Sunday, January 26, 2014

10 Things You Should Know About Mikee Cojuango-Jaworski

Mikee Cojuangco on love, politics & crazy horses

Mikee Cojuangco: Growing up privileged, Mikee was never indifferent to the plight of others — or the glamour of show business. After being injured and she couldn’t ride for a year, she turned to acting. “I totally enjoyed everything I was doing.” 
She was been away from the limelight for quite some time, but still very active with her advocacies and still as beautiful as ever. I catch up with a multi-talented woman who became Manila’s “it” girl even before we started using the term. Here are 10 things you should know about Mikee Cojuango-Jaworski.

1 Despite her parents Pepito and Tingting Cojuangco being in politics, Mikee’s dad actually did not want her to run for SK when she was 18.

“He said if I joined SK, I wouldn’t be as happy as I could be, that I would get stuck. I saw it myself,” she recalls. “My final straw with SK was when I offered a couple of co-SK officials a personal loan as a start-up capital for a small business. I had my Swatch money then. But I was told that if I wasn’t going to give it as a ‘donation,’ to just keep my money. So I did! I remember my dad telling me, ‘If you feel you are getting something out of it, personally, then get out. Public service is a sacrifice.’

“The first time that I realized that there was a difference between my life and other kids’ was, I don’t remember what grade I was, but one of the questions in Social Studies was, ‘Saan mas masarap ang buhay, sa probinsya o sa ciudad?’

I kept insisting ‘sa probinsya.’ The teacher kept saying that the amenities are not available in the province. But I was thinking, ‘Yes, they are!’ Ano lang naman yung amenities at that time, aircon, TV. I went home and told my parents what we talked about in school. And there was something different about the way they looked at each other and smiled. It wasn’t much later that I realized, ah, okay, I know na why, it is different,” she shares.

Mikee says that even if she grew up privileged, she wasn’t indifferent to the realities of how other Pinoys really lived. She recalls her mom always taking them on different provincial trips (“yung maliligo ka in those banyos outside the house where the toilets are”) and her dad always sat her down to talk. “My dad was always telling me, ‘You know, you are so blessed. From the time you were born and until the time you die, hopefully you’re never going to have to worry about your next meal.’ And I used to wonder, ‘What’s this about a next meal?’ I was eight when he first gave me that talk. He would say, ‘There’s nothing that you need that you don’t have, so you have to find a way to be a blessing to others because not everybody is like you.’ Up to now, same talk,” she says with a laugh.

2 Mikee is the middle child among five girls and admits, “I spent more time with my teammates than I ever did with my sisters.”

“All of us are so different. Personally, I never really felt the competition or even the comparison. Of course you’ll hear, ‘Ay, mas maganda si ganyan,’ which for us was more, ‘Ha-ha! Mas maganda daw ako!’” She says she and sisters Liaa, Pin, Mai Mai, and China were not really close growing up (“No sharing of boy stories even”), but points out, “Now we are so close.”

“My two older sisters had a lot to do with us growing up, because our parents were busy. So they called it their revenge. They were super strict! What time you have to be home, how you talk, the words you use, everything. They would say, ‘Sit up straight! Eat properly! Do your homework!’” she mimics. Meanwhile she, Mai Mai and China were “magkakampi and magkaaway.” “Usually China and I were magkakampi so we would cut the hair of Mai Mai’s Barbies or take the heads off,” she laughs. “It was my ate Liaa that encouraged me to make the Asian Games a goal, then it was my ate Pin naman who would dress me up or choose what I was gonna wear because I never owned anything to go out.”

3 As a high school student in CSA, she balanced her studies (“There was no special treatment”), training, plus she was in the student council.

“I get to the riding school, I wait for the sun, mga 5 a.m. School would start before eight. After school, there were student council meetings. Then I would just go back again after school. Basta I get home mga 8:30.” When asked if she ever felt balancing it all got too difficult, she says, “Never. Ever.”

