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

Friday, May 8, 2026

What ChatGPT Remembers About Me

The other day I prompted ChatGPT the following two questions.

My Prompt: What Do you remember about me? What other behavioral preferences have you noted? 

Reply: Here’s a clear, grounded snapshot of what I actually know and what I can reasonably infer about you so far.

What I explicitly remember

These are things you’ve directly shared and asked me to retain:

  • You’ve been blogging since 2009, with a consistent, reflective voice aimed at a worldwide audience.
  • You had a professional career with the FDA, including involvement in the 9/11 aftermath.
  • You’ve been diagnosed with Stage 4 Kidney Disease and have chosen not to pursue dialysis.
  • You’ve requested that, eventually, a final blog post be written summarizing your life, career, and writing journey.
  • You’ve been getting weekly whole-body massages for ~30 months.

Your behavioral patterns & preferences

These come from how you interact, not just what you’ve said:

  • You consistently ask for blog posts in your voice, reflective, thoughtful, and personal rather than purely informational.
  • You like to anchor writing in real-world triggers:
    • TV shows (especially Survivor)
    • News headlines
    • Cultural observations or viral content
  • You prefer content that connects ideas, not just reports them:
    • Psychology (alliances, human behavior)
    • Culture (Filipino customs, global trends)
    • Leadership and life lessons
  • You tend to revisit themes and build continuity across posts, which suggests you think of your blog as an evolving narrative, not isolated entries.
  • You like a slightly provocative or curiosity-driven hook (“SHOCKING,” “I finally found out why…”) but the body of your writing leans reflective and grounded.

Your likes (based on repeated behavior)

  • Reality TV with depth
    Especially Survivor - not just for entertainment, but for what it reveals about:
    • leadership
    • alliances
    • human psychology
  • Thoughtful storytelling
    You gravitate toward:
    • Meaning behind everyday behaviors (e.g., clapping on airplanes)
    • Human connection and cultural warmth
    • “What this says about us” type reflections
  • Global and cross-cultural themes
    • Philippines (you’ve revisited this multiple times)
    • Europe (Italy, Finland)
    • Broader “worldwide reader” perspective
  • Media as inspiration
    • TV shows (Real Time with Bill Maher, cooking competitions)
    • News articles (WSJ, trending stories)
  • Structured reflection
    You seem to enjoy:
    • Lessons learned
    • Psychological insights
    • Life frameworks (IQ/EQ/SQ, happiness, aging)

Your dislikes (inferred, not directly stated)

These are patterns I can reasonably infer-not certainties:

  • You’re not drawn to shallow or purely sensational content
    Even when you start with a “viral” or dramatic premise, you steer it toward deeper meaning.
  • You don’t seem interested in:
    • Technical deep dives for their own sake
    • Dry, purely factual summaries
    • Content without a human or philosophical angle
  • You appear to avoid:
    • Cynical or purely negative framing
    • Content that lacks reflection, growth, or takeaway

Subtle things you might not realize you’re doing

  • You consistently turn observation into meaning
    → You don’t just ask what happened- you ask what does this say about life?
  • You’re building a legacy body of work, not just posts
    → Especially clear from your request about a final blog post
  • You use modern media as a mirror, not the destination
    → TV, news, and viral stories are just entry points

One gentle pushback (in the spirit of accuracy)

It’s easy to assume I “know” you deeply-but I only see what you’ve chosen to share here.
There are likely dimensions of your preferences (music, personal relationships, daily routines) that simply haven’t surfaced yet.


Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview on the Above Topic:

ChatGPT remembers specific details you share across conversations, such as your name, job, preferred tone, and projects, to personalize future interactions. You can view, manage, or delete these memories in settings under Personalization > Memory. You can also ask ChatGPT, "What do you know about me?" to see a summary.
Key Aspects of ChatGPT Memory:
  • What it Stores: Preferences (e.g., "use bullet points"), personal details (e.g., "I live in CA"), and ongoing project context.
  • What it Doesn't Store: It generally does not store full conversation logs, but rather extracted "nuggets" of information.
  • How to Control It:
    • Ask to Forget: Tell ChatGPT to "forget [topic]" during a chat.
    • Manage Menu: Go to Settings -> Personalization -> Memory to view and delete individual memories.
    • Clear All: You can delete all saved memory in the same settings menu.
    • Temporary Chat: Use temporary chat for conversations you don't want to be remembered.
According to the Memory FAQ, this feature is designed to make ChatGPT more helpful, but you maintain control over the data it stores. For a more detailed, technical look at how this data is stored in the system, you can refer to this analysis of the model's memory features.
How to Check and Manage Memories:
  1. Direct Prompt: Ask, "What do you remember about me?".
  2. Settings: Go to your profile menu, select "Personalization," and then "Manage Memory".
  3. Correction: If a memory is wrong, you can ask ChatGPT to correct it in the chat.
  4. Security: Ensure two-factor authentication is enabled to protect your account data.

