28 August 2024

“AI” Vs “EI” – John McCarthy’s Artificial Intelligence (AI) Versus Frank A Hilario’s Extralogical Intelligence (EI). “Thinking Machine” Vs “Thinking Me”?

A digital denizen, my son Jomar Hilario on Facebook came out (27 Aug 2024) with the statement that “Google is doomed.” What he means maybe is that more and millions more people will turn to Artificial Intelligence (AI) to produce digital products, textual or visual or both – as varied & complex as interior planner, travel assistant, portrait, short story, music, video. Well, Google invented itself; so, if Google is left with only a few directly using it, it can always reinvent itself!

Ah, but as a creative thinker, I am not worried about AI. Starting some 70 years ago, Frank A Hilario has always been creative since high school, inspired by the Reader’s Digest in particular, whose articles and stories do entertain and educate at the same time. I became more creative when I worked 1974-75 as a copywriter for Tony Zorilla’s Pacifica Publicity Bureau in Makati where the original creative ideas of marketing genius David Ogilvy held sway. In later years, I learned the “Po Technique” from Maltese physician & thinker Edward De Bono, where there are no negatives, only possibilities you have to search for, considering also the insides or hidden nooks of the negatives, even downright stupid!

From a YouTube presentation, the above image says, “Episode II – AI: Artificial Intelligence. The Age Of Exponential Intelligence.” I have a problem with that – if the intelligence is exponential, there is no way the human mind can handle it! Two of the synonyms of “exponential” are “expanding” and “wanton” – can we humans handle “wanton creativity”? Me, I will always run to “human creativity!”
(sources of images: top, youtube.com; bottom, magzter.com)

Read the words in the bottom image, those that describe or point to Creativity: “Thinking. Positive. Mind. Brainstorming. Invention. Ideas. Innovation. Art.” Your mind, once turned on to creativity, will never run out of ideas! You just have to learn how to be creative, that’s all. (Let me help you with your article, thesis, technical paper, book – I prefer the digital version.)

“Artificial Intelligence.” Thinking more of the “threat” by AI, I have just come out with an inventive term for creative thinking: “Extralogical Intelligence” (EI). Artificial vs extralogical. Artificial means it is created by machines; extralogical means “outside the limits of logic” (Collins Dictionary, collinsdictionary.com). Not “illogical” but simply/not-so-simply “derived outside of logic.”

If you insist on being logical all the time, you will never be creative!

AI is no-sweat creativity; EI is no-holds-barred creativity. Personally, I love my creative ideas much more than any AI setup can come up with!

How much of a creative writer am I? Before the digital world came about, I was The Editor In Chief of the 3 Forest Research Institute (FORI, now ERDB) publications: monthly newsletter Canopy, quarterly technical journal Sylvatrop, and quarterly color magazine Habitat. (Note: Those were ancient, typewriter times!)

Since 2000, I probably have blogged 40,000 essays, the longest being something like 10 pages and the shortest exactly 517 words.

Now I wish, “Happy EI, everyone!”@517

27 August 2024

VP Sara’s Children’s Book – A Big, Huge, Gargantuan Lesson For Planning Before Executing A Publication Project! This Is The Editor In Chief Speaking As A Friend

“Isang Kaibigan.” Is that right? The children’s book authored by VP Sara Duterte will cost PhP10 million to print?

(Very Important Prior question: “How much did it cost to write, edit, desktop publish that book short of printing? Oh, and how come Ms Sara suddenly is an author of a children’s book?!)
(image from media.assettype.com)

Cristina Chi writes (“Children's Publishers Decry 'Excessive' Cost Of Sara's Self-Authored Book,” 22 Aug 2024, PhilStar, philstar.com):

In a time of slumping morale among reading advocates in the Philippines, Vice President Sara Duterte's planned P10-million-print of her self-authored children's book is souring the mood of children's book publishers.

It's an "excessive" and "self-serving" endeavor (according to) one independent publisher, and a "wasted opportunity" to support existing writers for another. But above all, they ask: Why should the government cough up millions for Duterte's own children's book?

I The Editor In Chief ask: “Why were Ms Sara’s book advisers not aware enough for the prior need to package and promote the book months before somebody began writing it? So that the public would have been pleased!”

