Saturday, June 20, 2026

Soldier On: Paninindigan sa Kulturang Christiano (1 of 5)

 There are seasons in life when faith feels effortless. The worship service uplifts you, prayers come naturally, and the words of God seem to settle exactly where your weary heart needs them. But there are also seasons when faith feels less like soaring and more like marching. The world becomes louder, burdens become heavier, and convictions that once felt certain are tested by doubt, disappointment, and the quiet seduction of convenience.

It is during these moments that the phrase soldier on takes on a different meaning.

Not the kind of soldiering that relies on brute strength or stubbornness, but the kind that draws courage from conviction. The kind that continues to worship even when life is unfair, continues to believe even when answers seem delayed, and continues to obey not because it is easy, but because it is right.

In many ways, this is the essence of Christian culture as lived inside the Iglesia Ni Cristo. It is not merely a collection of rituals or inherited customs. It is a way of orienting one’s life around a single, unwavering source of truth: the Holy Scriptures. In a world where opinions multiply endlessly and where truth itself often feels negotiable, there is something profoundly grounding about believing that faith and service to God must rest on His written words alone.




The Bible, after all, is not simply read; it is lived. Its teachings become the framework through which members understand suffering, joy, duty, and hope. There is comfort in knowing that one does not have to invent morality anew each generation or chase every passing philosophy. The world changes rapidly, but the believer is called to remain anchored.

This steadfastness is not always easy to explain to those outside the faith. Modern life prizes flexibility, reinvention, and the freedom to define truth on one’s own terms. To hold firmly to a set of spiritual convictions can appear old-fashioned, even restrictive. Yet many who remain faithful understand something deeper: that true freedom is not the absence of boundaries, but the presence of purpose.


Purpose becomes especially important during difficult times. There are moments when careers disappoint, relationships fracture, health declines, or plans unravel despite careful preparation. The natural temptation is to retreat inward, to question whether worship still matters when life feels overwhelming. Yet it is often in these very seasons that worship becomes most essential.

There is a quiet strength in walking into the house of worship carrying worries no one else can see. The hymns may sound the same, the prayers may follow familiar rhythms, and the lessons may come from passages read countless times before, yet somehow the experience remains renewing. Perhaps it is because worship reminds people that they are not merely enduring life alone. They are gathering with others who are also struggling, hoping, persevering, and placing their trust in something greater than themselves.

The act of worship is deceptively simple. Singing hymns, offering prayers, studying the words of God, and giving offerings may appear ordinary to an outsider. But for those who participate sincerely, these acts become declarations of faith. They affirm that God remains worthy of praise even when circumstances are uncertain. They affirm that blessings are not measured solely by material success. They affirm that gratitude can coexist with hardship.

Filipinos understand this paradox perhaps better than most. Ours is a culture shaped by typhoons and recoveries, by departures and reunions, by joys celebrated exuberantly and sorrows endured quietly. Faith has long occupied a central place in our collective life because it provides language for hope when logic alone feels insufficient. It teaches people to continue, to endure, to keep believing that present struggles do not have the final word.

This is why congregational worship carries such significance. It is not merely attendance. It is not checking a spiritual obligation off a list. It is choosing, repeatedly, to place God at the center of one’s life despite competing priorities and distractions. In an age where busyness is often mistaken for importance, setting aside time to worship becomes an act of resistance. It says that spiritual life deserves attention equal to, if not greater than, worldly pursuits.

There is also humility in this practice. The worship service gathers people from different walks of life—students anxious about their future, parents carrying financial burdens, professionals navigating pressure, elders reflecting on decades of faithfulness. For a brief moment, distinctions fade. Everyone sits beneath the same teachings, sings the same hymns, and bows their heads before the same God. The experience becomes a reminder that human worth is not measured by status or accomplishment, but by one’s relationship with the Creator.

And perhaps this is what it truly means to soldier on in the Christian life. It is not the absence of fear or fatigue. It is not pretending that suffering does not exist. Rather, it is the quiet determination to remain faithful in spite of them. It is waking up each day and choosing obedience over convenience, gratitude over resentment, and hope over despair.

The world will continue to change. New ideas will emerge, challenges will intensify, and distractions will multiply. Yet for those who build their lives upon the teachings of God written in the Holy Scriptures, there remains a steady confidence that transcends circumstances. The path may not always be easy, but it is clear. The burdens may not disappear, but they become bearable. And the journey, however long or difficult, is never walked alone.

