Responsive Ad Slot

Latest

Sponsored

Features

Buhay Pinay

People

Sports

Business Ideas for OFWs

Join us at Facebook!

Matalas ang dila

Posted on 16 December 2019 No comments


Magkahalong galit at awa sa sarili ang naramdaman ni Tessa nang sabihan sya ng kanyang among babae ng ”stupid,  no common sense” at may pahabol pa na “shut up” at “f—k”, nang tinangka niyang mangatwiran minsan siyang pagalitan.

Inutusan kasi siya ng kanyang amo na linisin muna ang washing machine bago labhan ang damit ng mga bata, na sinunod naman niya.

Pero pagkatapos labhan ang damit ng mga alaga ay isinalang naman niya ang kanyang mga maruming damit.

Call us!

Pag-uwi ng kanyang amo ay agad siyang tinanong kung nilinis niya ang washing machine bago nilabhan ang mga damit ng mga bata,  at sumagot siya ng “Yes, ma’am”.

Subalit hindi nakontento sa kanyang sagot ang amo at kumuha pa ng tisyu para punasin ang loob ng washing machine.

Nang makita nito na nadumihan ang tisyu ay minura niya nang husto si Tessie,

Call us now!

Hindi na nakatiis si Tessa at ipinagtanggol ang sarili ngunit minura siyang muli ng kanyang amo.

Lagi silang nagtatalo ng kanyang among babae dahil tila wala na daw siyang ginawang tama.

Galante sana kung magregalo ang amo nguni’t kung murahin naman siya nito ay tila walang siyang dignidad.

Call now!

Sa kabila nito ay pilit pa ring tinitiis ni Tessa ang paninilbihan niya sa amo, at sa katunayan ay pumirma siya ng panibagong kontrata dito.

Katwiran naman niya, titiisin na lang muna niya ang pang-aaping ginagawa sa kanya habang hindi pa siya nakakaipon.

Gusto daw kasi niyang mapatapos ang kanilang pinapagawang bahay para makauwi na at makapiling ang mga anak. Si Tessa ay may tatlong anak at hiwalay sa asawa. Siya ay tubong Passi, Iloilo. – Emz Frial
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.

CALL US NOW!
Call now!
Call us!

Call us now!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call now!

Balasubas si Gerlie

Posted on No comments

Nabaon sa utang si Mutya dahil sa pagtulong kay Gerlie na inakala niyang kaibigan. Nakiusap daw si Gerlie na ipangutang siya ng $4,000 mula sa isang kakilala niya na na nag 5-6.

Ayon kay Gerlie babayaran niya ang utang pagkatapos ng isang buwan ngunit umabot na ng walong buwan na si Mutya ang nagbabayad ng buwanang interes na $400 ay hindi pa rin niya ito masingil.

Kinalaunan ay hindi na niya ma-contact si Gerlie sa telepono.

Call us!

Pumunta si Mutya sa assistance to nationals section ng Konsulado dala ang resibo sa paglipat niya ng pera sa Hang Seng bank account ni Gerlie, nguni’t hindi din nila alam kung paano kontakin ang may utang.

Gusto sana ni Mutya na kahit ang $4,000 na lang ang bayaran ni Gerlie at hindi na ang ibinayad niya sa buwanang interes.

Call us now!

Mabuti na lang at bandang huli ay may pinsan siya na tumulong na mabayaran niya ang buong halaga na inutang niya sa usurero.

Dahil sa nangyari ay nadala na si Mutya sa mga lumalapit sa kanyang para mangutang.

CALL OUR HOTLINE!

Pinapaalala din niya sa mga kapwa OFW na pakaingatan ang kanilang kinikita dahil maraming mga manloloko sa mga kapwa nila Pilipina.

Si Mutya ay 42 taong gulang, may asawa at tatlong anak at tubong Guimaras sa Iloilo. Patapos na ang pangalawang kontrata niya sa amo sa Tai Wai. - Rodelia Pedro
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.

CALL US NOW!
Call now!
Call us!

Call us now!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call now!

Fake News

Posted on No comments

By Daisy Catherine L. Mandap

We live in difficult, if not dangerous times in Hong Kong.

The anti-government protests that started nearly six months ago in the wake of an attempt by the government to pass an extradition bill have shown no sign of a let-up.

