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Monday, December 14, 2009

Manny Pacquiao: An Inspiration in 2009

It's been more than a year since my last post. 2009 is about to end but I still have nothing in mind for this year. Nothing to share or no time to waste?

I don't want to end the year without anything on my blog. So I specially took a time to share something about the most inspirational story for me for the year 2009.

MANNY PACQUIAO... Wow, what a story... It wasn't about the fame, wasn't about the riches, wasn't about the champioship belts... It was just purely the drama on the story itself that touched the world...

Here's the story written about his journey on November 16th, 2009 issue for TIME Magazine...


Manny Pacquiao is going through his throwing motion at Yankee Stadium. With easy deliberation, he shows off the form he says he perfected playing elementary school baseball in the dirt-poor southern Philippines before boxing took him over completely. His shoulder slips back, his torso pitches smoothly forward, left hand and arm torquing an imaginary ball into the depths of the air-conditioned players' cafeteria, where he is waiting to take the field for an announcement. The diamond stud in his ear catches the light.

The baseball pose has a balletic grace at odds with the savage power that the best pound-for-pound professional boxer on earth exhibits in the ring. "Best pound-for-pound" is the mantra intoned with every story about Pacquiao. It sounds strange because he has never been bound by the laws of physics. In the past eight years, he has risen through six weight divisions to win just as many world championships. At the stadium, his promoters have arranged for the Filipino to make official his plan to fight Puerto Rico's Miguel Cotto for a seventh title, the welterweight, which has a maximum limit of 147 lb. (67 kg). That is a 40-lb. swing up from the 106 lb. Pacquiao weighed at the start of his career.

He carried increased poundage through his past two jaw-droppingly awesome victories: demolishing Oscar De La Hoya in December 2008 and knocking out Ricky Hatton in two rounds in May. This is how Pacquiao's coach Freddie Roach describes his skill: "He'll throw a combination at you. You'll think he's done, but then he'll keep pounding you. And there's not a dense hardness to his punch. It just jumps on you. It explodes." Roach, who has worked with boxing luminaries such as De La Hoya and Mike Tyson, offers a little poetry when he recalls the time in 2001 when Pacquiao first came into his gym. "I just did one round with mitts with him, and I thought, 'Man, can this motherf______ fight.'"

At Yankee Stadium on this September day, the Puerto Ricans who have come out to cheer Cotto are jeering Pacquiao, but for all that physics matters, the Filipino is the favorite for the Nov. 14 Las Vegas bout. His payday, it is said, will be about $18 million. Back in the Philippines, you can pun on Pacquiao with pakyaw — a verb, pronounced the same way, that means "to monopolize, to corner the market, to take everything at wholesale in order to maximize profit." Pacquiao knows he wants more than he has, more than boxing can give. At the stadium, he retails anecdotes from his life to a couple of Filipinos and repeats what seems to be both an assertion and a lesson learned. "'Di ako bobo," he says in Tagalog. "'Di ako bobo." "I'm not stupid."

A Face for the Selfless
Manny Pacquiao, now 30, is the latest savior of boxing, a fighter with enough charisma, intelligence and backstory to help rescue a sport lost in the labyrinth of pay-per-view. Global brands like Nike want him in their ads. He made the TIME 100 list this year. West Coast baseball teams invite him to throw out the first pitch in order to attract the Filipino-American community. He has even become an object of desire: ESPN the Magazine has his naked torso in its Body Issue, which explores the engineering of several athletic physiques.

In the Philippines, Pacquiao is a demigod. The claim goes that when his fights are broadcast live, the crime rate plummets because everyone in the country is glued to a screen. His private life as well as the ins and outs and ups and downs of his training regimen are tabloid fodder; his much brooded political ambitions are a dilemma many Filipinos feel as existentially as Hamlet's soliloquy: To be or not to be ... a Congressman?

Pacquiao has a myth of origin equal to that of any Greek or Roman hero. Aban-doned by his father and brought up by a tough-as-nails mother, the poor boy who loves to box is rejected by a local squad but then journeys many islands away, to the country's metropolis, Manila, to make it big. Then he leaves the Philippines to make it even bigger, conquering the world again and again to bring back riches to share with his family and friends. Now, in his hometown of General Santos City on the island of Mindanao, he and his family own commercial buildings, a convenience store, cafés and a souvenir shop that sells everything from DVDs of his fights to T-shirts to bobblehead dolls. In Manila, his children attend one of the most exclusive and expensive private schools. He is generous to a fault, spending thousands of dollars a day feeding and entertaining guests. For his last fight, he distributed $800,000 in tickets to friends.

The broad outlines of his history — his legend — have made the boxer a projection of the migrant dreams of the many Filipinos who leave home and country for work. About 10% of the Philippines' GDP is money remitted from overseas Filipinos: nurses, nannies, sailors, singers, doctors, cooks, X-ray technicians, mail-order brides, construction workers, prostitutes, priests, nuns. Some spend decades abroad, away from the ones they love, for the sake of the ones they love. Everyone in the Philippines knows a person who has made the sacrifice or is making it. Pacquiao gives that multitude a champion's face of selflessness: the winner who takes all and gives to all. "To live in the Philippines is to live in a world of uncertainty and hardship," says Nick Giongco, who covers Pacquiao for the daily Manila Bulletin. "Filipinos are dreamers. They like fantasy. And what is more of a fantasy than Manny Pacquiao?"

A movie has been made of his life. But Pacquiao says the full details of that life couldn't possibly fit into just one film. There are things to clear up. For one, he did not leave ramshackle General Santos City, a camp of tin and thatch, to pursue boxing, even though he did love the sport. He left home at 14 because his mother Dionisia, who did odd jobs and factory work and hawked vegetables by roadsides, wasn't really making enough to feed her six children. He had to go off and earn money elsewhere, doing anything to relieve the burden on his mother — even if she wanted him by her side. As it was, he was often absent from school because the family needed him to help sell snacks and trinkets on the potholed lanes where nearly naked children with matted hair still chase rusting bicycle wheels for fun. Pacquiao liked school, correcting and grading his classmates' homework. He "never cheated during a quiz — he wouldn't try to look sideways, this way or that," says one of his schoolteachers from the Saavedra Saway Elementary School. A decent education, however, requires several years and a lot of money. The Pacquiaos had trouble accumulating even a little.

