Monday, July 30, 2012

Slumbook Series #1: Sir M. Pascual


Multi-styled Text Generator at TextSpace.net
 Welcome to PUPSMK's Slumbook Series where you can find the coolest information about our History professors and dear student majors. Get to know them up close and personal.  

Our featured professor this week is 
Sir Macky Pascual


Name: Mc Donald Domingo M. Pascual
Birthday: November 17
Age: Wag na yan edad..
Work: Academician, Producer, Consultant
~
Likes: kindhearted, trustworthy, congenial, dearly, affectionate, will-powered, smart and visionary people
Dislikes: regal-headed, treacherous, irresponsible, and insensitive
Color: Blue
Author: Many to Mention
Book: I Made Millions and Lost Them by F.C. Dela Rama
Pet: di ako mahilig
Films: Haw-ang, Butas 2
Dream Vacation: Anywhere in the world with the person I truly love


Motto: Betrayal starts when loyalty ends.
♥ Crush: Uso pa ba un?
Love: It is the craziest game that we ever play!

♠ What one word would best describe yourself?
A. Passionate

Personals ....
1. What made you to choose teaching as your profession?
A. Actually I did not choose teaching as my profession, not even BA History as the program that I would pursue. I wanted to pursue Medicine then. But since I was scolded by my aunt and we did not talk for several days, I failed to enroll at UST where I wanted to take up Biology. Without a choice then, I and my aunt (we were already in good terms at that time) had to go to Fatima University in Valenzuela. Yet, since the tuition and other school fees were so expensive, including the penalty fee in case that payment would be made late, I decided to come to PUP instead and try my luck--after all, I thought, I could change my program if anytime I would want to. And so, we went immediately to PUP.

2. So, you finally decided to take up BA History in PUP?
A. Actually, it was not my desire to take up History in PUP yet I had not choice. There was no BS Biology yest at that time and so I thought of taking up BA English instead. Unfortunately, the enrolling officer of the English Department was not there and it was already past 4 o'clock in the afternoon. Besides, I and my aunt felt so exhausted already, considering of course the distance of our travel between Valenzuela and Sta. Mesa, apart from the fact that it was raining at that time. So, we went to the 6th floor and there we met Dr. Coloma, the enrolling officer for the History program. She told me to enlist my name in the masterlist and gave me a registration card. The rest became history.

3. Do you have any regrets of becoming a History major and an instructor?
A. Honestly, I wanted to shift to another program at the onset of my second year. Two classmates went ahead to the office of Dr. Rosales who was still the chairperson of the Department of History that time. I did not go with my classmates at the same time in order to let Dr. Rosales sign our shifting forms because a former high school classmate came to chance upon me and we had a short chit-chat just outside the restroom of the West Wing.

When, eventually, I arrived at the office of Dr. Rosales, I heard her cursing my classmates who went ahead of me and scolding them for allegedly making BA History as their stepping stone to get into the university. Then she suddenly turned her angry face towards me and said, "Mc Donald, magsi-shift ka rin ba?!" I answered, "Ma'am hindi po" was my resigned reply. Because of that, the three of us did not have the opportunity to transfer to other programs anymore until we finished our History degree.

Regarding teaching, I did not even see myself as a would-be facilitator or provider of knowledge. In the semester following our graduation, Dr. Rosales, the new dean of the College of Arts, took me and Raul Sebastian in. I was only 20 years old at that time and, admittedly, I did not know whether I could handle collegiate classes effectively or not, particularly that I had no teaching experience before that. But since that time, I came to love my profession. I did not love it because I was forced to do it but because it became spontaneously subtle on my part. I just found myself touching the lives of my students and, I think, I have been enjoying doing that.

4. Do you enjoy doing your job? Why or why not?
A. Oh yes, I enjoy my job definitely for certain good reasons: Firstly, teaching, for me, is a career where knowledge does not stop to reverberate. Because of that, there is a continuous intellectual advancement on my part and I also take part in the total development and success of my students.

Secondly, I have nice, jolly, and caring colleagues and friends that surround me. Thirdly, I have students who are thoughtful, obedient, and industrious; students who are always there to help. Fourthly, History has become intrinsically a part of me. And lastly, there is a vibrant life and career in History if one were just to discover it.

5. What has been your funniest moment with PUP?
A. The funniest moment was when, one time, I was coming to PUP and I was on top of a footbridge, I suddenly felt the presence of a hanging cloth behind me. I thought that if that was the strap of my bag the strap would be somewhat lengthy--but it was not! So, I decided to finally take that cloth and, presto, I saw that it was my used white underwear which was inserted in one of my pockets behind. I was so embarrassed when I saw it and I felt like I was declining in a quicksand. Even when I was already in the cab on my way to PUP--and to think that nobody knew me, I still felt that humiliation because I thought that a lot of people saw me with that used underwear in my back pocket.

6. Why was the used underwear inserted in your rear pocket?
A. It became like that because my aunt told me to bring out my used clothes so that the laundress could wash them. I told her to do it instead for me because I was already in a hurry, but she insisted that I should bring them out myself. To minimize therefore my movement and because I had two bags to carry, I inserted my used underwear in one of the rear pockets of my pants, thinking that I could remove it after coming out of our house and hand it over to the laundress. Unfortunately I failed to do that. I walked through our village, got on board a tricycle, went thought the market, waited and took on board an fx taxi, and walked over a footbridge before I could notice it--and I should have not noticed it quickly even if I was already touching it had it not been for a man who was trying to peep whatever was behind me. Perhaps he noticed it that is why he tried to identify what it was. Honestly, that was so disgusting.

7. How do you see yourself several years from now?
A. I guess, I would be one with fulfillment and joy.
 
#





CSS gradients

No comments:

Post a Comment