Mercifully, the escalation of violence that ultimately led to more than 5,000 people being arrested abated long enough for a watershed election to be held.

But for how long will this uneasy calm last?

Call us!

If we’re being optimistic we’d say that the administration should see the vote of no-confidence by the electorate in the Nov 24 election as a sign they should relent a bit and listen more to the protesters’ grievances.

But if we allow ourselves to wallow in the same state of hopelessness we were in when the protests escalated a few weeks ago we won’t see an end to the mayhem unless one side makes a major concession.

As we stay on the edge of our seats waiting for things to unfold, or hopefully end, we should also make sure we don’t fall prey to the misinformation swirling around us.

Call us now!

There’s enough uncertainty facing us all here, and we shouldn’t compound it by raising a false alarm, spreading unverified information, or worse, deliberately feeding our community with lies.

Most vulnerable to misinformation are members of our migrant community, who by their sheer number, are able to share news to a wider audience, and fast.

Forced to stay put in their employers’ homes on their only rest day in the week because of the protests, they get to spend even more time checking their mobile phones and passing on information.

CALL OUR HOTLINE!

The trouble is, some of them don’t bother with fact-checking even if the information can be checked readily by accessing mainstream media or other more reliable sources like the Consulate’s Facebook page.

Thus, the story about a supposed mass evacuation of Filipinos from Hong Kong easily caught on, and spread fast. Never mind if this was only raised as a possibility by the Philippine Labor Secretary during radio interviews in Manila.

The story so alarmed the community that Consul General Raly Tejada took no time setting the record straight. “I would like to put this issue to rest,” he said in his first meeting with Filcom leaders.

Speculations did die down considerably, but there remain many holdouts. Reacting recently to our story on the spike in the number of Filipino domestic workers arriving in Hong Kong despite the chaos, a netizen chastised us with, “Hindi ba ninyo na alam na may ban na si Bello dyan?”

There are many others spread by people with lots of time on their hands, and who specifically target our OFWs, knowing how fast unverified stories could travel among them.

Who could forget the story about migrant workers supposedly being offered $5,000 to take part in rallies? If it didn’t alarm so many people in the community it would have been laughable, especially since this was the time when two million people took to the streets to join the anti-extradition call.

Who would bother enticing fake protesters with money when there were millions who genuinely believed in the cause and had no qualms showing it?

Another rumor that spread fast was the supposed offer of a reward by the police to any domestic worker who would snitch on their employers who join the protests. This one caught on because former Chief Executive CY Leung re-posted the leaflets supposedly advertising the police offer.

But CY or not, this blatant disinformation, like all the rest, could be easily discerned. For one thing, the leaflets supposedly targeting migrant workers were in Cantonese. For another, they listed down unknown numbers for the police when calling 999 would have been far simpler and faster.

What we should emphasize here is that indeed, relying on social media for information is the only way forward. It is faster, more accessible, and offers a wide variety of news sources to choose from.

But using social media comes with a lot of risk, and its advantages could also turn to disadvantages. Thus we must always treat stories that we get off it with caution and discernment. How reliable is the source, how credible is the story itself?

Until we get into the habit of checking and double checking our information we must hold off passing it around. That is the only way we could help ease some of the problems besetting us during these difficult times.


---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.


CALL US NOW!
Call now!
Call us!

Call us now!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call now!

Positive vibes

Posted on No comments
Jocelyn Barite (center) with her employers.


Rare are the times when someone who gets featured in our pages comes back with an enthusiastic “thank you” and reports on how the unexpected publicity has made a positive impact on her work.

With many people resorting to social media nowadays for their daily dose of attention, a feedback like this immediately draws a picture of someone who maintains a positive attitude and rarely lets the blues get her down.

And that, indeed, is Jocelyn Barite, whose Korean Beef Stew recipe we featured in September as one of three examples of how meat is made tender while cooking.

Call us!

Jocelyn was obviously happy because not only was her recipe published in The SUN, her male employer, according to her, also proudly showed off the article to his parents in New York.

What’s more, she said has just received a raise, and it is not hard to see why. In the recipes she shares below, Jocelyn shows how she makes her own sauce and improvise on the procedure so she gets to come up with dishes – or sauces – all her own.

