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	<title>Comments on: Guestbook</title>
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		<title>By: Lucila Oblena</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6633</link>
		<dc:creator>Lucila Oblena</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 11 Dec 2010 05:39:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6633</guid>
		<description>&lt;p&gt;To Ernie Agbulos,

Mag email ka sa address na ito: &lt;a href=&quot;mailto:lco1924@mindspring.com&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;span style=&quot;color: #21759b;&quot;&gt;lco1924@mindspring.com&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt; o dito sa isang address: &lt;a href=&quot;mailto:clota@mindspring.com&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;span style=&quot;color: #21759b;&quot;&gt;clota@mindspring.com&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
May magandang balita ako sa iyo. May nakakita ng panawagan mo at hinanap ang ipinahahanap mong mga pangalan. Alam kung nasaan ang mga kamag-anak mo.Sinabi sa akin kung saan naruon ang kamag-anak mo, ngunit gusto ay ikaw ang makausap nuong nakakita ng address.

Ika-2 ko na itong pagsulat sa iyo. Kung susulat ka sa email address na nasa itaas nitong sulat ko, baka sakali na makakausap mo ngayong Pasko ang hinahanap mo.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To Ernie Agbulos,</p>
<p>Mag email ka sa address na ito: <a href="mailto:lco1924@mindspring.com" rel="nofollow"><span style="color: #21759b;"><a href="mailto:lco1924@mindspring.com">lco1924@mindspring.com</a></span></a> o dito sa isang address: <a href="mailto:clota@mindspring.com" rel="nofollow"><span style="color: #21759b;"><a href="mailto:clota@mindspring.com">clota@mindspring.com</a></span></a><br />
May magandang balita ako sa iyo. May nakakita ng panawagan mo at hinanap ang ipinahahanap mong mga pangalan. Alam kung nasaan ang mga kamag-anak mo.Sinabi sa akin kung saan naruon ang kamag-anak mo, ngunit gusto ay ikaw ang makausap nuong nakakita ng address.</p>
<p>Ika-2 ko na itong pagsulat sa iyo. Kung susulat ka sa email address na nasa itaas nitong sulat ko, baka sakali na makakausap mo ngayong Pasko ang hinahanap mo.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Lucila Oblena</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6625</link>
		<dc:creator>Lucila Oblena</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Nov 2010 04:26:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>&lt;p&gt;Dear Onel,

Thank you so much for visiting the Guestbook and posting these comments. I hope many Cavintinians/Filipinos can read this very touching post.

I am very sorry to learn of the demise of your mother. I know how difficult the situation you are in at the moment, but please bear in mind that you are not alone because you&#039;re surrounded by relatives and friends who care.  I will keep your Mom in my prayers,

Our deepest sympathy.
From the Oblena and Belleza Families
(Formerly Lucila and Lilly Conde}&lt;/p&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Onel,</p>
<p>Thank you so much for visiting the Guestbook and posting these comments. I hope many Cavintinians/Filipinos can read this very touching post.</p>
<p>I am very sorry to learn of the demise of your mother. I know how difficult the situation you are in at the moment, but please bear in mind that you are not alone because you&#8217;re surrounded by relatives and friends who care.  I will keep your Mom in my prayers,</p>
<p>Our deepest sympathy.<br />
From the Oblena and Belleza Families<br />
(Formerly Lucila and Lilly Conde}</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: rpadc2002</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6623</link>
		<dc:creator>rpadc2002</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Nov 2010 11:20:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6623</guid>
		<description>
Pacquiao-Margarito: What We Can Learn From The Humility, Empathy, and Grace of Manny Pacquiao
By &lt;strong&gt;michaeldsellers&lt;/strong&gt; on November 14, 2010















