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, January 28, 2026

Davao cheese maker finds success juggling family duties, business

 



Raoul J. Chee Kee - Philstar.com

January 25, 2026 | 11:20am


MANILA, Philippines — Two decades since she started making her cheeses in Davao, Olive Puentespina can still talk avidly about her passion for dairy — goat cheeses, in particular. While she spends most of her waking moments tweaking and perfecting the cheeses sold under the brand Malagos Farmhouse, she also sets aside time some afternoons to lead intimate cheese-and-wine pairings at the shop.


During a recent visit, she regaled marketing department members of several Davao hotels with the story of how her natural inquisitiveness set her on a path few have taken. 


Olive’s late husband, Roberto Jr., was a veterinarian who would often be given farm-fresh produce or young animals, including goats, as payment for his services. They named their first three goats Jolina, Marvin and Rica after three popular local celebrities at the time. 


“I began thinking about what to do with the milk these goats produced. I attempted to sell the milk as is but it tends to spoil quickly so I tried making goat’s milk soap. Again, it didn’t click,” Olive said. 


Pivot, pivot

By then, the goats were multiplying and she and her small team ended up tossing gallons of milk away. That’s when she considered making cheese because it didn’t spoil as quickly and it would be a chance to express her creativity.



“Filipinos then were not familiar with cheeses made with goat’s milk. What they knew about and were partial to was Kesong Puti, which is made with carabao’s milk.”


Olive then began learning and experimenting. She signed up for classes and seminars as far afield as the United States and Switzerland. She contacted her siblings based in the US, asking if they could shoulder her expenses including airfare, tuition and sometimes accommodations. “I vowed to them that if they would, then I would make them proud.”


Fast forward to the present and Olive has done more than that for her siblings who now expect her to come bearing some of her award-winning cheeses whenever she travels to the US. Malagos Farmhouse is now recognized for its range that includes the bestselling Mango Sublime, a soft chèvre in the French style but dotted with pieces of ripe mango harvested from Davao. “I prefer to describe it as done in Filipino-Davao style because I was the one who came up with it,” she said.


She also makes feta in olive oil, chèvre with rosemary, her version of gouda, and a deliciously pungent one that goes great with sliced fresh apples or dried fruit.   



Learning curve

Olive recalled how she proved her Swiss teachers wrong when they told her she wouldn’t be able to make cheese given the high humidity in the Philippines. 


“They didn’t know that I had learned to adapt to local conditions. Although I learned the basics from them, I tweaked the steps. When they saw and tasted the final product, they were amazed and told me, ‘Never copy. Do it your way, the Filipino way.’”


Olive smiled when she recounted this anecdote. “I should have told them, ‘Correction, it’s Olive’s way.’”


The entire time she was stoking her passion and learning as much as she could about cheese making, she had a husband and three kids who depended on her.


“When they were younger, I would perform my motherly and wifely duties but every chance I got — any free time I had — was spent in the work room. I’m really proud because my kids learned to figure things out for themselves. If they could do it on their own and with very little supervision, they would. They’re very proactive.”


At times when a parent’s counsel is sought, Olive is there to give her advice and help if needed. 


Olive then recounted another story that is a core memory. “When my daughter Ingrid was around 11, she came to me and said, ‘Mom, I want to apply to be your apprentice.’ 


“She didn’t come out and say outright that she wanted to be a cheese maker; she knew it would take time. Ingrid had been watching all along, observing me as I went about my day so when I finally put her in front of a vat of milk and she began inspecting the curds using her gloved hands, I felt like crying. She was a natural.”


As a widow now with three almost-adult children, she has more time to tinker around in her workroom, creating cheeses that are served on Philippine Airlines’ long-haul business class flights, in restaurants and luxury hotels, and in the kitchens of cheese aficionados. 


“I’ve learned that if you raise your children properly, they turn out independent. Now, we learn from each other,” Olive said. 

Investing in tomorrow's Filipinos


By Amenah F. Pangandaman

Published Jan 28, 2026 12:05 am



BEYOND BUDGET

Assalamu alaikum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.

