Monthly Archives: May 2023

Tim Walker’s Philippines – CIA

Cebu International Academy in Mactan is the finest place I have encountered, and am likely to encounter, in Philippines.

As previously documented, through what has been maybe my own doing, I have had my issues with Philippines and the people therein; please do not misunderstand me, this country is not an outrightly bad place, the fact that it fails to align with my morals, principles, and values, is not reason to assume that everyone who comes here will encounter the same upsets – my articles are my personal experiences, as they befell me.

Cebu International Academy is currently home to students from around the Asian continent – perhaps also beyond as nobody seems decided on whether Russia is Asia or Europe – from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, China, Mongolia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Russia; brilliant young students all with a common goal – learning English.

Admittedly, my experiences in this country have been generally negative thus my impression of Philippines is ultimately undesirable yet, throughout the ordeal, CIA has been my place of refuge, my solace, my sanity; the words have been uttered more than once, “If I could live there, I would.”

At the start of the Philippines school year, January 3rd, Cebu International Academy had fewer than 200 staff to accommodate its 300-plus students – much of the teaching is one-on-one or ‘Man to Man’ – then, by the beginning of May, staff numbers had moved well past 200 and student numbers are now transcending 420.

Employed as a Native English teacher, I handle up to eight group-classes per day and, from my first day here, in all my life I have never felt so welcomed, accepted, respected, and supported; the CIA team – staff and students – truly are a wondrous cohort to have beside you.

Cebu International Academy is equipped to go strongly into the future of English teaching; with its staff of wonderfully skilled, passionate, and empathetic teachers, with its focus on maintaining a safe and happy environment for its students, with CIA’s purpose-built IELTS proctoring facility, this is truly an educational juggernaut of behemoth proportions.

As a premises, CIA is otherworldly; from my interview November 2022 then to my first day January 2023, the people have been amazing and, outside-office-hours Filipino grievances notwithstanding, as a workplace, I would not wish for better.

Undeniably, Cebu International Academy in Philippines is the future of English teaching around the world.

 

Article by Tim Walker

Edited by Manny Blessings

Photography by Velan D Love

Tim Walker’s Philippines V

You want more? Oh, there is much more.

Month or two later I decided to reunite with 1000-Peso-a-day lady from Butuan.

Yeah, that didn’t go so well.

Went some way, in fact, towards finalising my decision to stay away from Filipino women (‘Not all Filipino people’ … ‘No, no, like I said, just the women’).

She came on the ferry from Butuan in March ‘23; admittedly, it was good to see her.

In the beginning.

She apologised for acting so horribly in November ’22, promised she’d be better this time; so hopeful I was, I didn’t even see the dollar-signs in her eyes.

It had just been her birthday, I said I’d get her something nice – what did she want?

“Money!”

That was easy; I gave her 2000 Pesos.

Next day, she said she was going shopping and needed money.

I gave her another 2000 Pesos; told her that was to last the week.

Next day she was going to an aquatic exhibit at a mall on the next island to make some Facebook videos and needed money.

I gave her 1000 Pesos; told her that was it for the week.

Next day she stayed at home all day, watching TV in the cool of the air conditioning.

Her manner had become increasingly insufferable; she was demanding, she was expecting, she was argumentative, she was defensive, she was defiant, she was hostile, she was spiteful, she didn’t listen, if she did listen she didn’t remember and, like last time, she was generally unpleasant.

I came home from work exhausted, she was on the couch with the aircond and TV on, surrounded by snacks in all her chubby glory – she wasn’t chubby a few months ago – and immediately ripped into me about not having enough money to do what she needed to do.

I reminded her I’d given her 5000 Pesos over the last three days; I was paying for the house, I was paying for her electricity, all she truly ‘needed’ was food and water for herself as well as bus fare to go wherever she ‘needed’ to go. If she couldn’t make that work over three days from 5000 Pesos – half a month’s salary for many – in Philippines, it wasn’t my fault.

Next morning, insufferable became unbearable; still before 6:30 – she was on the couch having been sleeping/watching TV downstairs all night – coming out of the shower I stumbled straight into another argument (demanding more money). In my quest to remain unflustered before the start of my workday, I opened my wallet, flicked out 1500 Pesos – having previously researched ‘boat fare Mactan to Butuan’ – calmly saying, “I was wrong for expecting you were going to be any different this time … I don’t want you in my house anymore … Go home.”

“1500? It’s not enough – give me 5000!”

“I don’t have any more cash on me, goodbye.” I turned out the door and walked to the refuge of my workplace.

 

Returning home at 5:30, I had actually forgotten about the morning’s unpleasantness; did think the outside light being on was odd, though.

Door was open. Memory came back. I stepped indoors through a waft of steam and heat. Awareness piquing, I walked straight to the bathroom. All the lights in the house had been turned on, air conditioning running at 21 degrees. The room was stifling. Plumes of steam were billowing from beneath the bathroom door. I pushed it open to be met with a palpable wall of heat. The electric shower was spraying near-boiling water onto the tiles. I reached down to switch off the shower then reflexively withdrew my hand; I had never run that shower at more than ‘1’ – glancing up – it was currently blasting water on ‘3’. It was hot. Still wearing my work backpack, clothes now soaked in perspiration, I reached up to twist the showerhead giving me access to the shower switch. Done, and with only mild burns. Now with wet feet padding on the living room tiles I shut off the air conditioning then walked back to the door and turned off the lights. Walking around the house I checked and turned off all other switches, including a kettle-full of boiled water – now tepid – then went up the stairs to my bedroom. Nothing on up there but, as I took off my backpack in preparation to plug in my laptop, I noticed my laptop charge cable was missing (plugged in via a Vietnamese adapter). Until that point nothing had upset me too much but that, stealing my charge cable and adapter thus potentially jeopardising my work in Philippines, that pissed me off. I checked my (always silenced) phone; my 1000-Peso-a-day Butuan lady had left a tirade of messages. Apparently, it was because I ‘did not give enough money’ that she had done what she did – told me she needed to take (steal) things to sell for enough money to get home.

Over the coming hours/days/weeks I noticed more things that 1000-Peso-a-day lady  had taken; she appeared to have rifled through every drawer and cupboard in the house, salvaging, on top of the charge cable and adapter, every electronic device I had in my bedside cabinet, my formal Vietnamese belt, my Vietnamese raincoat, my unopened pack of razors (strangely expensive in Philippines), my nose-hair tweezers (I think just to annoy me), also every work snack I had in the house (I suspect she ate the nuts before she left, around midday). Last month’s power bill was large, anyway.

 

During my time in Philippines it has become clear that, maybe due to many Filipino/Southeast Asian folk growing up/living in poverty they (‘not all Filipino people’), as well as having no concept of ‘accumulation of funds’ (‘Sorry, not all, just most, many’), they seem to have limited ability to budget those funds – despite not knowing from where or when the next score will come, they quickly blow through whatever they have. As for the women – again, from my experience – when they find themselves a White man, they tend to become entitled, as though they deserve everything the man can offer which, other than having a pretty face, often these women do nothing to deserve anything.

Rapacious ladies in Philippines.

It’s disgusting, it’s repulsive, and it is a culture that needs to change.

 

 

Article by Tim Walker

Edited by N Tate-Old

Photography by Cal Cha Shift