Friday, May 01, 2026

Labor Day 2026 - Filipinos Are Overworked, UnderServed, OverTaxed

#opinions

Labor Day, Without the Posters

Filipinos are resilient. That’s what we’re known for. But resilience, when you look at it closely, is often just a response to pressure. It’s not always a choice. It’s adaptation. It’s learning how to survive conditions that were never designed to be easy in the first place.

There’s a subtle shift that happens when resilience becomes normal. What used to be considered excessive becomes routine. What used to be questioned becomes accepted. Pagod becomes part of the job description. Sacrifice becomes something you stop noticing. And then you hear it—“Ganun talaga.” 

(we really can't stop laugh ironically as "ganun talaga" echoes in my head).


Labor Day arrives the same way it always does—quietly declared, briefly acknowledged, then quickly folded back into the rhythm of work. There are banners, statements, and the usual language of appreciation. Saludo sa manggagawang Pilipino. It sounds right. It feels right. But for many Filipinos, the day carries a different weight.


Overtaxed. Overworked. Underserved. (we saw this poster in our feed: LaborDay in red fonts, glaring)


after namin ng konting walk, pumasok at nagshift / LaborDayPun


Hindi na kailangan i-elaborate minsan. Ramdam na. Work, in the Filipino context, has never been purely individual. It extends. A salary rarely belongs to one person. It stretches across households, across expectations, across emergencies that no contract ever prepared you for. You don’t just work for yourself—you work for stability, for family, for that quiet assurance na may maibibigay ka kapag kailangan.

And so, naturally, the effort multiplies. The hours extend. The roles overlap. The energy stretches thinner than it should. Commutes take longer than they should. Days feel shorter than they should. And yet, the expectation remains the same: keep going. That phrase has a way of ending conversations before they even begin.

But Labor Day, if it means anything beyond symbolism, should interrupt that thinking. It should pause the automatic acceptance and ask something simpler, something more direct: Is the effort being matched fairly?

Because beneath all the narratives of hard work and perseverance lies a quieter imbalance. Workers continue to show up. They deliver, adjust, endure. The system continues to function largely because they make it function. But what comes back is often uneven—wages that don’t always scale with effort, benefits that feel conditional, security that remains uncertain.


Underserved doesn’t always look dramatic. 

It looks like compromise. It looks like staying longer than you planned.

Accepting less than you hoped.

Delaying things you once thought were within reach.

And still, people keep moving.


There is dignity in that. There always will be. But there is also a risk in romanticizing it. When endurance becomes the standard, the threshold quietly lowers. You begin to measure success not by how well you are supported, but by how much you can carry without breaking. That’s not sustainability. That’s tolerance.

Labor Day, then, becomes less about celebration and more about honesty. Not rejecting work, but examining its cost. Not denying resilience, but asking why it is so constantly required. Because at some point, we have to move beyond admiration. We have to ask whether the system is built to sustain the very people it depends on. Hindi naman kailangan ng grand statement. Minsan, clarity lang.

To say Filipinos are overtaxed, overworked, and underserved is not an attack. It’s an observation. A lived one. The kind that doesn’t need data to be felt. And maybe that’s where things begin—not in louder recognition, but in quieter awareness. Because honoring labor is not just about saying thank you. It’s about making sure the thank you means something.



Õthello

Monday, April 06, 2026

The Quiet Cost of Asking AI to "Just Make It" (Artificial Intelligence's Subtle Effects)

(This essay was inspired because the author is currently taking the course Machine Learning Foundations and had a small talk of a GenZ Insurance Advisor, in one of the coffee shops; where the use of AI from a perspective of nonchalantness was freely discussed in an open-ended exchange of ideas)


There’s a version of this conversation that feels very Gen Z, esp those in the higher echelons of education — those Gen Zs who're "woke" and constantly seeking "information"to better humanity and the environment.

You’re in a university "tambayan"— laptops open, someone running a group chat debate about sustainability. Someone says, “We need to be more mindful with AI. It consumes energy.” Heads nod. It sounds right. It feels responsible.

But then, five minutes later, someone’s prompting an AI to generate a video for a class presentation. Another is using it to summarize readings. Someone else is creating images for a campaign pitch. No one thinks twice — because the impact isn’t visible.


That’s the strange thing about AI—it feels weightless. Walang usok. Walang ingay. No factory. No physical mess. Just a clean interface and a blinking cursor asking what you want - at least from a user's vantage point. But behind that cursor is something very real.





Every time you ask AI to generate something—a video, a set of images, even long-form text—you’re tapping into a network of data centers. Massive, always-on infrastructures that process enormous amounts of data, cooled continuously, powered constantly. These centers don’t sleep. They don’t slow down. They respond, and every response costs energy.


It’s not dramatic in isolation. One prompt won’t change the climate. One AI-generated video won’t tip the scale. But that’s not how systems work. The cost is cumulative, quiet; distributed across millions of users who all think they’re just doing something small. Which, in a way, they are.