That PhP 10 million is supposed to cover only the printing – if 100,000 copies were printed, that would cost only PhP 10 each copy. Not bad. Even if only 50,000 copies were printed, at PhP 20 each, still not bad.

Still, my questions as The Editor In Chief are these:

1.    Why was the book written – what good was it supposed to do to readers, the children?

2.    What are the contents of Sara’s book, “Isang Kaibigan” (“A Friend,” my translation)?

3.    Where does it begin? Where does it continue? Where does it end? Is the book organization intelligent?

Ms Cristina says:

Two children's book authors and two independent publishers told Philstar.com that children's book writers often struggle to get their work into the hands of young readers because of the high cost of production and limited runs of local publishing houses, which contribute to steep book prices.

“High cost of production” – So, depending on the number of copies (not declared), the PhP 10 million is not that high?

I personally know every single step in the production of a book, from drafting to editing to rewriting to re-editing to desktop publishing to revising up to producing the portable document format (pdf); the pdf goes directly into the printing of distribution copies – it’s complicated and not easy, but can be mastered – I say that as a self-taught digital The Editor In Chief.

If I were the single writer, editor, and desktop publisher of VP Sara’s book, I would not have needed PhP 10 million to print copies – PhP 500,000 would have been enough to produce 1,000 paper copies; the remaining PhP 9.5 million would be used to produce/purchase digital setups to be shared among classes and schools nationwide for wider & more enjoyable circulation!

(And oh, yes, the contents would have been to encourage the children to discover their own geniuses!)@517

22 August 2024

Lessons For Farmers – From Asst Prof Adarsha Gowda, Dept Of Food Science, St Aloysius College, Karnataka, India. Good! & Bad!

Farming – How difficult is it? Here is Indian Prof Adarsha Gowda, PhD, Assistant Professor & Head, Dept of Food Science, St Aloysius College, Karnataka, India – he has “10 Lessons To Become A Successful Farmer” (via a sharing by Philippine Organic Farms on Facebook, image included, 19 Aug 2024); I will now discuss each lesson.

“1) Farming is not an option for lazy men, (it’s) a task for the strongest...”

Huh!? The very first lesson from Prof Gowda points out that the farmer has to be industrious, not lazy. And farming is for the strongest – I don’t know what he means by that, but I am the son of a farmer in Pangasinan, Central Luzon, Philippines, and I know farming is for the industrious, but not the strongest! There are machines the farmer can use to help him farm, like: the rotavator can help him prepare the field organically. (This is my intellectual invention; I have a project proposal for it.)

“2) To be a successful farmer you should learn the market trend, know what sells best and where.”

Really, the instructions from Prof Gowda means that, to be successful, farming is not easy! You have to be a businessman. You have to study the market here and there! You must be a good marketer of your produce yourself!

3) Farming needs Capital. Never start a project which you're not sure of its completion plan.”

Guilty! A great many of Filipino farmers do not think of “capital” and simply go to the seller of farm inputs to borrow money at 20% interest within 100 days – that’s usury, but most if not all Filipino farmer borrowers do not think of the burden of that 20%, because they need cash – because they do not think of other ways!

“4) Seasons are never the same; sometimes prices will [break your heart] while in other season(s) you will see your Mercedes Benz pa(r)ked in your farm.”

Prof Gowda is talking about a rich farmer! Most Filipino farmers are not that rich to be able to buy a Mercedes Benz!

“5) Learn to be unique, never be a product of copy and paste.”

Pass!

“6) Consistency is the seal; let people know you at least for one product which never lack(s) in your farm.”

Pass!

“7)  When youre aspiring to inspire, make sure you invest in yourself, learn the art; visit other farmers and learn from them. Through this you will one day be the master.”

Pass!

“8) Always remember that customers will always buy the cheapest in the market, but good quality products will set their own prices.”

So how do you ensure “good quality products” Prof Gowda?

“9) Never [lose] focus even if you don't see yourself when you had anticipated.”

Pass!

“10) Farming is never a get-rich-quick scheme; (it’s) a process which needs patience, determination and dedication.”