Another  Pacquiao fight — another drubbing of a much larger opponent, and  Pacquaio’s legend as a boxer grows. But the fight between Manny Pacquiao  and Antonio Margarito produced not just a memorable pay-per-view  experience worth every penny of the $64.95 it cost — it produced, for  this observer at least, some moments of clarity that helped me better  understand what makes the Filipino “National Fist” so much more than  just a great athlete.
&lt;strong&gt;The True Tale of How the Fight Unfolded, and How Pacquaio Had to Fight Through Early Adversity to Gain Control&lt;/strong&gt;
 First, if you didn’t see the fight but have read about it, you probably  have read that Pacquiao dominated; that he won every round or almost  every round; that he cut Margarito to shreds so much so that everyone,  including Pacquaio, had legitimate concerns about Margarito’s health and  whether the fight should continuing the later rounds.  That rendition  of the fight is accurate up to a point — but it fails to capture the  genuine peril that Pacquaio faced in the early rounds, the genuine  threat that Margarito represented, and thus the challenge that Pacquiao  overcame to prevail against Margarito–a fighter who was in the best  shape of his life and weighed 165 to Pacquiao’s 148 on fight night–an  advantage of not just 17 lbs but 12% of of body weight–a Goliath to  Pacquiao’s David and a disgraced Mexican warrior on an epic quest for  redemption  Could Margarito have been more prepared or more motivated?   I don’t see how.  That’s what Pacquiao was up against.
&lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-432.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
Think it was easy for Pacquiao?  Think again.  As the fight began,  Emmanuel Steward, hall of fame trainer and normally shrewd commentator  for HBO said: “I see the size difference — it’s a big factor right now.   I see he’s not used to punching at a man as big as this one who seems  to be absorbing his blows pretty easily.”  Then there was Margarito’s  jab — a new weapon — that was touching Pacquiao up in the first round.  Steward: “What I’m surprised about is Margarito’s jab, which is a very  good move, and that seems at this stage to be the most dominant punch in  the fight.”  A few moments later, with a minute to go in the first  round, Steward said of Pacquaio:  “He may have a problem tonight — the  physical size seems to be a big factor.”  By the time the first round  ended Pacquiao had thrown enough punches to  win the round — but just  barely, and the sense was that he could be in trouble, that he finally  might have bitten off more than he could chew.  The jab was a problem,  the size difference was a problem, and Margarito–a notoriously slow  starter–might get stronger as the fight wore on.
In the early part of the second round Max Kellerman — another  normally astute boxing analyst and commentator, had this to say:   “Margarito has landed not only some shots but a head butt followed by a  right hand — these are hard shots from a big man.”   This prompted  Steward to repeat: “The size is being a big factor as I see it right  here.”  Then, after Pacquiao mounted a flurry that didn’t seem to hurt  Margarito, Jim Lampley said:  “The loss of power from punching up could  be a factor in the fight” – meaning that Margarito’s height advantage  was causing Pacquiao to punch skyward and this was taking power out of  the punches.  Then with 10 seconds to go in round 2, Steward said:   “Looking at the eyes, Pacquiao is much more uncomfortable than Margarito  is at this stage even though he may be winning the fight.”  Lampley:  “Brand new experience for Pacquiao.”
Easy fight?
And that was how it felt after the first two rounds.  But as he has  so often in the past, Pacquiao — guided by the man he calls his “master”  Freddie Roach — gradually began to solve the Margarito puzzle and find  ways to use his astonishing hand speed, footwork, head movement, and  ring savvy to start slicing his opponent, most notably opening a cut  under Margarito’s right eye that almost immediately began to swell,  causing the eye to almost close. [[Comment: Margarito went straight to  the hospital after the fight and it was determined is orbital bone was  broken.]]  From there Manny gained the upper hand but even after the cut  had begun a problem, there were some nerve wracking moments, notably in  the 6th round when Margarito got Pacquaio against the ropes and hit him  with a huge left to the liver that buckled Pacquiao’s knees.  Later,  and more than once, he rocked Manny with uppercuts, most notably one in  the 8th round that clearly hurt.&lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-412.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
 Yet in spite of being hurt more than once,   Pacquaio dominated; he  repeatedly landed power punches that soon had Margarto’s entire face  swollen and bleeding and yet Margarito — to his credit as a warrior if  not a sensible  human — refused to go down and refused to stop.  &lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-411.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
 By the 10th round there was ample reason to stop the fight–and Pacquaio  glanced at the referee more than once as if to ask, “Shouldn’t you end  this?”, and his look was one of concern, not bravado and dismissiveness.   Steward at that point commented that while the referee had every  reason to stop the fight–he wouldn’t because Margarito was still  demonstrating his grit by throwing punches even though he could hardly  see and his punches no longer had snap or power to them.  To which  Kellerman said, rightly: “It’s not about his eyes, it’s about his brain —  how many power punches flush to the head can a man take?”   And indeed,   by the end, the compu-box figures that Pacquaio had landed a  disturbing 401 power punches to Margarito’s head — and who knows when  the damage from that kind of beating will present itself.
Margarito on his stool between the 11th and 12th rounds looked more  like Rocky Balboa in the original “Rocky” than any real fight most of us  have ever seen —  both eyes almost swollen shut, punch drunk, but  demanding that he be allowed to continue, to finish it.  All that was  missing was Margarito yelling “cut me” to make it a complete reprise of  Hollywood’s epic and amped up vision of the outclassed warrior willing  to risk everything to go the distance.   There he was,  insisting  through his mangled features that he wanted to fight one more round, to  make it to the end, and his corner let him do it–a decision that honored  Margarito’s epic courage but placed him in epic danger.
&lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-413.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
And then it was the 12th round, with Margarito out on his feet and  all but defenseless, game but beaten.   There was every reason to  believe that Pacquaio, hungry for the KO that would put the exclamation  point on his performance, would swarm Margarito and either drop him at  last,  or mount a swarming,  blistering final assault that would leave  the referee with no choice but to stop it.
But that didn’t happen.
&lt;strong&gt;Grace in the 12th Round
 &lt;/strong&gt;The first sign that something special was about to happen came  during the traditional touching of gloves before the last round.  Pacquiao touched them up, but went a step further — giving a deep nod to  Margarito – a salute — and then, as if to make sure the salute was  understood, he touched his right glove one more time to Margarito’s —  stepped back, crossed himself, and began to “fight” — but not quite.   For the first 30 seconds of the round Pacquiao, who had been throwing  power punches at a rate of one every five seconds of the entire fight,   threw only two tentative punches that wouldn’t have hurt a fly,  circling Margarito instead of engaging with him.  Pacquiao threw his  third punch – an inconsequential jab, 40 seconds into the round –thus  three inconsequential punches 1/4 of the way through the final round,  when by simple “average” punch count Pacquaio would by then have  normally thrown at least 25 punches.  Something was up.&lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-414.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt; At 45 seconds into the round, Lampley was the first commentator to  realize what was happening and comment on it: “Max, I honestly wonder  whether Pacquiao has no more stomach for the punishment.  He doesn’t  seem eager to hit Margarito any more.”  Kellerman: “It looks like he’s  carrying Margarito right now.”  Steward: “It’s much like Joe Calzaghe  did…” Lampley: “Some of the greatest fighters in history have done this.   There is no question Pacquiao is pulling his punches now.  He is not  following through and committing the way he does……it’s a nod to  Margarito’s guts and courage…and Pacquaio is going to let him finish the  fight.”   And then Lampley capped it off — no doubt with some hyperbole  — but then Pacquiao invites, and deserves, hyperbole:  “This is not  Manny Pacquaio the fighter, this is Manny Pacquiao the Congressman,  Manny Pacquiao the cultural icon, Manny Pacquiao the citizen of the  world.  That’s the man who’s letting Margarito finish.”
