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My Three Greatest Teachers of Life

Shirgie Fulgencio shares how he learned some life’s lessons from zorv, waterball and zipline. This is his way of saying that experience is always the best teacher.

three teachers

When I was teaching in a grade school, I used to explain things using a figure of speech called analogy. Analogy for me is the best way to explain or support the idea that I want to convey to my students. This is using a literal example or obvious illustration of things. It can be through a scenario, objects, people and even experiences.

The reason why I used Analogy as a method of teaching is because I learned a lot from
it. Analogy is everywhere, in fact this is how Universe speaks to us to remind us about
life and to teach us some valuable lessons.

Who would have thought that extreme activities like rolling on the hill through the zorv, running on the water through the waterball and flying in the air through a zipline can teach us life’s lessons?

I think this is the Universe’s way of reminding us about life and about our inner
capability to become infinite. Before we get too emotional here, I would like to share the lessons of life that I learned from one of our mini adventures.

Lesson Learned from Teacher Zorv: Be Courageous

Imagine yourself inside a ball as big as this:

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And imagine that ball rolling on the hill as high as this:

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Sounds exciting right? But hey, I’ll tell you, it’s a different feeling when you are just imagining it than in the actual scene. The thought of you being tied up inside this ball while it is rolling in the hill would make you think twice to try it. But you wouldn’t know how it really feels when you don’t try it, so I tried it.

I screamed and yelled and shouted inside the zorv while my intestines and all of my internal organs were gone haywire. It was one of the greatest 30 seconds of my life. It was like a roller coaster ride except that I haven’t experienced a roller coaster yet. One second you’re up, then next second you’re down, and the transition between up and down were so unpredictable and that made this activity more exciting and fun.

Life basically is just like a zorv, it will bring you up, it will bring you down and it will make you crazy. Just hold your grip, enjoy the ride and be courageous. Once the ball starts rolling, you can’t just stop it unless it reached the final edge of the hill. We have no choice, we have to live this life, but we can always choose to become brave in facing it and have fun.

Lesson Learned from Teacher Waterball: Challenge Yourself

Who would say it’s impossible to walk on the surface of the water? With the waterball, you can crawl, jump, run or even roll:

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This one is not as challenging as the zorv, even a kid can get inside this waterball and do stints on the water without drowning. What I like about this activity is that, you can do absolutely everything except standing.I tried it and I swear I really can’t stand inside the ball. Of course, you can’t just sit inside and stay, it’s better to move so you will feel the challenge. To make it more interesting and fun, we challenged ourselves to stand inside the ball. Guess what? Nobody made it. Nevertheless, I enjoyed it so much that I was able to bring out the kid inside of me. I was a kid for 10 minutes and I liked it.

Well life sometimes is kind of boring. You know, when you do the same things everyday and going to the same places, you will feel like being disoriented. If you feel like this, challenge yourself. Try something new and extreme. Just like the waterball, if you want to experience the fun, get up and challenge yourself to stand. You wouldn’t know how much fun it is when things start to become wild and extreme.

Lesson Learned from Teacher Zipline: Take a Risk

A zipline with 310 meters long and a height I know can multiply you into pieces if you will get fall is something of a real challenge. This is not a game for those who have fear of heights.

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I never backed out. I allowed myself to be tied up in a wire and slide over to get to the other end of the wire. At first, I was so scared to try it, it’s too risky up there. I don’t know how to fly, in case of worse comes to worst, I may end up dead. I rebuked negative thoughts, composed myself and decided to really try it out. I was a Superman in less than a minute. My hesitation was replaced by excitement when I was there flying while overlooking trees and mountains and buildings. So this is how superman feels when he is up there flying to save the world.

I never backed out. I allowed myself to be tied up in a wire and slide over to get to the other end of the wire. At first, I was so scared to try it, it’s too risky up there. I don’t know how to fly, in case of worse comes to worst, I may end up dead. I rebuked negative thoughts, composed myself and decided to really try it out. I was a Superman in less than a minute. My hesitation was replaced by excitement when I was there flying while overlooking trees and mountains and buildings. So this is how superman feels when he is up there flying to save the world.

This is an official entry to the The Learning Site’s Christmas Carnival.

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A Turtle’s Heart

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Cindy Velasquez shares a personal life-changing story about mountaineering and teaching and the transcendent power of the now.

