Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Don’t Fall into the Modus Operandi of Opportunists and Rogues

A Friendly Reminder
Don’t Fall into the Modus Operandi of Opportunists and Rogues

Dr Abe V Rotor
 
Beware. Don’t fall victim to impostors, opportunists and rogues. These are ten tips to protect yourself and other people.

1. Have presence of mind always.
2. Don’t be too confident and trusting.
3. Avoid unlikely places and hour of the day.
4. It is good to be with somebody or group you know.
5. Distance yourself from suspecting characters.
6. Dress simply and leave your valuables at home.
7. Screen and limit access of personal information 
    about you.
8. Be prepared for contingencies. Be security-conscious
    always.
9. Keep emergency phone numbers and addresses ready
     at fingertips.
10. Attend seminars and workshops on safety and security.

I am writing this article from fresh memory of an incident in which I am a victim. I must admit I violated Rules 1, 2, 3 and 7 in the above list.

First I was too trusting and confident in welcoming a “new found relative” – one Mario B. Rotor, incoming president of “The Leagues of Young Educators of Regions I and II.” (See hand written note of the impostor.) Through phone call, my wife endorsed this person to see me at UST where I was holding classes. (He had introduced himself on the phone, first to my daughter, then to my wife, picking up information in the process.)

Second, with this added information beefing up his readings and researches about me, he was ready to meet me finally – “his successful ‘uncle’ whom he had been longing to meet personally.” When I met him he practically knew me from head to foot, giving me a genuine impression about him as a new found nephew. I remember Mark Twain’s “Tom Sawyer” and “Huckleberry Finn”. Quite similar to the story of the swindlers in these novels, he started greeting me “uncle”, with music in his voice and familiarity in ambiance.

The third rule I broke is that I was totally unsuspecting. And this is when opportunists strike. He came on a Saturday, just after noon time, met me at the entrance of the graduate school, greeted the security guard and everyone else, with profuse courtesy. I led him to my classroom where I was going to give final examination. He waited until I finished giving the instruction and questionnaire. I entertained him at the corridor.

“Thank you for accepting our invitation to be our inducting officer and guest of honor,” he said, handing me the invitation, which has yet to be printed. “I’ll come back to give you the final copy, with your permission to print your name.” He told me how happy our relatives in the province are about me, that he is thankful to auntie (my wife) for arranging for this meeting.

“Why it’s an honor!” I answered. Who would not like to meet friends from both the Ilocos and Cagayan Valley where I was assigned for many years when I was regional director of then National Grains Authority. “I am sorry for the short notice,” he said. It will be at the National Defense College Auditorium, Camp Aguinaldo, at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, which means the following day.

Now here is the climax of the modus operandi. I offered him even only the cost of my food in the affair. He refused. “You are my guest,” he insisted. “Just donate a trophy,” he said. “Or the cost of it,” which I gave. He told me he had to rush to Manila Bulletin. “I’ll see you there, uncle,” he said and left.

There was no induction ceremony, and the phone number he left is the operator’s at Camp Aguinaldo. I came to know it only after he had left. When I reached home my wife and daughter exclaimed, “We thought he is the son of Vicente, your cousin. His name is Mario B. Rotor, a teacher.”

Except for his extreme feminine nature – bodily and by his voice – he could pass for a polished conversationalist, quick in wit and in scribbling notes. He spoke Ilocano perfectly with proper intonation. We talked in pure Ilocano throughout. He is around 5’ 4”, slim, kayumanggi, stoops a little, shoulders are rather high, and has rather sharp eyes, bony checks and prominent jaw, nose and ears (typical features of Rotors and Valdezes, so I thought). I was looking at my uncle Manuel and Ismael in their younger days, except that he could be mistaken for a woman by his voice, even on the phone. (He called up UST twice, I received the second.)

I am relating this story to warn potential victims of this impostor. What if the victim is not in his home ground? Or a neophyte in the city? His original plan according to my wife was to invite me outside. He suggested a fast food store near Dapitan, or anywhere outside UST.

Reading the Person through Handwriting Analysis

As I went over the notes this impostor wrote, I wondered if handwriting analysis or graphology can really tell the true character of a person, and thus tell us whether to avoid or welcome him, more so to be properly warned. I know that graphology is among the tools used in the recruitment process administered by certain companies in the US and Europe, but is it sufficient to give us a keyhole view of hidden motives, other general personality characteristics?