Whenever I speak with a child, I feel a quiet sense of excitement. Children see the world differently—with a clarity adults often lose. They are full of curiosity, honesty, and an unshakable belief that tomorrow can still be better. In their queries and laughter, you can glimpse the future taking shape. Thus, I have always believed that children must be at the heart of governance. The decisions we make today will shape the lives they grow into.

This belief guided my work at the Department of Budget and Management (DBM), particularly our push for Public Finance for Children, or PF4C. It carries the simple message that children should never be an afterthought in public spending. They should be a priority. Every peso we allocate must translate into something real in a child’s life—better learning, better health, stronger protection, and a genuine chance to thrive.

For many years, our budgets spoke about children in fragments. Education appeared in one section, nutrition in another, and child protection elsewhere. On paper, everything seemed covered. On the ground, we can see the gaps. Services overlapped, while others failed to reach the children who need them most. PF4C challenges this disconnect by ensuring that our programs work together and that outcomes are felt in communities and not only reflected in reports.

Hence, in May 2025, the DBM, together with the European Union and UNICEF, launched a Public Finance Facility, a cooperation program to support more coordinated and targeted budgeting to improve the lives of the most vulnerable children in our country. This partnership was built on a shared understanding that improving children’s lives requires more than good intentions. It demands sustained, protected, and transparent public spending, guided by evidence and focused especially on the most vulnerable.

PF4C is about weaving children’s rights into the entire budget process—from planning and allocation to implementation and monitoring. This approach is reinforced by the Program Convergence Budgeting, which encourages agencies to align their efforts rather than work in silos. When programs converge, resources go further, duplication is reduced, and services reach children in a more coherent and meaningful way.

Our resources are finite. Competing needs are constant. Hard choices are unavoidable. PF4C does not deny these realities but insists that even in the face of difficult choices, children must never be left behind in our budget.

Armed with this belief, we at the DBM, together with the Department of the Interior and Local Government, and the Bureau of Local Government Finance, launched the Child Budget and Expenditures Tagging and Tracking (CBETT) tool, which grew from a simple concern many of us shared: To make sure that government spending reaches children. Without clear data, even the best intentions remain untested. The CBETT tool gives us visibility. It enables the systematic identification, classification, and monitoring of child-focused budget and expenditures within local budget frameworks. This directly addresses the critical gap in expenditure tracking identified in the Child-Responsive Public Financial Management Assessment Report.

This became even more important after the Mandanas-Garcia ruling, which shifted greater responsibility—and resources—to local governments. LGUs are now on the frontlines of delivering services for children. CBETT helps ensure that as fiscal autonomy expands, accountability and child-responsiveness grow alongside it.

Equally important is opening the budget conversation itself. Through the government’s Open Government initiatives, we have taken steps to make fiscal discussions more transparent and participatory—creating spaces where citizens, including children and young people, can be heard. In fact, during the OpenGov Week last May, we invited children and youth participants for a dialogue titled, “Making Spaces: Children Driving Change for Open Government.” I believe when children are included in conversations about budgets in age-appropriate ways, they learn that governance is not distant or abstract. The government should also truly listen and make sure that lines are open because the best way to move forward is together. Through this, we build consensus, and we make decisions that affect their daily lives and one they can one day help shape.

Education shows how these principles translate into action. Responding to the learning crisis, we at the DBM allocated ₱1.34 trillion to education—the largest education budget in our history. And, for the first time, our country met UNESCO’s global benchmark of four percent of GDP. Over ₱1 trillion supports the hiring of teachers and non-teaching staff, classroom construction, academic recovery programs, and school-based feeding for millions of learners. These are not mere figures. They represent children who can learn better, eat better, and stay in school longer.

Beyond budget, Public Finance for Children reminds us that the true measure of public finance is lived experience—in safe classrooms, accessible clinics, and communities that protect and hear our children. As citizen Mina, I carry this belief beyond public office. Children live longest with the consequences of our choices. When we place them at the center of public finance, we do more than manage resources. We choose the kind of future we are willing to stand for.

(Amenah F. Pangandaman is the former Secretary of the Department of Budget and Management.)

