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Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Bye Subway Guy

So sad.

By the way, I got a FREE Subway dinner today...so I'm happy and sad at the same time =) =(

Remember the Subway person I blogged a few days ago? Well, he was the cashier today but he personally put barbecue sauce and pepper and wrapped my sandwich too, then when I was about to pay he said it's his last day today. He's going to be transferred to a Subway branch in Orchard road...and he said he's giving me that meal for free.

Actually I've always been a happy customer when he's around the Subway kiosk because of his great customer service, and now he's leaving.

Haven't eaten my dinner yet, so I'll excuse myself first. Not to eat my last Sub from him though, but to write him my very own GEMS card to give him before he leaves forever.

Note for the uninitiated:

About GEMS
Go-the-Extra-Mile for Service (GEMS) is a national movement launched on 6 October 2005 that seeks to encourage everyone - from businessmen to service workers to customers - to play their part and take the initiative to improve service levels. GEMS is supported by an Executive Committee (EXCO), comprising members of diverse backgrounds, including businessmen, union leaders and representatives from the media and government agencies. The GEMS EXCO focuses on raising service levels in the tourism, hospitality, food & beverage, retail and transport industries. The four aspects they will focus on include Service Leadership, Service Capability, Service Mindset, and Service in Small and Medium-Sized Businesses.


Monday, August 28, 2006
kNOCk, kNOCk!

I just came from dinner at science by my lonesome, and when I checked my mail I got this:

Dear Espinosa Korinna Gacal

Interview for NOC Program Jan 07 Intake

We are pleased to inform you that you have been short listed for the second round of interviews for the NOC Programme. The schedule for your interview is given below. Please come prepared with 2 hardcopies of your curriculum vitae (resume). There is no fixed format, but please include the below details; the cover page should include all personal details while the rest of the information (personal statement, etc) are to be on subsequent pages.

- Personal details (Cover Page)

+ Photograph

+ Full Name

+ Matriculation number

+ Date of Birth

+ Nationality

+ No. of years in S'pore (for foreigner)

+ Faculty

+ Course and year of study

+ Major / Area of Focus

+ SEP/ Special Program

+ Cumulative Average Point

+ Total MCs obtained to date

+ Expected AY/Sem of graduation

+ Number of Semester(s) extended



- Personal statement

- Education details

- Work experience

- Scholastic Achievements

- Extra/Co-curricular activities

- References, if any (can be same as original application)

- Language proficiency

- IT proficiency

- Other skills and interests, if any

Date: Friday, 1 September 2006
Time: 2.00 pm
Venue: NUS Overseas Colleges, E3A, 7 Engineering Drive 1, Level 6. (Old University Hall, opposite UCC)

Notes:

We will not be able to change the interview slot allocated to you and no questions on the resume will be entertained
Please take a seat at the reception lobby when you arrive for the interview and wait for NOC staff to attend to you.
Please confirm your attendance for interview by Wednesday, 30 Sep, 5pm.

Regards
Angel
NUS Overseas Colleges


Whoa. Okay, apparently my first interview went well. =) I didn't blog about that because I wasn't able to 'read' the interviewers. I mean, I talked a lot during the first interview, but I wasn't able to gauge based on their facial expressions whether they thought I was knowledgeable and knew what I was getting myself into, or they were silently screaming for me to shut up. Actually there were a lot more things I wanted to say but they remained inside my head (as a precautionary measure to prevent my interviewers from dozing off). So it really pays to do your 'homework' before coming to the interview, huh? But for the next round I'll practice being more concise.

Digression: Now I'm really, really grateful to Mr Paul Koh, the one who interviewed me for the Singapore Scholarship (the reason why I'm here right now in Singapore). That interview was by far the worst intreview ever. If there is anything worse than worst, it's exemplified by that interview. But it was my fault also, because I came unprepared. When I asked around before the interview, people told me it would just be a casual conversation for them scholarship sponsors to get to know me better, so okay...sounds simple enough. But oh my goodness, the diplomat roasted me during my hot seat with him. He called me lazy and that my test results sucked (and when you tell that to the consistent honor student that I was, it's just heartbreaking), and a lot more other things no one has ever told me before. By Divine Intervention (really, it was beyond my own power), I was able to put up a straight face throughout the interview...but the second I came out of the room and walked towards my mother, I started crying which lasted for more than two hours. At that time no one could talk to me because my heart and my ego were both shattered to a million pieces, which for some reason impaired my speech. I'm really grateful my mother was there with me physically, because that moment after the interview was one of those times that I felt I was being sucked in a blackhole to rot there forever.