It is interesting to note the following features I observed on the impostor’s handwriting which are as follows: (See reproduction)

1. His writing lies perfectly in between lines, the words rarely touching the lower or upper bars. (Sign of independence, cleverness, non-conformist)

2. Heavy writing. You can feel the back of the paper like Braille (serious, intense, violent tendency, risk taker).

3. Loops of letters f, g, p, y vary. A large loop is a sign of openness; while tight and sharp pointed loops show the opposite character. Lack of “tail” after each word means an inward, silent character, but the sharp and deep downward strokes (f, p, t, l, I) show emotional intensity.

4. Ambivalence is also shown by the inconsistent writing pattern, and inconsistent type and size of letters. There are letters, which cannot be immediately deciphered, or are missing. (Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde syndrome)

5. The dot of letter i, lies too far towards the right. No dot is exactly above the letter i. The letter t lacks the usual cross line at the top; instead it is cut at the middle either by a short dash or line that connects the nearby letter. Note wide spaces between words, large margins, and empty lines. (procrastination, loafer, tamad)

6. Writing has a feminist touch, which explain his personality.

I have always been fascinated by graphology since college days and through books in the library and bookstores I have learned a number of basic signs associated with talents, tendencies, etc. I must admit that as a field in psychology, graphology faces many views and controversies (like Freudian and Jungian approaches in psychology), but with computers today, this new science can be developed into a potent tool in personality analysis. I remember our teachers in elementary and high school who used to remind us in class that handwriting is the mirror of ourselves.

A Plea for Help as Modus Operandi

I lived at Don Antonio Height 2 at our family residence way back in the seventies when the area was still sparsely populated. One late evening I was awakened by a pleading sound, and when I looked from the veranda I saw a man apparently bleeding from wounds, leaning under a street lamp across our house. He was groaning and repeatedly pleading, “Dalhin ninyo ako sa ospital,” (Take me to the hospital.)

Our neighbor was also alerted. As we had coded security communication, we cautiously observed the “victim”. We sensed something wrong. Apparently he was only acting. When he saw that we were armed and did not open our gates, he started walking away. There at the nearest curb he joined his companions, a jeepload of tough guys, apparently hold uppers.

After the incident the whole neighborhood arrived at a theory that the “wounded” person acted as a decoy. In the process of being helped, his companions rush in, and declare a hold up. This “pasok bahay” modus operandi is not new and has been modified into other varieties, such as “akyat bahay”. In this case the gang takes advantage of houses when the residents are on vacation.

This mutual defense strategy proved to be an effective deterrent of a would-be crime. You can modify this according to your situation. One is by having coded night light or alarm. The rule is that, “Do not lift the drawbridge or open the fort gate,” so to speak, if you are living in a pioneer territory.

Be Sure Your Car Doors are Locked

My cousin had a co-teacher at Ramon Magsaysay High School Manila who fought a hold upper. She showed me both her hands bearing the scars of multiple wounds from knife. “My husband was also hurt,” she said. “Thanks God we are still alive.”

This is her story. Every morning the husband drives Remy, my cousin’s co-teacher, to Ramon Magsaysay before proceeding to his office. He would pick her up in the afternoon. For years this became a routine.

One morning while waiting for the green light at an intersection along Quezon Avenue, an unsuspecting man passing as a pedestrian suddenly opened the car’s rear door and occupied the backseat. With a fan knife he declared a holdup. Resisting the threat, the husband fought. The wife tried to help the husband. The struggle attracted passersby and pedestrians. The hold upper escaped, leaving the wounded couple that was immediately brought to the hospital.

Lesson: Be sure to lock all doors of your car. Roll up the windows to a level no one from outside can unlock and open the doors. When parking, leave the car immediately after locking the doors. Be sure to put on the wheel or engine lock. Don’t linger around, more so stay inside and sleep while the aircon is on. You are an easy target of hold uppers.

When opening your garage when going out specially in the early morning, and upon arriving in the evening, look around first for any suspicious people around. My friend, director Ruel Montenegro, lost his GSR Lancer this way. His driver did not resist the hold upper who simply took the car from the garage. It was never found.

