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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Father's Day

I have a friend laid-off of his overseas job and now stay in his home without income, savings and a remote chance to find an overseas job in the soonest time possible. His once vibrant personality is replaced by a timid and serious looks. Being jobless reaches his inner core that he began to feel useless.
How can you provide hope when everything around you seems embrace hopelessness?.
Two days ago, his son came from school crying and my friend asked why. The child said that he can not go to school anymore because his classmates teased him of having always no money.
My friend was devastated. He can take ridicule from anybody of having no money but for his son to suffer because of circumstances not his fault is not acceptable. He as a father can do something to earn money but his 7 years old can not. Who is going to act then, he asked himself.
Yesterday is Father's Day and that day he packed his bag and went to Manila to look for a new job. Not for his sake but for his child.
A man can be transform when he became a father provided that one ingredient reaches his core: love.

Monday, June 08, 2009

My dream


I was on my last day of my retreat in Lucban, Quezon. My mind is at peace and i am totally recharge. After several minutes of reading, I fall asleep. in my golden slumber, I have a dream. Let me share it with you.
A priest is very popular in his parish that his charisma attracts followers and believers. One day a poison letter is send to the bishop,priests of other parish and to lay people. The letter accused the charismatic priest of having a woman and getting her pregnant. Naturally, gossips and rumor mills circulated in the parish. The priest is devastated. For one month he refused to meet people and never say mass to any church. The poison letter is like a spear wounding his heart.
Then one day, the people is surprised to see the priest greeting people outside the church and began to say mass more passionately. The people are amazed on the transformation of the priest and they asked him how he overcome the gossips. The priest just say "I recognized that I can not please all people, that it is always possible that a leader is not a leader unless he is ready to be wounded".
After several years, the priest became a bishop and he transform his church by refusing to be served by anybody when he is invited to a lunch or dinner; he transferred his room air-con to the visitors waiting area; his room is bare only bed a small table and chair can be found; he refused to buy expensive car and rather take the bus or jeepney; he made sure that as a bishop he is a servant especially of the poor.
When he died, all parishioners weep as if a part of them died. He is the only saint they met in their lifetime.
As I wake up, I am crying because still I have to meet such priest/bishop in my lifetime.
Do you know somebody?

Monday, March 23, 2009

The Tao of Charlie Munger



Charlie Munger, 84, is Warren Buffett’s principal sounding board and co-strategist. With his help Buffett has evolved from a successful but small-time money manager to the world’s richest man, with unparalled global influence – and on the eyes of some admirers, he wouldn’t be where he is without Munger.
I am one of his loyal fan and maybe one of the few Filipinos who seek his wisdom on investing. Let me share to you Munger’s five thoughts to help investors in today’s recessionary environment:
Avoid the Middleman. Maybe we should think twice about or brokers and mutual funds. Munger says that due to its middling performance and high fees, the money management industry as a whole “ gives no value added” to its customers. “They are croupiers taking profits out of the System”.
Pick Common Sense over Math. Another knock against the pros? Their obsession with statistical analysis – “boring gravel sifting,” as Munger calls it – obscures insights about which businesses are poised to succeed. “ These people od involved computations, and they are walking right by great boulders of gold.” Meanwhile, he and Buffett “just look for no-brainer decisions…..We don’t leap 7-foot fences.”
Think Like Ben Franklin. Munger believes in educating himself deeply about, well, almost everything , “invading other people’s territory” to develop a “mental latticework of theory” to shape his investing decisions. His poster boy for this approach: Ben Franklin. “He was a self-educated man who wandered over vast territory, “Munger says. “He recognized that he needed higher math, so he went out and learned algebra….. Learn your gaps, and fill them. That’s what I do.”
Sit on your assets, if you can. . While most investors associate Buffett and Munger with finding good stocks cheap, Munger points out that quality can trump price. “If you buy something because it is undervalued, you have to think about selling it when it approaches your calculation of its intrinsic value,” he says. That’s hard. But if you buy a few great companies, then you can sit on your ass. That’s a good thing.”
Source: Smartmoney interview; recent speeches; Poor Charlie’s Almanack

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Motivating people


In the corporate world and in the academe one common findings I discovered. To motivate the best and the brightest there are only 2 key factors needed:

1. You should give the best people the freedom to do his job. The high-performing people should be treated as professionals and should not be micro-managed. Because they really don't like to be managed at all. They prefer to be led, being provided with a clean set of goals and objectives and given the creative freedom to accomplish their targets. They seek empowerment that comes from a leader
who trust them completely.