But that interview had been a blessing in disguise after all, to help me prepare for all the subsequent interviews I'll be having for the rest of my life. Some lessons in life are best learned the hard way, and I'm grateful that I learned one at an earlier phase of my life, so for the rest of my years on earth, I know better.


Okay. The second round of interview for the NOC program. It's going to happen. To me. So it is part of God's masterplan for my life, for either of these reasons:

1.) because it is a pre-requisite to get into the program, and it is in His will that I get into the program; or

2.) even if I don't get into the program, it is something that I would learn a lot from, and in the future be very grateful for having experienced it, just like my interview with Mr Paul Koh; or

3.) it is for some other reason that I haven't thought of yet, or something that my brain can't ever comprehend, but nevertheless something significant because the author of my life had allowed it to happen.

Whatever the reason, I accept it. And of course, on my part I will do my best, I will come prepared, and I offer this experience to my awesome God who would use it for a purpose, who would use it to fulfill His wonderful plans for my life.

All glory and honor and prasies to God alone. =)


Saturday, August 26, 2006
Happy Birthday Mommy



Friday, August 25, 2006
SMU matric fair

I got some awesome freebies today! Inside the goodie bag is a box of Currensia hair color, BeautyLabo Leave-On Treatment Spray that comes in a cute baby pink 220 ml bottle, and a couple of gift vouchers from some nail art store, Essential Brew cafe, etc. I got the goodie bag from Women's Connection booth at SMU (Singapore Management University)'s matric fair.

I tell you, the matric fair at SMU is so happening and the stuff they give away for free are not cheapskate items! I know matric fair goodies are supposedly for SMU freshmen...I look like one anyway haha! I just got one goodie bag (by signing up at the booth) because the contents really are irresistible for me (funny I blogged about my hair last night and today I got these for free!).

Actually, I didn't know about the matric fair. All I thought was we had to distribute some promotional items for AIESEC's orientation camp. I was more than willing to go because I don't have any classes on Fridays, and I'll get to see what it's like inside SMU.

I can say that the crowd in SMU is definitely hipper and trendier than in NUS and NTU. But that's not surprising, because SMU is of course largely a business school, and business students always dress smarter and hipper and more sophisticated than those from other faculties (which is why I looked kind of like a rag doll in the midst of them SMU people, what with my Faculty of Engineering get-up of shirt, jeans, and chucks).

And the matric fair itself, as I've mentioned earlier, is more happening than in NUS. I won't say a lot more happening, because I laud the efforts of NUS matric fair organizers and I did enjoy my own matric fair. It's just that the 'oomph' factor for SMU matric fair is a notch higher.

And there I met (again) the cousin of my (gasp) ex-boyfriend. Yup yup, my past is haunting me again. I wanted to write 'my loser of an ex-boyfriend' but never mind. She's nice actually, and she has nothing to do with what happened to us so I have no ill feelings for her whatsoever. I also met Wathanak, after two years. For those who can remember his significance in my life, haha yup I saw him again.

I left early, and on the way out I was with some freshies who were already done with the fair...and man they looked like they just came from retail therapy. The paper bags and plastic bags and all other whatnots they were carrying, plus their overall attire - it looked like they just went shopping in a downtown mall. In NUS, students who just came from a matric fair look like the part.

So SMU is funkier in terms of building architecture (I think it's because it's situated right smack in the heart of the city) and crowd, but of course I love NUS. No hip school building, no happening matric fair, no anything - nothing - can change that.

It's my school what. =)


Hair Ko Uli

I just want to share another thing before I hit the books again. I am happy because I was able to conquer what then seemed like an uncontrollable penchant to spend a bomb on my hair. For the previous start of the semesters, I've rebonded my hair, permed, colored, permed again, colored again, and did other hair salon whatnots.