Yes Sir! Prof Gowda’s “lessons for farmers” needs editing and simplifying and much review & revising – this is The Editor In Chief speaking!@517

21 August 2024

Stop Being Boring! Modern Lesson For Old Seminaries – Teach Seminarians Old & New American & British Literature And They Will Learn To Teach The Word To The World, Beautifully!

Yes, as a Roman Catholic I can tell you: “Almost all Roman Catholic priests are boring, boring, boring! when it comes to preaching the Word of God.” Why because they were not taught in seminary how to make their lectures and/or conjectures interesting at least, if not brilliant! 
(image from istockphoto.com)

Jonathan Liedl writes, “A Novel Idea: Seminarians Read Literature As Prep For Priesthood” (15 Aug 2024, National Catholic Register, ncregister.com): “Pope Francis lamented that ‘a sufficient grounding in literature’ is not a standard part of priestly formation.” What I understand Pope Francis is not saying is that if the priest knew much about published literature, he would be an interesting person to listen to by the parishioners every single Sunday!

I creative writer say, “To be good, better, best, the priest should learn how to think good, better, best!” And old and new widely regarded American and British literature would be big helps in understanding human nature – which the would-be priest should know in order to teach good, better, best!

1980s. I remember Fr Monching Carillo of the San Antonio church at Crossing, Los Baños, Laguna: delightful, entertaining, educational; that is, he was not preaching – he was telling stories!

And that’s how homilies should be done – telling stories parishioners are familiar with, relating to them because, after all, it’s their lives the priest wants to touch and change for the good, better, best as the case may be.

I am a creative writer. How did I learn to be interesting? In high school, I read, and read, and read! I devoured the American and British classics (books); the American journals life, look, National Geographic; I read the Reader’s Digest, Life, Look, Post – in high school, that early, I sensed that I was enriching my mind for later use. Seminarians similarly reading will enrich their minds.

Again, from Mr Liedl:

When Carter Anderson started seminary formation two years ago, he likely knew that hitting the books would be on the agenda.

But what the Diocese of Helena, Montana seminarian might not have known at the time was that, in addition to sacred Scripture and theological texts, works of fiction would also play an important part in his preparation for the priesthood. 

Of course, the thoughts of others that you are reading make/help you think more – and better (“bitter” avoid that!). Those words open the world wider than you know, bring you thoughts you never had before, even challenge your old ideas – and that’s how you learn to be more interesting (and more intelligent) when talking to/with others.

Mr Liedl further says:

More broadly, it illustrates the important role reading fiction can play in the formation of future priests, with seminary faculty, seminarians and even Pope Francis noting the ability of quality literature to bolster empathy, increase a desire for goodness, and offer a refreshing alternative to screen time.

Seminarians, to be interesting to your parishioners – read, read now!@517

13 August 2024

I Don’t Believe It! The Whole University Of The Philippines System Has 96 Outstanding Alumni This Year, 2024, While UP Los Baños Has Only 1 Outstanding Alumnus (For Creative Writing) In Its Entire 100 Years History!

I am reading today, Monday, 12 Aug, the news by ANN, “UPAA Announces 2024 Top Alumni Awardees” (06 Aug 2024, Author Not Named, NewsInfo, Inquirer, newsinfo.inquirer.net), saying:

The UP Alumni Association (UPAA) will honour 96 outstanding graduates, in fitting ceremonies, as this year’s top Alumni Awardees. “These exceptional individuals are being recognized for their established leadership, significant achievements, tireless service, and substantial contributions to their professions and the communities they chose to serve” said UPAA President and Alumni Regent Robert Lester F Aranton.

I am overwhelmed, to say the least, that there are 96 outstanding graduates from 8 constituent universities: UP Baguio, UP Manila, UP Diliman, UP Los Baños, UP Cebu, UP Mindanao, UP Tacloban, and UP Mindanao.

For me, the more the un-merrier!

What credentials do I have to dare say that? Well, I am the one-and-onlyOutstanding Alumnus For Creative Writing,” a singular honor granted by the UP Los Baños Alumni Association, with UPLBAA President Elpidio L Rosario, in the entire 100+ years of UP Los Baños. That was 2011 yet, 13 years ago.