2. The best people wants to have an impact and to be recognized for it. the company should always remember that their best people are passionate on what they are doing. They can easily be spotted because these best people aligned his objectives with his boss or his organization.

To motivate employees is easy, the difficult thing is having the skills and the will to do it.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

FrancisM


We are made to contribute and Francis Magalona was one of the few who carried the banner. Our generation is marred by confusion and rebellion to authority that we viewed as repressive and protector of personal interest. Francis M songs expressed our generations sentiment and his death pierced our heart. So long Francis, we are sure you will still write and sing songs in heaven!
KALEIDOSCOPE WORLD

So many faces, so many races
Different voices, different choices
Some are mad, while others laugh
Some live alone with no better half
Others grieve while others curse
And others mourn behind a big black hearse
Some are pure and some half-bred
Some are sober and some are wasted
Some are rich because of fate and
Some are poor with no food on their plate
Some stand out while others blend
Some are fat and stout while some are thin
Some are friends and some are foes
Some have some while some have most

Every color and every hue
Is represented by me and you
Take a slide in the slope
Take a look in the kaleidoscope
Spinnin' round, make it twirl
In this kaleidoscope world

Some are great and some are few
Others lie while some tell the truth
Some say poems and some do sing
Others sing through their guitar strings
Some know it all while some act dumb
Let the bassline strum to the bang of the drum
Some can swim while some will sink
And some will find their minds and think
Others walk while others run
You can't talk peace and have a gun
Some are hurt and start to cry
Don't ask me how don't ask me why
Some are friends and some are foes
Some have some while some have most

Every color and every hue
Is represented by me and you
Take a slide in the slope
Take a look in the kaleidoscope
Spinnin' round, make it twirl
In this kaleidoscope world

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Rebelyn Pitao, 20


(Evangeline Maasin Pitao, Rebelyn's mother. MindaNews photo courtesy of Rene B. Lumawag, Pixels & Cutlines)
A teacher from Davao who was abducted last Wednesday was found dead last March 8. She is just 20 years old, living the difficult life as we all experienced on a daily basis. She is a woman who committed no crime and whose only case her torturer and murderer can think of is that her father is an NPA commander. The sins of her father the criminals make sure she shouldered the pain. They mutilated her genital and stab her repeatedly with ice-pick. Rape is evident.
The church is beginning to observe the lenten season but this early we already grieved because of this terrible injustice.
If this government will not arrest the criminals they will bear the brunt of the people's anger.
What happened to Rebelyn only validates that evil still resides in the heart of those who are supposed to practice Christian virtues.
They are an abomination in the eyes of God and the murderers can never rest in peace!.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