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I always wanted to be a mountaineer. But I never had a chance until I said yes to an invitation by my closest friend, the backpacking poet Jona. It was way back 2009 when I joined the Freedom Climb held at Mt. Babag. Heading straight toward the mountain, I almost collapsed. Hot winds somehow robbed my lungful of air. Gathering my breath, collecting them like seashells while outlining a long shore. I could remember how unwelcoming the trail was.

When I saw the rippling orange beam scarfed with the gloomy red light, I was almost near the peak. A slow dance of charcoaled and pirouetted skies, I felt I visited this place perhaps in memory or imagination. It was like my very first handwriting when I was beginning to write my name. There were traces of happiness shadowed by some fear and tired feet. Yet, it travelled through the air like faint noises or the crickets’ inhospitable sound. Suddenly, the smell of the city had died.

After the climb, I found myself at the state of smallness. To be connected with the mountains, I was fascinated. It was an overwhelming weight of loveliness yet unarmored with the truth: I’m a dot in this universe. An audacious moment, comforting yet it was fleeting. Early morning, I couldn’t move even a single part of my lower body. Soon, all parts were someway paralyzed except my heartbeat. Reposeful with yesterday, I was so drained yet so alive knowing I was still on top of the city. Out of nowhere, I began to feel like a turtle’s heart: “It beats for minutes long after the turtle itself is dead.”

From then on, I simply looked at the mountain as my guide. It maps to my forgotten courage, locating a mixture of my peculiar guts and timing bravery. Though my body is somehow lifeless after every climb, all because of muscle pain, my heartbeat is enough. Surprisingly like a wizard’s effect, it leads me to my youngest mentor.

As a teacher myself, I always believe: one way to have a little transcendence is to simply seek learning without comparing with someone’s birth year. Teaching is an art that truly conceals age. Instead, it firmly anchors on friendship. Perhaps, it owns a vortex of an imagined time. Let just say that in teaching, age is simply an invisible thread, it may stretch or tangle, but never break. It bonds each one of us. No wonder I often think of teaching as a magical place. And in here, people do not age.

Just this year, I met an incredible friend but he is more like a manghod (a younger brother). He has this habit of doing good word-plays, a lover of siopao. He has a talented hand that can easily solve shape puzzles and has the most creative eyes especially when he gets a little drunk. He is four years younger than me. Yet when we are in the mountains, I change the way I look at him. I inhabit in my eyesight a mentor, embarking on him trust. This may seem bit pretentions, yet he is eminently older than me when we are in a labyrinth of a difficult trail. Or when he starts sharing his stories about the mountains, his narration is reckoning on how I value places aside from home. He has these stories that speak to me like the infinite spaces of the sea where it encompasses wonders and possibilities. Sometimes, it talks like an unknown geography that outstretches my little childhood fear. His stories have a form that I need to relearn. It takes me some time to decipher this situation. But I begin to grasp that I am becoming his student.

A confession: he taught me how to unite with the mountains, to truly confirm its existence, resting a fact that sometimes a man needs greater force than gravity. These are days when I feel younger than him by years.

It is through Edward that I learn to seek more information about mountaineering. I remember him saying: “Safety is knowledge.” I climb mountains for years, but it was just recently through his help and with our fellow-mountaineers that I entirely appreciate the value of the Basic Mountaineering Course (BMC).

Most of the people who know that I’m a mountaineer often ask this classic question: “Why do you climb?” To have less word to answer, I often replied: Makig-uban sa kinaiyahan (to be with nature), to be more earthbound. But giving this answer for the sake of answering it pollutes the peak’s worthiness. Listening to Edward’s stories, it narrates unmistakable signs of absence. Then it hits me. I finally realize why I become a mountaineer. The truth is: my answer is not anymore to be with nature, but to be with nature in that very particular instant. To feel the now of everything as if I have no expectations of what will happen tomorrow, enjoy the unifying force of the present, belonging with uncertainties while becoming one with nature. For not being yourself at this moment is the saddest. Perhaps this is the truest thing, the youngest mentor that I have taught me the oldest principle in the world: to fully appreciate the present.

Once again, out of nowhere, I feel like the turtle’s heart. Its dead in the past will not matter, not even its transformation as it decomposes in the future. The most important thing is my heart, its beating that marks the now.

