Sunday, August 19, 2012

HUMAN BODIES FOR OLYMPIC TRAINING


HUMAN BODIES FOR OLYMPIC TRAINING
By Wilhelmina S. Orozco

The concept of manhood in our country is quite barbaric, primitive. It is brawn against brawn, and not even the litanies of prayers of the Lord’s Prayer, Hail Marys, and the Nicene Creed are enough to erase such idiotic notions of what is being a man in those universities where frat violence exists.

Womanhood meanwhile is being advanced by some religious groups as purely for procreation or pregnancy. Nowhere is there any encouragement of women’s engaging in sports at all.

How about examining ourselves everytime the so-called fist guy has a fight? The whole country stops and majority are glued to the TV set watching him pulp down his opponent. Then when he comes home, he is given a “hero’s” welcome. The mayor who started that “heroic welcome” is a devout Catholic, mind you.

Let’s ask, Heroism for what, for doing violence against another person’s human body? Listen to the language of the announcers when they are covering the fights and you would feel like vomiting, that is if you are steeped in human rights lingo.

Physical notion

In general the focus on the human body is  on its vulnerability.

There is a very low regard for sports in general in our country. Many classes in the elementary do not even have a physical education subject. This view is an indication of how we view the human body. The prevailing notion, abetted by the Church is that it is for procreation. As such –as women have limited fertility period -  then we are narrowing down its capabilities. We are saying that the human body has an ephemeral significance. Beyond procreating, what else will the human body do? The Church is silent on that one.

Advertising:only physical

The advertising world focuses on the body as a tool to attract the opposite sex especially for the youth. Its ads focus on their capability to have or keep this or that guy and gal. Every product has a sexual connotation, that once it is used, then huffing and pumping would not stop.

In advertising terms, the human body is only a physical tool -- for decoration – for display as a sweet-smelling body, its gorgeous bunch of hair on the head flinging away to the wind with the use of the “proper” shampoo; a body that will move ooh so slowly like a princess or a king, an aristocratic false view of human motion; or in the case of the female body, one that will always look svelte all the time if not pregnant.

Except for the chocolate drinks for children and some multivitamins which push for a healthy body, the rest of the ads are just Horrible, aren’t they? Not an ounce of respect nor recognition of the capabilities of the human body to reach the heights of perfection, of speed, and of muscle coordination.

Also save for medicines fornthe elderly or adults suffering from arthritis, memory loss,  or the like, the ad models are all young up to their 30’s, a reflection on the burgeoning Filipino populace. Yet we know that time passes by and the human body ages, some very fast due to exposure to the polluting elements of urban life.


Noontime shows

Then view the different noontime shows. The hosts look forever the same through the years, perhaps courtesy of some surgical operation. But the female accoutrements are sprightly youngsters whose only qualifications seemingly are that ability to put life into their one or two liners and the capability to shout out loud to two thousand people. (The screeches in those programs are just plainly unbearable.)

Inspiring environment

I asked two students, from grade and high schools, what is your physical education subject now? He said none. N-O-N-E.  She said, not now yet.

To nurture Olympian medalists, our environment should be inspirational for physical excellence In the 60’s, when I was in the elementary, everyday was PE day. Walang palya. (An ad uses that phrase to hint at unlimited sex activities for couples who take a certain product.) We even displayed or competed with other teams of the school population once a school year. In college at UP, I had PE subjects yearly in swimming, golf, volleyball, aerobics, modern dance and so many more. We were also made to attend varsity games and to cheer our teams during tournaments.

What is wrong with our educational curriculum now? How come there is less emphasis on the physique? The Greeks have a mantra:, “A SOUND MIND IN A SOUND BODY.” My teacher in high school told us that over and over again.

So if the school cannot do it, let us turn to the barangay. Unfortunately the barangay seems to have only one focus– basketball. I could only close my eyes everytime I see youngsters playing that game on the streets with great hopefulness in their eyes that someday they would be as famous as Jaworski or some other guy. But they are too short to even reach the goal.

Wanted: institutional ads
Worse of worst, Folks, a tv ad pretends to focus the attention on the Olympics, but in what manner? It implies, “Hey sports people, sure get into the race but don’t forget you could smell along the way. So wear this deodorant.”

Whoa! What is that? How could a runner, a sprinter focus on that medal, on that race, when this ad keeps reminding him or her, “Hey your opponent might smell you.” Is that not idiotic? Instead of praying muscle power would not fail her, the sportster is made to think of “kilikili” power.

Actually, what we need are institutional ads – no longer the use of sports in the Olympics for promoting this and that product. During important periods where sports are given prominence , those commercial interests should take the back seat and make the human body be the frontfunner for all types of messages – as capable of achieving the greatest speed, the most creative movements, the highest point for jumping,  etcetera. .

