safeter internet day

In support of Safer Internet Day, I wrote about How my daughter turned me into a digital mom in 1996. Wow, that’s over 18 years ago. There were just websites and online journals in those days. The internet was not complicated as it is today with so many new technologies.

The question remains :

“How do we keep our kids safe online?”

“How do we reach our kids?”

As parents, let’s not try and race them with today’s technology. We’ll eventually lose. We , the parents have the edge in wisdom and that’s how we keep our kids safe when they venture into the cyber-world.

We need to understand the technologies better to know how they should and should not be used. We have to recognize where the real world begins and ends so we can help our children develop boundaries in both worlds. Parents also need to venture into the online world of our children to help them navigate the tricky waters, learn the rules, learn from our adult experience and still be safe.

cybersafe book In this book I own, “Cybersafe : Protecting and Empowering Kids in the Digital World of Texting, Gaming and Social Media”, I stumbled upon some myths which parents need to know.

The author, Dr. Gwen Schurgin O’ Keefe says that the “two of the biggest generators of myths is the disconnect in how parents and kids use digital technology , and how kid use digital technology compared with how their parents think they do. This includes not just the internet but vieo games, music, cellphones….the entire digital world.”

The book shares a list of the digital myth perspective that many parents take for granted as “safe” or acceptable but “in reality not what any of us are doing”.

1. Social networking is dangerous

Dr. Gwen says that “social networking can be safe and often is, if done thoughtfully, age appropriately and with a conscious following of stated age limits and privacy rules. ” Parents need to be involved on how their young teens manage the privacy settings or digital footprints

2. Predators track down kids in real life from their addresses online.

Online predators maybe foremost on our minds as parents, but the reality is that only 1 in 7 kids are solicited by online predators. Most encounters are from other youth and not intended to lure at all . Studies show predators don’t have the technologic capabilities to found our kids from their online addresses.

3. All online “friending” is dangerous.

The rules of friendship off-line extends to the online world including the act of friending. Dr. Gwen adds that “the best guideline is to only friend people you know and have a connection with off-line. Friending only becomes iffy when we add people to our lists who we don’t know well or at all and when we fail to set our privacy to “friend only”.

It is good to stress to our children that what goes online, stays online.

internet safety

4. All online discussions with strangers are dangerous.

In the offline world, we meet strangers everyday , be it the bank teller, security guards, clerks , doctors and many others. Dr. Gwen says that by observing our behavior with these people, our children learn tha it’s oOK to interact with these type of strangers and when they become more independent they’ll understand how to negotiate these social norms , whether in person, by phone or online.

We should help our children understand how to create a safe buddy list, keep personal information private and not to meet online friends off-line and to know their time limits online. When my daughters and I went to the United States for a choir trip, I allowed her to meet up with her online friends who was accompanied by their parents. Seventeen years later, they are still friends.

5. Online games are safe if they use cute cartoon characters.

This is so not true. I once saw a naked anime character. Cute doesn’t mean safe by any stretch of imagination. Dr. Gwen says it is important “to check all the kids your kids are playing….If you have a younger gamer at home, look past the character and first check the rating. If the rating is not appropriate for your child’s age, that’s your first red flag. Second, check the content of the game yourself, to see if it is appropriate for your child. Third, are there other players with whom your child will be interacting? If so, those players may be adults and the game just took on a world wide meaning that isn’t something to enter without thought.”

6. Updates for anti-virus software don’t need to be purchased.

There are a lot of free antivirus programs but these are very basic. One needs to get a full and comprehensive protection plan against more sophisticated threats such as Trojan horse. One would also need an anti-spyware protection. Having an Apple macbook spares me from having some of these threats. Still I am careful when I surf to unsafe sites. Google now stops us from browsing if there is a threat to a website.

before you click
Photo via merrybeau.edublogs.org

7. Parents know their kids.

Dr. Gwen stresses that “this is one of the most commonly expressed phrases from every parent I know, but the honest truth is we have to admit we’re getting to know our kids as they grow up!” The best we can admit is that we’re aware of the people our teens want to be and help them with that process.

Our teens can easily outsmart us especially if the strict rules are unreasonable. For instance, my husband disallowed sleeveless tops for the girls for the longest time. How would I know that they would bring it with them when leaving the house? In the end, the kids will behave just like all the others kids their age, in one way or another.