How much did I deserve such a distinction? At that time, I was a Writer From Home (WFH) blogger for the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) based in Patancheru, India – and ICRISAT had already printed 4 of my books that I desktop-published myself into printable document format (pdf). (You can check with ex-Sec of Agriculture William Dar, who was the Director General of ICRISAT at that time.)
(image from localizationengineers.com)

Now, note – I was not simply “Distinguished” but “Outstanding” because I was self-taught when it comes to both creative writing and desktop publishing – neither of which skills is taught by UP Los Baños yesterday nor today.

With that as background, I would consider the following as “Outstanding UP Alumni” if:

UP Baguio – An alumnus or alumna comes up with a concept of enriching those rice terraces and simultaneously enriching the farmers there. (Poor rice terraces farmers!)

UP Manila – How about an alumnus concocting a diet that is very much welcome to the children sufferering from Vitamin A deficiency, out of Golden Rice?

UP Diliman – An alumnus in one’s province leading a community of learners in discovering their individual multiple intelligences (MI) in the manner of Harvard psychology professor Howard Gardner, having unusual MI in any of these 10 areas (I added the 2nd): 1. Bodily-Kinesthetic; 2. Creative (added by FAH); 3. Existential; 4. Interpersonal; 5. Intrapersonal; 6. Mathematical-Logical; 7. Musical Intelligence; 8. Naturalist; 9. Spatial; and 10. Verbal-Linguistic.

UP Los Baños – An alumnus coming up with a cultivation method that automatically produces a rich soil.

UP Cebu – An alumnus showing in a project how Tagalogs and Bisayans can work together harmoniously.

UP Visayas – An alumnus leading a community into “sustainable development” in Eastern Visayas.

UP Mindanao – An alumnus leading Muslims in community development visibly benefitting all residents.

Outstanding UP alumni all!@517

11 August 2024

AI Is Not Outright Plagiarism, But It Is Being Used For Outright Plagiarism, Which Means It Is Destroying The Reputation Of All Scientific & Technical Publications!

On the question of identifying plagiarism, I should have enough experience, having had a total of 14 years editing technical publications:

(a) my typewriter days 1975-1980, in Forestry, as Founder and The Editor In Chief of 3 publications of the Forest Research Institute (FORI): monthly newsletter Canopy, quarterly technical journal Sylvatrop, and quarterly color magazine Habitat;

(b) my digital days 2000-2007, in Agriculture, as The Editor In Chief of the Philippine Journal of Crop Science (PJCS), during which years I made the PJCS up-to-date from being late by 9 issues, all the while bringing up its quality to be included in the international elite list called “ISI” (now “Web Of Knowledge”).

Additionally, I have also edited theses: bachelor, masteral, and doctoral.

Even with such extensive experience, by myself I do not believe I can quite detect plagiarism in a paper submitted for publication. That is how complicated AI plagiarism is!
(image sources: “Originality,” winpro.com.sg, “Plagiarism,” savannahstate.libguides.com)

Today, I saw ABS-CBN publish/republish on this topic: ANN’s “Flood Of 'Junk': How AI Is Changing Scientific Publishing” (Author Not Named, 10 Aug 2024, Agence France-Presse, news.abs-cbn.com):

An infographic of a rat with a preposterously large penis. Another showing human legs with way too many bones. An introduction that starts: "Certainly, here is a possible introduction for your topic."

That is too easy to detect, an exaggeration to make a point.

(Those) are a few of the most egregious examples of artificial intelligence that have recently made their way into scientific journals, shining a light on the wave of AI-generated text and images washing over the academic publishing industry.

Yes, today the academic publications are quite vulnerable to plagiarism. I believe that is because there is too high an academic value given to “papers published in reputable journals” by many scientists.

ANN says:

All the experts emphasized that AI programs such as ChatGPT can be a helpful tool for writing or translating papers – if thoroughly checked and disclosed.

“No, not for writing papers!” I Editor am saying. If allowed, or if the editors are not watching, everyone would be writing via AI!

,,, It is thought to be ChatGPT, a chatbot launched in November 2022, that has most changed how the world's researchers present their findings.

