Thursday, December 16, 2010

Our Memories with Elvira will always be lived


Elvira Lim Sarmiento

January 14, 1940 - December 12, 2010



Mama Elvir... we love you so much!

God saw you getting tired and a cure was not to be. So He put His arms around you and whispered "come to me." With tearful eyes we watched you, and saw you pass away. Although we loved you dearly, we could not make you stay. A golden heart stopped beating, hardworking hands at rest. God broke our hearts to prove to us, He only takes the best.


The Sarmiento family needs our prayers and support right now.
A few minutes of your time is enough.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Minutes of the Meeting

Lim Family 2nd Generation
Minutes of the Meeting

Agenda:

Proposed Projects
    1. Smaller Pictures will be printed so that everybody will fit at the letter V portion of the family avatar.
    2. If possible, each Couple will be joined in one Picture.
    3. Send soft Copy as Email to Jonathanpado@yahoo.com before the end of this year.
    4. Tarpaulin system will be used as the material for our pictures.
    
 Proposed implementation of “Lim Family 2nd Generation Trust Fund”
    1. This fund will be used to fund open scholarships for future generations to come.
    2. This fund can also be used to fund a Family Attorney since we never had somebody to defend us from forms of injustice.
    3. Funds will be contributed yearly per couple for the minimum amount of 1000php per couple or head (if still single).
    4. Contributions will be given before August of 2011.

Proposed Permanent Roofing at Lolo and Lola’s cemetery   

Friday, July 23, 2010

4th Family Reunion

To: All the Members of the Juliano & Cecilia Lim Family
From: The Chairman: Dr. Erlinda Lim-Juan
Theme: Clean & Green

We will have our 4th Family reunion on Papa Juling’s 104th Birthday and Mama Celing’s 31st Death Aniversary on August 21, 2010 in La Libertad Negros Oriental. Our host is Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Terio and Family. Please wear something green.

Program of Activities
I. Arrival in La Libertad 8:00am – 12noon
II. Lunch at Terio’s Residence - San Jose, La Libertad, Negros Oriental
III. Celebration & Service at the Tomb 3:00pm – 5:00pm
Speaker: Mr. Roderick Lim
Program: Mrs. Ethel Rose Estrellado & Mr. Leo Art Sarmiento
IV. Dinner and Fellowship at La Limar 6:00pm – 8:00pm
Host: Terio Family
EMCEE: Giel Estrellado
Presentation by the Third Generation:
By: Jonathan Julvic Trinidad and Rickne Ian Lim
V. Family Meeting 9:00pm – 11:00pm
1st & 2nd Generation
VI. Sweet Dream (Sleeping time) 11:00pm

VII. Homeward Bound (8/22/2010)


Assignments:

1st Generation:
1. Submit 2 Stories about Papa and Mama

2nd Generation:
1. Video Presentation
2. Plans for the Future
3rd Generation:
1. Prepare for a number (base on theme)
2. Submit your auto biography and for those who cannot write yet parents will be the one to write.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

The LIM Christmas Party '09

The annual Christmas party was held at Eng. Ernesto Lim at Valencia, Oriental Negros. This event is the most awaited party of the Lim family where we reunite once again.

Monday, July 27, 2009

The National Anthem

Please stand up for the National Anthem.

Handa, Sing!

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Awit ng Kabataan Cover

Inspired By
Winnux's Virtuosic adlib,
Mcloy's Percussion,
Romy's Back-voice,
Joseph's Bass and
(yours truly) Pharaoh's Rythms,
we made this one while emptying Nama Beer Cans.
This one goes out to all Kabataan...both physically and heartily. Enjoy!
This one goes out Twinkle...wishing you were here with us bro.


Sunday, July 12, 2009

A very beautiful story

I was born in a secluded village on a mountain. Day by day, my parents plowed the yellow dry soil with their backs towards the sky.

I have a brother who is 3 years younger than me. I wanted to buy a handkerchief, which all girls around me seemed to have. So, one day I stole 50 cents from my father's drawer. Father had discovered about the stolen money right away. He made me and my younger brother kneel against the wall as he held a bamboo stick in his hand.

