Open Letter Re: Bonifacio High Street Parking

Dear Ayala Property Management Corporation,

I am a regular patron of Bonifacio High Street, one of your properties within Bonifacio Global City. Aside from its accessibility and availability as a training ground for runners, I also just love spending time shopping at its establishments and enjoying its park-like atmosphere.

When you raised parking fees last June from P25 for 3 hours and P5 for succeeding hours to the current rate of P30 for 3 hours, P10 succeeding, I continued to patronize the open parking area despite no improvements made to the parking facilities. (In fact, you decreased the total number of paved parking slots and charged the same increased rate for the unpaved parking areas around BHS.)

However, recent events have given me cause to write this open letter, because I have been overcharged for parking not once, but twice already. Tonight, as I exited the elevated parking area behind R.O.X., the cashier charged me 50 pesos for 5 hours of parking. I do not normally distrust cashiers, but after I paid and left, I checked my parking stub and realized I had only been parked for 4 hours.

BHS Open Parking stub
my parking stub

I had entered the parking area at 1744 hours (5:44pm), and exited at 2135 hours (9:35pm). At 6:44, that was one hour of parking. At 7:44, two hours. 8:44, three hours. I had exited before 9:44, but that fraction of an hour counts as one hour. That’s a grand total of FOUR hours. Why did the cashier charge me for FIVE hours?

Your cashier does not know how to count. I should have argued with her, since this is not the first time one of your cashiers has assessed me an extra hour of parking.

The first time this happened (some time in July), I was on my toes and feeling combative, so I argued with that cashier and paid the proper amount. Tonight, however, I was off-guard. When I realized the mistake, I wanted to go back to the cashier and ask for my 10 pesos back.

Instead I chose to sit down and write this open letter because I am sure other people have fallen for the same thing. I believe it’s my civic duty to expose this practice and make people aware that they may be getting overcharged and scammed at your parking facility.

There is one reason this problem occurs time and again. Manual, non-computerized ticketing and charging.

  1. Upon entry, the parking cashier handwrites the plate number and time of entry on a ticket stub, which has been manually stamped with the date.
  2. Upon exit, the cashier writes the time of exit on the stub, mentally counts the number of hours the car has been parked, and requests an amount for payment.
  3. Upon payment, the cashier tears off half the parking stub and gives it back to the car driver. There is no written record on the parking stub of the amount that was charged.

One would think that with the parking fee increase, Ayala Property Management Corp. could afford to use a computerized ticketing system. If not, you could at least educate and/or screen the people you hire to be your cashiers to make sure they know how to compute parking correctly.

There are two implications should you allow this practice of overcharging to continue.

  1. If you are not aware that the cashiers are doing this, and you argue that the cashiers pocket the extra hour’s worth of parking charge, know that your company’s name is on the line. People will still think that you are complicit.
  2. If you are aware of this practice, you will most certainly be pocketing the extra money. That makes your company’s parking practices dishonest, and that is unacceptable.

I think your company can afford to use a register that prints receipts recording the amount being charged, at the very least. I hold Ayala commercial areas in high regard and know you will do the right thing, which is to put into place safeguards against overcharging. We are willing to pay, but let it be the correct amount.

Sincerely,
Noelle De Guzman

On the Radio, Oh Oh Oh

I don’t think you’d remember, but I auditioned for RX 93.1’s “Radio Idol”, back in 2007 — you know, it’s a yearly competition where the winner gets to be a DJ for the radio station. Anyway, I crashed out in the second round because I got asked to talk about OPM, which I know nothing about. I opened my mouth, and no words came out. Oh, well. There went my chance for DJ stardom.

Radio Idol: internalizing

Hello? Is this thing on?

In the past three weeks though, I’ve had the chance to live out my radio dreams anyway. I was asked to guest in “Fit Radio” on 99.5 RT two Wednesdays ago to promote my TV show, RunnerSpeak and talk a little bit about the running scene in the Philippines. It was a very short but sweet segment, but I have to say the radio mics do wonders for people’s voices.

Anyway a friend of mine, Vince Golangco, asked if I were free to come on his show on Mellow 94.7 called “The G-Spot” to do a segment called “Edumacate Me”. Since I liked being on radio so much the last time, I accepted the invitation gladly, and showed up at the station today.

Radio Guesting on Mellow 94.7
Radio Guesting on Mellow 94.7

All we hear is radio gaga

We talked about my website, KikayRunner.com, and about the things you need to do when you start running. In between all of that I was able to insert some plugs for the magazines I have articles in this month: Runner’s World and Total Fitness. It was really so much fun, especially since I knew what I was talking about in general.