8. The other kid is the bad guy.

It takes two to tango, right? Regardless of the situation, there are always two sides of the story. Dr. Gwen adds “when it comes to their kids, defenses go immediately and most parents quickly aim at the other child and family”. Are you willing to recognize that our child may not be innocent all the time? In cyber-situations, Dr Gwen says “our teen is likely as others to be part of the issue, from cyber-bullying, to sending inappropriate texts and e-mails, to not handing the receiving sext correctly. ” Parents can help their kids understand online misunderstandings, by helping our kids be realistic about their own behaviors and to own up to their role in a situation that does not come out too well.

9. Handheld gaming does not connect to the Internet

In the early 2000, this was not true. Today’s handheld devices now connect to the internet mostly via wi-fi. This means our children can easily communicate with others through chats set up through games.

real world and digital world

10. Cell phones are fine for young kids.

The purpose of the cellphone is essential. Some schools don’t allow it. I recall giving cellphones to my two girls so I could easily communicate with them but they were not allowed to bring it to school. If you must give a cellphone to your child, avoid smart phones. Phones that call are more appropriate. Dr. Gwen recommends that high school is the appropriate time to consider a cellphone.

11. Everything kids are storing is stored off-line

What happens online stays online . Every time teens post publicly, they are leaving their digital footprint. A digital footprint is the data trail one leaves with everything our kids do online. Data is being stored from their smartphone to the Internet and social networks. Parents can gently remind their teens on caring about their digital footprint through this article, Teenagers: Why You Should Care About Your Digital Footprint .

12. Kids would never post in the nude for a picture

Remember the STC Cebu Bikini controversy on Facebook? The poor girls were not able to be part of the graduation exercise.  In this age of social media, this will not be the last instance of STC students posting comments , pictures in Facebook or other social media sites.  Let’s face it, kids will always be influenced by peer pressure. We have to continually remind our children that what they post online will not always be private , even if posted as “friends only”.

13. Kids will not use their webcam for any stupid things.

Same as number 12. Some kids can do dumb things online. They just have to know what happens online stays online. That has to be repeated often enough for them to get it.

digital footprint

14. Kids don’t hack other kids.

Dr. Gwen says “just like nice kids sometimes say mean things to kids online, nice kids sometimes hack other kids’ computers.” I don’t recall my daughters ever being mean to kids online. I never gave them more than an hour online to venture out and hack someone’s computer.

15. The reason kids use headsets and microphones when playing games is to listen to game sound effects without disturbing the family.

I discouraged my kids to use headsets when we are not at home . That is because they may not be able to hear a phone call , fire alarm or something.

Dr. Gwen adds that “the best way to learn what your kids are listening to is to listen with them”. I always took note of the music they were into. I once recalled this song in 1999 which had lyrics “horny horny”. My six year old son then asked “What is horny?”. I looked at the horrified expression of my daughter who tried to explain that “horny” meant the devil. Some lyrics are just not age appropriate especially if music is shared to the whole household.

16. Xbox is a game device.

That is just the tip of the iceberg, says Dr. Gwen. Playstation 3, Xbox, and Wii are multimedia entertainment units that can run everything fro games to DVDs, to music and can even connect to the internet. With the convergence of content into devices, future devices will likely have many more applications than today’s “games” and digital devices.

You have just gone through 16 myths. Parents must learn to drive the vast cyber-space, the internet, its components and the issues that surround it. This helps narrow the digital divide between the parent and their digital native. It also sends a clear message to our kids that we know how to use and understand technology and we are there for them online as well as offline.

Source: “CyberSafe. Protecting and Empowering Kids in the Digital World of Texting, Gaming, and Social Media.” by Gwenn Schurgin O’Keeffe , Ameican Academy of Pediatrics.

digital citizens

How time flies. It’s been four years since Blog Watch interviewed then Presidential Candidate Noynoy Aquino for his platforms. It was an intimate tête-à-tête and I thought we would have more of these talks if elected as President.