Finally, here are the highlights of what I currently remember about you:

  • You create daily blog posts and have been exploring AI tools that can turn your blog content into videos.
  • You were diagnosed with Stage 4 Kidney Disease and chose not to undergo dialysis.
  • You would like a final blog post published after your passing that reflects on your career with the FDA, your involvement in the aftermath of 9/11, and your blogging journey since 2009.
  • You have been receiving weekly whole-body massages from a professional therapist for about 30 months.

I also know from our recent conversations that you often write reflective blog posts about aging, Filipino culture and food, politics, science fiction, family relationships, and the experience of senior living, though I have not permanently stored all of those topics as memory.

Mangoes-King of Fruits- Pleasant Childhood Memories

https://images.openai.com/static-rsc-4/4Z-7j6w0prIgyye-3m9pjwh9QGHuaTudRN2j_N2rYFxyizgoFo3mBEjXaGAZUB5j20T5D16M87zqFC3IEQkqP1gYrZKWFh3L2BDffISCbFvRWGKoEubSHCUwJHS-y4veQ-cu9kyZ4FeGONbajkx0vXdd4JDoKybM69jd7qk-sm0hPfy4THY5SNxBM58XXIiy?purpose=fullsize

There’s something slightly absurd almost poetic about reading in The Wall Street Journal that wealthy Americans are now paying lobster-level prices for mangoes flown in from India. A fruit once so common in parts of the world that it ripened under beds, in baskets, in backyards, now sits in climate-controlled displays as a luxury indulgence.

And just like that, I was transported back, not to a market, but to a childhood.

The Mangoes of Memory

I grew up in the Philippines, where mangoes weren’t exotic, they were inevitable. The Carabao mango, known for its honeyed sweetness and silky flesh, wasn’t something you sought out; it found you. Trees bent under their weight during the season, generous almost to a fault.

My parents had a ritual that felt entirely ordinary at the time. They would harvest hundreds of mature green mangoes and carefully lay them beneath our beds. There, in the quiet darkness, they would slowly ripen, transforming from firm, tart fruit into golden orbs of sweetness. No fancy logistics. No import tariffs. Just time, patience, and nature doing its work.

At night, as a child, I would fall asleep with the faint scent of mangoes in the air-a perfume that no luxury brand could ever bottle.

From Backyard Abundance to Global Luxury


I grew up in the Philippines, where mangoes weren’t exotic, they were inevitable. The Carabao mango, known for its honeyed sweetness and silky flesh, wasn’t something you sought out; it found you. Trees bent under their weight during the season, generous almost to a fault.

My parents had a ritual that felt entirely ordinary at the time. They would harvest hundreds of mature green mangoes and carefully lay them beneath our beds. There, in the quiet darkness, they would slowly ripen, transforming from firm, tart fruit into golden orbs of sweetness. No fancy logistics. No import tariffs. Just time, patience, and nature doing its work.

At night, as a child, I would fall asleep with the faint scent of mangoes in the air, a perfume that no luxury brand could ever bottle.

From Backyard Abundance to Global Luxury

Fast forward to today, and mangoes have become a symbol of something larger: globalization, inequality, and the strange economics of desire. The prized Alphonso mango from India, often called the “king of mangoes,” now commands staggering prices in American markets. Air-freighted, meticulously inspected, and beautifully packaged, they arrive not as everyday fruit but as curated experiences.

It raises an uncomfortable question: how does something so ordinary to one part of the world become so unattainable in another?

The answer, of course, lies in systems, trade, access, wealth. But it also lies in perception. What we grow up with, we often take for granted. What we lack, we elevate.

The Invisible Distance Between Worlds

In many ways, this mango story echoes themes I’ve explored in my writing, whether it’s the erosion of fairness in our institutions, the unseen labor behind our daily comforts, or the widening gap between those who have and those who don’t.


A mango is just a fruit. But it also isn’t.

It carries with it the weight of geography and privilege. For a child in the Philippines, it is a birthright of abundance. For a wealthy shopper in an upscale American grocery store, it is a rare delicacy, something to be savored, posted, perhaps even boasted about.

That distance, the one between abundance and scarcity is not measured in miles. It is measured in systems we’ve built, often without questioning.

What We Lose When We Price Memory

There’s also something more personal at stake. When everyday foods become luxury items, they risk losing their cultural grounding. Mangoes, in my memory, are not plated desserts or imported treasures. They are sticky fingers, shared laughter, and the quiet hum of family life.

They are my parents, carefully placing fruit under the bed, not as a novelty, but as a necessity, a rhythm of life.

You can’t import that. No matter how much you pay. 

