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!

free counters

Google

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

What is it like to live in Manila?

 


In some ways this is a very difficult question to answer because your experience will differ drastically depending on how much money you have. I'll give you my experience with the caveat that it is by no means representative of most people who live there. Although if you're a foreigner who's coming to live in Manila, this probably is representative.

I was born in Manila in 1984 and lived there until I left for college. However, I am not Filipino. My family is Pakistani and I inherited their citizenship since the Philippines does not grant citizenship based on birth in their territory.

My father worked for the Asian Development Bank, which is headquartered in Manila.

These are some of my thoughts from living there. Some of these are not necessarily specific to Manila but the Philippines in general.

  • Filipinos are some of the friendliest people in the world.
  • Almost everyone speaks English, though to varying degrees. I lived there for 18 years and I only learned Filipino by watching local television (I still remember watching Noli De Castro saying "Magandang Gabi.... Bayan"). However, when we got cable TV in 1992, I stopped watching local channels and my knowledge of the language has steadily declined since. Talking to taxi drivers or going to local shops does not require knowledge of Filipino.
  • The traffic is terrible. Home to school was only 12 km but it took 30-45 minutes by car. If there was heavy rain? Forget about it. It would sometimes take hours if there was flooding.
  • There are various methods of transportation available. Taxis are quite common in the business districts. Buses are everywhere. There are also Jeepneys, which operate fixed routes like buses and usually have very cheap fares. There is a light rail system but it's not comprehensive. It only goes down a few of the main roads. You can rent a car and generally rental cars come with drivers. If you buy a car, be aware that to reduce traffic, based on your license plate number, you cannot drive on certain days of the week during rush hour. If you're renting a car, the rental car company will send you a car that has the correct license plate for that day.
  • Malls are everywhere. Every few years it would seem that a gigantic new mall was built that would rival the last gigantic mall.
  • These days electricity is very reliable. In the mid 90s brownouts were very common but these days brownouts are very rare.
  • Compared to the US, the wealth disparity is very extreme. However, there is a much more robust middle class than what I saw in Pakistan.
  • Poverty, however, is very visible and heartbreaking. If you drive around you will generally see street children begging or selling items on the road.
  • If you have access to housing, generally you will either live in a "village" or a condominium. A "village" is perhaps most analogous to a "gated community" in the US. However, depending on which village you live in, there may be extremely heavy security. In order to get in to any of the villages, you need to have a sticker on your car that shows that you live in that village. If you don't, you have to stop at the gate and you have to tell the guard where you're going and leave your license at the gate. The exception is that if you live in one of the Makati villages that are part of the Makati Village Association, your sticker is interoperable with any other Makati Village.
  • Foreigners cannot buy property in the Philippines. However, you can buy a condominium unit so long as Filipinos own at least 50% of the condominium units in the building.
  • Armed security guards are everywhere. You'll find them at villages, offices, malls, and yes, at corner 7-11s. Most of this security is just a deterrent. You don't typically hear about security guards actually discharging their weapons. In fact, I'm pretty sure that many of the weapons aren't even loaded.
  • Labor in the Philippines is relatively cheap so you'll see a lot of jobs done by people that would be mechanized elsewhere.
  • If you live in a house in a village, generally you're going to have domestic helpers. In the first house we lived in, we had 3 maids, a driver, and a gardener. Our neighbors had 10 (10!) maids.
  • When you go to a big department store like SM, the sales staff are friendly but not particularly useful. I'm not sure if there are perpetual supply chain issues or if this is just a cultural tendency but 90% of the responses I've gotten from sales staff are "Out of stock, sir."
  • Expect to be called "Sir" if you're a man or "Ma'am" if you're a woman.
  • Basketball is huge
  • There is a lot of good food and good restaurants
  • There's a ton of stuff to do at various price ranges so you can never really be bored.
  • I loved the weather, about mid-80 degrees all year round. Not everyone finds this comfortable.
  • Government services more or less work. If you need to get a driver's license or have some other interaction with the government it's possible to do so without having to pay any bribes. This is unlike a lot of other countries where it's necessary to pay bribes.
  • Pretty much everything that is available in the US is available in the Philippines.
  • BEWARE OF THE VOLTAGE! The Philippines plug system is very deceptive. Every outlet will have two types of plug points. It will have one flat plug point (that is 220 V) and it will have one round plug (that is 110 V). Beware of this because US appliances are 110 V and have the flat plug, so if you stick that into an outlet that fits in the Philippines, that appliance is going to go bust.
  • Mosquitos are very common. All windows usually have screens on them so that you can open the window without letting bugs in.
  • If you look like you're of Chinese origin, you have to be careful about kidnap-for-ransom. Just be sensible.
  • I went to International School Manila, which is the main international school. The curriculum is American until high school and then you can pretty much choose to be on an AP track or an IB track. From what I've seen of US schools, ISM beats most of them.

