Académique Documents
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Culture Documents
8,2009
Feature Story
What Really Happens To Josephine B. Ramos?
True Story About A Young Singer Who Gets Sick
By Quirico M. Gorpido, Jr
Maasin City, Southern Leyte-Bad rumors silently spread like wild fire when a local
young singer gets afflicted with a paralyzing disease that deeply grieved her
parents, who also have to bear the pitiful condition of their child. At first the
singer’s mother wants to retaliate and confront those badmouths, but the spirit of
humility pervades in her heart and lulls down her plans to file charges in court
against those backbiters. Instead she keeps her composure and is hopeful though,
that when the time ripens, the truth of her child’s affliction will vindicate
their malicious gossips.
Here is the real thing, a true story of Josephine Batistil Ramos that becomes a
household byword by many in some communities of the province during her popularity
as a promising young singer. By her behaviors and choices of activities and
inclinations, one can say that she’s has the in-born talent for singing. Unlike
other children her age, by common observation they could hardly attune their
voices to a song’s particular melody even with a musical accompaniment. But for
Josephine, adjusting her voice’s flexibility to a song’s tune is as normal as any
other child’s activities she’s engaged in and gradually attaining mastery of her
chosen pieces.
What really happens to her, who in her days of popularity has unimaginable
falls into the pit of utter desperation after savoring her crown of glory reap
from her winning stints in major singing competitions? Josephine starts singing in
public at the age of 5 at St. Joseph College. Always passing the first auditions
in many amateur singing contests sponsors by different barangays of Tagnipa,
Badiang, Lanao, Manhilo, Guadalupe, and Ibarra, she usually emerges as either a
champion or a grand champion. She also marks her winning prowess in the
neighboring town of Macrohon’s 2 barangays of Ilihan and Laray
Singing Competitions.
In 1993 at 10 years old, she was the grand champion in DYDM’s “Battle of
Champion” and Tacloban’s DYVL station, maintaining a winning streak in a weekly,
monthly and grand final during that year. At eleven and12 years old, she won a
consecutive Grand Champion titles after defeating all those winners who
participated in that 2 events. Josephine seems so insatiable with all her
successes in the provincial and regional competitions. In all of the singing
competitions she has participated in different places of the province and in
region 8(Leyte and Samar), it is always her father Segundino F. Ramos, now 65, who
is her personal chaperon.
At the age of 14 in Sept 1998, she decided to transfer to Sauyo National High
School in Novaliches, Quezon City where her aunt resides with her family. Knowing
the talent of her niece, she accompanies her for an audition at ABS-CBN’s KTV or
Katunog Ng Voice. She passes. During the competition, she was asked by the host
about her place. While other well-known personalities in this province who gain a
niche in the field of music and in sports are somewhat reluctant to tell of their
respective places, Ms.Ramos shamelessly told the audience that she is from brgy.
Tagnipa, Maasin, Southern Leyte.(Equally proud of her roots, actress Jenalyn
Mercado speaks with candor that she hails from Southern Leyte when asks about her
reaction of a great catastrophe that hits brgy Guinsaugon, a farming village). In
that particular contest, she became the Grand Champion with her rendition of Celin
Dion’s song “It’s All Coming Back To Me Now”. She competes in this program
relentlessly maintaining her position for 4 months from August up to the grand
finals in November 1998.
At the age of 15 she became as representative of Sauyo National High School to
the Marian Movement Singing Contest at the National Capital Region and emerged as
the champion. Not long after that event, she joins the Red Cross Youth Super Camp
Philippines held at Macario Peralta Janingdan in Capiz. As if lady Luck is always
on her side, she becomes the champion in a vocal solo contest sponsored by the Red
Cross sub-camp category. Later on she decided to transfer to another school at St.
Francis Divine College where beauty titlist and actress Miriam Quiambao studies in
the elementary. Still it is located within the vicinity of Novaliches, Q.C.There
she graduated in high school in 2000.
Staying in Metro Manila for too long a period and away from her parents, she
feels homesick. On her return to Maasin, she joins the Offbeat /band until the end
of 2001.Another local popular singer who is her classmate, Hazel Año, now a
licensed Civil Engineer, also joins.
In 2003 at the age of 19, she passed the audition in Search For The Star at GMA
Channel 7 hosted by Regine Velasquez. While her singer-predecessor Sarah Geronimo,
who is currently one of the popular singers in the country, was able to join the
Search For The Star competition only after her third audition. But the Maasinhon
Josephine has made it in just the first audition.
A Twist Of Fate
Unexpectedly however, not even a premonition or anticipation of some kind that
her gradual rise to popularity of stardom would be snapped from a friend’s
persuasion, whom she is not yet so familiar with, being new to her list of
friends. How come? Josephine is friendly and can easily win friends, and in turn
can easily be convinced
2
from a friend’s persuasion. One day, her mother, Genita Batistil Ramos, 49, a
former stenographer at the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Southern Leyte.who resigned
to take care of her daughter, says that according to Josephine, a Tagalog friend
has given her Bangkok slimming pills. She says she accepts it without hesitation
after her audition at GMA 7.She then starts taking the slimming pills but
discontinue after 4 days because she feels bad like fast heartbeat and later a
fever. Instead of reporting to GMA 7 studio on schedule for the contest, she goes
to the hospital consulting a doctor. When the host of the Search for The Star
knows about her condition thru a telephone call, she informs her that she can
still join the next session. However, Josephine fails to make it.
Her parents brought her to Makati Medical Center where the doctor subjected her
to MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) scan in the laboratory. But the result of the
MRI examination could not give the MMC doctor an exact diagnose of her sickness.
