LILIW
Day 33
May 13, 2007 Sunday
“But  if you tame me, it will be as if the sun came to shine on my life.  I  shall know the sound of a step that will be different from all others.   Other steps send me hurrying back underneath the ground.  Yours will  call me, like music, out of my burrow.  And then look: you see the grain  fields down yonder?  I do not eat bread.  Wheat is of no use to me, the  wheat fields have nothing to say to me.  And that is sad.  But you have  hair that is the color of gold.  Think how wonderful that will be when  you have tamed me!  The grain, which is also golden, will bring me back  the thought of you.
And I shall love to listen to the wind in the wheat.”
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery 
We  went to Liliw with a lot of expectations.  We went there with heads  held up high, confident that the three years of Nursing education we had  was enough to back us up in doing community work.  It was more than  enough, actually, but you see, in school, they don’t teach you how to take a shower with a pig inside the bathroom, <span>they don’t teach you how to get rid of all the flies that seem to be addicted to your legs,</span> they don’t teach you how to stop being afraid of frogs. The Liliw experience can never be fully explained in words.  Only those who went there shall know it in abstract.
In Liliw, where a long dusty road leads directly to a statue of the Virgin, we learned that the most beautiful things in life are free,  that dances under the rain are not only for children and that the  moonlight caught in the twinkle of a woman’s eye can cast a spell.  At  the center of the place is an intersection, a crossroad of sorts that  stands for the choice between the road already paved and the road less traveled.   We took both simultaneously, both blending into each other until we  created a whole new different path – one, which, we wish will serve as  guide for future hopefuls like us, those longing to find their place in  the greater scheme of things.  In Liliw, we walked under a swathe of  silver stars painted on the black sky, yearning to catch them so we  could save some for the rainy days ahead.  We stood over a cliff where  we could be closer to the gibbous moon, to which we whisper wishes of  triumphs in life.  We passed through the snake-like trail, surrounded by  trees that hiss flax-golden tales of ghosts and goblins, treasures  untold and star-crossed lovers.
We went to Liliw to help  without expecting anything in return.  We lived with the people to gain  their trust and cooperation.  They tamed us with their kindness and free  spirit.  And like the fox who loves to listen to the wind in the wheat  because of the little prince that tamed him, we will look at the sky  and remember that once we saw angels dancing, daintily stepping on the  white fluffy clouds.  In Liliw we found it possible to believe again, to  see the world with child-like wonder.  Liliw.  The place none of us  will ever forget.
We are glad Liliw happened to us.
/FMEAB_05/2007
***
What  you see above is the last day entry, an excerpt from the unpublished  Liliw Summer Immersion Program documentation.  Much has been said about  the Liliw immersion program yet we never run out of words, of stories to  tell and blackmail items to squeal whenever it comes up.
BEFORE
Plans  to resume an immersion program in our college started as early as the  beginning of second semester SY 2006-2007.  It began with the Trinitian  Center for Community Development or TCCD, the university’s outreach  department.  According to Mr. Francis Barte, TCCD was looking for a  depressed community which could be adopted when President Josefina  Suerte-Sumaya who hails from Liliw, Laguna suggested that they try to  see this small neighborhood in her hometown people refer to as  Valenzuela.  After the initial assessment of the place, TCCD referred  the community to the St. Luke’s College of Nursing.   A second social  investigation was done on March 17, 2007 through a medical mission  sponsored by the SNA 2006-2007.  It passed the criteria for RLE adoption  and it was then decided that the SLCN will again be conducting an  immersion program and that it will be on April to May 2007.
The next question is who will be sent there?
369  students.  It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that 369  shouting, screaming, shrieking eager young nurses-to-be simply won’t fit  in a community that small, much less a medium-sized house.  The college  had to choose.  From 369 incoming Level IV students, 64 were chosen to  participate in the said program, based on their performance in CHN  (Community Health Nursing) duty, the deliberation done by the level  coordinators with the CHN clinical instructors, and the screening  conducted by the college dean, Prof. Gisela Luna.  These students –  divided into two batches – will be staying in Liliw, with each other at  the safe house (President Sumaya’s ancestral home) and with a host  family in the community for two straight weeks.  Clinical instructors  appointed to guide them were Mr. Francis Barte, Mr. Messiah Dela Cruz,  Ms. Antonietta Lomuntad, and Ms. Venni Genetiano.
DURING
Magis Team B / Community Team A :: April 11-April 26, 2007 (Team Maitim)
Magis  Team B composed of selected students from sections 5 to 8 was the first  group sent to Laguna.  Their task was to socially prepare the people of  Valenzuela for the coming projects that will be implemented by the next  team, the first two phases of COPAR (Community Organizing Participatory  Action Research).  They were the guinea pigs, the foremost group of  people tasked to test the waters and establish ties with the community  and the local government units.  They had to make sure that the  community will like them or else it would spell doom to the succeeding  team.
They made a community profile from scratch, using  whatever resources they had on hand.  It was pure resourcefulness that  got them through and yes, the never-ending laughter that this group is  known for.  They went there not knowing what lies ahead.  And they all  went back here dark, the contrast level between their teeth and skin  very high.
Magis Team A / Community Team B :: April 28-May 13, 2007 (Team Maasim)
The  second team, which I belonged to, was tasked with the next 3 phases of  COPAR.  We continued what the first team started and along the way,  added programs which the community felt they needed.  We stayed at the  safe house during the first three days (in the community for the next  nine days, and back at the safe house the remaining five days).  The  real challenges came on the days thereafter when like the first group,  we were each paired with someone of the opposite gender and were  assigned to live with a host family, all the while doing community  organizing work without the comfort of having our cellular phones with  us.  We were essentially on our own, literally penniless and undoubtedly  clueless.  We relied on solicitations, the money we earned from  quarrying, and material donations to provide for the community projects.   In collaboration with several municipal government agencies, we were  able to do that and much more.
AFTER
All  of us were informed early on that our performance will determine if the  immersion project will be continued years after we graduate.  We all  felt pressured but all worries disappeared at the sight of the smiles  that greeted us.  In the end, it wasn’t about the grade anymore; it was  about sharing ourselves and giving, even at times when we felt we  couldn’t bear one more ounce of life.
In Liliw, the world  became our classroom and experience, our teacher.  We lived with the  people, we were one with them.  We learned lessons that cannot be found  in any book.  We forged lifelong friendships and realized that life  offers so much more than what we know.  Liliw will always, always hold a  special place in our hearts

