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2024-02-13 ย |ย โฑ๏ธ 17:24 ย |ย ๐๏ธ 44K views ย |ย ๐ 4.4K likes ย |ย ๐ฌ 2.1K comments
Pea hits the streets of Dumaguete to ask local Filipinas whether they'd date a man who doesn't believe in God, how they'd handle religious differences in a relationship, and whether an atheist foreigner has any realistic shot at a relationship in the Philippines. With 86% of the population identifying as Catholic, the answers reveal a surprisingly consistent pattern: believe in something โ anything โ and you're in the game.
The setup and format โ
- Street interview style in Dumaguete; Pea walks the city for 3.5 hours looking for people to talk to
- Notes it's the first sunny day in weeks
- Pea mentions the difficulty of finding willing interview subjects โ people seem to run the other way when they see her approaching with a camera
- She and her camerawoman Lucy are exhausted by the end
Respondent 1 โ Religious, would not date an atheist โ
- Considers herself religious; would not date an atheist
- Doesn't think people who skip church are bad โ they might just have schedule conflicts โ but insists they need "faith in God in their hearts"
- Believes you need religion to be a good person because "God serves as the light in your life"
- Would date a guy from a different religion, including a Muslim, as long as he believes in God
- Would not convert for him, but believes love can make the relationship work across religions
- Would teach children both religions and let them decide later
- Doesn't worry about different afterlife destinations โ "as long as it's with God"
- When asked how she'd verify a man is actually Catholic, she says she'd give him the benefit of the doubt โ wouldn't quiz him on the Ten Commandments because that would be insulting
Respondent 2 โ Open-minded, would date an atheist โ
- Only "slightly" religious
- Doesn't believe you need religion to be a good person
- Would date someone from a different religion or a non-believer
- Her parents are open-minded and not controlling โ "as long as you're happy"
- Has a friend who is an atheist; they've debated about God's existence
- Her friend's argument: everything has an inventor, the universe has an inventor, therefore God exists
Respondent 3 โ Would not date an atheist, but would date across religions โ
- Wouldn't date a non-believer but would consider someone from a different religion
- When asked about raising children: "We'll talk about that in the future"
- When asked about different afterlife destinations: "Worry about that later"
Respondent 4 โ Religious, requires church attendance โ
- Would not date a non-believer; is religious
- Defines a religious person as someone who "knows something about God" and goes to church every Sunday
- Requires a man to go to church with her
- But says people who don't attend church aren't necessarily bad people
Respondent 5 โ Most nuanced answer: religion doesn't equal morality โ
- Raised Catholic, considers herself religious
- Admits she doesn't always go to church herself and doesn't consider herself a bad person for it
- Key insight: "I've met a lot of people who don't go to church but they're much better than those who are frequent at church"
- Doesn't believe you need religion to be a good person โ "it's about being a human"
- Still thinks most Filipinas are too loyal to their faith for an atheist to have an easy time dating here
- Acknowledges strict religious households play a big role
Respondent 6 โ Born-again Christian, wants to convert her partner โ
- Would not date an atheist
- Would date someone from a different religion โ but with the expectation that he'd eventually receive "God's call" and convert to born-again Christianity
- If he says the same thing (convert to mine), she believes she'd win that standoff: "I think me"
- Pea finds this confidence amusing
Respondent 7 โ The polytheistic/philosophical respondent โ
- Does not conform to one religion; beliefs are influenced by Hinduism and Taoism
- Believes everything is connected, doesn't believe in coincidences, believes in reincarnation and multiple lives
- Would date a non-believer as long as they respect her beliefs
- Would let children "go with the flow" โ wouldn't gatekeep beliefs from either parent
- Thinks it depends on whether a Filipina's beliefs are traditional or more open
- Most nuanced and articulate response of all the interviewees
Respondent 8 โ Believes in God, relationship needs God "in the center" โ
- Would not date a non-believer; a strong relationship needs God at the center
- Would date someone from a different religion out of mutual respect
- Doesn't overthink the afterlife question
- Wouldn't force a partner to attend church but wants him to "respect my beliefs"
- Would accept his claim of faith at face value โ just needs him to believe in something, "regardless if it's true or not"
- Pea highlights this last point โ the standard is belief in anything, even if unverifiable
Respondent 9 โ The practical neutral โ
- Would date a guy without religion
- Describes herself as a "firm believer of Catholicism" who is "not practicing" and "not that active" โ essentially neutral
- Doesn't mind different religions; compatibility is what matters
- Believes good people don't need to come from religious families โ "it's really out of your personal values"
- Pushes back on the idea that atheists are Satan worshippers: "They don't believe in the devil anyway"
- Has atheist friends from events who are good people
Respondent 10 โ Brief but clear: no atheists, different religion is fine โ
- "Not totally" religious but still wouldn't date a non-believer
- Needs religion to be a good person because "God guides you"
- Would date someone from a different religion; family and parents would be okay with it
Pea's overall takeaway โ
- Some Filipinas are open to dating non-believers, but many traditional women require a man to believe in God โ any god
- The most surprising finding: many women didn't care which religion, only that you had one
- Pea compares this to "a Yankees fan dating a Red Sox fanatic but a thousand times worse"
- She raises practical questions the respondents didn't address: how would you raise children, and how could you be happy knowing one of you ends up in "a horrible place" according to the other's beliefs
- Leaves the debate to the comments rather than taking a personal stance
Bonus: Pea's weigh-in segment โ
- Follows up on a promise to do a live weigh-in after returning from a US trip
- In October (while in the US) she weighed 119 lbs, up 7 lbs from her usual 112
- Blames irresistible American food โ burgers, fries, pizza (best pizza from Pizza Alley in St. Augustine)
- Current weight: about 50 kg / 111 lbs โ back down
- Jokes she's "like a big sack of rice"
- Plans more beach travel vlogs since Philippine summer is approaching