I guess that’s the trick to being successful on radio: you’ve got to be a little bit knowledgeable about a lot of things so you can talk your way through. You’ve got to be a wide reader and brush up on pop culture. I’m just lucky that running is a part of pop culture these days. Ü

Tags: ,

Tired of the Nightlife

For the past two years I’ve had the opportunity to go out clubbing on an average of once every month. While initially it was a heady rush, at some point the party life just starts feeling like the same night over and over again, like “Groundhog Day” except I don’t look like Bill Murray and the music playing on the sound system isn’t “I Got You, Babe” by Sonny and Cher.

What drew me to it in the first place? Well, it was an opportunity to get dolled up and wear my most outrageous heels. Most days of the month I live in flipflops and sneakers and don’t feel remotely glamorous. And sure, I got to hang out among beautiful people and bump elbows with celebrities and feel, just a little bit, like some of the glitz rubbed off on me. But in hindsight, I’m not sure how glamorous it is to come home smelling like smoke, with dark circles under my eyes from staying out so late, and have awful drunken-looking photos uploaded onto Facebook the next day.

Initially I also went out clubbing to dance. I teach BODYJAM in the gym and always like taking some of the moves out to the clubs and see if they actually can be used without people laughing. Unfortunately, club culture (at least in the clubs I go to) have people just bouncing around or bobbing their heads to the beat, occasionally singing along to familiar tunes. Nobody actually dances any choreography. Additionally the floors are usually over-packed with people, like sardines in a tin can. Good luck trying to find space to execute a flashy arm combo without smacking someone in the mouth.

These days I like being home before midnight, and I get to dance as often as I want when I teach BODYJAM anyway. I don’t know if this is me getting older, or just getting wiser. I’d rather make a night of meaningful memories breaking bread and getting deep into discussions about life’s meaning with friends than wake up the morning after clubbing to stories of embarrassing exploits that I can’t even remember because I was too drunk.

Not that I won’t go out anymore; of course I still will to hang out with people whom I won’t have opportunity to be with otherwise. But I’ll get my kicks from their company, rather than the nightlife culture itself. I’m over it.

The Trouble with Mall of Asia

I live in the Q.C. (Quezon City) and it has everything a girl like me would need: shopping malls, parks, restaurant rows, etc. So I very rarely make my way to the other end of EDSA and that imposing structure known as the SM Mall of Asia.

I’m only here when I need to a) see some friends for whom MOA is the closest/most convenient mall; b) attend Fashion Week or any other event held at the SMX Convention Center in the MOA complex; c) attend work-related meetings at Fitness First MOA; or d) visit a specific store not found in any other mall in Metro Manila.

It’s for Reason D that I’m at MOA right now, having made my way through the 2-hour traffic jams caused by payday Friday (and I should note that it’s Friday the 13th as well). I’ve brought my entire mobile office with me as well, since I don’t want to pop into the store, get what I’m looking for, and then leave MOA to go work somewhere else on my articles.

So here I am ensconced in my little corner of Coffee Bean counting the reasons I don’t come to MOA more often.

Reason #1: It takes too long to get to MOA! I live about 15 minutes away from SM North EDSA, and 10 minutes from Trinoma. Today it took me 2 hours to get to MOA. One hour into the trip and I was only on EDSA-Santolan.

Reason #2: MOA is huge! While I appreciate that there might be more shopping choices in a mall of this size, most of the stores also have branches in other malls in the metro, and since stores of similar pricing and products aren’t located near each other, it can be quite tiring to window-shop in MOA. In fact, it’s making me tired just thinking about it… And good luck if you’re trying to find a specific store but don’t know where it’s located: there may be touch-screen store maps around the mall, but some of these terminals aren’t working anymore, and the listings may not be updated.

Reason #3: MOA is crowded! You’d think a mall of this size would have ample space for people, but during certain times of the day you won’t be able to find a place to sit down or even stand in line at the restaurants and fast food chains. There are always throngs of people here no matter what time of the day as well. Don’t these people have jobs they need to be at? Or maybe they’re all freelance, like me?

Reason #4: It’s too hot to walk around in MOA. Apart from the main mall, which is fully air-conditioned, getting from store to store involves walking along a non-airconditioned corridor. I know boardwalks are vey popular in other countries, and MOA is built right on Manila Bay with that boardwalk feel. Unfortunately, this is the Philippines and “al fresco beside the ocean” translates to “sticky and sweaty”.

Still, it’s always an adventure to come here. I just always need a whole day — and comfy shoes! — to take it all in.