This semester, I still wasn't spared of that temptation. The first few days of school, I'd be very irritated to look at the mirror and see the atrocity that is my hair. I wanted to go to JB to have my hair rebonded again, but then it would be a never-ending cycle of start-of-the-semester salon trips that would ultimately annihilate all my hair strands and burn a whole in my pocket. I mean, it's still recovering from what I did the previous semesters and it's good seeing signs of life again. And of course, it's nice seeing it grow longer everyday. Hehe.

I really learned a lot from last semester's hair disaster. Now I am more disciplined about my hair spending habits. But of course, I'm not saying I won't ever color my hair or have some stuff done with it ever again. I'm a girl and of course I'm vain (ako pa), but I'll do stuff once in a while na lang.


Thursday, August 24, 2006
Subway

Nasaan na yung taga Subway na ang tawag sa akin ay 'princess' ? Bakit hindi na sya pumapasok?

ok fine, binasa niya lang naman yung nakasulat sa T-shirt ko. Oo dapat Tagalog baka may magalit na naman hehehe.

Anyway, Wayne asked me a while ago "Gabi-gabi kang nagsa-Subway?"

No, not every night. I go there very often though. It's very convenient for me because it's the nearest establishment from my room where I could buy food. SO how about the frugality thing I've been talking about? Because eating Subway nightly doesn't seem very cheap. At first I've been having guilt trips too, but when I thought about it and made some calculations, I get value for money eating Subway dinner in the end.

To justify the extra cost I pay for a delectable Subway sandwich versus buying sucky food from YIH that I very seldom get to finish (oh did I just mention one reason?), I don't spend a cent for breakfast (because I never have time for it - have to rush to class every morning), so I can rollover my breakfast budget for dinner. Anyway, I only pay $3.20 for my Subway sandwich because I always show my matric card so I can have a discount, and that's even less than what I've allocated for breakfast+dinner.

And second (and the most important reason), I get to eat vegetables. Lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, onions, green bell peppers, and some alien stuff. As a kid I hated vegetables. If there's anything in the world I hate more than a vegetable, that would be TWO vegetables. And if there's anything in the world I hate more than TWO vegetables...anyway you get the drift. It's just recently that I decided to do my body a favor and tried eating vegetables. Actually, it's only when I got here in Singapore that I started eating veggies. However, sometimes the veggies from other food stalls still suck, but I order a serving anyway. I have this psychological hoo-ha that if there's veggie in my plate, it would 'contaminate' its surrounding food with its nutrients, so even if I don't really eat the veggies, my brain is conditioned that I'd still get to absorb the nutrients and thus be healthy.

Of course it's stupid.

But, with Subway, I eat all the veggies the serving crew dumps in it. Like pizza - I eat everything that's on top of pizza. With Subway, I eat everything that's inside of it. And some more, everything is fresh. The bread is fresh - they bake their own bread. Their sandwich is definitely fresh - they make it in front of you.


The food is really yummy and healthy, it makes me feel full, and I always get a discount - so I'm happy.

PS

I don't think I'll ever buy from any other Subway branch apart from the one here in campus though. First of all, I might want to try eating other food for a change...and secondly, the price is quite expensive for me without the NUS matric card discount. Hee.


Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Perseverance

*Sigh* I still need a lot of things to do for my online ventures to really take off. It's getting frustrating already. See, I have this so-called business plan that I should follow...but you know, I skipped some steps just because I was very excited to have a website already..to show people and myself that I really am doing something. However, what I've done so far is comparable to opening a restaurant and sitting on the main counter everyday, getting depressed because no one is coming in to order. Some people do peep in, curious because someone had set up a new establishment around the neighborhood, look inside and see nothing, and go about their merry way. Of course I cannot blame them, for there really is nothing to see at this moment. It's like a restaurant trying to sell sandwiches, pizza, steamed rice, shampoo, and all other sorts of unrelated products. There is no clear target market yet, and no one can derive any value from it yet (save for the owner of the building who leased it to the restaurant owner).

