[12/31/2012] — It is 12:12am here in the Philippines. Twelve minutes into the very last day of this year. Just slightly a little less than 24 hours before this year slips away and the new year begins. How will I spend this last day of the year? The 30th was somewhat uneventful, which is how I wanted it. I’ve been craving some peace and serenity now that
After that I decided to work from the Cafe Malmo today. But first I spent the afternoon tapping out the article, “Taking the Last Boat to Cebu“. I honestly thought I’d tap that out in about an hour and I ended up spending the entire afternoon on it. Around 5pm I went to the Cafe Malmo, got a good table by the window so I could watch the sunset and pretty girls pass by. Day turned into evening and six hours later I was still online apart from 15 minutes that we had a power outage. From there I went to get some rice at a sari-sari store since the mall had long since closed. Can’t make breakfast without rice anymore, not here. I gotta have it. After changing into some comfortable clothes for the night I answered some texts and heated up some dinner that Delia was kind enough to drop off the day before.
As can be expected, I’ve been a bit ponderous now that the year is coming to an end. I avoid making resolutions at the end of the year, it seems the motive is all wrong. Much better to make resolutions when the epiphany necessary strikes during the year rather than manufacture one due to the calendar. But reflection, well.. reflection and this upcoming move to Bohol have got me to thinking. I may be in for more of a solitary life ‘out there’ in the province. In general, anyways. Surprisingly, for being cut off from the main town I feel that I will actually be losing a lot of my privacy. With the very small
community (about ten houses) that are in close vicinity to where I plan to live.. it will pretty much be impossible to have someone over for dinner without everyone knowing about it. Or talking about it. It’s that small town paradigm in play out there in the province. Not much going on and any time a stranger enters their midst.. everybody takes note and has some sort of opinion on it. Not so sure I like that idea.
Perhaps I’m just being paranoid. But I doubt it. The last time I showed up immediately I was invited over to a neighbor’s for lunch. Now, that’s a good thing and I’m not complaining about lunch. What I’m noting is that nothing enters that part of the forest without being noticed. In the big, or even small, city.. you can go about your business and it’s just understood that everyone keeps to themselves. My business is mine and yours is yours. That’s what I’m accustomed to. But even here in Mactan I can’t leave my studio without some neighbor kid noticing me out on the street.
In addition to this, I’ve pretty much resigned myself to not having a girlfriend-girlfriend for an indeterminate time. Lots of reasons but I suppose the most basic reason is simplicity. In one sense there are lots of options still open to me.. but in other ways (such as my ‘no-baby’ requirement) the pickings are slim for me in particular.
So.. as I see it, the end of this year will usher in a new year of relocation and a refining of the objectives I’ve had all along. To build my business and explore the Philippines. How that all pieces together is what the adventure is all about.
[12/25/2012] — It’s Christmas Day! As it turns out my Christmas plans went all sideways before I even left. By the 23rd many of the boats leaving Cebu for Bohol were selling out. I went a night before to get tickets but got there an hour after the ticket office had closed. The next morning I left Mactan via taxi, then met up with a Filipina friend at Pier 1 in Cebu where we stood in line for over an hour (kinda like waiting for Space Mountain, I’m used to it) at 9:00am to get a ticket for a speedboat that was leaving at almost 3pm. With five hours to kill, we hung out at a bbq diner. But I did meet this cool French dude from Singapore who had just arrived at the Philippines the day before. He and I passed the time away chatting about business and life in the tropics.
The speedboat trip hit a few major waves, but other than that we arrived at Tobigon, located on the West side of the island, where we got on a Tricycle which took us to a V-Hire Van that was headed for Tagbilaran. After arriving at
Now, she does speak fairly good English. But apparently there were some items I must have missed in the translation along the way. I thought she was going to visit them for a week and then return to Cebu. My plan was to just visit Jagna for Christmas Eve and then go to Tagbilaran the next day. As it turns out, she wasn’t raised by her parents but by her Aunt. Her parents were only 15 years old at the time she was born but, over the years she visits her parents every so often, usually holidays. I met her family when we first arrived for about 15 minutes.. gave the Dad some brandy, her Mom some sweets and candy/crackers for the kids. Then I went to town to get a hotel. The ‘plan’ was that later her cousin with a motorbike would pick me up for dinner around 10pm that Christmas Eve while she visited with her parents.
