Speak Out: The encounters of a foreign student
Thursday, February 9, 2012
EXPERIENCES are like shadows, we try to leave them behind but they keep on following us and they form part of what we become in future. Just like any other person, I’ve had so many experiences but one of the greatest of them all is my education in the Philippines. I came to the Philippines on October 2008. But before I came here I knew some few things about Filipinos because I used to watch some Filipino Telenovelas which were telecasted on one of the Ghanaian television channels of which one of them was “The Promise (PangaKosayo)”.
In spite of what I saw on TV, I still wanted to know more about them so I was so intrigued when I was told to come and study here. I started my college education in the University of Baguio in November 2008 and my first day in class was so fun. I had no difficulty in communicating with either my classmates or instructors due to the fact that the official language of the Filipinos is English. Who wouldn’t want to study in a country like that?
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Throughout my studies in the Philippines there were certain remarkable traits I observed about the Pinoys. Firstly, I realized that Filipinos are very jolly, which means they love to laugh no matter their situation. For instance during the typhoon “Ondoy” season, I watched a news on TV from which I saw an old woman and a little boy standing on the roof of a building due to the severe flooding and to my surprise they were smiling and giving the peace sign as if they were posing for a photo-shoot at a photo studio. Another example was how my classmates used to create jokes for us to laugh in class even when we were reviewing for quizzes. These traits taught me so many things. It taught me that in life sometimes you have to laugh your problems and issues away in order to be free.
Another trait I learned about the Filipinos is how friendly and hospitable they are. There were times I met people smiling at me in the jeepneys as if I knew them for so long meanwhile I never knew them. Even when I go to the market I used to meet people who guide me in buying good products. And most of all the love I got from my church members, every time I was in church I felt like I was with my own biological family that was because my church members were so good to me.
Finally, another trait I observed about the Pinoys is how they can simply use ordinary materials to create beautiful designs and decorations. That really had a great impact on me by making a person who loved designing.
But upon all those experiences, the one that will never leave my mind was when I was nominated by an instructor from the School of Information Technology called Ma’am Michelle Montalbo (God bless her) to compete in an extemporaneous speech competition only a month after my enrollment. That really shocked me, but I realized she did that because she saw me as one of her own people. And that created more opportunities for me to contest in other competitions. It really made me realize my hidden abilities.
Therefore, if I’m asked to say anything to my fellow foreign students on how to be able to study in the Philippines successfully, all I can say is that they should love and respect the Filipinos just as they will do for their own countrymen because what they can obtain from the Filipinos is beyond what they can imagine. I am who I am because of the Philippines. To end my story, I would like to share an answer I gave to a panelist during one of my major competitions. I was asked to state a sentence in Filipino language and all I could say was “Napili ko dito sa Pilipinas dahil edukasyon sa Pilipinas ay magaling” and I really meant that. Maraming maraming salamat po sa mga readers. Thank you.
Published in the Sun.Star Baguio newspaper on February 09, 2012.
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