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2024-10-15 Β |Β β±οΈ 17:09 Β |Β ποΈ 167.4K views Β |Β π 8.4K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.5K comments
Pea pushes back on the viral narrative that all Filipinos eat garbage-can food by visiting a young provincial family and walking viewers through exactly how common rural Filipinos actually live β from the sleeping arrangements and outdoor cooking setup to the mountain-piped water and hole-in-the-ground CR. The tour doubles as a window into Pea's own childhood, since she grew up in nearly identical conditions.
Framing: Are Filipinos really eating out of garbage cans? β
- Pea addresses the widespread perception driven by videos of Manila slums β particularly Barangay 105, ironically called "Happy Land," a giant trash pile where 12,000 people survive and some eat pagpag (food scavenged and re-cooked from restaurant garbage)
- She notes pagpag also exists in Cebu City and other urban areas
- Government figures: only 15% of Filipino families live below the national poverty line (lacking income for basic food and necessities) β still inexcusably high, but far from universal
- Her analogy: judging all Filipinos by Manila slum videos would be like seeing a video of San Francisco's homeless and assuming it represented life in America
- The majority of Filipinos live in the provinces (rural areas outside cities), and that's what she's here to show
The family: Jane, Joe (Jardo), and their household β
- A young couple β Jane is still in school, Joe works construction
- They live with Joe's mother (the grandmother) and their one-year-old daughter
- A nephew named Saling comes to play; a woman referred to as "Si Nang" helps watch the baby when the parents are away
- The house requires a significant hike to reach β no proper roads nearby, which is typical since only 1 in 10 Filipinos own a car
The house tour β
- Built of coco lumber (coconut wood) with a corrugated metal roof
- Walls are tarp β not solid construction
- Pea notes this is nearly identical to the house she grew up in as a kid, which had bamboo floors
- Sleeping: The entire family sleeps together in one area on sheets or banig (woven cogon grass mats), not mattresses. The baby sleeps "tapad" β sandwiched between mom and dad. Pea says this communal sleeping arrangement is standard provincial life and matches her own childhood.
- Baby has a duyan (hammock) made for afternoon naps β Pea recalls her family used to repurpose flour sacks from the bakery as baby hammocks for her brothers
- A small dining area inside, but no cook-top or kitchen equipment visible indoors
Cooking setup β
- All cooking is done outdoors over firewood β no propane
- Jane collects firewood (kaingin/asot) from the forest, just as Pea did as a child
- When it rains, they cook under a partially covered outdoor area
- For typhoons: they cook enough food early before the storm hits and store it inside
- Main diet: rice and vegetables (utan-utan). Pea jokingly asks "but not cats?" when a stray cat appears at the cooking area
Water β
- Free mountain water piped via a long hose from a source in the mountains (bukid)
- No water bill β they just had to buy the hose and tap into the mountain source
- The hose run is described as very long
The CR (comfort room/bathroom) β
- A basic structure with a hole in the ground β no septic system
- Bathing is done at the outdoor water faucet, Filipino style (with clothes on)
- Pea notes that in the mountains, "everywhere is your CR" given the steep terrain and open space
Farming and food β
- Joe uses the surrounding land to grow beans (3-month growing cycle) β they eat some and sell the rest
- They also grow corn on the other side of the mountain
- Pea emphasizes this is a key advantage of provincial living: they can grow their own food for free
No electricity β
- The family has zero electrical service
- They use a single solar-powered rechargeable flashlight β charged by day, used at night
- No karaoke (Pea notes the significance since karaoke is a Filipino cultural staple)
- No video games for kids β children play in the dirt, look for bird nests, play in the jungle
- After dinner, the family just talks β Pea quips "communication is the key"
Social life and entertainment β
- Joe admits he doesn't take Jane on dates anymore β too busy with work
- No mall trips, no going to town for fun
- They go to town about twice a month to buy supplies, traveling via motorbike taxi (habal-habal)
- Jane and Joe met as neighbors in the area
- They have never watched a movie together
Dreams and aspirations β
- Jane wants to finish her studies and fix up their house
- Joe wants more babies (gets a laugh from Jane)
- Both want to improve the house
- Jane confirms they plan to have more children
Pea's personal connection and closing message β
- She repeatedly notes throughout the tour that she grew up in nearly identical conditions β the tarp walls, bamboo floors, communal sleeping, firewood collection, outdoor cooking
- Her framing for Western viewers: "For those of you at home, you might think that this is camping, but this is a common living scenario in the provinces"
- Provincial Filipinos consider themselves lucky compared to urban poor in Manila and Cebu β they have free food (they can grow it), free water, clean air, and a home they own
- Both Jane and Joe confirm they are happy β Joe says there's peace in the mountains
- Pea gives the family some money to help fix their house, telling them on camera "I hope this will help you fix the house"