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PASAYUD! STAR MAGIC CONFIRMEd! Break na si gerald and julia! 🤣🤣
18/09/2025

PASAYUD!

STAR MAGIC CONFIRMEd!
Break na si gerald and julia! 🤣🤣

ako nga ordinaryo nga empleyado lang ga tax 6k-10k a month  daw mapikon na gani.. how much more  , ining mga celebrities...
17/09/2025

ako nga ordinaryo nga empleyado lang ga tax 6k-10k a month daw mapikon na gani.. how much more , ining mga celebrities, and high earner employees and most especially OFW"s?
that 6k or 8k na tax kada payday, thats already a single cut off salary sang mga employees nga may below minimum.or minimum wages dason anyarehhh gintunga tungaan lamg sang mga bata sang contractors kag gin spend lavishly with those luxy bags , cars and ginkaon kaon sa mga restaurants.

supporting rallies to imprison politicians and constructors behind flood control budget issues.

17/09/2025

basi may relasyon pa da nga gabato. Please lang untata niyo nana.

isa ni sa pinaka old bridge sang sagay  ano ang mahambal ta sini kay natalana na nga gubaon..
10/09/2025

isa ni sa pinaka old bridge sang sagay ano ang mahambal ta sini kay natalana na nga gubaon..

SABAY SABAY TAYONG MAIYAK! — "MY WIFE DIED BECAUSE OF MY PRIDE"This is a real life story/confession....My wife and I had...
26/08/2025

SABAY SABAY TAYONG MAIYAK! — "MY WIFE DIED BECAUSE OF MY PRIDE"

This is a real life story/confession....

My wife and I had a small argument one Monday morning while we were getting ready for work. I got annoyed over something so petty, the way she had buttered the bread. It wasn’t spread neatly, and instead of ignoring it, I made a harsh remark. My words cracked through the room like thunder.

If I had known what was coming, I would have closed my eyes, eaten the bread silently, and smiled at her instead. But I didn’t.

She was hurt by my tone. She pushed her plate aside, left the table without eating, and went to work without saying goodbye. I was angry too, and neither of us wanted to take the first step toward peace.

That evening, we came home without speaking. We ate separately and went to bed in silence. Tuesday, Wednesday, and then Thursday passed the same way, our pride building walls between us.

On Thursday night at dinner, she finally broke the silence. She whispered a soft “hi.”
I wanted to respond, but my pride held me back. I kept eating, pretending not to hear, then stood up and left. Still, she smiled at me, so softly, so beautifully. Her smile could melt any heart. But I forced myself to resist. I told myself: If this fight is going to end, she should be the one to apologize. Not me.

Later that night, she went to shower while humming our favorite song. If I hadn’t been so stubborn, I would have joined her, like we always did. But I let my pride rob me of that moment too.

When she came out of the bathroom, I was already pretending to sleep. Around 3 a.m., she gently patted me, trying to wake me up. I brushed her hand away, thinking she just wanted space. I didn’t know it was the last time I would ever feel her touch.

I fell back asleep. When I woke up at 7:15, late for work, she was still in bed. I didn’t say a word to her. My pride was stronger than my love in that moment. I hurried, ate breakfast, and left the house without even looking back.

That evening, when I returned home, the house felt strange. The door was still wide open, the table untouched, exactly as I had left it that morning. My chest tightened. I rushed upstairs and found her still lying in bed.

My phone slipped from my hand as I ran to her.
“Baby…” I whispered, trembling.
Her skin was cold. Her chest wasn’t moving.

I collapsed beside her, crying out her name, pressing my ear to her chest. Nothing. No heartbeat. No breath. I screamed for Jesus to bring her back, but it was too late.

It didn’t feel real until the day they buried her. My wife was gone. Just like that.

Only then did I realize the truth. My wife had asthma. That night at 3 a.m., when she reached out to wake me, she must have been having an attack. She was probably asking me for help, for her inhaler, for air, for life. But I let my pride get in the way. I brushed her hand aside. I turned my back on her. And I let the woman I loved die beside me.

It has been three weeks since that day. My world is broken. My heart is empty. If I could turn back time, I would undo every harsh word, every silence, every stubborn choice.