&lt;strong&gt;Humility, Empathy, and Candor in the Post Fight Interviews&lt;/strong&gt;
 As the fight ended Pacquaio knelt in his corner in prayer as is his  custom.  I’ve watched Pacquiao do this and each time I’m struck by his  body language as he prays – the intensity with which he clutches his  gloves to his head,  blocking out the crowd, the arena, the chaos around  him creating what clearly must be a profound moment of heartfelt  religious communion.  And then, moments later as the championship belt  was draped over his shoulders, a smiling Pacquiao immediately looked  around for his crucifix – found it dangling from the hand of a handler,  then immediately leaned forward,  head bowed, placing it around his  neck.
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-416.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
And then a gracious and amazingly (yet typically) humble post fight  interview with Max Kellerman who started by saying: “Manny, that was a  pretty big guy you just beat up – what was that like?”  Pacquiao:  “It’s  hard, I really  …I mean ….I did my best to win the fight….he’s  strong….a very tough fighter.  And I can’t believe it.”  Kellerman:  “What can’t you believe?”  Pacquiao:  “I mean, he’s very tough and  strong and I never expect that.”  Who ever heard a boxer be so candid  and so humble after such a victory?  What other boxer’s ego would allow  such statements?
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-417.png&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
Then Kellerman drilled down a bit, noting that Pacquiao had gotten  his back to the ropes and had a few tough moments in the fight, ending  it with “Why was your back on the ropes.”  Pacquiao:   “Well, I’m trying  to psyche him that I’m not hurt, but the truth is — he’s really strong  and I got hurt.”  Full stop — again, when did a winning boxer ever admit  so openly to getting hurt?  Kellerman: “When did you get hurt?”   Pacquiao: “When I stayed on the rope.”  Kellerman: “Where did you get  hurt?”  Pacquiao: “In the body and in the face.  He got me in the  uppercut, so … I am so lucky tonight.” And later, in his second  interview: “I tell you the truth. I got hurt in the body shot, I tell  you, I got ..I felt so weak in that round because I got really hurt in  my stomach.”  [[Comment: Two days later, on Monday, there were media  reports that Pacquiao had canceled a TMZ appearance due to rib and torso  pain--and watching the replay of the shot in question, it was apparent  that the blow almost dropped Pacquiao to the canvas, and that he  struggled mightily to regain weather the storm it caused.]]
Kellerman then asked — what were you asking the referee to do when  you looked toward him in the 11th round (presumably imploring him to  stop the fight).  Pacquiao: “You know, I feel….pity to my opponent…his  eyes, his bloody face, you know — take a look for that.”  Later, in  another interview, Pacquiao was more direct:  ”Boxing is not about  killing each other. It’s about entertainment.”
Kellerman: “In the 12th round it looked like maybe you were backing  off, maybe not to hurt him”:  “I’m not looking for a knockout. I want to  finish the round.  My trainer said take it easy, win the round, just be  careful.”  Now this is interesting because on the surface it sounds  like Manny was just following Roach’s instructions–and indeed I have no  doubt that Roach gave the instructions Manny describes. But I think  there is something else going on here — he didn’t want to “dis” his  opponent by saying that he intentionally let up.  Instead, he just left  it that his corner told him to win the round and be careful.  But  everything from the salute to Margarito at the beginning to Manny’s  demeanor throughout the round confirms that he was, indeed, “carrying”  Margarito to the finish line, giving the warrior his due in the process.
The interview finished with Pacquiao saying: “That’s all I can give.  I’m trying to make people happy.”  For a boxer to say “I want to make  people happy” seems overly simplistic on one level — but when you think  of where Pacquiao comes from — not just the Philippines, but the mean  streets of the Philippines, a place of grinding poverty where there is  no escape and where hope is often all but extinguished — the power to  “make people happy” is a power that means more than producing a  transitory moment of enjoyment. It’s an ability to fundamentally alter  that state of mind and heart for people – to lift them up and make them  feel that there’s hope, and good things are possible in a tough  unfriendly world.  For Manny Pacquiao, to “make people happy” is  something far more profound and meaningful than it would be if the same  statement were coming from an American boxer.
Asked about his next moves, Pacquaio replied:  “That’s why …. I have  another job after this, I’m going back to the Philippines and do my job  as a public servant — and I want to help people.”    Honestly — much of  the time when Pacquiao speaks English you have the feeling that he’s  groping for words, that he could be much more articulate in Tagalog —  and yet there is a simple clarity to his choice of words — ‘do my job as  a public servant’ and ‘I want to help people’.  How can you not believe  he is sincere — and humble. He’s not just a “public servant” – he’s a  congressman, and rightly proud of that.  But he always chooses to refer  to himself by the term “public servant”, not “Congressman”.  There’ is  genuine humility–and perhaps a touch of political genius– in that.
&lt;strong&gt;The Last Word&lt;/strong&gt;
 Those of us who are connected to the Philippines have followed Manny  Pacquiao for many years and we’ve heard him say things like this, and  act in this humble, gentle manner — so this in itself is not news for  us.   But as his fame grows and the rest of the world gradually wakes up  and takes notice of Pacquaio as a sporstman who transcends national  boundaries and the niche of boxing, hearing him speak this way reminds  us that while on the one hand what we see in Manny is unique,  in  another way it is not, because what is on display when Pacquiao speaks  is essential Filipino values that typify the elusive best of a country  whose  people’s humble and gentle virtues are not particularly well  understood abroad.  This is, after all, a world where, for example, some  cultures have adopted the term “filipina” to be slang for  “housekeeper”.  The truth is, it’s easy for ignorant westerners to  underestimate and misinterpret the gentle, gracious nature of the  Filipino character — yet somehow Manny Pacquaio is singlehandedly  changing that, teaching the world and reminding the Philippine universe  that humility, grace, compassion, and empathy can coexist with the heart  of a warrior.
Yet even if Filipinos instinctively understand the meaning of Manny  Pacquiao better than we foreigners — they have been traveling on a  learning curve with Pacquaio as well.  Remember that Pacquaio’s  popularity in the Philippines, great as it is,  did not automatically  win him a berth in Congress.   He ran previously,  two years ago and  lost badly.  Some said the loss reflected what was in essence a cynical  “no” vote from an electorate who wanted him to keep fighting;  others  inerpreted the “no” as a desire keep Pacquiao from becoming tarnished by  the dirty nature of Philippine politics.  Pacquao lost, and it wasn’t a  split decision — it was much closer to a political knockout.  But he  didn’t give up, he showed patience and sincerity and above all   perserverence, and throughout it all he continued to talk compellingly  about his real reasons for doing it — and along the way many of the  skeptics who saw in his first run for Congress a questionable act of  celebrity ego began to gradually come to understand that it was another  impulse, the impulse toward genuine and sincere public service, that was  driving Pacquiao.   And so now he has the position he sought — the  position of “public servant”, and he has stated that his goal is to  become a “champion of public service” as his life transitions toward a  new phase.  Boxing has been his vehicle to “make people happy” in one  profound, “let me lift you up” way that Filipinos perhaps understand  better than the rest of us.  That phase will end. But now, today, he is  an elected Congressman who through both his boxing and public service  has truly has made millions of people happy in that transcendant way he  seeks–so truly and so beautifully that the skinny kid who grew up on the  streets may well someday have the opportunity to lead not just an  impoverished Sarangani province, but an entire resurgent nation that  with Pacquaio as example-maker-in-chief–a long-suffering and self  doubting country that under his inspired leadershp may lift itself up as  a country in ways that would be just as surprising, yet just as  inevitable, as Pacquaio’s rise to the top in boxing.   I for one believe  in Manny Pacquiao–his heart, his sincerity, the sheer power of his  will, and the true Filipino essence of his character.  He makes me feel  hope for the future of the Philippines, and proud to be part of a Fil-Am  household that has plenty of Filipino blood flowing through our  family’s veins.
 