Okay, maybe initially my main motivation was money...but now I want to create something more. I want to create value. But it's hard, because it entails a lot of thinking and a lot of research. It entails me to find a problem and solve it, to find a want and fill it. And that is just the beginning.

You know I have this blue notebook. It's actually a freebie by the DSTA (I believe most NUS students who went to last semester's career fair have it). Well, I've used up all its pages already for my 'online marketing' notes when I was trying to educate myself about this stuff last summer. There are a lot of valuable stuff inside, but I have yet to implement most of the stuff. And surprisingly (or maybe not), most of the materials covered in the introductory lectures of my formal Entrepreneurial Marketing module this semester are the same stuff in my blue notebook. That boosted my confidence in the contents of my blue notebook (crappy handwriting, hastily written) and I realized that business principles online and offline are the same (and I hear a loud DUH from the audience).

Anyway, it is during these moments that I live by what I'd told myself as I was starting all of this. I mean, it's very easy to say "never say die" or "never give up" when there's nothing challenging you to do so. But you see, when feelings of doubt about yourself and your own capabilities come crouching at your doorstep, it's another story altogether.

I'm going to need to reread my business plan again and implement it step by step. Why do I need to rush anyway? If people go to university and spend 3-4 years learning how to become a scientist, sociologist, engineer, or whatever profession, why can't I allow myself to take my time to learn this thing too?

Perseverance. Easy to say, difficult to live by.


Monday, August 21, 2006
maligayang bati!


I met a bunch of strangers today. Don't know who they are, but I guess they're the birthday girl's fans.=p




Saturday, August 19, 2006
Passion

I just want to say hi to who I think is the biggest fan of this blog: my father. Hi!

Anyway, I want to pen down the news I broke to Papa a while ago. I submitted my NUS Overseas Colleges application yesterday.

Yeah I know, I blogged about deciding not to apply just a few days ago. But that was just me trying to pacify myself because I had been afraid of the obstacles that popped up along the way. For a while I almost gave up, and while I was trying to merrily go by my alternative route, I found out that this burning passion inside of me to apply for NOC can't be extinguished by whatever boulder that would block my path. See, I still don't have clear solutions to the problems that happily presented themselves, but my gut tells me that this programme is really worth pursuing.

And the best part is, I can handle rejection by the NOC staff better than regretting forever that I didn't even try to apply in the first place. This is how the phrase 'going after your passion against all odds' became a reality to me. In fact, I would be happy feel alright even if NOC rejects me, because then I would be at peace with myself and can soundly carry on with my life, knowing that I took the first step and tried. Of course, if I get accepted, I would be catapulted to the pinnacle of euphoria, and as sure as the sun rises in the east, I shall do my very best over there and make everyone who knows me very proud. And as for the issues that almost hindered my application, I shall cross the bridge when I get there.

Currently, I am waiting to be interviewed. I know I want this, and I'm doing my best preparations for the interview. But I leave it all to God. Ultimately I surrender to His will and not mine.


Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Taipan

I just LOVE this speech by John Gokongwei, Jr. I've read it somewhere before and I found it again today while unearthing some stuff from the net.

John Gokongwei's speech at the Ateneo on entrepreneurship

Good morning.

I am John Gokongwei, Jr. I am not an Atenean but I feel at home with you. Today, at least. Sixty-two years ago, I could not have dreamt of appearing before the Jesuits and their students to tell the story of MY life. I was no more than a student then, at San Carlos University in Cebu, when my father died suddenly. It left me, the eldest, the responsibility of taking care of my mother and five siblings. That was tough for someone who was 13. Creditors had just seized our home and business and I had no experience with earning a living.

But here I am - not all on account of my good looks or charming personality but because I somehow survived. And when I look back, I know now that I did so because I recognized CHANGE when I saw it.

The first change was war. I had turned 15. My mother had already sent my brothers and sister to China where the cost of living was lower. From Cebu, she and I had to make money to send to them.