And so young Manny plotted his trip in secret. Dionisia Pacquiao is slender and slight, like her son, and has his easy smile. "Manny has a strong mind and a strong body," she says. "Just like his mother. Except I am stronger." But she was heartbroken when he left for Manila. Dionisia recalls receiving a letter from him "saying how sorry he was [for leaving home] ... I was very, very sad. But after a while, I accepted his destiny."

From Zero to Hero
Pacquiao was not one to pick quarrels. But he did not shy away when friends got into free-for-alls: what he calls, with an almost pop-eyed relish, bukbukan — unrestrained fistfighting. He loved boxing. Dionisia recalls an 8-year-old Manny wrapping towels around his hands to mimic gloves. Rey Golingan, a General Santos City businessman, remembers the young Pacquiao attending the weekly bouts in the main plaza. "Manny was always there at the fights, waiting to be paired with someone," says Golingan. But his consistency wasn't matched by any obvious talent. "Honestly, I didn't see any potential in Manny. He was just another kid who knew if he won a few fights he might get 100 pesos [less than $3]," says Golingan. "He was always very courageous and had natural speed and power. But he wasn't a clever boxer ... He was [always] flailing around."

When he got to Manila, Pacquiao first worked as a laborer. His enthusiasm for boxing, however, had him returning to the ring, fighting in run-for-cover, barely legal matches pulled together in one of Manila's cramped suburbs. He lingers over the names of boxers he knew who died after such fights, then moves on. The death of a friend reportedly spurred Pacquiao to turn professional.

His 1995 pro debut on a boxing show — which he won by decision — made him a local star. After that, energy alone seemed to carry him through six inconsistent years, a period in which he still managed to win two world titles in fights in Southeast Asia. Finally, a Cinderella-like twist got him noticed in the U.S. market. In June 2001, Pacquiao stepped in as a last-minute replacement at a fight in Las Vegas to win the IBF super-bantamweight title by TKO. Soon after, he walked into the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood and met the owner, Freddie Roach, who would transform the way Pacquiao fought.

Roach makes a powerful impression when you meet him, because something is clearly wrong. His movements are a beat or two off-sync; the occasional phrase or sentence is interrupted by an abrupt pause, then a slurring. Roach, who is not yet 50, has Parkinson's disease, most likely the result of his own boxing career. But it has not stopped him from taking Pacquiao's energy and giving it strategy. Their partnership has created one of the most riveting fighters in boxing history. Roach seems prouder of Pacquiao than of almost any of his other famous trainees. He sometimes talks as if the fighter has already reached his peak. Manny, he says, "has nothing more to prove." He predicts a first-round knockout of Cotto but, even as people are already talking about the fight after that (Floyd Mayweather Jr. is the dream matchup), Roach says Pacquiao may have just two more fights in him and then ought to call it quits.

Pacquiao is certainly thinking of the day after boxing. In 2007 he ran for a congressional seat in General Santos City but was beaten by the incumbent, Darlene Antonino-Custodio, who hails from a wealthy family long rooted in the politics of the region. But he is almost sure to run again in the 2010 national elections, though not in the same district. (Pacquiao has his own political organization — the People's Champ Movement — but has been aligning himself with President Gloria Arroyo, who needs his popularity.) Most people say they'd rather he stay a boxer and win more accolades for the nation, that his need to help lift people up can be better served elsewhere. But politics as his second act may be a strategy born of a deeper survival instinct — from knowing the limitations of a boxer's life, particularly after the fighting is done. "'Di ako bobo," he might say.

You see, Manny Pacquiao is not the first famous boxer produced by General Santos City. The previous Filipino world champion, Rolando Navarrete, came from the same streets. Navarrete now lives in embittered obscurity on the city's outskirts, often falling afoul of the law. "Most boxers start with nothing and end up with nothing," says Pedro Acharon, the mayor of General Santos City. "Manny wants to end that story. He knows there's more to explore in life."

Will His Kingdom Come?
Pacquiao crosses himself before digging into dinner amid the Corinthian columns of Capitale, an old bank turned party space, just about where Chinatown starts in Manhattan. It is early June, and he is there to receive his second Fighter of the Year award from The Ring magazine. Even as old palookas cuss up a storm, he prays before his meal. His mother says he was always "very disciplined and God-fearing" — taking after her, of course. Her front garden features a coral-lined altar to the Virgin Mary, and an entire shelf in her living room is filled with icons and bric-a-brac in honor of Christ's mother. Dionisia wanted Manny to be a priest. Prayer reigns in his gym. "After each workout," says Giongco, "he requests a moment of silence where he prays, and then everything goes back to normal."

Being a good Catholic is a plus for a would-be politician in the very pious Philippines. But so is knowing how to handle a constituency. Pacquiao doesn't have one so much as he has a royal court. Roach is famous enough to have his own table at the Capitale extravaganza. Beside Pacquiao sits his wife Jinkee. Filipino tabloids have published her purported ultimatums against Manny's "playboy" ways, but tonight she says only a couple of sentences and even those guardedly. She speaks mostly to the other man seated next to her, Mike Koncz, a Canadian who takes care of the little details that matter to Pacquiao and his wife. The fighter, for example, must have white rice with his meals (a hard habit to break for all Filipinos), so Koncz goes scampering for a plate of it. The slightly fusiony menu lists a side of wild rice with the entrée. That will not do for the Pacquiaos.

If Roach is the most popular foreigner in the Philippines, Koncz, who has become a gatekeeper for the Pacquiaos, is the most loathed. And not just by Filipinos. In mid-October, Alex Ariza, a Colombian boxer who is Pacquiao's fitness coach, fought with the Canadian. Koncz, says Ariza, "is so condescending, so passive-aggressive, and just doesn't care if he's being unreasonable. He crossed a line, and I just bitch-slapped him." Roach shrugs off Koncz's influence. "I'm the only one who can really talk to Manny," he says. Still, he says introducing Koncz to the Pacquiao team was "the worst f______ mistake of my life." For his part, Pacquiao tries to remain above the fray.

