Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Pomposity of Colors in Plants: Nature's tool for beauty and survival

Pomposity of Colors in Plants
Nature's tool for beauty and survival

Dr Abe V Rotor


Butterfly plant, what a coincidence
     in form and structure, and color;
I'd rather say, a case of mimicry,
     mutual advantage and favor.


Angel's trumpet, flimsy sinister, heralding
     not of victory but defeat;
Narcotics its essence, abuse its courtship,
     to the unwary on a dark street.


Balibago - white in the morning pink later -
     your secret of a short lived;
you must court the sun and bee without delay,
     in the act of make believe.


Mickey mouse the male, Minnie mouse the female,
     both flowers born on one plant;
If ever Disney got the idea from this plant, he's right,
     mystery is what people want.


Begonia, frail and dainty, and easy to wilt
     must shout its color to the butterfly and bee,
else its flowers like spinsters just fade away
     sad and lonely though colorful and free.


Caladium - but you are not a flower and far from one;
     yet you are an apple to the eye of the beholder;
whatever perceptions you create to your pollinators,
     count me as one, your ardent gardener. 


Caballero, title of a noble horseman, 
     wakes with the sun, retires at sundown,
season after season blooms the color of gold;
      tell me where your treasure is found. 


Puff lilies, forerunner of summer in the garden,
suddenly transforming it into a piece of Eden.


Tabernamontana pandakaki - what a name!
whatever that is, bears flowers a gyre of stars
in pure white shining in some forgotten corner
of a garden where other plants are scarce ~

Monday, July 13, 2026

EcoArt: Greening Our Home

Evolution of Art
EcoArt: Greening Our Home  

Dr Abe V Rotor

Aesthetics and function in greening our home lifts the soul;
    green the most restful color, soothing, easy to the eye;
buffer against noise, dust and wind, cleanliness our main goal;
    a world we call home sweet home, in song and smile.

“Green is the prime color of the world, and that from which its loveliness arises.” – Pedro Calderón de la Barca 

 
Potted plants by the window grill merged into an integral scene of trees and lianas, to connect house and garden

“Live simply so others can simply live.” – Mahatma Gandhi 

 
Left: Potted cactus with "man-heaven- earth" motif.  Right, wind chime hangs on a mural. Together, they welcome guests at the doorway.

Bring nature to your home,
for the elders and children,
through the magic of art
and warmth of a friend
 
 
 
The art in the garden is expressed simply and naturally like the shape and formation of leaves and flowers, type of growth, plant arrangement, singly or in combination.

Indigenous these plants are, their care simple, if needed at all.
lies the secret of green thumb in the Garden before the Fall.    

“Green living is not perfection; it is persistent intention.” – Davina Cole 

 
Trees are clothed with lianas and epiphytes.  On the ground are fern and seasonal plants, Between big trees are shrubs and hedges. Make a group of trees an arboretum or a miniature forest, which also serves as a botanical collection. 

Forest in our garden, around our home,
abode of creatures, tame and wild;
could art enhance this union and harmony,
for man to appreciate and abide?  

“The smallest seed of care can grow forests of renewal.” – Jonah Sylver 

 
Garden pond of Pistia and hornwort

Invigorating emerald green 
carpet of calm and serene;
beneath, fish seldom seen,
divide our world like screen.

"We are not above nature, we are a part of nature." — Jennifer Nini

Now and then there is need to prune the trees.  This allows other plants to grow,
and induce old ones to form new crown.  Cut dead branches for safety reason. 

“Being green and clean is not just an aspiration but an action.” – Christine Pelosi  

  
 Symmetry - radial and bilateral - is key to nature's art.  The garden is also a living laboratory. Study Fibonacci's principle, Linnaeus systematic nomenclature, Darwin's theory, among other studies.

The garden: workshop and laboratory,
art and science, hobby and study;
rules and theory, history and posterity,
knowledge, quest, and mystery.

“A cleaner world starts at home: choose, refuse, repair, repeat.” – Marco Reyes 

Space for a plaza, for picnic, strolling, outdoor game and gathering. 

Reminiscent of Thoreau's Walden*
 a forest clearing gives freedom,
space to reach out to heaven;
from disobedience and boredom.

Walden or Life in the Woods by American transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau. The book is about simple living in a natural surrounding. Before settling for a year in the woods, Thoreau wrote a controversial essay, Of Civil Disobedience. ~

Sunday, July 12, 2026

How balanced are you today? Key to Peace of Mind

How balanced are you today? 
Key to Peace of Mind

Yes, you can earn and enjoy the most elusive state of happiness - Peace of Mind.