What rules did the couple violate? First, they were not security-conscious. And second, they lacked the presence of mind at that time. This is often the case when we are preoccupied with routine activities. Again, as in my case they were too trusting and confident no one would harm them. In this civilized world we are still living in a jungle – a jungle made by man himself. ~

Monday, August 26, 2024

Golden Homesite Plan of Ed Nanquil

                  Golden Homesite Plan of Ed Nanquil 

The homesite supplies food for the family and immediate community. It provides a healthy environment for growing up and for spending the golden years of life.  It is a workshop, a place to learn, enjoy, reflect and meditate with nature.   
Dr Abe V Rotor 


Golden Homesite Plan was submitted by Mr Ed Nanquil to Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School on Air) as an assignment.  Its vivid presentation touches six (6) interrelated lessons, namely:
 
1. Homesite 1000 sq m area or equivalent to 1 mu, average farm size in China extensively cultivated to sustain more than the needs of the family, but for the market as well. Recommended particularly for those preparing to retire, and retirees, thus the name - Golden Homesite. 

2. Integration - horizontal (crops by season spread year round), and vertical (multi-storey cropping, thus a 1000 sq m area is equivalent to 2000 up to 5000 sq m effective area, depending on the "layers" of crops raised at a given time. Depends greatly on multiple cropping and crop rotation technology, and non-cash inputs.  Tri-commodity approach (crops, animals and fish) .

3. Self-sufficiency target in food of farm products (fruits, vegetables, fish, poultry and livestock), as well as garden products (flowers and herbals). Model applies to both urban and rural setting. 

4. Agro-ecology - unity and harmony of farming and environmental conservation,  underlying principle of sustainable productivity. Include recycling (composting), natural farming (least use of chemical-based input, and non-GMO plants and animals), optimum, instead of maximum utilization of the land, thus allowing it to fallow or rest.  

5. Bahay Kubo concept functionally modified to meet present conditions. Reliance on local resources (bamboo, nipa, coco lumber), homesite and house design (trees as windbreak and shade, pond cools the surroundings, natural ventilation).  Homesite is also a wildlife sanctuary, helps restore threatened and endangered species of plants, birds, others. 

6. Strengthen family bond, restrains migration to the city, upholds Filipino dignity and promotes indigenous culture. The homesite provides a healthy environment for growing up and for spending the golden years of life, it is a workshop, a place to learn, enjoy, reflect and meditate.   

Acknowledgement: Mr Ed Nanquil. (Sorry for misspelled name in earlier publication.)   More power to you!
Lesson on former Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) Dr Abe V Rotor and Ms Melly C Tenorio 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday

Sunday, August 25, 2024

The Seed of Childhood

The Seed of Childhood
Dr Abe V. Rotor

 
Flying kites and fishing, section of a mural painting by AVRotor 2008

Children let the night pass quickly,
Rising on the farm as the sun rises,
As early as the butterfly and the bee
And birds singing in the trees.

Frogs freeze before the kingfisher;
Rain is read from hovering dragonfly;
Nests are secrets only to the finder -
Early lessons live to live by.

War is resolved in kites and fishing poles,
In hide-and-seek and barefoot races;
Faith lies in the seasons the sky extols
And virtues friendship embraces.

Peals of thunder break the afternoon,
Driving the fowls to their tree;
The children catch the rain, and soon,
Across the field, dash for home aglee.

Respite not enough, schooldays are long,
And everything is passing imagery,
Ephemeral is childhood, and all along
The years are but blissful memory.

Take it from the sages of old who knew
What makes a man, the child of years ago.
What the seed was and how it grew –
Look and behold! It is true. ~

Saturday, August 24, 2024

15 Art Works of Nature in the Garden

                 15 Art Works of Nature in the Garden
Living with Nature Center (San Vicente Botanical Garden)
Photographs by Dr Abe V Rotor

"Art is born of the observation and investigation of nature." 
- Marcus Tullius Cicero

Leaf venation of croton (Codiaeum variegatum)

"Art is a man's nature; nature is God's art." - Philip James Bailey

 Angel Wings (Caladium bicolor)

"...and then, I have nature and art and poetry, and if that is not enough, what is enough?" - Vincent Van Gogh

Sander's Alocasia (Alocasia Sanderiana)

"Art is never finished, only abandoned." ― Leonardo da Vinci

 San Francisco (Codiaeum sp)

"Art is a harmony parallel with nature." - Paul Cezanne

Snake Plant (Sanseviera zeylanica)

"Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you."
- Frank Lloyd Wright

Variegated Pandan? (Pandanus sp)

"A work of art which did not begin in emotion is not art." - Paul Cezanne

Anthurium (Anthurium scherzerianum, also A. andraeanum)

"Nature is not only all that is visible to the eye... 
it also includes the inner pictures of the soul." - Edvard Munch

Ornamental Pineapple (Ananas sp)

"Great art picks up where nature ends." - Marc Chagall

Sampaguita or Jasmine (Jasminium sambac)

"The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance." - Aristotle


"Butterfly" plant

 “Flowers are the music of the ground from earth’s lips spoken without sound.” —Edwin Curran

Angel's trumpet
 
In my garden, after a rainfall, you can faintly, yes, hear the breaking of new blooms.” —Truman Capote

Balibago - white in the morning, turns pink, then it dries up

"The garden reconciles human art and wild nature, hard work and deep pleasure, spiritual practice and the material world. It is a magical place because it is not divided." —Thomas Moore

Brightly colored false petals of bromeliad

“Watching something grow is good for morale. It helps us believe in life.” —Myron Kaufmann

Hibiscus
“Flowers are restful to look at. They have neither emotions nor conflicts.” —Sigmund Freud

Acknowledgement: Quotations from Internet ~

Are old books destined from Library to Museum?

Are old books destined from Library to Museum?
Collection of the Living with Nature Center Museum and Library

Dr Abe V Rotor

"A book lying idle on a shelf is wasted ammunition. Like money, books must be kept in constant circulation... A book is not only a friend, it makes friends for you. When you have possessed a book with mind and spirit, you are enriched. But when you pass it on, you are enriched threefold." – Henry Miller, The Books in My Life

An old book about the UN, now a museum item. 
With the current world crisis, people ask, "Is the United Nations already senile?" (Founded in 1945, the United Nations is currently made up of 193 member states.)

"If the United Nations is to survive, those who represent it must bolster it; those who advocate it must submit to it; and those who believe in it must fight for it." -  Norman Cousins

 
   
"Take the backseat," 
These books seem outpaced by advanced technology 
and knowledge explosion, AI notwithstanding. 

 
Who are interested with proverbs among the young? Who would still read Sophocles, or any Shakespearean literature  today?

"Tradition and classics are timeless.  
Timelessness makes them universal, too" - avr
 
  
At finger's touch, you can open a dictionary on the computer -  in fact, a whole library. Why bother opening a voluminous dictionary?  Remember the big Merrian-Webster dictionary, so huge it had a stand of its own? 

 
Books from Museum to Library, instead
Before: How's your grammar?
Now: How's your English?
Lately: How's your handwriting?

"Some books leave us free and some books make us free." 
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

 
 
What a mix of books.  Indexing is a big and continuing task, even with  electronics today. Here is an example of such dilemma - asthma a medical condition, and dog training in the same shelf, plus many other books of varied topics.
  
We read to know we are not alone. – C.S. Lewis
"Once you learn to read, you will be forever free." – Frederick Douglass

  
Orations, Declamations and Speeches
      • Oh, Captain, my captain!
      • Gettysburg Address
      • I have a Dream.
      • To be, or not to be... these continue to live in the library and museum - and in the hearts of humanity. - avr
  
Idioms - a group of words established by usage as having a meaning not deducible from those of the individual words (e.g., rain cats and dogssee the light ).

 
Is Logic a Stairway to Philosophy?

Logic is the study of correct reasoning, while philosophy is the study of fundamental ideas about truth and knowledge. These disciplines intersect uniquely within logic in philosophy and the philosophy of logic. Logic in philosophy is one of many forms of applied logic.

 

"Reading is a form of prayer, a guided meditation that briefly makes us believe we’re someone else, disrupting the delusion that we’re permanent and at the center of the universe. Suddenly (we’re saved!) other people are real again, and we’re fond of them." – George Saunders


  
 Have a break.  Take the lighter side of human nature.
Neither the library nor the museum can lead the way.  - avr

* Photos of the book covers by the author; references (Internet, Living with Nature book series by the author)  

Thursday, August 22, 2024

I am HABIT - a Reflection

I am HABIT - a Reflection
We are creatures of habit, whether we like it or not. 
We can make habit our servant, or we can allow it
to become our master.
Dr Abe V Rotor

Good habits are developed through good training and conducive environment. Children's Summer Workshop, Lagro QC.

