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 10, 2023

OPM icon Rey Valera headlines pre-Valentine concert ‘Pangako Sa’Yo’ at Manila Hotel

by Manila Bulletin Entertainment

Live Artists Production Inc. presents the pre-Valentine concert entitled “Pangako Sa’yo” that will be held at the Manila Hotel on Feb. 12-13. The show’s dinner with buffet will start at 7 p.m. Then the concert will begin at 8 pm.

OPM icon Rey Valera will treat his fans with his greatest hits ballads that have become the soundtrack of their lives. He popularized the songs “Kung Kailangan Mo Ako,” “Sorry Na, Puwede Ba,” “Malayo Pa Ang Umaga,” “Walang Kapalit,” “Tayong Dalawa,” and many more.

Also making a special appearance at the concert is Star Magic artist Sheryn Regis.

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For ticket inquiries, call +63 2 85270011 loc. 1379 or call 0922-8226917 for reservations.

DdO People's Org get P19-M sustainable assistance from DSWD-XI


To improve the socio-economic status of formerly conflict-affected communities in Davao de Oro, the Regional Office of the Department of Social and Welfare Development (DSWD-XI) yesterday (February 8, 2023), turned over P19-million pesos worth of financial assistance to sixty-six people’s organizations (POs) at the Capitol Lobby, Nabunturan.

Sustainable Livelihood Program (SLP) Provincial Coordinator Wilfredo R. Planas said that the assistance is under the PAyapa at MAsaganang PAmayaNAn (PAMANA) of the national government, funded by the Office of the President.

He also added that each PO received PHP300,000 checks as start-up capital for their chosen project or business, such as general merchandise stores among others.

"We conducted constant monthly monitoring sa atong mga identified SLP associations sa probinsya pinaagi sa Project Development Officers ug concerned partner agencies aron masiguro nga adunay development nga mahitabo,” Planas added.

Leonora D. Ambas, SLP Kapatagan-Association President in Laak, expressed gratitude to the government for the assistance provided to their association from various capacity development training, monitoring, and supervising.



“Tungod sa hiniusang kusog sa mga ahensya, sa pagpasabot ug pag-unong kanamo, natagam-taman na namo karon ang tinood nga kalinaw ug nahatagag higayon nga maplastar ang amoang asosasyon diin nakatabang sa matag-usa nga membro og sa kinatibok-ang kumunidad,” Ambas added.

Present during the ceremony were Governor Dorothy Montejo-Gonzaga, represented by Acting Provincial Administrator Fatima P. Montejo, 1001st OIC Commanding Officer, COL Febie N Lamerez, 28th Battalion Commander, LTCOL Ronilo G Desingano, PSWDO Head Josephine Frasco, and personnel from DSWD-XI.

The DSWD-SLP is part of the holistic approach of the government that seeks to improve the program beneficiaries through a micro-enterprise development and employment facilitation program that shall ultimately provide a sustainable source of income. (Rheafe Hortizano, Photos by Albert Dayao)

Doing things well




By Fr. Roy Cimagala *


“HE has done all things well. He makes the deaf hear and the mute speak.” (Mk 7,37)

We may not be able to make the deaf hear and the mute speak, but we should try our best that we can also gain the same reputation as that of Christ. We should be known for doing whatever we have to do, well.


Obviously, the motive should never be one of pride or vanity, but rather the strong desire to be like Christ as we should. It should be a reputation that obviously would make us happy, but definitely it should make us more humble and eager to serve others, considering that everything that we achieve is actually a gift from God.


We have to understand that our work, whatever it is, whether it is high or low, is our usual way to give praise and glory to God. It is actually our way of cooperating in the abiding providence of God. We should not underestimate the value of our work. It can and should be our path to heaven. It should be done well.


That is why we should see to it first of all that our work is what God wants us to do. Our attitude toward our work should not be conditioned mainly, much less, solely, by the fact we like a particular kind of work or that we have the aptitude toward it, or the relevant qualities and skills for it. While these factors matter, they should not be the main criterion. Such an attitude can only confine us to our own interest.


What should guide us is what God and the others want and need from us, and how they want to be served. This attitude should determine the kind of work we do and the way we do it, and would bring us to tackle the objective requirements of the common good.


Having determined that, we should love our work, doing it as best that we can. And this can mean that we carry it out very conscientiously, “squeezing” each hour for all it is worth. We should work in such a way that we would always be short of time for finishing what we would like to do.


It can also mean that we look very carefully after the details in finishing our daily work. We should lovingly exert the necessary effort for it and embrace the sacrifices involved—that is, the setbacks, the difficulties, the tiredness and fatigue, etc. 


