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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Wednesday, February 5, 2025

20 Harsh Realities of Life That Everyone Must Face At Some Point

 

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Flavian Mwasi
Entrepreneur | Life Coach | Mentor
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Life is something I cherish; I’m enthusiastic about it. I’m an entrepreneur and author, meaning I also enjoy writing about such things as entrepreneurship, finance, relationships, and health.

Please enjoy reading my content and books. I’d like to read your comments and suggestions where necessary.

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Live responsibly. Have fun responsibly. When you were born, you were crying while everybody else was laughing. Live your life so that when you die, you’ll be laughing while everybody else will be crying.

“Wisdom is like a baobab tree. No one individual can embrace it.” — African proverb.


  1. Nobody owes you anything.
  2. Time is your most precious resource.
  3. Failure is inevitable.
  4. Hard work doesn’t always guarantee success.
  5. People will judge you—no matter what.
  6. Life is unfair.
  7. Not everyone will like you.
  8. Change is constant.
  9. Most people are selfish.
  10. Money matters more than you think.
  11. Love alone won’t sustain a relationship.
  12. You’re responsible for your own happiness.
  13. You will lose loved ones.
  14. Talent means nothing without discipline.
  15. The world moves on without you.
  16. You can't control everything.
  17. Most friendships are temporary.
  18. Social media is a highlight reel.
  19. No one is coming to save you.
  20. Your legacy is up to you.

PAGASA monitors cloud clusters over Mindanao for potential LPA formation

Effects of 'amihan,' easterlies to prevail in Luzon, rest of the country


The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) announced on Wednesday, Feb. 5, that it is closely monitoring cloud clusters over Mindanao for the potential formation of a Low-Pressure Area (LPA) as the northeast monsoon and easterlies continue to affect Luzon and the rest of the country.

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(PAGASA / MANILA BULLETIN)

“Meron tayong mga cloud clusters na namamataan sa may silangan ng Mindanao, bagama’t mababa ang tiyansa na maging isa itong bagyo, mino-monitor natin ito ngayon for possible formation as a low-pressure area (Cloud clusters have been observed east of Mindanao, although the chances of it developing into a storm are low, it is currently being monitored for possible formation into a low-pressure area),” said PAGASA weather specialist Benison Estareja in a weather forecast.

Meanwhile, Estareja said the northeast monsoon or “amihan” and easterlies continue to affect Luzon and the rest of the country, bringing isolated rain showers and cloudy skies. “Asahan pa rin ang epekto ng malamig na northeast monsoon o hanging amihan na nakakaapekto sa malaking bahagi ng Luzon, medyo malakas na ito sa ngayon kaya’t aasahan din ang mga mahina at katamtamang pag-ulan (Expect the cold northeast monsoon or 'hanging amihan' to continue affecting most parts of Luzon, which is now stronger, so light to moderate rains are also expected),” he explained.

Estareja also mentioned that the easterlies, or warm winds from the Pacific Ocean, are influencing the weather in Visayas and Mindanao.

In its daily weather forecast, PAGASA said that the northeast monsoon will bring cloudy skies and rain to Cagayan Valley, the Cordillera Administrative Region, Aurora, Quezon, and Camarines Norte.

Due to the "amihan," partly cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated light rains are also expected in Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon. 

Caraga, Eastern Samar, Southern Leyte, and Davao Oriental will experience cloudy skies with scattered rains and thunderstorms caused by the easterlies.

Likewise, partly cloudy to cloudy skies with isolated rain showers or thunderstorms are expected in the rest of the country, still due to the easterlies.

PAGASA warned of possible flash floods or landslides during severe thunderstorms or moderate to heavy rains.

Davison shines as PLDT drubs Farm Fresh

BY KRISTEL SATUMBAGA-VILLAR


AT A GLANCE

  • PLDT banked on hard-hitting Savi Davison as it made short work of Farm Fresh with a 25-20, 25-17, 25-19 victory on Tuesday, Feb. 4, in the Premier Volleyball League All-Filipino Conference at the Philsports Arena in Pasig City.