  Dr Abe V Rotor

When you wake up in the morning, go to the mirror so to speak, and look at yourself. Imagine you are at the center of a square. In a perfect square setting you find Peace of Mind. POM has four attributes, which are associated with positive feelings, such as happiness, feeling of good health, mental alertness, calmness, resoluteness, and the like.  A hearty laugh

At one time science tried to devise a biorhythm clock to indicate the ups and down of each of the four attributes. The premise is that every person has his own biological clock greatly influenced by body physiology. A woman's menstrual cycle, for example influences physical condition and temperament. Transition in life stages is a major factor such as the age of puberty, and mid-life crisis which is beautifully expressed, "Life begins at forty." And how about reaching the golden years and the sunset of life?

The coming and passing of seasons dictates the shape of our "square." Winter is generally the loneliest, thanks to Christmas. Spring brings pep and hope, when buds peep from the bare trees, when the birds herald its coming. Summer is vacation, it is a time for loafing and respite. Autumn is sad, but it is a beautiful season.

Then there are circumstances beyond human control such as tragedy in the family, sudden loss of health, broken relationships, and frustration over failures in personal goals.
Whatever conditions you are in today, go to the mirror and see for yourself who you are today.

The Magic Square
1. Intellectually, are you sharp or dull? Have you been forgetful lately? Maybe you have to postpone making a major decision if you are not mentally prepared. On the other hand, make full use of sudden mental alertness. Deliver a paper in a conference, call a staff meeting. Finish a chapter of the book you are writing. It's a new idea, it comes as a spark of genius. Capture it! Just don't submit to your intellectual mood - create one that would bring you the best mind for the day.

2. Psychologically what's eating you? Hold your horse away from anger or aggression. You'll only regret if you submitted yourself to unguarded moments, spurts of emotion which when uncontrolled will lead you to trouble. On the other hand, get out of bed, go to nature, there is a calming effect when you are close to her. Don't deny your genuine feelings though, for good reason. People will love you for being kind, for being compassionate. Remember. "Laugh and the world laughs with you; weep and you weep alone." (The Way of the World, Ella Wheeler Wilcox).

3. Physically, are you fit for the day? Assess the rigors you have to face. If you have been exercising regularly, keeping away from smoking and drugs, and taking the right food, your fitness is not only for a day. True fitness is a long term reward of strict regimen of good health. And remember to keep a positive disposition, just like the Greek philosophy, "A healthy mind in a healthy body."

4. The spirit - the Little Prince in every person (The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery) - is key to attaining an ideal square of your life. Feeling of emptiness is traced to a spiritual vacuum - when the inner person is neglected. When the "why" in life gets more and more difficult to answer, when life's true meaning comes to a crossroad - or even to a dead end. When spirituality can be neglected even in the midst of religious fervor, and therefore will not grow. When winning is not a win-win equation, when the pedestal is out of reach, the spirit fades away. Take heed, don't wait for the day you get lost in the Sahara desert, so to speak.

Balance yourself today, the best way you can. Continue doing so day after day, until it becomes a discipline - self-discipline. Only then can you earn and enjoy the most elusive state of happiness - Peace of Mind. ~
---------
Past lesson on former Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class Monday to Friday.
Lesson on TATAKalikasan, Ateneo de Manila University 87.9 FM Radyo Katipunan, e
very Thursday, 11 to 12 a.m. March 16, 2023; 
Lesson, Ilocos Sur Community College Education-Extension Program, December 11, 2023

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Scarecrow – Endangered Folk Art

 Scarecrow – Endangered Folk Art

Dr Abe V Rotor
Living with Nature School on Blog

Love that scarecrow (banbanti Ilk.). It is folk art on the farm. In the middle of the field it feigns scary to birds, what with those outstretched arms and that mysterious face hidden beneath a wide brim hat. There it stands tall amid maturing grains, keeping finches or maya birds (Lonchura Malacca jagori and L. m. formosana) at bay.

Scarecrow in the middle of a cornfield. 

Finches are widely distributed in Asia and the Pacific feeding on rice grains, and alternately on weed seeds, but now and then they also steal from the haystack (mandala) and poultry houses. They are recognized for their chestnut colored compact bodies, and sturdy triangular beak designed for grain picking and husking. The scarecrow also guards against the house sparrow, mayan costa (billit China Ilk.), including the loveable turtle dove or bato-bato (Streptopelia bitorquata dursummieri), all grain feeders.

