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

Monday, January 19, 2026

Fernando Mendoza & the Historic Rise of Indiana Football

Fernando Mendoza & the Historic Rise of Indiana Football

To the casual football fan especially those used to the NFL, college football can feel like a completely different world. But the 2025-26 season will go down as one of the most unforgettable storylines in recent college football history, and at the center of it all was Indiana University’s quarterback Fernando Mendoza. My first article on Mendoza:

https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2026/01/fernando-mendoza-college-football-hero.html

From Underdog to Heisman Winner

Fernando Mendoza wasn’t a preseason household name. A Miami, Florida native, he transferred to Indiana after beginning his college career at California. What followed was nothing short of spectacular. Mendoza led the Hoosiers with a season that culminated in him winning the Heisman Trophy, college football’s most prestigious individual award and becoming the first Heisman winner in Indiana history. His 33 passing touchdowns led the nation and set a school record, and his efficiency and leadership powered Indiana’s rise from a long-shot contender to college football’s top team. 

A Perfect Season

In a sport where parity is the norm, undefeated seasons are extremely rare. But this year, Indiana achieved perfection.

📍 Regular Season Highlights

  • Indiana opened the season strong with big wins, including a 56–9 rout over Kennesaw State where Mendoza threw four touchdown passes. 

  • A dominate road win against No. 20 Illinois, showcasing Mendoza’s ability to take over a game with five passing touchdowns. 

  • Close, gritty victories - like the 20–15 win over Iowa,  displayed Indiana’s ability to win in different ways. 

In the Big Ten Championship Game, Indiana stunned the college football world by beating Ohio State in a nail-biter- the Hoosiers’ first outright Big Ten title in decades and a defining moment that secured their playoff berth. 

Playoff Dominance

Once in the College Football Playoff, Indiana didn’t just win - they dominated:

🔹 Rose Bowl (Quarterfinal): Indiana crushed Alabama 38–3, their first bowl win in decades. 
🔹 Peach Bowl (Semifinal): The Hoosiers powered past Oregon 56–22 in a performance that showed they were a true national contender. 

Then, in the National Championship Game against Miami, Indiana capped their historic season with a hard-fought 27–21 victory, completing a perfect 16–0 season and winning the first national title in school history. 

What This Means for Indiana Football

For decades, Indiana football was known more for basketball than the gridiron. But under head coach Curt Cignetti, and with Mendoza’s leadership, the program has transformed into a national powerhouse in a single season. Their success rewrote the program’s record books, delivered unparalleled excitement to Hoosier Nation, and brought national recognition to Bloomington. 

Whether you’re a long-time college fan or someone who only tunes in for big NFL games, this Hoosiers season was a story of grit, breakthrough performances, and one deeply memorable championship run.


Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview on the Above topic:
 Fernando Mendoza led the 
Indiana Hoosiers to their first-ever national championship on January 19, 2026, defeating the Miami Hurricanes 27-21 at Hard Rock Stadium
. This victory capped a historic 16-0 undefeated season, making Indiana the first team in modern college football history to achieve such a record. Mendoza, who transferred from Cal, also became the first player in Indiana history to win the Heisman Trophy. 
2025-26 Championship Season
Under second-year head coach Curt Cignetti, Indiana completed a "rags-to-riches" transformation from one of the losingest programs in the country to national champions in just two years. 
  • Championship Game: Mendoza secured the title with a 12-yard rushing touchdown on 4th-and-4 with 9:18 remaining.
  • Historical Milestones:
    • First outright Big Ten Championship since 1945.
    • First-ever victory at Penn State and a road win over a top-five opponent (Oregon).
    • Defeated Ohio State 13-10 to win the Big Ten title for the first time since 1967. 
Fernando Mendoza 2025 Performance
Mendoza's Heisman campaign was defined by elite efficiency and record-breaking production. 
Statistic 2025 Regular Season StatsTotal Season Stats (Incl. Postseason)
Passing Yards2,9803,349
Passing Touchdowns33 (National Leader)41
Completion Percentage71.5%73.0%
Interceptions66
Rushing Touchdowns66
Passer Rating181.39188.0
Sources: 
Key Accolades
In addition to the Heisman Trophy, Mendoza swept several major national awards in 2025: 
  • Maxwell Award (Player of the Year)
  • Walter Camp Player of the Year
  • Davey O'Brien Award (Best Quarterback)
  • AP College Football Player of the Year
  • Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year 
Future Outlook
Mendoza is widely projected to be a top selection—potentially the No. 1 overall pick—in the 2026 NFL Draft. Following his departure, Indiana has already secured TCU transfer Josh Hoover to lead the program in 2026.