I turned to peddling. My day began at 5 in the morning. I would load my bicycle with soap, thread, and candles, and then bike to neighboring towns to sell my goods. On market days, I would rent a stall, lay out the goods from the bike, and make about 20 pesos a day, enough for me to survive and to buy even more goods for next time. Those days, you might call my BICYCLE AGE.

After two years of biking and peddling at 17, I entered my BATEL AGE. The batel was a small very utilitarian boat that defied the open sea and would take me farther from Cebu and all the way to Lucena, from where I would take a truck to Manila, with companions twice or thrice my age. The sea trips could take two to three weeks depending on the weather, and the land trips another five to six hours. (I was lighter then, you can imagine.) On the batel, I read books like "Gone with the Wind" under the great blue sky to pass away the time - even if we traders were always in fear of sea pirates and the bad weather.

Once, our batel hit a rock and sank. Thank heavens for my rubber tires! Those were the goods I had with me to sell in Manila. Well, we all held on to those tires, which meant I saved all those traders and those traders saved all my tires.

At that time, the War was still going on. Ironically, I look back at the War with the fondest of memories. It was the great equalizer. Almost everyone I knew had lost big and small fortunes at the time. This meant we all started at ground zero.

When the war ended, I was 19. Because of the war, the economy was more dependent than ever on imports. So when I set up Amasia, my first company, it was to import textile remnants, fruit, old newspaper and magazines, and used clothing from the U.S.

There was a side benefit to this. I would wear some of my own stock, so I would have different clothes to wear when I went courting Elizabeth, the woman who would be my wife. But at the end of it, I made some money. The Bicycle Age was over. The TRADING AGE began. By then, my brothers and sister returned from China. Together, we worked in the trading business I had begun - as bodegeros, clerks, warehousemen, cashiers, and collectors. And all this while they were all still going to school; me, I stopped schooling. Like most Chinese-Filipino families, we worked where we lived, and at times, we had to endure the stench of rotten oranges and potatoes filling our two-story apartment.

By the early '50s, we were importing cigarettes and whiskey as well. Business was good. But two factors made me change strategies again. First, I saw that trading would in time become a low-margin business BECAUSE we were at the mercy of our suppliers and buyers. Second, I saw that the government was working on import-substitution policies to encourage local business. President Quirino wanted to shore up the country's foreign exchange reserves that had been depleted as a result of the high importation of the post-war years.

So I decided to enter the AGE of MANUFACTURING. In 1957, I started a corn milling plant producing glucose and cornstarch. Why cornstarch? Because I thought - and it turned out, correctly - that the unglamorous cornstarch would be in great demand from better known businesses like textiles, paper, ice cream, pharmaceuticals, and beer.

But there was one problem: I needed capital. This was not easy. I was 30, had no big company success to back me up, and I didn't know any bankers. Thankfully, Dr. Albino Sycip, then chairman of China Bank, and DK Chiong, then president, gave me a clean loan of P500,000 to start my business. He would be asked later why he did that and he said something about knowing a good man when he saw one. (Maybe he knew something I didn't.) Anyway, from there Universal Corn Products, the predecessor of Universal Robina Corporation, was born.

Of course, the bigger cornstarch players did not give us an easy time. They engaged us in a price war. That is a nice way of saying they tried to kill us by selling low.

But we prevailed, and started to get clients like San Miguel Corporation. It was my first real taste of competition. And I liked it. I think THAT first experience prepared me for the bigger tougher competitors in my future.

By 1961, corn starch was becoming a commodity, and I saw that there was no future in a business where we had to keep lowering margins to survive. It was time to get into bigger, and riskier, games played by big multinationals like Procter and Gamble and Nestle. I saw that all they did to capture the market was to brand their products, for instance their coffee and their toothpaste. That is, give their coffee and toothpaste a name, a face, and an image that customers would instantly recognize - and identify with quality. Me, I dreamt that one day I would be the Philippine Nestle or General Foods. So the Manufacturing Age for me was giving way to the AGE of BRANDS.