Philippine maya bird, national bird of the Philippines - considered a "pest" in rice fields, for which the scarecrow is intended to drive out.

A scarecrow is usually made of rice hay shaped like a human body wrapped around a T-frame. It is simply dressed up with old shirt and hat. The idea is to make it look like the farmer that the birds fear. There is one problem though. Birds, like the experimental dog of Pavlov (principle of conditional learning), soon discover the hoax and before the farmer knows it, a whole flock of maya is feasting on his ready-to-harvest ricefield. It is not uncommon to see maya birds bantering around – and even roosting on the scarecrow itself!

Today the scarecrow is an endangered art. In its place farmers hang plastic bags, or tie old cassette and video tape along dikes and across the fields. These create rustling or hissing sound as the wind blows, scaring the birds. Others use firecrackers and pellet guns.

At one time I saw a lone scarecrow in the middle of a field. On examining it closely, I found out that it was made of a mannequin dressed the way the fashion world does. It reminded me of the boy who discovered the statue of Venus de Milo in a remote pasture in Greece. On another occasion I saw balloons and styropore balls hanging in poultry and piggery houses, bearing the faces of Jollibee, Power Puff Girls, Batman, Popeye, Mr. Bean and a host of movie and cartoon characters. Interestingly I noticed that the birds were nowhere to be found.

When I told my friend, an entomologist, that these new versions of the scarecrow seem to be effective, he wryly replied, “Maybe there are no more birds left.” Suddenly I remembered Silent Spring, a prize winning book by Rachel Carson. The birds that herald spring had died of pesticide poisoning.

Modern scarecrows, though still essentially decoys, seldom take a human shape. On California farmland, highly reflective aluminized PET film ribbons are tied to the plants to create shimmers from the sun. Another approach is automatic noise guns powered by propane gas. One winery in New York uses inflatable tube of men or air dancers to scare away birds.

In the United Kingdom, where the use of scarecrows as a protector of crops date from time immemorial, and where dialects were rife, there are a wide range of alternative names such as:

Hay-man England
Bodach-rocais (lit. "old man of the rooks") Scotland

Vogelscheuche German PHOTO
Kakashi Japanese
Heo Suabi Korean
Orang-Orang Malaysia
Tao-tao Philippines
Pugalo (Пугало) Russian
Espantapájaros Spanish
Bù nhìn Vietnamese
Flay-crow
Bird-scarer
Rook-scarer
Korean scarecrows
A scarecrow wearing
 a helmet (Japan) 

Wikipedia; Trudgill, Peter. Sociolinguistics: An Introduction to Language and Society. London: Penguin Books, 2000); Photos from Wikipedia, Internet 

Past lesson on Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio 738 DZRB AM Band, 8 to 9 evening class, Monday to Friday

 Cyptobiology
Study of Nature's Spirit

 

 

Friday, July 10, 2026

Scenarios of our children living in a Postmodern World

Scenarios of our children living in a Postmodern World

"Our children will clean the land, water and air we the generation before littered. They will heal the earth we defaced, damaged... "

Dr Abe V Rotor

 Education is the most important tool of our children in a 
postmodern world. Author poses with students in
a symposium-workshop, University of Santo Tomas
 
Key players to our children's future: Institutions and the Family


 The youth: full of energy and dreams, UST

1. Our children live in a Renaissance in the new age: post-capitalism order, environmental revolution, devolution of corporations, green technologies, cyberspace communication, and space exploration. Our children comprise a new breed of more dedicated leaders. They hold the key to change. They play the role of the little prince in Antoine de Saint-Exupery's novel The Little Prince, who saved the pilot whose plane crashed in the Sahara desert.

2. Our children will continue looking for the missing links of science, history, religion, astronomy etc., among them the source of life itself and its link with the physical world. 
This includes linking of disciplines, narrowing down the gaps of specializations, making of a new concept of Man and culture. 

3. Our children are at the front line and center of people’s revolution spreading worldwide. Arab Spring - Part 1 and 2 - is sweeping North Africa and the Middle East, so with the escalating unrest questioning the present world order. The young are angry at the inability of government and capitalism to narrow down economic inequity. Occupy Wall Stree! is the battle cry in the US. Greece, Italy, Spain, once world powers in their own time are undergoing a similar revolution.

4. Our children will live simpler lives, going back to basics, preferring natural over artificial goods and services.  In the long run they are less wasteful than we are today. They learn to face a hidden desire to escape when things get rough, an instinct for survival either by detour or turning back.  