Well, evening rolled around and, long story short.. everyone that knew how to ride the motorbike was now far too intoxicated to drive. Christmas Eve at 10pm and there is not a taxi, van, bike, tricycle or donkey to be found for transportation to get me from the hotel to their home. So.. it was spaghetti and rice watching movies on cable at the hotel for me. Not quite what I had planned for Christmas Eve but.. things happen, so I just rolled with it. I had no clue where their home was and there was zero transportation so.. “where there is no solution, there is no problem.” That brings me to this morning, Christmas Day. After a bit of conversation and lots of texting she decides she’s visited her family enough and now wants to join me on my van-ride back to Tagbilaran, so we did that. Our van almost ran over a guy who had spilled his motorcycle into our lane but that was averted, narrowly. Lots of screaming and panic but it all worked out.
Finally we got here around 11:30am to Tagbilaran and I am now here at the Island City Mall. I went to a KFC for some light
Also got news via text that the trip to the province was cancelled for the New Year’s fiesta at Delia’s home barangay. Which, in a way is fine because now I’m in no hurry to leave Bohol. I’m already here so I’ll just wait for the storm to pass (did I mention there’s a storm?) and enjoy the beach for a few days. Meanwhile, gonna pick up some gifts here at the mall and then join Delia’s brother’s family to stay with them for a few days while I scout around the area I’ll be moving to.
All in all.. I’m okay with it went down. Meeting someone’s else’s parents is fine for about.. an hour. I really wasn’t prepared for 2 days of that anyway. My real homework is here in the Tagbilaran/Panglao area where I’m moving to. So for me, it all works out. I still have Sinulog coming up in January on Cebu so that should be fun with a breather between now and then to relax. But for now.. time to log off, buy some wine and make the next stop on my holiday journey.
MERRY CHRISTMAS To Everyone!!! 🙂
Henry V.
[12/13/2012] — With the typhoon behind me, it was time to take a trip to Bohol as previously planned. Wow. I absolutely did not foresee what an impact this trip would have on me. My close friend, Delia, had already planned a trip out there since her brother lives there on the southern tip of Bohol. She asked if I’d like to tag along for the day and do just a bit of sight-seeing so I grabbed a backpack and we got on a fast-boat from the Cebu harbor. Now, I already knew from both online and speaking with people that in order to really take your time and experience a glimpse of all that Bohol has to offer takes several days. But this was just a quick jaunt.. a ‘teaser’ if you will.
I was so amazed even by what little we had time to see that by midday I started telling myself, “I have GOT to move here.” I wasn’t sure how or when, but I had to make it happen. For one thing, there is so much jungle and greenery EVERYWHERE that it makes Mactan look like a desert by comparison. Green jungle everywhere there isn’t cement. And the overall percentage of land mass Bohol has is left in it’s natural state. There are some small cities along the southern coast of Panglao and Tagbilaran, which is where Delia and I went venturing. More small towns are along the rest of the coast, but it’s pretty much as ‘natural’ an inhabited island as you’re gonna get here in the Southern Visaya area.
So that is the new game-plan. I’m looking at using Jan-Feb to trim down my possessions (again) to make the move to Bohol as easy as possible. It takes a fast-boat about 90 minutes to get there from Cebu so I want to take as much as possible on the two trips I plan to make between now and March. I may have already found a 3-bedroom home I will possibly rent out in the province/jungle area. I prefer to live out in the boonies after taking a hike out there. Being surrounded by jungle that just grows over everything is absolutely awesome. It’s like being inside the monkey/ape section of the San Diego Zoo.. only it’s real and goes on for the length of the island. This is what they call the ‘province’ area.. natural and green. Yet.. with a motorcycle I can take a (very) bumpy road for about 2.5 miles and suddenly come out at the edge of town, Tagbilaran. There is a hospital and a very large mall with a multi-screen cinema so, if I need anything from groceries to laptops.. I can get it all there. Plus.. I will be only ten minutes from some of the most amazing beaches such as Alona beach, Virgin beach and the Tagbilaran coastline. All warm water beaches kept in pristine condition.
Needless to say, I am really excited about getting resettled there. The only down-side to all of this will be that I won’t be able to hang out with Kristine, Delia, Jaem and Baby any more. Of all the people I’ve met here they are the closest to me. My other buddy, Minhaz from Bangladesh, returned home to prepare his family for their return to live on Cebu so I’ll not be seeing him until summer of 2013. It sucks to not be able to see them while I’m in Bohol, but I do need to return every 2 months to Cebu to check in with Immigration.. so I’ll make a point to spend the night and see them when I’m here.