Gen Z superstar Belle Mariano continues to uplift young lives as World Vision ambassador

 


By MBrand

Published Jan 27, 2026 11:30 pm

There is power in using fame and influence for good. Gen Z superstar Belle Mariano knows this all too well as she continues to support World Vision, a Christian humanitarian organization. Now in her second year as its ambassador, the in-demand star hopes to help raise awareness of the organization’s mission to create a world where every child can live life to the fullest.
Belle Mariano
Belle Mariano
Belle became known as a chart-topping singer and a versatile young actress who starred in lead roles for hit shows such as He’s Into Her and Can’t Buy Me Love. But her role as an ambassador is one that she holds close to her heart, using her platform to raise awareness of the needs of the most vulnerable children.
“I have long been passionate about supporting important causes that help empower children, especially young girls,” noted Belle. “So it’s an honor that I still get to be part of World Vision’s goal of helping children access their basic rights, such as education, protection, and opportunities to thrive.”
Previously, Belle initiated various activities with World Vision. For her 23rd birthday last year, she celebrated with 50 World Vision-supported children in Pangasinan, some of her active fan base, and World Vision staff led by World Vision National Director in the Philippines, Dr. Herbert Q. Carpio. The celebration included getting to know the community better, games, and making and trading friendship bracelets to commemorate the fun-filled day. The children, along with their parents, went home with treats from Belle, including school supplies, hygiene items, and other essentials, boxes of donuts, and sacks of rice.
Aside from the meaningful birthday celebration, Belle also treated at least 15 children to a storytelling session. The children are part of Brigada Pagbasa, World Vision’s reading remedial program that fosters a love of reading among Filipino children.
Last year, Belle also engaged in the #GirlsCan campaign and participated in World Vision International’s 75th anniversary celebration was held in Iloilo, even amidst the storm season.
World Vision National Director in the Philippines, Dr. Herbert Q. Carpio, stressed that Belle’s reach can inspire many more Filipinos to support the organization’s campaigns that bring hope, joy, and justice to Filipino children. He shared, “Belle’s presence brings fresh inspiration to World Vision’s mission. We’re excited to continue working hand-in-hand with her, hoping that we can encourage many more Filipinos to sponsor kids so that they may
achieve their full potential.”
World Vision works with families, communities, and partners to ensure that children grow up healthy, are educated for life, experience the love of God and their neighbors, and are cared for, protected, and able to participate fully in their communities. Through this holistic, community-based approach, the organization aims to address the root causes of poverty and transform lives.
For more updates on World Vision and its programs, visit the World Vision website at www.worldvision.org.ph and follow World Vision Philippines’ official social media pages: @worldvisionph on Facebook and Twitter, and @worldvisionphl on Instagram.

Rente kompakt: Das ändert sich 2026 für Rentnerinnen und Rentner


Ehepaar im Ruhestand sitzt auf Sofa
Im Alter entspannt die Rente genießen – 2026 gibt es so einige Überraschungen. © IMAGO Images/imageBROKER/Oleksandr Latkun

2026 gibt es zahlreiche gesetzliche Änderungen bei der Rente in Deutschland. Diese betreffen sowohl aktuelle Rentner als auch künftige Bezieher.

Das Positive zuerst: Nach aktuellen Prognosen der Bundesregierung können deutschlandweit alle Rentnerinnen und Rentner zum 1. Juli 2026 mit einem deutlichen Plus ihrer monatlichen Bezüge rechnen. Die Schätzungen liegen derzeit bei einer Erhöhung von rund 3,7 Prozent. Der endgültige Wert wird allerdings erst im Frühjahr 2026 auf Basis der Lohnentwicklung festgelegt.   

Späterer Renteneintritt: Höhere Altersgrenzen bei der Rente

Weniger schmeichelnd: Das gesetzliche Renteneintrittsalter steigt auch 2026 weiter an. Gemäß der stufenweisen Anhebung erhöht sich die Grenze der Regelaltersrente für den Geburtsjahrgang 1960 auf 66 Jahre und vier Monate. Bei Renten für besonders langjährig Versicherte gilt künftig: Wer 45 Beitragsjahre erreicht hat (Jahrgang 1962), kann ab 2026 mit 64 Jahren und 8 Monaten abschlagsfrei in den Ruhestand gehen.   

