This might not be the typical expat blog, written by a German expat, living in the Philippines since 1999. It's different. In English and in German. Check it out! Enjoy reading! Dies mag' nun wirklich nicht der typische Auswandererblog eines Deutschen auf den Philippinen sein. Er soll etwas anders sein. In Englisch und in Deutsch! Viel Spass beim Lesen!
You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?
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!
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Sunday, October 12, 2025
What foreigners can teach us
Davao Oriental fast-tracks earthquake rehab

Bayanihan in action: Now is the time to step up, not step back
By Manila Bulletin
Published Oct 12, 2025 12:05 am
In the wake of last week’s calamitous earthquakes — first a magnitude-7.4 quake off Davao Oriental then a magnitude 6.8 in the same area Oct. 10, following closely after the magnitude 6.9 quake in Cebu island on Sept. 30 — the Philippines is once again confronted with the raw power of nature and the fragility of our built environment. In Cebu alone, more than 70 lives were lost, hundreds were injured, and thousands of homes and public infrastructure were severely damaged or destroyed. In Davao and surrounding provinces, the quake triggered landslides, damaged roads and schools, and left communities reeling.
These earthquakes come on top of a long season of calamities — protracted flooding in recent months, coming from monsoon surges and tropical storms, has already battered provinces and displaced many families. Barangay, local government units’, and government agencies’ volunteers and community groups have already been stretched thin managing evacuation centers, distributing food, and doing frontline relief work.
The Philippine Red Cross, too, has proven how indispensable volunteer networks are in such times. Even when their own homes were threatened, their volunteers persisted in search-and-rescue missions, medical outreach, health education, and managing relief distribution. In the Davao earthquakes, Red Cross volunteers responded swiftly to affected municipalities, joining the front lines of relief and damage assessment.
It is telling: in every recent Philippine disaster, professional responders—government, police, military, NGOs—cannot reach every barangay immediately. The gap between disaster onset and formal assistance is precisely where volunteerism matters most.
There is much room for volunteer work. If you live near or can travel to affected areas—Cebu, Davao Oriental, or intermediate provinces—join official volunteer corps (Red Cross, local NGOs) rather than simply showing up uncoordinated. These organizations have protocols for safety, logistics, and working with local disaster risk reduction offices.
Those who cannot go to the affected areas, or are not fit to do volunteer work, can donate cash or goods to trusted organizations (Philippine Red Cross chapters, accredited foundations, or local NGOs).
Beyond monetary support, volunteer your time and skills: Help pack relief goods, hygiene kits, and medical supplies. Help manage or staff evacuation or distribution centers. Assist in logistics, transportation, communications, or data registration. Help in fundraising, awareness campaigns, or coordination efforts.
Ask, don’t wait to be asked. In devastated areas, resources may be overwhelmed, and official volunteer recruitment slow. Reach out to your local disaster risk reduction management council, or to the non-government organizations (NGOs), to the Department of Social Welfare and Development (Dswd) through their websites. They have issued calls for volunteers. Ask, “How can I help?” Even small tasks multiply when many hands answer the call.
Some might argue that disaster response should be left to professionals. True, technical decisions (search & rescue, medical triage, infrastructure assessment) require expertise. But the recovery and relief process depends on sustained community involvement. The debris must be cleared, relief packages must be sorted and delivered, centers must be run, and emotional wounds must be tended. All of these demand manpower, care, and consistency.
Moreover, volunteerism sends a message: victims are not alone. The presence of volunteers restores dignity, nurtures hope, and strengthens social fabric when it is most frayed. This is the heart of bayanihan—not heroism for media headlines but quiet, selfless service.
In this moment of suffering and uncertainty, each Filipino has a role to play. Let our bayanihan not be a cliché, but a living force. Let us answer with solidarity, courage, and compassion. Because in disasters, we must always choose to stand with our fellow Filipinos—not with empty words, but with hands and hearts.
In crises, the Filipino spirit of bayanihan must now move beyond symbolism and become visible action.
Friday, October 10, 2025
Feeling stressed? You're not alone, survey shows more Filipinos do
By Ellalyn De Vera-Ruiz
Published Oct 9, 2025 08:44 pm
Photo from Pixabay
As the world observes World Mental Health Day on Oct. 10, a nationwide survey shows that more Filipinos are living under daily stress as they cope with financial, health, work, and family pressures.