College Education = Middle Class




College education is under question nowadays. Some people bashed it as worthless while others claimed it is a waste of time and money. The thousands who graduate yearly from colleges and universities will find it difficult to land a job in today’s recessionary times. The more than 35,000 nursing students who passed the board exam recently can not be entirely absorbed by all hospitals in the country. The law of supply and demand will surely come into play and it will result to lower salary of nurses. This reality further fuelled the fire that college education will likely not give the parents the return of investment they dreamed since their child was born.
The diploma-mill-school aggravates the situation by producing graduates who do not possessed even basic written English skills.
Why I am then proposing that the Filipino youth should pursue their college education?. BECAUSE THERE IS NO OTHER WAY to earn a regular salary, have a formal employment and crawled to middle class but to earn a college education.
There are people who sarcastically point to us that they can earn money without completing their college. Their ultimate hero is Bill Gates who dropped out of Harvard in his 2nd year, created Microsoft and never looked back.
I always loved to point to them that they are not Bill Gates who has parents earning lots of dollars, who studied in the best and expensive private elementary and high school, who has a country that passionately reward creativity and out-of-the-box thinking and a business environment where venture capitalists abound.
The challenge is clear for Filipinos that the Philippine environment is chaotic, bureaucratic and dwells on penalty rather than rewards.
But college education can change the landscape. It can make Filipinos open-minded, challenges traditional mores, invests more, entrepreneurship focused, back democratic process and support politicians with right economic policies.
The problem is when Filipinos college graduate do not possess the above characteristics. This will validate the claim that colleges and universities failed on their sworn duty. This failure will result to a life of hand-to-mouth existence even though a college diploma hangs in the wall.
Those who love the Philippines I am sure will not allow our country to slide in the level of North Korea or Zimbabwe.
We can do it by acting as one race and with one aspiration: the creation of a middle class with characters shaped by a solid college education.

Arnel L. Cadeliña

Sunday, February 08, 2009

Love =Unity + Patriotism


There is a race called Filipinos who are famous on not loving their country called the Philippines. The people spit everywhere, throw their garbage wherever they like and curse the weather when it is cold and even curse it whenever it is hot. You can find people pee in the wall, in electrical post, in jeepney tires and all places that are vacant. They are unashamed throwing their trashes in the river or in the ocean and if you will not shout at them they will even throw their refuse in the street or in front of your backyard.
These people, who are also famous to take a bath everyday even three times a day, are the same people who violates every rule indicated in the constitution down to municipal laws. If they are elected officials, they get 5 % commission on government projects and if they are appointed officials they equally appoint relatives to fill up vacant positions. The World Bank is even amazed the expertise of Filipinos on manipulating contracts.
Down south, kidnapping is common. They said they have no jobs and kidnapping is an occupation. You can bet it will land in the Guinness Book.
Foreigners are wondering what kind of race this called Filipinos. These same foreigners admire the natural resources and the potential of the people. They are wondering why this race can not move on the same direction and can not feel that they should have common aspirations.
These foreigners are telling us the truth that from the high echelons of the government down to the barangay level and even deep down to the family level we are lacking love of our country.
We say it, we sing the national anthem but we failed to put it in action.
There is only one solution on the problems of the Filipino race and that is to love our country more than ourselves. That is the secret of all countries who made itself successful.
We should not be stupid to notice it.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Blessing Prayer in a Time of Sickness


Lately some of my friends are getting sick. One is stricken with cancer and a handful are hospitalized due to stress related issues. As I browse my Catholic Digest an article by Edward Hayes caught my attention. I decide to share an excerpt of his book specifically the "Blessing Prayer in a Time of Sickness".

If you or your love ones suffer from any illness say this prayer:
Lord of health and wholeness,
your servant________________(name)
now lies sick
and desires to be restored
to the balance of good health.
Hear, O Lord, our prayers
For the healing of him/her
whom we love so much.

Remove from him/her this illness
so that, fully recovered
and restored to health,
he/she may return
with renewed zeal
to the daily life that we share.


Catholic Digest January 2009 issue page 111.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Pre-need Demons


My teeth gnashes in anger as I heard the news that three pre-need companies declared bankruptcy without any warning to their planholders. Legacy Plans, scholarship Plans and All Asia Plans announced that they can not meet anymore their obligations.
Nobody from these companies held a press conference and apologize to the public. Instead thru their media they are blaming the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the current economic recession as the culprit.
These people are the personification of Beelzebul. How can they stomached to milked the money of hardworking Filipinos for the past years? The middle class are their primary customers who skipped a little luxury in life in order to pay the premiums with the hope of providing good education for their children. Don't they feel the pain?
The SEC is incompetent in the sense that they did not monitor strictly these pre-need companies. They deserved to be fired because they failed to protect the interest of the people.
Just like the case of CAP and Pacific plans nobody will go to jail on this latest mess.
These pre-need companies are highway-robbers who inflicted the highest form of injustice. They kill hopes and dreams.
They deserve to rot in jails.

