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PROVINCIAL LIFE IN THE PHILIPPINES / Real Filipinas Real Talk

πŸ“… 2021-11-12⏱ 16:11
πŸ“… 2021-11-12 Β |Β  ⏱️ 16:11 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 66.5K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 5.4K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1.5K comments

Pea continues her Part 2 interview with three young provincial Filipinas β€” Clarinjoy (nicknamed Claire and Joy, 20, student), Arjoline/RG (turning 20, student), and Jesse (20, BSBA Financial Management student) β€” picking up where Part 1 left off. This episode digs into the husband-vs-family loyalty question using a Bible verse as leverage, wifely duties, whether wives should submit to husbands, the "rent don't buy" philosophy of long-term girlfriends over marriage, what men gain from marriage, the handsome-poor vs. rich-ugly husband debate, and misconceptions about provincial women.

What's Covered ​

  • The loyalty flip: husband first or family first?

    • In Part 1, Claire and Joy said husband first, while RG and Jesse said family first
    • Pea challenges RG and Jesse with a Bible verse β€” "A man and wife should leave their family and become one flesh" β€” and points out this contradicts their "family first" answer
    • Both RG and Jesse are religious (go to church, read the Bible), so the contradiction hits home
    • RG changes her answer on the spot: Since she's building a new family with her husband and future children, her loyalty should go to him β€” but she'll still support her birth family when needed
    • Jesse also changes her mind for the same reason
    • Pea clarifies: giving loyalty to your husband doesn't mean you stop loving your family
    • Key takeaway: These young women's initial instinct was family first, but when confronted with their own religious beliefs, they reconsidered β€” showing how faith can override cultural default settings
  • The duty of a good wife

    • RG: Support the family, not just financially but emotionally β€” hear out family members' feelings and guide the household
    • Claire and Joy: Take care of the house and husband; references the Filipino saying "mothers are the ilaw ng tahanan (light of the home)" and "fathers are the haligi ng tahanan (foundation of the home)"
    • Jesse: Same β€” provide all support including advice
  • Should wives submit to their husbands?

    • All three answer NO
    • RG: Marriage requires coming together to solve problems; the husband shouldn't be the only one followed β€” "What if your opinion is much better than his?"
    • Claire and Joy: Decision-making should be balanced; husbands don't have exclusive rights to decide
    • Jesse: In marriage, you help each other, talk it over, and decide together β€” "That's what marriage is about"
    • Despite being religious and citing the Bible moments earlier, they unanimously reject the submission verse β€” they want 50/50 partnerships
  • "Rent don't buy" β€” long-term girlfriend vs. marriage

    • Pea explains the Western concept: some men think it's less risky to have a long-term girlfriend than to get married
    • None of the women had heard of this phrase
    • All three reject it firmly:
      • Jesse: If you're going to have a long-term girlfriend, you should marry her
      • RG: "I really deserve to be treated like a wife" β€” marriage is very important to her as a woman
      • Claire and Joy: What's the point of a long-term girlfriend if you don't plan to marry her?
    • Pea frames it as a fairness issue: women like these want marriage as an end goal, and it's not fair to string them along without stating your intentions
  • How does marriage benefit a man?

    • RG: He gains someone to talk to about his problems, a partner through ups and downs β€” he's no longer alone
    • Jesse: It's a lifelong commitment where you can discover yourself and become better; you gain long-term companionship
    • Claire and Joy: A man alone needs a companion β€” someone to share problems he can't tell his parents or family
    • All agree men get "all in one" from marriage β€” companionship, partnership, emotional support
  • Would you rather have a poor handsome husband or a rich ugly husband?

    • All three choose the rich ugly husband
    • RG: "I can't eat that handsome face" β€” being practical matters, especially nowadays
    • Jesse: Wants to be practical; what matters is good qualities and personality, with wealth as a bonus β€” "If he's handsome too, then good"
    • Claire and Joy: Also chooses practical β€” and adds that if you're rich, "you can just fix the face"
    • All emphasize the right personality and qualities matter more than looks, but financial stability beats physical attractiveness
  • Misconceptions about provincial women

    • RG: People call provincial girls "ignorant about almost everything" β€” this is wrong; city people should walk in their shoes first; provincial women can be more educated than city women because they have values and "respect the smallest things"
    • Jesse: Agrees β€” being called ignorant is untrue and they can prove it
    • Claire and Joy: Provincial girls are more productive, more resourceful, and adapt easily to their surroundings
    • Pea agrees from personal experience as a province girl: they're educated, adaptable, resourceful, flexible, and definitely not as naive as people assume β€” "We may be from the provinces but we're tough"

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