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Opinion

Let's go on dreaming

- Fr. Roy Cimagala - The Freeman

That's what Pope Francis encouraged us to do when he met with the families in the Mall of Asia last January 16. "It's important to dream in the family," he said. "All mothers and fathers dream of their sons and daughters in the womb for 9 months. They dream of how they will be. It isn't possible to have a family without such dreams..."

We can never say enough about the importance of the family, about the fundamental and most strategic role it plays in one's life and in that of society in general. Let's hope that we never stop dreaming about our respective families, because it is through it that families can cope with the complicated challenges of our times.

This was, more or less, the take-home message I got after attending a Family Congress recently. I was there not as a speaker but simply as a listener, and to give company to Archbishop Jose Palma and the main guest speaker, Dr. Bernardo Villegas.

Dr. Villegas was my economics teacher when I was still studying in La Salle. I already know his calibre as an economist and teacher. He was great, and he showed it once again in that congress with his most insightful discussion on the Filipino family that is supposed to be on the way to a first-world future.

He said that the Philippines now enjoys a high growth rate that he believes will be sustained and will most likely even increase because the proper economic drivers are already in place, namely the remittances of our OFWs, the income we get from BPOs and KPOs, and the thriving domestic tourism we are having these days.

But most importantly, he was one of those who changed my life because of the way he was and continues to be-brilliant but not proud, very knowledgeable but always simple, with a good sense of humor, sometimes mischievous, but always oozing with goodness.

At one point of his talk, he said that the Philippine economy is already quite stable such that its progress can be sustained irrespective of whoever sits in Malacañang, whether it is Vice Ganda or Binay.

Anyway, he mentioned about how families should always be protected and strengthened against some economic or social forces and developments that can undermine them. He also touched on how the family should be properly anchored on faith.

But what caught my attention the most was a comment during the panel discussion toward the end of the congress. Someone suggested that parents should be more sensitive to the different changes that children go through as they grow from infancy to toddler to middle child-age, to puberty, to teener and young adult. Parents need to change strategies in dealing with their children as they go through these stages.

Though I know there are such stages of development with their corresponding distinctive characteristics, I never really gave much thought about how each stage is different from the others, and how children ought to be treated in these different stages. What I heard was a great learning moment for me.

I am happy to note that there are now a good number of couples, all of them professionals in the different fields, who are willing to spare part of their precious time to go into more serious study about this concern, and to share their findings with other parents. Indeed, the family is worth all this effort and sacrifice.

[email protected]

ARCHBISHOP JOSE PALMA

DR. BERNARDO VILLEGAS

DR. VILLEGAS

FAMILY

FAMILY CONGRESS

LA SALLE

MALL OF ASIA

POPE FRANCIS

THOUGH I

VICE GANDA

WHAT I

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