She shares she got to enjoy school life just like any other student. “I really didn’t feel like I missed out because of my sport because my dad probably wouldn’t have let me go out anyway. I remember though one time, I was in second year high school and he grounded me. I went to the house with my classmates and asked if we could watch a movie. ‘Okay, be home by 10.’ Eh it was 7:30 p.m. I was the only one with a car. We all went to the movie house, and by 9:30 I was telling them, ‘C’mon we have to go!’ Because I was still going to drop them off. So we left without finishing the movie, of course they were so inis with me. I got home at 12 past 10. He grounded me for two months. I said sorry and I said, ‘Okay. I mean, come on, the last time I asked if I could go out was probably four months ago! So it’s not really a big deal,’” she laughs. “He didn’t ground me from training anyway.”

4 During the height of her acting career, she was being pitted against Judy Ann Santos. “I just thought, are you serious? Juday? Me versus Juday? It’s Juday!

“From the time (the Swatch commercial) aired, I was getting movie offers. It was not something I was considering because I didn’t have time. There was no way I was gonna give up school or riding, so I would just say no. Then I got injured when I was 19 and I couldn’t ride for a year. After all those years, suddenly I had free time and I didn’t know how to handle it! ‘Okay, let’s do this,’” she shares.

“I totally enjoyed everything I was doing. The lifestyle was so ideal for me because I wasn’t really a social person. I could be home three months shooting a movie and taping for my show, and gone another three months training and competing.

“What other job was gonna allow me to do that? And earn what I needed to support my sport? I always say that I never made all of these plans, but obviously God made them for me. One thing I learned from my mom is when an opportunity comes, grab it. If you don’t like it, get out of it. If you like it, buti na lang you tried.”

5 The one moment in her life that she felt most self-conscious was when she sang at the birthday special of Sonny Jaworski at the Araneta Coliseum.

“We were recording the song and I told my vocal coach, ‘No, no, no, it has to be really perfect, it has to be the best I’ve ever sung. It’s my boyfriend’s dad!’ We spent a couple of hours recording,” she recalls. Mikee stands up to reenact the moment. “I remember standing there, singing lip sync and performing, and I went to do this to my hand (reaches her hand out) and it started shaking! ‘What’s happening!?’ When I was done, I was looking around, it felt like ages standing there looking like a fool! And I just walked off the stage,” she laughs.

When asked how it was when she first met the Big J, she says, “I remember thinking, ‘Wow, he is such a nice person.’ I was at their house and we were on our way out. It was late afternoon and someone opened the gate, it was him. He opened the gate himself, got back into his car, drove it in. It was so... normal!”

She met her husband Dodot through common friends Vince Hizon and Toni Leviste who were dating at that time. “It took months for Toni to convince me. I had been set up with so many people that I felt, I’m tired na. I’d rather do other things than be set up again.” She eventually said yes to the set-up, they ended up hanging out with a group of friends, then just the two of them; then after a while, they got together. “I do remember, one time he was sick and I sent him oranges in a bayong. He always teases me that I made him ligaw, and for me, why would he think that I like him just because I sent him oranges? I would tell him, ‘What? Because of that you thought I liked you? Baduy mo!’ I didn’t want to say na lang kasi I was given a lot and baka mabulok,” she recalls. “Baka nga akala niya niligawan ko siya!” Two years after meeting each other, Dodot and Mikee got married.

6 On what kind of woman she thinks would be perfect for her cousin P-Noy: “She has to have a strong personality. Even if she’s going to pretend to be submissive, she needs to be strong.

“He is palabiro especially with me. He would ask, ‘Ano, okay ba? Kasi pag sinabi mong ayaw mo, ayoko na rin,’ he would joke around with me. I remember one time I teased him, ‘Kuya Noy, ano ba, tatlo na anak ko!’ And he said, ‘Basta pag meron na talaga, tapos yun na talaga yun, I will seek you out para ipakilala ko sa iyo.’  The girls that I’ve met that he has gone out with have not been that different from each other, they’re nice, intelligent and classy. But who wouldn’t want that? Maybe what he needs is not that,” she laughs. “Maybe he just needs time to actually go out on dates. It’s not an easy time for him to find someone.”

On reading P-Noy basher posts on social media: “Of course it affects me. I try to remind myself that out of two bashers, there are 10 lovers or likers or admirers.”