What’s the worst that can happen with AI plagiarism? ANN says:

…There are also fears that the errors, inventions and unwitting plagiarism by AI could increasingly erode society's trust in science.

That is to say, if allowed to exist and be used with impunity, AI as Technology is going to undermine Science!

Now then, scientists should play active parts in defeating AI use in publications – which is easier said than done.

Andrew Gray, a librarian at University College London, has “determined that at least 60,000 papers involved the use of AI in 2023 – over one percent of the annual total.”

At this point, what I can say is that AI plagiarism will bring about the end of AI itself!@517

08 August 2024

Carlos Yulo’s Glory – Only Once In A Hundred Years?

Uniquely, Jun Lumibao says “A Yulo Comes Once In A Hundred Years” (05 Aug 2024, BusinessMirror, businessmirror.com.ph):

(image from Facebook shared by Mau Victa)

What Caloy did for Philippine sports (happens) only once in a hundred years,” said an ecstatic Philippine Olympic Committee President Abraham “Bambol” Tolentino. “He will be on top of the conversation as the Philippines’ greatest athlete.”

Yes Sir! I have had the fun as a fan. What Carlos Yulo has achieved has happened only once in the last hundred years of Philippine sports. That’s exactly why we should make it happen all the time!

Now then, if I had the funds, I would author a whole book about everything Carlos Yulo and his
forgiving spirit as a son,
faithful spirit as a boyfriend,
friendly spirit as a mentee,
fierce spirit as an athlete, and
fighting spirit as a Filipino –
and then, Filipino athletes could emulate his spirits!

Right now, he could be a recipient of The Outstanding Filipino (TOFIL) Award, and/or a Ramon Magsaysay awardee.

From news items, I gather the following:

Son & Boyfriend
Carlos is the son of Angelica. Mother & Son had been at odds because Mother believed the girlfriend had been leeching him of his money, and Carlos had defended her. Before training in Tokyo, Son left Mother with access to his bank account – “Yulo would say that the financial issues with his mother was the usage of his incentives from the 2022 World Championships without his prior consent” (Wikipedia,
en.wikipedia.org/wiki).

Mentee
Munehiro Kugimiya was his Japanese trainer. “He also received a scholarship from the International Gymnastics Federation to fund his move to Japan” (Wikipedia).

Athlete
Yulo is the most successful Filipino gymnast in history. Yulo is a two-time Olympic champion; a six-time world champion: two golds, two silvers, and two bronzes; a ten-time Asian champion; and a nine-time SEA Games champion.

Filipino Genius
How/when did Yulo realize he had a genius in athletics? Who helped him develop his talents? How did he meet his financier? His girlfriend? What’s the real story with his mother Angelica? How many gold medals has he won so far in world/Asian championships? How many gold medals in SEA Games? Who discovered his genius in gymnastics and brought him to the Gymnastics Association of the Philippines for training? Who offered a scholarship for him to train in Japan? Is it true that he graduated from Teikyo University in Itabashi, Tokyo as an “Associate in Literature”? Athletics & Literature – aren’t the subjects as different as Black & White? What year did he start competing in the Palarong Pambansa? When did he first win gold in the Palaro? When did he go for training in China under a sponsorship of the Philippine Good Works Mission Foundation? Where did he meet his Japanese coach Munehiro Kugimiya? Who coached him as a Junior player? When did the MVP Foundation start extending financial help to him? What did the International Gymnastics Federation do for him?

Last but not least: Philippine Airlines says, “Champions fly forever!” No Sir; “Champions try forever!”@517

07 August 2024

How To Block “Writer’s Block” – What I Call “Writer’s Blank”

Writer or non-writer, if you’re suffering from “Writer’s Block,” you’re not alone. Whether you are using pen or laptop, you write some words, and then stop – no further thoughts come out of your mind to write on paper, or onscreen. I pity you!

Note: 2 of my numerous blogs over the years: (1) since March 2019 – Communication For Development Of Vibrant Villages (blogspot.com), 1,079 articles; and (2) since Jan 2020 – The Editor In Chief (blogspot.com), 549 articles. Total: 1,628 articles in the last 5 years, 27 articles every month, 517 words each article.
(Image sources: top,  grammarly.com/blog, bottom positivewriter.com)

That all shows I have suffered no Writer’s Block!
Oh, and I am almost 84 years old!

