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When Your Philippines Plans Go Boom, and It Was All A Lie

πŸ“… 2024-10-08⏱ 24:31
πŸ“… 2024-10-08 Β |Β  ⏱️ 24:31 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 177.3K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 10.3K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 3.5K comments

Pea interviews Mark, a 54-year-old retired American who came to the Philippines after two years of research and a six-month long-distance relationship with a Filipina β€” only to be robbed, scammed by a fake hotel listing, and caught in a passport standoff within his first few days. The conversation is a cautionary tale about how even the most prepared expats can get blindsided, but also about the strangers who stepped up to help him through the chaos.

Mark's background and preparation ​

  • 54 years old, retired early due to medical issues
  • Spent two years researching the Philippines before coming, including watching Pea's channel
  • Joined a popular dating site and was on it for over a year before meeting this woman
  • Developed a personal screening system β€” a list of about 20 questions he'd ask right away to weed out scammers
  • Says he'd gotten good at spotting the obvious scammers quickly

The relationship with the Filipina ​

  • She passed his 20-question screening "with flying colors"
  • They talked exclusively for six months β€” from the moment she woke up until he went to bed, non-stop WhatsApp video messaging
  • She was about 35 years old with two children
  • She never once asked him for money β€” no sick baby stories, no uncle's surgery, none of the typical scam setups
  • He met her daughter and parents online via video calls
  • The plan was to meet in Manila for a weekend, then go stay with her parents until they found their own place

The arrival and robbery ​

  • She met him at the airport (Pea notes she's "chewed out" other expats for letting women meet them at the airport, but Mark did it anyway)
  • Everything seemed great β€” she was clinging to his arm, affectionate, had already ordered food at the hotel
  • They went to bed together, he was exhausted from the flight and fell asleep
  • He woke up and she was gone β€” she'd placed a pillow next to him where she'd been lying
  • All her belongings were gone from the room
  • She left a message saying it was "overwhelming" and she was "scared" and needed to go to her best friend's place "to think"
  • Mark's stuff (laptop, phone, passport) was still there but had been moved around
  • His cash β€” $250 (over 10,000 pesos) β€” was gone from the hiding spot
  • He'd planned to use the room safe but the room didn't actually have one despite the listing saying it did
  • Pea is baffled by the math: six months of daily video calls, meeting at the airport, clinging to his arm, sleeping with him β€” all for $250
  • Mark had the same reaction: "My love is only worth $250?" Pea quips: "More than $50 to make me holler"

Trying to reach her afterward ​

  • She never replied to any messages after leaving
  • They contacted her best friend, who claimed she hadn't seen her and didn't know where she was
  • Mark suspects the best friend was lying and she was actually there
  • He sent a message through the best friend saying if she brings back whatever money is left, they can forget the whole thing β€” no response
  • Complete ghosting after six months of constant communication

The scam hotel disaster ​

  • After being robbed, Mark needed to sort out his accommodation
  • He'd booked a place through Travelocity, but when he arrived it turned out to be a scam listing β€” the property didn't exist or wasn't what was advertised
  • He lost approximately $300 on this fake booking
  • Travelocity acknowledged it was a scam and promised a refund, but said it would take 7–14 business days
  • Pea notes the universal truth: "They'll take your money like that, but giving it back takes forever"

The passport hostage situation at the replacement hotel ​

  • Desperate for somewhere to stay, Mark booked a different place β€” not cheap, but advertised WiFi, hot water, and good security
  • It was a condo-style hotel in Manila (the Azur) where diplomats sometimes stay; had an extensive three-hour check-in process
  • Once in the room: WiFi didn't work, hot water heater was broken, and the host said it wouldn't be fixed during his stay
  • The next morning the host knocked on his door demanding cash payment β€” even though Mark had booked through Booking.com and his card was charged
  • Turns out the condo owner's contract with Booking.com was cash-only β€” Mark didn't know this
  • The charge on his bank account was actually still from the scam Travelocity hotel, not the current one
  • Mark gave 5,000 pesos as a down payment, but the host demanded his passport as collateral until full payment
  • Mark handed over the passport, then realized he needed it to withdraw cash from the bank/ATM
  • Asked for the passport back temporarily β€” the host refused
  • The host's worker left and didn't return until the next morning
  • When the worker came back, she said she didn't have the passport β€” another round of calls to the host
  • The host was "adamant" about not returning it, even though Mark explained he literally couldn't get cash without it
  • Mark suggested the worker could accompany him to the mall and hold the passport while he withdrew money
  • Finally, another condo owner talked sense into the host, but it still took until the following day (day three) to get the passport back
  • Once he finally had the passport, he could withdraw money and pay for his stay

The financial damage ​

  • $250 cash stolen by the girlfriend
  • ~$300 lost on the scam hotel booking (pending refund)
  • Additional costs for the replacement hotel
  • Multiple days of stress, no hot water, no working WiFi

Mark's outlook despite everything ​

  • Despite all of this, he still wants to stay and retire in the Philippines
  • His reason: the strangers who stepped up to help him through his situation β€” the general kindness of everyday Filipinos
  • Says "I wouldn't trade this for the world"
  • He will never use a dating site again
  • Not actively looking for a relationship β€” says if it happens organically, it happens
  • Describes himself as "extremely cautious" now but not giving up on the country
  • "Peace of mind is more important than a piece of..." β€” Pea finishes: "peace of meat"

Pea's takeaway ​

  • Even watching every vlog ever made about the Philippines won't fully prepare you for your first time there
  • You have to experience it yourself
  • She frames the interview without heavy moralizing β€” lets Mark's story speak for itself

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