The fighter appears anxious as the evening wears on. He reaches into his pocket and pulls out sheets of paper — his acceptance speech, in English. While Pacquiao has no problem understanding English, which is widely used in the Philippines, he is much more comfortable speaking Tagalog, the national language, and Cebuano, the dialect he grew up with. But he is a hit with the New York City audience. All he really has to do is grin, and they are in his hands. A Filipino listening to the speech, however, senses the trouble Pacquiao will face if he decides to run for office in the Philippines. His English is heavily accented, sounding provincial to anyone used to the softly musical English of the entrenched upper classes of Manila. What would they think of someone who pronounces everything as eebreeting? Snobbery is the unvoiced rationale behind some of the opposition to Pacquiao's political ambitions: He's not really one of us.

Even one of his closest advisers isn't sure he's right for politics. Governor Chavit Singson, 68, of the province of Ilocos Sur, in the northern part of the archipelago, hangs out with Pacquiao all the time. He styles himself a kingmaker but is unclear whether Manny can be a king. "He is so humble," Singson says. "He's a simple person." Singson, however, may be a role model for Pacquiao. The governor amassed his fortune as a tobacco-plantation owner and travels in a private plane and in a bulletproof Hummer. He is an epitome of Philippine politics, where power grows out of barrels of patronage. Political reformers worry that that is the style Pacquiao has been learning during his decade of kingdom-building and distributing wealth to family friends and allies. Ramon Casiple, a prominent political analyst and reform advocate, says Filipinos know that model too well to want it from their hero. "They don't want him to run, to dirty himself and open himself to charges of corruption."

Manny's sister Isidra, however, says her brother is too strong-minded to be dissuaded from politics. "Whatever Manny does, we'll support," she says. During the huge floods in Manila in September, he took a motorcade from the mountain resort where he was training to help distribute relief to victims. "He wants to be giving service," his sister says. "He has big potential. He is caring, thoughtful and generous." Dionisia is quieter about her son's career after boxing. "I will support and pray for him," she says. But she worries. "There's a lot of trouble in politics." Can Manny Pacquiao continue to be the most loved man in the Philippines when he quits the ring and enters the cockpit of politics? That is going to be the fight of his life.

TIME MAGAZINE
The Meaning and Mythos of Manny Pacquiao
By Howard Chua-Eoan and Ishaan Tharoor Monday, Nov. 16, 2009

Friday, September 19, 2008

HK Permanent Resident: It's official!!!

August 08, 2008 - I'll gonna remember this day for the rest of my life.

That day, I went to the Immigration Department of HK to collect my HK Permanent Identity Card. During the process, it was full of thrill and excitement! Imagine, your future of eligibility to live in Hong Kong depends on that single Smart ID Card approval! Damn, you just can't wait to finally grasped in your own hands.

As I handed my collection form to the counter, it doesn't take long. My name was called and instructed my to proceed to the collection counter. A little briefing about the rules and regulations... and there it is... I've officially been pimped!!!

It's official!!! I'm now a Hong Kong Permanent Resident!!!

Monday, August 25, 2008

Winners and Losers of 2008 Beijing Olympics

Dan Wetzel's one hell of an analyst. He has all the guts every writer just need to bring out intriguing topics...

I just love reading his articles. They are full of knowledgeable information, at the same time entertaining.

Here's one of those gutsy articles about the just ended Beijing Olympic games.
His points were amazing. Reading throughout the article, all I can do is just nod in agreement.

But I just want to comment about his last 3 WINNERS...
I think they were winners only for the Olympic perspective. Other than that, they're th biggest LOSERS...

Read on...



BEIJING – After nearly 1,000 medals were handed out here, someone needed to provide a Cliffs Notes version on the real winners (and losers) of the 2008 Summer Olympics. We’re here to oblige, and yes, readers from around the world, this is an American-centric list. Deal with it.

WINNER – Michael Phelps

With eight gold medals, seven world records, a possible $100 million in endorsements – and reports he’s hanging out with Australian swimmer Stephanie Rice – Phelps has redefined Olympic success.

Perhaps most impressive, he made Americans care about swimming. His race was appointment television at night and coffee-shop talk in the morning. The likelihood the Baltimore native achieves the goal of making swimming “more than a once-every-four-year sport” remains a long shot, although who wants to bet against him now?

LOSER – NBC

Because I was in China, I didn’t watch NBC’s coverage. I can only say from the flood of angry emails it hasn’t improved since the last time I was home for the games. Tape-delayed races, plausibly live coverage and covering up Chinese special effects for the Opening Ceremony, NBC is like the China Daily – a state-run propaganda newspaper – of American television.

If only everyone could get the feed for the Canadian Broadcast Company, which anyone in select American markets can attest does an exponentially better job of television coverage of the Olympics.

WINNER – Kobe Bryant

The two biggest surprises to come out of the redemption men’s basketball team was 1) the ease in which the U.S. dominated the competition to win gold and 2) the immense popularity of Kobe in China. Everywhere he went, he found adoring crowds, huge ovations and general rock-star treatment that not only dwarfed his teammates but also was at least the equal of national hero Yao Ming.

Not even in Los Angeles is Bryant this well received. Said Carmelo Anthony: “He ought to move here.”

LOSER – Liu Xiang

The Chinese hero was under enormous pressure to repeat gold in the 110-meter hurdles, an event he no longer dominates. He never even competed, pulling out due to injury before the preliminaries in an announcement that caused television reporters to cry on the air.

It was a devastating turn for Liu, whose likeness adorns advertisements across the country. While sympathetic Chinese journalists felt for Liu’s injury, many skeptical western ones questioned if it was just a face-saving measure. While only Liu knows for sure, it’s one of those clear cultural divisions in the world. Either way, the Olympics of Liu’s dreams turned into a nightmare.

WINNER – Hope Solo

A year ago, after she was benched in a Women’s World Cup game against Brazil, the U.S. goalkeeper ripped the decision, a move that tore apart her team and caused her temporarily to be separated from it. At the Olympics, she let her play do the talking, making a number of critical saves in a shutout of Brazil for the gold medal.

The entire U.S. women’s soccer team looked like it had entered a new era under positive coach Pia Sundhage. Solo is just the most obvious example.

LOSER – Ronaldinho

Soccer fans here were excited by the inclusion of the veteran superstar on the Brazilian men’s team, which, per Olympic rules, is mostly under 23. Once considered the best player in the world, Ronaldinho showed just how out of shape he is and looked a shell of his former self in a sad vision of how far and fast he has fallen. Very disappointing.

WINNER – Alicia Sacramone

Yes, she famously fell off the beam in the women’s gymnastics team finals and failed to medal in her only individual event final, the vault. She wasn’t too happy leaving Beijing.

