Archive for Academics

#82 Laughter for 300 bucks: Comedy Bars’ Secret to Success

Comedy bars are the new trend of the century, amidst the oil price hike, maltreated Malaysian babies, and the simmering international brawl for that tiny, rocky island. The world is becoming distressed of the hustle and bustle of real life; people are willing to shell a million bucks for crisp laughter. The society today dictates that without money, you have relatively no right to get your funny bone tickled.

This sad fact doesn’t matter, because everyone benefits from this barter fair and square. The people laugh; the management earns; the flamboyant talents are soon to be discovered and seen in fantaseryes and slapstick movies. No wonder why comedy bars are such a hit.

During our first visit to one comedy bar, we found out how the system exactly works. What makes people laugh; the management earn; and their talents famous? Through keen and persnickety observation, comedy bars’ secret to success can finally be laid out on the table.

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#81. Second semester mumbles

Compared to first, second semester passed by swiftly. Adjustment period has come to an end; I told myself it’s time to take things more seriously. To my dismay, my academic performance declined. But gladly I can proudly say that I got more immersed in the world. Here are the gifts I nurtured this semester. I intentionally didn’t mention my professors’ names for privacy.
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#80. A Game of Shadows

Author’s Note: The first thing I planned to share for this requirement is how commuting changed my life, but I’ve already used that last semester. With deeper contemplation arise new anecdotes about finding myself, while holding onto the fine string of defiance. Both papers are about how external factors shaped the way I think now. What makes this story different is its ‘stream of consciousness’ manner in showing how my thoughts flow during this moment of thought and solitude. This has got to be the most personal piece I’ve written in my entire life.

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#78. Cancer

English has always been one of my favorite subjects, because it foments me to think wider than I could have imagined. My immense interest in this class seems not evident however because of my negligent classroom behavior and a defective work ethic. Perhaps external factors like the early timeslot, and the infamous Katipunan traffic provoke these faults, but I still blame nothing but myself.

Ever since grade school, I’ve been plagued with bad habits of slouching, yawning and sleeping in class. The non-conformist part of me back then did not care if these lenient habits would demerit me from a deportment award. I thought back then that I was just being true to myself. No pretensions. What everyone sees is what everyone gets. If I was pissed, everyone around me would sense it and thus ending up being pissed also. I was weak at hiding my irrational moods. As I’ve observed, I’ve brought this unlady-like behavior to college. Little did I know that a simple slouching and yawning would reflect my upbringing and integrity. Character development is best depicted in simplest ways like how I sit and converse with other people. More importantly, respect to authority is best shown by practicing proper decorum. I’ve learned this lesson quite recently; and I’ve been working on it.

To be brutally honest, I didn’t know what to write here at first because despite all the discouraging factors aforementioned, I still manage to make it to class and submit requirements on time. My slouching problem could be applicable to anyone; some people in the classroom might have even done worse than I did. I didn’t think I’ve done a grave act of disrespect in this class until recently.  That moment was when I crammed my final research paper in one and a half day before its deadline. My drafts were pretty much a mess mainly because of arising pressures of passing my math subject. I focused on this 6-unit subject too much to the point of procrastinating the drafts the night and dawn before the peer review sessions. The worse of it all,  I wasn’t able to polish it until the weekend before the submission day.

That weekend had been the most malevolent yet in my college life. I had gotten a research paper to overhaul, a report to write in another subject, plus a massive migraine to drive me nuts. My unyielding engrossment in the topic had been dominated by my poor time management. I’d let distractions steer me away from doing a quality paper. More concretely, I’d stumbled upon a lot of interesting videos and articles about Philippine politics that were irrelevant to my paper. However, I still made sure that I abide by the guidelines from my teacher and the book to ensure a high grade. A small part of me was complacent because I’ve done a lot of cramming in the past years, and I still managed to pull those off. The greater part, on the other hand, was saying something had gone terribly wrong.

Worry had been fidgeting my knees upon submitting my research paper. Everyone but me enjoyed the soothing relief of concluding a three-month worth of hardwork.  I was on a high at first — excited to deliver my best in the paper about my genuine interest. Throughout that day, I kept on asking myself: “How did I let myself finish it off that way?”. I was thinking that nothing could provide me solace to this regret but perhaps another opportunity to polish my paper, which I fortunately got weeks after. I couldn’t believe it; my prayers of a chance to rectify my mistakes were answered. I will not blow it off this time.

Bad habits are carcinogenic to character development. If not detected and cured early, these would cause life-threatening damages in our system. My declining performance in a subject I love is caused by terminal carcinogens in forms of a lax decorum and procrastination. Small transgressions like this should be corrected immediately before further impairment. I learned not to let these faults overwhelm the joy in learning.

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#65. Day 4 – Rant about our generation

‘Most Appreciative Generation’
What do we really appreciate these days?

Since our generation seems to just take everything all in, media has notably become more lax in portraying today’s pop culture. Our standards of what we consider a poignant ‘work of art’ have gone deeper down the drain that we think dumb and scripted reality shows are worth our much-awaited recreational time. The value of our ‘appreciation’ nowadays has been exploited thoroughly for liking so many love-wretched status updates and narcissistic profile photos on Facebook.
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#063. Thing that has sentimental value to me: My Bear Bank!

I come from a frugal family. When I was a kid, I was affirmatively brainwashed by my parents to save every centavo I acquire instead of hitting the sari-sari store for cheap candy and marbles. Thus, they finally bought me a money container for my growing net worth. As time wafts by, economic stability fluctuates; the Apple era emerges; commercial banks now offer ATM accounts to minors. And I’ m a college student now, still faithfully using the same container to store all my saved allowance.
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