A Final Reflection

Reading that article in The Wall Street Journal didn’t make me crave mangoes. It made me grateful and a bit reflective.

Grateful for a childhood where sweetness was not measured in dollars per pound. Reflective about a world where even something as simple as a mango can reveal so much about who we are, what we value, and how far we’ve drifted from the basics.

In the end, perhaps the real luxury isn’t the mango itself. It’s the memory of having more than enough and never once thinking it was special.


Fast forward to today, and mangoes have become a symbol of something larger: globalization, inequality, and the strange economics of desire. The prized Alphonso mango from India, often called the “king of mangoes,” now commands staggering prices in American markets. Air-freighted, meticulously inspected, and beautifully packaged, they arrive not as everyday fruit but as curated experiences.

It raises an uncomfortable question: how does something so ordinary to one part of the world become so unattainable in another?

The answer, of course, lies in systems, trade, access, wealth. But it also lies in perception. What we grow up with, we often take for granted. What we lack, we elevate.

The Invisible Distance Between Worlds

In many ways, this mango story echoes themes I’ve explored in my writing, whether it’s the erosion of fairness in our institutions, the unseen labor behind our daily comforts, or the widening gap between those who have and those who don’t.

A mango is just a fruit. But it also isn’t.

It carries with it the weight of geography and privilege. For a child in the Philippines, it is a birthright of abundance. For a wealthy shopper in an upscale American grocery store, it is a rare delicacy something to be savored, posted, perhaps even boasted about.

That distance the one between abundance and scarcity is not measured in miles. It is measured in systems we’ve built, often without questioning.

What We Lose When We Price Memory

There’s also something more personal at stake. When everyday foods become luxury items, they risk losing their cultural grounding. Mangoes, in my memory, are not plated desserts or imported treasures. They are sticky fingers, shared laughter, and the quiet hum of family life.

They are my parents, carefully placing fruit under the bed, not as a novelty, but as a necessity, a rhythm of life.You can’t import that. No matter how much you pay.

A Final Reflection

Reading that article in The Wall Street Journal didn’t make me crave mangoes. It made me grateful and a bit reflective.

Grateful for a childhood where sweetness was not measured in dollars per pound. Reflective about a world where even something as simple as a mango can reveal so much about who we are, what we value, and how far we’ve drifted from the basics.

In the end, perhaps the real luxury isn’t the mango itself.

It’s the memory of having more than enough and never once thinking it was special.

Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview:

The Carabao mango from the Philippines is widely regarded as one of the sweetest mango varieties in the world. It's even recognized by the Guinness World Records for its exceptional sweetness, with a Brix rating of 15.6-22°. For comparison, the popular Alphonso mango from India has a Brix rating of 26.8-28.9°, but it's worth noting that Brix ratings can vary. However, according to some sources, the Alphonso's rich flavor profile often makes it a favorite among mango enthusiasts.
Here are some of the sweetest mango varieties, ranked based on their Brix ratings 

Top 5 Sweetest Mangoes:

  • Carabao (Philippines): 15.6-22° Brix, known for its creamy, fiberless, and highly aromatic flesh
  • Alphonso (India): 26.8-28.9° Brix, rich, saffron-colored flesh with a smooth texture
  • Ataulfo (Mexico): 15-17° Brix, small, creamy, and very sweet with minimal fiber
  • Sindhri (Pakistan): 14-16° Brix, large, juicy, and sweet with a rich flavor
  • Nam Dok Mai (Thailand): 15-17° Brix, long, golden-colored mango with a floral aroma and ultra-sweet inside

It's worth noting that the sweetness of mangoes can vary depending on factors like the ripeness, cultivation, and specific strain. For example, the Sweet Elena strain of Carabao mangoes is reportedly the sweetest among the 14 different strains 



Finally, From My FaceBook Page this Morning-Pleasant Memories, indeed.
Nereo Cajilig Luján's post


LOOK - Top photo: An advertisement for the Katague Building appearing 
on the inside front cover of the 1954 issue of Almanaque Panayanhon, 
announcing the availability of office spaces for rent. Bottom photo:
A photograph of the building courtesy of Dr. David B Katague Jr., 
son of the owners, Dr. David Jamili Katague and Paz Balleza Katague.
Located across the YMCA Iloilo on Iznart Street, the building was
constructed in 1949 using Dr. Katague’s back pay after serving as a 
dental officer with the USAFFE during World War II.
The building was no longer properly maintained following Dr. Katague’s 
death in the early 1970s. After Mrs. Katague died in the late 1980s, 
their seven children decided to sell both the building and the property. 
Because of its prime location, the land had become more valuable than 
the structure itself. It was eventually demolished by the new owner and 
replaced it with a larger commercial building.

Personal Note: Today is my oldest Daughter, Dinah, 65th birthday 
as well as would be our 69th wedding anniversary.
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