Why I Continue to Write About the Philippines
After all, I left my homeland in 1960 as a young man with a suitcase full of dreams. I built my career in America, raised four wonderful children here, became a proud American citizen, enjoyed a fulfilling career as a scientist with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and today, at the age of 91, I live a happy and peaceful life in California.
Yet, hardly a week goes by without my writing about the Philippines.
The answer is simple. I am not merely writing about a country. I am writing about the life that shaped me.
The Philippines is not just a place on a map. It is the sound of church bells on Sunday mornings in Iloilo. It is the aroma of freshly cooked rice filling our family home. It is the taste of La Paz Batchoy, Pancit Molo, Kansi, fresh mangoes, and countless dishes that remind me of my childhood. It is the laughter of neighbors who never knocked before entering our home because everyone belonged to one another.
It is the school where I first dreamed of becoming a chemist.
It is the teachers who encouraged me, the friends who walked beside me, and the parents whose sacrifices made my education possible.
When I left Manila in 1960 to begin a new life in America, I did not leave those memories behind. They traveled with me.
For more than six decades, they have quietly lived within me.
My children grew up as Americans, and I could not be prouder of them. My grandchildren are even more rooted in America, and now my two precious great-grandsons will grow up in a world far different from the one I knew as a boy.
They know they are Filipino-American. But I also know that every generation naturally becomes a little farther removed from the country where their family story began.
That is precisely why I write.
I wrote my autobiography so my family would know where I came from, not simply the dates and places, but the people, the values, the struggles, and the dreams that shaped my life.
I write about Philippine history because our nation's story deserves to be remembered.
I write about Filipino traditions because culture is more than colorful festivals and folk dances. It is respect for elders, close family ties, generosity toward strangers, resilience in difficult times, and the remarkable ability to smile through hardship.
I write about my hometown because every person carries a place that helped make them who they are.
I write about Filipino food because every family recipe tells a story that no history book can fully capture.
Food is memory. History is memory. Culture is memory. Family is memory.
Since I began blogging in 2009, I have written thousands of posts that have reached readers in more than 150 countries. Many readers tell me they have learned something new about the Philippines. Others say my stories remind them of parents, grandparents, or childhoods they thought had been forgotten.
Those messages mean a great deal to me. But if there is one audience I hope will return to these pages years from now, it is my own family.
To my children, grandchildren, and especially to my two young great-grandsons:
Perhaps someday you will wonder where your family's journey began.
Perhaps one day you will want to know why your great-grandfather spoke so often about Iloilo and Marinduque, why he smiled whenever he heard an old Filipino song, or why certain meals always brought back stories from another lifetime.
When that day comes, I hope these pages will help answer those questions.
I do not expect you to carry my memories. I simply hope you will know them.
Because every generation deserves to understand the shoulders upon which it stands.
Long after I am gone, my blogs and my autobiography will remain.
They are more than stories. They are my gift to you. They are my way of saying:
"This is where we came from. This is the journey that brought us here. Never forget your roots, even as your branches continue to reach toward the sky."
That, above all, is why I continue to write about the Philippines.
AI Response and Comments on this Posting:
It has been one of the real pleasures of our conversations to help preserve your memories and your legacy. At 91, you are doing something many people intend to do but never accomplish, you are leaving behind a written record of a life that spans remarkable chapters of history: growing up in pre-war and post-war Philippines, immigrating to America in 1960, building a distinguished scientific career, raising a family, and now reflecting on nine decades of experience with wisdom and gratitude.
Your blogs are more than opinion pieces or memoirs. Collectively, they have become a living archive of Filipino-American history seen through the eyes of someone who lived it. Your children, grandchildren, and your two great-grandsons may one day discover details about their family's heritage that they could never have learned elsewhere.
I also appreciate that, despite writing about politics, history, food, science, aging, and culture, your posts almost always return to the same enduring themes: family, gratitude, curiosity, and never forgetting one's roots. Those are values that resonate across generations and across cultures.
As we say in Filipino:
"Ang taong hindi marunong lumingon sa pinanggalingan ay hindi makararating sa paroroonan."
"A person who does not know how to look back to where they came from will never reach their destination."
That proverb could very well serve as the motto for your life's work as a writer.
Maraming salamat for allowing me to accompany you on this journey. It is an honor to help give voice to your memories and ideas, and I look forward to helping you write many more stories for your readers around the world.
Muchas gracias. Maraming salamat. And, as always, may God continue to bless you and your wonderful family.
- Identifies behavioral patterns: Your history highlights personal blind spots, recurring habits, and relational tendencies.
- Provides data for strategy: Analyzing prior failures shows you what does not work, revealing more efficient routes forward.
- Measures your trajectory: You cannot accurately track personal growth without a baseline from where you started.
- Builds emotional resilience: Remembering past hardships that you successfully survived reminds you of your inner strength.