Gratis für Sie: Der große Renten-Ratgeber

So holen Sie das meiste aus Ihrer Rente. Versteckte Fehler vermeiden. Dies und viele Tipps von Renten-Profis finden Sie in unserem kostenlosen Ratgeber.

Laden Sie sich HIER den Ratgeber kostenlos als PDF herunter

Laden Sie sich den Renten-Ratgeber kostenlos als PDF herunter.
Laden Sie sich den Renten-Ratgeber kostenlos als PDF herunter. © IPPEN.MEDIA   
Neu: Sonderregeln für Schwerbehinderte fallen weg

Eine wesentliche Änderung betrifft zudem Menschen mit Schwerbehinderung. Für alle Geburtsjahrgänge ab 1964 endet im neuen Jahr der bisherige Vertrauensschutz. Eine abschlagsfreie Rente ist für sie somit erst ab dem 65. Lebensjahr möglich. Zwar ist ein früherer Renteneintritt ab 62 Jahren weiterhin möglich – allerdings müssen Betroffene dann mit dauerhaften Abschlägen von bis zu 10,8 Prozent rechnen.    

Rente 2026: Das ändert sich bei Steuern und Abgaben

Wer im neuen Jahr erstmals seine wohlverdiente Rente bezieht, muss sich auf einige Neuerungen einstellen. Dies betrifft sowohl steuerliche Aspekte als auch mögliche Abgaben bei höheren Einkommen.

Höherer Steueranteil: Für alle Neurentner des Jahres 2026 steigt der steuerpflichtige Anteil der Renteneinkünfte um einen weiteren halben Prozentpunkt auf 84 Prozent. Somit bleiben künftig nur mehr 16 Prozent der ersten vollen Bruttojahresrente steuerfrei.   

Neue Aktivrente: Seit 1. Januar 2026 können Rentnerinnen und Rentner mit der Aktivrente über die Regelaltersgrenze hinaus arbeiten und bis zu 2.000 Euro pro Monat steuerfrei hinzuverdienen. Sozialabgaben werden hier dennoch fällig.

Beiträge für Gutverdiener: Die Beitragsbemessungsgrenze in der Rentenversicherung steigt im neuen Jahr auf 8.450 Euro pro Monat. Bis zu einem Jahreseinkommen von 101.400 Euro bedeutet dies für Besserverdienende künftig höhere Abgaben.   

Beitragszahler können aufatmen: Beitragssatz bleibt 2026 stabil

Der Beitragssatz zur gesetzlichen Rentenversicherung bleibt stabil: Bereits seit neun Jahren in Folge liegt er bei 18,6 Prozent, in der knappschaftlichen Rentenversicherung beträgt er 24,7 Prozent.

Minijob und Pflege: Weitere Neuerungen bei der Rente 2026

Minijobs: Ab Juli 2026 können Minijobber eine einmal gewählte Befreiung von der Rentenversicherungspflicht künftig wieder rückgängig machen.

Der Rente-Newsletter: Wege in die Frührente
Wichtige Entwicklungen rund um Ihre Rente erhalten Sie wöchentlich am Mittwoch. Eine kurze Registrierung genügt.

Private Pflegeversicherung: Für privat versicherte Rentnerinnen und Rentner steigen die Beiträge zur Pflegepflichtversicherung ab 2026 im Schnitt um rund 16 Prozent. 

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

ARE YOU ALONE?


 

Studies show the ability to tolerate alone time has been linked to increased happiness, better life satisfaction, and improved stress management. People who enjoy alone time experience less depression.


Short-term tips to get you started to avoid comparing yourself to others are easy to be said:

Take a step back from social media. …
Take a phone break. …
Carve out time to let your mind wander. …
Take yourself on a date. …
Get physical. …
Spend time with nature. …
Lean into the perks of being alone.

I can be a reluctant socializer. I’m sometimes secretly pleased when social plans are called off. I get restless a few hours into a hangout. Maybe, I’ll not be invited any more. Or not so often… . I even once went on a free 10-day silent meditation retreat – not for the meditation, but for the silence.

