I first visited the Philippines in 2006. On the short flight from Manila to Tacloban I was seated towards the rear of the plane among a group of college kids on a field trip. I told them I was on a 10,000 mile blind date and planned to get engaged if everything worked out. About 20 minutes before landing I went to the CR to freshen up a bit, it had been over 30 hours travel to this point. I believe this is when the college kids formulated a plan. When the plane landed and the front and rear doors were opened I got up and grabbed my carry on from the overhead but all the college kids remained seated, and they were all looking at me? I began to walk towards the open door and they all began to clap their hands! I remember thinking 鈥淚鈥檓 going to like this place!鈥 As I exited the plane I saw 2 little Filipinas jumping up and down, it was my future wife and her sister.
We planned to someday build a retirement home in the Philippines so in 2009 we bought an 850 sqm property on Biliran Island in a barangay the wife called 鈥渉ome town鈥 since her parents and grandparents were all born there. The property was plenty deep but a bit narrow. In 2014 the adjacent 850 sqm property became available so we bought that and now with 1,700 sqm we had plenty of room to build on.
In early 2020 we decided it was time to build the house so we went looking for an engineer and ended up with a gentleman who attended high school with my wife鈥檚 sister. He was born and raised in this barangay but he operates out of Cebu. I told him we wanted a 200 sqm, 2 story, 3 bedroom, 3 bath house and all the particulars. He put his architect to work and in a couple months we worked out a design we could all agree on. Construction began in June 2020 and finished 1 year later. My wife鈥檚 parents, nephews and an uncle oversaw the project plus we had the world鈥檚 best foreman so everything went very well.
We made our move in July 2021 which involved a 10 day quarantine in Manila and another quarantine at our final destination. We planned it so we would be reunited with our dog at the Tacloban airport after 10 days separation and that worked out. Normally it is required to quarantine at one of these tiny one room row houses but since my wife is related to the Mayor and her aunt works at the municipality we were allowed to quarantine in our new house. We arrived in our driveway the first of August in the back of her brother鈥檚 L300 van.
We entered the house like kids on Christmas morning and began checking everything. The in law鈥檚 had us a little table set up in the dining room with some food and baskets of fruit. There was a large poster on the wall to welcome us home. There were a few dozen balikbayan boxes on one side of the living room and in the center was a refrigerator, free standing range with oven, front loading washing machine and a LG 1.5hp split type air conditioner, all to be installed by me. The small bedroom upstairs had a bed and a temporarily installed window air conditioner. We slept very well that night, our incredibly long and difficult journey was near an end.
The first morning we awoke and opened a few balikbayan boxes until I found some tools which allowed me to unbox and install the range, refrigerator and washing machine. We made egg sandwiches for breakfast. I had packed coffee beans, a hand grinder and French press in my checked baggage so I was able to boil water in a pot had a good cup of coffee for a change.
This is a brief summary of how our home in the Philippines went from notion to fruition. I left out one small detail. When we landed in Tacloban my wife was handed the greatest gift or her life, an 8 month old healthy baby boy. She wanted a child from the start but I told her up front that I had a vasectomy. I did promise her I would do everything I could to give her a child. Nothing worked so her younger brother donated a beautiful baby boy who we are now in the process of adopting. We are now 3 months from our 2nd anniversary in the Philippines.
鈥淟ife is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you're going to get.鈥