original story here:
http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/2010/11/14/pacquiao-margarito-what-we-can-learn-from-the-humility-empathy-and-grace-of-manny-pacquiao/?ref=nf

</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Pacquiao-Margarito: What We Can Learn From The Humility, Empathy, and Grace of Manny Pacquiao<br />
By <strong>michaeldsellers</strong> on November 14, 2010</p>
<p>Another  Pacquiao fight — another drubbing of a much larger opponent, and  Pacquaio’s legend as a boxer grows. But the fight between Manny Pacquiao  and Antonio Margarito produced not just a memorable pay-per-view  experience worth every penny of the $64.95 it cost — it produced, for  this observer at least, some moments of clarity that helped me better  understand what makes the Filipino “National Fist” so much more than  just a great athlete.<br />
<strong>The True Tale of How the Fight Unfolded, and How Pacquaio Had to Fight Through Early Adversity to Gain Control</strong><br />
 First, if you didn’t see the fight but have read about it, you probably  have read that Pacquiao dominated; that he won every round or almost  every round; that he cut Margarito to shreds so much so that everyone,  including Pacquaio, had legitimate concerns about Margarito’s health and  whether the fight should continuing the later rounds.  That rendition  of the fight is accurate up to a point — but it fails to capture the  genuine peril that Pacquaio faced in the early rounds, the genuine  threat that Margarito represented, and thus the challenge that Pacquiao  overcame to prevail against Margarito–a fighter who was in the best  shape of his life and weighed 165 to Pacquiao’s 148 on fight night–an  advantage of not just 17 lbs but 12% of of body weight–a Goliath to  Pacquiao’s David and a disgraced Mexican warrior on an epic quest for  redemption  Could Margarito have been more prepared or more motivated?   I don’t see how.  That’s what Pacquiao was up against.<br />
<a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-432.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-432.png?referer=');"></a><br />
Think it was easy for Pacquiao?  Think again.  As the fight began,  Emmanuel Steward, hall of fame trainer and normally shrewd commentator  for HBO said: “I see the size difference — it’s a big factor right now.   I see he’s not used to punching at a man as big as this one who seems  to be absorbing his blows pretty easily.”  Then there was Margarito’s  jab — a new weapon — that was touching Pacquiao up in the first round.  Steward: “What I’m surprised about is Margarito’s jab, which is a very  good move, and that seems at this stage to be the most dominant punch in  the fight.”  A few moments later, with a minute to go in the first  round, Steward said of Pacquaio:  “He may have a problem tonight — the  physical size seems to be a big factor.”  By the time the first round  ended Pacquiao had thrown enough punches to  win the round — but just  barely, and the sense was that he could be in trouble, that he finally  might have bitten off more than he could chew.  The jab was a problem,  the size difference was a problem, and Margarito–a notoriously slow  starter–might get stronger as the fight wore on.<br />
In the early part of the second round Max Kellerman — another  normally astute boxing analyst and commentator, had this to say:   “Margarito has landed not only some shots but a head butt followed by a  right hand — these are hard shots from a big man.”   This prompted  Steward to repeat: “The size is being a big factor as I see it right  here.”  Then, after Pacquiao mounted a flurry that didn’t seem to hurt  Margarito, Jim Lampley said:  “The loss of power from punching up could  be a factor in the fight” – meaning that Margarito’s height advantage  was causing Pacquiao to punch skyward and this was taking power out of  the punches.  Then with 10 seconds to go in round 2, Steward said:   “Looking at the eyes, Pacquiao is much more uncomfortable than Margarito  is at this stage even though he may be winning the fight.”  Lampley:  “Brand new experience for Pacquiao.”<br />
Easy fight?<br />
And that was how it felt after the first two rounds.  But as he has  so often in the past, Pacquiao — guided by the man he calls his “master”  Freddie Roach — gradually began to solve the Margarito puzzle and find  ways to use his astonishing hand speed, footwork, head movement, and  ring savvy to start slicing his opponent, most notably opening a cut  under Margarito’s right eye that almost immediately began to swell,  causing the eye to almost close. [[Comment: Margarito went straight to  the hospital after the fight and it was determined is orbital bone was  broken.]]  From there Manny gained the upper hand but even after the cut  had begun a problem, there were some nerve wracking moments, notably in  the 6th round when Margarito got Pacquaio against the ropes and hit him  with a huge left to the liver that buckled Pacquiao’s knees.  Later,  and more than once, he rocked Manny with uppercuts, most notably one in  the 8th round that clearly hurt.<a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-412.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-412.png?referer=');"></a><br />
 Yet in spite of being hurt more than once,   Pacquaio dominated; he  repeatedly landed power punches that soon had Margarto’s entire face  swollen and bleeding and yet Margarito — to his credit as a warrior if  not a sensible  human — refused to go down and refused to stop.  <a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-411.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-411.png?referer=');"></a><br />
 By the 10th round there was ample reason to stop the fight–and Pacquaio  glanced at the referee more than once as if to ask, “Shouldn’t you end  this?”, and his look was one of concern, not bravado and dismissiveness.   Steward at that point commented that while the referee had every  reason to stop the fight–he wouldn’t because Margarito was still  demonstrating his grit by throwing punches even though he could hardly  see and his punches no longer had snap or power to them.  To which  Kellerman said, rightly: “It’s not about his eyes, it’s about his brain —  how many power punches flush to the head can a man take?”   And indeed,   by the end, the compu-box figures that Pacquaio had landed a  disturbing 401 power punches to Margarito’s head — and who knows when  the damage from that kind of beating will present itself.<br />