"Who stole the money?" he asked.

I was stunned, too afraid to talk. Neither of us admitted to the fault, so he said, "Fine, if nobody wants to admit, you two should be beaten!"

He lifted up the bamboo stick. Suddenly, my younger brother gripped father's hand and said," Dad, I was the one who did it!"

The long stick smacked my brother's back repeatedly. Father was so angry that he kept on whipping my brother until he lost his breath. After that, he sat down on our stone bed and scolded my brother, "You have learned to steal from your own house now. What other embarrassing things will you be possibly doing in the future? You should be beaten to death, you shameless thief!"

That night, my mother and I hugged my brother. His body was full of wounds from the beating but he never shed a single tear.

In the middle of the night, all of sudden, I cried out loudly. My brother covered my mouth with his little hand and said, “Sis, now don't cry anymore. Everything has happened."

I still hate myself for not having enough courage to admit what I did.

Years went by, but the incident still seemed like it just happened yesterday. I will never forget my brother's expression when he protected me.

That year, my brother was 8 years old and I was 11 years old.

When my brother was in his last year of secondary school, he was accepted in an upper secondary school in the central. At the same time, I was accepted into a university in the province. That night, father squatted in the yard, smoking, packet by packet. I could hear him ask my mother, "Both of our children, they have good results? Very good results?"

Mother wiped off her tears and sighed," What is the use? How can we possibly finance both of them?"

At that time, my brother walked out, he stood in front of father and said,"Dad, I don't want to continue my study anymore, I have read enough books."

Father swung his hand and slapped my brother on his face. "Why do you have a spirit so damn weak? Even if it means I have to beg for money on the streets, I will send you two to school until you have both finished your studies!"

And then, he started to knock on every house in the village to borrow money.

I stuck out my hand as gently as I can to my brother's swollen face, and told him, "A boy has to continue his study; if not; he will not be able to overcome this poverty we are experiencing. " I, on the other hand, had decided not to further my study at the university.

Nobody knew that on the next day, before dawn, my brother left the house with a few pieces of worn-out clothes and a few dry beans. He sneaked to my side of the bed and left a note on my pillow; "Sis, getting into a university is not easy. I will go find a job and I will send money to you."

I held the note while sitting on my bed, and cried until I lost my voice.

That year, my brother was 17 years old; I was 20 years old.

With the money father borrowed from the whole village, and the money my brother earned from carrying cement on his back at a construction site, finally, I managed to get to the third year of my study in the university.

One day, while I was studying in my room, my roommate came in and told me, "There's a villager waiting for you outside!" Why would there be a villager looking for me? I walked out, and I saw my brother from afar. His whole body was covered with dirt, dust, cement and sand. I asked him, "Why did you not tell my roommate that you are my brother?"

He replied with a smile," Look at my appearance. What will they think if they would know that I am your brother? Won't they laugh at you?"

I felt so touched, and tears filled my eyes. I swept away dirt and dust from my brother's body. And told him with a lump in my throat, “I don't care what people would say! You are my brother no matter what your appearance is?"

From his pocket, he took out a butterfly hair clip. He put it on my hair and said, "I saw all the girls in town are wearing it. So, I think you should also have one."

I could not hold back myself anymore. I pulled my brother into my arms and cried. That year, my brother was 20 years old; I was 23 years old.

I noticed that the broken window was repaired the first time I brought my boyfriend home. The house was scrubbed cleaned.

After my boyfriend left, I danced like a little girl in front of my mother, "Mom, you didn't have to spend so much time cleaning the house!" But she told me with a smile," It was your brother who went home early to clean the house. Didn't you see the wound on his hand? He hurt his hand while he was replacing the window."

I went into my brother’s bedroom. Looking at his thin face, I felt like hundreds of needles pricked in my heart. I applied some ointment on his wound and put a bandage on it, "Does it hurt?� I asked him.

