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2024-04-19 Β |Β β±οΈ 17:58 Β |Β ποΈ 97.4K views Β |Β π 6.1K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.3K comments
Pea answers three viewer emails in this Mailbag Friday installment, covering disability and dating in the Philippines, finding a Filipina who doesn't want marriage or children, and whether bringing a beautiful Filipina wife to the US is a recipe for disaster. Each question gets Pea's signature blend of cultural insight, blunt honesty, and practical advice.
Email #1: Demi from Canada β disabled foreigner asking about life and dating in the Philippines β
- Demi is a 40-something Canadian man in an electric wheelchair, missing his left hand and arm up to the elbow, with limited use of his right hand β he types with a stick using his mouth and controls his mouse with his feet
- He has a master's degree in Translation (French-English, working on adding Japanese) and works from home as a translator
- He compliments Pea's zombie apocalypse survival video as his favorite; Pea notes the videos she loves best always get the fewest views
- Pea's answer on accessibility: The Philippines is rough for wheelchair users β bigger cities have some level sidewalks and ramps, but she's never seen a handicapped-friendly bus; parking spaces are cramped and tiny; outside cities, sidewalks barely exist and even able-bodied people struggle on the uneven terrain
- Many disabled Filipinos are essentially stuck at home being cared for by family members, so Demi would likely need to hire a live-in helper (inexpensive in the Philippines) but probably wouldn't get out much
- Pea's answer on attitudes: Filipinos are "the most welcoming people on Earth" β they see a person who happens to have a disability, not a disabled person; many Filipinos have imperfections themselves and it's almost never treated as a big deal
- She preemptively addresses the cynical comment she knows is coming: "Oh Filipinos don't care about anything as long as they get your money" β she says those people don't understand the culture; in many Western countries the disabled are treated like rejects, but the Philippines values elders and people with special needs
- Filipinas can absolutely fall in love with a disabled man; there are plenty of disabled foreigners in the Philippines who can confirm this
- Bottom line: The Philippines' infrastructure isn't ready for Demi yet, but once it catches up with the attitudes, it could be a perfect fit
Email #2: Carl from the US β doesn't want marriage or children, has questions about provincial life β
- Carl describes himself as "not the typical Westerner" who looks at life differently; he's interested in provincial women specifically
- Question 1: Are there Filipinas who don't want marriage?
- Pea explains marriage is still the ultimate goal for most Filipinas β it represents lifetime commitment; a woman who just lives with a guy feels like she's "not good enough to commit to"
- The real fear: when she gains weight or "hits the wall," the guy will start looking elsewhere and she'll be "kicked out on her expanding ass with nothing to show for it"
- Unlike Western countries, a middle-aged Filipina can't easily reinvent herself β jobs dry up after your 30s; women have "a really short shelf life" and "not many guys are interested in sour milk," so women need to feel secure through the "curdling process"
- But yes, some single Filipinas are fine without marriage β Pea personally knows several living happily with foreign partners with no marriage plans; Carl just has to look harder and be honest about his intentions from the start
- Question 2: Are there Filipinas who don't want children?
- Reproducing is almost a duty for Filipinas, with heavy family pressure β but "not every Filipina listens to her mom" (Pea calls herself living proof)
- Two options: find a woman whose kids are already grown, or find one of the small number who simply don't want kids
- Question 3: Can he get good electronics and internet for day trading?
- Easy, no problem β might pay more, and outside the city Starlink is recommended (as Pea herself uses), but the Philippines has him covered: "we're not The Flintstones"
- Question 4: How are provincial women with body hair?
- Pea distinguishes city girls vs. province girls: city girls are much more likely to eliminate body hair, sometimes all of it
- Provincial women generally don't shave legs (most don't need to, though some can "grow a pretty impressive amount of fur"); armpits are usually left alone unless needed, then they pluck each hair individually with tweezers
- "Down under" / "the tresses hidden by dresses" β most provincial Filipinas don't do much maintenance: "It's a Jungle Out There"
- Body hair isn't considered unattractive in Filipino culture, so if Carl falls in love with "a wookie," he may have to convince her to make friends with a razor
Email #3: James from the US β worried about bringing his gorgeous Filipina wife to America β
- James came to the Philippines 6 years ago with no intention of finding a partner, married a woman 10 months after meeting her, and everything has been great
- He's starting to miss home β Pea notes this is common after a few years when you start remembering "juicy steaks" and things running smoothly
- His wife is "objectively the most gorgeous woman" he's ever seen, could be a beauty queen, constantly gets stares from foreigners β in the Philippines that's manageable because there's limited competition
- His nightmare: exposing her to "an endless supply of younger, hotter, richer guys who constantly pay her compliments while trying to seduce her"
- He's getting older while she still has years of youth ahead
- Pea's response: She can't predict the outcome but refers him to her earlier video "Your Place or Mine" which includes a five-point risk checklist
- The "seven-year itch" has been updated to a "three-year itch" β since James has been together with his wife longer than three years, that's a point in his favor
- The real question isn't about looks β it's about what kind of person she is on the inside and whether the marriage fulfills both their needs
- Pea shares that when she was in the US for 3 months, she "didn't hardly get any looks at all," but a beautiful woman like his wife will get "bombarded with constant offers and temptations"
- The critical question James must answer: does his wife value him and their relationship, or the excitement of something new and better? "If you get it wrong, you'll definitely regret trading your wife for a juicy steak"