Loob
In Philippine Culture, Loob or Kalooban refers to one's inner self, or, more specifically, to the internal dimension of a person's identity. It's external counterpart is labas - the physical, outward appearance.[1] Loob is a core concept in Filipino Psychology, a field which is unthinkable without both the internal and external dimensions, "loob/labas".[2]
Loob or kalooban has been compared to similar concepts in other Southeast Asian and Oceanian cultures, such as the Indonesian concept of batin or kebatinan.[1]
Concepts whose expression involves "loob"
As a core concept of value, Loob and its variants are a critical aspect of numerous Filipino value constructs, of which the following are examples[3]:
- Utang na loob - a debt of gratitude
- also May utang na loob a good person because that person understands what it means to owe a debt of gratitude
- also Nakikingutang ng loob, to seek a favor from someone
- Ipagkaloob - to entrust
- lagay ng loob - mood, one's state of mind or feeling
- lakas-loob - courage
- tibay ng loob - inner strength
- tining ng loob - clarity of thinking, feeling, volition
- kababaang loob - humility, literally "lowness of the inside"
- kabutihang-loob - good naturedness
- kagandahang loob - generosity, noblemindedness
- may kusang-loob - one who does his work without prodding
- payapang loob - a peaceful, calm person
- mapagkaloob - a generous person
- mahina ang loob - a coward
- malakas ang loob - a daring person
- malamig ang loob - an indifferent person
- pikit ang loob - one who is blind to injustice
- mabigat ang loob - the state of being sad, heavy-hearted
- maluwag sa loob - one's experience of a state of being willing, cheerfully ready, literally to feel "loose/open on the inside"
- wala sa loob - a state of being unwilling, literally to "not have it in oneself"
- tapat na kalooban - the state of having a sincere inner being
- masasamang-loob - criminals, literally, "those with bad inner beings"
- kapalagayang loob - confidante, intimate
- pampalubag-loob - consolation
- kagaanang-loob - something to pacify intense emotion such as anger
- saloobin - one's inner thought or inner feelings
- masama ang loob - to feel down from others' deed
The word loob, simply taken as "inside" and not a construct, is also used for "looban," which means an interior compound, or community; and for the term "manloloob", which means "robber," literally "someone who enters."
See also
Sources
- ^ a b Mercado, Leonardo N. (September 1994). [ttp://www.crvp.org/book/Series03/III-8/contents.htm The Filipino Mind: Philippine Philosophical Studies II (Cultural Heritage and Contemporary Change Series III Asia)]. Washington, D.C.: Council for Research in Values and Philosophy. pp. 226 pages. ISBN 1565180631.
- ^ de Guia, Katrin (2005). Kapwa: The Self in the Other: Worldviews and Lifestyles of Filipino Culture-Bearers. Pasig City: Anvil Publishing, Inc. p. 378. ISBN 971271490X.
- ^ Enriquez, Virgilio (1992). "Unit 15 - Kaugalian, Halagahin, at Pagkatao (Customs, Values & Character)". From Colonial To Liberation Psychology: The Philippine Experience. Quezon City, Philippines: University of the Philippines Press. ISBN 971-542-002-8.
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