JackTV Gatecrashed

I led the warm-up for the Takbo.ph RunFest last July 25 and appeared in a very short snippet of “Gatecrashed” on JackTV. It was a privilege to be able to help more than 2,000 runners warm up for the most anticipated race event of the year. (It’s the most anticipated because sign-ups commenced three months beforehand!)

The YouTube ID of bBrfICVLuMQ?fs=1 is invalid.

HerWord.com Features Filipino Bloggers

July 29, 2010
Creating a dynamic blog
Tips from Filipino bloggers
by Ana Santos

Maybe it’s fashionable, or maybe it’s because you can be your own little star. Or maybe, in a purely practical sense, it’s the effect of the global economic crisis. Whatever it is, everyone seems to be interested in turning blogging into an additional or alternative source of income.

Thinking of starting your own blog but you’re not sure if there’s enough room in cyberspace for you? Fret not. I talked to a mix of bloggers who are starting out and have established an online presence with a respectable following, not to mention a steady stream of income. See what advice they have to share about creating an on-line brand and a blogging voice that will stand out above the crowd.

Noelle de Guzman
www.kikayrunner.com

A question Noelle is always asked is “What is a kikay runner?” In anticipation of this, Noelle has already posted the answer on her blog.

“Well, for me it means being a female recreational runner who, aside from being interested in all that sports science has to offer when it comes to helping me run faster, also likes looking good while doing so.”

When she first started racing and started falling in love with it, Noelle started a blog specific to running, thinking that this would keep her motivated to train towards running her first marathon in July.

While she has yet to make a significant amount of money from her blog, Noelle has gotten jobs sometimes hosting races. Her “sporty and speedy with style” presence is easy to spot so apart from running in a race, Noelle also works the track to score interviews with other runners.

“There are a lot of perks in terms of giveaways and other freebies,” says Noelle who is relishing the idea of doing what she loves and actually getting rewarded and  recognized, even if not paid, for it.

And you can make sure that part of her preparation is to make sure that she looks damn good running.

On building an on-line following:
“When you write intelligently and passionately about your topic, you can make yourself a trusted go-to source for it. I like when people tell me they learned something new from reading my blog posts, and will be back for more.

“I also try to date my posts as close as possible to the event they refer to so that people who were at that event and are maybe looking for information or stories about it can find what they’re looking for in my blog.”

On creating and sustaining rapport:
“I try to answer each comment posted, and maybe even ask a question about the commenter or add a comment of my own about what a reader has shared. It also goes both ways. When I visit the blogs I link to, I try to comment relevantly on their posts. Sometimes I may even write a post inspired by a topic I’ve read about.”

Hannah Villasis, TV Host of Tek Tok TV
www.flaircandy.com

“The Flair Candy blog is all about adventure,” gushes Hannah.

“I blog about anything that interests me—surfing, gadgets, sports, Formula 1, travelling, fashion and beauty, photography, and many others. I created my own personal brand when I started blogging and the ones who read my blog are often inspired at how I can juggle many things—a day job, attending events at night, travelling out of country on a budget, and how I push the limits when I go on my crazy adventures.”

Hannah’s 300 to 400 visitors a day can certainly relate to the carefree, vibrant way she lives her life.

“I think I give inspiration to my readers especially when they think things are impossible. I always make it happen and I blog about it.”

Recently, Flair Candy was awarded “Best Personal Blog” at the Philippine Blog Awards.

“A fellow blogger named Dhina Lieva (who was initially a stranger to me) nominated me for Best Personal Blog. I didn’t expect that someone who was not even a personal friend would nominate me. When I received an e-mail saying I won, I screamed!”

What started as a hobby now has become a source of income. Hannah earns from her blog through Nuffnang, Asia Pacific’s first blog advertising community and through direct advertising.

Advice to bloggers:
“Just keep on blogging. Make your blog a part of your personal brand.  Don’t be too serious and technical about blogging.  The more personal and real you are, the more your readers will love you.”

On building an on-line following:
“Interact with your readers.  Reply to their comments and personal email. Visit their blog and comment as well. Manage your social media networks well, as they are very important tools in creating and sustaining two way communication with your audience.”

Ken Tan
www.entrepbuff.com

A group of young men started to question if the meaning of life could be found in the corporate rat race and realized that the answer was NO. The group firmly believed that they were not the only ones who felt this way and started an on line community of budding entrepreneurs.

That was the birth of EntrepBuff.com, a website that dishes out financial literacy information alongside pep talks through web videos.

“Our first attempt with web video content, Week By Week features the most passionate, innovative and locally-grown individuals in a five- to 10-minute talk about how it is to be a dreamer and a doer,” says Ken, EntrepBuff.com founder.

Though he admits that visits and hits to the site are still limited, Ken believes that EntrepBuff’s readers are more involved.