Margarito on his stool between the 11th and 12th rounds looked more  like Rocky Balboa in the original “Rocky” than any real fight most of us  have ever seen —  both eyes almost swollen shut, punch drunk, but  demanding that he be allowed to continue, to finish it.  All that was  missing was Margarito yelling “cut me” to make it a complete reprise of  Hollywood’s epic and amped up vision of the outclassed warrior willing  to risk everything to go the distance.   There he was,  insisting  through his mangled features that he wanted to fight one more round, to  make it to the end, and his corner let him do it–a decision that honored  Margarito’s epic courage but placed him in epic danger.<br />
<a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-413.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-413.png?referer=');"></a><br />
And then it was the 12th round, with Margarito out on his feet and  all but defenseless, game but beaten.   There was every reason to  believe that Pacquaio, hungry for the KO that would put the exclamation  point on his performance, would swarm Margarito and either drop him at  last,  or mount a swarming,  blistering final assault that would leave  the referee with no choice but to stop it.<br />
But that didn’t happen.<br />
<strong>Grace in the 12th Round<br />
 </strong>The first sign that something special was about to happen came  during the traditional touching of gloves before the last round.  Pacquiao touched them up, but went a step further — giving a deep nod to  Margarito – a salute — and then, as if to make sure the salute was  understood, he touched his right glove one more time to Margarito’s —  stepped back, crossed himself, and began to “fight” — but not quite.   For the first 30 seconds of the round Pacquiao, who had been throwing  power punches at a rate of one every five seconds of the entire fight,   threw only two tentative punches that wouldn’t have hurt a fly,  circling Margarito instead of engaging with him.  Pacquiao threw his  third punch – an inconsequential jab, 40 seconds into the round –thus  three inconsequential punches 1/4 of the way through the final round,  when by simple “average” punch count Pacquaio would by then have  normally thrown at least 25 punches.  Something was up.<a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-414.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-414.png?referer=');"></a> At 45 seconds into the round, Lampley was the first commentator to  realize what was happening and comment on it: “Max, I honestly wonder  whether Pacquiao has no more stomach for the punishment.  He doesn’t  seem eager to hit Margarito any more.”  Kellerman: “It looks like he’s  carrying Margarito right now.”  Steward: “It’s much like Joe Calzaghe  did…” Lampley: “Some of the greatest fighters in history have done this.   There is no question Pacquiao is pulling his punches now.  He is not  following through and committing the way he does……it’s a nod to  Margarito’s guts and courage…and Pacquaio is going to let him finish the  fight.”   And then Lampley capped it off — no doubt with some hyperbole  — but then Pacquiao invites, and deserves, hyperbole:  “This is not  Manny Pacquaio the fighter, this is Manny Pacquiao the Congressman,  Manny Pacquiao the cultural icon, Manny Pacquiao the citizen of the  world.  That’s the man who’s letting Margarito finish.”<br />
<strong>Humility, Empathy, and Candor in the Post Fight Interviews</strong><br />
 As the fight ended Pacquaio knelt in his corner in prayer as is his  custom.  I’ve watched Pacquiao do this and each time I’m struck by his  body language as he prays – the intensity with which he clutches his  gloves to his head,  blocking out the crowd, the arena, the chaos around  him creating what clearly must be a profound moment of heartfelt  religious communion.  And then, moments later as the championship belt  was draped over his shoulders, a smiling Pacquiao immediately looked  around for his crucifix – found it dangling from the hand of a handler,  then immediately leaned forward,  head bowed, placing it around his  neck.<br />
 <a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-416.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-416.png?referer=');"></a><br />
And then a gracious and amazingly (yet typically) humble post fight  interview with Max Kellerman who started by saying: “Manny, that was a  pretty big guy you just beat up – what was that like?”  Pacquiao:  “It’s  hard, I really  …I mean ….I did my best to win the fight….he’s  strong….a very tough fighter.  And I can’t believe it.”  Kellerman:  “What can’t you believe?”  Pacquiao:  “I mean, he’s very tough and  strong and I never expect that.”  Who ever heard a boxer be so candid  and so humble after such a victory?  What other boxer’s ego would allow  such statements?<br />
 <a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-417.png" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/files/2010/11/Picture-417.png?referer=');"></a><br />
Then Kellerman drilled down a bit, noting that Pacquiao had gotten  his back to the ropes and had a few tough moments in the fight, ending  it with “Why was your back on the ropes.”  Pacquiao:   “Well, I’m trying  to psyche him that I’m not hurt, but the truth is — he’s really strong  and I got hurt.”  Full stop — again, when did a winning boxer ever admit  so openly to getting hurt?  Kellerman: “When did you get hurt?”   Pacquiao: “When I stayed on the rope.”  Kellerman: “Where did you get  hurt?”  Pacquiao: “In the body and in the face.  He got me in the  uppercut, so … I am so lucky tonight.” And later, in his second  interview: “I tell you the truth. I got hurt in the body shot, I tell  you, I got ..I felt so weak in that round because I got really hurt in  my stomach.”  [[Comment: Two days later, on Monday, there were media  reports that Pacquiao had canceled a TMZ appearance due to rib and torso  pain--and watching the replay of the shot in question, it was apparent  that the blow almost dropped Pacquiao to the canvas, and that he  struggled mightily to regain weather the storm it caused.]]<br />
Kellerman then asked — what were you asking the referee to do when  you looked toward him in the 11th round (presumably imploring him to  stop the fight).  Pacquiao: “You know, I feel….pity to my opponent…his  eyes, his bloody face, you know — take a look for that.”  Later, in  another interview, Pacquiao was more direct:  ”Boxing is not about  killing each other. It’s about entertainment.”<br />