My Photo of the Day: 


Greenland and the End of Moral Authority

When the Guardian Breaks the Gate: Greenland and the End of Moral Authority

There are moments in history when the question is not whether something can be done, but whether it should ever be imagined at all.

Recent articles speculating about a U.S. invasion of Greenland fall squarely into that category. Greenland, vast, icy, sparsely populated, and strategically located has suddenly become a thought experiment in raw power politics. Some argue it would enhance Arctic security. Others frame it as access to minerals, shipping lanes, or geopolitical leverage.

But beneath these arguments lies a far more troubling question:
What happens to the world when the self-appointed guardian of international order becomes its violator?

For decades, the United States has positioned itself, sometimes imperfectly, sometimes hypocritically, but consistently as a defender of sovereignty, alliances, and international norms. These claims were the moral counterweight to its immense military power. Remove that counterweight, and power becomes something else entirely.

If America were to seize Greenland by force, the message to the world would not be subtle. It would be deafening.

Vladimir Putin would hear it immediately. The invasion of Ukraine already justified in Moscow through a twisted lens of historical entitlement would gain new rhetorical oxygen. “If borders can be redrawn in the Arctic,” the argument would go, “why not in Eastern Europe?”

Xi Jinping would hear it too. Taiwan, long framed as a unique historical case, would suddenly appear less exceptional and more opportunistic. When norms dissolve, timing becomes everything.

And then there is the rest of the world, the quiet majority of nations that depend not on strength, but on predictability. For them, an American invasion of Greenland would signal that no treaty is permanent, no alliance sacred, no promise immune to power.

The United States would not merely be criticized. It would be redefined. World Hatred? 

Once admired, often resented, but broadly trusted as a stabilizing force, America would risk becoming just another empire, feared, transactional, and morally unmoored. Hatred, in this sense, would not come from ideology but from disappointment. The deeper wound is always inflicted by those we believed would know better.

Those of us who have lived long enough remember when American leadership meant restraint as much as resolve. When strength was measured not only by what could be taken, but by what was deliberately not taken. That idea, fragile, imperfect, but real has kept the world from unraveling more times than we care to count.

Greenland, in the end, is not the issue. Ukraine is not the issue. Taiwan is not the issue.

The issue is whether the rules survive when the strongest player decides they no longer apply. History teaches us that once that gate is broken, it rarely closes again.

A closing reflection

May wisdom outpace ambition. May power remember humility. And may those of us watching in the twilight years of our lives never grow so cynical that we stop believing the world can still choose restraint over ruin.

Meanwhile, here's Chat GPT Take on the Topic: 

If a U.S. president were to invade Greenland, a sovereign territory tied to Denmark and NATO, it would not be perceived as a strategic land grab but as a collapse of moral restraint by the very nation that has long claimed to uphold a rules-based international order.

The danger isn’t Greenland itself. The danger is precedent.

  • Putin would point and say: “You see? Borders are negotiable.”

  • Xi would say less, but calculate more.

  • Smaller nations would quietly begin hedging their alliances.

  • America’s moral authority, already strained would fracture beyond repair.

History shows that empires rarely fall because they lose power. They fall because they lose legitimacy.

And the AI Overview on the Above Topic:

Greenland and the End of Moral Authority" refers to contemporary discussions, notably by Michael McFaul, linking potential U.S. actions in Greenland (like Trump's earlier interest in buying it) to a loss of American moral standing, especially concerning China's potential actions on Taiwan, suggesting that invading or seizing Greenland would signify a disregard for international law, making criticism of others hypocritical
. The phrase highlights how actions in the strategic, resource-rich Arctic territory challenge international norms and postcolonial ideas, where Greenland seeks greater autonomy while balancing Danish ties and global interests. 
Key Concepts:
  • Geopolitical Significance: Greenland's melting ice reveals mineral wealth and strategic Arctic location, attracting global interest from superpowers like the U.S., China, and Russia, notes Wikipedia.
  • Postcolonialism & Self-Determination: Greenland has significant self-rule but relies on Denmark for defense and foreign policy, with growing independence movements, creating complex international dynamics.
  • Moral Authority: This concept questions whether powerful nations (like the U.S.) can credibly uphold international rules if they act unilaterally or exploit smaller entities, with Greenland serving as a test case. 
Context of the Phrase:
  • Trump's Interest: President Trump's expressed interest in acquiring Greenland from Denmark in 2019 sparked debate about U.S. imperialistic tendencies, notes Wikipedia.
  • McFaul's Argument: Author and former U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul uses the hypothetical of a U.S. "invasion" of Greenland to argue it would destroy any U.S. moral claim to criticize China's actions in Taiwan, highlighting the hypocrisy of violating sovereignty. 
In essence, the phrase points to how powerful nations' actions concerning Greenland test global norms, potentially eroding their own legitimacy and "moral authority" in international affairs. 