Monday, January 19, 2009

6 Eternal Truth on Investing


1. Live within your means or below it.
2. Never use a credit card and avoid the plague it is.
3. Borrow money only for education and housing purpose.
4. Never invest in stocks with the money intended for food and next years college tuition.
5. Invest money only if you have 3 months cash reserve.
6. Invest money that you will not use for the next 10 years. It will give you enough time to defeat the bear and earn a decent profit.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

ATENEO MBA ALUMNI BATCH 2001


MASTER IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION - 233 graduates
(STANDARD PROGRAM BATCH 2001)
ADAPON, GLORIA M.
ADOREMOS, MA. ZARAH B.
AGUILA, RANDOLPH Q.
AGUSTIN, ERWIN C.
ALARCON, RUBINA R.
ALCANTARA, IMELDA C.
ALCARAZ, MARIE GRACE L.
ALVAREZ, EDWIN C.
ANCENO, EDGAR P.
ANG, ELEANOR GRACE T.
AQUINO, ANN MARIE JARDIN P.
ARAÑES, MARY CLARE B.
ARMADA, LETICIA C.
ARROJADO, ALLAN R.
ASI, MARIA CECILIA M.
ATENCIO, FRANKLIN G. JR.
BADINAS, ERLINDA V.
BALCOBA, MARIA EDITHA B.
BALISACAN, ELMER B.
BAÑARES, RUBYROSA G.
BARCELONA, GENARO P.
BARCENA, JAN ARVIN S.
BATARA, MONICA EMELDA T.
BAUTISTA, ANDRE JOSE C.
BELTRAN, JOANNA C.
BISCOCHO, EDNA G.
BONGALA, SAMMY E.
BONGCAS, GIOVANNI D.
BULATAO, MICHAEL PHILIP M.
BUNYI, MARK ANTHONY V.
CABAÑES, FATIMA MARCIA S.G.
CABER, ANNA MARIE A.
CABRERA, MARIA CARIDAD O.
CADELIÑA, ARNEL L.
CANTO, ROWENA M.
CARANDANG, FLORENCIO R.
CARTONEROS, CYBELE B.
CARVAJAL, MARIA THERESA M.
CASIÑO, MARIE PATRICIA G.
CASTILLO, ANGELITA A.
CATALAN II, EMMANUEL M.
CATINDIG, VERONICA T.
CHAN, NELSON S.
CHEN, HIRONG
CHOA, ALLAN T.
CHUA, MARY GRACE L.
COCHIEN, HEINRICH YOKOGERI S.
CORTEZ, DOLOR S.
CUSI, FERLIZA P.
DATU, MARIA NOREEN N.
DE GUZMAN, ERLINDA B.
DE GUZMAN, MAUREEN CECILIA T.
DE LEON, CHERYL S.
DE OCAMPO, FR. HENRY C.
DELA ROSA, TEODORA B.
DELLOMAS, BONIFACIO N. JR.
DE VERA, DENNIS I.
DIAZ, JOEL N.
DIAZ, MARY RACHELL R.
DINEROS, CHERYL R.
DOMINGO - GONZALES, ROMINA PRISCILLA F.
DOROS, EDWARD R.
DUFOURNAUD, MARIA DOLLY B.
EKO SUSETYO, KURNIAWAN
EUSTAQUIO, AILEEN R.
EVANGELISTA, MA. COLEEN B.
EVANGELISTA, MARY RUTH E.
FERNANDO, JOEL S.
FINEZA, MA. ANTONIA T.
FLORES, BARBARA KAREN T.
FONTANILLA, MARISSA M.
FRANCISCA, LAMSARULLY JUDITH
FUNELAS, HERBERT E.
GAAC, SOCORO CARIDAD L.
GAGATIGA, JENNELYN A.
GAJISAN, MARIA ELENA A.
GALVAN, JESUS G.
GARCIA, ANNA LIZA E.
GIRON, REGINALD R.
GO, JENNIFER C.
GOC - ONG, JUDITH T.
GOH, RAZIEL B.
GOMEZ, VITUS GERALD Z.
GOSECO, GERARDO ALFONSO S.
GUERRERO, JANET P.
GUERRERO, MARY JANICE C.
GUEVARRA, NOVA A.
GUEVARRA, ROMELA V.
GUZMAN, EMILIANO A.
HERMANO, JOHN O.
HIPOLITO, BONITA M.
HIPOLITO, HELEN J.
HIZON, KRISTINE A.
HUSSAIN, MAQBOOL
IBE, MILAGROSA D.
JACOBA, JANINA ROSA V.
JALBUENA, LAURA MARY ALLEN D.
JAVIER, ALBERTO FERNANDO A.
JAVIER, JOSEPHINE D.
JOAQUIN, ROSENDA RHODA C.