However, the 20-year-old Brown University sophomore may wind up one of the breakout stars of the games. Even more than gold medalist teammates Nastia Liukin and Shawn Johnson. At least among male fans who help make her one of the most searched athletes of the Olympics.

Or as Deadspin.com put it: “Is Alicia Sacramone the New Anna Kournikova?” Anna never won, either. She made a lot of money anyway.

LOSER – Softball

In losing the gold to Japan, the U.S. may have made the best case for softball to be saved from elimination from future Olympics. That’s an awfully big price to pay for something that may not even be enough.

WINNER – Usain Bolt

Track seemed all but dead a couple weeks ago. Then along came this flamboyant speedster out of Jamaica.

He won three gold medals and set three world records, all while electrifying fans around the globe. He wasn’t just fast; he was flashy, a personality, a 6-foot-5 game changer who simply gobbled up track with each stride.

There hadn’t been anything in track like him in years, and coming off an era of extreme doping, he couldn’t have come at a better time.

LOSER – Jacques Rogge

If you wonder why everyone calls the International Olympic Committee out of touch, consider that while most of the world was celebrating Bolt, the organization’s president decided he should use his considerable bully pulpit to rip him for supposed showboating.

Rogge is a classic stiff-collared bureaucrat. His organization has made billions off athletes such as Bolt for years, yet he has to find someone to pick on.

He’s deathly frightened of criticizing any major nation – such as China, which broke a hundred promises to him in staging these games. He wouldn’t dare mention any of the dozens of athletes from big countries whose celebrations were just as bold.

A single sprinter from a small, impoverished, powerless island nation? Sure, hammer away.

Fortunately, Bolt came back and didn’t change his act at all in winning his third gold in the 4x100 relay. Rogge will soon fade into obscurity for a while.

LOSER – Smog

In a beat down worse than the one the U.S. laid on Germany in men’s hoops, the Chinese government all but eliminated smog from Beijing during the games. Trees were planted, factories shuttered, construction sites quieted and cars removed from the streets in an effort to produce blue skies.

It was a slow start to the process. Early on, the clouds of pollution were almost incomprehensible. The Chinese originally tried to claim it wasn’t smog but that it was just “mist.” Only the China Daily, and perhaps NBC, would believe this.

“We got absolutely snuffed out,” said a spokesperson for the Smog Olympic Committee. “It was a tough games for us. We just couldn’t get the carbons together to form a cancerous cloud, trap heat and sear eyeballs.”

WINNER – Smog

Guess what, it’s coming back. How depressing will it be to a Beijing resident the next couple of weeks? The smoke stacks will be relit, the coal plants fired up, the cars will return. Slowly, the reverse of the above picture will occur.

One older Beijing resident claimed the city hadn’t looked this good in a decade. Newer arrivals remarked the town was actually pretty. Yeah, not for long.

China has claimed it will curb the problem, but how? And Western corporations, all too pleased to take advantage of lax environmental laws, are part of the problem, too.

China gets routinely and deservedly hammered for its human rights issues in Tibet and Darfur. The biggest human rights issue may be the cancer in the air that its own citizens must breathe.

WINNERS – USA Volleyball and USA Water Polo

On the beach, the Americans swept the men’s and women’s competitions. Indoor, the men won gold and the women won silver. Both did so while dealing with some level of tragedy from the stabbings of Todd and Barbara Bachman, the parents of former women’s player Elisabeth Bachman and the in-laws of men’s coach Hugh McCutcheon.

In the pool, the men surprisingly took silver and the women also won silver in a last-second loss.

WINNER – Cigarette Smoke

Veteran readers of this column will note past criticism of Greek and Italian smokers, two medal contenders in the worldwide tobacco competition. At dinner, the Greeks smoke between bites. The Italians just never take it out of their mouths. (Smoking would be one of the more intriguing Summer Games events, although not as good as Russian Roulette, where gold really is the only option. Then there’s haggling at the Beijing silk market, where I’d have a shot to medal.)

Anyway, the Chinese appear to be far behind on cigarettes. It was mostly clean breathing (so to speak) around here.

LOSER – Chinese Coffee

Good tea here. Coffee, not so much. I’m dying for a Dunkin’ Donuts large black. Not four ounces of warm, darkened water. The Big One.

WINNER – Ara Abrahamian

Yes, sportsmanship and all declares that protesting a scoring decision by throwing your bronze medal down and storming off isn’t good form. Then again, who hasn’t wished they could do the same on occasion. The Swedish Greco-Roman wrestler inspired every take-this-job-and-shove-it wannabe around the world.

That’s a winner enough for us. And that was before an arbitration court ruled in his favor.

LOSER – Angel Matos

The Cuban taekwondo athlete was so angered at his disqualification from a bronze medal match, he deliberately booted the referee in the face. Yeah, that’s a little much. Matos and his coach were banned for life. Not sure how there could be an appeal.

WINNER – Beijing Organization

Considering the ability of the government to relocate people, build whatever infrastructure was necessary and control everything from private industry to dinner menus to traffic, there will probably never be a better tactically run games than these.

As long as you didn’t consider how it got done, working in Beijing was a breeze. The venues were modern and close, and the organization was sophisticated and smart. On this point, London and everyone else has its work cut out for it.

WINNER – Living in Beijing

Once the smog cleared, Beijing was tremendous. One of the best parts of covering an Olympics is you don’t see the host city as a tourist. You come here to live and work for a month, and while you’re obviously never a real local, you tend to get a little deeper into the place.

You learn how the subway works. You figure out a bus route. You have regular restaurants. We lived at Beijing Normal University, on the near northwest side of town, between Second and Third Ring Roads. It is surrounded by a real neighborhood, and over the course of nearly a month we met store owners, waiters, bartenders, cooks, security guards and local residents. We’d see them on the street and stop and chat.

The food was incredible and beyond cheap. The service was impeccable. And this neighborhood near “Bay-Shoe-Dah” was a tremendous place to live for a stretch.

WINNER – Chinese People

Nowhere in the world have I encountered friendlier people. Nowhere. Perhaps it was Olympic pride. Perhaps I was just an easily identifiable American with a press badge. It didn’t matter. The Chinese people wanted me to think well of them and their emerging country, and it is quite clear that this nation’s greatest resource is its citizens.

