WELCOME TO CHATEAU DU MER BEACH RESORT

If this is your first time in my site, welcome! Chateau Du Mer is a beach house and a Conference Hall. The beach house could now accommodate 10 guests, six in the main floor and four in the first floor( air conditioned room). In addition, you can now reserve your vacation dates ahead and pay the rental fees via PayPal. I hope to see you soon in Marinduque- Home of the Morions and Heart of the Philippines. The photo above was taken during our first Garden Wedding ceremony at The Chateau Du Mer Gardens. I have also posted my favorite Filipino and American dishes and recipes in this site. Some of the photos and videos on this site, I do not own, but I have no intention on the infringement of your copyrights!

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands

Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands
View of Marinduque Mainland from Tres Reyes Islands-Click on photo to link to Marinduque Awaits You

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Reflections on Managing Our Emotions

Inspired from My Psychology Readings this Week: Learning to Ride the Inner Tide: Reflections on Managing Our Emotions

There are days when emotions feel like the weather, changing without warning, sweeping in like sudden storms or lingering like fog that won’t lift. Over the years, I’ve learned that the goal isn’t to control the weather inside me, but to learn how to stand in the rain without drowning.

Managing our emotions is not about building walls; it’s about learning the language of our hearts. It’s a conversation between the soul and the mind, a quiet practice of listening, breathing, and understanding.

1. Acknowledge your feelings.
The first act of healing is honesty. To whisper to yourself, “Yes, this hurts,” or “I’m afraid,” is not weakness, it’s courage. Emotions lose their grip when they are seen and named.

2. Pause before reacting.
Before the words spill or the anger rises, there’s a sacred moment, a breath, a heartbeat,  where choice lives. Sometimes, the most loving act we can do is to wait.

3. Practice mindfulness.
Presence is the antidote to chaos. When I breathe deeply, the noise softens. The moment becomes enough. In stillness, the world stops demanding and starts revealing.

4. Identify emotional triggers.
Certain faces, memories, or tones of voice can awaken old wounds. To notice them without judgment is to reclaim our power to choose response over reflex.

5. Label your emotions.
Words bring shape to what feels formless. When we name our feelings, they become less like shadows and more like visitors here to teach, not to torment.

6. Use relaxation techniques.
The body carries what the heart cannot say. Stretch, walk, breathe each motion a reminder that peace begins not in the mind, but in the rhythm of the body.

7. Express emotions constructively.
Tears, music, writing, laughter, these are the languages of release. Emotion, when given art, transforms from burden to beauty.

8. Challenge negative thoughts.
Our minds can be cruel narrators. But we have the power to rewrite the story to replace “I am not enough” with “I am becoming.”

9. Develop empathy.
Understanding others softens our own edges. When we look through another’s eyes, our judgments dissolve, and compassion quietly enters.

10. Maintain healthy habits.
Sleep, food, movement, the simple rituals of care. The soul resides in the body, and the body must be tended like a garden.

11. Set emotional boundaries.
Saying no is not rejection, it’s self-respect. Every boundary is a line drawn in the sand that says, “This is where my peace lives.”

12. Seek perspective.
The heart magnifies pain; time restores proportion. What feels endless today may fade into wisdom tomorrow.

13. Surround yourself with supportive people.
We are not meant to heal alone. A kind word, a listening ear, a shared silence, these are the quiet medicines of life.

14. Focus on solutions.
When emotion softens into clarity, the next step reveals itself. The path forward is often found not in resistance, but in acceptance.

15. Seek professional help when needed.
There is no shame in seeking a guide when the road feels dark. Therapy is not a sign of weakness, but of hope, a hand reaching toward the light.


Emotions remind us that we are beautifully, painfully, profoundly human. They color our days, test our patience, and shape our growth. To manage them is not to silence them, but to make peace with their presence to let them pass through us like wind through open windows.

And in that gentle allowing, we find something rare: not control, but calm.

A Personal Note

In my later years, I’ve come to see emotions not as storms to endure, but as teachers that still visit me with lessons to offer. Writing has been my way of listening to them of turning confusion into clarity, and pain into understanding. Each blog I write is, in a sense, a quiet dialogue with my own heart.