This is an official entry to the The Learning Site’s Christmas Carnival

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Lessons from a Child

dinosaur (1)

Jennyfer Tan has learned a lot of lessons from her 8-year son, Daniel. She believes that we all learn something from someone, even from the unexpected.

dinosaur (1)

I thought I had it in the bag. Homeschooling a 6 year old boy. Easy! How hard can it be?

I was wrong.

My husband and I have been talking about homeschooling our son since he was in preschool. We’ve researched about it, prepared for it, bought the lesson plans, workbooks and textbooks. I’ll just follow the outline right? Make a schedule? Allot a spot in the house to be our “study nook”?

It didn’t turn out the way we planned it.

We started the Grade 1 curriculum in July 2010, a month late because we had to wait for the lesson plan that we ordered from the US to arrive. Since our preferred mode of homeschool is the eclectic way, we would follow the pace of our son, so I thought, oh, we’ll be able to catch up, he’s smart. We ended up finishing Grade 1 before the year was over. He breezed through the lessons and kept on asking for more. We spent the next 3 months scouring the internet for interactive things and higher grade worksheets for him to accommodate his thirst for knowledge.

The same thing happened when he was in Grade 2, but the difference was, the questions he was asking were way more than what I know. He was already curious about solar system facts that I couldn’t seem to remember. He spewed words that I didn’t recognize, he played and finished physics games that I couldn’t even comprehend. His science lessons consisted of parts of the heart and the moons of the other planets.

And slowly, we were at each other’s throat, butting heads, testing each other’s patience and threshold. I was frustrated at his stubbornness to listen to me, and at his insistence on just reading in his room and not going out to play with his peers (in our case, the neighbors’ kids). He was frustrated at my inability to answer his questions at the drop of a pin. He kept insisting on doing repetitive actions and finishing a whole book before putting it down. He would scream and throw tantrums and would break down and cry, until he was too exhausted to talk and will just sleep.

It’s been happening constantly that his pediatrician recommended I had him tested for IQ. She said that the frustration and the power struggles might be from boredom. We took her advice and had him tested. The doctor was right – he was bored, IQ was 6 years above his age, but that’s not all – he was diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome.

According to Wikipedia, Asperger Syndrome (AS), also known as Asperger disorder, is an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that is characterized by significant difficulties in social interaction, alongside restricted and repetitive patterns of behavior and interests. Although most students with AS/HFA have the average mathematical ability and test slightly worse in mathematics than in general intelligence, some are gifted in mathematics.

We should have noticed it early on, we should have trusted our instinct. Maybe we were able to bring him to occupational and speech therapy earlier, maybe we could have sped up his social and emotional skills, maybe we could have saved him and ourselves the heartache.

But what’s past is past. This is the now that we are facing. I have accepted it and found that the knowledge of why he was the way he was, was actually a blessing in disguise. With the help of the Internet and the books that I have purchased and read, I slowly understand why he acts the way he does, why he thinks the way he thinks, why he feels the way he feels, and I sometimes cry and feel guilty.

The things that I considered as his “weaknesses” turn out to be his strengths. His inability to stay still or being hyper means he has the strong desire to seek new things to learn, to gain more knowledge. His obsession with using a particular word and editing his worksheets means he has great attention to details. His “catastrophic thinking” (e.g. “Why are you late in picking me up at school? I thought you were caught in a tsunami and died.”, “My tummy hurts, I think I was poisoned.”) means he sees things in a global scale. He never fails to donate to the Fallen Soldiers Fund whenever he gets the chance.

He is currently attending occupational and speech therapy and is enrolled at the school where is accepted and nurtured. He is still bored at times, and he always announces that his favorite part at school is quiz time because that means he’ll be learning new things instead of reviewing the old ones.

He would often tell me things like “Uluru was formed before the Mesozoic Era.” He once asked me if I remember what a “Sauropod” is. I answered, “Of course! It’s a dinosaur with a long neck!” He just stared at me, waiting for me to continue. With an exasperated sigh, he exclaimed, “You forgot again! It’s a dinosaur with a long neck AFTER the Triassic period!”

One time I saw a picture of a weird looking dinosaur, looked for its name and thought it was something he didn’t know. I went to his room, proudly told him, “Hey Daniel, did you know that there was a dinosaur that looked like an ostrich? The name was Gallimimus!”

