Friday, December 20, 2024

How's my grooming? A self examination this Christmas season

How's my grooming?
A self examination this Christmas season

"Simplicity, good taste and grooming are the three fundamentals of good dressing and these do not cost money." - Christian Dior

Grooming enhances dignity in the profession. Alumni meet after many years since high school. They are leaders in the fields of education, science, judiciary, law, legislation and military. Author is at the extreme left.

Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature School on Blog

Quite often on the road, I read from the rear of a bus or van, “How’s my grooming?” printed bold and clear. Below it is written a cellphone number or two you can call. It is a discreet message. If the driver of the vehicle you are following is reckless, you may call the attention of the owner of the vehicle or the government regulatory office concerned. Corollary to this, one may ask the same question to himself, “How’s my grooming?” Here is a set of questions to find it out. (True or False) 

1. We are judged the way we talked as much as the way we look. 
2. It’s all right to cause embarrassment on another as long as it is not your real intention. 
3. Pronounce words properly, use correct grammar, follow correct logic and syntax, and refrain from mumbling. 
4. It’s all right to be talking about yourself after you have done a great job.
5. It’s all right to ask personal questions from a friend even without first asking permission. 

6. There are times you have to ask “intrusive” questions as host of a program to add spice or give more light. 
7. It is old fashion to say Please and Thank you. Smile is enough these days 
8. One can be clean and yet untidy, and vice versa. 
9. In fashion and cosmetics, “Excess can be a mess.” 
10. Good teeth and fresh breath always go together. 

11. Keep your mouth closed when chewing. Take small bites. Eat quickly.
12. Say excuse me when you have to go the restroom without telling you are going there, or to answer the call of nature. 
13. Sit and walk straight. Maintain good posture always even at home. 
14. Dressing appropriately means you have to be in fashion. 
15. Try to make as little noise as possible in all situations – when eating, walking, talking, working, etc. – even in your home. 

16. Mobile phone etiquette is chiefly not disturbing others with it. 
17. Laugh, smile, giggle, cry with dignity. Do not make a scene. 
18. Be interested with people and things around you but be discreet. 
19. Grooming is applicable only in formal occasions and places, not in your leisure and privacy. 
20. Grooming distinctly separates men and women. It’s gender distinction. It gives dignity to being a gentleman or a lady. 

21. One may be fashionable but not well groomed. 
22. When one is in his advanced senior years, grooming does not apply to him anymore. 
23. People with gender problem find it difficult to adjust with proper grooming. Often grooming result to mere attraction. 
24. Never touch another person’s belongings without asking permission. 
25. Never assume anything about anyone. Caution, caution. 

ANSWERS: 1t, 2f, 3t, 4f, 5f, 6f, 7f, 8t, 9t, 10f, 11t, 12f, 13t, 14f, 15t, 16t, 17t, 18t, 19f, 20t, 21t, 22f, 23t, 24t, 25t. 

RATING: 24 - 25 You are a model 21 - 23 You are well groomed, no doubt. 18 - 20 More finesse, please. 17 and below "Practice makes perfect." 

Lesson on former Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid 738 AM with Dr Abe V Rotor and Ms Melly C Tenorio 8 to 9 evening Monday to Friday.

Therapeutic Effect of Violin and Nature

 Therapeutic Effect of Violin and Nature

Dr Abe V Rotor
Violin and Nature is an experimental approach to music


   
Therapeutic effect of music to aquarium fish and workshop participants. A trio - violin and flute accompanied by a keyboard.

Music must be elevated from the level of entertainment and expression of skills to one that brings the listener to a state of catharsis, relieving him of the stresses and tensions of daily living. Music therapy is now recognized as part of alternative medicine. There are musical compositions that bring about the so-called Mozart Effect, named after Amadeus Mozart whose compositions are acclaimed by scientists to be the most therapeutic of all musical compositions, even among his contemporaries in the classical and romantic schools.

