Category Archives: Writing

My Speech

Good morning honored guests, parents, Daly staff and of course 5th grade Class of 2013-2014.

Some people say leaving elementary isn’t a big of a deal. For me it is, why? Because, everything started here.  Although we first learn basic things at home with our parents and family, but it’s in school, where we learn the formal education. It is here where we first learn how to read and write, learn numbers, and meet new people.

When I started kindergarten in Sacred Heart of Jesus Montessori School I was so happy that I can finally start going to school, because I always get jealous of my 2 older sisters.  In 3rd grade my parents moved me to XUGS or Xavier University Grade School, where it is so advanced that I was so lucky to have a tutor help me with my lessons every day after school.

After I finished 3rd and 4th grade in the Philippines me, my sisters and my grandma, moved to America met our parents. We had been apart for 7 years. My sisters, and I finished the 2012-2013 school year in Boston, and it was so different that the school in our home town because we  usually have books, arm chairs and we usually bring huge roller bags so it was a huge change for us. Before 5th grade we decided to move to Maryland, and there it was I started 5th grade, with no help, just me trying to listen to the teacher and meet new people at the same time.

My 5th grade was amazing, especially if you have the funniest, weirdest, camera lover teacher which is Mr. Fitz. Every day I learned interesting stuff from him. The other day he told everybody in his class that tomorrow we can do the shaving cream stuff in our desk, and he saw a confused face from me and told me that shaving cream has an alcohol that actually cleans our desk so it was a fun way because we can play with it.  Also every time I wear a Norway flag vest, or a UK sweater, or a Boston sweat shirt, Mr. Fitz usually calls me a Norwegian, British, Bostonian and a Filipino girl, where it reminds me of him,  so I am so lucky to be in his class and having the funniest, best memories that I will always remember.

So I’m here leaving elementary, hoping to spend my middle school years in Boston Latin School or BLS, graduate high school, and study Mathematics, design, physics, and technology in college. Also I could participate at engineering style competitions with teams, such as model bridge building contest to be a Civil Engineer, but that’s still in the future.

So in a couple of months, we are going to be in middle school, I know we are all nervous and excited at the same time, but this is something we all need to remember, because we all know that this will be the next chapter of our life. Thank you everyone and have a great summer!

The Seven Chairs “The fifth one ended up in France”

 

A spiritual person sent 7 chairs to 6 different churches, and one chair to a different place that wasn’t a church.

Sunday evening in St. Patrick’s Church the nuns, priest and the acolytes were getting ready for the 5:00 p.m. mass. Before people were getting in, a nun was wondering why a mysterious chair  was in the confession room because the chair should not be there.

After the mass the nun was waiting for people to leave. After they’re all gone, she went back to get the chair and when she put it down she saw a light coming from the ceiling. She kept staring at it, it got brighter until a face appeared and started to talk to the nun

harris flying chair

and she replied to it.

On the next day, in St. Mary’s Church the people who attended mass went home and the people who work for the church is going to get  lunch, a nun who is about to go get lunch got a phone call from somebody but she didn’t answer it, while she’s getting out from the church she stopped and looked at a mysterious chair that she never seen before, when she touched it a light coming from the ceiling was just so bright until she noticed a face appeared and heard something and replied to it.

 

The 3rd chair was in the St. Joseph Church and the 4th chair was in St. Stephen’s Catholic Church where the bright light with the face appeared when the nuns touched it

 

and sat on it.

The fifth one ended up in France.  Where the nun sat on the chair and then saw the bright light.  That shows some little babies on a church with a lady that she is familiar with.

The 6th chair was in St. Johns Church and the nun just saw the chair and sat on it so she can pray, right after she sat a light flashed and it kept getting brighter and brighter until a face appeared and heard a message that only the nun can hear it.

The 7th chair was in Lourdes, France, where a nun was about to go home but before she does she stop at the grotto where the statue of Mother Mary was under a rock cave and in front of those are some benches and beside that is a chair where the nun sat and

 

while praying a dazzling light and a figure all dressed in white gave a message to the nun.

After a week, all 7 nuns went to a particular church and when they are all in there they prayed and another nun came out from a room and inviting them to come in.

The nun asks them “Do you still remember me?”

 

The 7 nuns were so confused until the nun told them that they are all sisters.

 

The nun told them a story about their mom. She was her friend and that all of you were raised by nuns and being adopted by different families and that is why you don’t get to see each other.

And all of them ask the same question, why all of us get to come to the church at the same time?

 

 

 

Solar Energy

In my opinion “Solar Energy” is the best because, it’s renewable, it’s affordable and it’s safe for your environment.

     

First, if you pick “solar” than “wind” is a best choice because, solar has no moving parts, has a better reliability and has a 25 year warranty, and requires less space in most cases as the panels can be installed on a roof.