Living here in Mactan I’ve gotten accustomed to having neighbors both next door and down the street with a busy mall only a 2-minute walk from my place. While the jungle areas
And there is still SO MUCH Bohol has to offer that I didn’t even get to visit during my quickie-trip. But I’ll be posting lots more photos soon of what I did see. A bit of video even. For now.. I should probably get some sleep!
[12/3/2012] — The more I keep up on this cyclone/typhoon thing coming at us.. the less I like it. I’ve cancelled a trip to Bohol due to it. However this thing has winds over 90mph and was headed directly at Cebu just 24 hours ago. Since then it has veered a bit south and
One good thing is that here, people just sort of suffer through these sort of things. They don’t go into a looting riot like in Los Angeles any time the power is out for more than 4 hours. Whole different culture.. it makes a difference.
I’m going to try and either renew the tags on my moto-scooter today or possibly get my driver’s license today at the Mactan LTO. I was told online to not bother until after 1pm. Gotta do a drug test and stuff. If all goes well I should have it in a few hours. We’ll see how that turns out. Meanwhile, I had named one of the dogs that comes around for scraps on a
Around here, before anyone gets on their high-horse about ‘spaying’ and all that 1st-world jargon.. there are so many dogs that don’t belong to anyone around here that dogs are more like communal pets rather than private pets. And don’t even tell me that a family struggling to put food on the table has some obligation to spay/neuter every random dog that hangs out in the neighborhood.. it just aint gonna happen. Anyways, there’s a much bigger problem with young girls who keep ending up as single-Mothers by the time they are 20 to worry about. That’s where the real compassion should be directed. Get some birth-control available to these girls.. and the moral freedom to make use of it. Because, frankly, in the course of my dating ventures.. it is rare to find a girl over the age of 22 who isn’t a single-Mother. A girl I just texted with this morning was pregnant at 17, dropped out of school, boyfriend (Filipino) took off, no way to support herself and is living with her parents. That is just far too common here.
I’ll come up with names for the 5 pups as time goes by. One I already named ‘Calico’ since he has that sort of markings. Another is black with brown paws, just like Not-So-Fat Doggy, so I may name him ‘Darky’. I guess I’ll have to make a more concerted effort to bring bones home from the bbq place from now on. As for the Filipina single-Moms.. it’s just heartbreaking. No way I can make all of them happy other than to be a friend. And even then, that usually means they come to ‘the foreigner‘ every week when there is some crisis. Any my bankbook just can’t sustain that. Total bummer on so many levels.
[12/1/2012] — Well, it is now ‘officially’ the Christmas season here. Although I’ve been seeing Christmas decorations and listening to holiday music in the malls here since the last week of September. They start early here. With no Thanksgiving and Halloween not a big deal, they just go straight from summer right into the holidays. Which is fine with me, I
Today was a mess. After finally getting home from the club at around 4am, I decided to tap out an article on how the evening went before going to bed. After proofreading and uploading it was about 6am and some texts started rolling in. Then around 7am one of my friends was having a crisis so they came over and we talked it out until almost 11am. Needless to say, by this time I was wiped out after no
You may not be able to tell from this photo I took somewhat inconspicuously, but.. see that woman behind me on the phone? I see them about once a week or so around here, different
As I mentioned, the night out already has done wonders to get my head on straight. It brought things back into perspective for me. I feel a lot more comfortable with my friendship with Kristine. Same with Delia. We’ve been texting and had some dinner the other day.. looks like we’re past the worst of it and things are cool. I really can’t complain, I
Another update: I made the final payment on my moto-scooter this morning. Now I just gotta do the paperwork and get my license. Then I hit the open road! Soon as I figure out how to drive the thing.
It’s just after midnight, I feel I’ve barely started my day but, in order to get ‘sort of’ on a day-walker schedule again I’m going to take some Melatonin and go back to bed. I had a great dinner and feel rejuvenated both mentally and physically. Amazing what a little booze, some loud music and two cute girls can do to put some pep back in your step. All I had to do was get off my butt, outta my mood and do a reboot. We’ll see how this Christmas turns out. It will be my first Christmas, ever.. in my whole life away from family. Not really sure how it will go down but I’ll try to think of something. I still have 24 days left to figure it out. Geez, can’t believe it’s already December! What a ride.
Henry V.
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Author: Reekay V.
Since 2012 I’ve been traveling through various islands of the Philippines as a full-time Expat and spent 1999 living in Vietnam.
Share with me my ongoing adventures of life in the Philippines. Hopefully you find my observations helpful in your own adventures.
— Reekay