7 Dodot originally wanted him and Mikee to have 12 children.

They have three boys, Rob, 14, Raf, 12, and Renzo, 5. “In the beginning, when we got married, he was saying he wanted 12 kids. He was actually serious! Then the first was born, then you know, milk, diapers, all that. Then it became, ‘Ah, 10 na lang.’ ‘Okay, whatever,’” she laughs. “Then Raf was born. That’s double the milk and diapers. Okay, eight na lang. Tapos nag-aral na. Every time reality set in, there was a change of point of view. So naging four na lang. We were planning to have two, then have a break, then two again. But when Renzo was born, we just got so busy and all of a sudden, now he’s five! Now Robbie is almost in high school, so okay, three na lang. Life happens, you know?”

She and Dodot agreed to one rule when it comes to raising their kids: “Let’s not make contra each other in front of them.”

8 The one lesson she learned from the toughest time of her life: “You can only just do your best. You cannot please everybody no matter what you do.

“There was a personal side to it, a legal side to it, it involved my sport, my passion, my family, everything dear to me. God has always been so good to me that whenever something is not right in one aspect of my life, there is something that is. When all of that was happening, it was a stressful period, but it was the personal side that made it really difficult,” she shares. “God opened up so many things for me from that painful experience. That bad experience of having to deal with it and having to overcome it apparently became one of the things that the IOC (International Olympic Committee) liked about me. Because I have experience in conflict resolution related to sports.” (Last year, Mikee was elected into the IOC as a representative to the Philippines, only the third Filipino with that honor.)

9 Mikee Cojuangco in numbers:

17: Age when her Swatch commercial aired.

3: Number of major medals won. An individual gold and a team silver at the 2002 Asian Games, and a team gold at the 2005 SEA Games.

6: Number of surgeries she’s had. Three were sports related, and the other three were the C-sections for her kids.

8: Number of hours a day she trained at the peak of her riding career. “Now when I train, maybe one and a half hours.”

12: Number of horses owned. “My dad has this philosophy that I wouldn’t be a real rider if I didn’t know how to ride the untrained ones. So he always gave me these racehorses. When I fell off one of them and I already had Robbie, my coach stormed into my dad’s house and said, ‘This is it, this is the last one! You are not giving her another crazy horse! She has a child, Peping!’ That was the last,” she laughs.

10 She admits she has no secret to looking “forever young.” For that, she thanks her parents who both have good skin, and shares she is “quite low maintenance.”

Turning 40 this year, what message would Mikee give her 50-year-old self? “Life truly begins at 40! You’re only 10 years old, you have a long way to go.”

On what advice she would give her 30-year-old self: “This actually happened all the time throughout my life. But 30 being the year that Dot ran for office, my mindset being that I would be the wife of a congressman, I would say, ‘Life doesn’t always turn out how you plan it, but it always turns out better.’”

* * *

Before, during, and after our interview in her lovely home, Mikee made coffee for us both, checked on her son Renzo who was playing with their dogs, took a phone call from husband Dodot, then son Robbie, then another from mom Tingting, consoled Renzo when he came crying after falling, welcomed home son Raf, chit-chatted a bit more when the recorder was put away, and even escorted me outside the gate when I left. Obviously more than content and fulfilled with her career and her time in the spotlight, she now relishes life simply as a mother, wife and advocate. “Yes, I do have everything,” she once said in an interview with Boy Abunda. I saw for myself that not only is that true, but that with the right mindset, it is possible for any of us too.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

10 Things You Should Know About Grace Poe Llamanzares



Grace Poe: Life as a senator and adopted child of FPJ

Senator Grace Poe Llamanzares on the possibility of finding her biological parents: “I am curious to know, but I have to be honest. I consider my parents to be my parents.”
Pinoy politicos don’t exactly have the best reputation right now. So what would drive an accomplished private citizen to join the roller coaster world of politics, and how does one go from working mom in the US to becoming the leader in the senatorial elections? Here are ten things you should know about Grace Poe Llamanzares.

1 On Senate life so far: “Five months feel like 10 years!”

When it comes to rating the difficulty level of being a senator from 1 to 10, Sen. Grace can’t quite put a number to it. “Adjusting to the work alone, for me, I can handle it. I have very good people working with me and this is what I want to do. When it comes to the personal, emotional side of it, it’s not as easy because of the issues that have come up. You have some people involved that you know personally. But then it’s never an issue of being torn about what we need to do. We know what we have to do. And that’s really to be true to our mandate. So whatever the truth is, whatever is just, that’s where we need to side.”