These days, I am often asked this question “so what happened to the social media plan of our President?”

noynoy aquino and me

Since the June 30 inaugural and our interview with then Presidential candidate Noynoy Aquino in February 2010, attempts to communicate and engage directly with the President was often met with silence. I got a reply once but I was told the President was busy. This came shortly after he was accused of “noynoying”. Proposals to initiate a twitter town hall meeting and a yearly coffee chat never got a reply. The President or his communication staff do not look too kindly on criticisms, whether they are constructive or not.

Maybe the President will engage with social media users once his communication team gets it. Secretary Coloma seems so old school. I once approached him in the Palace in late 2010 and told me it will take time.

While Jane, (my friend and partner in crime), and I are busy with Blog Watch and our individual advocacies, we remember that we also need to be sustainable. Tonight was a business meeting with the Vibal Group. While waiting for Tin and Sally , we ordered our Pumpkin soup and Cesar’s salad. To my surprise, Jane gasped “Pnoy is here”. I glanced to my left and saw the President walking towards the table next to us which was separated by a divider.

I kidded Jane, “maybe we can have a photo op. I have seen Carlos Celdran do it in Facebook. I also see him with photos ops from ordinary citizens”. Ever since that 2010 Blog Watch interview, Jane and I never had another photo op. Sure, we were invited to the Palace on Inaugural day and other media events but we never had a chance to even go near him and have another photo. Maybe this time. Of course , I did not want to just approach their table . There was also a chance that he will refuse but I will take that risk. The opportunity soon came when he looked like he was leaving the restaurant.

Looking at his direction, I meekly asked “Can we have a photo with you?”, motioning my hand towards Tin, Sally and Jane.

He seemed to be in a good mood because he readily agreed without any hint of hesitation. He motioned his hand towards someone in the room to take our photo. Oh , a camera man with his large DSLR. (I guess he does not want a repeat incident after that Napoles fiasco where he will claim that he did not know us) I handed my iPhone to the camera man while Jane handed her Samsung to another PSG ( or assistant).

SNAP!

president noynoy aquino and photo ops

I then told him “We interviewed you when you were just a presidential candidate in 2010“.

To jog his memory, I said “Blog Watch”. (see photos)

He smiled and looked pleasantly surprised “in Vibal!” That probably sounded like music to Tin and Sally.

blogwatch-noynoy15

He remembered. Maybe he thinks we, in Blog Watch are too critical . All I can say is that is democracy at work. We want him to succeed as President and we call out on the promises and platforms he told us before he was President. I hope to engage with the President’s communication team and sit down with them on what construes as “constructive engagement”. I want to remind our government to focus on how to be social, not on how to do social.

It is also my hope the President remembers the social contract we discussed four years ago so he can deliver all of these before his term ends in 2016 .

I am excited about 2014 for the possible opportunities that will come my way.  The start of the new year offers a wonderful opportunity for me to reflect on 2013 and to set goals for the months ahead. I took concrete steps on the direction of this blog ever since I started in 2006.   Yesterday, I blogged about “Speaking and Consulting” as possible income opportunities.   It is another business model to sustain my advocacy in using social media for social good. Sure, I will still get ads, sponsorship, create content and collaborate with projects but I want to diversify. I am in control of my blog and I know I need to take risks to reach my goals.

I believe bloggers can generate revenue by being a blog and social media entrepreneur. There are many benefits of being one.  Some of the things you can do is creating and sharing relevant content; building and managing online communities (managing a forum or Facebook page) ; becoming a digital advocate or influencer; starting a blog movement or communities of like-minded people; building a blog network; creating a win-win social media campaign; helping out with the online presence of NGOs; and building social media presence for people or businesses.

Readers often ask me tips on how to tap the potential of their blogs and social media network. The question on their minds is “How?”

While I would like to sit down with them, I believe I won’t be able to deliver all the tips in one day. You can also do it by trial and error like I did but it will take years to acquire those skills.  If you want to fast track your blogging direction, the best recourse is to acquire the skills and knowledge from resource speakers who walk the talk, and are subject matter experts.