Kellerman: “In the 12th round it looked like maybe you were backing  off, maybe not to hurt him”:  “I’m not looking for a knockout. I want to  finish the round.  My trainer said take it easy, win the round, just be  careful.”  Now this is interesting because on the surface it sounds  like Manny was just following Roach’s instructions–and indeed I have no  doubt that Roach gave the instructions Manny describes. But I think  there is something else going on here — he didn’t want to “dis” his  opponent by saying that he intentionally let up.  Instead, he just left  it that his corner told him to win the round and be careful.  But  everything from the salute to Margarito at the beginning to Manny’s  demeanor throughout the round confirms that he was, indeed, “carrying”  Margarito to the finish line, giving the warrior his due in the process.<br />
The interview finished with Pacquiao saying: “That’s all I can give.  I’m trying to make people happy.”  For a boxer to say “I want to make  people happy” seems overly simplistic on one level — but when you think  of where Pacquiao comes from — not just the Philippines, but the mean  streets of the Philippines, a place of grinding poverty where there is  no escape and where hope is often all but extinguished — the power to  “make people happy” is a power that means more than producing a  transitory moment of enjoyment. It’s an ability to fundamentally alter  that state of mind and heart for people – to lift them up and make them  feel that there’s hope, and good things are possible in a tough  unfriendly world.  For Manny Pacquiao, to “make people happy” is  something far more profound and meaningful than it would be if the same  statement were coming from an American boxer.<br />
Asked about his next moves, Pacquaio replied:  “That’s why …. I have  another job after this, I’m going back to the Philippines and do my job  as a public servant — and I want to help people.”    Honestly — much of  the time when Pacquiao speaks English you have the feeling that he’s  groping for words, that he could be much more articulate in Tagalog —  and yet there is a simple clarity to his choice of words — ‘do my job as  a public servant’ and ‘I want to help people’.  How can you not believe  he is sincere — and humble. He’s not just a “public servant” – he’s a  congressman, and rightly proud of that.  But he always chooses to refer  to himself by the term “public servant”, not “Congressman”.  There’ is  genuine humility–and perhaps a touch of political genius– in that.<br />
<strong>The Last Word</strong><br />
 Those of us who are connected to the Philippines have followed Manny  Pacquiao for many years and we’ve heard him say things like this, and  act in this humble, gentle manner — so this in itself is not news for  us.   But as his fame grows and the rest of the world gradually wakes up  and takes notice of Pacquaio as a sporstman who transcends national  boundaries and the niche of boxing, hearing him speak this way reminds  us that while on the one hand what we see in Manny is unique,  in  another way it is not, because what is on display when Pacquiao speaks  is essential Filipino values that typify the elusive best of a country  whose  people’s humble and gentle virtues are not particularly well  understood abroad.  This is, after all, a world where, for example, some  cultures have adopted the term “filipina” to be slang for  “housekeeper”.  The truth is, it’s easy for ignorant westerners to  underestimate and misinterpret the gentle, gracious nature of the  Filipino character — yet somehow Manny Pacquaio is singlehandedly  changing that, teaching the world and reminding the Philippine universe  that humility, grace, compassion, and empathy can coexist with the heart  of a warrior.<br />
Yet even if Filipinos instinctively understand the meaning of Manny  Pacquiao better than we foreigners — they have been traveling on a  learning curve with Pacquaio as well.  Remember that Pacquaio’s  popularity in the Philippines, great as it is,  did not automatically  win him a berth in Congress.   He ran previously,  two years ago and  lost badly.  Some said the loss reflected what was in essence a cynical  “no” vote from an electorate who wanted him to keep fighting;  others  inerpreted the “no” as a desire keep Pacquiao from becoming tarnished by  the dirty nature of Philippine politics.  Pacquao lost, and it wasn’t a  split decision — it was much closer to a political knockout.  But he  didn’t give up, he showed patience and sincerity and above all   perserverence, and throughout it all he continued to talk compellingly  about his real reasons for doing it — and along the way many of the  skeptics who saw in his first run for Congress a questionable act of  celebrity ego began to gradually come to understand that it was another  impulse, the impulse toward genuine and sincere public service, that was  driving Pacquiao.   And so now he has the position he sought — the  position of “public servant”, and he has stated that his goal is to  become a “champion of public service” as his life transitions toward a  new phase.  Boxing has been his vehicle to “make people happy” in one  profound, “let me lift you up” way that Filipinos perhaps understand  better than the rest of us.  That phase will end. But now, today, he is  an elected Congressman who through both his boxing and public service  has truly has made millions of people happy in that transcendant way he  seeks–so truly and so beautifully that the skinny kid who grew up on the  streets may well someday have the opportunity to lead not just an  impoverished Sarangani province, but an entire resurgent nation that  with Pacquaio as example-maker-in-chief–a long-suffering and self  doubting country that under his inspired leadershp may lift itself up as  a country in ways that would be just as surprising, yet just as  inevitable, as Pacquaio’s rise to the top in boxing.   I for one believe  in Manny Pacquiao–his heart, his sincerity, the sheer power of his  will, and the true Filipino essence of his character.  He makes me feel  hope for the future of the Philippines, and proud to be part of a Fil-Am  household that has plenty of Filipino blood flowing through our  family’s veins.<br />
 <br />
original story here:<br />
<a href="http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/2010/11/14/pacquiao-margarito-what-we-can-learn-from-the-humility-empathy-and-grace-of-manny-pacquiao/?ref=nf" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/michaeldsellers.weearth.com/2010/11/14/pacquiao-margarito-what-we-can-learn-from-the-humility-empathy-and-grace-of-manny-pacquiao/?ref=nf&amp;referer=');">http://michaeldsellers.weearth.com/2010/11/14/pacquiao-margarito-what-we-can-learn-from-the-humility-empathy-and-grace-of-manny-pacquiao/?ref=nf</a></p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: jmyrdee</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6607</link>
		<dc:creator>jmyrdee</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Nov 2010 04:23:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6607</guid>
		<description>mam Oblena,