“Our audience is more educated and personally involved. Just take a look at a sample of a conversation that went on regarding a talk on passion,” says Ken.

On building an on-line following:
“If there is really something I’ve learned that is probably worth sharing with regards to building a following, it is about the importance of creating quality content. Content is king. And since I truly believe most of our stuff is quality, and we don’t always have new content (like for the past three months), we’re still getting a good amount of traffic.”

On creating and sustaining rapport:
“On conversing and creating rapport, I guess the old cliché applies—to be yourself and being honest. It’s a small and connected world and people know when you’re being pretentious, so don’t be. I think rationale people already understand that everybody makes mistakes, so kahit yung mga pagkakamali, dapat transparent.”

Kring Elenzano
www.funnysexy.ph

“Funny is the new sexy” is the headline of Kring’s blog and sort of her bold personal statement.

Kring describes herself as never being the type to be pursued by a lot of boys in high school.  “I was always the funny girl, the one who had a lot of guy friends, but not a lot of romantic pursuits,” relates Kring who said this was the catalyst for challenging the whole definition of sexy.

“Why can’t funny be sexy,” she wondered. Kring started the sexyfunny blog and used humor and self-deprecation to endear herself to a reading public that just gobbled up her posts.

Kring, who now has hoards of Facebook fans and hundreds of blog followers, is often teased about having not just men but also women falling at her feet. Jovially she says, “I’m making up for all those years, I guess.”

Kring has pretty much made funny synonymous to sexy.

Advice to bloggers:
“Creating your own brand is very very important. And having a unique identity is necessary as well. You should stick to your image and your personality, because the market you will attract will most likely be interested in that. Once you change, you start to lose that following.”

On blogging and creating a blog personality:
“REPLY REPLY REPLY. And try to check out your readers’ own blogs as well.”

Nina Terol-Zialcita, Writer, Poetess, Political Communicator, co-founder Writer’s Block Philippines
www.theartofchangemaking.com
www.changemakersphilippines.com
www.writersblockphilippines.com

On her way to attend a talk in the Podium, Nina suddenly found herself immobilized by a sharp pain in her back. She was immediately taken to the hospital where the doctor advised her to stop balancing her regular heavy bundle of books and laptop while teetering on her high heels.

Such are the perils of a high-powered woman who is constantly on the go and juggling not just her books but her many jobs, whilst still looking glamorous.

Nina is a political strategist/communicator working on new media campaigns of candidates. She simplifies her job description by saying, “What marketers do for marketing, I do for policies and policy makers.”

She is also passionate about changemaking or inspiring people to make their own contribution for the betterment of society in whatever way they can. “I’ve always had this notion that more than a strong citizenry is the foundation for a good society. Chanemaking is all about making a difference and touching other people’s lives through volunteering for a cause, donating, or personal involvement,” explains Nina, who stresses that you don’t have to be a big important person to make a difference.

On building an on-line following:
“To me, building a good network isn’t about the quantity of followers or readers, but about the quality of INFLUENCERS or GATEKEEPERS who refer to your blog or retweet and repost your entries. I’m not obsessed with the number of hits or readers that I get—it was never a priority in my nine years of blogging.

“Rather, I’m more interested in building a blog that will connect me to leaders, thinkers, and opinion leaders. For example, one of my blog entries in an old blog of mine, ‘Soul Work,’ was featured in Paulo Coelho’s blog. I thought it was a hoax when I first got a comment from ‘Paulo Coelho’ on my blog, but when he emailed me and gave me his private email address and soon reposted my entry on his blog, THEN I knew that I was on to something.”

On sustaining conversation:
“To sustain that conversation, you have to ‘listen’ to your readers and give back to them. Take note of comments, answer their questions using new blog entries, discuss topics that you think they’ll find interesting, share more of yourself, ask questions. Especially when writing a personal blog, your online dialogue with your readers should feel just like any other conversation. It should be sincere, truthful, and genuine. Nothing manufactured of overly planned, please. Just like many things, rapport is spontaneous. You can practice rapport-building skills, but you can’t fake it.”

Vince Golangco
Radio DJ – Mellow 94.7; Editor-in-Chief /Creative Director/ TV Show Host Tek Tok TV on the Global News Network (GNN)
www.WhenInManila.com

If you don’t see Vince on TV hosting the tech and gadgets cable show Tek Tok TV, you’ll hear him every Saturday morning chatting up a storm on his radio show “G-Spot” for Mellow 94.7. If you still miss him, you’re bound to see Vince at various blogger events, documenting them, or hosting them.