In these uncertain times, perhaps what people need most is not another trend, another opinion, or another promise of quick relief. Perhaps what is needed is the quiet courage to remain steadfast, to worship in spirit and in truth, and to continue moving forward with faith intact. To soldier on, not because life is easy, but because God remains faithful, and for believers, that has always been reason enough to keep going.



— billymacdeus


Monday, June 15, 2026

Why Adulthood Feels Unexpectedly Emotional

 

There is a peculiar sadness in realizing that life has quietly switched protagonists. There was a time when we were half-asleep in bed, hearing our parents prepare for work in the early morning darkness. We would hear the clinking of cups, the opening and closing of cabinets, the muffled sound of slippers against the floor. Sometimes we pretended to still be asleep when they kissed us goodbye. Other times, we would hear the familiar reminders before the front door closed and silence reclaimed the house. Back then, it all felt ordinary. Parents leaving for work was simply part of the landscape of childhood, like sunsets, homework, or Sunday afternoons. We never stopped to wonder what it felt like to wake before sunrise while the rest of the family slept. We never imagined the weight they carried in their bags alongside packed lunches and folded umbrellas. We never asked why they looked exhausted some nights, or why they sat quietly at the dining table after dinner, staring into space as if trying to gather enough strength to do it all again tomorrow.


And then one day, without ceremony, the roles begin to reverse. Suddenly, the one leaving the house is no longer our father or mother. It is us. For some, it is the morning shift. For others, especially those of us working nights, it is an even stranger arrangement. We leave when everyone else is winding down. We prepare coffee while the neighborhood prepares for sleep. We say goodnight and good morning in the same breath. The world outside grows quiet while our responsibilities are only beginning, and in those odd hours of the night, something unexpected happens: we begin to understand.




We understand the tired smiles that once seemed automatic. We understand why our parents sometimes chose silence over conversation after a long day. We understand the invisible mathematics they performed every month, stretching salaries into tuition fees, groceries, electricity bills, and somehow still finding enough left over for small joys. As children, we thought endurance was an instinct adults naturally possessed. We assumed strength simply arrived with age, as if growing older automatically equipped a person to carry burdens. Now we know better. Strength is often exhaustion that keeps moving. Courage is showing up to work even when your body begs for rest. Love is leaving the house at inconvenient hours so the people inside it can sleep peacefully, unaware of the sacrifices being made on their behalf.


Filipino families know this kind of love intimately. It is the love of fathers who spent decades commuting under the unforgiving heat, their shirts damp with sweat before lunchtime. It is the love of mothers who worked all day and still found the energy to prepare dinner at night, making sure everyone had eaten before thinking of themselves. It is the love of OFWs who missed birthdays, graduations, and special occasions because opportunity demanded distance. These are not the kinds of love that make headlines or inspire grand speeches. They are quieter than that. They are woven into routines, hidden inside sacrifices so familiar that we often mistake them for obligation rather than devotion.


Perhaps that is why adulthood feels unexpectedly emotional. We slowly realize that our parents were never superheroes immune to fatigue. They were ordinary people doing extraordinary things quietly. They worried about money. They feared failure. They had dreams they postponed and comforts they sacrificed. There must have been nights when they felt overwhelmed, mornings when they wished to rest a little longer, afternoons when they wondered if they were doing enough. Yet somehow, they kept going.


And now, standing at our own doorsteps with office bags slung over our shoulders, waiting for a ride under the dim glow of streetlights or walking through sleepy neighborhoods before dawn, we begin to see traces of them everywhere. Not only in our faces, which slowly resemble theirs with age, but in the way we suppress our own worries so others won’t worry too. We see them in the way we continue working despite sleepless nights, in the way we quietly say kaya pa even when we’re unsure, and in the way we carry responsibilities without announcing their weight.


The inheritance our parents gave us was never just land, money, or possessions. It was endurance shaped by love. It was the quiet dignity of responsibility. It was the understanding that love is not always grand or poetic. More often, it is waking up while everyone else sleeps, putting on your uniform, and stepping out into the world carrying hopes that are bigger than yourself. And maybe that is why adulthood humbles us so deeply, because somewhere along the way, we stop asking why our parents did what they did and slowly, almost imperceptibly, we become the answer ourselves.