                         

Second “Fossil Fuels” is a good  but if you pick “solar” its better because solar is a clean power, doesn’t have a smell, and we can get power by the sun.

                    

Third “Geothermal” vs. “solar”, well they are both good but let me explain it to you, solar captures the energy of the sun by exiting electrons and capturing that energy in wires, while “geothermal” takes advantage of the ground, which is 50-55 degrees year round just a few-feet below the surface, so I’ll bet that you pick “solar” than “Geothermal”.

          

 

Last “Hydro” power can be used all day and night, as the solar, of course, it can only be used during the day, but solar does produces more power than hydro so it’s more efficient to have solar than hydro power.

                     

Again “Biomass vs. Solar, for me I’ll go with “solar” because solar contains stored energy from the “SUN” and the solar panels have efficiencies as high as 19% meaning that much of sun’s energy is converted into electricity, then the efficiency of biomass is much, much lower perhaps 1% so I rather go with solar than Biomass.

          

6 Things you didn’t know about Solar? (Source: http://energy.gov/articles/top-6-things-you-didnt-know-about-solar-energy)

  1. The first silicon solar cell, the precursor of all solar-powered devices, was built by Bell Laboratories in 1954. On page one of its April 26, 1954 issue, The New York Times proclaimed the milestone, “the beginning of a new era, leading eventually to the realization of one of mankind’s most cherished dreams — the harnessing of the almost limitless energy of the sun for the uses of civilization.”
  2. The space industry was an early adopter of solar technology. In the 1960s the space industry began to use solar technology to provide power aboard spacecraft’s. The Vanguard 1 — the first artificial earth satellite powered by solar cells — remains the oldest manmade satellite in orbit – logging more than 6 billion miles.
  3. Fast track to today and demand for solar in the United States is at an all-time high. In the first quarter of 2012, developers installed 85 percent more solar panels compared to the first quarter of last year. Total U.S. installations may reach 3,300 megawatts this year – putting the country on track to be the fourth largest solar market in the world.
  4. As prices continue to fall, solar energy is increasingly becoming an economical energy choice for American homeowners and businesses. Still, the biggest hurdle to affordable solar energy remains the soft costs – like permitting, zoning, and hooking a solar system up to the power grid. On average local permitting and inspection processes add more than $2,500 to the total cost of a solar energy system. The Energy Department Sun Shot Initiative works to aggressively drive down these soft costs – making it faster and cheaper for families and businesses to go solar.
  5.  Solar energy is the most abundant energy resource on earth – 173,000 terawatts of solar energy strikes the Earth continuously. That’s more than 10,000 times the world’s total energy use.
  6. The largest solar energy project in the world is currently under construction. The project relies on a technology known as solar thermal energy. Once the project is complete 350,000 mirrors will reflect light onto boilers. When the water boils, the steam turns a turbine, creating electricity. The project is expected to provide clean, renewable energy for 140,000 homes and is supported by an Energy Department loan guarantee.

How do Solar Panels work? (Source:http://www.solarenergy.org/answers-younger-kids)

Solar electric panels are made up of something called silicon, the same thing that makes up sand. There is more silicon on the planet than almost anything else. Even though you can find silicon almost everywhere, making a solar panel is difficult and expensive.

The silicon has to be heated to super high temperatures in a big factory, and then formed into very thin wafers.

When sunlight hits a solar panel, it makes electrons in the silicon move around. (Electrons are teeny tiny specks–they’re way too small for us to see, even under a microscope.)

The electrons flow through wires that were built into the solar panel. And presto! We have electricity! We can do whatever we want with this electricity, run a calculator, a CD player, or, if we have big enough solar panels, a satellite! [Solar panels are also called photovoltaic panels. “Photo” means light and “voltaic” means electricity.

What is Solar Cooking?(Source: http://www.solarenergy.org/answers-younger-kids)

      In the United States, the stoves in our houses run on electricity or gas. In other parts of the world, many people still cook over campfires. One of the many cool things about solar ovens is that they don’t need electricity, gas, or wood to work–they cook food using only sunlight! Basically, you put food in a box and trap the sun’s heat by covering the box with glass or plastic. (Solar cooking is an example of using solar thermal energy.)

And they’re easy to make! You can make one with two cardboard boxes, one inside the other, covered with glass or plastic. You can put crumpled-up newspaper between the two boxes to help trap the sun’s heat, paint the inside black, and put aluminum foil outside to help reflect more sun into the cooker. Even a simple solar cooker like this one can reach temperatures over 250? F.

Solar cookers are great because they save money and energy, and produce no pollution. People don’t have to cut down trees for firewood, and they make no nasty smoke to hurt people’s lungs, things that are big problems in countries that don’t have as much money as we do. Solar cookers can also be used to make water safe to drink, make doctor’s tools safe to use, and heat water for laundry.