From the woman in the earthquake refugee camp who, despite having nothing, offered me a small, simple glass of water as a sign of hospitality. To the army of volunteers, forever smiling even when given the lowest of tasks such as sorting garbage in the cafeteria. The lasting memory for me from these games will be the Chinese people.

Their government has issues (as do all governments). It didn’t live up to what it said it would here. There is a great fear of China in the western world because people here will work for wages unlivable anywhere else and because of a natural suspicion of the Communist party.

No doubt, the challenges here are immense. If allowed, the Chinese people might be good enough to solve them.


Beijing Olympics' winners and losers
By Dan Wetzel, Yahoo! Sports
Aug 24, 2008
AFP Photos

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Kobe Bryant: The Real Olympic Glory

BEIJING – Once Kobe Bryant let that Shaq rap go, he wished that he had resisted responding to so much else throughout his tumultuous 20s. Shaquille O’Neal obliterated him on that June nightclub stage in New York, a TMZ moment that threatened to drag Bryant back into that Hollywood trash-tabloid place.

Here was Bryant on his 30th birthday, on the eve of playing Spain for his gold-medal moment for United States basketball, and he had such regret that it took so long in his life to let Shaq shadow box.

“The biggest mistake I made was coming up with a rebuttal,” Bryant said. “My philosophy had always been to keep quiet and not to say anything. And by me responding, that drew me into it. If I had to do it over again, I would’ve just let people talk and say what they had to say, and as time goes on, they would’ve seen what was what.

“When you’re young, (you think) ‘Enough is enough. I’m going to say something.’ And all of a sudden…”

All of a sudden, there’s no winning. There’s no way out. Perhaps this is why Bryant seems so liberated, freed from a legacy and life forever framed through the prism of Shaq and their three Los Angeles Lakers’ titles together. As Kobe reshapes his image here with American flags, Jordanesque ferocity and the warm, welcoming touch of a grateful guest, O’Neal is back in the United States facing a restraining order for allegations of stalking an Atlanta woman after several disturbing e-mails and phone threats surfaced.

The old images of the brooding, immature Kobe and the gregarious, life-of-the-championship-party Shaq have turned inside out. Somehow, Kobe’s become the grownup and Shaq the screw-up.

In the wake of the Lakers’ NBA Finals loss to the Boston Celtics, Shaq climbed on that stage and started with the lyrics that, “Kobe couldn’t do without me,” and maybe for the first time cast Bryant as a sympathetic figure. To dismiss the firestorm as deftly as Bryant did – whatever, I’ve got a gold medal to win this summer – cornered Shaq as a fading superstar filled with too much jealousy, too little motivation.

These Olympics have been the most remarkable three weeks of Kobe Bryant’s basketball life. He disdains the marketing “Redeem Team” title, calling it “kind of cheesy” because let’s face it: Those weren’t his international failures over the past eight years. Nike tried so hard to make LeBron James a co-star of these Games but failed miserably. He’s riding shotgun and doesn’t seem terribly thrilled about it. There’s no usurping Bryant in China.

Bryant has won the respect of his teammates, but he doesn’t run in the big cliques on the team. LeBron is the ringleader of the young players, and Kobe goes his own way. He’s won his teammates over with his ferocity, his insatiable need to win, but no one ever gets close to Bryant. He’s a loner, but he learned to lead. When all hell was breaking loose in the semifinal victory over Argentina, it was Bryant working with Jason Kidd to bring his teammates back from the brink of losing composure.

“We didn’t come to tussle,” Bryant said. “We came to win a gold medal.”

When his teammates went in groups to volleyball and women’s basketball games this week, Bryant was over at the U.S.-Brazil gold medal women’s soccer match with his wife and daughters. He waves his American flag, his eyes mesmerized by the dichotomy between the winners and losers, gold and silver.

“I stayed to watch them get their gold medals, just to see what that would be like,” he said.

As much as any NBA player, these Olympics have been a source of pure fascination for Bryant. For this most obsessive perfectionist, a basketball player with a full-time staff “whose whole job, whole purpose, is to just stay on top of my health,” Bryant couldn’t stop putting his own greatness into context with that of the world’s best athletes. He spent several years of his childhood living in Italy and always did have a global perspective on himself. The Olympics have been such a renaissance to his career, Bryant insists that he wants to play as a 34-year-old in 2012 in London.

“If they want me back, I’ll be back,” he said.

Bryant’s popularity is staggering in Asia and Europe, and he insists that, “People here have seen my personality more than in the States. I’ve done tours here. In the season, I’m in that Mamba mode. That switch is on. But during the summer, I’m kicking back and they get to see what a smart-ass I am. They get a chance to relate to you a lot more.

“Half the places you go to in the States, they’re rooting against you. Here, I think they’ve seen more of who I am.”

Well, there’s this idea, too. Bryant will forever have the rape charges in Eagle, Colo., on his permanent stateside record, but they don’t judge him overseas. They don’t care about that dropped case and taking sides in the Lakers’ soap operas and vitriol toward his Lakers bosses and teammates.

They just judge Kobe in the pure way that he judges himself: On the basketball court, peerless.

On his way back home, Bryant will be remembered as the anchor responsible for restoring American basketball glory. His MVP season, his return to the Finals, taught Bryant that he had to give more of himself to get the things that he ultimately wanted.

For the longest time, though, he played the part of the spoiled brat, the baby brother that Shaq had to balance between shaping and scolding, and maybe ultimately defining. Now, Shaq’s career is in sharp decline with a summer of high-comedy, low-rent rap and a stalker complaint in hot pursuit.

Across the world, Bryant goes for his gold medal on Saturday, something it turns out he could do without Shaq. Still, that’s a war Bryant never won and never will. Mostly, he understands that it isn’t even worth waging. Let it go, he tells himself. Let it go.

“As I get older, I do care what people think of me,” Bryant said. “I don’t want them to have the wrong impression. That is important to me. I’m not too big to say that. I’m not embarrassed to say that.

“I care about what people think.”

The world has watched him grow from teenage prodigy to tortured twenty-something to the weekend a world away in China when Kobe Bryant could feel the burdens peeling away like a second skin.

“I’m just happy I made it to 30,” he said. “Now the pressure’s off.”


Kobe turns a year older, a decade wiser
By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports
August 23, 2008
AFP Photos

Thursday, May 29, 2008

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Thursday, March 6, 2008

Clinton or Obama: Who's it gonna be?