KILALA - MURALLON, BRENDA C.
KING, ULYSSES S. JR.
LAMADRID, PAOLO R.
LAO, ALEXANDER M.
LAYUG, JENNIFER N.
LEDESMA, MARIA KATRINA SELINA L.
LEE, MICHAEL GEORGE M.
LEYNES, MAIAH ANGELA R.
LI, HUI MIN
LIM, JOHN HUI KIANG N.
LINGAD, ENRICH H.
LIUSON, JOYCE C.
LOPEZ, MYRA V.
LOSTE II, AUGUSTUS ROMUALDO D.
LUIS, CATLEYA S.
LUNA, JOY C.
MADLANGBAYAN, MELANIE S.
MAGANA, LIZA LIBERTINE L.
MAGBAYAO, DONALD M.
MAGDALENA, NINA MARIA
MAGLALANG, AMILLIE A.
MAGNO, ELFIN JAY E.
MAGTOTO, ARIEL L.
MALACCA, SANTIAGO S.
MALLO, MELVIN P.
MAMIIT, NOEL M.
MANALANG, JO - ANN MARIE C.
MANALAYSAY, ELIZA R.
MANALO, CRISELDA K.
MANALO, VINCENT PHILIP P.
MANAS, EDUARDO G. JR.
MANCILLA, DENNIS G.
MANGUERRA, RHODA C.
MANIO, ROWENA JOY D.
MANUEL, RUEL A.
MANUEL, SAHLEE RUTH S.
MARCELINO, ORLANDO ANTHONY C.
MARTIN, ENRIQUE R.
MASAGCA,IVEE R.
MEDIODIA, NOEL G.
MENDOZA, JENNIFER H.
MENDOZA, MARY MABEL L.
MIJARES, MA. VINA PAMELA M.
MIRALLES, GILBERT F.
MONTE, MARIBEL V.
MORALES, EDEN D.
MORENO, HAZEL S.
MORENO, MHELISSA A.
MUSTERA, MA. CORINNA U.
NACIANCENO, RENE S.
NAPIGKIT, ALFIE P.
NAVARRA, JINA P.
NEPOMUCENO, NILO PAUL H.
NIEVA, MARIA LUISA O.
ONG, COLETTE H.
ORDOÑEZ, CAESAR M.
ORDOÑEZ, JONATHAN S.
ORTIGAS, RAFAEL B.
PADILLA, RAQUEL G.
PALAD, BRENDA ROSELLA E.
PALENZUELA, MARILOU ANN F.
PALISOC, MARY ROXAN L.
PALO, PHILIP MARTIN P.
PAN, ARLYN V.
PANGALANGAN, FAY ANN A.
PANGCOG, MELVIN L.
PARAYNO, CARMINA RAISSA S.
PASIMIO, GEMMA RITA CECILIA N.
PATIÑO, ELIZABETH V.
PAULINO, MONICA B.
PEÑA, EMILIANO D. JR.
PEREZ, YVONNIE G.
PUALENGCO, MARRIANNE S.
QUEBRATA, NERIZZA C.
QUINSAY, SOUCI HANNAH Q.
QUINTOS, ROBERTO B.
RAMOS, EVA MARIE S.
RANGA, FILOMENO M. JR.
RAYOS, CECILLIE T.
RAZAL, MARIA IMELDA S.
REJANO, VLADIMIR V.
RELONA, AMELIA
REYES, MA. LOURDES U.
RILLORAZA, MYLA U.
ROBEL, JOSEPH ERIC L.
RONQUILLO, MARY GRACE C.
ROSALDO, ALDINE H.
ROSALES, JOSEPH FERDINAND L.
RUFO, ROWENA O.
SAENZ, ELOISA MA. VICTORIA L.
SALVADOR, EMELBIN M.
SALVADOR, RODA C.
SANDOVAL, BERNADETTE C.
SAÑEZ, AMELOU T.
SANTOS, BERNARD R.
SANTOS, DONABEL B.
SANTOS, GISELA ILONA D.
SAYSON, MA. BELLA R.
SAYSON, MARIA ASSAMPTA C.
SIA, MARY JEAN R.
SIA, SUSAN ANGELI M.
SICAT, MA. RITA LUISA S.
SIMBULAN, LYNNE C.
SORIANO, PATRICIA B.
SOSA, MERLIE A.
SUAREZ - CONCEPCION, MA. RONORA
SUNTAY, MA. ANGELICA C.
TAALA - BUNTUA, CATHERINE
TAE SOON, KIM
TAN, JASON PETER P.
TAN, MARK LAWRENCE V.
TAN, ROCHELLE T.
TOLENTINO, ROWELL C.
TRINIDAD, LORENA C.
TRINOS, MARIE ANTONIETTE V.
VELASQUEZ, ROCHELLE D.
VELILLA, SHEILA MAE M.
VENERACION, MARIA GORDIANA K.
VICENCIO, RAOUL FERDINAND S.
VIGO, CHRISTINE S.
VILLENA, MA. VIVIENE L.
WIDYADMONO, VENANTIUS MARDI
WISCO, IVY JOY P.
WU, MEI - LI
YAM, MA. AMELIA AMORA
YANGA, MICHAEL S.
YBAÑEZ, CARINA M.
YU, ELMER J.
YU, MICHAEL S.
YU, ORLANDO B.
YUE SUI
ZARA, EMMANUEL G. JR.
ZARAGOZA, EDGAR A.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