The doctor refers her to Dr. Leonardo Fugoso of St. Luke Hospital where she
undergoes Positron Emission Tomography (PET) examination. After reading the
result, Dr. Fugoso could not also make a diagnosis. He refers the patient’s case
to Dr. Jonas Francisco Santiago, Diplomat, American Board of Medicine who sends
the PET result to an American Hospital connected with St. Luke Hospital. But still
the American doctor could not arrive for an exact diagnose and therefore could not
also prescribe medicine for Josephine.
MOA Signing
Dr. Fugoso suggests to Josephine and her parents that a Memorandum of Agreement
will be signed by them giving him their consent that he be allowed to study
Josephine’s disease. After signing the MOA for their affirmation, Dr. Fugoso
starts giving her medicines for Parkinson’s disease for a period of 5 months. But
before taking her medications, the patient would already twitch, says her mother.
However, there’s no sign of improvement for her health despite the treatment.
Instead her disease gets worst.
Her attending physician talks to her parents and reveals that their daughter
has only 6 months to live.
The revelation strikes like a thunderbolt upon her mother’s ears. Grief and sorrow
grips her heart and starts imploring fervently to the Almighty Creator to give her
daughter a chance to live and heal her sickness. Then they decided to go home to
Maasin. After a lapse of 4 months, they bring their daughter to Chong Hua Hospital
in Cebu City. There they have met Dr.Florenz Eubil C. Bilocura, adult neurologist,
who utilizes EEG (Electroencephalograph), a device that detects and records the
electrical activity of the brain.(Electroencephalogram is the pattern traced by an
Electroencephalograph).
They stay at the hospital for 12 days.
Concert Time
The ‘concert for a cause’ was held recently at the city gymnasium. The
recorded songs of Josephine were repeatedly played while sponsors and concertgoers
were entering the gate. It was a night full of songs and music. Viper Music
Production with its modern equipments has provided for the sounds. In contrast to
the past concerts by local bands and other bands from Cebu sans the state-of-the–
art equipments, Viper Music has delivered a balance volume of vocals and musical
accompaniment to the pleasure and delight of the entire audience. Left and right
bleachers were full of people composed of children, youngsters, adults and the
old. Fourteen bands were scheduled to perform but only 6 have made it to a live
performance at the stage.
Two child singers render one song each beautifully “Broken Vow” and “Habang
May Buhay” at the start of the show.Joani Cristi Cepada with SJC kids did a song
rendition and dance number. Another 2 local popular singers Brian Gilles and Hazel
Año beautifully render a match duet “Ikaw Lamang Hanggang Ngayon”.Año, now a
licensed Civil Engineer, reminisces her days with Ramos when they were both
members-vocalists of the Offbeat band (2000-2001). She dedicates one of
Josephine’s favorite songs by Celin Dion entitled “It’s All Coming Back To Me
Now”. She claims that only her friend can sing it, but Año did it well with her
inherent high pitch voice on a par with Josephine’s.
Janice B. Ramos, younger sister of the sick singer, also dedicates a song
coming from her sister’s favorite singer Celin Dion.Wheelchaired Josephine was
brought by several men upstage where the former sings infront of the latter.
Emotions start throbbing when Janice kisses her sister as tears runs down her
checks. Touching moment intrudes the air for awhile and the audience give
applause.
Sixtenz band composed of SJC students covers some of Alanis Moresette hits,
while the Trendsonic belts out some of Asin’s and Aegis hits. The songs renditions
were a type of rock, love songs, ballads, rapping and reggae. Other bands doing
live performances were the Recykool, Hybrid Monkees, Yawtakis and Tribu Latagaw
who does a comic acts to the laughter of the crowd.
However, the night of music was unexpectedly disrupted when a drunken man
throws a chair towards the youngsters’ side and shouts to stop the show, according
to a witness. Instead of negatively reacting, he says, the youngsters and young
men around just kept their cool in deference to him who is well-known in the
religious circle. One of the witnesses, an Engineer, says that he accosts and
pacifies the man, advises him to go home and he did. During that time at past 1:00
a.m., he says, there’s no policeman around. The American host Mark Coombs gets
hungry and decides to stop the show.
Nevertheless, the trouble does not affect the purpose of the concert for a
cause: The proceeds will be used for the further treatment of Josephine in Manila
to see if she can still be cured of her debilitating disease, proclaims Mr.
Coombs.
Weakens The Immune System
Earlier in Manila, the pediatric neurologist explains to Josephine’s mother
that the Bangkok slimming pills given by a Tagalog friend to her daughter in
Manila, which the latter has taken it for 4 days, have weakened her immune system.
“It triggers in the reawakening of the measles’ viruses that remain inactive when
Josephine’s immune system sustains a strong resistance”, Genita quoted the doctor
as saying.
With this new information which the doctor has revealed, it would be better
now for everybody, particularly those figure-conscious women to be meticulously
cautious if a new friend or any new acquaintance would introduce them and sweet-
talk them to take any kind of sliming pills or slimming tea. Is it not a common
knowledge from the late Julie de Vega’s fans that she was reportedly taking
slimming pills during her popularity days as a showbiz actress? Taking medically
safe slimming pills might be proper for de Vega’s body size because she was really
fat. But, is the kind of slimming pills that she was taken, a safe one? Is it
herbs produced into pills or tablets? However, before taking it too long of her
slimming pills, she got sick. It was diagnosed by a doctor as pneumonia which
caused her early death. Is there not a probability that her taking of slimming
pills has also weakened her immune system so that her body could no longer resist
death-causing viruses? I also have a relative who was a figure-conscious woman and
was taking slimming tea. It did not take too long for her that she also got sick.
The manifestation of her symptoms under my personal observation and analysis is
that her taking of that slimming tea has caused a disruption of the normal
function of her immune system.