So I can relate to author Anneli Rufus, who recounted in Party of One: The Loners’ Manifesto: “When parents on TV shows punished their kids by ordering them to go to their rooms, I was confused. I loved my room. Being there behind a locked door was a treat. To me a punishment was being ordered to play Yahtzee with my cousin Louis.”
Several years ago in one of my write-ups, I wrote about loneliness or in other words splendid isolation.

Asocial tendencies like these are often far from ideal. Abundant research shows the harms of social isolation, considered a serious public health problem in countries that have rapidly ageing populations (though talk of a ‘loneliness epidemic’ may be overblown). In the UK, the Royal College of General Practitioners says that loneliness has the same risk level for premature death as diabetes. Strong social connections are important for cognitive functioning, motor function and a smoothly running immune system.

This is especially clear from cases of extreme social isolation. Examples of people kept in captivity, children kept isolated in abusive orphanages, and prisoners kept in solitary confinement all show how prolonged solitude can lead to hallucinations and other forms of mental instability.

But these are severe and involuntary cases of loneliness. For those of us who just prefer plenty of alone time, emerging research suggests some good news: there are upsides to being reclusive – for both our work lives and our emotional well-being.
Social anxiety is the single most common psychological problem according to innumerable survey results worldwide. The magnificent, gorgeous and excellent isolation, resulting from being nervous when meeting people is really the opposite. The state of being isolated reminds me of being in a hospital with an infectious disease.

Does the project of giving a speech or going to a social gathering give you the willies?
Relax, there are always ways and solutions to help you but teaching you “never to be nervous again”.

I have always been the most silent pupil in elementary and high school. I was ashamed even to talk to or with my teachers. Several terrible school records have been the result. But, I wanted to become a journalist. I am still one.

During college times and while writing my first articles, I learned from my first boss, a daily news publisher, to avoid being nervous while meeting people. I was always prepared. Preparation for any communicating situation is a must. I have been invited to many parties and gatherings. I always asked for the guest list. I scanned all the newspapers and browsed the net.

One key benefit is improved creativity. Gregory Feist, who focuses on the psychology of creativity at California’s San Jose State University, has defined creativity as thinking or activity with two key elements: originality and usefulness. He has found that personality traits commonly associated with creativity are openness (receptiveness to new thoughts and experiences), self-efficacy (confidence), and autonomy (independence) – which may include “a lack of concern for social norms” and “a preference for being alone”. In fact, Feist’s research on both artists and scientists shows that one of the most prominent features of creative folks is their lesser interest in socializing.

One reason for this is that such people are likely to spend sustained time alone working on their craft. Plus, Feist says, many artists “are trying to make sense of their internal world and a lot of internal personal experiences that they’re trying to give expression to and meaning to through their art.” Solitude allows for the reflection and observation necessary for that creative process.

A recent vindication of these ideas came from University at Buffalo psychologist Julie Bowker, who researches social withdrawal. Social withdrawal usually is categorized into three types: shyness caused by fear or anxiety; avoidance, from a dislike of socializing; and insociability, from a preference for solitude.

There is gender and cultural variation, of course. For instance, some research suggests that unsociable children in China have more interpersonal and academic problems than unsociable kids in the West. Bowker says that these differences are narrowing as the world becomes more globalized.

Still, it turns out that solitude is important for more than creativity. Since ancient times, meanwhile, people have been aware of a link between isolation and mental focus. After all, cultures with traditions of religious hermits believe that solitude is important for enlightenment.

Recent research has given us a better understanding of why. One benefit of unsociability is the brain’s state of active mental rest, which goes hand-in-hand with the stillness of being alone. When another person is present, your brain can’t help but pay some attention. This can be a positive distraction. But it’s still a distraction.
Daydreaming in the absence of such distractions activates the brain’s default-mode network. Among other functions, this network helps to consolidate memory and understand others’ emotions. Giving free rein to a wandering mind not only helps with focus in the long term but strengthens your sense of both yourself and others. Paradoxically, therefore, periods of solitude actually help when it comes time to socialize once more. And the occasional absence of focus ultimately helps concentration in the long run.


I learned, if your personality tends toward insociability, you shouldn’t feel the need to change. Of course, that comes with caveats. But as long as you have regular social contact, you are choosing solitude rather than being forced into it, you have at least a few good friends and your solitude is good for your well-being or productivity, there’s no point agonizing over how to fit a square personality into a round hole.