— billymacdeus

Monday, May 25, 2026

Ilocos Longganisa, The Smoke While Cooking, and the Memory of Home


A week ago, I found myself missing something oddly specific—the smell and taste of slightly burnt Ilocano longganisa from the province. Not just longganisa in the generic sense, but that distinct provincial kind where the edges blacken just enough on the kawali, where the caramelized fat almost crisps into bitterness before surrendering to sweetness and garlic. It was one of those cravings that felt less like hunger and more like memory quietly knocking. As if life had a habit of answering in small, almost poetic ways, the wish arrived.




Two friends of mine, without planning it against each other, became unexpected couriers of nostalgia. One casually said, “Boss, may pasalubong ako—longganisa from Ilocos Sur.” Before the thought could even settle, another message followed from a close lady friend: “Ilocos Norte Longganisa on its way.” It felt absurdly generous, almost genie-in-a-bottle timing, the kind of coincidence that reminds you how food in Filipino life often travels not just as sustenance, but as affection.


The moment I held those linked strings of longganisa in my hands, memory began to move. I could not help but return to childhood afternoons in Dingras, when my mother or father would ask me to run a quick errand to the public market. It was usually one of those lazy provincial afternoons where sunlight stretched longer than it seemed possible, or early dusk when the sky had begun softening into orange and smoke from nearby kitchens started rising into the air. I would happily comply, not because errands were exciting in themselves, but because I already knew what waited on the other side of that small walk.





The meat stalls in the public market had their own rhythm. Vendors knew regular buyers. Wooden counters carried years of use. The scent of raw meat, garlic, vinegar, and heat from nearby stalls seemed permanently woven into the market air. I would buy a kilo of longga—what we casually called it at home—and carry it back with quiet excitement, already imagining dinner.


At home, the aroma would eventually begin its slow conquest of the house. Longganisa frying on a pan has a way of announcing itself without invitation. First comes the garlic. Then the rendered pork fat. Then that subtle sweetness—especially with Ilocano longganisa, known for being garlicky yet touched by the characteristic sweetness of the north. If left just long enough, the outer skin would char slightly, giving that semi-burnt edge that somehow made it even better.


Dinner was rarely just longganisa. There was usually pinakbet on the side, earthy and unapologetically provincial, carrying bitter ampalaya, squash, okra, and bagoong into one deeply Ilocano kind of comfort. Beside it sat white rice, steaming heavily after being lifted from the dalikan, still warm enough that opening the pot released a brief cloud that smelled like evening itself.


It was never luxurious food. But it was complete. That is perhaps what memory does with food—it removes hierarchy. It reminds you that some of the most unforgettable meals are not expensive or elaborate. They are meals attached to repetition, to family, to ordinary days that no one thought were historical while living them.




Writing this now feels strangely necessary. Perhaps because memory, no matter how sharp today, eventually softens. The mind forgets details. Names disappear. Faces blur slightly. But words have a way of preserving what time threatens to dissolve. If someday forgetfulness arrives—as it does for everyone, little by little—then maybe this digital footprint will remain somewhere in the wide quiet archive of cyberspace.


Ilocano longganisa, I suppose, has always been more than breakfast food. It is one of the quiet staples of northern identity. Traditionally hand-made, the pork is minced carefully, seasoned with garlic, salt, vinegar, and local sweetness, then packed into natural casings—likely pork intestines, humble yet essential, the very wrapper I once only knew as “yung balot.” The links are tied one by one, almost like edible necklace of labor and patience, hanging in strings that feel both rustic and deliberate.


What fascinates me now is how such an ordinary food can hold so much emotional architecture. A few strings of sausage can reopen an entire geography of memory: the market of Dingras, the walk home before sunset, the smoke from the stove, the metallic clang of ladles, the scent of pinakbet mixing with pork fat, and the silent certainty that dinner meant family gathered without needing to announce it.


Perhaps this is what pasalubong has always meant in Filipino life. Not merely something brought home from travel, but a way of carrying place itself. A reminder that provinces do not always leave us, even when we leave them. And so I ate that longganisa slowly, letting the edges burn just enough, letting garlic rise the way it once did in childhood kitchens. Somewhere between the first bite and the lingering smokiness after, it felt less like eating and more like returning.



— billymacdeus

ps: readers, tell us in the comments which one is the Norte and Sur longganisa :)
and btw, thanks to RK and Dar.E - you guys are generous!

Monday, May 11, 2026

When Time Quietly Reverses

There is a particular kind of sadness that arrives in adulthood, not the loud and catastrophic kind, but the softer variety that settles slowly into ordinary moments. It reveals itself not through tragedy, but through repetition. Through pauses. Through the subtle realization that the people who once carried the full weight of your childhood are no longer moving through time with the same certainty they once had.