While John McCain is now the official Republican presidential nominee and now taking time to decide of whom to choose as his vice presidential running mate, the race for the Democratic presidential nominee remains close.

Obama still holds the lead in number of delegates but Clinton is making a come back with huge primary victories in Texas, Ohio and Rhode Islands. This race is believed to go down the wire as these two goes toe to toe with seven more weeks of primaries ahead.

Anyway, whoever come out victorious between the two, I do believe that the Democrats will make history on the 2008 Presidential Election. There are hints that there is a possibility that these two would share the Democratic presidential ticket. An Clinton-Obama or Obama-Clinton ticket would be a sure win. A big-time ticket that puts the Republicans in a big trouble, and I guess they know it!

So, why did I say that the Democrats will make history? It's simple. If these two runs together, it's either America will have their first ever woman or first ever black-African president. And therefore, the only thing we're waiting now is...

Who's gonna be on top? Hilary Rodham Clinton or Barack Obama?

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Visa or Mastercard: Which one suits for you?

The two leading credit card companies in the world today are the competitors Visa and MasterCard. They both operate in a very similar way. While Visa claims to have almost a billion cards issued, MasterCard has over twenty five thousand banks issuing its cards and it is difficult to find any difference in the number of locations worldwide that accept the cards, which is now estimated at over twenty million. But, as far as most consumers are concerned, there is no real difference between the two. They are both very widely accepted in over one hundred and fifty countries and it is very rare to find a location that will accept one but not the other.

However, neither Visa nor MasterCard actually issue any credit cards themselves. They are both simply methods of payment. They rely on banks in various countries to issue credit cards that utilise these payment methods. Therefore, the interest rates, rewards, annual fees, and all other charges are issued by your bank and when you pay your bill you are paying it to the bank or institution that issued your card and not Visa or MasterCard.

How Visa and MasterCard make their money is by charging the retailer for using their payment method. So the truth of the matter is that a Visa issued by say the Bank of New York will have very little to do with a Visa issued by other banks and may in fact by more similar to the Bank of New York’s MasterCard.

What this means for the vast majority of customers is that you do not have to overly concern yourself with whether a credit card is MasterCard or Visa. You would be better off concentrating on the interest and other charges on the card, the balance transfer possibilities or their reward scheme. You are very unlikely to ever be effected by the fact that it is one and not the other.

If you prefer, if you are going to have two credit cards, you may decide that you want one of them to be Visa and the other MasterCard, this means that if something drastic were to happen to one company, or if you were in the unlikely position of finding a location that accepts one but not the other, then you would have the option of paying with either.

At the end of the day however, much more depends on the bank that gave you the card, than on the type of card it is.


Fortunewatch

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

CT Metal Factory Visit

Here is a photo gallery of my CT Metal factory visit in China.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Goodbye 2007! Hello 2008!!!

It’s been awhile since my last post here... And I wonder how’s everyone doin’!

Well, well, well, just came back from Cebu, Philippines today! I was in a delayed flight (as always) and the plane landed at around 1:15am, and that made me arrived home at probably 2:30am. Went to sleep at around 4:00am, then get-up at my usual time 7:30am, ‘coz ladies and gentlemen... I need to be back in the office.

Hell yeah! Last year’s second half has been a very busy season for me and my company and I think busy days are about to continue this year! But ah-ah, don’t get me wrong! It’s not only that we are getting more business, it was also the period of trying to fix all the problems from previous products and suppliers!

Anyway, anyway, year 2007 is all behind us now and we are now about to tackle new challenges and face new experiences for the year 2008! For me, it all started today and I think I am ready to welcome just anything! Year 2007 was a great year for my career, my family and our business. And we're just so eager to turn 2008 into another amazing year! So help us God!

So, I guess I have to hit the breaks here! Just want to extend my greetings to everyone... Let’s all have an amazing year 2008! And please always remember... Be positive... Keep on kickin’!

Goodbye 2007! Hello 2008!!!
Happy New Year to all!!!

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Roses and its meaning...

"Oh the roses are so lovely– thank you so much, dear. So why did you give me 15 stalks?" the girl asks. "Huh? Hmm… well just thought the bouquet look nice with fifteen."

Ha! You just got yourself shoot!

Do you know that Roses, its colors and the number of stalks each has got their meaning? Yes, it has, and it might get you into some trouble if the person whom you’re giving the bouquet knows about its meaning.

So the next time you’re gonna try to impress that special someone with a bouquet of roses, make sure you know the meaning it represent.

Meaning of Color of Roses:


Meaning of Number of Roses:


Okay. Now that you know the true meaning of roses, you won't go wrong!

Whatever the occasion, there is always a rose color or combination that will express your feelings. Isn't it more meaningful that you chose the color that conveys a specific message for that special someone?

The recipient might not truly understand the meaning behind the roses sent but well, it’s your job to make her understand. Either from your own lips or from an accompanying card, along with the roses, your message will be delivered.

Try to express your feeling by telling your special someone the meaning of the roses you’ve just gave her. And with that, you may have just made that person be more impressed with you!

So why not send some roses to your loved ones today? It might not seem much of an effort on your side but think about it, wouldn't they be thrilled and surprised to receive a bouquet of roses say, in the middle of a boring day at work?

Monday, November 26, 2007

Free Hugs campaign...

There's a man who had been living in London when his world turned upside down and he'd had to come home. By the time his plane landed back in Sydney, all he had left was a carry on bag full of clothes and a world of troubles. No one to welcome him back, no place to call home. He was a tourist in his hometown.

Standing there in the arrivals terminal, watching other passengers meeting their waiting friends and family, with open arms and smiling faces, hugging and laughing together, he wanted someone out there to be waiting for him. To be happy to see him. To smile at him. To hug him.

So he got some cardboard and a marker and made a sign. He found the busiest pedestrian intersection in the city and held that sign aloft, with the words "Free Hugs" on both sides.

And for 15 minutes, people just stared right through him. The first person who stopped, tapped him on the shoulder and told him how her dog had just died that morning. How that morning had been the one year anniversary of her only daughter dying in a car accident. How what she needed now, when she felt most alone in the world, was a hug. He got down on one knee, they put their arms around each other and when they parted, she was smiling.

Everyone has problems and for sure his haven't compared. But to see someone who was once frowning, smile even for a moment, is worth it every time.