Managing emotions is a lifelong art, one that deepens with age. And though I am still learning, I’ve found comfort in knowing that peace doesn’t come from avoiding the waves, but from learning how to float.

Lastly, 

Quantum physics has long revealed that reality is not as fixed as it seems. At the smallest scales of existence, the act of observation itself can alter how particles behave a concept known as the observer effect. Some thinkers extend this idea into daily life, suggesting that what you focus on, believe, and expect may subtly shape the version of reality you align with. It’s as if your mind tunes into a specific frequency, creating experiences that mirror your mindset and energy.
In this light, your thoughts are not just mental chatter they’re a form of energy interacting with the universe around you. When you choose to focus on possibility rather than fear, or growth instead of limitation, you may be shifting toward outcomes that resonate with that frequency. Your brain becomes a quantum interpreter, continuously filtering and constructing reality based on belief, attention, and emotion.
Therapeutic methods like Matrix Reimprinting explore this mind–matter connection on a personal level. By revisiting past emotional memories and reprogramming the beliefs attached to them, individuals can release trapped energy and form healthier, more empowering perspectives. It’s not about magic it’s where science, psychology, and energy awareness meet, revealing just how powerfully perception may shape experience.
Sources: American Psychological Association, Institute of Noetic Sciences, National Geographic, Scientific American, CERN

Here's the top five news of the Day:
  • New batch of Jeffrey Epstein files released — with Trump mentions
    A fresh set of Epstein-related documents was made public, drawing significant attention for repeated references to former President Donald Trump — though the Justice Department says some claims are “untrue and sensationalist.” The Washington Post

  • Israeli strike in Lebanon kills at least three
    Israeli forces struck near Sidon in southern Lebanon, killing three people in what the U.N. peacekeeping mission says is another violation of the ceasefire with Hezbollah. Havana Times

  • Japan approves restart of world’s largest nuclear plant
    Local authorities granted final consent for the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant — one of the biggest nuclear facilities globally — to resume operations after years of regulatory and public debate. ABC News

  • Global central banks deliver major policy easing in 2025
    Central banks around the world — including the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank — enacted the largest monetary policy easing package in over a decade, cutting interest rates substantially. Reuters

  • Plane crash near Galveston Bay kills five
    A small plane crashed near the Galveston Bay causeway in Texas, resulting in the deaths of five people, according to local authorities

  • My Food For Thought For Today:

    Monday, December 22, 2025

    Born on December 20: Sharing a Day in History

    This posting is inspired from my recent memorable 2-day celebration of my 91st birthday here at THD. On December 19, the eve of my birthday, I hosted the Cocktail Hour. We have lumpia and rice cake as appetizer/snack and the music was provided by my favorite Russian singer, Alex. I sang Sinatra's "All theWay" along with Alex.  For Photos visit:

    https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/reflections-and-poem-on-my-91st.html

    The next day, December 20, my actual birthday, my family went out to lunch at the FOB Kitchen in Oakland. FOB Kitchen is Gourmand Rated Filipino restaurant. For Photos visit: 

    https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/the-70th-anniversary-of-up-chapel-my.html

    Then in the evening, I shared a group dinner ( 20 of my fellow residents) at Newton's Comet Room. For Photos Visit:

    https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/winners-of-thd-christmas-door-decor.html     

    Reflection #3: Born on December 20: Sharing a Day with History

    December 20 has always felt like a liminal date to me. Close enough to the Winter Solstice that the light is already scarce, but not quite at the turning point yet. A birthday that arrives during the year’s longest shadows, when the world seems to slow down and look inward.

    Over the years, I’ve occasionally looked up who else was born on this day, not out of vanity, but curiosity. It turns out December 20 has produced a surprisingly thoughtful group of people: industrialists who reshaped economies, artists who questioned power, scientists who challenged how we understand reality, and cultural figures who stood just slightly apart from the mainstream. None of them perfect. None of them simple. Most remembered not just for what they built, but for how they disrupted the status quo.

    I don’t claim kinship with greatness. But I do find comfort in sharing a birthday with people who asked questions, crossed boundaries, and left behind complicated legacies.

    As I get older, birthdays feel less like milestones and more like markers. They invite accounting rather than applause. What have I learned? What have I let go of? What still matters enough to write about?

