20/03/2026
| From Chalkboard to Command: The Teacher Who Answered the Call
Within the four corners of every classroom she enters, the air is often filled with stories of heroes long gone and lessons from history. But for the students of Maโam Patricia Nicole Balbinโnow a member of the Scout Ranger Orientation Course Class 112โ2026 (Bravo)โthe lessons she shared were never just about the past. They were blueprints for a future yet to be built.
Many knew her as the educator who spoke of patriotism with a spark in her eyes. What her students did not know was that while she was teaching them to find their voices, she was quietly preparing to discover her own strength in the toughest way possible.
Most people get through the week by looking forward to the weekend. For her, however, the weekend was simply another kind of classroom.
From Monday to Friday, she wore the professional attire of a licensed teacher; on Saturdays and Sundays, she wore the uniform of an ROTC reservist instructor.
โPeople often ask where I find the energy,โ she said. โThe answer is simple, even if it sounds clichรฉ: I love what I do. Teaching young minds about our nation while serving it in uniform gives my work a deeper sense of meaning.โ
She did not merely speak about patriotismโshe lived it every day, believing that love for the country belongs not only in books, but also in action.
On May 16, 2025, her lessons on service became a reality. Under Republic Act No. 2334, the Philippine Army called for inactive reservist officers to return to active duty. While many might have hesitated, she saw it as a continuation of the lesson she had long taught.
She did not leave the classroom because she was tired of teaching; she left because she realized that to truly inspire her students, she had to become the very example she spoke of during her lectures.
Yet the transition from the faculty room to the Scout Ranger Orientation Course was far from easy.
Training tested not only her determination but also her physical limits. During a Rope Course Practicum, a fall left her with a weakened left footโa constant, throbbing reminder of what she once perceived as her limitations.
โAt one point, my morale reached its lowest,โ she recalled. โI felt like I had become a liability to my team rather than a strength.โ
In one of the lowest moments of her training, she found herself alone in a tent area, tasked with securing the company guidon. As she sat under the vast, indifferent sky, her thoughts did not drift to military tactics. Instead, they returned to her students.
She remembered the small sheets of paper where her students had written their dreams. She recalled the voices that once filled her classroom as they spoke about their plans for the future. She remembered their hopes, their potential, and the words she often told them: never give up.
โIn that moment, I realized that the encouragement I once gave my students was the same encouragement I needed to give myself.โ
Today, as a member of the Scout Ranger Orientation Course Class 112โ2026 (Bravo), she stands as a testament to the power of quiet perseverance.
This Womenโs Month, her story bridges two worlds: the nurturing halls of the school and the disciplined front lines of the military.
She carries her studentsโ dreams in her pack. She carries her identity as an educator in her heart. And she carries a message for every student who has ever felt โslow,โ โunskilled,โ or โincapable.โ
โGrowth does not require the absence of fearโit only requires the courage to move forward despite it.โ
As she walks through the hallways where she once taught, her mantra for 2026 echoes through the corridors: โMay we all have the courage to bloom where we are planted.โ
Maโam Balbin may no longer stand at the front of the classroom, but she continues to teach the most important lesson of allโthat the path to greatness is often paved with the courage to answer a call, even when your feet feel heavy and your heart is full of doubt.
โ๐ป : Claire Ann Bajo