You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Friday, February 13, 2026

On turning 80


Randy David

Exactly a month ago today, I turned 80. It was an event I didn’t expect to feel any different from my previous birthdays. But thanks to my fellow Inquirer columnist Ambeth Ocampo, who devoted an entire column to the lunch my sisters prepared at our childhood home in Betis, I received a lot more greetings and attention than usual.

Far from the “Kapampangan feast” by which Ambeth titled his piece (1/14/26), lunch that day consisted of the simple dishes my late mother used to cook when we were growing up—easy to prepare, nutritious, tasty, and inexpensive viands. Perhaps the only thing “special” was the callos my daughter Kara contributed. But given how we have come to associate fiestas with elaborate dishes rich in spices and ingredients, I can understand how the faintly familiar but long-forgotten meals of our childhood can strike one as special. Marcel Proust was right: a large part of our memory resides in our taste buds.

But that is the public side of marking a birthday. At my age—or rather, in one’s elderly years—the private side is more deeply felt. The question I ask myself is no longer how many years I have left, but how much longer I can walk for an hour without pain, and think clearly enough to compose a column every week without being tempted to ask ChatGPT for a draft. I realize—and for this I am eternally grateful—that I am still healthy enough to regard these as indicators of successful aging.


Sam Cantada ready for UAAP seniors debut

 



By Mark Rey Montejo

Published Feb 12, 2026 09:35 pm


With tons of expectations weighing on her shoulders, highly touted rookie Sam Cantada vowed to make an impact as she gears up for her UAAP women's volleyball debut with National University this weekend.

With tons of expectations weighing on her shoulders, highly touted rookie Sam Cantada vowed to make an impact as she gears up for her UAAP women’s volleyball debut with National University this weekend.

The 18-year-old Cantada, who spearheaded Adamson in the junior ranks including back-to-back finals appearances, is set to don the Lady Bulldogs’ colors when they battle the UST Golden Tigresses on Sunday, Feb. 15.

The Dasmariñas, Cavite native acknowledged the pressure but said the support of her coaches and teammates makes it easier to manage.

“As of now po, mahirap po siya. Pero, d'yan naman po ‘yong mga coaches and ‘yong mga teammates na pwede po silang tumulong po sa akin para ma-overcome ‘yong pressure po,” said Cantada.

“Siguro po, mas tatapang po talaga ako this season. Lalo na po, kailangan po mag-peak ng round 2 po,” she added.

Surely, suiting up for a powerhouse school like NU, which was then powered by decorated spikers Bella Belen and Alyssa Solomon in the previous seasons, is already a daunting assignment for a freshman.

But it was not the case for the 5-foot-7 outside spiker as her transition went smooth after receiving warm reception from the Lady Bulldogs mainstays and veterans.

“Okay naman po sila. They're trying their best naman po mag-lead, lalo na po ‘yong mga ga-graduate na po,” Cantada stressed.

Last May, Cantada started her run with NU after she and the Lady Bullpups represented National Capital Region in last year’s Palarong Pambansa in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte.

There, she met senior stars Belen, Solomon, Vange Alinsug, Lams Lamina, and Shaira Jardio, to name a few, who supported them live at the jam-packed PCV Socio-Civic and Cultural Center in Bacarra, a neighboring city of Laoag.

They won the gold medal after beating Tay Tung College (Western Visayas) in the secondary girls’ finals and their reign extended in the Shakey’s Girls Volleyball Invitational League (SGVIL) a week later at the expense of the very same Bacolod-based school.

Cantada backs the likes of Alinsug, Lamina, and Jardio, with new head coach Regine Diego, as they go for a three-peat.

“Hindi po magiging madali ‘tong season, pero I think pag lahat kami iisa ng mga teammates ko, may mataas po kami na chance na makuha namin ‘yon,” she concluded.