"No, it doesn't hurt. You know, when at the construction site, stones keep falling on my feet ... Even that could not stop me from working."

In the middle of the sentence, he stopped. I turned my back on him and tears rolled down my face. That year, my brother was 23 years old; I was 26 years old.

After I got married, I lived in the city. Many times my husband invited my parents to come and live with us, but they didn't want. They said, once they left the village, they wouldn't know what to do.

My brother agreed with them. He said, "Sis, you just take care of your parents-in-law. I will take care of mom and dad here."

My husband became the director of his factory. We asked my brother to accept the offer of being the manager in the maintenance department. But my brother rejected the offer. He insisted on working as a repairman instead for a start.

One day, my brother was on the top of a ladder repairing a cable, when he got electrocuted, and was sent to the hospital.

My husband and I visited him at the hospital. Looking at the plaster cast on his leg, I grumbled, "Why did you reject the offer of being a manager? Managers won't do something dangerous like that. Now look at you - you are suffering a serious injury. Why didn't you just listen to us?"

With a serious expression on his face, he defended his decision, "Think of brother-in-law. He just became the director, and I being educated, and would become a manager, what kind of rumors would fly around?"

My husband's eyes filled up with tears, and then I said, "But you lack in education only because of me!"

"Why do you talk about the past?" he said and then he held my hand.

That year, he was 26 years old and I was 29 years old.

My brother was 30 years old when he married a farmer girl from the village. During the wedding reception, the master of ceremonies asked him, "Who is the one person you respect and love the most?"

Without even taking a time to think, he answered," My sister." He continued by telling a story I could not even remember. "When I was in primary school, the school was in a different village. Everyday, my sister and I would walk for 2 hours to school and back home. One day, I lost the other pair of my gloves. My sister gave me one of hers. She wore only one glove and she had to walk far. When we got home, her hands were trembling because of the cold weather that she could not even hold her chopsticks. From that day on, I swore that as long as I live, I would take care of my sister and will always be good to her."

Applause filled up the room. All guests turned their attention to me.

I found it hard to speak, "In my whole life, the one I would like to thank most is my brother, "And in this happy occasion, in front of the crowd, tears were rolling down my face again.

Love and care for the one you love every single day of your life. You may think what you did is just a small deed, but to that someone, it may mean a lot.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Reminiscing "Excerpts from a Grandchild"



Most of our childhood memories are better remembered whenever we are most happy. When Phoebe and Nathan migrated from Basay to Dumaguete, our first house was the old leased Hut at Mangnao, Dumaguete City. It was hard those days because we had to fetch drinkable water a kilometer away.
However, the best memories I kept was when we where about to go to Lalibertad to attend Family affairs. The travel was tough because I used to vomit inside the crowded Ceres Bus Liner but the destination was very promising enough. It was La Libertad and everything in there was nothing but fun. To mention a few, the water Jump at Hinobaan Bridge, the Banca ride, the fresh Bibingka, the camaraderie of fellow cousins...etc. It was a weekend of fun and nothing else.
And in these happy weekend trips, I did notice one explicit thing about our Late Lolo Juling. He was a man of great precision when it comes to time. He always woke up early to do his morning jogs. Im really not sure though how he was doing during weekdays but Im pretty sure he was always early because he was a teacher. He was always early to church too. Well, he was an elder and I remembered them having regular sessions an hour earlier before each sunday service.

Nevertheless, there was only one thing that our late Lolo Juling never hesitated to offer time.
.....and this was "Prayer".

You guys remembered this so well. We used to make jokes about the lenghty prayers our late Lolo Juling made each time he leads a prayer on meals, family assemblies, services, etc.
Ever wondered why those prayers were too long?
Well, it took a lot of time for me to realize too, that prayers are better mustered with answers if it's faithfully dedicated and heartily spoken in "Detail".

That's why it was lenghty...Lolo Juling had to pray for a lot of things...and in detail.

Lim Family Upcoming Occasions

note: Please report immediately if you find any clerical errors or missing data.