The Social Weather Stations (SWS) Third Quarter 2025 survey found that 34 percent of adult Filipinos experience stress “frequently” in their daily lives, up from 27 percent recorded in the fourth quarter of 2019, just before the pandemic.
Another 32 percent said they “sometimes” feel stressed (down from 37 percent in 2019), 30 percent “rarely” (down from 34 percent), and 4 percent “never” experience stress (roughly unchanged from 2 percent).
The survey also examined the magnitude of stress related to specific aspects of daily life.
Financial concerns ranked highest, with 53 percent of respondents reporting “big” stress (very big or somewhat big).
Health-related issues affected 42 percent of adults, 39 percent reported stress from work or school, and 38 percent experienced stress from family matters.
Metro Manila reports highest stress levels
SWS found that 50 percent of adults in Metro Manila said they experience stress frequently, the highest among all regions.
This was followed by Balance Luzon (36 percent), Mindanao (28 percent), and the Visayas (26 percent).
Compared to fourth quarter 2019, the share of adults experiencing frequent stress rose sharply in Metro Manila, up 15 points from 35 percent.
It also increased in Balance Luzon by eight points (from 28 percent) and in Mindanao by 10 points (from 18 percent).
The Visayas saw little change, remaining at 28 percent.
For those who experience stress sometimes, Balance Luzon had the highest share at 34 percent, down from 38 percent in fourth quarter 2019.
It was followed by Mindanao with 32 percent (down from 41 percent), the Visayas with 31 percent (up from 29 percent), and Metro Manila with 27 percent (down from 38 percent).
Those who rarely experience stress were most common in the Visayas and Mindanao, with 37 percent each (down from 41 percent and 36 percent, respectively).
Balance Luzon had 27 percent (down from 33 percent), and Metro Manila 19 percent (down from 25 percent).
Meanwhile, the share of adults who never experience stress was highest in the Visayas at 6 percent (up from 2 percent), followed by Balance Luzon at 4 percent (up from 2 percent), while Metro Manila and Mindanao recorded 3 percent each, remaining largely unchanged from 2 percent and 4 percent, respectively.
Women report higher stress than men
The survey also found that women are more likely to experience stress frequently than men.
About 41 percent of women reported feeling stressed daily, compared to 27 percent of men.
Since fourth quarter of 2019, the share of women reporting frequent stress increased by eight points, while it rose by seven points for men.
Women also reported higher levels of stress across all major areas, including finances, health, work or school, and family responsibilities.
On financial matters, 57 percent of women reported experiencing big stress (24 percent very big, 34 percent somewhat big), compared to 48 percent of men (18 percent very big, 30 percent somewhat big).
Regarding health-related stress, 46 percent of women considered it big (18 percent very big, 29 percent somewhat big), versus 38 percent of men (12 percent very big, 26 percent somewhat big).
In terms of family-related stress, 44 percent of women reported big stress (16 percent very big, 28 percent somewhat big), compared to 32 percent of men (12 percent very big, 20 percent somewhat big).
For stress from work or school, 40 percent of women considered it big (14 percent very big, 26 percent somewhat big), slightly higher than 38 percent of men (12 percent very big, 26 percent somewhat big).
The Third Quarter 2025 Social Weather Survey was conducted from Sept. 24 to 30, through face-to-face interviews with 1,500 adults nationwide, aged 18 and above.
The sample included 300 respondents in Metro Manila, 600 in Balance Luzon (Luzon outside Metro Manila), and 300 each in the Visayas and Mindanao.
The survey has a sampling error margin of ±3 percent for national percentages, ±4 percent for Balance Luzon, and ±6 percent for each of the other regions.
8 KA MGA PANIMALAY SA BALUT ISLAND, SARANGANI, DAVAO OCCIDENTAL, NADAMYOS TUNGOD SA KUSOG NGA HANGIN
8 HOUSES IN BALUT ISLAND, SARANGANI, DAVAO OCCIDENTAL, DESTROYED DUE TO STRONG WIND…See more·Hide Translation·Rate this translation