I came across, the Ateneo – DigitalFilipino Digital Entrepreneurship Program called,  Blog & Social Media Entrepreneur Course “with the aim of creating a movement – to encourage the growth of online entrepreneurship and serve the growing needs of businesses locally and internationally.”  Janette Toral partnered with Ateneo De Manila University and eLearning Edge to offer this program which started in 2010 , to support her advocacy in developing more “blog and social media entrepreneurs” in the country.  They combine online course access, hands-on activities, and consultations via webinar. See the modules in the infographic below:

blog and social media entrepreneur

One advantage of this intensive 14 – week online mentorship program is one can learn at any time of day and from anywhere as long as one has internet access. How convenient!

Another advantage is this program is different from similar courses in the market because it goes beyond the creation of a project plan. The one-on-one consultation plays an important role during this stage as well where Janette Toral also collaborates, if necessary, to help carry out a participant’s project.

What makes the program unique in comparison to other programs available is it required completion of a live project per module. As a result, by the time a student finishes the program, they have three projects in their portfolio.

Want to increase your income for 2014?  Grab the opportunity.  Consider being a Certified Blog and Social Media Enterpreneur.  Ideal students for this program are those who aspire to establish their own “personality” brand. They will be able to use the skills and experiences learned in doing the same for others – person, product, service, company and advocacy.

Investment for the program is only P25,000.00. It may look big at first but can be easily recovered by an entrepreneur on their first two projects.  The online class starts on January 25, 2014. Contact Janette Toral (@digitalfilipino) on Twitter or send a private message on facebook.

How time flies. The year 2014 is my eighth year as a blogger. When I look back at my grief journey, the turning point is the day I became a blogger on February 25, 2006. It must have been my angel that touched me that one night. I embraced twitter a year after including facebook and other social media networks.

Never in my wildest dream did it occur to me that this new life without my son would open doors to an even more meaningful life. Three years after in 2009, an opportunity presented itself to me to be part of the Automated elections in a PCIJ training. I grabbed the chance. I felt sad that the democracy that we fought so hard in 1986 was getting fragile. I felt the same heaviness in my heart as I saw the corruption slowly destroying our country. What will happen to the country that my children will inherit one day? I wanted take an active role in advocating social change.

jane and myself 3

My good friend Jane Uymatiao (@philippinebeat) together with other citizen advocates in Blog Watch are committed to make a difference in the lives of the Filipino people by helping them make more informed decisions. We help make things happen , one blog post at a time, one tweet at a time , to advocate social change as well as serve as a nonpartisan citizens’ watchdog and collective conscience for transparency and good governance. Being part of that positive change is a meaningful life to me. Blog Watch Citizen media, an emerging media is so much a part of my life aside from this blog.

To sustain an advocacy requires time and money that could have otherwise gone to saving up for our senior years. This is where Jane and I talked about developing our income channels yet doing what we are passionate about: advocating for social change.

Why not offer our services? Though, Jane and I are invited as social media resource speakers, we don’t actively promote ourselves. For 2014, we have moved to a new direction: expanding our services to include social business consultancy, and more topics for social media and pro-active parenting with a new category on “Reinventing One’s Life”. Jane writes about this new chapter in her life.

Here is a general background of the services Jane and I are offering:

1. Social Business Consultancy

Social media presence is no longer a “nice to have” feature of your business. It is a “must have” to be present on social media and give personality and better customer service to your customers and clients. We can help you align your business goals with social media engagement. Applying a new philosophy and methodology to your digital approach will naturally make your business and your overall strategy…meaningful and social.

2. Social Media Resource Speaker

Speaking topics include:

a) Personal branding
b) Brand advocacy- effectively turning customers into brand advocates is a company wide effort
c) Social media content
d) Developing a crisis communication plan
e) How to develop social-media enabled leaders in their spheres of influence
f) Using social media to advocate for social good (company advocacy work, disaster risk reduction)

3. Pro-active Parenting

Speaking topics:
– A safe school program to prevent bullying, abuses and discrimination
– How to establish a digital trust fund for your children
– Teenagers: Why they Should Care About their Digital Footprint
– Parenting in a digital landscape

4. Reinventing One’s Life

Speaking topics:
– Rediscovering Passion in One’s Prime
– Learn the power of forgiving and letting go
– Loving and taking care of yourself
– Finding purpose and meaning in one’s prime
– Developing a wellness mindset

With this new thrust, we will be able to achieve a better work balance, as we continue to earn adequately to sustain our advocacy and boost our retirement savings.