GOAT: A rewatchable family movie

 



Published Feb 13, 2026 08:00 am
By Margaret Siytangco

Let me say this first: GOAT is not just another animated sports movie.
It’s fun. It’s loud. It’s heart-filled. And for a mom who turned this into a Valentine’s mom-and-son date? It was such a win.
(Images courtesy of Columbia Pictures)
(Images courtesy of Columbia Pictures)
Produced by Stephen Curry and backed by the same creative energy behind KPop Demon Hunters and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, you can immediately feel that bold, stylized DNA. The aesthetic? Watercolor-y but graffiti. Soft, but edgy. It feels like a sketchbook collided with a street court. Completely unique. Completely eye-catching.
And yes — it’s inspired by Curry’s own underdog story. The underestimated player. The doubted kid. The one who dared to dream way bigger than people expected. Except here, the underdog is literally a goat. Greatest. Of. All. Time. The metaphor is not subtle — and I love that it doesn’t try to be.
The voice cast? So good. You’ll recognize Caleb McLaughlin, Aaron Pierre, David Harbour, Nicola Coughlan, and Gabrielle Union — plus Curry himself. And you can tell they had fun with it. The characters feel rich. Distinct. Not just filler voices reading lines.
Now, can we talk about the sneakers?
Because excuse me. Those rubber shoes are about to become collectible. I am calling it. The designs are bold, colorful, and very Gen Alpha coded. If these drop in real life, kids are going to want them. It’s giving serious “Sold out in three days” vibes.
But beyond its style and branding potential, what really makes GOAT work is its heart.
This is an underdog story done right. It’s entertaining. It’s funny. It doesn’t drag. It doesn’t preach. It just lets you root for someone who refuses to shrink himself. And as a mom watching beside my kiddo? That hits.
My son was locked in. He was laughing, reacting, and fully invested. And that shared movie moment? That’s the real win.
Is it deep, dark cinema? No.
Is it emotionally draining? Not at all.
Is it going to become one of those well-loved, rewatchable family movies? I genuinely think so.
This feels like the kind of film families will put on again on a random Saturday. The kind kids quote. The kind that quietly becomes part of childhood.
Bring the kiddos. Bring the whole family.
If you’re looking for something entertaining, stylish, and heart-forward — GOAT is worth the watch.

I LOVE YOU!

 



This week, it's time again for Valentine's Day. Expensive flowers, sweets, lunches, hotel overnights ...


Do you know something about the legend of St. Valentine? The history of Valentine's Day – and the story of its patron saint – is indeed shrouded in mystery. We do know that February has long been celebrated as a month of romance, and that St. Valentine's Day, as we know it today, contains vestiges of both Christian and ancient Roman tradition.


From February 13 to 15, the Romans celebrated the feast of Lupercalia. ... Emperor Claudius II executed two men — both named Valentine — on Feb. 14 of different years in the 3rd century A.D. Their martyrdom was honored by the Catholic Church with the celebration of St. Valentine's Day.


Being married for almost 43 years now, Valentine's Day lets me always recall lovely moments from the past.


In a very old issue of PHILADELPHIA NEWS, which is still on my desk, columnist Larry Fields confessed: "I lead a life of wine, women and song (by the way, a wonderful waltz by the Austrian king of waltz Johann Strauss!) - it's cheaper than petrol, food and rent!"


Well, some marriages are made in heaven. You know some? I do. The best of the rest are down-to-earth. Maybe also yours? I am blessed and happy to celebrate my  43rd wedding anniversary next month.


Maybe you remember this: "Then the prince swept the lovely young maiden into his arms and carried her home to his castle. And they live happily ever after!" Indeed, they did.


What I would like to see is an autonomous in home affairs study of all these titles of nobility bearers seven years after their happily-ever-after marriages. or even earlier, because the so-called darned and tricky seventh marriage year could be even the first one already.


The truth is that life isn't made up of the continual highs found in the initial stages of courtship. Of course, flirting is fun and a wide groove exists. But after a while our system needs a rest. Unanimously we're in the second stage sooner or later and our marriage life badly needs a new outside coating.