Sometimes, a hug is all what we need. Free hugs is a real-life controversial story of Juan Mann. A man whose sole mission was to reach out and hug a stranger to brighten up their lives. In this age of social disconnectivity and lack of human contact, the effects of the Free Hugs campaign became phenomenal.

The Free Hugs Campaign is an Internet-spread phenomenon that appears to have begun in June, 2004, and was widely publicized in 2006 by a music video on YouTube. The phenomenon involves individuals who offer hugs to strangers in public settings. The campaign is an example of a random act of kindness, a selfless act performed by a person for the sole reason of making others feel better. The original organizer has stated in interviews that the purpose is not to get names, phone numbers, or dates.

A video on YouTube was released on September 22, 2006, and by November 2007, had gained just over 20 million views. According to the video summary, it was recorded in Sydney. In the video, the main character who is giving out hugs, (identified as "Juan Mann", a pseudonym and a homonym of "one man"), walks through the Pitt Street Mall holding up a sign with the words FREE HUGS written on it. Music for the video is provided by Sick Puppies, an Australian band that Mann met a year earlier. Shimon Moore, the lead singer of the Sick Puppies who worked at the mall, shot the footage which he later compiled into a video for the song.

Initial distrust of Juan's motives eventually gave way to a gradual increase of people willing to be hugged, with other huggers (male and female) helping distribute them. After some time, security guards, then police told them they must stop, as Mann had not obtained public liability insurance worth $25 million for his actions. Mann and his companions used a petition to attempt to convince authorities that his campaign should be allowed to continue without the insurance. What we then witness is the true spirit of humanity come together in what can only be described as awe inspiring. His petition reached 10,000 signatures. He submitted it and was allowed to continue giving free hugs.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

How fortunate we are...


English:


In fact, I'm fortunate. But I have never thought about it until now.

As a child, I lived my life through hardships. Parents got divorced after being born. Have not seen my father, even once. Poverty made my mother work for survival in other countries.

Being away from my own parents is a very difficult situation. No one would listen and no one would try to understand. That time, I really don’t know what it takes to be happy.

But I tried. Though I was happy, I wasn’t really comfortable and I couldn’t help being scared. I won’t be able to stay happy for long. It easily breaks after all. And even I, myself doesn’t understand it well. I had a mysterious feeling.

Now that I had grown up, got a vision of life, I finally understand the meaning of being happy, naturally. Yeah, like the small things in our normal existence. Like “Oh, the weather is so nice!” “The breeze feels so comfortable!” “Oh, that was beautiful!”.

If we could just see those simple things, if we could just feel the importance of those little things in our lives, I think I can say that we are fortunate!

With that, I know I’m living with happiness since the day I was born!



日本語:


実は僕幸せだった。でも、今まで全然考えたこともなかった。

子供の頃だいぶ苦労して生きてきた。生まれてから親が離婚。父も一度も見たことない。貧乏で母がほかの国で一か八か。

親と一緒に住めなくて、困難な状況。誰も聞いてくれない、誰も分かってくれない。あの頃の僕は幸せっていうことは何なのか、よく分からなかった。

でも、幸せになろうって頑張っていた。幸せなのに、居心地が悪くて、怖くて怖くて仕方がなかった。自分がずっと幸せでいれるはずがない、すぐに壊れるんだ、どうせ。そして、自分でもよく分からない。不思議な感じを抱いていた。

今大人になって、人生の先を読めて、やっと幸せの意味が自然と分かってきた。うん、そういうのさ、普通の暮らしの中の小さなこと。「いい天気だな~」とか、「風が気持ちいいね」とか「それがきれいだな~」とか。

そういうシンプルなものを見られれば、そういう小さなものの大切さを、感じていられれば、幸せなんだよって、僕は思うよな。

だから、生まれてから僕はずっと、幸せだと思うんだ!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Mom's overture...

You've got to watch this video! She's amazingly unbelievable!!! She really deserves a standing ovation!!!

However...

In your normal daily life, imagine if your mom does exactly the same things on her song 24/7... What are you gonna do???

Friday, November 9, 2007

In-love for the first time...


I think I just fell in-love...

I went to Tokyo for a business trip last week. As part of the trip, I went to the 40th Tokyo Motor Show to explore and check-out some new ideas and developments. With all the biggest motor company gathered, showcasing their new ideas and new car models, fanatics just got crazy! As usual, huge crowd and the area was packed!

And there she was... So attractive in black. The first time I saw her, I just can't take my eyes off. I wanted to feel her like I don't have another chance, like it was my last day here on earth. She's not the same slick sexy bitch that we use to see. She's rather wide but sporty with the beautiful curves on her body.

She's just so seductive with her arms wide open, literally inviting people to come to her. Of course, who's gonna resist the temptation with a gorgeous chick?! Everyone around her patiently waiting for their turn to take a picture with her. She's not mine yet, but I felt a little jealous when they came touching, feeling her smooth body.

But I played it cool. With that huge crowd, I know there is no chance for me to get close to her. So I just keep staring at her from a distance, trying to imagine what she've got in the inside. But the last thing I wanna know is her name... Coz if I could only get her name, I know there is a big chance for me to see her again.

And so I got it from her name plate...

Family Name: PORSCHE
First Name: CAYENNE
Middle Name: TURBO

Yes, you read it right!!! PORSCHE, CAYENNE TURBO - the embodiment of all Porsche values. I really fell in-love with her so badly that I wanted to have her as my own. I know it's hard. So I need to set my goal for the impossible to become possible. And so to Cayenne, I know it may take a long time, but I still believe in destiny.

Just for the record... For the first time in my life, I fell in-love with a car...

Friday, November 2, 2007

Nights in Tokyo...

You'll never gonna spend a boring night in Tokyo. As long as you're not afraid to explore and always ready for an adventure, for sure, you'll ganna have a memorable and splendid sojourn. Don't have any clue??? Well, read on and prepare for a satisfying journey!!!

If you don't have any idea where to stay, Ueno is highly recommended, where hotels are just a minute walk away from the train station. Besides being convenient, it's also of great significance in Japan history with a zoo, an old public park, a shrine, historical art museums, and of course, a nearby traditional wet and dry market. And so a walk around Ueno is just the beginning of a facinating experience.