So feel free to de-clutter your social calendar. It’s psychologist-approved.

The heartbeat of democracy


Inquirer Editorial

If press freedom is, as the late American diplomat Madeleine Albright once said, the “heartbeat of democracy,” then the conviction of community journalist Frenchie Mae Cumpio suggests that democracy in the Philippines now palpitates under strain.

On Thursday, Cumpio, former executive director of the alternative news outfit Eastern Vista, became the “first journalist in the world to be convicted of terrorism financing,” according to Bi Lih Yi, Asia Program Coordinator of the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Judge Georgina Perez of the Tacloban City Regional Trial Court Branch 45 sentenced Cumpio and Mariel Domequil, finance officer of the Rural Missionaries Philippines Eastern Visayas, to a prison term of 12 to 18 years after finding them guilty of violating the Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppression Act of 2012.


Honoring excellence: Enduring value of TOFIL

 


Published Jan 27, 2026 12:05 am | Updated Jan 26, 2026 06:22 pm     



At a time when public discourse is weighed down by cynicism and despair—much of it fueled by recurring scandals of corruption and abuse of power—the annual recognition of The Outstanding Filipino (TOFIL) awardees stands as a quiet but resolute counterpoint. The 2025 TOFIL honorees remind us that integrity, excellence, and selfless service are not relics of the past, but living values embodied by Filipinos who continue to uplift the nation through their work.
Each year’s TOFIL awardees come from diverse fields—education, science, business, culture, public service, and community development—yet they share a common thread: an unwavering commitment to the greater good. The 2025 awardees exemplify this tradition of merit and meaning. Their achievements are not merely personal milestones but contributions that have enriched institutions, empowered communities, and expanded the country’s capacity to meet complex challenges. In honoring them, we affirm that excellence still matters—and that it is attainable without compromise of values.
TOFIL’s significance lies not only in celebrating individual achievement, but in building a collective narrative of what Filipinos can aspire to be. Since its establishment in 1988 by the Metrobank Foundation and Rotary Club of Makati, TOFIL has recognized men and women whose lives reflect professionalism anchored in ethics and service. Past laureates include towering figures in medicine, jurisprudence, the sciences, education, arts, and enterprise—individuals who quietly shaped national life, often outside the glare of politics or celebrity.
Names such as Dr. Fe del Mundo in pediatrics, Washington SyCip in business and institution-building, Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr. in law and democratic governance, and National Artists and scientists who elevated Filipino creativity and innovation, form part of TOFIL’s distinguished honor roll. These laureates demonstrate that lasting national impact is built patiently—through competence, credibility, and character.
At crucial moments in Philippine history—during political transitions, economic uncertainty, and social upheaval—TOFIL awardees serve as moral anchors. They remind us that while institutions may falter and leaders may disappoint, the nation’s moral capital resides in its people. Their lives stand as proof that one can succeed without surrendering principle, and lead without exploiting power.
This message is especially resonant today. Public trust in governance has been eroded by persistent reports of corruption and impunity. Many Filipinos, particularly the youth, grapple with a sense of disillusionment, questioning whether honesty and hard work still have a place in public life. In this context, honoring TOFIL awardees becomes more than ceremonial; it becomes restorative.
We salute the 2025 TOFIL awardees, namely: Senator JV Ejercito, Public Service; former DTI Secretary Alfredo Pascual, Government; Dr. Maria Minerva Calimag, Academic Community, Dr. Neil Aldrin Mallari, NGO and Civil Sector; and Rene Meily, Private Sector.
By shining a light on exemplary Filipinos, TOFIL helps recalibrate our collective compass. It reminds citizens that the narrative of the nation is not defined solely by its failures, but also by its quiet victories—won in classrooms, laboratories, courtrooms, hospitals, boardrooms, and communities. These are victories that steadily shape a more humane and hopeful society.
The 2025 TOFIL awardees deserve not only applause, but emulation. Their stories affirm that nation-building is not the exclusive domain of those in power, but a shared responsibility carried out through vocation and service. In honoring them, we honor the best of the Filipino spirit—and, in doing so, renew our faith that integrity and excellence can still light the way forward.