On making friends in the Senate, she shares she’s closest to Sen. Serge Osmeña and Sen. Chiz Escudero, but reveals she’s had “some very pleasant surprises.” When Sen. Bam Aquino and Sen. Koko Pimentel showed support for the FOI, she says, “that for me said, okay, I trust you and I support you.” She also admits to being intimidated by Sen. Miriam Santiago. “It almost feels like you are learning from a professor! I have not had the opportunity (to work with her closely), but I’m hoping that I won’t be on her bad side,” she laughs.

On how to really eliminate corruption: “I think people in government should be paid…. justly. I don’t know how to say it but they have to be compensated to make what they do worthwhile. Another is we should start convicting people who are involved in graft or plunder.”

On the absence of PDAF for the new breed of lawmakers: “At least now we can face our constituents with all confidence to say, ‘We are somebody you can trust.’”

2 One of her fondest memories of her parents was the time her mom made tampo with her dad, so FPJ got the Philharmonic Orchestra to play in their living room for Susan Roces.

She says she learned two important things from her parents’ marriage. “You have to give each other space, you have to allow the other to blossom. Another thing is, my mom always said, wag kong sasabayan ang galit. If you see the other is upset, don’t try to collide and assert your case,” she shares.

“I could tell when my dad knew he did something wrong,” she laughs. “One time, inumaga na siya, I don’t know where he went. So picture this. Beautiful scene. It was 5 a.m., you have the Philharmonic Orchestra in the lawn, some in our living room, the doors were open, and National Artist Ernani Cuenco was playing the piano. My dad, who was a bit tipsy, wakes up my lola, the mom of my mom, and dances with her in the living room! So you have the complete orchestra, and him serenading my grandmother who said, ‘Wag ka na magalit, parang ano lang naman yan.’ Of course my mom couldn’t get mad at him! That’s how he would do it.”

3 On recalling the day of the presidential proclamation in 2004: “If there’s anything my parents were really good at, it was maintaining the normalcy at home.”

“I remember when they proclaimed GMA, it was before dawn, people were asleep. They were all there happy in Congress and I remember hugging my dad and just telling him, ‘Thank you for running, I know you are doing this for the future of our children.’ I was crying, and he was the one trying to console me. And that’s so typical of him, saying, ‘Don’t worry’. Maybe he kept a lot bottled up inside, and they say that’s what caused him so much stress. Deep in my heart I knew that there was more to be done.

“My mom, of course she was sad for my dad, but it was more like, ‘Life goes on.’ It was a relief for her, she didn’t have to be first lady,” she says laughing. “Actually she didn’t really like it. When my dad died, she would recount the time he decided to run. She was weeping when she said, ‘I thought we could finally look to our retirement and enjoy each other’s company more.’ She felt it was time taken away from her. You know, to be able to support any great person — maybe I’m biased but I found my father great — usually the family would sacrifice time with that person. And I think my mom has been doing that for him so that he would shine. As the wife, you have to be confident, you have to trust your relationship, it’s a huge sacrifice on your part.”

After the elections, Grace went back to her family in the US because her kids were still in school. “I had a heavy heart. The decision to run just happened a couple of months prior to the end of ‘03, so we weren’t even planning to move back (to the Philippines) yet, and like a whirlwind, he died before 2004 ended.

“My dad daw kept saying, ‘February, February,’ parang he had some information that something would come out. It was almost like the calm before the storm because everything was so artificially calm, that you know something will happen. I knew it wasn’t the end, I knew there would be some sort of protest.”

4 As a child, Grace would play bit roles in movies. “You wouldn’t believe this but one time I was the voice of Nora Aunor in a movie.”

“Because she didn’t show up for the dubbing! Can you believe that? I was 11 years old. Pa-extra extra ako, nobody really took me seriously because there were a lot of talented child actors at that time.” She’s played the role of a neighbor, the young babaeng Kidlat, but clarifies: “My parents really didn’t encourage me because they wanted me to have the opportunity they didn’t have, which is to finish education. Buti na lang, I realized later on in high school, because ang hirap din to be compared to them.”