5. Our children face the consequences of  loss of privacy and secrecy from personal to institutional transparency. “You can no longer hide. There is no place you can remain with comfortable anonymity.” But they adjust and find comfort and peace in their own way. 

6. Our children’s involvement in social media makes them actors and not mere spectators. They are involved, concerned with issues, local and world wide.  Development Communication rises above conventional entertainment and reactionary media.  They favor transparency to attain social justice an d more freedom. They learn from Wikileak which unveiled classified information about the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.  Bank secrecy laws and safeguards are changing.  Citizens claim their right to access to hidden financial transactions.

7. Our children inherit our aging infrastructure.  Aging Infrastructure pulls down the economy, increases risk to disaster, creates ghost cities and makes life miserable.

We have created artificial ecosystems in deserted towns, inside the 38th Parallel between the two Koreas, land mines areas, deserted high rise buildings, and now in radiation-affected areas of Chernobyl and Fukoshima. 

8. Our children are being deprived of natural beauty and bounty with the unabated  shrinking wildlife, conversion of farms and pastures into settlements, and destruction of natural habitats and ecosystems.  “Canned Nature” (delata) have become pseudo Nature Centers. Gubat sa Siyudad, Fantasyland, Ocean Park, Disneyland

9. Our children, and succeeding generations become more and more vulnerable to various infirmities – genetic,  physiological, psychological, pathologic. Computer Syndrome is now pandemic, and its toll is increasing worldwide, with South Korea, China, US, Japan, India leading the list. 

10. Our children’s learning process through codification defeats logical thinking and creativity, thus affecting their reasoning power, judgment and decision, originality of thought and ideas.  More and more children are computer-dependent. They find simple equations and definitions difficult without electronic gadget.

11. Our children face the age of singularity  whereby human and artificial intelligence are integrated.  Robotics robs human of his rights and freedom – new realm of curtailment and suppression. (2045 – The Year Man Becomes Immortal – Time Magazine).  This is falsehood!

12. Our children find a world of archives - memories, reproductions, replicas – of a real world lost before their own time. We are making fossils,  biographies, dirges and laments, with little sense of guilt.

13. Our children are overburdened by education.  They need freedom to learn in their own sweet time and enjoy the bliss and adventure of childhood and adolescence. E-learning is taking over much of the role of schools and universities.  Open Universities, Distance Learning will dwarf classroom instruction. This is a revival of the academy of Plato’s dream. 

14. Our children become more and more transient in domicile where work may  require, and for personal reasons, and when given the choice and opportunity in a global perspective, intermarriages notwithstanding. “Citizen of the world” is a person without a specific country.  He is therefore, rootless, baseless, transient. Humans since creation are rooted politically, culturally – and biologically most of ll.

15. Our children become new heroes – heroes for the environment, martyrs for Mother Earth. Heaven is in a regained Paradise on earth. A universal faith, irrespective of denomination, is shaping up fast.

16. Our children will clean the land, water and air we the generation before littered.  They will heal the earth we defaced, damage. With generation gap closed, the task will be shared by all. They learn to become good housekeepers of  Mother Earth. Our children know the meaning of biodiversity and its four attributes -  richness in kind,   population, interrelationship, and balance. Biodiversity  per se does not guarantee sustainability unless integrated with functioning systems of nature. 

17. Our children face acculturation and inter-racial marriages.  Melange of races is on the rise – Eurasian, Afro-American, Afro-Asian,  etc. – a homogenization process that reduces - if not pollutes - natural gene pools, as a consequence. Culturally and scientifically, this is dangerous.  Homogenization leads to extinction of races and ultimately the species. 

                                   Living close to Nature

18.   Our children will realize that optimism will remain the mainstay of human evolution, rising above difficulties and trials. Hope is ingrained in the human brain that makes vision rosier than reality. Anxiety and depression will continue to haunt, in fact accompany progress, but these all the more push optimism up and ahead.

19. Our children live in an era with race discrimination a thing of the past. Many favor living alone as a new norm. More and more join the nones - spirituality outside organized religions, 

20. Our children face the coming of the Horsemen of Apocalypse  – consequence of human folly and frailty (nuclear, pollution, poverty).  Finally, postmodernism may do more harm than good for our children in a runaway technology and culture. More than we grownups, they are more resilient to adapt to the test. This is true. “I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul.”  And this is the philosophy that we wish our children to uphold. ~