewan ko lng…wish me luck!!!

2.magpakamatay?:
===nope!!!!

3.gawin lahat para sa taong mahal mo?:
===yes!

4.mahalin ang taong di mo mahal pero mahal ka?
=== ang pag-ibig e natutunan…

oUtInG

Filed under: sumthing about everyday life... — alphabet at 3:42 pm on Wednesday, August 3, 2005

Akalain nyo, may overnyt kame sa intel today, until tomorrow afternoon despite this "oh-so-wonderful" weather….wahahaha! palibhasa, saving the best for last hehe,,,

maganda gcng at tulog ko hehe…di na ko nakapg-aral kgbi kc ang aga ko natulog… msaya nnmn ako hehe!!! saka ung mga serious thoughts. I’d love to enjoy muna and take a break!…(",)

A Nice Story to Share

Filed under: sumthing about everyday life... — alphabet at 9:47 pm on Monday, August 1, 2005

                              A Nice Story

                                          Elizabeth Silance Ballard

       This work of fiction was penned in 1976 and published that year in Home Life magazine



Jean Thompson stood in front of her fifth-grade class on the very first day of school in the Fall and told the children a lie. Like most teachers, she looked at her pupils and said that she loved each of them the same, that she would treat them all alike.

And that was impossible because there in front of her, slumped in his seat on the third row, was a little boy named Teddy Stoddard. Mrs. Thompson had watched Teddy the year before and noticed he didn’t play well with the other children, that his clothes were unkempt and that he constantly needed a bath. And Teddy was unpleasant. It got to the point during the first few months that she would actually take delight in marking his papers with a broad red pen, making bold X’s and then highlighting the "F" at the top of the paper biggest of all.

Because Teddy was a sullen little boy, no one else seemed to enjoy him, either. At the school where Mrs. Thompson taught, she was required to review each child’s records and delayed Teddy’s until last. When she opened his file, she found a surprise.

His first-grade teacher had written, "Teddy is a bright, inquisitive child with a ready laugh. He does his work neatly and has good manners. He is a joy to be around."

His second-grade teacher had penned, "Teddy is an excellent student, well-liked by all his classmates, but he is troubled because his mother has a terminal illness and life at home must be a struggle."

His third-grade teacher had noted, "Teddy continues to work hard but his mother’s death has been hard on him. He tries to do his best but his father doesn’t show much interest and his home life will soon affect him if some steps aren’t taken."

Teddy’s fourth-grade teacher had commented, "Teddy is withdrawn and doesn’t show much interest in school. He doesn’t have many friends and often falls asleep in class. He is tardy and could become a more serious problem."

By now Mrs. Thompson realized the extent of the problem, but Christmas was coming fast. It was all she could do, with the school play and all, until the day before the holidays began and she was suddenly forced to focus again on Teddy Stoddard.

Her children brought her presents, all in beautiful ribbon and bright paper, except Teddy’s, which was clumsily wrapped in the heavy, brown paper of a scissored grocery bag.

Mrs. Thompson took pains to open it in the middle of the other presents. Some of the children started to laugh when she found a rhinestone bracelet with some of the stones missing, and a bottle that was one-quarter full of cologne. She stifled the children’s laughter while she exclaimed how pretty the bracelet was, putting it on, and dabbing some of the perfume behind the other wrist.

Teddy Stoddard stayed behind after class just long enough to say, "Mrs. Thompson, today you smelled just like my mom used to."

After the children left, she cried for at least an hour.

On that very day, she quit teaching reading, and writing, and speaking. Instead, she began to teach children. Jean Thompson paid particular attention to one they all called "Teddy." As she worked with him, his mind seemed to come alive. The more she encouraged him, the faster he responded. On those days when there would be an important test, Mrs. Thompson would remember that cologne. By the end of the year he had become one of the highest achieveing children in the class and, well, he had also somewhat become the "pet" of that teacher who had once vowed to love all of her children exactly the same.

A year later she found a note under her door, from Teddy, telling her that of all the teachers he’d had in elementary school, she was his favorite.

Six years went by before she got another note from Teddy. He then wrote that he had finished high school, third in his class, and she was still his favorite teacher of all time.

Four years after that, she got another letter, saying that while things had been tough at times, he’d stayed in school, had stuck with it, and would graduate from college with the highest of honors. He assured Mrs. Thompson she was still his favorite teacher.

Four more years passed and yet another letter came. This time he explained that after he got his bachelor’s degree, he decided to go a little further. The letter explained that she was still his favorite teacher but that now his name was a little longer. The letter was signed, Theodore F. Stoddard, M.D.

The story doesn’t end there. You see, there was yet another letter that Spring. Teddy said he’d met this girl and was to be married. He explained that his father had died a couple of years ago and he was wondering if Mrs. Thompson might agree to sit in the pew usually reserved for the mother of the groom.

And on that day, she wore that bracelet, the one with several rhinestones missing. And on that special day, Jean Thompson smelled just like the way Teddy remembered his mother smelling on their last Christmas together.