Melange Musings

Melange Musings "YOU CAN PLANT A DREAM"

-Anne Campbell
(4)

12/02/2026

Take more pictures, even if they seem trivial.

Capture the ordinary moments. The messy rooms, the unplanned smiles, the sunsets you've seen a hundred times.

These little snapshots might not seem like much now, but one day, they'll be treasures. They'll remind you of the laughter, the love, and the life you lived in all its imperfect beauty.

Don't wait for the 'big' moments to document your journey. The small, everyday memories are the ones that often mean the most later.

Youth passed like morning mist on hills we climbed,Our laughter echoing where the wind still stays.We traced the world w...
28/01/2026

Youth passed like morning mist on hills we climbed,
Our laughter echoing where the wind still stays.
We traced the world with restless feet and time,
Collected places, moments, fleeting days.

Now memory visits in quiet hours,
Faces, voices, hands that once were near.
I cannot walk those paths with the same fire,
Yet hope lives on in those I hold most dear.

May my children climb higher than I could see,
Go farther still, and become more than me.

I was doing the laundry for my two kids, myself, and a few of their dad’s clothes. While waiting for the washing machine...
08/12/2025

I was doing the laundry for my two kids, myself, and a few of their dad’s clothes. While waiting for the washing machine, I took a short rest and got a bit distracted. I didn’t notice that my little one had gone out, and I didn’t realize the machine had already stopped. She came back in, called me, and excitedly said, “Mama, you have to go out and see the washing machine!”

And just like that, whatever tiredness I was feeling seemed to fade. This is what I saw.

01/12/2025

My wife (and you guys have been tagging me) sent me an article claiming that ₱500 should be enough for a Noche Buena meal. My first reaction? Whoever in government said that is completely detached from the everyday reality of Filipino families.

Now, technically speaking, yes — anyone in a difficult financial situation can force a celebration out of ₱500. And yes, Christmas was never supposed to be about an overflowing feast. A simple meal, shared with the people you love, is and SHOULD be more than enough.

But that’s not the point.

There are families who want to splurge once a year - not out of excess, but out of longing. Out of the desire to give their kids even just one day where life feels normal, joyful, dignified.

When a government official casually declares “₱500 is enough,” it reveals how disconnected they are from the struggles of the people they supposedly serve.

Worse, statements like these operate as subtle conditioning. It’s a familiar tactic: redefine lowered standards as “resilience,” repackage scarcity as “discipline,” and normalize hardship so that people start believing they should be grateful for survival-level living conditions!!!
It’s the same psychological playbook used to soften public outrage - convince the masses that their expectations are the problem, not the incompetence and corruption that drive prices up in the first place.

By saying “₱500 is enough,” they’re not giving budgeting advice. They’re shaping perception. They’re shifting blame. They’re conditioning people to accept less, expect less, and demand less - while billions quietly disappear and the powerful continue to eat well.

In the end, the backlash to these tone-deaf statements says more about the public than the official. It shows how tired Filipinos are. How fed up. How done we are with being told to endure while others enjoy.

And honestly? That awakening - that collective refusal to swallow the same old narrative - is the one hopeful thing in all of this.

Hello!
28/11/2025

Hello!

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