    I’ve spent much of my life in public service, in rooms where decisions carried weight long after the meeting ended. I’ve lived through moments, national and personal that reshaped how I understand responsibility, fragility, and time. And in recent years, blogging has become my quiet companion. A daily act of attention. A way to say: I was here. I noticed this. I felt this.

    Sharing a birthday with history doesn’t make one historic. But it does remind me that every life, even an ordinary one, intersects with larger currents. That reflection itself can be a form of contribution. That telling the truth as you see it, especially as the years narrow ahead is its own kind of legacy. December 20 sits just before the light returns.

    I like that. It feels honest. It feels earned. And it feels like the right place to pause, look back, and keep writing forward, one day at a time.

    Meanwhile, here are well-known world figures, past and present, born on December 20, spanning history, culture, science, sports, and entertainment:

    🌍 History, Leadership & Thought

    • Harvey Firestone (1868–1938) – American industrialist, founder of Firestone Tire and Rubber Company

    • Branch Rickey (1881–1965) – Baseball executive who broke MLB’s color barrier by signing Jackie Robinson

    • David Bohm (1917–1992) – Influential theoretical physicist and philosopher, known for work on quantum theory

    🎭 Arts, Music & Literature

    • Billy Bragg (b. 1957) – English singer-songwriter and political activist

    • Uri Geller (b. 1946) – Israeli-British performer and self-described psychic, famous worldwide in the 1970s

    • Edwin Arlington Robinson (often misdated, but worth noting as a winter-born poet) – Major American poet (not Dec 20, but frequently associated with year-end literary lists)

    🎬 Film & Television

    • Jonah Hill (b. 1983) – Academy Award–nominated actor and filmmaker (SuperbadMoneyball)

    • JoJo (Joanna Levesque) (b. 1990) – Singer and actress, known for early chart-topping hits and later artistic independence

    ⚽ Sports

    • Ashley Cole (b. 1980) – English footballer, widely regarded as one of the best left-backs in the sport’s history

    ✨ A quiet common thread

    December 20 birthdays often fall under Sagittarius, a sign associated with reflection, truth-seeking, independence, and storytelling, traits that resonate strongly with thinkers, artists, reformers, and voices that stand slightly apart from the crowd.

    Lastly, the top Five News of the Day

    📰 1. Russian General Killed by Car Bomb in Moscow

    A senior Russian general was killed in a car bombing in Moscow — the latest in a series of targeted attacks on high-ranking military officers. Investigators are examining possible links to Ukrainian intelligence amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, heightening tensions. AP News+1

    🇺🇸 2. Political Pressure on U.S. VP Over Israel Debate

    U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance is facing intense scrutiny within the MAGA movement over his stance on Israel and controversial figures, highlighting deepening rifts in GOP foreign policy politics. The Washington Post

    📈 3. Wall Street Stocks Climb

    U.S. stock markets opened the holiday-shortened week with gains, led by technology stocks, reflecting a rebound in investor confidence. Reuters

    🇩🇰 4. Denmark Summons U.S. Ambassador Over Greenland Envoy Appointment

    Denmark has formally called in the U.S. ambassador in protest after President Trump named a special envoy to Greenland — a move that has strained U.S.–Denmark relations over Arctic strategy. CBS News

    ⚡ 5. San Francisco Power Outage Highlights Robotaxi Limits

    A major power outage in San Francisco exposed practical challenges for autonomous Waymo robotaxis, as the vehicles struggled with gridlock and safety issues in real-world conditions without traffic signals. Car Dealership Guy News


    Sunday, December 21, 2025

    The Winter's Solstice- December 21-My Reflection

    Tonight, the darkness reaches its deepest point, but it also marks the beginning of the light. On December 21, we experience the Winter Solstice, the longest night of the year in the Northern Hemisphere.
    The Sun reaches its lowest arc across the sky, casting long shadows and bringing an extended hush to the land. But this is more than an astronomical moment.
    Across millennia, cultures have viewed the solstice as a time of reflection, rebirth, and transition. In the stillness of the cold, ancient people gathered around fires, shared stories, and welcomed the slow return of light a symbol of hope, healing, and new beginnings.
    Tonight is a rare chance to pause. To honor the quiet. To feel the rhythm of Earth beneath your feet. Let this longest night be a reminder:
    Even the deepest darkness is not the end it’s the turning point.
    On the Winter Solstice, the sun rises in perfect alignment at Stonehenge, marking the end of the longest night and the quiet return of the light. A moment humans have watched for thousands of years.