If appropriate, please post this video link:

&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqnydkwSg80&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqnydkwSg80&lt;/a&gt;



Thank you po.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>mam Oblena,</p>
<p>If appropriate, please post this video link:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqnydkwSg80" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqnydkwSg80&amp;referer=');">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqnydkwSg80</a></p>
<p>Thank you po.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Ma. Charlene Rocamora</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6601</link>
		<dc:creator>Ma. Charlene Rocamora</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Oct 2010 01:19:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6601</guid>
		<description>Mam. Ako  po c Charlene Rocamora, anak ng Nita at Inong Rocamora from Calbario, Cavinti Laguna. Pwede po  ba ako ask ng favor.  Alam nyo po ba address and telephone nos. n ninong Dr. Manuel Valente. May gusto lang po akong message na iparating sa kanya. Or you can give my contact nos. to him. 9528606 and 09217681305. Salamat po.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mam. Ako  po c Charlene Rocamora, anak ng Nita at Inong Rocamora from Calbario, Cavinti Laguna. Pwede po  ba ako ask ng favor.  Alam nyo po ba address and telephone nos. n ninong Dr. Manuel Valente. May gusto lang po akong message na iparating sa kanya. Or you can give my contact nos. to him. 9528606 and 09217681305. Salamat po.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Lucila Oblena</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6585</link>
		<dc:creator>Lucila Oblena</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Sep 2010 08:46:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6585</guid>
		<description>Hi Mabel,
I am from Cavinti, too. I am sure your Dad knows me if he is the Leandro Villanueva who has been my student in the grade school.  
In my eagerness to find out if he is the person I am referring to, I picked up my phone and dialed the number that you gave me in your message in spite of the fact that it is quite late. I am glad that your Mom took the phone so your Dad and I were able to converse for some time. 
My best to you all, always take care and God bless!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Mabel,<br />
I am from Cavinti, too. I am sure your Dad knows me if he is the Leandro Villanueva who has been my student in the grade school.<br />
In my eagerness to find out if he is the person I am referring to, I picked up my phone and dialed the number that you gave me in your message in spite of the fact that it is quite late. I am glad that your Mom took the phone so your Dad and I were able to converse for some time.<br />
My best to you all, always take care and God bless!</p>
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		<title>By: maramvillanueva</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6584</link>
		<dc:creator>maramvillanueva</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Sep 2010 07:01:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6584</guid>
		<description>Hello! I was so excited to discover this webpage.
My dad Leandro L. Villanueva is from Cavinti and currently living in Los Angeles, Ca for 4 years now. He&#039;s looking for his relatives in North America to get in touch with. We found this website when we searched for Carling Mejilla who is my dad&#039;s first cousin. My dad will be very happy if anyone would be kind enough to share any information.
You can contact my dad at 818-817-1309 or my mom Remy at 818-817-1308/818-892-4859.
Thank you very much.
 