My Photo of the Day-Cravings for Dungeness crab
Satiated at the Last Night Dinner

Lastly, the top Five News of the Day 

1. World Economic Forum 2026 opens in Davos
Global leaders, executives, and politicians gather in Switzerland under the theme “A Spirit of Dialogue,” with security heightened and talks expected on AI, geopolitics, and major economic issues. 

2. Severe geomagnetic storm watch issued
A powerful solar flare and coronal mass ejection are expected to hit Earth tonight, possibly producing northern lights at lower latitudes and disrupting electronics. 

3. Martin Luther King Jr. Day observances affect services
Many U.S. government offices, markets, and schools are closed or operating on limited schedules for the national holiday. 

4. Stock market recommendations for the week
Analysts publish lists of stocks to watch as markets begin the trading week — part of broader investor-focused news today. 

5. Latest crypto market developments
Live crypto news updates highlight market movements and major developments in digital assets for January 19. 

 My Food for Thought for Today: "If NATO is to survive the 21st century, it can’t be held together by the likes of threats, tariff tantrums, and ego-driven territorial obsessions. And if the U.S. is to retain any moral authority on the world stage, it has to reject the notion that global policy is about personal medals and one man's ego".

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Retirement, Mattering, and the Quiet Gift of Purpose

I am dedicating this posting to all my Fellow Residents here at THD and to all my senior readers all over the world who are planning to retire or are in their retirement years.   

Retirement, Mattering, and the Quiet Gift of Purpose

I recently finished reading an article in The Wall Street Journal titled “The Retirement Crisis No One Warns You About: Mattering,” by Jennifer Wallace. Long after I folded the paper, one sentence stayed with me:

A sense of purpose plays a central role in retirement satisfaction and mental health.

That line struck a chord deep in my heart, not because it surprised me, but because it named something I had lived through, largely without realizing it at the time.

Much has been written about the financial side of retirement. We are warned to save enough, invest wisely, and plan for healthcare costs. Far less attention is paid to the quieter, more personal crisis: what happens when the world no longer needs you in the same way it once did.

The Invisible Loss After the Farewell Party

When I retired from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration at age 68, I did not feel lost. I felt grateful, accomplished, and ready for the next chapter. Yet I now understand that many retirees experience something different, a sudden erosion of identity, relevance, and belonging.

Work, for all its frustrations, provides structure. It answers an unspoken daily question: Why do I matter today? When that structure disappears, some people feel untethered. They miss the subtle affirmations, the emails, the meetings, the problems only they could solve.

I was fortunate. My retirement did not lead to stillness; it led to reinvention.

Purpose as a Shared Calling

Purpose, for us, was never a solitary pursuit. Long before blogging became my second act, my wife and I found deep meaning in medical mission work in our previous home province of Marinduque, Philippines. From 1999 to 2013, we volunteered our time, energy, and resources to support medical missions that brought basic healthcare to communities with limited access to it.

Those years shaped us profoundly. We witnessed hardship, resilience, gratitude, and grace. In serving others together, we were reminded that purpose is not confined to professional titles or formal roles. It often reveals itself in service, quiet, human, and deeply grounding. Sharing this work with my wife anchored my retirement years in compassion and reinforced a truth I continue to hold close: purpose grows stronger when it is shared.

Building Something That Outlived the Paycheck

After leaving the FDA, my wife and I did something bold: we built a retirement home in the Philippines, Chateau Du Mer Beach Resort and Conference Center. What began as a dream quickly became a living, breathing responsibility. I managed the resort for several years, and in doing so, discovered that purpose does not retire simply because a paycheck ends.

There were guests to welcome, staff to mentor, problems to solve, and a vision to sustain. I was no longer “Team Leader” or “Supervisor,” or " Doctor Katague" but I still mattered to the people who worked with us, to the guests who found rest there, and to myself. Purpose, I learned, is not about titles. It is about usefulness.

Blogging as a Second Act

Then, in 2009, I began blogging.