PLDT banked on hard-hitting Savi Davison as it made short work of Farm Fresh with a 25-20, 25-17, 25-19 victory on Tuesday, Feb. 4, in the Premier Volleyball League All-Filipino Conference at the Philsports Arena in Pasig City.

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Savi Davison scores 26 points for PLDT. (PVL Images)

The 5-foot-10 Davison was unstoppable at the attack line, pumping in 23 kills to finish with 26 points to steer the High Speed Hitters to their sixth win in nine matches.

It was the second straight triumph for PLDT as it aims to strengthen its playoff standing. They are currently at third behind unbeaten Creamline (7-0) and Petro Gazz (6-1), which is playing ZUS Coffee as of this writing. 

Mika Reyes also displayed her vintage form and unloaded nine attacks to finish with 10 points, while Erika Santos and Majoy Baron combined for 17 points.

“Lesson lang samin mawala yung complacency and mas maging consistent. Sana madala pa namin to sa mga next games namin,” said PLDT coach Rald Ricafort.

Angge Alcantara also played a key role throughout the 77-minute match, delivering 12 of the team’s 16 excellent sets, while libero Kath Arado and Fiola Ceballos took charge of the floor defense and conspired for 24 excellent digs.

PLDT pounced on Farm Fresh on all angles, outscoring them in attacks, 52-31, while making more blocks, 8-4. 

So tight were the High Speed Hitters’ defense that they limited all Foxies to single-digit production with Trisha Tubu being held to a measly nine points.

The Foxies failed to sustain their four-set victory over the Galeries Tower Highrisers last Thursday, Jan. 30, and slipped to a 4-5 win-loss record.

Does anybody still read the newspaper?

BY FORMER SENATE PRESIDENT MANNY VILLAR


OF TREES AND FOREST

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To be able to last for 125 years means you are doing something right. To be able to last for 125 years means that the people know and trust that you are doing something right. To be able to last 125 years means that you have been a witness to the unfolding of the nation’s history. This is what the Manila Bulletin has accomplished last Feb. 2, 2025. 


Just to give you an idea how mind-bending this feat is, when the Manila Bulletin started out as a shipping journal, The Daily Bulletin, churning out “accurate and reliable shipping and commercial information,” on Feb. 2, 1900, it was just about 20 months since General Emilio Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the Philippines on June 12, 1898. It was just less than 14 months since the signing of the Treaty of Paris in which Spain unjustly ceded the Philippines to the United States and US President William McKinley proclaimed a policy of “benevolent assimilation” in which the Philippines was to come under the sovereignty of the United States.


Around one year before the Manila Bulletin’s establishment, the Philippine-American War erupted, set off by a gun battle between an insurgent patrol and an American. Four months later, the First Philippine Republic would declare war against the nascent imperialistic intentions of the United States. 


In fact, with the exception of the four years during the Japanese occupation and a minor interlude during the declaration of Martial Law, the Manila Bulletin came out every day, a witness to our history, strengthening our democracy, contributing to national development and more importantly, upholding the truth and the tenets of journalism. It is an amazing achievement and I congratulate the management, staff and journalists (past and present) for making that possible.  


I read the editorial by the Manila Bulletin on Feb. 2, 2025 extolling its 125th anniversary. It proclaimed that despite all the challenges and hurdles, “the Manila Bulletin faces the future with optimism and determination.” Despite the changing times, the Manila Bulletin bravely stated that “its editorial policy remains clear: to uphold decency, principle, and fairness while advocating for the best interests of the country and its people.”


Despite such optimism, there are serious headwinds not just for the Manila Bulletin but for all of print media. It is an existential issue best expressed in this question which sounds more forceful in Filipino: “May nagbabasa pa ba ng dyaryo?” (Does anybody still read the newspaper?) Gone were the days when the first thing you look for when you wake up is the newspaper. It seems like a scene from a long time ago when you have a family gathered around having breakfast and the father drinking his coffee while reading the “peryodiko” (for those that are too young, that was how we called newspaper back then). 


I still do it. I love the smell of newsprint and coffee in the morning. But I am an old soul like that. Today, the first thing people do when they wake up is check their phones. And to the extent that they are interested in the news, they go to Facebook or Twitter. Today, you would probably see a typical family situated around a table but in their own zones checking social media feeds on their mobile. Before, what you read on the newspaper became the topic of actual conversations within the family, in the office, or with friends. Today, we “converse” by retweeting or “sharing.” We communicate in the comments section or reply with an emoji. 


These are different times, interesting times.


And so, while we celebrate this milestone by the Manila Bulletin, there is reason to be concerned about the future. “May magbabasa pa ba ng peryodiko?” I was searching for an answer until I found the mission of the Manila Bulletin on its website, which reads: “to provide…accurate and objective news of the Philippines, without embellishment or advocacy of persons and parties but only in ideas…it will strive to be positive rather than negative in its coverage and interpretation, build-up rather than destroy, encourage rather than take a stand of negative criticism and be courageous in reporting abuses and dishonesty, so that the medium will become an instrument of construction rather than destruction, without neglecting its critical function in society”.


I am not sure what the future of the print media would be. But I am mighty proud to be part of a news organization that stayed true to its core values even after 125 years. I am not sure “kung may magbabasa pa ng dyaryo.” But I hope that in the future “may interesado pa sa katotohanan.” (there would still be those interested with the truth.)  If that is the case, then a multi-media organization with a  print edition, like the Manila Bulletin, will survive and continue to thrive. 


(mbv_secretariat@vistaland.com.ph and/or http://www.mannyvillar.com)

Book on the Forgotten Kingdom of the True Malay Rulers in Mindanao Launched

The book chronicles the arrival of the early Muslim missionaries in Mindanao.


by Datuk Ben-Oliver M. Matias

The historic Manila Hotel recently served as the backdrop of an equally historic event, the gathering of foreign history scholars and traditional leaders of Mindanao for the 3rd Royal International Interfaith History Convention held last November 2024. Part of the ceremonies were public lectures and the launching of The Roots: Sejara Raja Raja Melayu Sejati Di Mindanao Darussalam (The History of the True Rulers of Mindanao Darussalam Negara Filipina).  

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BOOK DONATION Author HRH DYAM PSB Tengku Syarifah Marieta Nor-Aisha P. Mindalano-Adam H.D. (the Maharanee Permaisuri Sri Kandi Agong of Mindanao Darussalam) turns over a copy of The Roots to National Historical Commission of the Philippines librarian Diane Galang during the 3rd Royal International Interfaith History Convention held at the Manila Hotel

 

Authored by HRH DYAM PSB Tengku Syarifah Marieta Nor-Aisha P. Mindalano-Adam H.D. (the Maharanee Permaisuri Sri Kandi Agong of Mindanao Darussalam), the book chronicles the arrival of the early Muslim missionaries in Mindanao including the brothers Syarif Ali Maraja and Syarif Hassan, founders of the sultanates of Mindanao (Maguindanao) and Sulu, respectively.

 

“For more than a century, a forgotten kingdom in Mindanao had been obscured in Philippine history. Its catastrophic consequence led to the incorrect depiction of how Islam spread in pre-colonial Mindanao and the proliferation of royal claimants with questionable ancestry. Virtually unrecognized were the early missionaries and the ruler of Mindanao (Maguindanao), the Maharaja Tabunawai,” said Maharanee Permaisuri, president of Pertubuhan Bangsa Melayu Filipina (PBMF) and Pertubuhan Warisan Bangsa Melayu Filipina (PWBMF).

 

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HAND OVER Managing editor and former The Manila Bulletin writer Ben Matias symbolically hands over a copy of the book to author HRH DYAM PSB Tengku Syarifah Marieta Nor-Aisha P. Mindalano-Adam H.D. (the Maharanee Permaisuri Sri Kandi Agong of Mindanao Darussalam) together with the Editorial Team held at the Maynila Ballroom, The Manila Hotel during the 3rd Royal International Interfaith History Convention 

 

During the lectures, Malaysian Prof. (Tun) Suzana binti Hj Othman and Indonesian Prof. (Tun Guru) Fekri Juliansyah, PhD. affirmed that early missionaries Syarif Auliya (also known as Maulana Ibrahim Asmoroqondi in Tuban/ Karim Al-Makhdum in Sulu) and Syarif Kabungsuan were brothers to debunk the popular narrative. Their father was Sayyid Jumadil Kubro but from different mothers. The two history scholars also confirmed the genealogy of Maharaja Tabunawai and his brother Rajah Kecil Mamluk as the sons of Syarif Ali Maraja and Tengku Putri Paramisuli as published in The Roots.