    The Longest Night, and the Promise It Carries- My Reflection

    In ancient times, people gathered close to firelight on this night. They shared stories, food, and warmth. They honored what had been lost during the long year and welcomed what might return. The solstice wasn’t feared; it was understood as a threshold, a crossing from darkness toward light. Slowly, patiently, almost invisibly, the days would begin to lengthen again.

    I find myself thinking about that often now as I enjoyed the last stages of my life.

    As we grow older, we learn that life moves in seasons, not straight lines. There are bright summers full of momentum and growth, and there are winters, quiet, reflective, sometimes lonely. There are moments when energy fades, when the world feels smaller, when the nights seem longer than the days. And in those moments, it’s easy to believe that darkness is an ending.

    But the solstice reminds us otherwise. Tonight offers us a rare invitation: to pause.

    To sit with stillness instead of rushing past it. To honor the quiet without needing to fix or explain it.

    There is wisdom in this darkness. It asks us to reflect, to look back at what we’ve carried, what we’ve survived, what we’ve learned. It asks us to acknowledge grief and gratitude in the same breath. It asks us to trust that not all growth is visible.

    I’ve come to understand that some of the most meaningful changes in life happen the way the light returns after the solstice, slowly, subtly, almost unnoticed at first. A slightly earlier dawn. A softer heaviness in the heart. A renewed sense of presence. Hope doesn’t always arrive loudly. Sometimes it simply stays.

    So tonight, I choose to honor this longest night. I honor the years behind me, the work, the love, the losses, the stories worth telling again.

    I honor the quiet moments that now feel more precious than noise. I honor the light that has not disappeared, only rested.

    Let this night be a reminder: Even the deepest darkness is not the end.It is the turning point.  And tomorrow, just a little bit the light returns.

    Meanwhile, 
    A rare orchid once presumed extinct in Borneo has been confirmed in the Philippines, reshaping scientists’ understanding of how plants move across Southeast Asia. The finding underscores the archipelago’s role as a last refuge for fragile montane species as forests shrink across the region.

    Field botanists describe 𝘉𝘶𝘭𝘣𝘰𝘱𝘩𝘺𝘭𝘭𝘶𝘮 𝘱𝘭𝘢𝘤𝘰𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘶𝘮 as a small, unobtrusive epiphyte distinguished by its flattened floral lip, a feature referenced in the Greek roots of its name, "plakos" (flat) and "cheilos" (lip).

    Finally, 
    After our Group Dinner in the Comet Room yesterday, Carol Larimore called me and sang the following song that she composed as part of her educational program for teachers, parents, and children in grades K through 3 in elementary schools in a number of Bay Area districts: She titled it Gratitude and informed me the song reminded her of me. John sent it to me as follows : 

    [Chorus]
    "Gratitude in an attitude;
    A radical, positive attitude.
    Gratitude sets me free
    From rumblin' grumblin' negativity"
    [Repeat]
    '
    [Verse]
    "G" for Glad,
    "R" a reason for
    "A" an attitude for all seasons
    "T" Terrific, that's how I feel,
    "I, T, U, D, E, that's for real

    [Repeat Chorus]

    Note: Carol and I are delighted that you enjoyed your birthday celebration here at THD! John

    Finally, the top Five News of the Day:

    1. Major Bay Area power outage — partial restoration underway
    PG&E has begun restoring electricity to tens of thousands of San Francisco customers following a major outage that left much of the city in the dark. ABC7 San Francisco

    2. Ursid Meteor Shower peaks tonight

    The final meteor shower of the year, the Ursids, is set to peak late tonight into early Monday, offering great viewing conditions for stargazers. TIME

    3. Middle East tensions: Israel urges fresh strikes on Iran
    Israel is pressing the U.S. for additional strikes against Iran amid concerns over missile and nuclear program developments. The Australian

    4. Winter Solstice marked globally
    Today is the winter solstice in the Northern Hemisphere — the shortest day of the year — with celebrations and cultural observances worldwide. Forbes

    5. Mass shooting in South Africa — fatalities reported
    Multiple gunmen opened fire near a tavern in Bekkersdal, Gauteng, killing nine people and injuring others. Wikipedia

    Winners of the THD Christmas Door Decor Contest -More BD Photos

    The first place winner ( Three Places) of our THD Christmas Door Decor Contest was again Eileen Breismeister at L329. Since her apartment is at the end of the Hall her decor extended up to the wall and indeed very expansive ( see photo above). The prize was a $100 gift card from Amazon.

