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2023-04-11 Β |Β β±οΈ 16:54 Β |Β ποΈ 112.9K views Β |Β π 9.1K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.5K comments
Pea breaks down the specific childhood experiences inside Filipino families that create toxic adult behavior in Filipinas. Rather than blaming individual women, she traces each red flag β pathological lying, image obsession, inability to accept responsibility β back to the family dynamics that installed it, giving foreign men a roadmap to understand why their partner acts the way she does and whether the damage can be undone.
The "picture-perfect family" is often a facade β
- Pea opens by acknowledging the stereotype of warm, close Filipino families and says for many Filipinos who know the truth, it's a lie
- Beneath the surface: backstabbing, shaming tactics, guilt trips, and a toxic atmosphere "enough to poison the purest of hearts"
- The toxic Filipina has a killer smile on the outside but her personality has been "warped by years of emotional manipulation" β hard to spot at first
"It only matters what it looks like" β Fiesta culture and image obsession β
- Filipino kids grow up with Fiesta culture: families that can barely afford to eat will produce a feast for the village festival so they don't look poor
- The underlying lesson children absorb: your actual needs don't matter, only the image you project to others
- Pea says Westerners may claim they have this too, but "we Filipinos take it to extremes and it leaves a lasting mark"
The blame game β deny, deny, deny β
- One of the most toxic aspects of Filipino family life, and it directly shapes adult behavior
- Filipino children learn that if caught doing something wrong, the first defense is to find a way to deny involvement β blame the dog, blame a friend, use a convincing lie, but never admit wrongdoing
- Rooted in the same "it only matters what it looks like" philosophy
- Getting a Filipino to admit fault is "like trying to nail Jello to a tree β will squirm to the left, squirm to the right, and point to whoever we think can take the fall"
- Pea says she's talked to foreigners who cite this as the main reason they broke up β the partner refuses to admit fault even when caught red-handed
- It all traces back to a little kid too afraid to tell her parents she spilled the bag of rice
"I don't want to hear it" β children's voices are silenced β
- Filipino parents don't want to hear what children have to say; the parent hands down the law and the child shuts up and obeys
- Ideas and suggestions from children are unwelcome even when they're good, because "a child is just a child"
- Arguing with a parent only gets you the back of their hand
- Long-term effect: stifles curiosity and creativity, produces "good little soldiers in the family clan"
Parents choose your future β children as investments, not products of love β
- Many Filipino parents choose their children's education and career
- The logic: since parents brought you into the world and sacrificed resources to raise you, they get to decide what field you enter so you can pay them back
- Some kids are told flat-out it's their responsibility to provide for their parents for the rest of their lives
- "If Filipino kids were named according to what function they served, there'd be a lot of us called 401K"
- Kills the ability to save for your own future and passes the same obligation to your kids
- Leaves no room for following your dreams β you're supposed to concentrate on whatever benefits your parents
Respect is demanded, not earned β age trumps everything β
- Elders must be automatically respected regardless of accomplishments, purely based on age
- Even if your Lolo hasn't done anything more stimulating than plow the same field for 30 years while you've traveled a dozen countries and published a book, his opinions on raising your kids are supposed to carry equal weight
- Clear hierarchy where having more birthdays is the only way to the top
The Golden Boy β the untouchable favorite child β
- Every family has a golden child who can do no wrong, almost always a boy
- If his grades are bad or he drinks too much, his behavior is covered by an avalanche of excuses
- Any sibling who mentions the double standard faces consequences
- Other siblings may be expected to help pay for the golden boy's mistakes β from wrapping his motorbike around a tree to getting fired for being drunk on the job
- Accountability doesn't apply; the only thing that matters is that a family member is "in need"
"Mine is mine and yours is ours" β forced wealth sharing β
- If someone in the family comes into money through hard work, a good job, or marrying well, they're expected to share with everyone
- Get a promotion? You're supposed to treat the family to a feast. Some parents expect part of your first paycheck
- Pea compares it to being an ant dragging a dead bug back to the colony β who cares if you found it, it doesn't make it yours
- The problem is obvious: why work hard when everyone else gets the benefit? Why be an overachiever when you can sit back?
- Reinforces the idea that you're not an individual, just a "nameless ant in the colony"
- For Filipinas with foreign partners, this creates a direct conflict of interest β stuck between her mate and family expectations
"Bury the hatchet in your back" β no consequences for bad behavior β
- No matter what a family member does β lies about you, stabs you in the back β the bad deed is supposed to be forgotten instantly
- Bringing it up is "digging up the past" even if it happened last week
- If a relative steals your carabao and sells it, they can still turn to you for money β and if you refuse, the rest of the family sees you as the bad guy
- The message: you are not important and you have no right to withhold help from people who've wronged you
Don't be a smarty pants β crab mentality enforced by family β
- If you stick out in any way β too smart, too rich, too tall, too funny β you'll be picked on or shamed by your own family
- Excel in school and your siblings and friends will make nasty comments behind your back to keep you in line
- Dreams of starting a business or being your own boss are dismissed β "just get a job and be a good employee like everyone else"
- The message: you're not an individual and certainly no one special
"Filipino Pride" as a shield against criticism β
- The concept sounds great but is "often used as cover for being hypersensitive to criticism"
- Say anything negative about Filipinos or Filipino culture and you get instant backlash β no self-reflection, no acknowledgment that someone might have a point, just emotional reaction
- "Filipinos are about the most sensitive people on the planet" β tendency to assume the worst about anything they don't understand or agree with
- Example: tell her she looks good in a dress and she assumes you mean she looks ugly in shorts; tell a joke she doesn't get and she assumes she's the punchline
- Result: a person constantly looking for reasons to be offended, which gets tiresome
- Part of the tribal mentality where any perceived insult on one clan member means the whole clan swarms the attacker
- Pea acknowledges she'll be attacked for saying this, reinforcing her point
The end result: what a toxic Filipina looks like β
- Obsessed with image and status, preoccupied with what other people think
- Problems accepting responsibility, needs to blame anyone but herself
- Uses lies as a go-to defense mechanism (built-in from childhood)
- Seems brainwashed about obeying parents
- Feels responsible for a whole host of people who don't have the same concern for her
- All these traits cause "countless fights and problems and be fatally toxic to your chances of happiness"
- Pea's conclusion: if you're patient enough to try to undo the programming, she admires you β but if you choose to "run like hell," she can't blame you either