So, we put up CFC, and our first successful product was Blend 45, an instant coffee we put out to directly compete with Nestle's Nescafe. We positioned it as "the poor man's coffee," hired top movie star Susan Roces to endorse it, and employed Procter-and-Gamble veterans to sell it. Basically, we took a page out of the multinational book and applied it to our business. We gave our coffee, snack food, candy, and chocolates a name, a face, an image. Today, Jack and Jill, Max candy, and Cloud 9 have become household names. It was also at this time that I returned to school for an MBA - with all due respect to the Jesuits, at De La Salle University - and a decade later for a 14-week advanced management program at Harvard. Going back to the university for studies which war had interrupted gave me an appreciation, believe me, for the beauty and the breadth of business life. This is something I believe I would never have gained if I had chosen to stop my education. The success of URC opened up many opportunities for our group. We had the choice to focus on food where we were very successful - or to pursue other businesses. We decided that there were too many good opportunities to pass up, and that remaining in our comfort zone would stunt our growth. So we got into the Age of Expansion.

For the next two decades, we pursued businesses that answered positive on FOUR CRUCIAL QUESTIONS.

First: Is there a market?

Second: Could we compete against both local and foreign players?

Third: Could we find the right people for the job and did we have enough capital to pursue the business?

Last and most important: Did we have the stomach for it? That is, could we take the sleepless nights, the cutthroat competition?

We went into textiles, retail, real estate, telecommunications, aviation, banking, and petrochemicals because we said YES to all those questions. Still, in all those industries, we were faced with tough and worthy competitors - the mighty SM Department Stores and Malls, the unbeatable PLDT, the entrenched Philippine Airlines and the powerful San Miguel Corporation. Most pundits expected us to fail. They were wrong. Robinsons Stores and Mall, Digitel, Cebu Pacific Air and Universal Robina Corporation are now market leaders in their respective fields.

That's because they offered the public a choice.

Remember the story of David and Goliath? Every industry has its Goliath. But every David knows that all giants have their weaknesses. Every weakness is an opportunity.

In a few months, we will launch our mobile services to compete with two giants, Globe and Smart. Our stomachs are churning for sure - but we know that we faced similar challenges before, and we are hopeful we can prove the pundits wrong again.

In the past decade, which is one-sixth of my entire business life, the company has tripled in size. This was the decade when our companies raised money from the global equity and debt markets, brought our companies public, and hired the best professionals to run them. In six decades, we grew from a one-man team to a group with 30,000 employees.

Now I am in what you can probably call the AGE of GLOBALIZATION. I am always asked where I stand on this issue. I say that it does NOT matter where I stand because as sure as the Ateneo Basketball Team will win next year's UAAP championship, global barriers will come crashing down, and we have no choice but to prepare ourselves for that.

Still our company will not take globalization sitting down - OUR future and the country's depend on how we act now. JG operates branded food concerns in Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Hongkong, China, and soon, Vietnam. We also sell our snack foods in India, Korea, and Taiwan - one of the few ASEAN companies to do so.

In a few years, when foreign products find their way into OUR shopping carts as they already have, we want Piattos and Chippy to find their way into THEIR shopping carts as well. Our dream is to be the first group to plant the Philippine flag throughout Asia.

As I look back, I ask myself, "What if I had stopped at cornstarch?" I would probably be the owner of the biggest cornstarch group in the country today or just as possibly, be broke.

But I chose to live my life unafraid even during times when I WAS afraid. I discovered that opportunities don't find you. You find your opportunities.

I found those opportunities when MY FATHER PASSED AWAY, WHEN WAR CAME, THROUGH CHANGES IN PRESIDENTS AND THEIR POLICIES, DURING MARTIAL LAW,DESPITE THE COUPS D' ETAT, PAST ECONOMIC BOOMS AND BUSTS, AND IN THE MIDST OF MARKET SHIFTS AND MOVEMENTS.

Now I'm 75 and retired. And funny, but I often wonder what ever happened to my first bike! The bike that was my companion during those first years when my family had lost everything. I wonder where it is now. That bike reminds me that success is not necessarily about connections, or cutting corners, or chamba - the three C's of bad business.