These are normal occurrences in our daily work that we should not anymore be surprised about. We just have to be prepared for them, since they are occasions to grow in our love for God and others. In short, in our holiness.


We should work in such a way that we can say that we bring them to the end. Our work should make us feel good as we go to bed. There should be peace and joy, the sensation that despite the drama of life, things are resolved somehow. We should feel the sensation that we have arrived home somehow, a sense of reaching our final goal.


This can only happen if ending the day well is associated with reconciling ourselves with God regardless of how things in our life are at the end of the day. With God, everything is taken care of.


That’s when we can truly say that we have done all things well!


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

Email: roycimagala@gmail.com

Thursday, February 9, 2023

How do you come to terms with the thick Filipino accent ...

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On Speaking Tagalog/Visayan

As someone who has spent time in different parts of the Philippines, it’s straight up impossible to get every accent right.

Not to diss the Tagalogs, but they do have a tendency to point out or make fun of Visayans when they try to speak Tagalog. A lot of Visayans already prefer speaking English over Tagalog, and people making fun of them doesn’t help. Especially when they don’t speak a lick of Visayan themselves.

What people should realize is that we are all multilingual. We have our accents. We can correct each other, but in a nice way.

On speaking English

I love it when we stick to our natural accents when speaking English. When I say natural, I mean however you speak it when you are alone in the shower.

hate it when we consciously change our accents to sound more Americanized.

Conclusion

Just speak as naturally and clearly as possible. Stop caring about accents. It’s not worth it, at all.

RISING MODUS IN NAIA: A WARNING TO TRAVELERS | TIPS & YOUR RIGHTS


A not-so-new but growing modus... How can we prevent airport criminals from stealing our luggage? What rights do we have?

NOBODY IS PERFECT


Nobody is perfect, and nobody deserves to be perfect. Nobody has it easy, everybody has issues. You never know what people are going through. So pause before you start judging, criticizing, or mocking others. Everybody is fighting their own unique war.


I don't care what people think about me.  I am a different person and life has taught me that you don't know me! And you can't judge me! Look at yourself in the mirror first! People in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.  


Don't judge others and God won't judge you. Forgive others and God forgive you. Give and gifts will be given back in good measure, a generous helping. Compress, shaken down, overflowing. For the measure you give for others, is the measure God gives you.


No one has the right to judge anyone else so be kind and Almighty bless you all. So stop judging and condemning others for what they want to do with their life or whomever they are. Who they are and you sure can't change them for the better. Thank you so much for your kindness and judging by the way who they are and what they are !


Many of us believe perfectionism is a positive. You may count me in.


More often than I’d like to admit, something seemingly inconsequential will cause the same feeling to rear its head again. Something as small as accidentally squashing the makeup I was bringing my first girlfriend’s family for Christmas can tumble around in my mind for several days, accompanied by occasional voices like “How stupid!” and “You should have known better”. 


Falling short of a bigger goal, even when I know achieving it would be near-impossible, can temporarily flatten me. When a former agent told me that she knew I was going to write a book someday but that the particular idea I’d pitched her didn’t suit the market, I felt deflated in a gut-punching way that went beyond disappointment. The negative drowned out the positive. “You’re never going to write a book,” my internal voice said. “You’re not good enough.” That voice didn’t care that this directly contradicted what the agent actually said. And, up to now, I haven't finished my first book, yet... .


That’s the thing about perfectionism. It takes no prisoners.


If I’ve struggled with perfectionism, I’m far from alone. The tendency starts young – and it’s becoming more common. Thomas Curran and Andrew Hill’s recent meta-analysis of rates of perfectionism from 1989 to 2016, the first study to compare perfectionism across generations, found significant increases among more recent undergraduates in the US, UK and Canada. In other words, the average college student last year was much more likely to have perfectionistic tendencies than a student in the 1990's or early 2000's.


It's heading toward an epidemic and public health issue. It's a great quotation from Katie Rasmussen.


“As many as two in five kids and adolescents are perfectionists,” says Katie, who researches child development and perfectionism at West Virginia University. “We’re starting to talk about how it’s heading toward an epidemic and public health issue.”


The rise in perfectionism doesn’t mean each generation is becoming more accomplished. It means we’re getting sicker, sadder and even undermining our own potential.


Here is another great example: a perfectionist, French Claude Monet often destroyed his paintings in a temper while saying, ‘My life has been nothing but a failure'.


Perfectionism, after all, is an ultimately self-defeating way to move through the world. It is built on an excruciating irony: making, and admitting, mistakes is a necessary part of growing and learning and being human. It also makes you better at your career and relationships and life in general. By avoiding mistakes at any cost, a perfectionist can make it harder to reach their own lofty goals.