At first, it was simply a way to organize my thoughts. Over time, it became something more enduring: a conversation with readers around the world, many of whom I will never meet but who nonetheless share this human journey of aging, meaning, and reflection.

Blogging gave me a new rhythm to my days. It sharpened my thinking, connected me to global events, and perhaps most importantly allowed me to give something back: perspective shaped by experience.

In hindsight, I see that blogging gave me what Wallace’s article describes so clearly: mattering. The sense that my words, ideas, and reflections still had a place in the world.

A Different Kind of Wealth

Looking back, I realize that my happiness in retirement has little to do with comfort or geography. It has everything to do with purpose.

Purpose does not have to be grand. It can be tending a garden, mentoring a younger generation, volunteering, creating, or simply bearing witness through storytelling. What matters is the quiet knowledge that your presence still counts.

Retirement, at its best, is not an ending. It is a narrowing of focus away from ambition and toward meaning.

A Closing Reflection

If there is one lesson I would offer to those approaching retirement, it is this: plan not only for how long your money will last, but for how long your sense of purpose will endure.

I am a very happy and contented retiree today not because I stopped working, but because I never stopped mattering to my family, to my community, and to myself.

And that, perhaps, is the retirement crisis we should talk about more and the one we can still choose to avoid. 

A Closing Meditation

If you are reading this in the later seasons of life, pause for a moment.

Take stock not of what you no longer do, but of what you still offer. Your years have given you something rare: perspective. Your presence, your listening, your memory, your voice, these are not small things in a world that often rushes past wisdom.

Purpose does not shout. It whispers. It shows up in the way you greet the day, in the care you extend to others, in the stories only you can tell. You do not need to prove your worth; you need only to remember it.

May your remaining years be less about accumulation and more about contribution. Less about urgency and more about meaning. And may you wake each morning knowing that, in ways both seen and unseen, you still matter.

Meanwhile, here's the AI  Overview on the Above Topic:
In 2026, retirement research increasingly emphasizes that a successful transition depends less on financial wealth and more on a "mattering factor"—the subjective perception that one is important, noticed, and relied upon by others
. This sense of mattering is the "quiet gift" that transforms a life of leisure into a life of enduring purpose. 
The Core of Mattering
Psychologically, mattering consists of three critical dimensions that prevent the emotional burnout often seen in early retirement: 
  • Awareness: The feeling that your presence is acknowledged and you are not being ignored by your community.
  • Importance: The perception that others care about your well-being and take pride in your successes.
  • Reliance: The feeling that others depend on you for support, mentorship, or your unique talents. 
6 Paths to Purposeful Retirement
Choosing a defined "retirement path" helps retirees maintain their mattering factor by aligning their daily activities with their core identity: 
  1. Continuers: Use existing professional skills in new volunteer or consulting roles.
  2. Adventurers: Ditch old routines to pursue entirely new careers or "dream" hobbies.
  3. Searchers: Explore multiple options (Plan A, B, and C) to find the perfect fit.
  4. Involved Spectators: Stay connected to their former industry as active observers or news followers.
  5. Easy Gliders: Savor a freewheeling lifestyle without a fixed agenda, finding joy in daily spontaneity.
  6. Retreaters: Focus on recharging through intentional reflection or perpetual relaxation. 
Benefits of Finding "Micro-Purpose"
As of 2026, new clinical evidence highlights that purpose does not need to be a "grand mission" to provide significant benefits: 
  • Cognitive Health: A strong sense of life purpose is linked to a 28% lower riskof developing cognitive impairment.
  • Biological Longevity: Regular volunteering in retirement is associated with slower rates of biological aging and lower levels of systemic inflammation.
  • Emotional Resilience: Mattering acts as a buffer against depression, which affects nearly one-third of U.S. retirees due to the sudden loss of workplace routine. 
Practical Strategies to Foster Purpose
  • Say "Yes" Twice a Week: Accept or extend two invitations weekly to signal mutual value between you and your social circle.
  • The 3T Pattern: Identify a community need and meet it with your Time, Talent, or Treasure to regain the feeling of being "needed".
  • Intergenerational Storytelling: Share family histories or mentor younger people; these "knowledge transfers" create a sense that your stories and impact will live on.
  • Identify Your "Ikigai": Use tools like the Boldin Retirement Planner or Hartford Funds Workbook to map out activities that balance what you love, what you are good at, and what the world needs. 
  • Lastly, my photo of the Day: Feasting on Dungeness crab tonight:


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