For more details about how Jane and I can work with you, please send me an Email at noemidado @ gmail.com or the form below

I finished the Coursera Course on “Understanding Media by understanding Google”. I am so glad I completed the course. For the last essay, Prof. Owen R. Youngman told us to write our thoughts on sharing our lives online.

The subtitle of Jeff Jarvis’ most recent book Public Parts, which we did not read but whose contents are central to the online debate at The Economist, is “How sharing in the digital age improves the way we work and live.”

In no more than 400 words, take a position on whether our decreasing anonymity online, and the increases in data collection and information sharing that accompany this decrease, either improves or damages 21st-century life.

These are my thoughts:

——

Our decreasing anonymity online, and the increases in data collection and information sharing that accompany this decrease, improves 21st-century life.

gravestone for my son

In 2000, I lost my precious six-year old son and my whole world collapsed. I was devastated for many years until I decided to  live a new normal  in 2005 and start The Compassionate Friends, a grief support group to bereaved parents. I didn’t feel it was enough so I started a blog so other parents would discover it by using a search engine and search “grief support group in the Philippines”.  Sharing the changes in my new life  were shown in my blog entries. I wanted to offer hope that there is a new normal after the loss of a child.  During our meetings, talking helped. As I gave comfort, I too found comfort.

Jeff Jarvis in Economist Debate on Social Networking  affirms the benefits of sharing. “Sharing is a social and generous act: it connects us, it establishes and improves relationships, it builds trust, it disarms strangers and stigmas, it fosters the wisdom of the crowd, it enables collaboration, and it empowers us to find, form and act as publics of our own making.”

How did that lead to a better life? See, grief is taboo at least in our culture and through grief education, these bereaved parents were able to start living a new normal, a productive life even without their child around. Through the group, the bereaved parents decided to work towards a positive resolution of their grief , yet knowing that their child will always be with them in their hearts and in their minds.

Blogging also opened doors for me.  I soon received recognition and awards which provided more traffic to my grief support advocacy site and my blog. It is not easy sharing the depth of my sadness to strangers but I felt I was at the stage of my grief that I needed to offer hope that there is a life after a death of a child.

Sarah Perez in If The Government Can Access Our Facebook Data, What Happens When We Have Computers On Our Faces?, agrees that agrees that “by recording and sharing bits of ourselves and our lives, from the days of cave paintings to Instagram photos and now to the very number of steps we’ve taken and beats of our heart, we are somehow not as alone as we feel.”

As I reach out to offer hope in my blog posts,  grief is no longer taboo.  Sharing not only gives us something to do with the energy of grief, but also establishes the continuity of memory and spirit of one who was so much a part of our lives. Life is so much better.

I always challenge myself to be a better person. I also challenge myself to learn something new whether it be a hobby or a course. The opportunity to learn something new came when Coursera opened a six-week course on Understanding Media by Understanding Google. Online media has been my life ever since I turned to blogging in 2006. The course syllabus was really interesting but could I go through the discipline of quizzes, and peer-graded assignments? That I had to see. The online course started on September 16 and I knew it would be a busy month due to my anti-pork activities. There were times I could barely catch up with my readings and cramming everything in one day.

The good news is I finally finished six weeks. Yes, Today I submitted my quiz and essay for week six. I am not sure I will get a high grade but I am sure to pass as I believe the past five weeks have given me satisfactory scores in my quizzes and perfect scores in peer graded assignments.

With all that behind, I’d like to share some of the essays I wrote for this course. But before that , let me explain the rationale of this course.

Most of you know that Google Inc. is one of the key success stories of the Internet era. When I first heard of Google in the late nineties, it was only meant to be a search business. Through innovation and acquisition, Google has touched the lives of nearly every person who lives life online. For instance, Americans spend more than 3,400 hours per year using consumer media, the field where Google’s impact is most profound. I don’t have data for the Philippines but I can safely say that Google is the number one search engine. Citizens of the world increasingly must understand what the company has wrought not only to manage their offline and online environments, but also to interact and engage successfully with anyone in their professional and personal lives.

It is through understanding Google that we can begin to understand media.

google books

The first peer-graded assignment was about Google books. Here is the question.