But the drawback of perfectionism isn’t just that it holds you back from being your most successful, productive self. Perfectionistic tendencies have been linked to a laundry list of clinical issues: depression and anxiety (even in children), self-harm, social anxiety disorder and agoraphobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, binge eating, anorexia, bulimia, and other eating disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, chronic fatigue syndrome, insomnia, hoarding, dyspepsia, chronic headaches, and, most damning of all, even early mortality and suicide.


“It’s something that cuts across everything, in terms of psychological problems,” says Sarah Egan, a senior research fellow at the Curtin University in Perth who specialises in perfectionism, eating disorders and anxiety.


Culturally, I learned, we often see perfectionism as a positive. Even saying you have perfectionistically tendencies can come off as a coy compliment to yourself; it’s practically a stock answer to the “What’s your worst trait?” question in job interviews. (Past employers, now you know! I wasn’t just being cute).


Studies have shown that ‘adaptive’ aspects like striving for achievement have no effect at all or may even protect you.


It is difficult to tell who is motivated and conscientious and who is a perfectionist. Earlier, in my daily teaching at the University of Southeastern Philippines in Davao City, I met a student who works hard and gets a poor mark. If she/her tells herself: “I’m disappointed, but it’s okay; I’m still a good person overall,” that’s healthy. If the message is: “I’m a failure. I’m not good enough,” that’s perfectionism.


That inner voice criticises different things for different people – work, relationships, tidiness, fitness. My own tendencies may differ greatly from somebody else’s. It can take someone who knows me well to pick up on them. (When I messaged one of my friends I was writing this story, he immediately sent back a long line of laughing emojis).


Perfectionists can make smooth sailing into a storm, a brief ill wind into a category-five hurricane. At the very least, they perceive it that way. And, because the ironies never end, the behaviors perfectionists adapt ultimately, actually, do make them more likely to fail.


Thinking of perfectionism, makes me think of my own childhood peppered with avoiding (or starting and quitting) almost every sport there was. If I wasn’t adept at something almost from the get-go, I didn’t want to continue – especially if there was an audience watching. In fact, multiple studies have found a correlation between perfectionism and performance anxiety even in children as young as 10.


Mental health problems aren’t just caused by perfectionism; some of these problems can lead to perfectionism, too. One recent study, for example, found that over a one-year period, college students who had social anxiety were more likely to become perfectionists – but not vice versa.


When it comes to the most dramatic example, suicide, numerous studies also have found that perfectionism is a lethal contributor all on its own. One found that perfectionism made depressed patients more likely to think about suicide even above and beyond feelings of hopelessness. A recent meta-analysis, the most complete on the suicide-perfectionism link to date, found that nearly every perfectionistic tendency – including being concerned over mistakes, feeling like you are never good enough, having critical parents, or simply having high personal standards – was correlated with thinking about suicide more frequently. (The two exceptions: being organised or demanding of others).


Some of those criteria, particularly pressure from parents and perfectionistic concerns, also were correlated with more suicide attempts.


In many ways, poorer health outcomes for perfectionists aren’t that surprising. “Perfectionists are pretty much awash with stress. Even when it’s not stressful, they’ll typically find a way to make it stressful,” says Gordon Flett, who has studied perfectionism for more than 30 years and whose assessment scale developed with Paul Hewitt is considered a gold standard. Plus, he says, if your perfectionism finds an outlet in, say, workaholism, it’s unlikely you’ll take many breaks to relax – which we now know both our bodies and brains require for healthy functioning.


After all, many of us live in societies where the first question when you meet someone is what you do for a living. Where we are so literally valued for the quality and extent of our accomplishments that those achievements often correlate, directly, to our ability to pay rent or put food on the table. Where complete strangers weigh these on-paper values to determine everything from whether we can rent that flat or buy that car or receive that loan. Where we then signal our access to those resources with our appearance – these shoes, that physique – and other people weigh that, in turn, to see if we’re the right person for a job interview or dinner invitation.


Fear of failure is getting magnified in other ways, too. Take social media: make a mistake today and your fear that it might be broadcast, even globally, is hardly irrational. At the same time, all of those glossy feeds reinforce unrealistic standards.


In my opinion, and I am not alone with it, it’s the idea that you don’t have to be perfect to be lovable or to be loved. It’s a work in progress. And,  what I’ve noticed too, is that, each time I’m able to replace criticizing and perfecting with compassion, I feel not only less stressed, but freer. Apparently, that’s not unusual.


How about you, my dear readers?