But small actions, when scaled, stop being small. There’s a kind of irony here. The same generation pushing hardest for sustainability—reducing plastic use, advocating for climate policies, questioning corporate practices—is also the most fluent in AI. The most dependent on it. The most likely to integrate it seamlessly into daily life. And maybe that’s where the tension sits. Not in rejection, but in regulation. Because no one is realistically suggesting we stop using AI. It’s too embedded already—in education, in work, in creativity. The question is not whether to use it, but how much, and for what.


Do we generate a full AI video for a two-minute classroom report that could have been done with existing footage? Do we prompt endlessly for slight variations of the same output? Do we treat AI as convenience or as necessity? These aren’t moral questions. They’re behavioral ones.


It’s easy to underestimate invisible systems. We tend to care more about what we can see. A plastic bottle thrown on the ground feels wrong because it’s immediate. It occupies space. It lingers. But an AI request leaves no trace in your room. Walang kalat  - just output; but the cost has simply moved elsewhere.


In data centers. In energy grids. In cooling systems working overtime so the illusion of effortlessness can remain intact. And maybe what Gen Z is beginning to sense—especially those in academic spaces where ideas circulate faster than conclusions—is that sustainability, is no longer just about physical waste. It’s about digital consumption; about restraint in environments where excess feels harmless. It’s not about guilt. It’s about awareness.


You don’t need to stop using AI. But you might start noticing how you use it, the extra prompts you didn’t need, the outputs you generated just to see if you could, the convenience you chose over effort—not once, but repeatedly, beecause the real impact isn’t in a single decision - it’s in the pattern. And patterns, once established, tend to scale.


So maybe the conversation isn’t about restricting AI. Maybe it’s about maturing with it - understanding that even the most frictionless tools still carry weight—just not in ways we’re used to seeing. And learning, slowly, to ask not just what can AI do for me? But what does it cost when I ask it to - "just make it"?




- billymacdeus

Monday, March 30, 2026

National Women's Month: Leaders Who Move the Needle - with Intention

As March 2026 comes to a close, allow me to share a reflection of leadership essay which ultimately carve in this digital footprint journey — the recognition of women leaders in my circle.

This National Women’s Month, I find myself reflecting on the kind of leadership that doesn’t always demand attention—but quietly transforms everything around it. And in our space, I’ve had the privilege to witness that through Joy and Abie. 

Working alongside them in IT Service Delivery, I’ve seen firsthand how they navigate complexity with calm, and pressure with purpose. As IT SPOCs and Service Delivery Leaders, they carry a responsibility that goes beyond systems and tickets—they carry trust. Client expectations, stakeholder alignment, operational continuity—all of it converges in their day-to-day, and yet they handle it with a level of composure that is both steady and inspiring.   

There are moments when the pace becomes relentless—projects stacking up, ad hoc requests coming in, incidents demanding immediate resolution—and still, they show up with clarity. Not rushed. Not shaken. Just focused, grounded, and ready.  




I’ve seen Joy lead with a quiet strength that anchors the team. There’s a thoughtfulness in how she approaches challenges, a steadiness that brings confidence even in uncertain situations. She doesn’t just resolve issues—she builds trust in the process.     

And then there’s Abie, whose leadership blends precision with heart. She moves with intention, sharp in execution yet deeply aware of the people behind every task, every request, every deliverable. She reminds me that technical excellence becomes even more powerful when paired with empathy.   


What stands out to me the most is how both of them consistently move the needle—whether it’s through IT projects, operational improvements, or the countless unseen efforts that keep everything running seamlessly. They don’t just meet expectations—they elevate them.  Being in this field, I know how demanding IT can be. And seeing women like Joy and Abie not only thrive but lead with impact—it’s something worth recognizing, celebrating, and learning from.   


This March, I celebrate them not just as colleagues, but as leaders who embody what it means to make a difference—with skill, with resilience, and with grace.  Because when I look at the work they do, I’m reminded that leadership isn’t always loud. Sometimes, it’s intentional, and deeply human. And that kind of leadership?  It moves everything forward.



---billymacdeus



Sunday, February 22, 2026

Saline: The Ordinary Solution That Becomes Extraordinary During Emergency



We got curious, as the trainer mentioned saline - once, then twice, and the third time came; our interest grew even stronger, we have to google and re-search what is saline. Although we have an idea that it's rooted from salt - however, our neurons got stimulated further na nagsilbing inspirasyon upang gawin ang blogpost na ito.

Over the past few days before the weekend, we were invited to attend an ISMS (Information Security Management System) ISO 2700, clubbed with OSH - ISO 4500 training. Our speaker surely imparted a plethora of ideation, learnings and realization pertaining to the topics engulfing ISMS and OSH.

Our imagination balooned as he demonstrated and discussed the importance of handy saline in emergency situations. A life-saver, a basic must-grab part of a kit. After careful reading with ChatGPT on the ELI5 of saline --- we deduced...


Saline is,

Just salt water, after all.

And yet, saline occupies a quiet, indispensable place in emergency response. It is one of those unassuming tools that rarely earns applause but often makes the difference between escalation and stabilization. Sa madaling salita, simple pero mahalaga.