All of a sudden, the partner prefers day and night watching all the sports channels, falls asleep while you're revealing your innermost secrets and even forgets the anniversary for the first or even second time . Just bear in mind: You've won each other's acceptance  and sometimes even feelings are terribly gloomy. This acceptance shouldn't be undervalued.


Even we see a house that has to be cleaned, many other things have to be organized, and the partner, who looks as fatigued and bored as you feel. Logical question: "That's it? That WAS it?"


And suddenly, we experienced the third stage and learned why it's worth the ups and downs. Maybe we men don't mention any more, how incredible she looks, but we enjoy bleating and grousing at her spending innumerable hours putting her together. But then, suddenly, we men unload the garbage without being asked for it.


Although no marriage is continually blissful - it can be pretty good most of the time. When we last through arguments, money worries, and kid's problems or slowly but surely coming up mid-life crises, we should face reality that our relationship is not always a big day celebration.


It's because the fundamental  reason for a marriage has outlasted the craziness of day-to-day living: we love each other. That's MY idea of "Happily ever after, indeed!"


And one more thing: in my opinion, Valentine's Day shouldn't be only on February 14. It doesn't matter if one is married or not.



Thursday, February 12, 2026

Celebrate friendship on Valentine's Week


Published Feb 12, 2026 12:02 am | Updated Feb 11, 2026 04:44 pm

DRIVING THOUGHTS

It’s almost Valentine’s Day when we will be surrounded by loud love. Red roses, candlelit dinners, staged affection posted online. Love, apparently, must be visible, romantic, and preferably photogenic.
But some of the most enduring forms of love don’t show up with flowers. They arrive quietly. And they are almost never celebrated on Feb. 14.
Friendship is one of them.
Well, a group of friends, mostly couples in their senior years, celebrated Valentine’s week without those photogenic or Instagramable moments. They went camping. Driving through kilometers of desolate landscape of sand trails left by Pinatubo’s eruption decades ago, stirring a whirlwind of sand in its path, crossing a river, dodging tree trunks — and finally reaching a surreal landscape of rolling green grass, pine trees, and a serene lake.
This is Lake Mapanuepe in Zambales, a truly hidden paradise visited only by the adventurous with 4x4 vehicles, and a few brave 4x2 drivers, all of them with the spirit of Indiana Jones.
Far from the restaurants where most couples will dine on Valentine’s Day, this group who call themselves the Senior Car Campers Plus seek the outdoors to celebrate friendship. Under the stars, the chilly wind of the lake threatening to blow away tents and awnings, these senior citizens cook meals on neatly-assembled kitchen tables, lay the sumptuous food on tables extended by coordinated planning, and sit on camp chairs each brings along.
The Great Outdoors is what draws these seniors together. Total strangers before they met in some campsite years ago, they have now become friends and act like neighbors, although their home addresses are scattered around Metro Manila.
This week, and on Valentine’s Day, they celebrate friendship, a form of love that hardly attracts attention online. To me — and I am sure, to many of you — friendship has kept you grounded many times in your life. To have a friend who knows your voice well enough to hear the bad day before you say a word. The one who sends a message that simply reads — “Are you okay.” You have a treasure when you have a friend who remembers how you take your coffee, your irrational fears, and your old stories — and listens to them again and again.
Friendship is love without performance. With the red roses and chocolates. There’s no public milestones for it, to celebrate the fifth anniversary of knowing each other’s worst habits. And because it does not follow the familiar romance narrative, we often treat it as secondary — important, yes, but somehow not central.
That’s a mistake.
Friendships are the relationships that hold us together when romantic love falters, or ends. They are the ones who survive distance, heartbreak, career changes, parenthood, grief, and personal reinvention.
Unlike romantic love, friendship is rarely about possession. It allows space. It doesn’t panic when you change. It understands that silence doesn’t always mean absence. All it asks for is something simple — “Be there when I need you.”
There’s humor in friendship too. The kind that only exists when you’ve known someone long enough to laugh without explaining the joke. With the seniors who’ve shared only about two years together, the laughter comes from jokes about appetite or one’s build that prevents one from setting up an awning. All that said with affection, the banter goes on and on from one campsite to the next. The laughter refuses to leave.
With this group, they linger together from one campsite to the next, until, as one of them said, “We run out of clothes and food.” That’s not extraordinary; with friends, lunch extends to dinner, and cocktails to midnight snacks.
And yet, on Valentine’s Day, friendships are politely ignored. We don’t buy chocolates for the people who sat with us through uncertainty. We don’t celebrate the ones who stayed when we were not particularly lovable.
Maybe because friendship feels too ordinary to honor. Or we assume it will always be there, quietly waiting.
But friendship is not accidental. It is built and maintained. It requires time in a world obsessed with speed. It needs presence in a culture addicted to distraction and multitasking. It requires listening without giving advice, honesty but not cruel comments, and care without conditions.
That’s not small love.
If romantic love is fireworks, friendship is the steady light that shows you where you are. It doesn’t overwhelm. It stays long after the noise — or the camping ends.
So maybe this Valentine’s week, we expand our definition of love. Maybe we acknowledge that some of the deepest connections in our lives do not arrive wrapped in romance. They arrive in shared silence — when we set up camp, each quietly assembling tents, kitchens, beds. They come with old conversations of repeated jokes, and whimsical dreams of what one wants to buy for the next camping. It mingles in the comfort of being fully known to strangers who now sleep in tents beside mine.
Some loves do not ask for roses. They ask for time — to get away from the comforts of the city to some desolate campsite. They ask for honesty — to ask for help to set up a new tent and not pretend one can do it all by himself. They ask for staying – through three days to seven days in two to three campsites.
Those quiet friendships deserve to be celebrated! This week, I celebrated friendship with Lawrence Dy, Danny and Beng Yan, Dean and Nette Baltazar, George and Josie Coscolluela, Zaldy and Claire Ramonez, PJ and Gay Beltran. We missed Bodz Rivera and Richard Siy, regular campers who couldnt get away for the week. (Email: pinky.colmenares@mb.com.ph)

