Thursday, December 30, 2010

Ups and Downs Family Love is All Around


Just 2 Backpacks For a 1 Week Trip

It's not every year that your family comes together. I'm not just talking about Thanksgiving, Christmas or Easter. I'm talking about the entire family - the aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents and the obscure ones you didn't even know existed. This year, my grandpa 'Papa' celebrated his 84th birthday. To commemorate this momentous occasion, relatives all over the world - mainly the US and the Philippines - came together in Iloilo, Philippines during the second week of November. Dave and I pleaded our bosses to give us time off despite being in the dreaded 3 month probation period. We were scheduled to leave on Saturday the 13th, but of course last minute shenanigans happened eg. change of the party to the evening of the 13th and PAL rerouting our direct flight from Sydney to Manila through Melbourne. Luckily, I was able to exchange our tickets for a day ahead and so we left on Friday the 12th. I've never been so spazzed out about catching a connecting flight until now. In Manila, I had to go from one terminal to another. You'd expect to jump onto some airport monorail or bus, but this wasn't the case. We had to go across a very busy part of town to the domestic terminal of the same airport bypassing the completely separate domestic airport on the way. We jumped into an empty airport shuttle and begged him to go. We arrived with enough time to check-in and get to security. At security, we had to turn right back around because our duty-free bought Bundaberg rum from Sydney Airport wasn't allowed as a carry-on. By 7pm, we had been traveling for 11 hours and had only enough energy to sigh a breath of relief once we sat down for an hour long trip to Iloilo. Once there, there would be no more planning, just us going with the flow of my parents' plans.

We arrived 5 minutes early and found no one waiting for us. We strolled up and down the arrivals gate weaving through dozens of cabbies asking us if we needed a ride. We approached a young boy cleaning a cafe to use his cellphone. The poor boy didn't have enough credit to make a call. (The Philippines is known as the texting capital of the world since a single SMS is approx. a peso!) No return text. We stayed till the airport shut all its lights and only one taxi was left. We took it to the only part of town I knew - SM City Mall in the heart of Iloilo. Dave and I are pretty seasoned travellers. Despite this irritating circumstance, we had a plan B, enough money and most importantly a positive attitude. We checked into the nicest hotel in the clubbing district and ordered a pricey, yet totally satisfying Filipino meal on a veranda overlooking the clubbing district. Phoneless and disheartened, we ate and watched the club-goers hoping to see my cousins letting loose escaping the clutches of their parents. That Friday, all known parties had driven, flown and boated over to Iloilo because my Papa’s birthday party would be the next night. Our meal was bittersweet. We had finally taken our first vacation since moving to Australia, but were unsure if we were going to find my family when we foreigners could hardly distinguish one Filipino from the next. At this point, I have never seen my step dad’s side of the family.

The next morning, found emails from my family on the lobby Internet. By noon, my mom had found us. When we saw her, she gave me the biggest hug and started to cry. I had never seen my mom so worried and relieved at the same time. According to my parents, they had entrusted my aunt and uncle to pick us up with my Houston-based cousins who were arriving at relatively the same time. With all the excitement and commotion of the party and relatives filtering in, we were missed. At this point, my immediate family had pulled out of the reunion/ birthday party and was staying at another hotel. How could this much drama happen overnight? Dave and I were feeling pretty guilty, but we couldn’t have stayed at the dark and empty airport!

Trying to keep my mom’s mind off the drama, we spent the day – the day of the party – with her shopping and running errands. Dave, my dad and brother got facials – the kind for acne and leaves you red-faced and sorry. Eek! It was really great to see my parents in their own element. I asked them if they felt like they were at ‘home’. They answered 50/50 because they have been so removed (since the early 80s) that they love both their home country and their current home in the States. I’ve lived in so many different places, what will I call home when I’m their age?


Me and Papa at His 84th Birthday & Family Reunion

In the last two years, my aunt lost her husband and my grandfather lost his wife. If a reunion was going to happen, it needed to happen sooner than later. By 5pm, my dad and I were worried we’d miss the big reunion. After all, a lot of time, money and concerted effort were put into play to make my Papa’s birthday a success. Cuddling with my mom, we persuaded her to go and forget the entire mess and just concentrate on what was important – giving my Papa the best birthday and family reunion ever.



The Main Event - Lechon

At the reunion, all was set aside and we enjoyed a feast including Lechon (a traditional Filipino roasted pig served at big occasions). There were over 100 people all connected to my grandfather. Predictably, there was karaoke, choreographed dances and games – my favourite being the newspaper game! There are pairs dancing around a newspaper. When the music stops, the pair has to fold it in half and fit their feet on it. The winning pair is the one with the smallest newspaper square and can still stand on it even if that means piggy back style!