No one really prepares you for this transition. Growing up, we are taught to become independent, to build careers, to leave home if necessary, to pursue versions of ourselves that stretch beyond the geography of our upbringing. In Filipino families especially, there is almost an unspoken expectation attached to this journey. The child studies hard, works harder, and eventually becomes successful enough to help carry the family forward. It is a familiar narrative, repeated across provinces, cities, and generations. But somewhere inside that pursuit of progress, another quieter transformation begins to unfold—one that rarely gets discussed with the same enthusiasm. Your parents begin to age in front of you.


Not dramatically at first. It happens in fragments that are easy to dismiss. Your father asks how to navigate an app he once confidently ignored. Your mother repeats a story she already told over lunch, unaware she has circled back to the beginning. They ask questions whose answers once felt obvious to them. They walk more slowly through grocery aisles that they once crossed effortlessly while carrying bags heavier than you remember.




At first, impatience appears almost instinctively. You answer too quickly. You interrupt gently, sometimes not gently enough. Somewhere in your mind, you still expect them to move at the pace they taught you to move. After all, these were the same people who once corrected your homework, reminded you where you left your things, and repeated instructions to you countless times while you stumbled your way through childhood. But age has a way of reversing familiar roles so quietly that by the time you notice it, the shift has already happened.


The hands that once held yours crossing busy streets are now the same hands reaching carefully for railings. The voices that once reassured you during moments of fear now pause slightly, searching for memory, searching for confirmation. In many Filipino households, this reversal carries a particular emotional texture because our parents rarely articulate vulnerability openly. Many belong to a generation shaped by sacrifice, by endurance, by the quiet discipline of surviving difficult years without complaint. They are not accustomed to asking for help, which is perhaps why their dependence arrives so subtly that it almost feels accidental. And yet, if you are paying attention, you begin to realize that what looks like inconvenience is actually time coming full circle.


This realization changes the emotional atmosphere of ordinary interactions. The repeated stories stop sounding repetitive and begin to feel archival, as though your parents are unconsciously preserving pieces of themselves before memory softens their edges. The simple questions no longer seem frustrating but strangely intimate, small invitations to remain connected in a world moving too quickly for them to fully keep pace with.


It becomes clear then that this stage of life is not merely about caregiving. It is about reciprocity.


Everything your parents once gave freely to you—the patience, the slowed pace, the repeated explanations, the emotional steadiness—is now quietly returning to them through your own actions. Not as repayment in the transactional sense, but as continuity. The care that once flowed downward through generations begins, slowly and inevitably, to rise back upward.


This is perhaps one of the most emotionally complicated parts of adulthood because it collides directly with the life most people are trying to build. Careers demand urgency. Responsibilities multiply. Time becomes fragmented. There are deadlines to meet, bills to pay, futures to secure. And yet, amid all of that movement, your parents are aging at a pace that no amount of ambition can slow down.


In Filipino culture, where family often remains central even in adulthood, this tension feels especially familiar. Many children leave provinces for Manila, or leave the country entirely, carrying with them the invisible weight of obligation and longing. Phone calls become shorter. Visits become occasional. And then one day, during a reunion or holiday gathering, you notice your parents moving more carefully than before, speaking more softly than before, repeating themselves more than before. The realization arrives all at once: time did not wait while you were busy becoming yourself.


Perhaps this is why moments of patience begin to matter more deeply as we grow older. Sitting through the repeated story. Explaining something slowly instead of rushing. Walking beside them at their pace instead of asking them to match yours. These acts appear small from the outside, but emotionally they carry enormous significance because they preserve dignity. They communicate, quietly and without performance, that your parents are still seen not as burdens, but as people deserving of the same tenderness they once extended toward you without hesitation.


Love, in youth, often feels expressive and declarative. As we age, it becomes quieter and more procedural. It exists in reminders to take medicine, in waiting without irritation, in answering calmly when exhaustion would make impatience easier. It reveals itself less through words and more through sustained gentleness.


And maybe that is the deeper truth hidden within this role reversal. Caring for aging parents is not simply about responsibility. It is about witnessing the full arc of human life with enough humility to recognize yourself inside it. Because one day, if time is kind enough to allow it, we too will move more slowly. We too will repeat stories. We too will hope that someone listens with patience instead of annoyance.