This article is the result of a research conducted by the author with his class at the UST Graduate School as respondents to the hypothesis that the combination of Violin and Nature sounds has therapeutic effects to the listener. And if so, how? What aspects of our body physiology, mind, psyche, and spirit are affected? In what ways, and how do we measure such effects?
Cover of tape, later copied into CD. Shorter versions are available: Violin and Birds, Violin and Waves
Can auditory art be developed by converting word to music, and re-create the sound of nature to accompany it? The idea is to find a compatible blend of science - the prosaic and formal, with humanities - the entertaining, cultural, and the sounds of nature, definitely a rare   experience that takes place in the inner vision of the mind. Violin and Nature is a CD recording or 32 extemporaneous popular and semi-classical compositions played on the violin by the author with accompaniment of birds, insects, wind, waterfall and running stream.

People say, “ Relaks lang” or “just do it” as part of daily conversation. Either it is taken as advice or compliment, the message is clear: life today is growing tenser. “ Take it easy” has a reassuring note that everybody must learn to live in a stressful world.

Both the poor and rich are subject to different forms of stress, so with the city and village dweller. Ironically, stress does not spare growing affluence. In fact, it persists invariably throughout life, virtually from womb to tomb.

The idea of dealing with tension or stress is how one is able to reduce it effectively so as to enjoy life and get rid of its complications from headaches to various psychosomatic symptoms- and eventual health problems, if it is not checked on time.

One proposal is the use of therapeutic effects of music and nature, thus the rationale of this experiment that employs the combined soothing sound of the violin, and the harmony of nature.

Music is well known to reduce tension. Pipe-in music increases work efficiency in corporate offices, takes out boredom in otherwise monotonous assignments, and fosters proper attitude and disposition, when correctly applied. In fact, scientists have established the biological basis of music by being able to increase the production efficiency in poultry and livestock with the use of background music. The key is the reduction of stress in the animal. The same result has yet to be established in plants.

A stressful life builds tension in the body. Headache, wakefulness, palpitation, indigestion, trembling and many other symptoms, which wear away the life force, accompany tension. Tired nerves need rest and quiet, as nature needs time to recuperate her exhausted energies.

What is tension? It is the effort that is manifested in the shortening of muscle fibers. Physiologists compare muscle tension with “neuromuscular relaxation” to differentiate popular interpretation of relaxation as amusement, recreation, or hobbies. To be relaxed is the direct physiology opposite of being excited or disturbed.

Neurosis and psychoneurosis are at the same time physiological disturbance, for they are forms of tension disorders. Therefore, the key to treatment lies in relaxation.

Who are victims of tension? Everybody is a candidate. These are models of tensed individuals: the “burnt out” housewife, the tagasalo in the family, the gifted child, the dominant lola, the authoritative patriarch. These persons themselves are not only victims of tension; they spread tension among people around them.

Multitudes long for a better life, but they lack courage and resolution to break away from the power of habit. On the other hand, many escape from the harsh realities of life by taking alcohol and drugs.

Hypothesis
The whole idea of relaxation is in disciplining the body to budget life’s energies, and to immerse oneself to relaxing moods. Music and nature are a great inexhaustible source. Plato and Confucius looked at music as a department of ethics. They saw the correspondence between character of man and music. Great music, they believed, is in harmony with the universe, restoring order to the physical world. Aristotle on the other hand, the greatest naturalist of the ancient world supported the platonic view, which through the Renaissance to the present dominate the concept of great composition. Great music has always been associated with God’s creation.

Nature on the other hand, produces calming effects to the nerve. Sightseeing, picnic and camping are a good break to prosaic city life. Different from ordinary amusements in the park or theater, the countryside is one arena of peace and quiet. Features on TV and print media provide but an alternative scenario. Today “canned” Nature is being introduced in many forms such as traveling planetarium, CD-ROM Nature Series, Ecology Village, and the like, to illustrate the growing concern of people to experience the positive effects of Nature in an urban setting characterized by a stressful modern life.

This experiment is based on the premise that the combined effects of music and Nature help reduce tension in daily living, particularly among working students in the city.