Transparency among sports managers
So now we know that a Philippine contingent went to the 2012 London Olympics. We have two agencies who are supposed to focus on that: The Philippines Sports Commission and the Philippine Olympic Committee. I tried accessing data through the internet to find out, how much budget was allotted for their attendance? Who are the participating sports people? How long did they practice for the event? Who are their trainors -- are they of Olympic quality? How much allowance does each sports player have just to practice everyday? But there is none at all. Even the news items hardly mention the different categories that the participants entered. Our news reports seem to be gagged to give only a superficial rundown of our participation in the event. It seems that transparency is not a valuable word in the field of sports management.

Watching the TV programs focused on the Olympics, we can gather how other countries had prepared for the Olympics -- 4 years before the event! The candidate is given to a trainor to train rigidly, everyday.

Way back in the 90's I had a friend, Carol de la Paz Zialcita who trained gymnasts for the SEA Games. She was a famous beautiful stage actress who starred in many Broadway plays – like Guys and Dolls - presented at UP during the 60’s and 70’s and later on, had gone into gymnastic training. I met her colleague, a foreign trainor and in another, weight-lifting I think, a Russian. The Russian trained participants won gold. In preparation for the SeaGames, the government spent something like P150,000 per month allowance for the foreigner with free housing etc. Those benefits drew “inggit” comments but when the medals came in, they stopped.

It was all worth the expense. It put us in the map of Southeast Asia. But now we are completely zero. And boxing? Wow, never the sport that the young should learn at all. In fact the CHED and the Dep Ed should make sure that it is erased as a sport, not even to recognize any of the international champions in the schoolbooks as worthwhile emulating. What happened to Muhammad Ali? Huh?

Sports for us
As we are an archipelagic country, the sports that we should excel in are swimming and rowing. Our Dragon oars persons won an international gold already and that speaks a lot of our capabilities where water is concerned. I wonder why they did not join the Olympic trip.

Now because we are short, we need not bother about basketball but rather about football, sprint, and track and field. What we lack for height, we can compensate through other sports that do not require it. 

I have seen many of our kababayan who could walk around very fast --especially those who are asked to walk ahead of me in the streets by some Olympic losers masquerading as intel officers. Joke guys, but the act is very real. It really happened. 

Actually, we have tall young people around us. I have seen many men and women who are a head taller than I am, which means to say 6-footers. One woman I saw is a policewoman. If we put our minds to it, we could start selecting people with the right height and build for particular sports. In volleyball, definitely we should choose tall players. In track and field, we must have those with long legs. In swimming, we must have also tall people so that when they kick at the start, their bodies would be more forward than the rest. The only thing we have to do is to convince those tall people to go athletic.

Table tennis should be another sport that we can excel in. Here, we need not think of height. Moreover, we have many Chinese folks here who could teach and train our sports people on how to whack that ball. Why Chinese is because pingpong is originally from China. My mother, Esperanza became a table tennis champion even when she had had all of us already – five children, in the fifties. So we can gather that the people of that era were conscious of being into sports.  Her ability to focus was too great despite the fact that my father was bedridden then with nephritis.

One benefit we can get from excelling in sports is that tourists would come flocking in here just to see us train the participants for the Olympics. Regional competitions would also be a come on for them. Actually, some tourists do that –they look for unique scenery especially where there is excellence. 


Focusing and sports
How did the Olympic participants-winners train? On TV, they revealed that they had had to learn how to focus.

Mindset: One girl said that her mind was set on the gold medal for two years – all over her room, she was shaped into a determined sportster. She completely focused on winning in the race.

Emotional strength A young girl had to live in Iowa so as to train under an Olympic trainer. She had to curb her longing for her family for 2 years, mind you. But of course, train tickets are cheap in America and so I am sure her parents saw more of her during those years. 

Qualifications Then let us look at the qualifications of the participants. A winner in the rowing competition is a physical education teacher! Everyday of her life, she was thinking of sports. And, and, she had a MENTOR who instilled in her that self-confidence to be able to hurdle all the obstacles that would be thrown her way.

Hence, to recap, the qualities of Olympic participants, including those mentioned above, are:
  1. right height and build for the sports;
  2. ability to focus;
  3. respect for excellent mentors;
  4. self-discipline;
  5. self-confidence;
  6. a great sense of time;
  7. knows how to prioritize and can withstand delayed self-gratification;
  8. selects the people he or she would be around with in the course of the training. If participants are surrounded by mediocre people who would make fun of sports, as once shown in that TV lunch program ridiculing the Olympics,  then they better kiss those medals goodbye.
 

What to die for
One benefit of focusing on sports is that we could curb violence in our country, especially fraternity violence. The youth will be made to focus on the Olympic motto the Latin words "Citius, Altius, Fortius", meaning "Faster, Higher, Stronger" in English.  Nothing there about boxing the next fellow.

Through such focus,  we would be raising their standards for what is being a citizen of this country – one not dependent on some barbaric groups that espouse hierarchical but rather  democratic relationships, and certainly one who knows who and what are worth dying for.  

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