Lady Archers eye redemption in Season 88


 

Angel Canino leads De La Salle University's redemption bid in UAAP Season 88. (UAAP Media)


By Manila Bulletin Sports

Published Feb 11, 2026 04:18 pm


National University is surely the team to beat in the UAAP Season 88 volleyball tournament, and no one is more eager to claim the scalps of the defending women's champion than De La Salle University.

Angel Canino leads De La Salle University's redemption bid in UAAP Season 88. (UAAP Media)


By CHRISTAN SALVAÑA

Intern

National University is surely the team to beat in the UAAP Season 88 volleyball tournament, and no one is more eager to claim the scalps of the defending women's champion than De La Salle University.

Swept by the Lady Bulldogs in just two games in the finals, the Green Archers try to steal the throne in NU's post-Bella Belen and Alyssa Solomon era with Shevana Laput and Angel Canino leading the charge for the Taft-based squad.

“Since last year, runner-up kami, so sa ngayon talagang target talaga ‘yung top na. Yung preparation andun naman eh, laging paghahandaan kung sino man ‘yung dadating na kalaban, kasi sa ngayon, walang madaling kalaban ngayon, lahat competitive na,” he said.

The Archers are optimistic this time with the arrival of rookie Eshana Nunag who packs potential that should complement the team.

“Actually, wala naman nagbago sa amin. Isa pa, bago na naman ‘yung setter namin, rookie. So, eto na naman. Hopefully, maging maganda yung performance.”

La Salle will open its bid against Far Eastern University on Sunday, Feb. 15, at the Mall of Asia Arena.