Is Google’s intention to digitize all the world’s books a good thing or a bad thing, and for whom? Carefully cite at least two sources from the readings or lectures in support of your answer, which should be no more than 300 words in length.

Here is my essay:

 It is my dream that people from developing countries have access to open knowledge. As a little girl, I poured over the encyclopedia series that my father bought for us.  I believe access to books at an early age piqued my curiosity about the world, science and arts. Imagine if every child around the world had access to books at their fingertips.

It is my belief that Google ‘s intention to digitize the books is a good thing because it will provide readers’ “access to millions of books they currently can’t find or have trouble getting through libraries.”

In  countries like the Philippines where I live, public libraries are not available to many cities and even if available, the collection of books is very limited.  Having books within reach will  produce “generations of avid readers and a knowledgeable, engaged citizenry.”  With the digitized copies available online, anyone with access to a network can search for books and get it quicker since Google is known for its greater search results and efficiency. Even if the digital divide is wide in our country, the government will soon  provide internet access to schools with personal computers and tablets. Students can then easily browse the web and search for books to do their research.

Google books will never be a replacement of a traditional library.  Students should still be able to borrow books from the school library. I view digitized books as an alternative when the printed version is not readily available.  I hope to see Google’s digitized books  shared with a   universal library that is established to “make all knowledge available to all citizens” around the world.

What do you think?

Positive thinking is something I had to re-learn as family tragedies befell one after the other. With 5 deaths in my immediate family (including my son), it might seem I am immune to pain. It never gets easier. Along the way, I learned to improve my life, change and reinvent myself. Allow me to share (rehash) some of my recovery principles which may or may not be useful to you but worked for me.

thank_you1.jpg

1. Say Thank You everyday. Practice Gratitude. Everyday , I face interruptions, delays, changes and challenges. I have learned an important concept to get me through this stressful time and that is gratitude. I learn to say thank you, for all these problems and feelings. I don’t like this experience but Thank You anyway. I had to force gratitude until it became second nature to me. Gratitude helped me stop trying to control outcomes. Gratitude makes things right. It is the key that unlocked positive energy in my life.

2. Live life one day at a time which requires so much faith in us. Look ahead to make future plans. Don’t look back at the past unless healing from the past is part of today’s work. We focus on this day’s activity, living it to the best of our ability.

3. Love and Nurture Yourself. Nurturing is about how we show love for ourselves. I needed a loving relationship with myself that works so I can have a loving relationship with others that work.

4. Avoid Gossip. Direct , clean conversation clears the air and paves the way for good feelings about ourselves and our relationship with others. Gossiping about another for motives of diminishing him or her in order to build up themselves or to judge the person hurts friendships in the end. I resolved that I will resist and place boundaries when I am faced with another gossip.

5. Happiness is in your Hands. Healing comes when we are aware of how we attempt to use others to stop our pain and create our happiness. We will heal from our past. We will see that, all along, our happiness and our well-being have been in our hands.

Love-yourself-first
6. Practice healthy and loving tolerance. When I learned healthy and loving tolerance, I learned tolerance for others. I also learned that the humanness I tolerated is what makes myself and others beautiful. There are some things I do not tolerate. I do not tolerate abusive behaviors or destructive behaviors towards others or myself.

7. There is a time to feel anger and a time to let it go.. Anger is a part of life. We need not dwell in it or seek it out but we can’t afford to ignore it. In recovery, I have learned that I can shamelessly feel all my feelings including anger, and still take responsibility for what I do when I feel angry. I don’t have to let anger control me but it surely will if I prevent myself from feeling it.

8. Laughter is the best medicine. Even just the expectation of a mirthful laughter involved in watching your favorite funny movie has some very surprising and significant neuroendocrine/hormone effects. Earlier experiments showed that viewing a favorite funny video can offset symptoms of chronic stress, which can suppress various components of the immune responses, particularly those related to anti-viral and anti-tumor defenses.

9. Turn pain into something positive. Help others. Start an advocacy , a cause, a charity. Helping others can both help you and the person who is in pain.

10. Set boundaries. I can love my family or friends but refuse their efforts to manipulate, control or produce guilt in me. I can learn to be assertive with family members without being aggressive. I can set the boundaries I need with them without being disloyal to the family or the friend. I can learn to love my friends and family without forfeiting love and respect for myself.

