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2025-01-17 Β |Β β±οΈ 18:38 Β |Β ποΈ 299.9K views Β |Β π 15.3K likes Β |Β π¬ 2.5K comments
Pea's monthly mailbag episode covers three viewer letters: a Canadian expat whose neighbor is pelting his house with dog feces after he complained about trash burning, a man from Michigan whose Filipina girlfriend can't handle air conditioning, and a man who accepted a random Filipina's offer to father her baby and now β five years and a marriage later β wants to track her down. Pea delivers practical advice for each, along with cultural context about why these situations happen.
Letter 1: James S. from Canada β the neighbor war over trash burning β
- James rented a small house in a provincial area for four months to test-drive Philippine life and immerse himself in local culture
- One Sunday, heavy toxic smoke filled his house; he ran next door to find his neighbor burning a pile of plastic bottles, a bicycle tire, and garbage bags in an open inferno
- The neighbor gave a blank stare and said "I'm burning trash, I'll be done soon" β no apology
- Two weeks later it happened again; James went to the barangay captain, who visited the neighbor β James could hear them talking and laughing through the wall
- Almost immediately things escalated: a dead rat appeared in James's backyard, then a used disposable diaper, then dark brown projectiles flying over the wall onto his house and roof β which turned out to be fresh dog excrement
- James is terrified of confronting the neighbor and feels the barangay captain may think it's funny
- Pea's response:
- Burning solid waste in your yard is technically illegal, but people do it constantly and nobody cares β James is technically right but that doesn't help
- The neighbor isn't retaliating because James is a foreigner β it's because James dared to complain at all; most Filipinos believe they can do whatever they want on their property and neighbors should just "suck it up buttercup"
- The barangay captain was probably not laughing at him β most barangay officials take their jobs seriously and just want peace
- If James only has a few weeks left, she'd honestly just move to a hotel in town
- If he wants to fight: buy a cheap CCTV camera pointed at the back wall to document everything
- He could go back to the captain or go straight to the PNP (Philippine National Police)
- She wouldn't worry too much about physical danger β "Filipinos won't usually do anything bold like that, we just do the crap we think we can get away with"
- Her best suggestion: call the landlord, explain the property damage, and let them handle the police β they speak the language, know the system, and James's name stays off the complaint forms
- Closes with a joke: "it might be too soon to watch Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs"
Letter 2: Randall from Baguio β the thermostat wars β
- Randall is from Michigan and keeps his apartment AC at 70Β°F; his Filipina girlfriend bumps it to 80Β°F every time she visits
- When he sets it to his comfort level, she says she "can't take it" and leaves
- Even in the car, turning on the AC makes her complain it's "making her sick"
- Pea's response:
- Calls this the "thermostat wars" β it's an extremely common problem
- Filipinos are simply accustomed to higher temperatures; their bodies are set to a different baseline
- Many Filipinos genuinely believe cold air causes illness β this is a widespread cultural belief, not just his girlfriend being difficult
- Pea's practical fix: compromise by turning the temperature down gradually rather than blasting cold air; the girlfriend will adjust over time
- Bonus tip: turning the temperature down at night "guarantees you'll have a Filipina snuggle bunny till morning" β because she'll cuddle up to stay warm
Letter 3: Matt D. (no location given) β the baby proposal and its aftermath β
- Five years ago, Matt (then 42, single) was at a small cafΓ© in the Philippines before a conference when the waitress who brought his food said: "Will you give me your baby?"
- She clarified she didn't want marriage β she just wanted a mixed-race baby to raise on her own, didn't need his name, only wanted "his seed"
- Matt's first instinct was it was a scam or robbery setup, but something about her seemed genuinely innocent
- He admits he was lonely and "probably not thinking with the right head" β since he was leaving soon and never planned to return, he agreed
- She came to his hotel that evening; they had sex, and she asked to do it again the next day "to increase the chances" β he agreed to the encore
- They exchanged only first names: she said hers was Evangeline, he lied and said his was Charlie
- Now Matt is married (wife has a son from a previous marriage, no children together) and returning to the Philippines for business β he wants to find Evangeline and see if he fathered a child
- He only has her first name and the cafΓ© where she worked five years ago
- Pea's response β first, why he shouldn't have done it (for other viewers' benefit):
- Health risk: unprotected sex with a stranger is dangerous
- Legal risk: the woman might actually be married, and sleeping with a married woman is illegal in the Philippines β her husband could extort him
- Moral risk: even if the man doesn't care about an uncertain future for the child, many Filipinas aren't thinking clearly when they volunteer to be single mothers β they want a mixed baby but have no means to support one, and agreeing just adds another burden to someone who already has plenty
- Pea confirms this kind of proposition isn't as rare as it sounds β she expects commenters will share similar experiences
- Pea's response β addressing Matt's actual question:
- Challenges him to think through the consequences: if he finds Evangeline and there is a child, then what? Is he just going to say "oh that's cool, high five" and leave again?
- What if she's single and desperately poor β will he offer financial support or just walk away?
- What if she's married to an abusive alcoholic β is he prepared to rescue the child?
- His marriage is a major concern: does his wife know about any of this? He mentioned telling his best friend, so Pea guesses his wife has no clue
- If his wife doesn't know, is satisfying his curiosity really worth the risk to his marriage?
- She suggests that if he's going to do this, he should confess everything to his wife first, get her blessing, and have a plan for every possible outcome before he goes looking
- If he doesn't have his wife's full support: "let sleeping dogs lie"
- Her core point: unlike the night he gave into temptation, this time he needs to actually consider the consequences before acting
- She wants to hear what he decides