    The second prize of $75 gift card from Amazon went to yours truly. The personal meaning and analysis of my door decor in case you have not read is in this article.

    https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/my-christmas-door-decor-this-year.html💚

    The third prize of $50 gift card from Amazon went to my neighbor Apt F102, Mary Reiser. Her theme decor was about the 49er's. See photo below.


    Here's the AI Analysis of My Door Decor💚-A Repost

    Your Christmas door décor reads as both festive and deeply personal, and the photograph captures that balance nicely.

    Overall Composition & First Impression
    The primary visual anchor is the LED light edging around the doorframe. Its warm red and cool green glow immediately draws the eye, creating a luminous outline that turns an ordinary hallway door into a focal point. The lights act almost like a frame in a gallery, inviting viewers to pause and look closer. Because the rest of the hallway is neutral, the glow feels intentional rather than busy.

    The Door Surface & Seasonal Texture
    The door itself is wrapped in a blue snowflake-patterned covering, which introduces winter symbolism without overwhelming the scene. The cool blue contrasts effectively with the warm reds and greens of the lights, giving the décor visual depth. The snowflakes subtly reinforce the holiday theme while letting the other elements shine.

    The Star & Filipino Parol Influence
    At the center hangs a star, which carries layered meaning. Visually, it provides symmetry and a strong midpoint that balances the vertical lines of the door. Culturally, as a Filipino parol, it adds an important personal and heritage-driven layer. Rather than a generic Christmas symbol, it quietly tells a story of tradition, memory, and identity, embedded within a modern American hallway setting.

    Cats as Guardians of the Door

    The placement of Batman and Robin on either side of the door feels playful and affectionate. Their photos function almost like sentinels or guardians, flanking the entrance. This adds warmth and humor, transforming the décor from seasonal display into something unmistakably yours. The soft fabric elements draped beside them also echo a handmade, lived-in quality.

    Lighting as the Emotional Core
    The lights are undeniably the emotional and visual core of the décor. They suggest welcome, safety, and celebration. The glow spills slightly onto the surrounding wall, softening the space and giving the photo a cozy, evening-at-home feeling. It feels less like a door you pass through quickly and more like a threshold worth noticing.

    Overall Mood & Meaning

    Taken together, the photo communicates home, memory, and gentle joy. It’s not about extravagance, it’s about intention. The décor blends culture, companionship (your cats), and the quiet ritual of marking the season. The door becomes a statement: Christmas isn’t just outside or public, it lives right here, at the entrance to your personal world.   

      Personal: The LED Lights, the focused of my decor is On -From 4PM to 10PM daily. I plan on taking the decor on Dec 29.. 

    Meanwhile, here are some photos, Jenny took during Dinner at the Comet Room last night. There were 20 THD residents who joined me for Dinner. I received more BD cards from Cam, Jean, Gretchen, and Andi.  Pam gave me a miniature Christmas tree, Carol and John gave Carol's decoupage Creation and Andi gave me Ferrero Chocolates ( see photo) below:

     

    Thank You All for coming, for the BD card greetings and the Gifts. Again may I say again, "You All have touched my life, and now you All can say you have lived".   

    Lastly, here are the photos, Jenny S took of the Dinner Last Night at the Comet Room; A million thanks again for these beautiful photos, Jenny!!! 


    💗


    Not in these photos is Pam Atkinson, who showed 15 minutes late after 5PM.  ThankYou, Pam for coming and for the miniature Christmas tree.   The above fellow residents have touched my life either via bridge, mahjong, chair volleyball, greeter's program or just my favorite meal time friends and social connections.