HABIT

I am your constant companion.
I am your greatest helper or your heaviest burden.
I will push you onward, or drag you down to failure.
I am completely at your command.
Half the things you do, you might just as well turn over to me,
And I will be able to do them quickly and correctly.
I am easily managed; you must merely be firm with me.
Show me exactly how you want something done,
And after a few lessons I will do it automatically.
I am the servant of all great men
And, alas, of all failures as well.
Those who are great, I have made great.
Those who are failures, I have made failures.
I am not a machine, though I work with all the precision of a machine
Plus the intelligence of a man.
You may run me for profit, or run me for ruin;
It makes no difference to me.
Take me, train me, be firm with me
And I will put the world at your feet.
Be easy with me, and I will destroy you.
How am I?
I am HABIT.
Author Unknown

Reference and Acknowledgement: The 10 Natural Laws of Successful Time and Life Management by Hyrum W Smith. Illustrations from the Internet, Living with Folk Wisdom by AVRotor UST, Brainy Quotes Internet


Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Dawn of Art in Children - An Awakening in 3 Parts

                                            Dawn of Art in Children 

- An Awakening

"Coming of age to see the world beyond childhood,
bright as the sun, azure as the sky.
Hills to mountains grow, adventure awaits, behold!
birds in spring to somewhere fly. "

                            Selected works of pre-school and primary school pupils 
in a summer art workshop. 

Dr Abe V Rotor 

Part 1 - Summertime 

Weaning 
Coming of age to see the world beyond childhood, 
bright as the sun, azure as the sky; 
Hills to mountains grow, adventure awaits, behold!
birds in spring to somewhere fly. 

 
Kites
Kites whatever shape and make, 
fly high for the young one's sake
to dream in becoming great.    


Sailboats 
Rhyme and rhythm, 
music I hear,
waves and sky,
 serene and clear.


Freedom
Jump for joy at the setting sun,
into darkness away from man.


Emergence   
Shy and meek 
coy to speak;
hide and creep
or back to sleep.


Summertime 
Meadow in summer,
to autumn bound;
life in its fullest
for Nature's crown.

Where are the Children?
Wonder where the children are
at this time of the year?
playing on the hills, under the trees, 
Look! a flock of birds in the air
moving out of the chill.

Fruits
Half ripe, half done in the setting sun,
hurry up the colors before they're gone. ~

Part 2 - Respite from the Cellphone

"Have a respite from the cellphone, 
go for adventure and outdoor trip;
work on the basic skills in art alone,
    hone your mind, heart and spirit." avr
 
 
Revival of the classical Nipa Hut,
but where have all the trees gone?

Halos of the sun and moon combined
make an obelisk in the sky.

Sunset on the hills, sans trees,
and its reflection on the lake 

Crucifix, symbol of nature lost,
save a living waterfall and trees.

Rainbow fish took the colors away
to make for its home a confetti. 

Either nature, in summer, is in bloom,
or a reminder of the dreadful mushroom.

Part 3 - Art on the Floor 
“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist 
once we grow up” – Pablo Picasso


Let the wind blow, the grass grow, the mist settle down;
     guide a child, brush and colors in her hand, reign
over a beautiful realm we grownups have given up long ago,
     never to return, yet yearning, to be children again;
We pass this way but once - and again through our genes,
     in tender hands and heart, we've lived not in vain. - avr

 
“There are painters who transform the sun into a yellow spot, but there are others who, thanks to their art and intelligence, transform a yellow spot into the sun.” – Pablo Picasso

 
“Why do you try to understand art? Do you try to understand the 
song of a bird?” – Pablo Picasso

 
I watched a child paint the floor of our house.
    I gave her all the things she needed,
then left to attend the chores of the day.
    What had she done in my absence?

I almost forgot all about the whole thing.
   That always happens to a busy person.
I returned, apologetic. She didn't say a word.
   She was still busy painting without respite.

I studied her paintings on the floor.
   Suddenly I felt I was talking to myself.
Me, an artist of many movements:
   realism, romanticism, to postmodern.

And she, the artist of peace and harmony,
   naturalness and simplicity.
Here's the greatest masterpiece of the world.
   and the greatest story ever told. - avr

“No great artist ever sees things as they really are. If he did he would cease to be an artist” – Oscar Wilde