2nd Place in the Newspaper Dance Game

The next day, we took off for Boracay, a 4 hour ride across the island plus a ferry ride. This trip took 6 hours because of a flat tire and a stop at a resto to see the Philippines most prized athlete – Manny Pacquaio defeat Antonio Margarito. This fight was like The Thrilla in Manila Muhammed Ali v Joe Frazier to the Filipino public and was advertised as the David and Goliath fight. It was amazing to see locals so enamoured by one man. He was like Michael Jordan meets Jesus – he is almost a religion in the Philippines. As the biblical story dictates, so did the Pacman defeat his Goliath.




Never Too Old to Cuddle my Baby Bro RJ


The Road from Iloilo to Caticlan (Boracay Port City)


Boracay is one of the best beaches in the world and a guaranteed good time including snorkeling, white sand beaches and cheap seafood and massages. For the next 3 days, I enjoyed getting to know my dad’s side of the family and forgetting all the drama that had happened the day before. Poor Dave though, he endured food poisoning – we’re suspecting Yellow Cab Pizza Company because my sister got it too! – and was out of commission till our last night. Our one goal for the Boracay trip was to get a market fresh seafood dinner that we had enjoyed last year. We bought 2 lobsters, 1kg prawns and 200g calamari and had it prepared by a nearby restaurant for less than $20 a person! If you ever go to the Philippines, you have to dip your seafood in a mixture of soy sauce and calamansi juice known to my family as 'Dip dip'. You’ll want to spoon it up!


Island Hopping Around Boracay


Enjoying My Favourite Filipino Icecream
Ube or Purple Taro or Yam



Seafood Buffet for Two
Lobster, Prawn, Calamari, Rice & Calamansi Soy Sauce 'Dip dip'


My Proud Grandma and Me at the New Restaurant Bangga Vaflor

On Wednesday, we took off for Iloilo again, but this time to catch a ferry to my mother’s home island of Negros to the city of Bacolod. This was a very special trip because my mom had spent the last year tearing down my grandmother’s dilapidated house and building a restaurant for my extended family to run and earn money. The most vivid memory of the house was when I was 3 years old living with my grandmother in her huge, dark and scary house while my mom worked in the States raising enough money to bring me and my sister over. The site before us was not that gloomy house, but a bright two-part building called Bangga Vaflor or Vaflor Street set up as a cafĂ© for the neighboring college during the day and a fine-dining restaurant in the evening. For the next two days, we enjoyed huge crabs and bangus (milk fish) from my uncle’s fish pond and tasting menu for the restaurant. We held a second reunion, but this time with my grandmother’s side of the family.
 

The Biggest Crab I've Ever Eaten


Hiding Signs of Extreme Fatigue
Ariadne, Bea, Daddy, Me, Dave and RJ at Waterfall #3

On my last day in Bacolod, my family went to Mambukal Resort a hidden gem an hour away with 7 waterfalls. My dad, brother, Dave and cousins conquered the high terrain and beating heat to all 7 waterfalls. As much as I dislike hiking, it felt familiar and good to do something with my family that we haven’t done since I was living under their roof. It was like I was 10 and on vacation with my family with my dad leading the way making slacker jokes at us slowpokes bringing up the rear.


Enjoying a Well-Deserved Shiatsu Massage

That night, exhausted and yet to have a proper massage, I got my wish. The very same masseuse I had when I visited back in 2002 was still in contact with my aunt. He came over and went nuts. It was one of the Shiatsu massages that hurt and tickled at the same time for over an hour – all for 200 pesos or approx. $5!


The Great Manny 'Pacman' Pacquiao Singing to His Fans

On Dave and I’s last day, we decided to go to Manila early and do some last minute shopping at SM Mall of Asia. Only 15 minutes away from the airport, this was our best bet to get all the deals we were missing in Australia (the country with insanely overpriced retail goods). In the taxi, our cabbie told us Manny Pacquiao would be holding a concert at the mall! After a day of shopping, Cinnabon and more shopping, we walked out of the mall to the welcome of a fireworks display. And on the big screens, there was Pacquiao singing ‘Filipino, Filipino’. What a great way to end our trip!



The Vaflor Family

As hectic and dramatic the start of our vacation was, the rest of the vacation proved to be worth the tough start. I’m a big believer in balance and this trip exemplified how families can be both sides of angry, frustrated, and hurt and also loving, jokey and appreciative. This reunion doesn’t happen every year. In fact, this was the first I’ve participated in my 25 years. I hope we don’t go too long before another one happens. Thank you to all those involved in the planning, execution and follow up of this memorable event!

Monday, December 27, 2010

The 3 Month Review

Once getting the job, you expect that life will be full of sunshine and rainbows. In Australia, this is not the case. Once you’ve signed your contract, you will then be put onto a 3 month probation period. During that time, you’ll need to ‘fight for your life’ to keep your job. At any time if your boss feels that you’re under performing or just not the right fit, you could get canned. To avoid this, you’ll need to not only perform your job description, but also perform above and beyond expectation especially if you want a raise at your evaluation.

During this period, your peers are watching you. They’re constantly judging you, giving you more responsibility, tighter deadlines, thus added pressure that you just don't need. They’ll liaise with your boss disclosing a behind closed doors sense of your performance, work ethic, personality and ability to handle that pressure. You have no idea this is happening until the day of your 3 month review.