When that realization settles in fully, something softens inside you. The frustration fades. The urgency quiets. You begin to understand that this stage of life, difficult as it can sometimes feel, is not punishment. It is one of the final forms love takes before memory becomes all that remains.




- Óthello

Wednesday, May 06, 2026

Tupig — An Ilocano Delicacy and Its Quiet Nostalgia

Last weekend, we found ourselves craving tupig. Not in the casual, “masarap siguro kumain nito ngayon,” kind of way, but in the deeper sense where food begins to feel like memory trying to return to the surface. It could have been anything rice-based, really—kakanin, suman, bibingka—but tupig carried a different gravity. Perhaps it was because December was approaching, and in Filipino households, especially in the provinces, the holidays have a way of awakening sensory memories long before they officially arrive.


And suddenly, without warning, we were back there.


Back in the province where aunties and uncles moved with a rhythm that only provincial preparations seem to have. There was no formal coordination, yet everyone knew their role. Someone prepared the banana leaves. Someone mixed the paridusdus. Someone sat patiently beside the old wooden pangkayod, carving coconut flesh by hand in re

petitive, almost meditative motions. The sound itself was unforgettable—the scraping of coconut against metal, steady and familiar, blending into the afternoon noise of family conversations and distant radio music.


What stands out most in memory is the tupig pit itself, that rectangular makeshift trench lined with uling and heated patiently beneath the earth. Looking back now, it almost resembled a primitive kind of ceremony. The uncooked tupig, carefully wrapped in banana leaves, would be placed there gently, one by one, while everyone waited. There was no rushing the process. Tupig demanded patience. It cooked slowly underground, absorbing smoke, heat, and time before finally becoming what it was meant to be.


As children, we never thought much about how labor-intensive it all was. We only knew the reward: tupig fresh from the pit, still steaming when peeled open. Mainit-init pa. Soft, chewy, slightly charred at the edges, carrying that unmistakable sweetness of coconut and caramelized rice flour that somehow tasted richer because it came wrapped in smoke and effort. The banana leaf itself added something impossible to replicate in modern kitchens—a kind of earthy fragrance that belonged entirely to the province.


Earlier this week, a close friend handed us several pieces of freshly wrapped tupig (image below) brought from the province (thanks a whole lot kind buddy-yo!). The sight alone was enough to shift the mood of the day. There is something about receiving provincial delicacies that feels more personal than ordinary food. It carries the atmosphere of where it came from—the long travel, the hands that prepared it, the familiarity of traditions that survive quietly despite modernization. We were genuinely excited, almost childlike in our anticipation, immediately imagining the texture, the chewiness, the faint smokiness waiting beneath the banana leaves.

We honestly do not know the precise origin story of tupig, only that in Ilocos Norte and Ilocos Sur, it has become more than a delicacy. It is part of the emotional architecture of December. During the holidays, homes exchange their own versions freely, almost instinctively. One household sends a batch to the next house. Someone else sends theirs back in return. Recipes differ slightly—some sweeter, some softer, some with more coconut—but the gesture remains the same. Tupig becomes less about food and more about participation in a shared season.


What has always fascinated us is how long tupig lasts. Unlike other delicacies that spoil quickly, tupig seems to age with grace. Days later, it becomes denser, chewier, almost more flavorful. There is an aftertaste to it that lingers unexpectedly, making you crave another piece long after you’ve finished eating. Perhaps that, too, is part of its nostalgia—the way it stays.


And maybe that is why tupig remains such a profound comfort food for many Ilocanos and for those who grew up around it. It does not merely remind us of childhood; it reminds us of a slower way of living. A time when afternoons felt longer, when smoke from the cooking pit did not bother anyone, when joy could come from simply waiting beside the fire, hoping to be handed the first freshly cooked piece.


Life in the province was not necessarily easier, but it felt lighter. There was less urgency, less noise inside the mind. Looking back now, it becomes difficult not to notice how adulthood changes the texture of freedom itself. As knowledge accumulates and responsibilities settle in, innocence slowly gives way to awareness. The world expands, but in some quiet way, the carefree feeling of childhood narrows.


And so perhaps food like tupig matters because it momentarily interrupts that narrowing. It reminds us that there was once a version of ourselves capable of finding complete happiness in smoke-filled afternoons, coconut-stained hands, and a warm delicacy unwrapped beside family. Not everything meaningful arrives grandly in life. Sometimes, it returns quietly, wrapped in banana leaves, carrying the taste of home.


— billymacdeus