I am a publicly known creative writer since I became a writer from home (WFH) for the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) 2007-2014 when ICRISAT was under now PH ex-Secretary of Agriculture William Dar.

Wikipedia says (“Writer’s Block,” en.wikipedia.org/wiki):

Writer's block {has) various degrees of severity, from difficulty in coming up with original ideas to being unable to produce work for years. This condition is not solely measured by time passing without writing(;) it is measured by time passing without productivity in the task at hand.

Here’s advice from Frederick Meyer (“Writer’s Block: What Causes Writer’s Block, And How To Overcome It” (24 May 2024, Writers.com, writers.com): “Writer’s block … affects almost every writer at some point, and it can be debilitating for our creativity.”

In the 1970s, two researchers at Yale studied writer’s block, and concluded that it had four main causes:

1.    “Feeling constrained and creatively blocked by the “rules” of writing.“

2.    “Seeking external validation and attention through one’s writing, and becoming disappointed and angry if not getting it.“

3.    “Feeling not good enough and paralyzed by self-criticism.“

4.    “Feeling afraid of having one’s writing compared with the work of others.“

Here’s my pieces of advice. This is just a listing to help you get rid of your Writer’s Block. Choose what works for you:

(1) Do something else. Do something unrelated to writing.

(2) Cultivate other interests other than writing. I recommend reading. Select what you want to read, but read!

(3) Add to your knowledge before and after writing. This will help you increase not only your breadth but also your width of thinking.

(4) Keep a scratch pad ready all the time. I have what I call “Notesbooks” – plenty of them: in my room where I am writing this, outside where I sit and watch the world go bye, on the dining table, on my bed, and in my little shoulder bag!

(5) Read anything, including the labels of products. If anything, it will take your mind off what you are writing about.

(6) Learn digital writing – it will open new windows for you! Windows for more knowledge, windows for thinking some more.

(7) Don’t reject thoughts that run counter to what you are writing.

Oh yes! Why is humor not included as a way out of Writer’s Block? Humor me!@517

06 August 2024

PH Edu Sec Sonny Angara Going For MATATAG Curriculum. Me, A Teacher, Going For MiTATAG Curriculum – And There Lies A Whole Whale Of A Difference! This Involves Intelligence/s

So, PH now has a Secretary of Education in former Senator Sonny Angara, and as an educator myself – BSA major in Ag Educ, UP Los Baños 1965, Civil Service Professional 1964 – keeping my interest in PH Education, I want to know Sec Sonny Angara’s Vision for PH Education. Unfortunately, I can’t find it! I’m very sorry; what I know is that without Vision, you move blindly – literally!

What follows is not Vision, just part of the Agenda – Elizabeth Marcelo says, “Angara To Strictly Implement 6-Hour Teaching Policy” (04 Aug 2024, PhilStar, onenews.ph), and ANN has “DepEd’s New Agenda To Resolve Basic Education Woes” (Author Not Named, 30 Jan 2023, DepEd, deped.gov.ph).

Here’s the MATATAG Agenda according to Ms Marcelo:

“MAke the curriculum relevant to produce competent and job-ready, active, and responsible citizens;
TAke steps to accelerate delivery of basic education facilities and services;
TAke good care of learners by promoting learner well-being, inclusive education, and a positive learning environment; and
Give support to teachers to teach better.”

Whatever the above 48 quoted words mean, MATATAG is still a severely limited “Vision” for PH Education. Whatever it is, MATATAG covers only basic education – not the whole education spectrum of the Philippines!

Not looking wider and deeper, Sec Sonny is ignoring the out/standing threat of Artificial Intelligence (AI) – and DepEd is not only silent about it but more so has no alternative curriculum to outsmart it!

This is unsolicited help, but I’m offering it anyway. I now suggest this, as it were, as DepEd’s enlarged Vision: MiTATAG Curriculum.

MiTATAG means “Multiple intelligences Taking Appropriate steps Towards Advancing Geniuses.”