Call it trite - but, believe me, success CAN BE ACHIEVED through hard work, frugality, integrity, responsiveness to change - and most of all boldness to dream. These have never been just easy slogans for me. I have lived by them. I hope that many of you in this room will some day choose to be entrepreneurs. Choose to be an entrepreneur because then YOU create value. Choose to be an entrepreneur because the products, services, and jobs you create then becomes the lifeblood of our nation. But most of all, choose to be an entrepreneur because then you desire a life of adventure, endless challenge, and the opportunity to be your BEST SELF.

Thank you. *


HARD WORK, FRUGALITY, INTEGRITY, RESPONSIVENESS TO CHANGE - and most of all, BOLDNESS TO DREAM...these are the taipan's traits I also want to live by.

And I will.

And I am starting with this: www.kgeventures.com

I know I still have a lot to learn, but I am willing to educate myself and learn from others. I know it will not be a smooth ride and I definitely will have a lot of trying moments and setbacks and months of zero or negative profits, but I am not afraid of them anymore. I will treat everything as part of my learning experience. It is comforting to know that entrepreneurs are not born (because I definetely wasn't born one), but I can make myself one. It will be a long and arduous process, but I embrace it with open arms.

Cheers.=)



Saturday, August 12, 2006
ACEH Photos!

Here are some of the photos taken during my Aceh trip last June. Really grateful to Rai for sharing the photos (I don't have a camera, hint hint hehe=).


the girls from our team



the team at Changi Airport before leaving for Aceh



the butt of the plane we took



that's me, Shazana, and Rai



Team Aspire in Aceh



the only infrastructure left standing...everything else in the area had been flattened out by the tsunami



this ship was brought by the waves right in the middle of town (far from the sea) and SQUASHED 3 or 4 houses below...talk about instant death.



camwhoring by the paddy fields at dusk



finally meeting the Fajar Hidayah kids



one kid really caught my eye during their performance of a traditional dance



and there he is again...=)



a dance performance by the girls



letterbox-making session! (so later we were able to send letters to the kids and vice versa)



the second day I wore a tudung, a Muslim head-dress for the ladies, as a sign of respect to their culture (and so that I won't feel so out of place hehe=)



Sha-aa and our students, Maulizar and Iskandar



Bebek Yazid washing the dishes



Samsul writing one of us a letter during a blackout



and another cute kid



at the beach..yes I rushed into the water like that, with the tudung, long-sleeved shirt, and pants=)



this kid is really hot. haha.



my last night in aceh=)


Happy Globe Trotters

OKAY! So I was outbidded again.

Until now I only have 3 allocated modules. THREE!

Geotech, Transportation, and Entrepreneurial Marketing. I thought I'd be able to get my modules already but some guy (or girl) beat me to it. For the Wastewater module I was competing with only one person. I started with 1 point, then 50+, 100+, 500+, 1000+, 1500+...we were changing our bids almost every hour. Apparently I lost. I became overconfident because during the start of the closed bidding period, I was the only one who was bidding and I gave 1500+ points...so I thought what a waste...I thought the person gave up already so I lowered my bid to a measly 15 points, thinking I was the sole bidder anyway so I'll get it... and apparently I LOST!!!!

Wrong strategy. I always screw up my bidding.

But nevermind. I did something productive for today.

Look: www.travel.kgeventures.com.


BUT WAIT! I must warn though that I still haven't figured out how to fix one tiny flaw...and that is when you go to the above URL only the header is shown, and below there's something that says PAGE CANNOT BE FOUND or something. Anyhoo just click the link there and it should be okay. Okay?!

Yep yep I partnered with TravelNow.com so I now have my very own travel website. *CLAP CLAP CLAP*

Later it can be accessed by this address: www.kgetravel.com so it's easier to remember, but now it's still resolving some settings so we'll just have to wait. We offer vacation packages: Air, Car, Cruise, Hotel...and there's even a roadtrip package (in the US hee). If you're not ready yet to go for a trip anytime soon, you could always browse the Destination Guides, so you could find out where to go and how to plan your trip. You could get recommendations on attractions, restaurants, and hotels, and up-to-date weather, health tips, and general information for thousands of destinations. Just travel around the world virtually also can. And oh, for selected countries you can also view the travel/ vacation package costs in the local currency. See, so nice right??!!!

