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2024-03-08 Β |Β β±οΈ 25:17 Β |Β ποΈ 420.3K views Β |Β π 18.3K likes Β |Β π¬ 4.3K comments
Pea hits the streets to interview local Filipinas about their expectations for marriage, the role of a husband versus a wife, and what they bring to the table in return. The interviews reveal a consistent pattern: women overwhelmingly see the man as the sole provider and themselves as homemakers, most prioritize their birth family over their husband, and several struggle to articulate any concrete benefit a man gets from marrying them. Pea's commentary afterward flags the potential problems foreigners should watch for.
Interview 1: The husband provides, the wife stays home β no exceptions β
- The woman defines the husband's role using the Filipino concept of "haligi ng tahanan" (pillar of the home) β he works, pays bills, loves his wife and kids
- The wife's job is to take care of the kids and husband, with the husband coming first
- When asked if the wife should help pay bills, her answer is a flat "no" β the man handles everything and the wife stays home
- On who comes first, husband or birth family: she says her family, because "my family is the one who looked for me before my husband"
- Pea pushes back with the biblical principle of leaving your family and cleaving to your husband β the woman says she can't leave either one, and if they don't get along, "it's their problem, not mine"
- When asked what benefit a man gets from marriage, her answer is simply "someone to take care of him" β Pea counters with "what if he just hires a nurse?" and gets a "no comment"
- She firmly believes in dating to marry and would not accept a relationship without marriage
Interview 2 (Migga): Sweet but vague on what she offers β
- Says husband should love his wife and provide for her needs and wants
- Claims she's not materialistic and appreciates small things "from the heart"
- Her role as wife: take care of kids, be "the light of the house"
- Pea has to remind her she mentioned kids but forgot the husband β she corrects and says she'd ask about his day, hug him, give a massage
- When asked what benefits a man gets from marriage: "I can't think of any" β Pea jokes "I can't think of any either"
- Why a man should pick her: she's helpful and puts others first, which she considers a "rare" quality
- On a perfect guy who won't marry: she'd "explain the advantages and disadvantages" of marriage, but when pressed to name advantages, she can't
- Pea offers a creative compromise β have the whole wedding ceremony, big feast, invite "the lazy uncle, the chismosa tita," but just don't sign the paper β the woman still refuses
- She would sign a prenuptial agreement without complaint
Interview 3: The most balanced and thoughtful response β
- Husband's role: support the family financially including education for children
- Wife's role: stay at home, take care of children, cook, do laundry β she acknowledges that in the West women consider this "beneath them" but says it's normal and not frowned upon in Filipino culture
- On family vs. husband priority: says she'd prioritize her husband but wouldn't abandon her family β "it doesn't mean I will leave my family"
- Would sign a prenup and thinks it should be standard protocol: "what's the problem? You're going to be staying with him for the rest of your life"
- On marriage importance: says it only really matters if you're having children β for a guy alone, "there's no benefit"
- Describes her ideal man: mature (age and mindset), responsible, gentleman, taller than 5'4" (she's 5'4" so "maybe 5'6 and above"), salary doesn't matter, body type doesn't matter β "cuddly, squishy, fluffy"
Interview 4: Family first, no prenup, limited self-awareness about what she offers β
- Husband provides for the family; wife cleans and takes care of children
- Family comes first over husband β "my family, of course"
- Pea challenges her: "Isn't it kind of unfair if his priority is you but your priority is not him?" β she deflects with "if my husband is understanding"
- Can't think of any advantages a man gets from marriage
- What she offers: "to continue their lineage" β that's it
- Would not be okay living together without marriage β "I want a guy that can marry me soon"
- Why pick her: "I'm stable, I'm single, and I'm also a virgin" β Pea notes this is "rare" and calls her "the unicorn"
Interview 5: The husband-first outlier β
- Stands out from the others by saying her husband comes first, because "he's my partner" and "we're building a family"
- If the perfect guy wouldn't marry her, she'd propose to him herself β Pea reacts with genuine surprise and approval
- Still traditional on roles: husband provides, wife does household work
Interview 6: Family first so they can "help me in the future" β
- Would prioritize her birth family first specifically so they can help her later β essentially a strategic calculation
- Would not sign a prenup because "sharing is caring"
- What she offers a man: doing household chores β Pea fires back "he could get a maid, he doesn't have to marry the maid, he doesn't have to risk his assets"
Pea's analysis and warnings for foreign men β
- Filipinas overwhelmingly believe in traditional gender roles with the man as provider and the woman as mother/housewife, and they view marriage as the gold standard
- The family loyalty issue is the biggest potential red flag: most of these women would not put their husband first, which is "a completely alien concept to most westerners"
- Pea says if she were a man, she'd have "serious reservations about getting involved with a woman that didn't put me first"
- She recommends having this conversation early in the relationship to find out where you stand on the totem pole
- She noticed that several of the young women had never even considered what a man actually gets out of marriage β they couldn't articulate a single benefit
- Acknowledges this is a small sample size and no definitive conclusions can be drawn, but the patterns are consistent