MiTATAG comes from Harvard psychology professor Howard Gardner’s theory of “Multiple Intelligences” (MI) that covers nine intelligences:

1. Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence (“Body Smart”)
2. Creative Intelligence (“Thinking Smart”), added by FAH
3. Existential Intelligence (“Life Smart”)
4. Interpersonal Intelligence (“People Smart”)
5. Intrapersonal Intelligence (“Self Smart”)
6. Mathematical-Logical Intelligence (“Number/Reasoning Smart”)
7. Musical Intelligence (“Music Smart”)
8. Naturalist Intelligence (“Nature Smart”)
9. Spatial Intelligence (“Image Smart”)
10. Verbal-Linguistic Intelligence (“Word Smart”).

That is to say, in each and every single one of us awaits the discovery and development of our sleeping genius, whether it be in Athletics (1. Body Smart”) or in Music (7. “Music Smart”), or somewhere else.

Now then, I am recommending to Sec Sonny that DepEd prepare a nationwide curricula for from Grade School to Grad School for MiTATAG.

One relevant question I can think of right now: “How easy is multiple intelligences (MI) to teach?” My personal response is this: I taught myself all the skills I have now, that is, from typewriter-based to digital-driven, so that I have become all of these in one body:

1, Creative writer
2, Editor
3, Desktop Publisher
4, Blogger
5, Journal Editor

Please note – all those 5 intelligences are now expressed in digital terms, via the laptop and the Internet.

Now then, no matter how old you are, there’s MiTATAG hope for you!@517

05 August 2024

Here Is A Very Different Story Of Carlos Edriel Yulo, PH’s Paris Olympics 2024 Winner Of Two Gold Medals, Unexpected – An Unseen Lesson For Us All

Early morning today, Monday, 05 July 2024,

I scanned a great many of the media stories, PH and abroad, about PH’s Olympic double hero Carlos Yulo, and none of them tells the story behind – only “Letters Of Shai” does, only on Facebook.

Shared by Rene Bernardo Bajit on Facebook 05 July 2024, from Volleynatics, “Letters of Shai” (all quotes in italics) –

A young Carlos Yulo only dreamt of winning a gold in the SEA Games back when he was 12 years old. He was then training at the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex with the National Capital Region team. Now he's an Olympic Champion.

Carlos had a dream, and he trained for it. He pursued his dream, as he knew nobody else would do it for him. He did not know it would take him 12 years to achieve that dream, but he persisted. From 2012 to 2024.

It took him years of full discipline, hardships, and sacrifices to be where he is right now.

Athlete or not, to pursue your dream, you need discipline; you will meet hardships; and you will need to make sacrifices to be where you want to be. You will need persistence.

Carlos Yulo has just won 2 Gold Medals at the Paris Olympics – as I write this early Monday, 05 Aug 2024, my country has won only 2 medals, and they are both by Carlos Yulo – and they are both gold!

We can say that he had the support system in terms of financial, physical, and emotional aspects, but the courage came from within himself.

“The courage came from within himself” – Nobody can give you courage; you have to give it to yourself.

The spirit of never giving up – we've seen his journey. He had the choice to give up after so many attempts, but he didn't. He knew within himself that he would soon win that gold, and only he could know that.

You must persist with your dream – nobody else will do that for you!

Congratulations, Carlos Yulo! The Philippines is so proud of you. You inspire us all!

And to us all, may we have the same spirit and courage as these athletes. 🙏 Keep going 💐 shai

“May we have the same spirit and courage” as Carlos Yulo!

This is your reminder to never stop chasing your dreams.

Persistence is even more crucial than talent. You’re not going to get rewarded overnight. It’s going to be a long ride, but you should never give up because you deserve to see your hard work pay off.

That dream is planted in you for a reason.

And now here is inspiration from one of my townmates, Agnes Kristine Millano (Facebook sharing 05 Aug 2024), and I quote:

Never regret a day in yoiur life:
good days give happiness,
bad days give experience,
worst days give lessons,
and the best days give
memories.

Are you the best? You still have to persist to prove it!@517

Everyone, Go Google! Even Dennis The Menace Advises The Comic Strip Reader To Consult Google!

Today, Wed 20 Nov 2024, on Facebook I read Dennis The Menace advising someone to go Google for something not understood. Good advice; than...