Showing posts with label dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dream. Show all posts

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Admiration by an American Professor for culture of execution among Filipino OFWs, the shattered illusion of an American Dream

Every generation needs a revolution - an entrepreneurial revolution CULTURE OF EXECUTION AMONG OFWs:   an admiration of an American for Filipinos abroad:

Six truths about life of OFWs from BALIKBAYAD BLOG


Most Filipinos are hard working abroad and if Professor David wants something done, and done right, he calls among Filipinos to do this. If all Filipinos were to leave Middle East, no oil would flow from oil wells and the refineries.  (And yet maids are maltreated and killed in Kuwait)

The American dream is a trap.  Many Filipinos are enamored and seek life abroad only to find out that they will be perpetually in debt;  everything is acquired through debt.  Without credit card, many Americans would be poor (And it is a dangerous thing if that credit card business collapses;  it is the only thing that keeps American economy afloat)


LOVE LETTER TO FILIPINOS
By David H. Harwell, PhD
I am writing to thank Filipinos for the way you have treated me here, and to pass on a lesson I learned from observing the differences between your culture and mine over the years.
I am an expatriate worker. I refer to myself as an OAW, an overseas American worker, as a bad joke. The work I do involves a lot of traveling and changing locations, and I do it alone, without family. I have been in 21 countries now, not including my own. It was fun at first. Now, many years later, I am getting tired. The Philippines remains my favorite country of all, though, and I’d like to tell you why before I have to go away again.
I have lived for short periods here, traveled here, and have family and friends here. My own family of origin in the United States is like that of many Americans—not much of a family. Americans do not stay very close to their families, geographically or emotionally, and that is a major mistake. I have long been looking for a home and a family, and the Philippines is the only place I have lived where people honestly seem to understand how important their families are.
I am American and hard-headed. I am a teacher, but it takes me a long time to learn some things. But I’ve been trying, and your culture has been patient in trying to teach me.
In the countries where I’ve lived and worked, all over the Middle East and Asia, it is Filipinos who do all the work and make everything happen. When I am working in a new company abroad, I seek out the Filipino staff when I need help getting something done, and done right. Your international reputation as employees is that you work hard, don’t complain, and are very capable. If all the Filipinos were to go home from the Middle East, the world would stop. Oil is the lifeblood of the world, but without Filipinos, the oil will not come from the ground, it will not be loaded onto the ships, and the ships will not sail. The offices that make the deals and collect the payments will not even open in the morning. The schools will not have teachers, and, of course, the hospitals will have no staff.
What I have seen, that many of you have not seen, is how your family members, the ones who are overseas Filipino workers, do not tell you much about how hard their lives actually are. OFWs are very often mistreated in other countries, at work and in their personal lives. You probably have not heard much about how they do all the work but are severely underpaid, because they know that the money they are earning must be sent home to you, who depend on them. The OFWs are very strong people, perhaps the strongest I have ever seen. They have their pictures taken in front of nice shops and locations to post on Facebook so that you won’t worry about them. But every Pinoy I have ever met abroad misses his/her family very, very much.
I often pity those of you who go to America. You see pictures of their houses and cars, but not what it took to get those things. We have nice things, too many things, in America, but we take on an incredible debt to get them, and the debt is lifelong. America’s economy is based on debt. Very rarely is a house, car, nice piece of clothing, electronic appliance, and often even food, paid for. We get them with credit, and this debt will take all of our lifetime to pay. That burden is true for anyone in America—the OFWs, those who are married to Americans, and the Americans themselves.
Most of us allow the American Dream to become the American Trap. Some of you who go there make it back home, but you give up most of your lives before you do. Some of you who go there learn the very bad American habits of wanting too many things in your hands, and the result is that you live only to work, instead of working only to live. The things we own actually own us. That is the great mistake we Americans make in our lives. We live only to work, and we work only to buy more things that we don’t need. We lose our lives in the process.

Sunday, September 25, 2016

To be in Forbes list of richest Filipinos - dream for the next 10 years

Every generation needs a revolution - an entrepreneurial revolution

Rizal Philippines
September 25, 2016


Forbes list of top 50 richest Filipinos

Image result for Filipinos in Forbes richest
I just saw the list of top richest Filipinos listed in Forbes.  I realized that I forgot this as a goal while I thought.  My routine settled on grades arguing with school administrators, catching a plane, making syllabus, correcting papers.  Not exactly in line with selecting high value activities.

Being retired at 65 from teaching gave me a fresh look as to who I really want to be.  I want to be included in the list of richest Filipinos.  Say top 50.  Maybe a $1 billion.   (next 20 years)  For 10 years, I will settle for $100 million.

What will I do:

1. I will expand the Memorial Plan business make it multi billion in the next 5 years  (strive to sell 100,000 plans in next 5 years  -  that is about P3,000,000 billion worth -  good enough for $60 million

         1. put up and acquire chapels, crematorium

         2.  put and acquire more memorial parks

              Good for $30 million

2.  Develop subdivision, build and sell

3.  Expand the lending investor, acquire bank or join the rb and expand this into something else to help in #1 and #2

4.  Acquire schools

5.   Dab into the energy business


Maski wala sa worlds richest:

Image result for Filipinos in Forbes richest

Thursday, January 7, 2016

6 Ds needed to be a successful leader

Leaders bring hope and changes in this life

Rizal Philippines
January 7, 2016

D -  ream (seeking brainstorming)

D -  ecide  which options to pursue

D - etermination (you have to pursue that goal which you decide relentlessly)

D - edication (of your life, effort, and resources)

D - iscipline (to do the things necessary to reach the goal even if this distasteful or difficult/chalenging

D - o

Sunday, April 6, 2014

All four Entrep Guests at AGSB Clark had a common theme - Dream and Do

Angono Rizal  Philippine  |  April 6, 2014



The powerful line up of speakers last Friday for the AGSB entrep class had a common theme:

DREAM

1.  Dra Ferrer  -  "Live your Dream"  (of taking care of children, their health and their knowledge, and health of the community through healthy and hygienically baked bread

2.  Arni Valdes  -  "If you must dream, dream big"