If you're up for shopping, Harajuku should be your next destination. Or if you're a fashionist, try Shibuya -- Tokyo's center of fashion craze -- packed with people 24/7. However, if you're up for sight-seeing, a relaxing walk by the seaside at Odaiba is an option. But for people with a date, I highly recommend the beautiful illumination and ever so popular dating spot at Roppongi Hills.

Now, by this time, you may think that the night is over and probably ready to head home. Are you kiddin' me!? Hell no! Tokyo never sleeps! And the parties around Roppongi have just started! Whether you're alone or with someone, blending with people from different corners of the world is hassle-free. These people are gathered in every club of Roppongi just for one reason -- to party all night!

Clubs and bars in Roppongi are like paradise to me on a Saturday night. Anything can happen! Dirty dancing with someone, touching, slapping and squeezing someone's asses, deep kissing on the spot, or even a one night stand! All these are possible! All you have to do is do the talking and let the charm work! But for those coming with partners -- Beware! I ain't gonna recommend!

Just a simple advice -- You are partying with real party people. So don't try to seduce or get someone's attention by trying too hard. Be natural, be cool... And don't ever say "I like you" or "I'm fallin' for you" or "I wanna spend the rest of my fxckin' life with you." like you mean it. You'll never gonna get someone with that. Always remember, natural sense of humor always works!

But anyway, anyway, anyway... First things first – grab a drink! And when you're in there, it's all you!!! But let me tell you one thing for sure -- You'll probably gonna head home the next morning.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Philippine Airlines

Philippine Airline really lived up to its name. And it has become a trademark so well-known around the globe!

Oh, the first few statements may be misleading. This is not something Filipinos can be proud of. I'm not talking about their name as Philippine Airline. I'm talking about their acronym PAL, so popular worldwide, which simply stands for "Plane Always Late."

As I came to write something about this topic, I suddenly remember that the first ever flight I had was in fact with PAL. Of course, having your first ever experience to board a plane could be so exciting. But then the excitement was spoiled by an announcement. "Attention to all passengers of Philippine Airline Flight PR310, your boarding time has been delayed due to bla, bla, bla..."

I was 11 then, now I'm turning 25. That was almost 14 years and yet, Philippine Airline have no signs of getting their planes on scheduled time. My latest flight with PAL, it was like as usual. Here I was feeling so irritated. Then a foreigner sitting beside me, who is a frequent PAL flyer, calmly came to say, "It's nothing new..."

Woah, am I not a Filipino! And so, I was like, "Oh yeah, indeed!"

Basically, I don't think this reputation will give a huge organization like them any benefit. Surprizingly, it seems the business is good and they are still doing well!

So it makes me wonder...

Are these passengers contented with the way PAL operate, or they just don't have any options? Or maybe these passengers are used to it, that they willingly accepted the fact that Philippine Airline planes are always late? Is the Philippine Airline organization contented with this kind of reputation? And can we Filipinos, live-up with "Filipino Time" being globally referred to as always behind the schedule?


Anyway, PAL isn't the only one that should carry all the insult. This goes out to all the Filipinos in general. Believe me, it's in the blood. So the acronym PAL may after all, eventually mean "Philippine Always Late."

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Day in the office...

English:


It's been so busy lately. I've been travelling for a week. In fact, I just came back home today.


Since I have nothing much to say today, I just leave you guys with a video of my day in my office. It's just a short video to let you have an idea about the nature of my work.



日本語:


最近、忙しい。 一週間の出張で、疲れてます! 実は今、家に帰ってきたところです。


今日は、特に何もないので、ビデオをアップロードします。オフィスにいる一日の俺の短いビデオだけです。まっ、つまらないと思いますが、どうぞ見てください。

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Waiting for answers...

Lately, I'm so upset with the situation of the world we live in...

You come back home from work, switch your TV on for a routine news headlines, and the first thing that may pop-out from your screen are images of terror...
Every single night, you can never miss an update of killings, bombings, religious war, worldwide threats, etc... And I'm so sick of it!

Hearing news like these seem like the future is so unclear. It seems danger is everywhere. I may exaggerate things but terrorism happened already before, and we know there are still possibilities for another one... Makes me worry sometimes.

Wasn't there a moment in your life when you thought the same? Have you ever worried? Or you simply just don't really care?

Well I do care... a lot! How I wish I am Superman, to stop all these, and bring back peace in this world, all by myself.

Things became so complicated today because of the 9/11 terrorism. It started all these uneasiness in our lives and all these threats in the world today. And we might have to witness another terror with Osama Bin Laden still out there, regrouping, still a threat.

Damn, how I wish to find this azzhole myself. And if I do, I'd kill him with my bare hands, then tear his mazzafxckin' gut'z into pieces...

In reality, I'm just another powerless individual after all. And all I can do is sit, watch, and ask, “When will this be over? How will this gonna end?

Questions still waiting for answers...

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Sunday morning...

English:

Here's a video of my typical Sunday morning.

And for my readers to watch without feeling bored, the video was edited like a new version of Maroon 5's Sunday Morning music video.

And so, there you go... Enjoy!!!


日本語:

俺の典型的な日曜日の朝のビデオを添付しました。

ただのビデオだけで退屈だと思うので、マルーン5のサンデー・モーニングのミュージックビデオの新バージョンみたいに編集しました。

どうぞ、楽しんでください!!!

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Marion Jones

"...and so it is with a great amount of shame that I stand before you and tell you that I have betrayed your trust."

"...I am responsible fully for my actions. I have no one to blame but myself for what I've done."

"...I have been dishonest and you have the right to be angry with me. I have let (my family) down. I have let my country down, and I have let myself down. I recognize that by saying that I'm deeply sorry, it might not be enough and sufficient to address the pain and the hurt that I've caused you. Therefore, I want to ask for your forgiveness for my actions, and I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me."

Marion Jones on a news conference (2007-10-05).


In a tearful apology, Marion Jones, winner of three golds and two bronze medals in 2000 Olympics, admitted she used steriods.

But wow! I say, what a revelation!!!

Indeed, this was a sad day for sport. But what a brave decision to finally admit the shameful act she had done. What a heart to face an angry world!!!


And so, to Marion Jones...

Though the world is upset, I still salute you for having the guts to face it, despite the consequences.

With the International Olympic Committee stripping you of your medals, you're not an Olympic champion anymore. But you became a different champion. You might just won the heart of many for your bravery.

Goodluck!!!