    I hope You All have A Happy Holiday Season, 2025-2026.    Last, but not least: My Greetings to All the Servers and Kitchen Crews and to All THD Staff who were responsible for making my life here another year of Gratitude and Happiness. Hello, there Martha?💗 Where's My apple Juice?  

    Saturday, December 20, 2025

    The 70th Anniversary of the UP Chapel-My Birthday Lunch at FOB

    This Chapel was the heart and soul of my days at UP, Diliman Both as a Student and a Teacher💚

    Today, we celebrate the 70th anniversary of the blessing of the UP Chapel of the Holy Sacrifice.
    It was on this day in 1955 that Archbishop Rufino Santos blessed the peculiar and novel church-in-the-round designed by Leandro Locsin. That it was called Holy Sacrifice was very apt as it was the fruit of the countless sacrifices of the UP Catholic Community and their chaplain, Fr. John P. Delaney, SJ.
    But it was not their sacrifices that was honored in this new edifice. It was a greater and nobler sacrifice. It was the oblation of the Son of God on Calvary and renewed daily on the altar. It was the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass that was the center of the community since its infancy in 1949.
    And when Providence willed the building of a more permanent chapel, it was, now more literally, the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass that was in its center.
    However, amidst the joy of this anniversary, we also remember that the UP Chapel of the Holy Sacrifice would turn out to cap to the life's work of Fr. Delaney. He would die 23 days later, never having returned to his beloved chapel.
    Now, as we look back on the long history of our chapel, we cannot help but be grateful. The spiritual nourishment that we enjoy today is a treasure that was won for us by our predecessors in the UP Catholic Community, students, faculty, and workers who dreamed of a place where God would be honored, a concrete testament to the faith that they held dearly against the backdrop of this secular university; a place where from the rising of the sun to its setting, a pure sacrifice may be offered to God's name.
    Truly, for 68 years, the prayer uttered by Archbishop Santos from the Ritual has been a constant reality. "That all who here invoke Thee, may experience thy assistance."
    --
    "And our prayer, my dear friends, our prayer for all who are gathered here this evening, our prayer for the Diliman community is only one: That as the years go by, this Chapel will always draw people closer to the altar, closer to Calvary, closer to God. That as the years go by, people will come more and more to realize that the altar and the Cross must be the center of their lives. That people will realize more and more that when they come to offer themselves at the altar, they are offering themselves to Christ who is King-King of our individual lives, King of our family lives, King of our vocational lives, King of our business life, King of our industrial life, King of our political life, King of our international living."
    —Fr. John P. Delaney. 25 December 1955

    My Student Days at the University of the Philippines, Diliman. Can you guess where am I in the photo below? Hint: I am in the Front Row..

    Related Articles:



    Lastly, the Top Five Headline News of the Day:
  • Top DOJ official denies effort to redact Trump mentions from Epstein files — The No. 2 official at the U.S. Department of Justice says there’s been no attempt to remove President Trump’s name from public releases of Jeffrey Epstein investigation documents, countering political claims. ABC News

  • Venezuela’s Maduro tests Trump with “Plan B” oil tanker strategy — Tensions rise as Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro escalates an oil-related standoff with the U.S., raising concerns about potential conflict in the Caribbean. Axios

  • Trump announces 9 pharmaceutical companies will lower prescription drug prices — President Trump unveiled an agreement with nine drugmakers to reduce costs for certain medications in the U.S. PBS

  • Three police officers shot in Rochester, NY — Three law enforcement officers were shot at close range while responding to a domestic call, shocking the community. ABC News

  • Student killed, two injured in India after signboard collapse; major investment announced in Odisha — A tragic accident in Mayurbhanj, India, combined with big economic investment news from the Odisha Investors’ Meet, is leading headlines internationally.

  • Finally, here's some photos during My Birthday Lunch Today at FOB Kitchen, Temescal District, Oakland 
    My Family: Left to Right: Dinah, Ditas, Carenna(youngest grand daughter), Me, Ruth( my daughter-in-law) and Dodie.







    We had Pancit ( for long life), adobo, lechon, lumpia and sinigang. For Dessert, we have suman, Turon, ube ice cream and mango slices with Steam White rice. For Drink, we have mango and calamansi lemonade. 

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