Two weeks before my 3 month review I was asked to fill out a questionnaire with topics like:
  • What do you like about your job?
  • What don’t you like about your job?
  • What do you do in your job?
  • How could you do your job better?
  • What do you like about your manager?
  • What don’t you like about your manager?
  • What do you not like about your workplace?
  • How could you make the work place better?
These topics, although generic, can really open up an entire account of your experience. Because the questions are so open-ended, you are at liberty to answer in your own tone and reveal what you think is noteworthy to bring up at your assessment. With confidence and a promise to myself that I would always be open and honest at any job I hold, I answered the questions in length about my experience at Taurus.

The week before my review, one of my colleagues was notified that he was under performing. This assessment scared me. His resume boasted of experience and high qualifications. He had a bright personality and the charisma any company would want. He was also one of my first friends at the workplace, not to mention Australia. In the end, he wasn’t the right fit for our company. Gosh, what if I wasn’t the right fit? What if I was under performing? Keeping my composure, I held my head high. After all, I felt that my performance over the last 3 months was actually worth me presenting my case for a raise. I had written for every publication we contributed to, done loads of research, pitched a product into a highly saturated market and even managed the interns just to name a few highlights.

The day before my actual review, I sat down with my manager and talked through my questions. I was confident about the positive questions like what do you do, how have you contributed etc. When it came to the more sensitive questions, I broke down. I hate talking about people and how I felt the department was lacking. I didn’t want my concerns to reflect on management; the person sitting in front of me. I saw the concern in her eyes and the waterworks came. I didn’t want her to think she was a bad manager nor did I want to raise the red flag of the inconsistencies and shortcomings of the office. Nevertheless, I stayed true to myself and raised the issue of being open in our small office and how fairness and individuality need to be addressed. In my mind, wasn’t it better to contribute towards a dialogue of understanding and the improvement of myself, my peers, my department and my office? I was given the questionnaire to answer in my own words and of my own accord. She fully agreed with my advice and I swallowed the lump in my throat.

The second topic of the hour was my salary. I have to preface this bit with the fact that I hate talking about salary and deserving of said salary. To justify my desired salary, I printed off salary reviews and trends from Australia’s most trusted and used source for employment – Seek.com.au. I presented the print out with graphs and descriptions. She asked, “What drives you? For some it’s training. For others, it’s money.” I said skittishly, “Money.” I appreciate training, but I felt that I got enough experience and push by working in an agency itself. Working in an agency is a fast-paced, tight deadline driven and outcomes-based way of working. Those elements in themselves gave me enough of a learning curve to push my professional capabilities and boundaries. Furthermore, I was under-hired. I had previous experience in working with internal and external communications and public relations, but I had come off of 2 years of teaching English in Korea. Australia needed to see my capabilities and in 3 months, I showed them I was definitely not entry-level. So aiming high, my first figure was surprisingly for me and gladly accepted by my manager. Happy with my own self-assurance and the much higher figure, I said nothing more of my salary.

This was the easy episode. My immediate manager wanted to go through my questionnaire as a buffer before I took on my CEO the next day. Because I was emotionally spent at this point, I breezed through the round with my CEO. I was firm, confident and most of all sincere. I had my doubts, but as any good communication specialist would do, I backed myself up with credible examples and won my case. This experience isn't a reflection on my company, but is assessment that exists to bring mutual understanding and agreement between the employee and employer. I've had a wonderful and challenging experience thus far and can't wait to see how my professional self develops until my next appraisal occurs in May 2011.

The 3 month review is unfamiliar and a strange concept to grasp. I now understand why Australia does it and can appreciate the 'try before you buy' concept. After all, there are thousands who enter Australia each year trying to land a job and obtain a business visa. On the other hand, there are just as many who go beyond their tourist visa and just stay illegally. Australia has to be discriminating and that's where the 3 month review fits in the grander picture of living the 'Australian dream'.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Sydney to host FIFA World Cup 2022


Australia's World Cup Bid 2022
*Courtesy of YouTube

I love a good campaign when I see one, but pro-Australia campaigns seem to only love its cliches. This campaign is quite near and dear to my heart as I am an avid player, watcher and overall enthusiast of all things soccer. Living in Australia, I'm definitely rooting for Oz to host, but will I even be here in 2022?

Today, Australia is making its last bid to host the FIFA World Cup 2022 to the FIFA committee in Zurich, Switzerland. High-profile celebrities such as Hugh Jackman, Cate Blanchett, Elle MacPherson, and Cathy Freeman are ambassadors to host.  The country is in the running with USA, Japan, South Korea, and Qatar. However, speculation suggests Australia may not make such a good host being ranked 'least profitable'. The world will know by tomorrow 3 December 2010.

Seeing this campaign video is quite exciting though and reminds me of how fun Australia is and how they are able to make fun of themselves by including such personalities as Crocodile Dundee. Crossed fingers we score a goal on this one!

How long have I been here?