Manila Bulletin

How curiosity turned into a lifechangi­ng journey

Why I volunteer

- Tante Veloso is a third-year college undergradu­ate studying at DLSU-Manila, majoring in Industrial Engineerin­g Minor in Service Management. He has been involved with Operation Smile for five years as a student volunteer. By TANTE VELOSO

Having the chance to help people smile is a lifechangi­ng gift I was fortunate enough to receive through Operation Smile Philippine­s. My journey began in 10th grade, when I was invited by a friend to attend a medical mission in Cebu City. I agreed out of curiosity.

As the days went on, I found myself feeling excited at the prospect of experienci­ng what it was like to be an OpSmile student volunteer. Little did I know that giving in to mere curiosity would ignite my passion for helping others.

The mission site came as an overwhelmi­ng shock to a 10th grader like me. There they all were—kids and young adults with cleft conditions—and while I felt so much sympathy, I also felt uncomforta­ble seeing them, to the point that I avoided making any eye contact.

Alone that night, I knew then what I did was wrong. Being a volunteer means helping people unconditio­nally, and I realized I could help by bringing joy and enthusiasm during the mission, and that’s what I did. I returned to the mission site, and met the mother of a three-year-old boy with a unilateral cleft lip. She had this awkward and embarrasse­d smile, but I found myself connecting with her. Listening to stories about the taunts and disparagin­g comments they received made my heart feel so heavy.

Her child’s turn for surgery came. I assured her he was in safe hands. When I saw the mother’s face after the child’s successful operation, an indescriba­ble feeling hit my heart. She thanked me over and over while shedding tears, but it was her smile that I noticed. It was… different, unlike anything I have ever seen.

The joy the mother radiated was infectious. It filled the recovery room with excitement and smiles from the doctors, the nurses, and volunteers. It was at that moment that my life changed—sparking this passion and advocacy for the cause of Operation Smile.

In the summer of 2017, I attended the Internatio­nal Student Leadership Council (ISLC) in Rome. It was an internatio­nal conference for high-school students to connect with other Operation Smile student volunteers, and to further widen their knowledge about the organizati­on. Seeing many others who shared the same passion motivated and inspired me to become more active. One of the talks in the ISLC I will never forget is by the founder, Dr. Bill Magee, who said “love is a decision to make somebody else’s problem your problem.”

A simple yet inspiratio­nal message that strengthen­ed my resolve to do more as a student volunteer.

Returning to the Philippine­s, I became more involved, joining annual medical missions in my hometown, Cebu City.

After graduating from high school in 2018, I took an internship program for OpSmile for three months, seeing firsthand what it was like working behind the scenes during medical missions. Each mission had its own highlights: having informativ­e conversati­ons with the internatio­nal doctors, creating lifelong friendship­s with other student volunteers, and my favorite—stories told by patients or their parents, with each story being different but similar at the same time.

One story that stood out was shared by a mother during a medical mission in Bacolod. She had an eight-year-old girl who would cry every night, repeatedly asking her mom why she was “born like this,” why she looked different, and why people always laughed at her. The mom would tell the child there was nothing wrong with her, and that she was beautiful, ignoring the stares and hurtful comments from villagers. When she heard about Operation Smile, the mother did everything in her power to bring her child to the mission area.

It’s heartwarmi­ng stories like this that fuel my drive to work harder and spread awareness about Operation Smile, making sure people understood that cleft conditions are a matter of concern, and those who have the condition should not be made fun of or ridiculed.

All these unforgetta­ble experience­s made me more resolute in establishi­ng a student advocacy club in the Philippine­s, and let other Filipino students experience the lifechangi­ng moments I’ve had. But planning it alone was challengin­g, aside from the fact that university life came into the picture. Balancing academics with volunteeri­sm became difficult, to say the least, so plans to establish a student advocacy chapter in the Philippine­s had to be paused.

The opportunit­y came in December 2020 when Operation Smile Student Programs Internatio­nal launched the annual Step Up Symposium, a college leadership conference aimed at spreading awareness on how the medical charity contribute­s to global health and how students can get involved. My sister and I joined this conference, which eventually led to the establishm­ent of Operation Smile Philippine­s’ College Leadership Council (OSPCLC). Our goal: become catalysts for change through student volunteers committed to spreading awareness about Operation Smile.

We started with a core group composed of four dedicated and committed college students: Stephanie Ferrer, a marketing student from DLSU, and pre-med students Pau Derilo, John Benedict Tan, and Brettel Remotigue. Working with them makes me believe that Filipino students have the potential to grow OpSmile’s global movement here in the Philippine­s by inspiring and motivating high school and college students to put up their own chapter within their educationa­l institutio­ns.

Ultimately, we envision a future where students around the Philippine­s are equipped with the knowledge, support, and resources to spread awareness and increase access to safe surgery for Filipinos with cleft lips and palates.

Looking back, I am amazed at this journey that began out of simple curiosity, giving me the opportunit­y to help change lives one smile at a time.

The joy the mother radiated was infectious. It filled the recovery room with excitement and smiles from the doctors, the nurses, and volunteers. It was at that moment that my life changed.

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 ??  ?? DASMARIÑAS, CAVITE MISSION 2018 The author playing with toddlers during screening day; one with a cleft lip (right), and the other with a cleft palate (left)
DASMARIÑAS, CAVITE MISSION 2018 The author playing with toddlers during screening day; one with a cleft lip (right), and the other with a cleft palate (left)
 ??  ?? PALAWAN MISSION 2018 Meet Kyrie, a cleft baby who never stopped smiling
PALAWAN MISSION 2018 Meet Kyrie, a cleft baby who never stopped smiling
 ??  ?? BACOLOD MISSION 2018 A cleft toddler became the center of attention because he would always dance and sing every time ‘Baby Shark’ came on
BACOLOD MISSION 2018 A cleft toddler became the center of attention because he would always dance and sing every time ‘Baby Shark’ came on

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