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STARTING OVER IN THE PHILIPPINES - A Filipina Widowed at 41

πŸ“… 2022-09-27⏱ 22:56
πŸ“… 2022-09-27 Β |Β  ⏱️ 22:56 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 93K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 5.6K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 1K comments

Pea interviews Sharon Cavalier, a 41-year-old widow from Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu, whose life story touches on abandonment, long-distance love, loyalty, family betrayal, and starting over. Sharon also discusses her own YouTube channel and shares practical advice for foreigners about verifying a Filipina's marital status.

Sharon's first foreign relationship and abandoned daughter ​

  • Sharon met a Belgian man and got pregnant in 2006 when he visited the Philippines
  • After he returned to Belgium, he told her to get an abortion β€” she refused: "I am not a crazy and stupid mother and woman to kill my own baby"
  • She also points out abortion is illegal in the Philippines as a Catholic country
  • She cut off communication with him for a week out of anger that he'd want to "kill his own baby"
  • He sent money until her daughter was about 1 year and 2 months old, then stopped entirely β€” never came back, no more contact
  • Sharon was devastated, crying every night, but went to church and decided God must have another plan for her

Meeting her late husband online ​

  • After waiting years for her daughter's father to reconnect (he never did), Sharon made an account on Filipino Cupid
  • The first man who messaged her was also from Belgium β€” she immediately said "no, no baby, Belgian"
  • He convinced her to give him a chance: "Not all the men in Belgium are the same. What if we try to communicate as friends?"
  • They communicated online for a full year before meeting in person
  • She was shocked when he got serious quickly β€” he asked her to bring her parents to an internet cafe so he could ask for her hand in marriage via video call
  • Her parents agreed, with the condition that he take care of Sharon and her daughter β€” he accepted her daughter and "treated her like his own"

The marriage and six-year LDR ​

  • 2010: met online; 2011: met in person (he stayed one month); 2013: he returned for 45 days and they married
  • After the wedding, he went back to Belgium to work and build a business so he could eventually bring Sharon and her daughter over
  • He also needed to care for his elderly mother β€” as the only son, he felt obligated
  • Sharon, showing her Filipino family values, told him: "It's okay, we prioritize your mother because you are the only son. Don't worry about me, I am very patiently waiting"
  • They Skyped every day for six years β€” Sharon emphasizes how hard it was sleeping alone, wanting her husband there, but she remained faithful throughout

His death and the aftermath ​

  • Her husband died July 26, 2020 β€” they never got to live together permanently
  • After his death, Sharon and her daughter had to leave their rented house and moved in with her aunt
  • After about 10 months, the aunt kicked Sharon and her daughter out β€” Pea emphasizes this point about Filipino family dynamics: "Even if your family, if you don't have money or if they cannot benefit... you are just less"
  • Sharon's response was defiant: "I will stand again with my own feet and I will show them that we are in a good life"
  • She moved in temporarily with a niece in a small two-bedroom apartment
  • Then received a call from her husband's lawyer β€” she had a share of his property (not a large percentage, but meaningful)
  • Her husband had always told her: "You will have a better life. You and your daughter will not become poor again, because I know what people judge you when you were poor"
  • She used the inheritance to buy a house β€” fulfilling his dream for her and her daughter

Sharon's outlook on finding love again ​

  • Open to finding a new companion β€” "I don't want to grow old alone"
  • Prefers a foreigner
  • Qualities she wants: honest, faithful, loves her for who she is, accepts and loves her daughter, understanding, good communication, trust
  • No age preference β€” "as long as he loves me and accepts my daughter"
  • Her 15-year-old daughter understands and supports her mother's desire for a partner

Sharon's YouTube channel and advice for foreigners ​

  • Channel name: "Sharon Lapu-Lapu" β€” started vlogging in July 2022
  • Motivation: she heard about foreign men being scammed or unknowingly getting involved with married Filipinas, and wanted to help warn them based on her own experience
  • She does street interviews with Filipinas, cooking videos, karaoke, and fashion shows
  • Admits she's naturally shy and was very nervous doing her first interviews β€” "I was sweating a lot"
  • Biggest challenge: finding older interview subjects (40s, 50s, 60s) β€” most women she encounters in public are very young (18-20). Pea confirms she gets the same request from subscribers and faces the same difficulty

Sharon's specific scam warning story ​

  • Tells a story about a woman who had a foreign boyfriend β€” when the foreigner visited, they lived together
  • The woman's Filipino live-in partner would come to the apartment, but she introduced him as her "brother"
  • The foreigner trusted her and they all spent time together
  • When the foreigner went back to Belgium, the "brother" and the woman resumed living together
  • Someone tipped off the foreigner; he returned to the Philippines unannounced and caught them together

Sharon's practical advice: the CENOMAR ​

  • Strongly advises all foreigners to ask their Filipina girlfriend to obtain a CENOMAR (Certificate of No Marriage) from the Philippine Statistics Office
  • This document proves whether someone is single β€” if they're married, it will show up
  • Any Filipino can request a CENOMAR at any time, even if they're not planning to get married
  • Sharon frames this as essential due diligence: "For you to be sure that you will have no problem later on"

Pea's sidebar on the challenges of vlogging ​

  • Relates to Sharon's struggles β€” Pea has been doing it for over two years with two videos per week and confirms it's exhausting
  • Both agree it looks easy from the outside ("people think they're just sitting down and turning on the camera") but it's genuinely hard work
  • Pea encourages Sharon by saying passion is the key, and she thinks Sharon has what it takes

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