Conceptual Framework
A- Tension tends to dominate the body to relax, resulting in tension build-up in the muscles;
B- Music (violin solos) and Nature’s sounds( birds, running stream etc.) make a composition which provides a rare listening experience in varying intensity; and
C- The experience enhances relaxation, reduces tension and its physiologic effects in the individual.


Methodology
The Violin and Nature recorded in compact disc (CD) was then presented for evaluation to students in Research Methodology at the UST Graduate School on two aspects, namely, the content of the tape and the perception of the respondents. Physiologic response was determined by measuring the pulse rate before and after listening to eight sample compositions from the tape for thirty minutes.

These are as follows:

1. Serenade by Toselli (semi- classical)
2. Meditation, from the Thais by Massenet (classical)
3. Lara’s Theme (sound track of the movie, Dr. Zhivago)
4. Beyond the Sunset (ballad)
5. Paper Roses (popular)
6. A Certain Smile (popular)
7. Fascination (popular dance music)
8. Home on the Range (country song)

Respondents Profile

This is the profile of the 42 respondents, which made up one class in research methodology. They are predominantly female students (81%), employed (86%), with ages from 21 to 29 years old (76%).

Content Analysis
The respondents counted eight tunes or pieces, of which 5 are familiar to them. They identified three non-living sounds (running stream, wind, and waterfall, aside from the violin), and two living sounds (mainly birds).

Physiologic Response
The average pulse rates before and after listening to the tape are 79.47 and 73.29 per minute, respectively, or a difference of 6.18. Statistically, the difference is significant, thus confirming the relaxing effects to the respondents after listening to the CD.

Perception
The ten criteria used in rating the perception of the respondents are ranked as follows, adopting the Likert Scale. Note: A scale of 1 to 5 was used, where 1 is very poor, 2 poor, 3 fair, 4 good, and 5 very good.

Criteria Rating Rank
1. One has the feeling of being
transported to a Nature/Wildlife scene. 4.48 1

2. Listening to the tape creates an aura
of peace and serenity. 4.39 2

3. The composition is soothing to hear,
Has calming effect on the nerves. 4.24 3

4. The composition creates a meditative
mood. 3.95 4

5. It brings reminiscence to the
listener of a past experience. 3.64 5

6. It helps one in trying to
forget his problems. 3.59 6

7. One has the felling of being
transported heavenward, to Cloud 9. 3.55 7

8. There is tendency to sleep while
listening to the composition. 3.52 8

9. It brings about a nostalgic feeling. 3.19 9

10. The composition makes one
sad and melancholic. 2.55 10


Analysis and Interpretation
The means the first three criteria fall between good and very good, while the others, except the 10th, are between fair and good. This finding supports the positive relaxing effects of Violin and Nature.

Conclusion and Recommendation
Listening to Violin and Nature slows down pulse rate significantly, thus reducing tension, and brings the listener closer to a state of relaxation. The effects are measured as based on ten criteria. Topping the scores which are classified Very Good are:

1. One has the feeling of being transported to a Nature /Wildlife Scene;
2. Listening to the tape creates an aura of peace and serenity; and
3. The composition is soothing to hear, and has calming effect on the nerves.

There are six other parameters that support the hypothesis that the CD is relaxing. This is different from its effect of bringing nostalgia, sadness and melancholy that received the lowest scores and rankings.

However, there is need to improve the quality of the compositions, and their recording. It is also recommended that similar evaluation be conducted on other age groups and people of different walks of life who are similarly subject to stressful life and environment. ~

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

A Moment of Serenity

A Moment of Serenity
Dr Abe V Rotor

A Moment of Serenity in acrylic (14"x18") by Dr. Abe V. Rotor
Living with Nature Center, San Vicente, Ilocos Sur, Oct 26 2023

Details: Birds follow the stream of light and flow of a waterfall.

A moment of serenity is all we need,
     brief as it may in peace,
amidst all the throes of life we bid,
     with Mother Nature at ease.

