“Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom.” —Søren Kierkegaard While new and unfamiliar developments in our lives can often...
Actress and yoga instructor Maxene Magalona tested herself by driving a scooter alone, triumphantly overcoming her fear. Magalona shared how...
How ridiculous it must sound, to worry about the future—at 78!
NEW YORK — The next writer to take a close look at the Trump presidency: Bob Woodward.
Tanghalang Pilipino is staging ‘Ang Pag-uusig,’ Jerry Respeto’s translation of Arthur Miller’s never-more-timely work on political paranoia
What a year 2016 has been, and as it slowly fades into the background, we usher in 2017 with all the optimism and confidence we can muster.
Two weeks ago, we completed a three-part lecture series entitled “Finding the Filipino Soul, Narratives of Nationhood.” The first part covered the period from the La Liga Filipina of José Rizal to the declaration of martial law; followed by the martial law years to Edsa 1986; and capped by the post-Edsa years to the present. Close to 50 media practitioners, mostly millennials, attended the lectures.
Many, if not all of us, allow an accumulation of clutter in our drawers, cabinets, closets and wherever our favorite dumping places may be.
Your mantra for the week: I bravely live my passion without fear or doubt. Man is faced with five basic fears, we are told: ill health; poverty; getting old; loss of love; and death. I believe that we can transcend these fears in our lives.
I used to be such a scaredy-cat. I suppose it came from my overprotected upbringing. I won’t fault my parents here. They were only doing what they thought was in the best interest of their child.