ChatGPT reviewed one of my blogs, My Autobiography: David Balleza K(C)atague, There are several very clear themes that emerge from my writings over the last three years as follows:
Major Topics I Frequently Write About
1. Filipino-American Identity and Immigration
One of the strongest recurring themes is the Filipino-American experience, especially immigration, assimilation, family heritage, and maintaining cultural identity across generations. You often connect your own life journey from the Philippines to the United States with broader issues affecting immigrants today.
2. AI, Technology, and the Future of Humanity
In recent years, your blog has increasingly focused on artificial intelligence, digital technology, and their effects on society, employment, ethics, and human relationships. You often approach these topics from both a scientific and spiritual perspective.
3. Personal Memoirs and Family History
Your blog functions partly as a living autobiography. Many posts preserve family memories, childhood experiences in Iloilo, FDA career milestones, and tributes to relatives. These posts are among the most personal and historically valuable parts of your blog.
4. FDA, Science, and Professional Legacy
You frequently reflect on your scientific career and regulatory work at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, especially your pioneering role as a Filipino-American scientist and chemistry team leader.
5. Aging, Longevity, and Health
Many recent articles explore aging, supercentenarians, healthcare systems, wellness, and quality of life in later years.
6. Filipino Food and Culture
Food is another recurring theme from traditional Filipino dishes to cultural foods tied to memory and migration.
7. Travel and Global Observations
Your blog also contains travel reflections and observations about world cultures, especially the Philippines, UK, France and the broader Filipino diaspora.
8. Spirituality, Humanity, and Social Reflection
You frequently write about morality, faith, compassion, humanity, and the ethical direction of modern civilization.
Your Blog’s Overall Character
Your blog is unusual because it combines:
- autobiography,
- science,
- immigration history,
- Filipino culture,
- technology commentary,
- spirituality,
- and family archives
all in one place.
In many ways, it reads like a digital memoir of a Filipino-American scientist living through enormous historical change from postwar Philippines to the AI era.
Frequent Commentators on Your Blog
I could not reliably extract a complete list of your most frequent commentators from publicly indexed web results because Blogger comments are not fully searchable or easily aggregated through standard web indexing. Many posts also appear to have comments disabled or very few visible comments.
However, based on the publicly visible portions of your blog, the people most frequently mentioned or interacting around your posts appear to include:
- family members,
- Filipino-American friends,
- THD residents/community members,
- former colleagues,
- and readers interested in Filipino culture, aging, AI, and immigration.
I did notice recurring references to:
- your wife Macrine, your spouse for over 63 years
- your children and relatives,
- Filipino-American community members,
- and readers from the Philippines, Australia, and the U.S. Bay Area.
Meanwhile, here's my Non-Monetary Award Citation to three of my Frequent Commentators here at THD, Dick Botton, Phil Paris and John Larimore
This Certificate of Appreciation is proudly presented to Dick Botton, Phil Paris and John Larimore in grateful recognition of their thoughtful, insightful, and consistently positive commentaries on my daily blogs during the past three years at THD.
Dick, John and Phil, your words have gone far beyond ordinary responses. Through your wisdom, encouragement, humor, personal reflections, and meaningful observations, you have helped enrich the evergreen value of these blogs for readers around the world. Your participation has transformed many postings into deeper conversations on life, aging, family, culture, health, faith, and the human experience.
Your loyal support and continued engagement have been a source of inspiration and friendship, reminding all of us that meaningful dialogue and shared experiences can build lasting connections within our senior community.
With sincere gratitude and warm appreciation, this award is presented on this 1st day of June, 2026.
David B. Katague, Blogger and Friend
My Kudos AND THANKS to OTHER Commentators ( both written and oral) of My Blogs here at THD: Linda B, Susie H, Mary Ann D, Marsha K, Susie B, Nancy S, Andi S, Joan E, Carle H, Jean K, Sandi G, Jane W, Harry H, Patty H, Phyllis M, Dorothy M, Bill O, Maureen B, Anne L, Fred L, Jane M, Cam O, Jean D, Jay P, Norman N, Rita R, Joseph W, Gretchen A, Wanda K, Aileyn E, Claire F, Christa P, Shari R, Steve K, Bob F, Mary S, Sally P, Martha R, Veronica A, Deanna R and last but not least, Jenny S. I hope I did not forget someone.
Thanks to the former residents and employees of THD who had touch my life, Lee C( bridge), Michael H (daily reader/ commentator), and Ted T ( AI intro). Other previous THD employees that touch my life in minor ways were: Jennifer H, Teresa N, Cydney C, Elane J and Liza B ( facilitated my Catio construction).
Finally, My Thank You to All the Commentators and Readers All Over the World, Since 2009
Since I began blogging in 2009, I have been blessed by the participation of thousands of readers and commentators from many parts of the world. What started as a personal journey of sharing thoughts, experiences, and observations has evolved into a living community of ideas, memories, debates, humor, compassion, and friendship.
Many of your comments have added depth and perspective far beyond the original postings themselves, transforming simple blog entries into enduring conversations on life, family, Filipino-American heritage, public service, health, aging, faith, and our changing world.
To every reader who took the time to comment, react, encourage, disagree respectfully, or share personal stories, I offer my heartfelt gratitude. Your voices have become an important part of the legacy and evergreen spirit of this blogging journey.
My Food For Thought for Today Fareed’s Zacharia Advice to Graduates |
AI anxiety has become a feature of graduation season, with some commencement speakers booed for championing a technology many young people worry could upend the job market before they even enter it.
You can watch part of Fareed’s commencement address on GPS—tune in to CNN at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. ET to watch. |




