Saline solution—typically a sterile mixture of sodium chloride (salt) and water, often at a concentration of 0.9%—is designed to match the body’s natural fluids. This isotonic (containing essential salt and minerals) quality means it neither pulls water aggressively into cells nor draws it out. It respects the body’s balance. It cleans without shocking. It hydrates without disrupting. -- In first aid settings, that neutrality is precisely the point.


Historically when administering saline, like when a worker gets a chemical splash in the eye, saline becomes the first line of mercy. It flushes contaminants gently but thoroughly. It buys time. It reduces further damage while waiting for medical professionals. The same goes for wound irrigation. Before bandages and antibiotics, there is cleansing—and saline performs this task without introducing additional irritation.


Researching further, in the realm of emergency response, time is not just measured in minutes. It is measured in tissue viability, in infection risk, in how quickly a situation can be stabilized. Saline does not cure. It prepares. It clears the field so that more advanced interventions can do their work.


For normal people—not just trained responders—the significance of saline lies in accessibility. It is not an exotic substance. It does not require advanced certification to understand its basic use. Keeping a bottle of sterile saline in a workplace first aid kit is not a dramatic act. It is a practical one. Parang payong sa tag-ulan—anjan lang, hindi mo kailangang hanapin pagkat nasa tabi lang.


Based from in-depth reading, what makes saline particularly valuable is its predictability. In high-stress moments, predictability is a gift. You do not want to wonder whether a solution will burn, sting excessively, or cause a reaction. You want something the body recognizes. Something aligned with its own chemistry.


From the experts: there is also a philosophical subtlety here. Saline works because it mirrors the body’s internal environment. It does not overpower; it harmonizes. In emergency response, that principle is often overlooked. Not every solution must be aggressive. Sometimes, the most effective intervention is the one that restores equilibrium rather than forcing change.


It dawned on us that during an OSHA or ISO 45001 training, discussions about hazard controls and risk mitigation can feel abstract. But saline grounds those concepts. It is tangible. It sits in a bottle, ready to be used. It represents preparedness not as fear, but as foresight. It's impressive to note how we appreciated saline even further post these revelations and instrospection from the training. From the vantage point of first aid responders, they understand this intuitively. The goal is not heroics. It is stabilization. It is preventing a bad situation from becoming worse. Saline fits into that philosophy seamlessly. It buys clarity in moments that threaten chaos.


And for the rest of us—those attending continuous learning sessions, those tasked with keeping workplaces safe—the lesson extends beyond the bottle. Preparedness does not always look dramatic. Often, it looks like stocking the simplest tools and knowing how to use them calmly.


Saline may be ordinary. But in an emergency, ordinary things used properly become extraordinary.



-- billymacdeus 

PS: special thanks to Srinivas - the trainer/speaker, & to Miss Espie - for keeping us in mind.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Penoy and Balut: A Tender Argument at the Dinner Table

Have you eaten a Penoy or Balut?




There are foods you eat for nourishment, and then there are foods you eat for memory. Penoy and balut belong firmly to the second category. They are not merely eggs; they are conversations passed down quietly, choices that reveal temperament, comfort levels, and how much truth one is willing to encounter at the table.


At first glance, the difference seems simple. Penoy is gentler—an almost-formed promise. The egg is pale, yielding, mild. Balut, by contrast, is assertive. It arrives with history intact, unapologetic in its complexity, asking the eater not just to consume but to acknowledge. And yet, both are born of the same beginning.


Penoy is restraint. It is softness chosen. A kind of culinary mercy. It appeals to those who want the ritual without the confrontation, the warmth without the reckoning. To eat penoy is to lean into comfort, to savor the familiarity of broth and salt, to accept nourishment without complication.


Balut, on the other hand, is courage—though not the loud kind. It is intimate courage. The kind that unfolds quietly, spoon by spoon, in the late evening when the streets are still and the vendor’s lamp casts a gentle glow. Balut asks you to slow down, to look closely, to understand that flavor can carry history, and tenderness can coexist with difficulty.


To love balut is not to love shock value. It is to love honesty. The textures are layered, the taste deepened by context. It reminds you that life rarely arrives simplified, and that fullness—true fullness—often includes discomfort. What’s remarkable is how these preferences often mirror people’s inner lives.


Some of us gravitate toward penoy during seasons when we need reassurance. When the world feels sharp enough already. When we want gentleness without explanation. Others reach for balut not to prove anything, but because it feels grounding—because it connects them to childhood sidewalks, shared laughter, and the quiet pride of having learned to appreciate what once felt intimidating. Neither choice is superior. Both are valid expressions of care.


Penoy teaches us that softness is not weakness. That there is dignity in choosing ease. Balut teaches us that depth requires presence. That richness often reveals itself slowly, after we decide to stay. Together, they form a kind of balance—two answers to the same hunger. One whispers, You are safe. The other says, You are capable.


And perhaps that is why, at the end of the day, the debate between penoy and balut endures. Not because we need to choose sides, but because we recognize ourselves somewhere in between—sometimes seeking comfort, sometimes seeking truth, always seeking connection. In the warmth of an egg cradled in the palm, seasoned with salt and silence, we find more than food.


We find affection. We find memory. We find the quiet pleasure of being understood—no matter which one we choose.



-Othello