*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM
I still remember the day my former girlfriend finally let her hair curl naturally. She looked genuinely beautiful—radiant, confident, and at peace with herself. Her curls framed her face with life and movement, as if a part of her that had long been restrained was finally allowed to breathe. In that moment, she did not just look pretty; she looked whole. I admired her deeply, not only because of how she appeared, but because she dared to embrace what was naturally hers.
That courage, however, did not survive the noise around her.
Mockery came quietly at first—careless remarks, disguised jokes, and side comments meant to wound without leaving visible scars. Over time, those voices grew louder than her own. Slowly, the confidence I once saw in her eyes faded. And then came the moment that unsettled me most: she uncurled her hair. Not because she wanted to, but because she felt pressured to erase what others refused to accept. I felt anger rise—not the shallow kind, but the kind born from watching something genuine being undone by cruelty.
I had made real efforts. I sacrificed time. I spent money. I rearranged priorities and even missed my golf game—something I rarely do—just to support her and help her reclaim a confidence that life had long denied her. Seeing her reverse all of that felt like watching a fragile victory collapse. At first, I took it personally. I saw it as disregard for what I had given. Later, I understood it was something more complex and far more painful.
That night, she called me from the house she feared most—a home filled with bitterness, silent hostility, and relatives who never let her forget that she was alone. An orphan with a deceased mother and an absent father, she lived among cousins who projected their own frustrations onto her. When she said, “I feel ugly,” my heart sank. I knew those words were not born from truth, but from years of being told—directly and indirectly—that she was less.
In that moment, my anger softened into sadness. I realized that intelligence does not always protect a person from emotional harm. I had always believed she was intelligent—and she was—but even the brightest minds can grow tired of fighting daily humiliation. Giving in was not weakness; it was exhaustion. Still, I could not ignore the pain of seeing someone I believed in surrender something so beautiful, something so symbolic of inner strength.
Yet as much as I empathized with her pain, I also came to a difficult realization of my own. She needed to learn that effort matters. Love is not sustained by feelings alone, but by recognizing who consistently stands beside you. What hurt me was not that others mocked her—people like that will always exist—but that my efforts were outweighed by voices that had never invested anything in her healing. I was not asking her to fight the world for me; I was hoping she would learn to value sincerity over noise.
This personal experience led me to reflect deeply on good governance.
Good governance, like natural curls, begins with authenticity. Leaders start with principles, vision, and genuine concern for the people. But once pressure mounts—once ridicule, threats, and vested interests surround them—many choose to bend rather than stand firm. Integrity is straightened to appear “practical.” Principles are adjusted to avoid conflict. And slowly, what was once genuine becomes acceptable but hollow.
Just as my former girlfriend began to see herself through the eyes of those who mocked her, governments sometimes begin to govern through the approval of power brokers rather than the needs of the people. In both cases, the result is the same: dignity eroded, confidence lost, and something precious undone—not because it was wrong, but because it was difficult to defend.
What this taught me is sobering. Effort alone is not enough when the environment remains hostile. Love, like governance, needs protection. Reform, like healing, requires patience and courage. You can invest time, money, and heart—but if mockery and corruption remain unchecked, progress can unravel quickly. That does not mean the effort was wasted. It means the fight runs deeper than appearances.
In the end, I learned that you cannot fight every battle for someone else. Whether it is a woman learning to believe in her own worth or a nation struggling to uphold integrity, the final stand must come from within. Still, I hold on to this belief: curl power, like good governance, is real. It is natural, resilient, and worth defending—even when it bends, even when it trembles.
Because when we stop valuing genuine effort and start listening only to the noise, we do not just lose beauty or principles—we lose the courage to remain ourselves.
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*About the author:



