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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Showing posts with label AA Patawaran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AA Patawaran. Show all posts

Monday, April 24, 2023

Hey, daydreamer


A daydream is a meal at which images are eaten. Some of us are gourmets, some gourmands, and a good many take their images precooked out of a can and swallow them down whole, absent-mindedly and with little relish. —W. H Auden


AT A GLANCE

  • The writer is cursed, yes he is. He has been sentenced to a life of daydreaming in a world, where “Gising(wake up)!” translates to “Get off your lazy ass and do something.”


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But as a writer you cannot help it. You have to do it. It is in daydreams that your stories originate and then percolate and that’s also where you initially string the words needed to express them. In fact, you can write an entire article or flash fiction in your head. Meanwhile, even your own mother will snap her fingers in your face because “Hey, don’t you want to go out there and make friends? Play basketball or patintero or something.” Either that or you’re jolted out of your reveries and told to make your bed or wash the dishes or sweep the floor or do any chore because you just can’t stare out of the window all day.

Sometimes, you walk down the street from school and mouth words you invent out of imagined conversations. And someone catches you doing it as you cross their path and they either give you a puzzled look or they flat out tell you you’re a lunatic, talking to yourself like that.

It’s not far out for others to decide for you who you are. It’s not hard to believe their accusations that you are lazy when you know you can spend hours just looking up at the sky. It’s not hard to believe their accusations that you are crazy when you spend the weekend reading the medical encyclopedia and then the following week feeling all the symptoms. Yikes, I went through that myself and maybe I should thank my lucky stars that, just as I was halfway through the volume on mental disorders, my grandmother decided to keep the encyclopedia away from me, under lock and key.

Writing is hard enough, but it’s even harder that so few understand it, not even those who generously praise you for your gift of words. Yes, maybe they do consider it an art form to write well, but not as much as they value paintings or sculpture or even fashion. They think it’s easy because you don’t really need that much to write—just pen and paper and, well, a whole lifetime spent to fill the paper with something magical or extraordinary or well done.

As a young person growing up with dreams of writing, it is almost an instinct to keenly observe the world around you and chances are you will come off weird. “He gives me the creeps,” whisper your classmates. “When he looks at you, it’s like he stares.” What they do not know is that you might be checking them out in case one of them will figure in a future novel. Not really. In the eye of a writer, everything is a potential story and you do not want to miss out on the details.

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If you are gregarious, instead of shy, which many writers are before they find their voices or come to terms with the passion pre-ordained for them, it’s likely you will be quite the storyteller, inventing encounters or experiences and exaggerating everything for maximum impact. In prep school, I regaled my classmates with a movie I didn’t see, a movie that didn’t exist, about a science experiment gone wrong that made itself to the oceans and made giants of squids and shrimp and octopi, as well as a sperm whale that threatened to be bigger than earth. I don’t know why I lied. I guess it was more believable as a movie than as a figment of my imagination. But I was so terrified when a classmate said his father couldn’t find the movie.

It’s not easy growing up to be a writer, unless maybe your parents were fictionists or National Artists for Literature. Or even then, it’s not impossible you will simply stay in their shadows. Otherwise, you might just worry them when you move your writing desk to the top of the stairs so you can write with the steep stairs behind you and you can imagine something ghastly creeping up on you as you write. I did that a couple of times, convinced that I wrote better when I was scared.

So you live your life like that, much of it in your head, up in the clouds, among the stars, and of course between the covers of a thousand and one books. And then, at last, you become a writer and in order to do what you love to do, which is writing, you realize you have to be everything you did not practice to be—you have to be socially charming, you have to be marketing-savvy, you have to wean yourself off your dependence on inspiration because the deadline trumps it, you have to keep your ears on the ground rather than in tune with the song of the muses. Alas, writing isn’t only about pounding on the keys of your writing instrument. Imagination isn’t the only world you ought to inhabit; real life, too, especially real life.

Yet, you still need some kind of schizophrenia, some kind of madness, especially if you are a fictionist or a portraitist or a journalist. Imagine all the shoes you ought to put yourself in to write your stories. Imagine how much time you need to cover, from past to present to the future, near or distant, imminent or improbable.

It does take a little madness to be a writer.

Let’s fly together

 PANORAMASPECIALS

Let’s fly together

Nine travel industry top guns form an alliance to help tourism not only get back on its feet but also sail away and soar


AT A GLANCE

  • ‘Passengers are booking multiple trips even until next year, whether domestic or international destinations.’


FRIENDS who TRAVEL TOGETHER TravelingBFFsPH in Nagasaki.jpg
FRIENDS WHO TRAVEL TOGETHER TravelingBFFsPH in Nagasaki

“Wanderlust is real,” said International Journey’s Kem Aldrich Lim to me when I asked him how the travel industry was recovering from the disruption caused by the pandemic.

He and eight other travel agents, including Skynet Travel Corporation’s Dorothy Aytona, Travel Specialist Ventures Group’s Rowena Coloma, Skywin Travel and Tours’ Shirley Go, Travel Plus International’s Emily Lo, Golden Sky Travel and Tours’ Dolly Santos, Globetrotters’ Helena Ty, Travel Warehouse’s Jaison Yang, and Fiesta Tours and Travel Corporation’s Robbie Young, banded together to form TravellingBFFsPH when business ground to a halt in 2020 as a result of the global lockdowns. Each member, needless to say, is at the helm of his or her travel agency as president, general manager, vice president, or business development head.

Shirley Go Vice president, Skywin Travel and Tours Corp.jpg
SHIRLEY GO Vice president, Skywin Travel and Tours Corp.

“TravelingBFFsPH is a non-formal alliance of travel industry professionals, who support each other, though there are times we also compete with each other, which is normal for a small industry like ours,” explained Jaison. “But we are also real friends.”

I had the privilege of taking a Philippine Airlines trip with all nine of them to Fukouka, Nagasaki, and Nagoya in Japan just as the world was opening up in earnest after closing up borders to international tourists for over two years to keep Covid-19 at bay.

KEM ALDRICH LIM President, International Jouneys, Inc.jpg
KEM ALDRICH LIM President, International Jouneys, Inc.

In those times that everything was at a standstill and operation at travel agencies was indefinitely suspended, this group sought each other’s help, doing other things, including several advocacies and community engagements. “It was to help each other out not necessarily financially, but more emotionally, mentally by keeping ourselves busy,” added Jaison.

“In the pandemic, TravelingBFFs was the most visible group in the industry. Though most of our businesses were closed, we collaborated with the Tourism Promotions Board, the Department of Tourism, and some airlines to help domestic tourism by slowly organizing familiarization trips to help local destinations recover. Eventually, we started working with international carriers to promote newly opened destinations like Vietnam, Thailand, and now Japan.”

Rowena Coloma President and general manager, Travel Specialist Ventures Group, Inc.jpg

ROWENA COLOMA President and general manager, Travel Specialist Ventures Group, Inc.

Now that it’s almost business as usual, TravelingBFFs is an alliance beneficial not only to its members, but also to its clients, the industry, and allied industries like airlines, hotels, and F&B. “At the very least,” said Jaison, “we learn from each other. We share each other’s trade secrets. We celebrate each other’s successes, and we sympathize with each other’s failures.”

But is it really business as usual for travel in the Philippines?

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JAISON YANG President, Travel Warehouse, Inc.

“Yes,” said Rowena. She has observed that preferences have changed dramatically after the pandemic. “Before the pandemic, they were more budget-conscious. They would want the most economical way of traveling—economy class tickets, three-star accommodations…They would join group tours or bus tours, which are more affordable,” she explained. “But now, we receive a lot of requests for private tours, small groups, and premium travel. They want to experience luxury travel with their families.

They are conscious about social distancing, so they prefer to take business class. It’s more convenient and less crowded.”

To Emily, in a way, it’s the same as before the pandemic. “But families and friends want to spend time together now more than before,” she said. “More and more people want private tours and DIY tours rather than joining bigger groups to lower the cost. They really do want to spend quality time and build on core memories.”

DOROTHY AYTONA President and general manager, Skynet Travel Corporation.jpg
DOROTHY AYTONA President and general manager, Skynet Travel Corporation

The traveling behavior of Filipinos, according to Dolly, has indeed changed post pandemic. “Majority tend to splurge and buy a minimum of two packages of tours for the family—one long haul (Europe, the US, Canada, or the Middle East) and the other, short haul (Asia),” she said. “They prefer relaxing and meaningful experiences, rather than fast-paced and the usual itineraries. Most of them, especially the well-traveled, go for new destinations with different cultures, specifically destinations like Morocco, East and West Africa, and for the religious, Israel.”

“Among the main changes with the pandemic is that Filipinos want to experience more unique itineraries, as compared to more generic itineraries prior to the pandemic,” added Kem.

Helena Ty Managing director, Globetrotters, Inc.jpg

HELENA TY Managing director, Globetrotters, Inc.

Revenge travel? I asked and Helena exclaimed, “Yes, there is such a thing! Filipinos now are eager to travel all over the world, no matter what it takes. Even then, they are still very practical about their itinerary, choosing the best, most affordable options for their trips.”

Dorothy agrees. “When Filipinos travel, they’re looking for a good time. They want to take advantage of things like low prices and more vacation days,” she says, adding, however, that for her, it’s business more than usual. “Passengers are booking multiple trips even until next year, whether domestic or international destinations,” she explains. “Most of our clients’ popular types of trips are leisure, business, or education.”

Dolly Santos President, Golden Sky Travel and Tours Corp.jpg
DOLLY SANTOS President, Golden Sky Travel and Tours Corp.

Truth be faced, travel is more expensive now. Let’s not even talk about the fluctuating oil prices. “Filipinos have been including travel insurance in their travels more,” Shirley pointed out. “Due to the pandemic, they are more health conscious than before. They also ask about charges regarding how we’ll take care of them in case they get Covid during their trip. Other factors such as inflation also changed their perception in travel. Travel has again become a luxury unlike before the pandemic, when it was budget friendly.”

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ROBBIE YOUNG Business development specialist, Fiesta Tours and Travel Corporation

People want more from travel now, that’s the essence of revenge travel, and therefore so much more is expected of the travel agent. In TravelingBFFsPH, each of the nine members can now draw from the pool of experiences that they have individually and collectively gathered in the line of duty as well as from their own personal travels.

To Robbie, there are three key things that a travel agent must be able to manage for a client on any given trip—Expectations, perceptions, and memories. “These three factors connect the entire processes of the trip, which then create the tourist experience and may even influence other tourists’ expectations for the same or different types of trips,” he said.

Emily Lo President, Travel Plus International, Inc.jpg
EMILY LO President, Travel Plus International, Inc.

But what are a travel agent’s expectations from a trip he or she designed for others? “It’s my pet peeve that Filipinos visit and leave a place without any insight as to the history of the country. Most of our tours, tour members just love taking nice photos,” said Kem. “We should read up on history and interact with the locals. It’s the best way to understand nations and cultures. You also learn about yourself more as you learn more about other places.”

Kem also shared something unique about the Filipinos as travelers. “It is often marveled at that Filipinos always travel with three generations—kids, parents, and grandparents,” he said. “The idea is unimaginable in other countries, where lesser weight is put on family ties.”

There’s a reason Filipinos are at home anywhere in the world. Travel runs in our genes, and passed on through the gene pool, plus ours is an archipelago of such diversity on its 7,641 islands that even travel within the national borders can be extensive enough to make travelers of each of us.

In order to hone such great potential, the travel industry and the government must really get their act together, just as these nine travel professionals got together, nine better than one, as TravelingBFFsPH.

Thursday, January 26, 2023

Hala bira!

by AA Patawaran

SM Group throws massive support behind Dinagyang, the mother of Philippine festivals

Over the weekend, cheers of “Hala Bira!” and “Viva Pit Señor” filled the streets of Iloilo City and, more

than expressions of deep devotion to the Sto. Niño, the Infant Jesus, these cheers have also been about rah-rah-ing the Ilonggos and their visitors to shout for joy about all that is worth shouting about in Iloilo.

There was more to shout about this year, the return of Dinagyang to the streets after two years of pandemic restrictions, for one, but more because with Joe Mari Layson chairing the Iloilo Festivals Foundation Inc. (IFFI), no stone had been left unturned in making the comeback a roaring success. 

No less than the SM Group, well-represented by the sprawling, 170,000-square-meter SM City Iloilo, the eighth of the chain’s supermalls, on Senator Benigno Aquino Jr. Avenue in Mandurriao, threw massive support behind what is generally considered the “mother of Philippine festivals,” donating a hefty amount to the cause. SM Supermalls president Steven Tan flew in to hand over ₱10 million in cash to the IFFI in simple ceremonies over lunch at Breakthrough in Villa Arevalo, with Iloilo City Mayor Jerry Treñas as witness.

BIG BENEFACTOR As support to the Dinagyang Festival, SM Supermalls president Steven Tan (second from right) entrusts a ₱10 million check to Iloilo Festivals Foundation Incorporated president Joe Mari Layson (center) as witnessed by Iloilo City Mayor Jerry Treñas

The donation, topped by ₱7 million more in kind from SM City Iloilo, would go a long way now that the IFFI had introduced the latest of Dinagyang innovation, the Ilomination, held the night before Dinagyang, on Saturday night, with seven tribes representing the seven districts of Iloilo City—City Proper, Jaro, La Paz, Lapuz, Mandurriao, Molo, and Villa Arevalo—competing against each other with dazzling performances in their uniquely illuminated costumes and props.

Although the stage where the performances were held spanned the whole stretch of Iloilo Diversion Road in Mandurriao, from Atria Park to the Iloilo Business Park, the main judging area was right at the entrance of SM City Iloilo. It was also where the VIPs congregated, led by Mayor Treñas, Senator Franklin Drilon, and Senator Pia Hontiveros. Present were ambassadors like Tull Traisorat of Thailand, Xiomara Perez Rodriguez of Panama, Agus Widjojo of Indonesia, Borhan Uddin of Bangladesh, Folakemi Ibidunni Akinleye of Nigeria, Christian Halaas Lyster of Norway, and Raduta Dana Matache of Romania. Also spotted were sensational blogger Small Laude, and media darlings Tim Yap, Tessa Prieto, and Karen Davila.

LIGHT UP THE NIGHT A new component to this year’s Dinagyang Festival is the Ilomination, an evening competition where representatives of the seven districts of Iloilo City perform with illuminated costumes and props (Jade Dequiña)

Emerging as champion for the first-ever Dinagyang Ilomination competition was Tribu La Paz, which, also cited as best in music and best in musical direction, received the grand prize of ₱1 million in cash. Tribu Molo came in second, also bagging the awards for best in light and best light designer while Tribu Mandurriao came in as third, also winning awards for best in costume design and headdress and best costume designer.

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As for Dinagyang proper, held the following day at the New Iloilo Freedom Grandstand on Muelle Loney Street in Iloilo City Proper, the grand winner of Dagyang sa Barangay, the main event of the annual festival held every year on the fourth Sunday of January, in which eight barangay clans competed, was Tribu Parianon of the Molo district, bagging the ₱1 million cash prize, along with the awards for best in music, best in choreography, and best in performance. Tribu Molave kang Salog, previously called Tribu Barangayan, was first runner-up, also cited as the people’s choice, best in costume design and headdress, and best in production design. Tribu Familia Sagasa was second runner-up.

BATCHOY CONVERSATION Enjoying each other’s company over the Ilonggo staple La Paz batchoy are (from left) the author, Tim Yap, Tessa Prieto, Steven Tan, Mayor Jerry Treñas, Karen Davila, and Tibong Jardeleza

It was a crazy weekend with simultaneous events and parties going on, including the Batchoy Festival at SM Southpoint, the AweSM PCCI-ILOBEX Dinagyang trade fair, the Viva Music Festival at the SM South Point Parking, and the AweSM Iloilo musical fireworks and drone show.

SM Supermalls president Steven Tan flew in to hand over ₱10 million in cash to the IFFI in simple ceremonies over lunch at Breakthrough in Villa Arevalo, with Iloilo City Mayor Jerry Treñas as witness.

Mayor Treñas hosted a VVIP dinner at the grand ballroom of the Park Inn by Radisson Iloilo in honor of Steven Tan, from which we all proceeded to the pool deck to watch the fireworks and dance the night away with Bacolod band Mojo Nova. But we still had enough energy to go to an afterparty at the Azul Latin Bistro, where all of Manila showed up, including fashion maverick Chris Nick de los Reyes, hair stylist Jing Monis, chef Francis Tolentino, Globe Telecom’s Mic Coson, and H&M Philippines’ Dan Mejia. From there, with Iloilo cuisine and culture advocate, chef Tibong Jardeleza, Tessa, Tim, and I, joined later by publicist Keren Pascual, proceeded to Luna’s to cap the night with arroz caldo.

ILOILO GLOW The staging of the Dinagyang Ilomination tribes competition on the evening of Jan. 21, 2023 was a showcase the major growth areas of Iloilo City

As if it wasn’t busy enough, on Sunday afternoon, we joined First Lady Liza Araneta Marcos and Mayor Treñas, as Steven Tan representing SM Foundation Inc. (SMFI), with SMFI health and medical programs director Connie Angeles, turned over the newly upgraded pediatric ward of the Western Visayas Sate University Medical Center (WVSUMC) to WVSUMC president Dr. Joselito Villaruz and WVSU hospital director Dr. Dave Endel R. Gelito III.

While the pediatric ward, which offers procedures such as IV insertion, chemotherapy, and lumbar puncture, treating a whole range of illnesses and diseases, from pneumonia, gastroenteritis, and malnutrition to epilepsy, seizures, brain tumors, and cancer, is designed principally to serve patients from Iloilo City’s underserved communities, it also serves other cities and municipalities in the region, including Antique, Aklan, Capiz, Guimaras, and even Palawan and Negros Occidental.

IN HONOR OF THE STO. NIÑO Joining the turnover of the refurbished Western Visayas State University Medical Center pediatric ward are (from left) SM Supermalls president Steven Tan, First Lady Liza Araneta Marcos, Iloilo City Mayor Jerry Treñas, WVSU Hospital director Dr. Dave Endel R. Gelito III, and executive director for health and medical programs Connie Angeles

SMFI has refurbished the ward’s step-down NICU, pediatric ward for non-infectious cases, and treatment room and equipped it with specialized medical appliances and devices, such as pediatric cribs, bassinets, treatment beds, nebulizers, gun thermometers, and a mini refrigerator for vaccines. The center also received breastfeeding chairs, divan chairs, office tables and chairs, beddings, pillows, TV, water dispenser, and ceiling fans. Moreover, the SMFI upgraded the hallway, toilet, and hand washing area. To date, SMFI has renovated more than 170 health and wellness centers and served more than one million patients on its medical missions. 

Iloilo City is such a happening place. There really are many reasons to scream “Hala Bira!” if what we mean is “Keep going, Iloilo! Go! Go! Go!” There really are many things to thank the Sto. Niño for.