Growing up, she admits she identified more with her dad than with her mom. “My games were more in the outdoors with my dad. We would go to Montalban, he would let me swim in the river, we’d go hiking in Bataan, we’d go to the sand dunes in Ilocos, and when we would play in the house it was more of chasing each other. From my mom, what I remember, when she would apply makeup, I would just sit down and stare at her. She’s a gifted artist so even yung kilay niya, perfect. We would exchange stories. I realized, ‘Ah, I can never be like this person, I can never look like this person!’ Although I admired her, I became more a fan of my dad. He was the hero in the story, and I felt I wanted to save the barrio, too! “

5 She agreed to have her life story featured on Maalaala Mo Kaya because she wanted everyone to know, before starting her campaign, that she was adopted: “I didn’t have to hide anything, it was liberating.”

“I wanted it already out, na hindi ko biological parents si FPJ and Susan Roces. This is the circumstance of my birth, para wala nang magsasabi ng ‘Eh, ampon lang yan.’ Sinabi ko naman, eh ano ngayon? Does it diminish everything my parents have done for me or how I value their love? I don’t think it should take away from that. In fact, it should be an advocacy also for other adopted children, that you can make something of your life. Because of the altruism of these two individuals, I was given this opportunity. And I would like to give back at least in giving honor to their name.”

She attended grade school at St. Paul and moved to high school in Assumption. “I remember (they said), ‘Oh, you’re the daughter of FPJ and Susan Roces,’ and this is how subtle they were. In other places they would just say, ‘O, ampon ka lang.’ There it was, ‘Hey, when’s your birthday?’ ‘Um, Sept. 3.’ ‘No, what year?’ ‘1968.’ Then they’d say, ‘When did your parents get married?’ Ganyan sila! Initially they teased me, but when they saw that I could take it, they became the best friends I have,” she says. “I don’t even count it as an imperfection, being adopted, it’s just that it wasn’t accepted in our society at that time, there was such a stigma to it.”

6 On the possibility of finding her real parents: “I am curious to know, but I have to be honest. I consider my parents to be my parents.”

“Even the family that first adopted me in Iloilo, they were so excited for me when I ran, they couldn’t believe that the child they found was (running for Senate). They were so proud and I really appreciated that,” she shares. “Now there’s DNA, so anybody who makes those claims, it would be easy to check. During the campaign I didn’t go on an active search. If there was anybody who was interested, I think they would have come out already.”

On getting to know her half-siblings: “I am decades older than her (actress Lovi Poe). We didn’t really grow up together and I didn’t know her till my dad died. I find her so beautiful, so strong, and a good representation of her generation. She is the daughter of FPJ but she has her own personality and character. I was so touched during the campaign when my survey numbers were low, she was one of the first to say, ‘I support my ate, I know that she can do it.’” She has met Ronian Poe, but says, “I don’t really get to talk to him. He’s a gifted artist not just for tattoos. I like his design concepts, the way he presents FPJ, which is not dated. It’s FPJ as seen now.”

7 When husband Neil Llamanzares was courting her, he didn’t know that FPJ and Susan Roces were her parents.

They met when she was 16 at a tennis class and got married when she was 22. “He didn’t know! When he went to the house, he saw the picture of my mom because there was this painting of her. ‘Parang this looks like someone familiar.’ Then, he saw my dad! Of course he knew my dad, but he wasn’t really a fan, didn’t know his movies, so it was more like he was stunned. He did not expect that they were my parents. He didn’t know much about my world, I don’t where he was hiding, but it was nice, it was more comfortable for me,” she recalls. “Of course he was always sweating buckets when he was in front of my dad! My parents naman respected also my being a teenager. My mom would always say basta ang importante, dito sa bahay mag-aakyat ng ligaw.

“He is kind of my polar opposite because he’s so quiet and refined and well-mannered! I’m so mahina in math, he’s so magaling. I can speak comfortably but he can write really well. I always say that it’s important that you choose a husband that is smarter than you! Or at least you think is smarter than you,” she advises. Neil and Grace are proud, hands-on parents (“My teenager says I’m strict, but I don’t think so!”) to Brian, 21, Hanna, 16, and Nika, 10.