MEDICINE FOR HEART AND SOUL

My column in Mindanao Daily News

OPINION
By KLAUS DÖRING
 September 21, 2021

In Pandemic times , music helps me to overcome many daily hurdles. I learned from a psychological  friend that music, because of its deep connections with the brain, is intrinsically meaningful to humanity as a race. We thrive off it. It drives our actions and emotions, and its influence on our brains creates a sense of unity with music that few other art forms can provide.
 
We are beginning to understand our own love of music not only as a cognitive reflex, but as a true art form. Because of being too busy in the past, I neglected this special love. And the relation between religion and music too. 
 
The relationship between religion and music can be coined as the “spirit” of the “sound.” Both provide a means of transcending human existence.
 

Music has the ability to deepen the meaning of words that accompany it, both in a religious context or even on your local pop radio station you listen to on the way to work. As described by St. Augustine in Weiss and Taruskin’s Music of the Western World, St. Augustine reflects on his baptism, “The tears flowed from me when I heard your hymns and canticles, for the sweet singing of your church moved me deeply…The music surged in my ears, truth seeped into my heart, and my feelings of devotion overflowed…

 
Yes, music has a way of filling in the gaps in thought, feeling, and emotion that words cannot do justice, which can be incredibly powerful when accompanied by a spiritual belief. Using music for religious reasons also gave early humans the ability to experience and explore the tantalizing effects of music without committing a sin. In the present day, music is used much more widely and for purposes other than worship, which has allowed religious music to grow and expand into many types of praise that have a wider impact on many people. Music is a nearly universal part of religion because it appeals to and heightens human senses in a pleasurable way which, in turn, allows humans to praise through a medium that makes worship more enjoyable.
 
A life without music? I wouldn't survive!

When misunderstood and hated

By Fr. Roy Cimagala *

 

         THAT gospel episode where Herod the tetrarch was perplexed

about Christ and was more disturbed than simply curious about him,

(cfr. Lk 9,7-9) reminds us that if we are to be like Christ, we should

be ready to be misunderstood and even hated.


          Like Christ, we can be a sign of contradiction to some

people. We should therefore learn how to handle that condition the way

Christ handled his. It’s going to be an unavoidable feature in our

life, especially nowadays when there are many powerful and influential

people straying away from God’s will and ways.


          In this life, in this world, we just have to be ready to get

dirty without compromising what is truly essential in our spiritual

life. Evil is unavoidable in this world, and we just have to know how

to deal with it, always focused on going toward our eternal destiny

with God in heaven.


          We should not worry too much about the misunderstanding and

even hatred against us that we can provoke in others, because we have

been given all the assurances that if we are with God, everything

would just turn our right. The challenge now is how to handle the many

evil things that will always get mixed up with the essential good of

this life and of this world that all come from God.


          Evil does not have the last word, unless we let it. It is

the good that will have the last word. And so we just have to learn

how to go through such things even to the extent of cooperating with

evil materially, not formally, if only to change things for the

better.


          In this, we should look at Christ not only as the model but

also and most especially as the power to enable us to derive good from

evil regardless of all the dirt involved in the process.


          St. Paul has something relevant to say in this regard. “God

made him who had no sin to be sin for us,” he said, “so that in him we

might become the righteousness of God.” (2 Cor 5,21)


          That is why Christ allowed himself to take on all the

suffering so unjustly inflicted on him and ultimately to offer his

life on the cross to bear all the evil of our sins in order to conquer

sin and death itself with his resurrection.


          We have to understand then that our life here on earth, if

patterned after that of Christ, cannot but get involved with the dirt

of evil. It would be naïve on our part if we think that Christian life

is pure clean living pursued in a sterilized environment as if in some

controlled laboratory.


          In this, we have been amply warned by Christ himself. “In

this world,” he said, “you will have trouble. But take heart! I have

overcome the world.” (Jn 16,33) More graphically, he said:


          “If your hand or your foot causes you to stumble, cut it off

and throw it away. It is better for you to enter life maimed or

crippled than to have two hands or two feet and be thrown into eternal

fire.” (Mt 18,8)


          We just have to learn how to suffer, how to let go even of

some legitimate things if only to get what is truly essential. In

other words, we have to learn how to get dirty and how to suffer with

Christ.


* Chaplain Center for Industrial Technology and Enterprise (CITE), Talamban, Cebu City

Email: roycimagala@gmail.com