Today, all I can do is whisper her name and hope she hears me:
Stella, forgive me.
I’m sorry. I’m sorry, my love.



Life has a way of reminding us that pride serves no purpose in love. Arguments, hurtful words, and silent treatments may feel justified in the heat of the moment, but they only build walls that rob us of precious time. No bread, no mistake, no flaw is ever worth losing someone you love. What matters most is compassion, patience, and choosing peace over pride.

So forgive quickly, love loudly, and never let your ego silence your heart. One day, time will run out, and no apology will be heard, no hug will be returned. Say sorry when you can. Say "I love you" while they can still hear it. Because love is not about winning an argument—it’s about never losing the person who matters most.

24/08/2025

T kundi kanami lantawon kay ga saot²x kalang da, indi kay mamukaw kaya ala una sang kaagahon

14/08/2025

credit to : ill.tv

08/08/2025
07/08/2025

in 1985, in a quiet village in East Africa, a man named Danie stood barefoot with his three daughters. His wife had passed during childbirth the year before. He never remarried. He didn't have the time- or the heart. He was a farmer, a builder, a father and a dreamer all in one.

Their home had no electricity. Some nights, dinner would just be boiled roots and water. But what they had- What Daniel made sure they always had. was dignity!

Every morning before sunrise he woke his girls and walked them two miles to the schoolhouse. He couldn't read or write himself, but he sat outside the classroom everyday, waiting in the shade, just so they wouldn't have to walk home alone.

Sometimes, he went without food so they could buy a pencil.
He sold his wedding ring to afford exam fees.
He worked three jobs during harvest season just to buy secondhand textbooks that have many missing pages .

People laughed.
"They are girls!" they said.
"what future do they have."

Daniel didn't answer He just kept walking beside them.

Years passed. One by One, they graduated. One by one they earned scholarships and one by one. they crossed oceans.

In 2025, 40 years after the photo was taken, the world saw something no one expected:

A new image of the same man, standing proudly - this time in front of the hospital - with his three daughters, all wearing white coats.

DOCTORS.

all of them.

When asked how he felt, Daniel cried aofty and whispered,
" I never gave them the world, i just never let the world take their hopes away! '

He grew crops in his hands,
but he raised doctors with a heart.

And in the quiet shadow of a man the world never knew,
three girls rose. and changed it!

✈️💔 A 41-year-old OFW from Kuwait was supposed to come home today...Wilma Auza was just hours away from finally seeing h...
06/08/2025

✈️💔 A 41-year-old OFW from Kuwait was supposed to come home today...

Wilma Auza was just hours away from finally seeing her family again.

She had just landed in Cebu and boarded a bus, excited to surprise her loved ones.
But she never made it.

💔 She di3d alone on that bus — only miles away from home. The cause? Cardiac arrest?

Inside her luggage were gifts for her family. But inside her body was exhaustion from years of sacrifice. She was tired — deeply, painfully tired — and no one knew.

💡 Let this be a reminder:

📌 To our OFWs:
You are strong, but you’re human too. Don’t wait until your body breaks down. Your health matters. Rest when you need to.

📌 To families back home:
Don’t just wait to hug them when they return. Check on them while they’re away. Show them love now — while they’re still here.

📌 To all of us chasing dreams:
Success means nothing if we lose ourselves in the process.
Coming home alive is more important than any pasalubong.

👣 Wilma should have been welcomed with hugs and laughter...
Instead, her family was met with grief and heartbreak.

Her story is a painful reminder of how hard and lonely life can be for overseas workers — far from home, carrying silent burdens, often giving more than they have to give.

To all OFWs: You are not just workers. You are heroes.
But even heroes need rest. Even heroes need care.

💔 May Wilma’s story never be forgotten. May it remind us all of the cost of love from afar.

🕊️ Rest in peace, Wilma. You deserved more.

Note: Image is not the actual photo of Wilma.

02/08/2025

abaw! ti sino ang magbantay kag mag taghol to sa gwa ? ako? 🙄🤷😂😂😂
bantay ka tani! 😔

30/07/2025

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