8 Grace and Neil started their family life in Virginia, and she reveals, “I cried probably in the first seven  years that I lived there.”

She took on different jobs including pre-school teacher (“I chose that because I had the same schedule as my son,”) and working in a sales company (“Because you don’t have to be there all the time and you can take calls from home.”)

“It wasn’t not easy, but I was so blessed to have that experience. You wake up in the morning you are in a mad rush to get everyone out of the house. You have to put the leggings on your kid, and she’ll be pulling her leggings because she feels they’re too tight, she doesn’t like her hairpin, she wants to choose her own outfit. In the meantime, you have to prepare breakfast. So my husband and I would split — sometimes he would dress the kids while I prepared breakfast and lunch of the kids, then I would drop the kids off at school,” she recalls. “I remember picking up my son from school, but I couldn’t go home yet because I had work, so he would stay under my desk. But he enjoyed it because he thought it was camping, he would have a sleeping bag, his games, his Oreo biscuits there.

“It was hard, but after that I was so adapted to it. The US was home for me and the lifestyle I learned there was very rewarding,” she says of their 13 years living there.

9 Grace Poe in numbers:

30: Approximate number of white polos she owns, what has come to be her signature look.

14,400: Number of followers she currently has on Twitter, with her account @GracePoe2013.

39: Number of staff members in her office.

13: Number of bills filed as of press time, as well as 12 resolutions, that include (SB 79) the Free Lunch Program for elementary and high school students and (SB 78) the Film Tourism bill.

18: Age she first ran for any kind of election ever, where she won as UP Chairman of the Freshman Assembly, then Batch Representative later on.

10 On what kind of Philippines she is looking forward to for her children and the next generations: “I would like for them to have a country that they can really be patriotic and proud of.”

“What I want to have for them is a country that thrives environmentally, cleaner air for the kids, that there would be enough food, and basically opportunities for all would be available. I want them to really believe that they are proud to be Filipinos,” she exclaims. “And you can have that if you restore trust in our institutions. I think that change in government has already started but we still have to work hard to be able to achieve a certain form of transparency. That’s why it’s important, and magpluplug na ako, na may FOI tayo. So we can head towards that. Hopefully, we have six years. Yeah, we can do something.”

* * *

Our conversation ended with buzz about her and the 2016 Presidential Elections, talk that she would rather shrug off for now:

“Besides, there are a lot of magagaling ones who can run right now, I won’t mention who anymore.”

“You truly believe there are a lot?” I asked.

“Okay, not a lot.  (laughs) But then there are.”

So apparently like us, even politicians can be cynical about the world they move in. It goes to show that Sen. Grace, just as her father was to his legions of fans, is a reflection of us ordinary Pinoys. And she just happened to take that extra step to try to make our country a better place.


Sunday, January 5, 2014

What’s your New Year resolution like?




I was never good at keeping New Year’s resolutions. I’d be good for a month or two and that’s it. Until late 2012, a couple of friends and I heard from somewhere that doing a “theme” for the year would be better. That one theme that would guide your decisions and direction for the year to come. It proved to be a much more awesome way to get excited and revved up for the brand new year. Here are a few ideas for you:

1. #Explore2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I want to travel more this year and go to places I’ve never been to.”

What the theme means for you: Traveling is always a good idea. Always. But to “explore” isn’t limited to just traveling and getting on a plane. As they say, you can be a tourist even in your hometown. #Explore2014 for you would mean trying that new restaurant beside that restaurant you always go to where you always order the same thing, or going out more often with a new circle of friends, or adding simple, little new things like experimenting with making your own coffee in your daily routine life.

2. #Fitness2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I promise to work out four times a week.”

What the theme means to you: Oh, the countless workout promises that are never kept. Instead of disappointing yourself early in the year by not keeping up with your resolution to work out X amount of hours X times a week, just keep a mindset of fitness for the year. From trying new workouts, to spending your free hour doing cardio instead of reading your social media, to the food choices you make every day. Smarter choices, that’s what #Fitness2014 can be for you.

3. #NoExcuses2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “This year, I just really want to stick to what I say I will do.”

