Original Website of Don Herrington's © 2001-2010

Living in the Philippines
HOME

http://www.LivingInthePhilippines.com
is the ORIGINAL, first Philippines Expat site on the Net, since 1989. This is not one of many knock-offs, copycats, imitations. Some have permutations of the names, misspellings and "in" and "the" or "ing." left off to deceive you. This is the original, by: Don A. Herrington

Living in the Philippines

Why Filipinos Are Happy
Living in the Philippines Book

Who Else Wants to Escape to a Tropical Paradise?
with Free 7 Day eCourse Filipina Familiarity 101




How to Support Yourself and Your Family Living in the Philippines! Making a Living in the Philippines

Chris Bech

Beach Properties for Sale!
For more info visit:

www.samarislands.com
"Something new from UN Village, N. Samar, pristine Philippines!"
TWO DAYS FREE RESORT ACCOMMODATION INCLUDING BOAT TRIPS TO OUR PEARL FARM, FOR BUYERS
Members of LinP3 can mail Chris at
chris@samarislands.com for more information.
Filipina 202 How to Marry and Migrate the Filipina of your Dream Flipina 101 Everything you need to know to meet the Filipina of your Dreams! Buying and Investing Buying, Investing, Renting and managing Property Philippines Survival Philippines Survival Handbook
GENERAL INFORMATION
Living like a King in the Philippines
Cost of Living
Real Estate/Rentals (Apartments, Houses, Condo, Hotels and Clubs)
Places To Live
Love and Romance Filipino Style
Health in the Philippines
Medical, Dental and Cosmetic Surgery
Maids: Cheap and Priceless
Climate and Attire
Getting Around
How safe is living here for Expats
Shopping Filipino Style
Accommodations
Philippine Culture
Filipino Education
Filipino Painting
Politics and Economy
List of Philippine Presidents
Home: Staying In Touch
Getting Money from Home
Other Things To Do
Living and Retiring
Visas
Herbal Medicine
Golf in the Philippines
Death and Dying in the Philippines
Business, Job, Investing and Banking
Wedding in the Philippines
Philippine Recipe
Philippine Embassies and Consulates
Frauds Cases
American Citizen Services
Philippine Zip Code
Philippine Telephone Code
Philippine Call Centers
Philippine Corporation Code
Estafa and the Bouncing Checks
Philippine Securities Regulation Code
Philippine Family Code
Anti-Money Laundering
Philippines Citizenship
Philippines Highlights
History of Philippines Architecture
Philippines Wild Life
Living in the Philippine Comments
Constitution of the Philippines
Philippines Wireless Hotspot
 
REFERENCES
Visayan Grammar
Jobs in Cebu
LivingInThePhilippines Books Store
Philippine News and Newspapers
Legal Forms
CIA Factbook
Provincial Profiles 1990 Data
Government Agency
Resources/Links
Services You may Need
Living in the Philippines Store
Recommended Books in the Philippines
Law of Attorney
Philippine Law on Rape
Political and International Law
Philippine Labor Law and Jurisprudence
The Real Property Tax Code
(THE REAL PROPERTY TAX CODE)
The National Internal Revenue Code(THE NATIONAL INTERNAL REVENUE CODE)
 
SERVICES
Cebu Hair Care
(Men's Hair Pieces, Toupees, Wigs)
US Tax Preparation Service
Investigate Your Filipina
 
MAILING LISTS
Join Free Discussion List
Join Our Forum
Rules of the Lists and How to manage your E-mail
Accolades from the DOT and LIST GUEST
Personal INFO Tourism Sec. Joseph Ace Durano
2010 Living In The Philippines Calendar(courtesy by:BUTCH)
 
GUESTBOOK
Please Sign My Guestbook
Guestbook Archives
 
OTHER INTERESTING ARTICLES
Cebu Teaches The Other Philippine Cities How To Do It
A Few of My Favorite Things(Philippines)
(by: Rob Faraone)
Why Filipinos are Happy
Relatively Speaking
(by: Ambeth R. Ocampo)
Pearl of the Orient Seas
(by: Clarence Henderson)
A Senior Comes to Paradise
 
OUR SISTER SITES
Retire In the Philippines
Cebu Heart of the Philippines
Expats in the Philippines
 
 
 
Want Bigger or Smaller Text?

 

Why Filipinos Are Happy

YESTERDAY'S column was titled "Happiness is power."Yes, it is power. Not just as a "saleable" trait for Filipina domestic workers whose cheerfulness is an unstated but sought for quality among foreign employers, but also as a personal bulwark against the vicissitudes of loneliness and alienation.

It is a power that can be harnessed not just for personal protection and morale boosting, but also for organizing and consciousness raising. And it is a power that is puzzling for, according to an article in The Economist, in Hong Kong at least it is wielded by those who should by all rights be the most miserable. (And the planned reduction in the minimum wage for domestics should make them all the more miserable.)

Why are the Filipinas of Hong Kong, majority of whom work as domestics under often harrowing conditions, so happy? The Economist wanted to find out why and sought answers from both the experts and the subjects themselves.