Mabel Villanueva
 
 </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hello! I was so excited to discover this webpage.<br />
My dad Leandro L. Villanueva is from Cavinti and currently living in Los Angeles, Ca for 4 years now. He&#8217;s looking for his relatives in North America to get in touch with. We found this website when we searched for Carling Mejilla who is my dad&#8217;s first cousin. My dad will be very happy if anyone would be kind enough to share any information.<br />
You can contact my dad at 818-817-1309 or my mom Remy at 818-817-1308/818-892-4859.<br />
Thank you very much.<br />
 <br />
Mabel Villanueva<br />
 <br />
 </p>
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		<title>By: Vangie Lazaro</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6581</link>
		<dc:creator>Vangie Lazaro</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Sep 2010 23:02:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6581</guid>
		<description>NEW YORKERS WELCOME PRES.AQUINO

         PRES.BENIGNO &quot;NOYNOY&quot; AQUINO WILL SPEAK BEFORE SOME MEMBERS OF VARIOUS ORGS. IN NY ON SEPT.23,2010 AT BARUCH COLLEGE IN MANHATTAN AT 6P.M. AMONG THE ORGANIZATIONS PRESENT ARE THE CAVINTI LAGUNA USA(CLUSA)AND THE CAVINTI LAGUNA OVERSEAS TEACHERS ASSOC.(CLOTA) HEADED BY THE UNDERSIGNED.
        SOME CAVINTINIANS WILL BE THERE TO REPRESENT THE ASS. AND WELCOME THE PRESIDENT. EACH ONE CARRIES A TICKET FOR SECURITY PURPOSES. PRES.AQUINO WILL TOUCH ON ISSUES ABOUT HIS VISION FOR A NEW PHILIPPINES AND HIS SOCIAL AND ECO.AGENDA. THIS INCLUDES HIS PROGRAM FOR FILIPINOS RESIDING ABROAD.
                                           GELINE R. LAZARO</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>NEW YORKERS WELCOME PRES.AQUINO</p>
<p>         PRES.BENIGNO &#8220;NOYNOY&#8221; AQUINO WILL SPEAK BEFORE SOME MEMBERS OF VARIOUS ORGS. IN NY ON SEPT.23,2010 AT BARUCH COLLEGE IN MANHATTAN AT 6P.M. AMONG THE ORGANIZATIONS PRESENT ARE THE CAVINTI LAGUNA USA(CLUSA)AND THE CAVINTI LAGUNA OVERSEAS TEACHERS ASSOC.(CLOTA) HEADED BY THE UNDERSIGNED.<br />
        SOME CAVINTINIANS WILL BE THERE TO REPRESENT THE ASS. AND WELCOME THE PRESIDENT. EACH ONE CARRIES A TICKET FOR SECURITY PURPOSES. PRES.AQUINO WILL TOUCH ON ISSUES ABOUT HIS VISION FOR A NEW PHILIPPINES AND HIS SOCIAL AND ECO.AGENDA. THIS INCLUDES HIS PROGRAM FOR FILIPINOS RESIDING ABROAD.<br />
                                           GELINE R. LAZARO</p>
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		<title>By: Lucila Oblena</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6542</link>
		<dc:creator>Lucila Oblena</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Jul 2010 05:47:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6542</guid>
		<description>&lt;p&gt;Dear Joe,

Thank you for the videos.
If you will post url videos again on the website, just inform me 
and I will show you how to do it.

My apologies for my late response.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Joe,</p>
<p>Thank you for the videos.<br />
If you will post url videos again on the website, just inform me<br />
and I will show you how to do it.</p>
<p>My apologies for my late response.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: joe</title>
		<link>http://tipakan.com/guestbook-2/comment-page-1#comment-6529</link>
		<dc:creator>joe</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Jul 2010 06:24:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://tipakan.com/?page_id=5934#comment-6529</guid>
		<description>mam Oblena, 

I have no idea how to post url video here 
These are as follows:

&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlJ5rgZEhRk&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlJ5rgZEhRk&lt;/a&gt;

&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtzKdfQEmqU&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtzKdfQEmqU&lt;/a&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>mam Oblena, </p>
<p>I have no idea how to post url video here<br />
These are as follows:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlJ5rgZEhRk" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlJ5rgZEhRk&amp;referer=');">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlJ5rgZEhRk</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtzKdfQEmqU" rel="nofollow" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtzKdfQEmqU&amp;referer=');">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtzKdfQEmqU</a></p>
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