DECLARATION OF FINANCIAL EMPOWERMENT


There is a Declaration of Independence that every freedom loving people look forward to. It means to them freedom from colonial powers, tyranny or dictatorship. In the Philippines it was proclaim twice, in June 12, 1898 and July 4, 1945. Our country right after 1945 was never occupied again by foreign powers. But since independence day , we are still not free. Not of foreign dominations but of financial ignorance.
This new year, as my contribution to the Filipinos who would like to unshackle the chain of financial ignorance, I drafted the DECLARATION OF FINANCIAL EMPOWERMENT . The purpose of which as your guide and as my New Year’s gift to you.

DECLARATION OF FINANCIAL EMPOWERMENT
By: Arnel L. Cadeliña
1. I will find a job or create my own job as a starter to build wealth.
2. I will use my income to build my own house.
3. I will develop more skills to earn more, live within my means, save and invest not less than 10% of my income.
4. I will prepare early for my retirement by investing in diversified portfolio,
5. I will learn more about mutual funds and stocks.
6. I will teach my children on how to handle their finances.
7. I will support locally made products and competitive Filipino enterprises.
8. I will manage my budget and debt proactively.
9. I will not spend on things that are not needed in order to have a 3 months cash reserve.
10. I will always spend money that will have a positive impact on my family and my community.

