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2025-05-02 Β |Β β±οΈ 15:41 Β |Β ποΈ 35.9K views Β |Β π 4.1K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.1K comments
Pea delivers one of her strongest Mailbag Friday episodes, covering a Canadian man ambushed with a massive surprise party bill on his first trip to meet his girlfriend's family, a viewer who dares Pea to admit Filipinas are liars, and a gut-wrenching dilemma from a man choosing between his elderly mother and his Filipino partner.
Email #1: Louis from Canada β ambushed by the introduction party β
- Louis flew to the Philippines to meet the woman he'd been talking to online for nine months
- First few days at his hotel went great, no problems
- They traveled to her home island to meet her parents β she told him they were going to "eat and meet her folks"
- When they arrived at an outdoor resort, 50 people were already waiting β her parents, extended family, friends, neighbors, and even people she didn't know
- Louis was blindsided, but it got worse: he was handed the bill, which ran into many hundreds of dollars and included renting the resort and transportation for all the guests
- Then an old man walked up and stuck his hand out β Louis thought it was a handshake/thank you, shook his hand twice, but the man was actually asking for money; his girlfriend had to shoo the guy away
- Louis "lost his cool," they had a big fight, and his girlfriend acted like she didn't understand why he was upset
Pea's response to Louis β explaining the cultural mechanics β
- In Filipino culture, walking up to someone and asking for money is not considered that rude β Pea compares it to asking a pretty woman out: "She's probably going to say no, but you're just shooting your shot"
- Filipinos figure the person has the power to say no, but with a foreigner, there's always the hope they'll say yes
- The deeper issue: Filipinos have "a serious lack of empathy when it comes to putting you on the spot" β they have a hard time seeing things from anyone else's perspective
- On whether this will continue for the whole relationship: "Yep. Chances are that's the way it'll always be"
- Pea's trap analogy: you think you can say no to every request, but then your girlfriend's mom slices her hand open with a butcher's knife and can't afford stitches β "You're really going to sit there enjoying your steak dinner?" Of course you won't say no, and that's how the door opens
- Once you make one exception for emergencies, you'll suddenly get a lot of "emergencies" β "some real, most of them fake"
- From the Filipino perspective, Louis wasn't actually screwed: the guy is expected to pay for the introduction feast, and it's very common for the woman to invite "the entire Mongol horde" without warning the foreigner β Pea: "You know that saying about how it's better to ask forgiveness than permission"
- From Louis's (and Pea's own) perspective: yes, he got screwed
- Practical advice: anytime other people are involved, it's going to cost you; always ask exactly how many friends are coming and for how long; if she says her mom needs a ride, ask how many family members will be in the back seat, and make sure they don't expect a trip to Jollibee
Email #2: Albert from an undisclosed country β "Filipinas are the most deceitful women on earth" β
- Albert has spent eight years in the Philippines across five islands and dated "countless ladies"
- His core claim: Filipinas lie about everything from tiny details to major issues like whether they're married or have kids β "If they tell you the sky is blue, you better grab an umbrella"
- He dared Pea to post his email, saying it "doesn't fit your narrative" and she wouldn't respond because it "tarnishes your reputation"
- He challenged her to "do something very un-Filipina and tell everyone the truth"
Pea's response to Albert β don't dare me β
- Pea fires back: she was one of the first Filipino channels to tell the truth about the Philippines, good and bad, and took heat for it when other channels only covered the positive
- Her second video ever was about Filipinos having problems telling the truth, followed by another explaining exactly why they do it β five videos total on the subject
- She sent Albert links to the exact videos he claimed she never made
- "If you're going to accuse me of something, at least do your homework first"
- She does agree with one thing Albert said: Filipinos make really good partners
Email #3: "Torn in Toledo" β choosing between his mother and his Filipina β
- Torn has been dating a Filipina for a couple of years, visited her in the Philippines, and things are great β no fights, no arguments, she's not jealous, she's even okay with a close female friend he has
- They didn't meet online β she was introduced by a mutual friend
- He applied for a K-1 visa, but they've hit roadblocks at the US embassy and it doesn't look like she'll be approved
- Fallback plan: he moves to the Philippines, where she owns and operates a successful business he would co-manage
- The problem: his mother is turning 80, sold her house (already has a buyer and closing date), arranged an apartment, and is moving to his state specifically to be closer to him
- When he told her about potentially moving to the Philippines, "she freaked out" β accused him of choosing a stranger over her, turning his back on her, and said she rearranged her entire life for him
- Torn feels horrible and doesn't know what to do
Pea's response to Torn β no right answer exists β
- Pea calls it a "Sophie's choice" where regrets are guaranteed either way
- She says she gets a huge number of emails about this exact dilemma β men who don't want to leave their children, or who are caring for family members
- Rather than giving a direct answer, she poses a series of questions Torn needs to ask himself: Did you promise to take care of your mom? Does she have serious health problems? Could you spend six months in each place? How tight is your relationship β did you only meet the girlfriend once? Is she really "Mrs. Right"? Would she wait for you? Is there any chance of sorting out the K-1 issues?
- The two nightmare scenarios: if he stays and the girlfriend finds someone else, he'll wonder "what might have been" forever; if he goes and the relationship turns out to be "just another Filipina mirage" while his mom dies alone with a broken heart, he'll never forgive himself
- Pea distinguishes between advising him (which she can't do) and saying what she personally would do: she'd stay with her mom, invite her to live together, and care for her until she passed β but acknowledges this is shaped by Filipino culture where family obligation runs deep
- She asks viewers to weigh in, hoping someone might suggest an option Torn hasn't considered