Follow the stream resting in a pond
     before reaching out to sea,
the birds in the sky circling around,
     gaze at them flying free.~

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

The Ecological Literacy of Dr. Abercio V. Rotor - Rina Garcia Chua

    The Ecological Literacy of Dr. Abercio V. Rotor 

Rina Garcia Chua*

Abstract/Summary

The project was designed to explore the ecoliterate tendencies of Dr. Abercio V. Rotor
through his eco-poems in the collection Don't Cut the Trees. Don't and related essays in his two other books, The Living with Nature Handbook and Living with Nature in Our Times.  The aim of this ecocritique is to analyze the following: how his ecological literacy shapes his poetry, how his poetry fulfills the goal of ecological literacy,  and why his poetry represents a significant contribution to the steps being undertaken to save the earth.  Tropes of ecocriticism are used to support the ecoliterate tendencies that are introduced, namely, place as a mutualistic environment interrelationship dismantling of disasters aesthetics of environmental justice.  These tendencies have paved the way for a more critical/concrete perception of ecocriticism in the Philippine context and a stronger link between and among three fields - literature, science and education - in the environmental debate.     

This thesis has ecocritiqued the following areas of ecocriticism: the mutualism of no the and south environments in our country, the misperception of other animals and our interrelationship with them as species, the dismantling of disasters to bring forth survival through witnessing, and aesthetics and environmental justice in co-poetry as a way to testify against environmental abuses.  Rotor's ecoliteracy has consistently interpreted these tendencies through his eco-poetry with the use of his vast scientific knowledge, literary background, and educational perspective.  In doing so, he encourages sustainable thoughts which in turn can be actions and steps toward saving the earth.  Therefore ecological literacy has provided a link to utilize ecopoems for educational purposes to inspire and ingrain sustainable thoughts in readers.  This way, ecocriticism and environmental literature have contributed to the alleviation of the environmental crisis by being the voices of the unheard communities and their environments and by ecological frameworks in the Third World, where it is imperative to heed the call of environmental destruction and degradation.

Rina Garcia Chua completed her degree of Master of Arts in Language and Literature, major in Literature from the De La Salle University – Manila. Her manuscript was awarded a gold medal for outstanding thesis and all of its chapters have been presented in international and national conferences. She has been a fellow of several national literary workshops and has been published in different journals, literary magazines, and books. She is the editor of the first anthology of Philippine ecopoetry, ‘Sustaining the Archipelago’, which is forthcoming with the University of Santo Tomas Publishing House, and currently, she is taking up her MA and PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies in the University of British Columbia.

*The Ecological Literacy of Dr. Abercio V. Rotor
Rina Garcia Chua

Master of Arts in Language and Literature, Major in Literature
Department of Literature, De La Salle University, Manila

Thesis Adviser: Veric, Charlie Dr.
Defense Panel Chair: Roma-Sintuari, Dinah, Dr. 
Defense Panel Chair Members: Lua, Shirley, Dr; Groyon, Vicente Victor Emmanuel

Recommended Citation
Chua, R (2014).  The Ecological Literacy of Dr. Abercio V Rotor
Retrieved from https://animorepository. dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/4645 

   
Books written by Dr Rotor, winner of Gintong Aklat  Award, and National Book Award, respectively. ~ 

Monday, December 16, 2024

A Piece of the Garden of Eden

 A Piece of the Garden of Eden 

Mural by Dr Abe V Rotor

“Those ancients who in poetry presented
the golden age, who sang its happy state,
perhaps, in their Parnassus, dreamt this place.
Here, mankind's root was innocent; and here
were every fruit and never-ending spring;
these streams--the nectar of which poets sing.”
― Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy

             A Piece of the Garden of Eden (10ft x 16ft) Painting by AVRotor

Does the Garden of Eden still exist? If the Garden of Eden still exists, no one knows where. The Bible says a river ran from Eden and separated into four rivers: Pishon, Gihon, Tigris, and Euphrates. Here is an artist's concept of a little corner of that garden. ~  

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Ecological Christmas Lantern Two Faces of our Planet Earth

                                                Ecological Christmas Lantern 

Two Faces of our Planet Earth 

Indigenous Hanging Chandelier by Dr Abe V Rotor 

The Pristine Face of our Planet Earth in acrylic
on wood scrap by the author 2020

The Defiled Face of our Planet Earth in acrylic
on wood scrap by the author 2020

Light in the air, swaying with the wind;
     Heavy in the air dull, still;
Pristine, natural in the absence of man, 
     Defiled, dead, can't humans feel?