(You may share this DECLARATION OF FINANCIAL EMPOWERMENT to all Filpinos you know around the world. Just acknowledge the author. You may e-mail me arnelcadelina@gmail.com )

Para sa QNHS section JPM get-together


CLOSING REMARKS
Ang high school daw ang pinakamasaya sa lahat kasi wala ka pang masyadong alalahanin sa buhay except lang magpacute sa crush at kung paano pagkakasyahin ang baon. Ang buhay natin sa Quezon High ay simple lang kasi mayroon tayong tinatawag na common denominator sabi ni Mr. Basañez. Ang pagkakatulad nating lahat ay galling tayo sa hirap. Maaring ilan sa atin ang may kaya ang pamilya noong panahon na iyon pero kung susuriin higit sa kalahati ang pumapasok na pamasahe lang ang baon.
Ang section na JPM ang mukha ng kabataang nagsisikap umahon sa kahirapan. Kung di ako nagkakamali lahat tayo pumasa sa NCEE. Lahat tayo ay nagsikap magaral sa kolehiyo, mayroon nag working student, mayroong pinagsabay ang kolehiyo at trabaho, at mayroong nagtrabaho muna bago nagkolehiyo.
Ang section na JPM ngayon ay iba na ang mukha. Bukod sa tayo ay tumaba at maaring tumaba din ang ating wallet. Pero ang hiling ko lang at maaring hiling ng lahat na sana ay huwag nating kalimutan ang ating pinanggalingan. Galing tayo sa hirap kaya dapat tayong tumulong sa nangangailangan.
Iba ang darating na 2009. Ito ang taon na madarama natin na ang ating kumpanyang pinagtratabuhan ay kaunti lang ang kikitain at kailangan nilang magtipid. Ang taong 2009 din ang taong ang mga negosyante ay madarama na ang kanilang customer ay kumokonti dahil din sa pagtitipid.
Ano ang kailangang gawin ng bawat isang JPM.
1. Sa mga kakaklase nating may negosyo huwag mahiyang humingi ng tulong sa bawat isa, Kung kailangan ninyo ng bagong customer sabihin sa yahoo group natin. Kung kailangan ng payo sa negosyo mag-email. Iwasan lang ang pag utang, alam nyo na ang resulta nyan pag hindi nagbayad. Huwag mahiyang i-announce kung anong klaseng negosyo mayroon ka at huwag ding mahiya na mag-endorse ng produkto.
2. Sa mga kakaklase nating nagtratrabaho sa mga kumpanya, doblehin ang sikap sa trabaho para hindi matanggal sa trabaho. Pumasok ng maaga at umuwi ng late. Laging bigyan ng impormasyon ang inyong mga boss para lagi kang maalala.
3. Pag mayroong bakanteng trabaho sa ating mga kumpanya, i-announce sa yahoo group. Tulungan natin ang naghahanap at maghahanap ng trabaho.
4. Pag mayroong parents, kapatid o sino mang mahal sa buhay na namayapa i-announce sa yahoo group para madalaw ng bawat isa. Mahigit na tayong 40, kailangan nating damahin ang pagmamahal ng bawat isa bago pa tayo tawagin.
5. Dapat mayroon tayong kumpletong directory ng bawat isa, Telephone number, cellphone number, address, kursong natapos o kung ano negosyo o expertise para madali ang ating komunikasyon.
6. Huwag kalimutan ang ating adviser na si mam JPM. Tayo lang ang nagpapasaya sa kanya. Lagi natin syang alalahanin kung mayroon tayong get-together.
7. Huwag nating kalimutan ang Quezon High. Kung kaya nating mag-ambagan ng P300 sa ating get-together, kaya din nating magdonate ng tig P200 sa isang taon para sa scholarship. Ang P8000 ay malaki ng bagay sa Quezon High.
Ang 2009 daw ang susubok sa katatagan ng bawat Filipino. Pero ang section JPM sigurado ako kaya natin itong lampasan, kasi galing tayo sa hirap at dahil ayaw na nating bumalik doon, nagigi tayong matapang na harapin ang anumang pagsubok sa buhay.
Salamat at mabuhay ang JPM!