Archive for January, 2006

Tour of the Fireflies

Saturday, January 28th, 2006

For all cyclists and bike enthusiasts: The 8th Tour of the Fireflies is set on April 23, 2006 Sunday at 7am to 1pm! It is a costumed 50 kilometer bicycle ride through at least six cities in Metro Manila to promote Clean Air and Sustainable Transportation. To join, call 646-1952 (Mon) or visit www.fireflybrigade.org

** Thanks to Chico of Greenpeace SEA for sending us the email invite.

This one’s from http://www.fireflybrigade.org/news.html Read on!

Pinays on Bicycles
by Roselle Leah K. Rivera

I learned how to bike as a little girl. My story as a cyclist has its share of funny memories. I remember my blue bell bottom pants (yun ang uso noong 70s) getting stuck on the chain of my bike, and crashing downhill into a dingy canal along Maayusin St in UP Village where our family used to live. I also can’t forget that I lent my new red bike to my best friend then and it got stolen. How my parents scolded me. (especially because my friend did not replace it.)

Today, three decades after, I consider myself a hard core cyclist. I use my bike when I travel to work. The bicycle as a mode of transport is a far out idea for many middle class people. It is also especially uncommon for women in the Philippines. However, riding the bicycle as a mode of transport is a best economic option for many people.

A woman riding a bicycle on the street sticks out like a sore thumb. "Ay babae," I hear people say when I pass. " Babae, o," others stare with a look of bewilderment on their faces. As one venture into the streets, one will very seldom see women on bicycles. This is confirmed by a 1999 study which showed that out of 174 cyclists who were interviewed on the road in four different places in Marikina City, only 9 were women.

It’s no doubt that many people in Filipino society still believe that a woman’s place is only in the home or in the private sphere. Getting on a bike means venturing into the public sphere - the outdoors that is believed to be mainly men’s preserve. Not to be forgotten is the harassment women face when they are on the street. It’s not enough that you’re the underdog as a cyclist on the streets against the road rage of motor vehicle drivers. Women get a lot of sexist remarks from men as they pass on a bike.

Society, through its ordinary and taken-for-granted beliefs, limit women’s mobility. Too bad that girls are taught by their parents to be " mahinhin" (soft/slow) and "mabango," (sweet smelling) which is in direct contradiction to getting on a bike- one has to be "malakas ang loob" (assertive) and going under the sun will surely leave you " amoy araw." (smelling like the sun) Time to change our ways with little girls!

Another wrong but very common belief is that rigorous physical activity is also not the proper thing for girls and young women; and that physical activity, specially strenuous activities like biking on the streets, is for boys alone. (As if women do not do most if not all of the dirty housework at home!) In our country, a young girl active in strenuous physical activity is not "ordinary". We should open our eyes to the fact that both male and female are capable!

In many Asian countries, men and women use the bicycle as transport. China is the best example of a country where a bicycle culture is historically deeply rooted. My friend Jo who spent time in India said that she witnessed how many schoolgirls in their sari (Indian traditional costume) ride the bicycle to and fro their homes and school. A lot of women also use their bicycles in Vietnam and the streets are flooded with women ferrying goods from the market. In Africa, there are non-profit groups that use the bicycle as an entry point for literacy programs for women. Here in the Philippines, my friend Letty who lives in Binangonan tells me how she used to bike to market in Binangonan. (It’s too unsafe to do this now, she says. But then, what is safe in this country?) Filipino women can get their inspiration from experiences in various parts of the world.

Cycling and women are not incompatible, as most Filipinos still feel and believe. The challenge is to create an environment for the safety of cyclists- both men and women, girls and boys. Even more urgent is to work for a cultural and economic environment that encourages more people, especially women, to get on bicycles.

bike

Wednesday, January 18th, 2006

Magbibida lang muna ako. Just this Monday, I rode my bike to school. Matagal ko nang pangarap yan, nung nasa Baguio pa ako. I just couldn’t afford a bike then. Anyway FYI lang, takot ako magbike papuntang Diliman ng mag-isa dahil kelangan kong makipagsapalaran sa iba’t ibang uri ng sasakyan, makipag-angasan sa mga driver na walang respeto sa mga cyclist, at suminghot ng pagkarami-raming usok sa 9-lane (ata) na Elliptical Road. At hindi diyan natatapos ang pinoproblema ko dahil pauwi e kelangan ko namang makipagsabayan sa mga one-way ticket to hell na metro buses plying along Commonwealth Ave.  Scary talaga! Hindi naman kasi ako daredevil, enthusiast lang. Anyway, ang hindi ko naisip e may isa pa palang daan mula sa amin sa Visayas Ave. papuntang Commonwelath Ave na hindi masyado marami ang dumadaang sasakyan. Kaya ayun, doon ako dumaan papuntang school. Kaso medyo sumakit hita ko sa pagpadyak kasi puro paahon ang kalsada. Yun ang kapalit ng Visayas Ave-Elliptical Rd-Commonwealth Ave original route ko. Pero okay lang dahil nakarating naman ako sa destinasyon ko ng buo, walang galos, at nakainisan na driver. One simple dream accomplished! It was a good way to start the week right.

Eto pala ang mga natutunan/realizations ko (uli):

1. Always, always have alternative plans in case Plan A doesn’t work.

2. May paraan para maabot ang kahit anong pangarap. Kelangan lang ng will to do it, mag-risk at konting imahinasyon. Hindi rin kailangang magmadali pa ra sa realization nito.

3. I am really capable of doing things on my own. Pero masarap pa ring may kasama paminsan-minsan para may ka-share ng experience.

4. Karamihan talaga ng drivers dito sa Manila ay walang respeto sa mga cyclist… may bike lane man o wala. How I miss the polite drivers in Baguio. Nasa attitude talaga ng mga tao ang problema.

5. Agaw pansin pa rin ang mga babaeng nagba-bike. Except na lang shempre para sa tri-athletes at sa mga nagrerenta ng bike sa mga park. Kaya.. buwagin ang socially created gender roles for a gender-sensitive, gender-equal community.

6. Go for the natural high pa rin. :)