Indigenous art, ecological in message, this piece of art tells to viewers looking up to this hanging parol and chandelier.  No candles, no light, no chime, except the natural radiance and music of the pristine face of our Planet Earth.   

So rare today this happy face beams, so commonplace the sad face shrouds cities where more than half of the world's population of 8 billion souls are ensconced in the so-called Good Life, the "ultimate" aim of civilization.   

What is the Good Life in the current Corona Virus pandemic? Good life in global economic depression?  Good life in widespread poverty?  Good life in inequity and injustice?  Global breakdown of institutions, from marriage and family, threatening to destroy the pillars of human society?  

What is Good Life with the Israel war in Gaza?  Russian war in Ukraine? And in other critical spots, civil wars and drug wars, notwithstanding?  Cities burgeoning into metropolises and megapolises?  Growing widespread depression leading to suicide?  Hopelessness spreading among the young and old alike?   

What is the Good Life in a "floating continent of garbage" twice bigger Texas, thrice that of France? Unabated rise of sea level as a result of continuing global warming? Acid rain ruining productive farms? Radiation emanating from  transmission and communication towers, and from millions of computers and smartphones?  

What is the Good life in science and technology gone wild?  Good life in the explosion of knowledge, grain and chaff mixed up? Good life in erosion of values? Good Life in the failure of governance - local, regional, global?  

We have yet to learn from "the glory that was Greece, and the grandeur that was Rome," and the Dark Age that enveloped the world thereafter. We have yet to learn from the Renaissance that followed a millennium after.  If only man's rationality can save him from his own destruction. ~ 

My Best Photographs Series 11: Bring Nature Home in Paintings

My Best Photographs Series 11:
Bring Nature Home in Paintings
"Nature resides in the soul of art." - avrotor 

Paintings and Verses by Dr. Abe V Rotor

Living landscape in the sala.*
  
If you can't go to Nature;
in the magic of art,
 bring her home instead,
and never depart.

Befriending wildlife on a wall

Wonder if wildlife be tamed,
touch them like friend,
keep them pets at home,
faithful to the end.

Prince Neptune in a Passing Review, Lagro QC

Mythology is alive in us, 
it will never depart,
as long as Nature resides 
in the soul of art.

Violin and Sailboat.  Author plays Beyond the Sunset

Play with the breeze
and sail at ease.

Nature at Living with Nature Center

Nature in the living room 
with happy children -
what more shall they ask
from this great friend?

Siargao Falls mural by the author and daughter Anna
 (second from left) at St. Paul College Surigao

Tame her on a wall mural,
she roars into whisper,
 prayer, verse and song;
in thanksgiving 
we awe and wonder.  

Dolphins on the run

Capture the dolphins on the wall,
befriend them and their kin;
ask them before they're gone
where in the world they've been. 

Travelogue on wheelchair, St. Paul College of Ilocos Sur

Take the backseat, reason; 
give way to imagination. 
right brain over the left,
in a sacred moment.

Soldiers of Nature at the Living with Nature Center   

"One for all and all for one;"
 these musketeers pledge 
 soldiers of Nature,
to protect her always
to the very edge.

 Living room, Living with Nature Center sala

Queen of the sea and sky,
 titular yet well-meant
 commitment as guardian
of the environment.

Travelogue into the Coral Reef  Painting by Lyn 9 and JP Reyes 7, 

Get your paintbrush and dive into the coral reef, 
the great forest of the sea;
Re-create through colors on canvas nature's gift
of biodiversity;
Edge of land, where the blue sky and sea meet,  
and man with the  Almighty.

                                    -----------------
                                   * Courtesy of Mr and Mrs Elmo and Remy Jimenez