By: Xyrel James Canonoy

If organizations could have siblings, Kalakbay: The Pascian Teen Center and Prisma: The Gender and Development Club would be just that—sisters.

Two different hearts, beating in sync. Two different missions, bound by a shared purpose. One focused on the mind, the other on identity, both fighting to create spaces where Pascian students could breathe, feel, and exist without fear.

A year ago, Kalakbay was just an idea in the heart of my best friend, May Relyn De Paz. A dream of a safe space, a quiet refuge where students could rest their weary minds without judgment. It was built on the belief that mental health matters just as much as grades, that emotions are not weaknesses but truths that deserve to be heard. And now, Kalakbay stands firm on the second floor—a sanctuary for those who need to be reminded that they are not alone.

Prisma, in many ways, was its twin flame. I built it with the hope that Pascian students—regardless of their gender, their identity, their stories—could finally have a space that saw them, recognized them, fought for them. What started as a student-led initiative for gender and development became a movement, one that refused to be ignored, one that challenged norms and stood proudly in its truth.

Kalakbay and Prisma didn’t just exist. They moved, they led, they shook things up.

Together, they spearheaded last year’s Women’s Month celebration, not just as an event but as a statement: that mental health and gender rights are not side issues, but at the core of what it means to be human. They proved that student organizations aren’t just for extra-curriculars but for real, tangible change.

Sisters don’t just grow together. They fight together.

One year in, and Kalakbay and Prisma are more than just clubs—they are institutions. They are proof that young people, with enough passion and courage, can create spaces that truly matter. But this is not where the story ends. The fight for mental health awareness continues. The push for gender inclusivity is far from over.

Kalakbay and Prisma will continue to stand—side by side, hand in hand. Because at the end of the day, these aren’t just organizations. They are homes. And as long as Pascian students need them, these sister clubs will remain, unwavering in their purpose, unbreakable in their bond.