11 Take Financial Responsibility for ourselves. Each of us today, has a financial future. There are few future aspects of my life I can control, but one part I can play to assist our family’s future is setting goals. I don’t have to obsess about my goals. I don’t have to constantly watch and mark our progress toward them.Taking responsibility for my finances enable me to take focus off money. It frees me to do my work and live the life I want. I deserve to have the self-esteem and peace that accompanies financial responsibility.

God-Is-So-Good

12. Love God as you understand God. I learned that recovery is an intensely spiritual process that prods us to grow in our understanding of God . My understanding of God is based on my Catholic upbringing that God is real. Loving. God is Good. The more I turned my mind and heart to a positive understanding of God, the more God validates me. Whether one is a Christian, non-Christian or Atheists, I will respect their own understanding of God as well as my own. I will not allow others’ judgement of my beliefs to cause me anxiety or distress.

13. . Practice as IF. To practice the positive, I act as if. It’s a positive form of pretending. It’s a useful tool to use to get ourselves unstuck. Now, when a problem haunts me, acting as if can helps me get unstuck. I act as if the problem will be or already is solved so I can go on with my daily routine.

Do you have other ways that helped improve your life?

Contact #SoMoms at somoms@mommymundo.com. Visit our #SoMoms community

Using the monicker ““momblogger” was a matter of convenience. I wanted to be called by my first name. You know how Filipinos are. There is always a title before one’s name like Ma’am, Miss or Ate. The evolution of my online name was more for vanity’s sake. I didn’t want to feel old online. Years later, how would I have known that personal branding would define my online reputation and the focus of my advocacy?

Not so long ago, blogging was a popular medium. Blogging was a platform to share my story on how I lost my beloved son. There is hope after a loss of a precious child. There is a new normal , a new life after a loss of a child. The platform served me well because I was able to reach out to readers with similar losses. Twitter came but I used it mainly for broadcasting my daily grind . Then facebook, instagram, pinterest and other social networks soon sprouted. It is not just mom bloggers anymore.

social mom

The rise of social media moms is a new force to reckon with. According to the 2013 Social Mom report in the USA ( see study below), “moms in general tend to be heavy users of all the major social networks: YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Pinterest, and Google+. They also tend to have larger networks of friends and followers than the general population.”

1. Mom is a social leader
2. Social powers her life
3. Different social for different needs
4. The most social consumer you’ll meet
5. Marketing to Social Mom

Social moms in the Philippines are not just heavy users . They are influential in their community.

somoms community

Nuffnang was the source of digital ads for this blog for the past five years. It was time to move on to a community that can effectively deal with moms as an empowered consumer. Brands dictate too much on their own agenda but do they really care about mothers’ needs? Have they been communicating with us effectively? Whether we like it or not, the communications world is rapidly changing. Emerging media is ““the evolution of utilizing technology to share information in new and innovative ways.

It must have been fate that Mommy Mundo SoMoms came into my life early this month. This coincided shortly after I raised objections to Mead Johnsons’ sneaky #BestStartswithDad campaign ads in my blog.

Together with my good friend , Jane Uymatiao, we are the newest members of this wonderful community of social media moms. During Social Media Weekend, Janice announced that we are the newest members of the #SoMoms community . It is with great pride and joy to be with the mommies of the #SoMoms community. I feel positive with this community.

What is Mommy Mundo #SoMoms?

social media moms community

We are a collective of moms who are active on social media and have unique voices and points of view that are relevant to moms like us.

We have individual beliefs and advocacies covering a wide range of concerns that most moms today have namely, breastfeeding, babywearing, natural parenting, time management, mompreneurship, home management, beauty and fashion, health, and more.

We are passionate about sharing our discoveries with other moms, giving advice, creating conversations and building relationships online with our readers and followers.

We are proud to be social media moms. We are always online. We recognize the responsibilities of being an active influencer in social media and celebrate the opportunities that come our way.

