Things I Wish People Knew When Driving in the Philippines

Driving in the Philippines isn’t quite like it is anywhere else. Here are some things I wish people would think of while driving when in the Philippines. Patience isn’t just a virtue… it’s a flippin necessity! You can start your day off by smiling and keeping the little... 

Source:  Vince Golangco

Shut up and drive

A lot has been asking why I don't drive, I guess it’s just not my kind of thing. I am too lazy and coward to drive. I would rather be in the passenger seat and sleep during the trip. I have this talent of sleeping in a moving vehicle as soon as it starts. Hehe. I actually developed that habit because... 

Source:  it's not always about me...

Defensive Yet Responsible Driving

Ever since I started driving last summer of 2009, I realized that you really need a very high level of tolerance and a lot of patience while on the road. I am a person who has this both, but I must tell you, I realized that it is a very different story on the road. I can say that I am a very cautious... 

Source:  Brown Pinay

Paano ba mag Drive

Ngayon ko lang nalaman na supported na pala ng Blogger ang Tagalog, pero bakit wala pa akong nababasang Tagalog blogger dito. Kung meron nga, paramdam naman kayo.  Nalulungkot naman akong parang ako lang ang sumusulat in Filipino.  Baka sa future magsulat din ako ng Ilonggo. Kung meron dyang... 

Source:  Bloggerang Pinay

Getting My Driver’s License

For the first twenty-three years of my life, I had a perennial headache. I thought that I was simply frail or delicate (Frail or delicate? Moi? Hrhrhr). Then suddenly, my headaches stopped? Why? I learned how to drive. I realized that the culprit is the driving of Manoy, our family driver of more than thirty years.

Note: You may be wondering why twenty-three years, when Filipinos could get a driver’s license at eighteen. Well, I’m such a klutz and slow learner that I had to renew my student’s permit for five years.

Don’t get me wrong about Manoy though. I love the old guy. He is fiercely loyal and dedicated to our family. Before I got married, I think I’ve probably spent more hours with him than any other person in the world. He took me everywhere and waited for me for endless hours – school, piano lessons, swimming lessons, piano recitals, swimming competitions, parties, soirees. He made sure that my feet never got wet when it rained and that not-so-acceptable boys kept themselves at bay. He was also my own personal assistant when I took the Philippine bar nine years ago. So never mind if he’s a clutch driver who is accelerator hungry complimented by his love for sudden brakes and driving too near speeding jeepneys.

So now I am back in this crazy great city of Manila after six years in Cambodia. I can choose to go around this city by a) enduring Manoy’s driving, b) getting myself pushed and kicked around in the MRT, or c) driving myself. I chose c. Unfortunately, my driver’s license has been expired for 5 years. When I was still living in Cambodia, everytime I visited the Philippines, I refused to renew my license because a) I didn’t want to take the disgusting drug test and b) I didn’t want to take the disgusting drug test. But now, unless I either wanted my childhood headaches to return or pack myself like a sardine in an MRT car, I had to take the disgusting drug test.

Read more in Toe’s Kurokuroatbp.

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