Pretty good networking skills considering that Vince just moved back to the Philippines about two years ago from San Diego. He says that blogging and his writing skills opened a lot of doors for him. “Writing about someone is a great way to get to know them.” His friendly and easy-going manner also explain why he has been able to build a considerable following online in such a short time.

On building an on-line following:
“Interact, interact, interact! It’s all about talking to your audience. Make the first move and start a conversation with people through Twitter, Facebook or whatever social media you have. It’s a great way to introduce yourself and help people find out who you are.”

On creating and sustaining rapport with your audience:
“You need to appear friendly and approachable to most everyone. It will be more challenging to build relationships with people if you don’t seem accessible to them. Treat your viewers as friends, instead of fans.”

Ana Santos is a freelance journalist and the founder and editorial director of SexAndSensibilities.com, a website that pushes the envelope on the understanding of sexual reproductive health by making it sexy and sassy.

Allergy!

Over the many years I’ve been alive, I’ve discovered and dealt with many allergies — from the milk formula I had as a baby, to a period in my prepubescent years where my parents had to put me on a prophylactic medicine because they couldn’t figure out what I was allergic to, to learning I could never fearlessly eat shrimp, crab, or lobster again. In medical-speak, I’m “atopic”, which means my body reacts to small allergens in a big way. They’ve always been rather temporary incident, however, and I’m thankful to God that I’ve never had to undergo desensitization because the things I’m allergic to are easily avoidable.

The past two weeks, though, I’ve had to deal with a new allergy. It’s not one that has me scratching at hives, or struggling to breathe, as in previous instances. It’s not even an allergy that’s immediately visible.

Not many of you know that I grind my teeth while I sleep. To keep my teeth from grinding down to a pulp (eww!), my dentist had a mouthguard custom-made for me. In order to keep it from becoming a harbor for bacteria (another eww!), the manufacturers treated it with an antibacterial agent.

The first month I had that mouthguard, I had nightmares regarding teeth falling out, but I reasoned that it had something to do with my brain adjusting to having something in my mouth while I slept. Now that I think about it, though, it might have been my subconscious telling me there was something wrong with that mouthguard; my body had started reacting in small ways to the material it was made of and/or the antibacterial agent it was treated with, until it finally could take no more.

Two Mondays ago, I woke up with swelling in my gums and my mouth’s inner lining, and my tongue felt burnt. I initially thought it had come from using a strong breath spray. It was so bad that I couldn’t chew or swallow anything solid without pain. I stopped using my mouthguard and waited for my mouth to heal, which it did by last Sunday. In the back of my mind, though, I had a nagging suspicion that the swelling had something to do with my mouthguard, since all the areas that had swollen had been in contact with it.

Last Tuesday evening, I put the mouthguard back in for the first time. Four hours later, when I woke up early Wednesday morning, the swelling was back. I knew then that it was an allergy. It was so bad that I had to take two corticosteroid tablets, and people thought I’d undergone collagen lip injections. (LOL!) And then began another cycle of being unable to eat. But since the second allergic reaction happened so close to the first one, it was even worse this time around. Even drinking water to moisten my tongue brought tears to my eyes, and talking was definitely out of the question. It got to the point where I actually began wondering if my mouth would ever return to normal.

I woke up this morning with the pain lessened just a bit, so I know the worst is over — and I’m never using that mouthguard again!

You may wonder, why would God allow me to go through the whole painful experience twice in a row? And why couldn’t this allergy be dealt with as painlessly as the previous ones?

Well, I do believe it was no coincidence. I work with words for a living, but sometimes I don’t realize how powerful speech is. Due to my enforced silence, I’ve realized a new economy of words. I’ve learned how much of my side of a conversation could be pointless or unproductive or just hampers other people from speaking their minds. I’ve also learned to listen more, and that it’s okay not to have to entertain people with “witty” yet fruitless conversation that, at its worst, is a series of sarcastic put-downs. Let’s not waste words, but instead use them to encourage, inform, and empower each other.

If I learn this lesson well, my pain for the past two weeks will not be for nothing. Ü

34th Milo Marathon Press Con

I co-hosted the press conference for the 34th Milo Marathon held at the Bayview Park Hotel on Roxas Boulevard. Along with Mr. Lester Castillo, head of PR for Milo, I helped facilitate the Q&A for the press.

This is the first year Milo is holding its races for a cause. If in previous years all they were doing was providing venues for developing Philippine running, this year they’re donating 4,000 new pairs of running shoes to children who are in need of footwear. Milo organizers realized, as more people joined their races every year, that there were participants (particularly children) who competed barefoot because they had no shoes.

Some beneficiaries will be racing 3K on July 4 sporting their new shoes.