      

Solar Panels can be used to power different things (Sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_car , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_Impulse, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_boat)

As shown above, there are a lot of things you can power by the solar energy/sun, you can power cars, houses, boats, airplanes and etc.

Since”solar energy”can power to almost all things, how about trying this to our rollercoaster?

For Good

My sisters and I, are having a vacation with our parents and then we needed to go back in the Philippines.

After 10 months of waiting, March 24, 2013 was our 2nd visit to our parents and  now it’s for good, that’s why we are so excited because it’s our first time to experience winter for we don’t have it in the Philippines, what we have their are only rainy and hot season.

After that we arrived to Boston, the streets are covered with snow, and then my oldest sister Angelica put on some gloves  got some snow and throw it to us and that time we are having snow ball fighting at night which was cool.  Our  hands and feet were freezing but still enjoying the snow.

After a couple of days our parents enrolled us at Boston Public School, during our first day of school we are not actually excited or happy because we already finished school back home in the Philippines, and when we all got home we are so happy and shocked because everything is different from the Philippines, at first we are  having a hard time catching up because we entered school 3 months before schools here ends, but our teachers  are doing there best to help us understand our lessons.  Later, we all understood our lessons.

After a few weeks our parents decided to move to Maryland and stay here for good, at first time we disagree because it’s hard to move to another school but we understand and agree to move, so we travel about 10 hours in a car it was so tiresome, and when we arrived Maryland, my sisters and I was so shocked about the roads,  streets, and parks that is so huge because in Boston the road is so tight and small, and  so crowded yet  is also a beautiful place.

After a few weeks our mom enrolled us to Montgomery Public Schools, and luckily all of us were accepted and found our new schools and noticed that the buildings are so big.  Our mom prepared all our things for the next school year.

After a few weeks here in Maryland, our family started to go around the city to know the places and here we can say that we learned to love and would stay here in Maryland for good.

 

 

Summer Getaway In Manila

Sometime in March 2011, was the most exciting summer we all have ever experienced.   And why?Because my sisters, cousins and our grandma( we are a total of 12 people) went to see Manila.  It is a big city with lots of tall buildings, amusements parks and huge shopping malls compared to our city in Mindanao which is called Cagayan de Oro City.

Being away from our home is a bit sad but at the same time also exciting because we went to different locations where everything is all new to us.  We went to Subic Bay used to be US Naval Base where we saw dolphins shows.

We stayed in Manila for five days and afterwards we travelled two hours just to go to the place of one of our relatives, the name of the place is called  Bataan.   Their place is so beautiful and peaceful.  We stayed in one of the resort where we enjoyed swimming from day until night with lots of eating Filipino foods such as lechon or roast pig, pansit or noodles, grill fish and pork and of course lots and lots of rice.

After that we went to Enchanted Kingdom where there’s a lot of rides we ride a bunch of them and another called Star city which there’s a lots of rides they are indoor and outdoor roller coasters so the place was huge and some magic and a performance swallowing a fire and a sword put inside a mouth which is scary but the people we’re professional so no worries

When we came back to Manila and get ourselves ready for our trip back to our place in Cagayan de Oro City, our flight got cancelled because of bad weather.  We are all worried because we have no place to stay except in the airport.  But still we are so happy because we are all safe there.

The following day was a good day that our flight is on time and we all back home safely.

Being One Again

A family is supposed to be together but this family is different because this is based on a true story

Angelica, Hannan and I, 3 was left by our  parents when Angelica was 7, Hannan was 6, and when I was 2.  We have been separated for 7 years.Our parents, went to abroad and worked as housekeeper for the same family for the last 7 years.

All those years we only talked and see our parents through Skype.  Our parents never miss a day without talking to us.  My mother never missed to ask about our studies, homework and almost everything.  Even though our parents are so far away from us they tried their best to have time with each other even if it is only on Skype.   We feel their presence even they are away because we always have to talk to them.

We wanted to be together, so our parents sent us for interview. So, we have been praying and praying so hard and God is so good that he heard our prayers and we were given a visa.  Last May 2012 was our first time to see them both in person.

We traveled together with our grandmother for 23 hours by plane.  It was the longest travel we ever had.

Our grandma told us that was a long flight but Angelica told us this is it the day we’ll be meeting our parents, so we walk through the exit and the 3 of us smile to our parents when the door was open our parents we’re running to us crying and after that we go outside from the airport and take our very first family picture after 7 years.  It was the most memorable time in our lives.

New York was our entry and we were so excited to see the busy streets and lots of people around.   From there we drove straight all the way to Boston.   When we arrived in Boston we ate our dinner, a never ending talking with our parents and afterwards we  slept for we are so tired.  We woke in the morning so happy and all of us cannot stop believing that we are in already in the U.S.A with our parents.

And our parents friends and our families back home who knew about it,  they too are all so happy for us.

And that was the time that we will never ever forget the day that we were together as one again.

Thank you for reading my story. 🙂