What the theme means to you: If you ever find yourself at a crossroad this year, with two (or more) big choices looming over you, remind yourself of your goals and remind yourself that it is #NoExcuses2014. When you are staring at your office desk, looking at the clock, with a few more hours ‘til your deadline? Remember, #NoExcuses2014. When you are setting your alarm clock for the next day and know you have to wake up an hour earlier to workout, remember #NoExcuses2014. It’ll be a good push.

4. #Bucketlist2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I will finally go skydiving. And perform in public. And write that story.”

What the theme means to you: We all have a bucket list but wait until we are 30 or 40 or 50 or hit some life milestone before we check an item off. Why wait? Bucket lists take a lifetime to complete so why not start now? This theme is a challenge for you to not only check off the items that you can, but for you to add new items to dream of doing. Travel to South Africa, help a complete stranger, take a road trip cross-country, try martial arts, learn how to cook. The possibilities are endless.

5. #Commitment2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I don’t want to be a flaker anymore.”

What the theme means for you: It means going all in. To commit to your relationship, to your work, to your advocacy, to make time for family and friends, and even to your dreams. When work gets tough and people around you are making it even tougher for you, your #Commitment2014 theme may just be the motivation you need. When you promised your family that you’ll start having Sunday lunch together, make that effort. Make a list of things you want to commit yourself to this year, and stick to it.

6. #Beauty&Wellness2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I work too hard, I promise to pamper myself more.”

What the theme means for you: When you work too hard or when you think about everyone else before yourself so often that you forget personal grooming one too many times, this is the theme for you. “But I need to attend to my kids first because…” or “I am just so tired after a long day’s work...” or “I don’t have time...” This year, make time to pamper yourself. Get that manicure or foot spa, that massage or wax, that eye cream or hair treatment. You should look in that mirror and feel great about yourself.

7. #NoToDrama2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I will take out all the negative people from my life!”

What the theme means for you: Taking out negativity in your life might sound too Joel Osteen for you, but it is a great mindset to start and guide your year. There are so many telenovela-like scenes in life nowadays (from the news to your neighbor’s life) that your life should be just stress-free and drama-free. When a situation comes up that spells and smells too dramatic for you, just remember to stay logical and rational, and say #NoToDrama2014.

8. #WorkHardPlayHard2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I want to have a proper work-life balance.”

What the theme means for you: It takes a lot of work to achieve a harmonious work-life balance, but it can be done. When it’s only the hump day and all you want is the weekend, just think, #WorkHardPlayHard2014 and reward yourself with an all-out night out, or a massage by the beach come weekend time. Or plan a getaway with family or friend for a few days right after working your ass off for a big project at work. Instead of being mediocre at work and having just “okay” weekends, go all out and work hard, play hard.

9. #Organize2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I promise to keep my room/workspace/home clean.”

What the theme means for you: If you are sick and tired of your personal space being messy and disorganized, or if you have trouble keeping track of your schedules, if your laptop desktop and cellphone inbox are practically battlefields, then this is the theme for you. It won’t just motivate you to keep physical spaces around you clean and orderly, it will push you to organize your daily schedule, life, and weekly or monthly goals.

10. #Fearless2014

What your resolution would’ve been like: “I promise to take more risks.”

What the theme means for you: Things you would otherwise say “No, thank you” to, challenges you would face but you would say “That’s not for me,” this year should turn into “Yes,” or “I’m game for that!” Stop living such a safe life and push yourself out of your comfort zone more than the usual. Seek adventure, don’t be the party pooper, and never say “never.” It will be one of the best decisions of your life.

* * *

Last year, my theme was #Fearless2013 and it proved to be one of the best years of my life. This year I have decided to carry on the fearless spirit, but to add my new theme to it: #StepAhead2014. I challenge myself to beat my personal best every single time, to do things based on how they will affect me in the long run and not just for the now, and to think not just of my next step but the step after that as well.

I wish us all our best year ever! And truly, that is going to be up to us. I would love to hear about your theme for this year. E-mail me at askiamsuperbianca@yahoo.com or message me on Twitter @iamsuperbianca.

http://www.philstar.com/sunday-life/2014/01/05/1275110/whats-your-new-year-resolution