 

The 200-page coffee-table book aims to correct the century-old misinformation about the mythical origins of Maharaja Tabunawai and his purported surrender to a newcomer missionary. It also identified the early Islamic missionaries including the brothers Syarif Ali Maraja and Syarif Hassan, the founders of the sultanates of Maguindanao and Sulu, respectively. The restored historical narrative was presented by means of genealogies, archaeological objects, and heritage sites in Nusantara countries.

 

Research work started in 2015 and was only completed in 2024. The book was a testament to the passion and dedication of the husband and wife team of the late HM DYMM PSB Hadji Datu Abdullah Lihondo Esmael bin Muhammad Maulana Al Qadhi Adam (the Maharaja Tabunawai VIII of Mindanao) and Maharanee Permaisuri to restore and the honor and dignity of their clan.

 

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SPECIAL RECOGNITION OF LEADERS AWARD Dato Dr. HJ RA Huzaifah Dato Hashim, Board of Director and Chairman of Research and Special Affairs Bureau of The Malay and Islamic World Secretariat receives a medal from HRH DYAM PSB Tengku Syarifah Marieta Nor-Aisha P. Mindalano-Adam H.D. (the Maharanee Permaisuri Sri Kandi Agong of Mindanao Darussalam). He was also conferred the title of "Yang Amat Mulia Dato Sri Amar Diraja.”

 

Published by Roy C. Espinosa of Fil-Arts, the editorial team is composed of editor Dr. Carlos C. Tabunda Jr., managing editor (and former Manila Bulletin writer) Ben Matias, and researchers Datu Azmir Muizz V. Mindalano and Datu Sukarno Usman Budi. The Roots’ author was a former division chief of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao-Bureau of Cultural Heritage and a multi-awarded advocate of Malay heritage in the Philippines.

BLACKPINK’s Jisoo to hold fan meeting in Manila

BY JONATHAN HICAP


BLACKPINK member Jisoo will be coming to Manila for her fan meeting. 

“Let the fan meet begin!” Blissoo, Jisoo’s label, announced on Feb. 4. 

The event, “2025 JISOO ASIA TOUR: LIGHTS, LOVE, ACTION!" will be held in Manila, Bangkok, Tokyo, Macau, Taipei, Hong Kong and Hanoi. 

No dates have been announced yet about the fan meeting. 

“Ticketing information will be released soon on JISOO APP,” Blissoo added. 

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Jisoo (X)

Jisoo will release her mini-album “Amortage” on Feb. 14. The album contains four tracks: “Earthquake,” “Your Love,” “Tears” and “Hugs & Kisses.” 

Jisoo participated in writing all the songs. 

Meanwhile, Jisoo and Korean actor Park Jeong-min are starring in the Korean zombie apocalypse series “Newtopia,” premiering on Prime Video on Feb. 7. 

In the series, Lee Jae-yoon (Park Jeong-min), who is serving his military service, and his girlfriend Kang Young-joo (Jisoo) race to be reunited in zombie-infested Seoul. 

Übersetzerdienste - Translation Services

Even after retiring as German Consul, I am still accredited as a German translator and interpreter for the German, Swiss and Austrian Embassy as well as for Regional Trial Court Davao City and all courts nationwide. Please pm for via doringklaus@gmail.com further information. I'll be answering your messages as soon as possible. Please be patient. Auch nach meiner Pensionierung als deutscher Konsul bin ich weiterhin als deutscher Übersetzer und Dolmetscher für die deutsche, schweizerische und österreichische Botschaft sowie für das Regional Trial Court Davao City landesweit akkreditiert. Für weitere Informationen senden Sie bitte eine PN an doringklaus@gmail.com. Ich werde Ihre Nachrichten so schnell wie möglich beantworten.