SexBomb Girls announce Rawnd 6 and first international concerts in UAE

 


Published Feb 11, 2026 11:35 pm


What began as a nostalgia-driven reunion has turned into one of the most successful concert runs in Philippine pop history.
Following five sold-out shows attended largely by “mga batang pinalaki ng SexBomb,” organizers have confirmed that the SexBomb Girls’ Get, Get, Aw! Reunion Concert will return for a Rawnd 6, along with the group’s first-ever international concerts to be held in the Middle East.
SexBomb Girls (Images courtesy of Facebook)
SexBomb Girls (Images courtesy of Facebook)
"Nagsimula sa simpleng entablado...ngayon international na ang kembot (It started on a simple stage… now the hip sway goes international," the group's leader, Rochelle Pangilinan, and producer NY Entourage Productions announced on social media
The upcoming overseas shows dubbed "Get Get Aw! UAE" will be held on March 27 (Friday) at the Dubai Exhibition Centre and on March 28 (Saturday) at 321 Sports in Abu Dhabi.
While the venue for Rawnd 6 has not yet been announced, the follow-up concerts mark a major milestone for the OG (original) girl group first formed in 1999. With their revival, many local and international fans have been clamoring for them to perform outside Metro Manila.
Dubai concert poster
Dubai concert poster
The Get, Get, Aw! concert series opened on Dec. 4, 2025, at the Smart Araneta Coliseum and immediately sold out. A second show followed days later at the Mall of Asia (MOA) Arena, where demand continued to surge. What was initially announced as a finale for Rawnd 3 on Feb. 6, 2026, eventually expanded into two additional sold-out shows at the same venue, held on Feb 7 and 8.
Fans went wild over the dances and songs that brought them back to their youth. The SexBomb Girls exceeded expectations, delivering a world-class production that gave their audiences their money’s worth.
They didn't just dance, they delivered circus-like acrobatics paired with delightful costumes. From the start of the show, they made a dramatic entrance through hydraulic stage lifts. The 360-degree stage and the girls' overall performance set a new standard for how reunion shows should be staged. While the concerts stretched for three hours or so each night, the crowd loved every minute and even screamed for more.
Ice Seguerra was a special guest during the Feb. 8 concert.
Ice Seguerra was a special guest during the Feb. 8 concert.
Rawnds 3 to 5 also turned into a celebration of Filipino music across generations, gathering some of the biggest names in OPM on one stage.
For the three days of the MOA Arena concert series, guest performers included such heavyweights as Regine Velasquez, Gary Valenciano, Zsa Zsa Padilla, Gloc-9, Apo Hiking Society, La Diva, BINI, and Alamat, among others.
With the new announcement, the Get, Get, Aw! Concert has evolved far beyond its original goal of reuniting the Sexbomb Girls. Their sold-out shows prove the girls' place in Philippine pop culture and how their enduring appeal remains among their fans.

How to keep the flame of love burning

 



By Fr. Roy Cimagala

Chaplain

Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE)

Talamban, Cebu City

Email: roycimagala@gmail.com


THERE’S a Gospel Acclamation that can give us the idea of how to keep the flame of love, notorious for being fickle given our wounded condition, ever burning. It’s from the Acts of Apostles where it says: “Open our hearts, O Lord, to listen to the words of your Son.” (16,14)


God, whose very essence is love, has made this love known to us by its incarnation in the Son made man, Jesus Christ. More than that, this love can also be ours as long as we precisely would open our hearts to listen and make as our own the words, the teaching and example of Christ.


It’s a love that goes all the way, and remains unfazed regardless of whatever condition we may have in this life. Yes, it’s a love for all seasons, always taking the initiative to reach out to others, again regardless of how the others may be toward us.