Her joy in her work she attributes partly to her very supportive employers with whom she has been working for the past five years, and partly to the family she left behind.

Call us now!

Joyce, who is 43 and hails from Zamboanga del Norte, is married and has three children who make her proud. The eldest has already graduated from University of the Philippines in the Visayas , the second is about to graduate from a civil engineering course, while the youngest is just 11 and still in grade school.

She has worked in Hong Kong for 13 years, with the first 8 spent with a British and Chinese couple with two children. Joyce gives them a lot of credit for developing in her the love of cooking.

“Sir is a pilot kaya kung ano ang mga food na maganda sa ibang bansa (na napupuntahan niya) pinapa try niya sa akin (lutuin) pag uwi niya,” says Joyce.

CALL OUR HOTLINE!

In the last two years of working with them she says she was enrolled in a Japanese cooking class. “Doon nadagdagan ang idea ko sa pagluluto,” she says.

Unfortunately, their relationship did not have a happy ending. With barely two months before their last contract was to end, her male employer came home with a striped bag and told Joyce to pack in two hours so he could drive her out.

The reason? The employers said they saw one of her poems which told them they couldn’t trust her anymore.

Until now, Joyce still feels the pain of having been driven out unceremoniously from the home of a family she had cared so much for.

“Simula nang time na umalis ako until now masakit pa rin sa akin. Napapaluha pa rin ako at na mi miss ko ang dalawa kong alaga na ako ang nagpalaki.”

But true to her nature, Joyce still finds something good in what had happened. She says the couple gave her a good release letter, so she ended up with the caring family she now works with.

Even better, the love of cooking her former employers instilled in her continues to serve as a reminder of the good times they had, once upon a time. - DCLM


Eggplant parmesan 

Ingredients:
2 pcs medium eggplant
tomato sauce
2 eggs
bread crumbs
oil for frying
parmesan cheese

Procedure:
1. Peel eggplant then slice into lengthwise in medium thickness
2. Beat eggs and dip the eggplant slices. Roll in bread crumbs.
3. Fry the eggplant slices individually until they’re brown on each side. Set aside.
4. Pour enough tomato sauce to cover the base of a baking dish, then arrange the fried eggplants on top.
5. Pour more tomato sauce over the eggplants, then sprinkle with parmesan cheese.
6. Bake in oven at 150 degrees celsius for 20 minutes or until the cheese has melted.

For the dipping sauce, I use my own concoction.

Ingredients: 
2 cans Del Monte diced tomato, blended
8 cloves garlic, minced
1 tbs basil
1 tbs parsley
200ml vodka
olive oil

Procedure: 
1. Heat olive oil, then fry garlic until they’re light brown in color (do not burn)
2. Add blended tomato, basil, parsley, salt and pepper
3. Turn fire to low and simmer for another 15 minutes. Your sauce is ready.
(You can make more than you need, but make sure you put the remainder in a Ziploc bag which you should keep in the freezer until you’re ready to use it)


Chicken Kiev 

(My Style)
Ingredients:
2 pcs chicken breasts
2 eggs for dipping
butter
cheese
parsley
garlic
lemon juice
bread crumbs (with cheese, optional)

Procedure:
1. Mix together butter, parsley, garlic and lemon juice.
2. Make a hole in the middle of the chicken breast (like a pocket), then pour in the mixed ingredients, as well as cheese.
3. Close the hole and wrap with cling wrap. Put in the refrigerator to chill. (Best to keep the chicken in the fridge for at least an hour or overnight to soak in the flavor).
4. Beat the egg and dip each chicken breast before rolling in bread crumbs.
5. Fry in low fire until brown.
6. Put on a baking dish and bake at 150 degrees centigrade for about 20 minutes or until the inside part is totally cooked
7. Serve with steamed vegetable and mashed potatoes.
---
I-try mo ito, Kabayan: Kung interesado kang ma-contact ang mga advertiser namin dito, pindutin lang ang kanilang ad, at lalabas ang auto-dialer. Pindutin ulit upang tumawag. Hindi na kailangang pindutin ang mga numero.

CALL US NOW!
Call now!
Call us!

Call us now!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call us!
CALL US NOW!
Call now!
Don't Miss