He then replied, “What did it mimic?”

“Mimic? No, it looked like an ostrich!”

“But what did it mimic?”

“What do you mean mimic? How did you know that it mimicked something?!” He then looked up from the book that he was reading and just said “Because mimus is the Greek word for mimic.”

Instead of getting angry at him for not paying attention to what I say, I’d just sit down with him for a lecture on the different types of dinosaurs and what era they came from. I’d watch him solve physics puzzles and hear him squeal a delightful sound every time he gets a perfect 3 stars on it. I’d spend time with him in processing the emotions he cannot manage on his own. I’d learn from him on how to be patient, how not to see things in just one way, how each of us can learn something amazing from every person we meet.

How teaching cannot just be from teachers.

How teachers can also become the student, and the student becomes the teacher.

I still consider our family as a homeschooling family. But instead of me teaching my son school lessons, he is the one that is homeschooling me, both in academics and life in general.

This is an official entry to the The Learning Site’s Christmas Carnival. / Photo source

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A Writer’s Tribute To Her Teacher

notebook and pen

Anna Liza Alfafara has developed the building blocks of her career through her English teacher.

notebook and pen

Looking back, I acknowledge how some people have made a remarkable impact on the person that I am today. Special people that I met from my childhood days to the ones I mingled with during an event in my adult years. I still can remember them with a smile, knowing they have touched my life in their own simple way, even without them knowing it!

I’ve been writing since grade school all through high school, but I can say with conviction that my English 101 college professor, Mrs. De Vera made a huge impact to me till this very day. Not one teacher (ever, in my years of learning the English language) has taught me the way she did.

She painstakingly explained and gave all the examples she can give from the basics to the advanced form of the verbs, sentence construction, etc. After which, there would be endless exercises, seat quizzes and assignments of the lessons taken. She would also ask her students to write sentences in various verb forms over and over again, till we mastered them, and this went on for a semester. And I guess, that was the magic there.

I wouldn’t have known the usage of present, past and future perfect tenses, if not for her. This may sound funny and trivial to some, but I consider my learning from her as the primary building block of my career as an online writer and blogger.

I appreciate her even more now, 20 years after, in this age of Facebook and social media, where people freely air their thoughts and ideas wherever possible. Every time I see people committing grammatical errors in their statuses and updates, I secretly wish they had their own Mrs. De Vera in their lives to save them from further embarrassment.

To Mrs. De Vera, you just don’t know how much I appreciate the things you taught me. May your tribe increase!

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A Teacher, By Heart

If Lovely Boiser could turn back time, she would pursue teaching for a number of meaningful reasons.

A Teacher By Heart

If by any chance I am asked to turn back time and choose the best profession I would pursue (well, aside from being a full time mom now, a wife and a homemaker), one of the top choices would be teaching.  How many preschool pupils do we hear say, “When I grow up, I want to be a teacher?” I guess 7 out of 10 will possibly end up in this profession.

I remember growing up having three aunt-teachers from third to sixth grade: Teacher Jane, Teacher Fate and Teacher Emy. Back in grade school, I wanted to become like one. I recall how highly I looked up to them. They treated me like an ordinary student just like the others and not as a niece. And it was fair. I highly respect and understand them.

Traditionally, teachers are natural born info-dispensers. I admire their endless and long stretch of patience in child care. I cannot imagine what it is like when kids are left in their supervision for eight hours a day, five times a week at school. How hard that must be! It’s really a good test of patience for them. I appreciate how strategic they are in preparing their lessons each night, in making complicated lessons simple for the students. Two thumbs up for their endless enthusiasm, energy and lifelong commitment to teaching and imparting values to kids.

All throughout my life, I have been taught by a number of teachers. For me, there is no good or bad teacher. There is always a Great Teacher, though.  He teaches not only with the mind but also from the heart.  He smiles at his students and inculcates values in a Christian way of living. He also encourages them to create dreams and achieve goals. He unconditionally motivates the pupils to nurture their interests, talents and capabilities. He is someone the children can easily share their joy and sentiments with.

What do teachers do?

They inspire you, they entertain you, and you end up learning a ton even when you don’t know it. ~ Nicholas Sparks

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