As St. Paul would put it, it’s a love that is patient, kind, does not envy, does not boast, is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, not easily angered, keeps no record of wrongs. It does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. (cfr. 1 Cor 13,4-7)


In other words, it’s a love that would lead us to always think well of others, to be willing and happy to serve others, again regardless of how they are to us. It’s a love that would enable us to love even our enemies. 


It always thinks ahead of what to do for others. It does not wait for some favorable conditions to come before it is given. Yes, it is given gratuitously, without counting the cost nor expecting any reward. It’s quick to forgive and to ask for forgiveness.


With this kind of love, we will never have a dull moment in our life. We would never run out of ideas and initiatives. We would always feel hot and energetic, if not always bodily or emotionally, then always spiritually and morally. It will always keep us going, irrespective of the varying circumstances of our life.


It’s a love that goes beyond the limitations of our natural powers, since it can only be generated and kept with the grace of God. That is, if we listen to Christ’s words, follow his example, and incarnate him in ourselves through the sacraments, etc. 


This means that we should animate our human powers with God’s grace, and not let them remain on their own, relying only on natural elements. For this, we need to wage continual struggle since we cannot deny that we also have a strong tendency to depend solely on the natural rather than on the supernatural.


To be sure, this kind of love would keep us always calm, happy and cheerful, confident and hopeful. It would always prod us to be generous in our self-giving. It is this kind of love that would already give us a foretaste of the bliss we can expect in our definitive home in heaven when we become truly one with God as we should.


We need to spread this Good News more widely and think of ways of how this kind of love can be pursued effectively by all. We have to assure everyone that our ideal condition, the perfection and fullness of our humanity would be achieved if we learn how to have this kind of love.


Olympic town warms up as climate change puts Winter Games on thin ice

 


Finland's Elian Lehto speeds down the course of an alpine ski men's downhill portion of a team combined race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Bormio, Italy, Monday, Feb. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Gabriele Facciotti)

Olympic fans came to Cortina, Italy with heavy winter coats and gloves. Those coats were unzipped Sunday and gloves pocketed as snow melted from rooftops — signs of a warming world. Read more

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

From within the man, from his heart

 

Published Feb 11, 2026 12:05 am | Updated Feb 10, 2026 05:58 pm
REFLECTIONS TODAY
People are often judged by their external behavior. However, Jesus focuses his attention to the primacy of the “heart”— the interiority of intention and volition.
The Scriptures figuratively use the “heart” (Greek kardia) as the seat and center of human life, since it is the center of man’s personality, and it controls the intellect, emotions, and will. It is not the external things that make us holy or unholy, but the heart which expresses our intentions, our choices, and the will to do all for the love of God. External behavior is the result of what we decide in the heart, and not the other way around.
The standard between good and evil starts from within us and not from outside of us, that is, from the beginning motives/intentions and not just at its ending goals. But the intentions and the desires of the heart are not often holy; in fact, a lot of mundane cravings spring from the heart. The prophet Jeremiah declares: “More tortuous than anything is the human heart, beyond remedy; who can understand it?” (Jer 17:9). That is why the heart needs purification and conversion. Furthermore, the Lord declares, “I, the Lord, explore the mind and test the heart, giving to all according to their ways, according to the fruit of their deeds” (Jer 17:10).
It is God who judges the real motives and value of things. The heart is the repository of what we hold dear. Jesus declares, “For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be” (Mt 6:21).
Gospel • Mark 7:14-23
Jesus summoned the crowd again and said to them, “Hear me, all of you, and understand. Nothing that enters one from outside can defile that person; but the things that come out from within are what defile.”
When he got home away from the crowd his disciples questioned him about the parable. He said to them, “Are even you likewise without understanding? Do you not realize that everything that goes into a person from outside cannot defile, since it enters not the heart but the stomach and passes out into the latrine?” (Thus he declared all foods clean.)
“But what comes out of the man, that is what defiles him. From within the man, from his heart, come evil thoughts, unchastity, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, licentiousness, envy, blasphemy, arrogance, folly. All these evils come from within and they defile.”