Land of beautiful

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Mon, 17 Jun 2019 18:20:41 +0000

 

jullie yap daza - medium rare

“SO many beautiful girls, so lit­tle time” was the oft-repeated lamentation of a former boss of mine. Known for his fine taste in fashion and women, he had a forgiv­ing wife whose revenge was taking yearly trips to Switzerland for reju­venation treatments that cost him a leg and an arm.

What would he have felt had he been at the coronation of six Misses Philippines in one night, under one roof? That was one pageant, but one in which many of the girls return to year after year in hopes of improving their poise and walk, their Q and A chops, makeup and choice of coutu­rier, before finally winning the prized crown, sash, cash and all. As Filipi­nas become ever more beautiful, the Motherland is blooming and being groomed as a country of beauty pag­eants.

With their practice-makes-perfect seasoning, today’s winners may be older than yesterday’s young con­testants (Gloria Diaz was 16 when she was Miss Universe in 1969), but the trend also indicates that “mixed-blood” candidates with for­eign names and, presumably, mul­ticultural backgrounds will improve the race and therefore our chances for bagging more international titles well into the future.

Might not the same thing happen in sports for us to upgrade the build, height, skills, etc. of our athletes, at least the ones with an eye (and bull’s-eye) on the Olympics, Asian Games and such? If we can import them, as we have been doing, we can make them, here.

A report in 2018 found a discon­certing fact. Stunting. Our babies are being shortchanged either by nature or nurture. Due to malnutrition and other factors affecting their mothers – poverty, heredity, ignorance, bad habits (smoking, drugs) – they’re be­ing born shorter, not taller. We need our newly elected mayors to follow Malabon Mayor Oreta’s example of feeding the kids starting in kinder­garten, with their mothers learning by preparing and cooking healthy, nutritious meals for them.

Unlike the pretty girls who have spurred a 40 percent spike in the lo­cal “luxury beauty market,” the task of building boys to become sports heroes requires, verily, a program with much, much more muscle. Un­like lipstick, lavish lashes, hair ex­tensions for the ladies, the guys will need more than moisturizers, sun­block, vitamin-enriched shampoos, and hair-saving tonics.

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