"The usual hypothesis puts it down to the unique ethnic and historical cocktail that is Philippine culture: Malay roots (warm, sensual, mystical) mixed with the Catholicism and fiesta spirit of the former Spanish colonizers, to which is added a dash of western flavor from the islands' days as an American colony. (UP Professor Felipe) de Leon, after a decade of researching, has concluded that Filipino culture is the most inclusive and open of all those he has studied. It is the opposite of the individualistic culture of the West, with its emphasis on privacy and personal fulfillment. It is also the opposite of certain collectivistic cultures, as one finds them in Confucian societies, that value hierarchy and "face.'

"BY CONTRAST", Filipino culture is based on the notion of kapwa, a Tagalog word that roughly translates into "shared being."In essence, it means that most Filipinos, deep down, do not believe that their own existence is separable from that of the people around them. Everything, from pain to a snack or a joke, is there to be shared. "The strongest social urge of the Filipino is to connect, to become one with people", says De Leon. As a result, he believes, there is much less loneliness among them.

"It is a tall thesis,"admits the writer, so for confirmation a little "field research" was done among the Filipinas who every Sunday turn Statue Square in Hong Kong into "a map of the Philippine archipelago."Here and in other gathering places, "Hong Kong's Filipinas.....replicate their village communities, and these surrogate families form a first circle of shared being. Indeed, some of the new arrivals in Hong Kong already have aunts, nieces, former students, teachers, or neighbors who are there, and gossip from home spreads like wildfire."

"What is most striking about Statue Square, however, is that the sharing is in no way confined to any dialect group,"notes The Economist. "Filipinas who are total strangers move from one group to another always welcomed, never rejected, never awkward. Indeed, even Indonesian maids (after Filipinas, the largest group of amahs), and Chinese or foreign passers by who linger for even a moment are likely to be invited to share the snacks.

"The same sense of light-hearted intimacy extends to religion. Father Lim, for instance, is a Filipino priest in Hong Kong.....His Sunday service in Tagalog at St Joseph's Church on Garden Road......is, by turns, stand-up comedy, rock concert and group therapy. And it is packed. For most of the hour, Father Lim squeezes through his flock with a microphone. "Are you happy?' he asks the congregation. A hand snatches the mike from him. "Yes, because I love God.' Amid wild applause, the mike finds its way to another amah. "I'm so happy because I got my HK$3,670 this month [$470, the amahs' statutory wage]. But my employer was expecting a million and didn't get it. Now he's miserable. "The others hoot with laughter."

This "intimate approach to faith," is one reason Father Lim believes there is virtually no drug abuse, suicide or depression among the domestics, "problems that are growing among the Chinese."

An even more concrete form of "sharing" are the money, goods and little luxuries, like t-shirts, toys, perfume and chocolates that the women send home regularly. Many of the DH's, says the writer, borrow to send home money to their families, "often with ruinous financial consequences."

Father Lim shares a story that is both amusing and appalling: "An eminent Filipino died while abroad, and it was decided that local compatriots should bid the coffin adieu before its journey home. So amahs showed up to file past it. When the coffin arrived in the Philippines and was reopened, the corpse was covered from head to toe with padded bras, platform shoes, Nike trainers, and the like, all neatly tagged with the correct addresses."

It is with good reason that the domestics have wholeheartedly adopted the concept that they are the bagong bayani or new heroes of the country. "Bayani" is also the root word for "bayanihan," the communal exercise of moving home that has become for us a symbol of national togetherness.

In "Bayanihan House," a center for Filipino workers in Hong Kong, the writer chances upon a beauty pageant where one of the contestants was asked how she overcame homesickness, and why she thought the people back home considered her a hero. "She looked down into her audience of amahs. "We're heroes because we sacrifice for the ones we love. And homesickness is just a part of it. But we deal with it because we're together". The room erupted with applause and agreement.

"Nowadays, bayanihan really means togetherness", says De Leon, and "togetherness is happiness.' It might sound too obvious, almost banal, to point out--had not so many people across the world forgotten it."

When is a Filipino considered poor? What is the measure of personal wealth? Is wealth just in mind, in the bank, in landholdings, or elsewhere?

There is an article:"Why Filipinos Are Happy,"at art_why_filipinos_are_happy2.html

It is good. But it does not tell the whole story, at least from the standpoint of the international scientific community. The part of the site above, the small part below my ramble, does. But the article below is not written about Filipinos. It is written about people generally. It is about brain development. Yet it is a key to understanding Filipino-foreigner differences more.

Click here to read about 100 Best Things About Being a Pinoy.

Click here for Touching, Happiness, The Filipino and the Foreigner

Click to subscribe Living Retiring Traveling and Doing Business In The Philippines

>>> F R E E-
>> Click to subscribe to Living, Retiring, Traveling, Doing Business and Moving To The Philippines FREE INFORMATION FROM EXPATS, FOREIGNERS WHO TALK ABOUT LIVING IN THE PHILIPPINES, RELOCATION HERE AND DOING BUSINESS, TRAVELING OR RETIRING IN THE PHILIPPINES.
Copyright © 2001-2010 livinginthephilippines Inc. All rights reserved
Design By: Don Herrington © 2001
Maintained By: Web Designer's Workshop