Okay, after 3 months of studying how to start an online biz, I finally have something I'd be proud of promoting. Haha...the whole day I was super stressed, like my brain cells are annihilated one by one and almost feeling hopeless in being able to set up this website..but finally here it is. Woohoo! (Okay I know I still have to fix the homepage but yeah, I still want to celebrate).

I'll be setting aside maybe 1-2 hours per day ONLY working on this thing, like driving traffic to it by going to forums or submitting articles with the website link, etc. School's starting next week already and I need to promise myself not to sacrifice my studies for this (but for me, looking for ways to do business online is waaaaay more interesting than studying engineering. It keeps me up all night yet also gives me the boost to get out of my bed early in the morning, like today.)

Can't wait for the next schoolbreak again so I'll have all the time in the world for this hehe=)


Friday, August 11, 2006
Escherichia Coli

has nothing to do with this post.

I didn't get what would have been mymost favoritest hands-down nothing-else-comes-close module for this semester: Forensic Science. CRAP.

I was outbidded. I placed 501 points because that's almost everything I have right now for my General Account (for my Programme account I have a whopping 3800 points which I cannot use to bid for a GEM module like Forensic Science...crap).

It's the first time they're offering this module in NUS. Last year, I was envious of Maybeline and Michael (Tulod) because they have this module in NTU, and I also want to take! I saw Michael's notes and they have lessons about blood drops, etc...CSI stuff!!! (And for the uninitiated, CSI is like my most favoritest hands-down nothing-else-comes-close TV show, can?! Especially CSI Miami, the one with Horatio whom almost everyone I know hates).

My initial plan for this semester is to take up 6 modules...and for the first time in history I was planning to take up only 2 core modules (and 2 Technopreneurship Minor modules and 2 GEM modules). You see, I was really looking forward to this semester because I thought most of the modules I'd be taking are those that genuinely interest me. But no, that is not meant to be.

I also didn't get my other GEM, Reading Visual Images because of the freakingly high bid points, and another minor module- Financial Accounting- for the same reason.

Right now I only have 3 allocated modules. I altered my semester schedule a bit also. For this semester I'm going to follow next semester's schedule, and for next semester I'd follow what would have been this semester's. That means I'm taking 3 core (Geotechnical Engineering, Transportation Engineering, and Water and Wastewater Engineering) and 2 minor (Entrepreneurial Marketing and Technological Innovation) and no GEM. (And I haven't taken even a single GEM module yet since the dawn of the ages, and without that I cannot graduate. And somemore I'm in year 3 already. NEXT SEM MUST DEFINITELY TAKE).

And for my choice of core modules, I just took whatever Sundeep took. I have the same level of affinity (or lack of) for my core modules so it doesn't matter which ones I take, and I even have an incentive if I have someone to take them with because I need to be infected with some enthusiasm for my core modules right? And some more, Sundeep is going to France next semester so I think this semester is a better time to take more core modules where we could be classmates, than next semester when he is gone.


Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Galit na galit ako.


Friday, August 04, 2006
leaving on a jet plane again

Tis my last day at home until December. Can't wait for the Christmas holidays to come.

The Fajar Hidayah kids are coming over to Singapore tomorrow!!! Woohoo! I'm going to see them again. Hope bebek kampung is there haha!


Wednesday, August 02, 2006
*&^*% !!!

I am thoroughly, utterly, supercalifragilisticexpialidociously feeling sucky right now and I just have to let this out.

Or not.

Arayt bring it on...



Milnobecientosnobentaynuebe tayo nagkakilala hinayupak ka. At ngayon, makalipas ang pitong taon, tuwing sinusubukan kitang kausapin, ako'y napapaisip ng "Sana may kausap ako". Mabuti pa yung mga tipaklong sa kabukiran ng Indonesia, interesado pa sa mga sinasabi ko. Ang kapal ng mukha mo, mas makapal pa sa balat ng kalabaw. Hala sige, magsaya kayo at naway magka selective amnesia na ako upang mabura na ang pait na naramdaman ko nung nakita ko ang mga pesteng litrato nyo.