Contact us at somoms@mommymundo.com.

social media moms

Marketing to Social Moms

With the help of our community, I hope digital advertisers shift their strategy and listen to our parenting needs and aspirations. The 2013 Social moms study reveal some tips:

1. Recognize she’s different, and so are her needs; how and what you talk about matters

2. Create a give-and-take relationship based on what she finds valuable

3. Listen to her. Act on what she says; if she asks a question, answer it – every time

4. Talk to her about things that have nothing to do with you

5. Support her busy life, don’t make demands, nurture her journey

The Social Mom is well connected and influential in her community. Moms like Jane and myself who transitioned from active parenting to being involved parents must not be underestimated.

Advertisers and brands seem to forget or underestimate a growing circle of Mom influencers and advocates who no longer have young kids. This group of Moms are my generation — older women, social media savvy, still involved with our families, wiser (we would like to think) after many successes and failures during our parenting years. We have survived the schooling years of our kids, even going as far as sleepless nights helping them with exam preparations, homework and projects. We graduated from tutoring as our kids graduated from school. We saw them through struggles to find employment on their own. We have been there through their heartbreaks and relationships. We have worried over them as they traveled to foreign lands. We have prayed each day for their protection as they drive off to work. And we remain a presence for them even if some of them have already left the ““nest” to settle somewhere else.

I am not a political blogger

I hope digital advertisers understand the advocacies I support. I am not a political blogger. I am a citizen advocate. As a mom blogger, I cannot isolate myself from the larger society. Yes, I may seem controversial but I do this to advocate social change.

My concern is to nurture both my family and community. Dealing with politics is incidental. Sometimes when you want change, the best way to attain is to through political means. But politics is not an end in itself but merely a means to an end. I use social media to drive an advocacy, to push for social good.

social media day talk1

This change benefits the country and eventually improve the business climate. Moms may react differently on specific issues but we all have a common concern : our children’s futures unite us.

Most of the moms in the #SoMoms community are so much younger than me. My daughter was kidding me that I am probably the only one with children who flew the nest.

I protested “I will always be a mom”.

ONCE A MOM, ALWAYS A MOM! No matter how grown the kids are, they will always be your precious babies in your eyes!

Contact us at somoms@mommymundo.com. Visit our #SoMoms community

Here is the 2013 Social Mom report in the USA

2013 Social Mom Report

Don’t judge me unless you have looked through my eyes, experienced what i have, and cried as many tears as me. Until then back-off, cause you have no idea.

angel-of-grief

Today Matthew Warren died of suicide. He is the son of Rick and Kay Warren who must be facing the most painful moment in their lives. There is no pain more gut-wrenching than losing a child. My heart and prayers go out to them at this most difficult time.

““No words can express the anguished grief we feel right now,” Warren wrote in a letter to his congregation.

A long time ago, I too lost a son and I found hope and courage in Rick Warren’s The Purpose-driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here For? . The book inspired me to move beyond the pain of losing a son and work on my new normal. Because the book talks about starting a service, I initiated the The Compassionate Friends Philippines Chapter with the help of Cathy Babao and Alma Miclat.

I can’t be there to hug Rick and Kay Warren for their loss and thanking them too for giving me the courage to live this new normal after the death of my son. What I can do is to continue on with my advocacy on suicide prevention and grief education such as ways to comfort the bereaved.

In most of my meetings with the bereaved, a common complaint is the insensitivity of concerned friends or relatives. I see it also in some of the insensitive tweets addressed to Rick Warren questioning the circumstances of his death. Some may not know what to say and blurt out the wrong words.

I have had my own share. I know the depth of concern they have towards us but in their enthusiasm, they blurt out the most insensitive remarks. Newly bereaved are very sensitive to these remarks.

Many parents feel they were being unjustly judged and criticized by those who could not possibly understand because they have not experienced the loss of a child. Compassionate Friends USA shares the proper response.

Our wonderful, concerned, well-meaning friends don’t know. They can only imagine how the newly bereaved feel. They haven’t personally known (thank God) the disbelief, the shock, the anger of losing a child or any loved one. Instead of bringing relief, those words just seem to add to the hurt and the grief. There are no words that will make it all right that someone we loved has died. But there are ways that can soothe the hurt, ease the loneliness and add to the healing. Recently, my sister visited The Compassionate Friends to get tips on how to comfort a family whose daughter died of suicide.

candle-light

I’d like to share some of the ways to comfort the bereaved:

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