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Oct 31, 2013

What It Means to be a Girl in Green

USJ-R GSP Batch 2013-2014
 Being a Girl Scout is not just about girls in green wearing scarves and camp outs, the name itself is the purest form of one global organization aiming to be the change this world wants to see.


Independence Day 2011

It is a community of girls making a radical movement in their own little ways, and I am proud to be part of this community--the Girl Scouts of the Philippines. I've been with the Girl Scouts for four years (and counting), and in that four years, I've witnessed how life-changing being a Girl Scout is. 


Two-years-and-a-half ago
Being a freshman in the University of San Jose-Recoletos sans a knowledge of the school's organizations, I was recruited into the world of scouting. The moment I passed through the series of Oral Defenses and skills training prepared by senior Girl Scout Leaders is the moment I became the girl who does things extraordinarily well.

Ground-To-Air
Tree planting in Guiwanon, Argao
More than the summer trainings, the sun-kissed skin of summer extending for 4 consecutive years,  the outdoor cooking with matching Nagaraya-stylized rice, the visit to the student disciplinarian resulting either from Friday formation escape-ades or  in campus stays beyond curfew, the uncleared clearance in GSP triggering a game of  hide-and-seek looking for Mrs. Mauring-Recto's or the resident Finance Officer's (S4's) signature, the Saturday nights spent encoding and revising letters signed by the Principal and Father Director themselves, the cancelling of month-planned activities, the academic pressure steaming from an overload of extra-curricular activities, is a passion so strong that no matter what obstacles are thrown your way, you will always find another way.


Tatak Josenian GSP ka if you can read this
The many roles Girl Scout has given me: friend, sister, confidant, truth-seeker, role-model, and inspiration made me experience so much in High School that made me mature and live in reality. It gave me the confidence that gave rise to the many faces I owned: campus journalist, public speaker, debater, campus ambassador, RAYer, peer facilitator, squirette, and COP volunteer.

Meeting Brgy. Capt. Lorna Damalerio

Ambitious I was, and still am, and an overachiever too, I would always challenge myself to never settle for mediocrity--this was what High School taught me, the Josenian core value of Excellence. Despite being in the graduating class, despite the hectic schedule of irregular after school extracurricular meetings, and despite the doubts of maintaining my academics, it was in challenging myself that I joined the Chief Girl Scout Medal Scheme.


Construction of my work station

Giving solicitations at City Hall
Surveying my community
It was never an easy road, honestly. From the very first step, you have to brace yourself and be prepared for anything. It was like walking on water, much like how Jesus Walks on the Water . It was a feat that could only be achieved with complete faith and trust in God. You will fall in the middle if you get frightened and hesitate, yet your strength to persevere will grow once you overcome your anxiety. With every step you take and every turn you make, there's always a choice and a decision to make. I chose the field Livelihood over Environment, Dressmaking over a Water Reservoir. I chose a community I haven't been to and people I've never met. I chose to be different, I chose to be the risk-taker, the overachiever that is me. And did I regret? No Sir, I did not, and never will.



Sunday training on dressmaking
From my experience, I learned the importance of trust. You can not accomplish anything without trusting your beneficiaries, advisers, work group, and most especially yourself. Learn to trust others if your want others to trust you. Learn to be flexible in your encounters with people (be polite when asking for something, and if rejected, remain courteous and patient) and in your management of time (do paper works little by little, not altogether, and always make a back-up plan).

Turnover Ceremony
 After a year of hard work, my efforts finally paid off. The journey finally reached its end, yet the greatest reward is not the medal, nor the title, but the smiling, happy faces of the people who benefited from the hard work and effort done to make the project a success. It is their priceless faces, their hard work of sewing clothes and rags to earn an income and sustain the project that no amount of recognition can ever compare, and the even bigger reward would be seeing the same workstation 20-30 years from now fully-operating and buzzing with people.

CGSMS Awarding Ceremony, Visayas Region


L-R: Me, Kristien, Gilian, Apple, Danielle, and Jealyn
It was an achievement of a lifetime. It was a milestone that I could not have accomplished without my solicitors and donors whose solicitations and donations were used to construct the workstation of my project and to buy the sewing machines and materials, my advisers, most especially my parents who, even with a lot of arguments and a 'little' discouragement, were the pillar of strength that pushed me one, Tita Grace who inspired me to take up the challenge and taught me the meaning of service, my work group (Jhanica, Joann, Sandra, Kim, Jeciel, Karen, Inna) who despite the busy 4th year life,  helped me in their little (turned big) ways, my beneficiaries who remained with me throughout the year, and my Josenian and Girl Scout families. Where would I be without these people? :)


I am a Girl Scout and always will be for, hopefully, for as long as the fire in me remains fueled by the desire to serve others. Medical school may grow be too toxic for me to join activities and encampments, but wait a few years at balalik rin ako! And if I can not, then I'll make sure my kids will (in 15-20 year's time or more, haha). Even if my registration expires, in my actions I will always be Girl Scout...in my thoughts, and in my heart.


Signing off (for now),















Cadet Scout Angela Marie S. Magsucang

Oct 12, 2013

18th Ain't About Parties


The day you officially graduate from your teenage days and turn into an adult is, well, kind of a normal experience. No big bangs or ta-tas, but just the normal any other celebration of any other year. Just the way I like it. 

Rather than spend much (say 50K +) for a one-night event, why not be practical and use the money wisely, hmm? Isn't that what adulthood is about? Or maybe for me, that is. Attending mass, having an outreach somewhere in Cebu, and lunching out with family, relatives, and close friends, my day being a day of giving, that's my ideal way of spending the 18th. 

And so I did.


Road trip going to Sitio Napo

 When I told my mother I wanted to have a community outreach on my birthday, I already had a community I wanted to go to in mind, the same community I had my CGSMS Project, but she suggested otherwise...and look where it took me.


Kids from Napo Elementary School

The trip to Sitio Napo wasn't quite that long, being about 10 minutes away from home, and when I did reach the venue, how surprised I was! I wasn't used to being sang a birthday song, so I kind of became a bit shy. Plus, they also prepared birthday cards.  "No card, no food." My mother even jokingly said. How sweet of the kids.

Simple gifts that mean so, so much
Their thank you's and big smiles were too heartwarming that I swear I could've flown if I had wings. I almost cried, not because of the presents, but because (to be honest), I know I made God proud of this good turn.

A lot of the kids out of a class of 37, haven't tried eating Jollibee, and being able to give them this simple joy is enough for me. It brings justice to the reality that people who have less appreciate more the little things given to them than the rich who are given more, yet appreciate less.

The trip to Napo Elementary School served as an inspiration to make every birthday of every year a day of giving.  


Photo courtesy from: http://jaredramos.files.wordpress.com

True to my list, the second one to cross off would be the lunch out in Patio Isabel.


R-L: Ate Mimi, Kuya Francis and Kuya Ton-ton

I truly appreciate the people with me celebrating one of life's events. Them lending me their time and effort (jima moment here, awee).

Feeling blessed and thankful
I want to thank everyone who've been with me for the past 18 years: my family who has always given me love and inspiration to do my best and make 'em proud, my relatives who have been great supporters full of love and care, and my precious friends who I wish would still be there for the rest of my lifetime.

Most of all, I'd like to thank God for the gift of life. For helping me make it through life's trials, and granting me success. I know life's going to get a lot tougher after this, but I believe anything's possible, and that any trouble brewed will all come to pass.



Post-celebration!








Your downtown lassie,