Iceberg

[Tw: Discussions of drug abuse, mental illness, and suicide.]

A lot of episodes on this feed simply don’t happen. Because they can’t. But it doesn’t matter so much. This is just a podcast.

In reality, there’s a lot of conversation that aren’t happening, and those that are--like about the extrajudicial killings of drug users in the Philippines--are just types of icebergs some people might not recognize.

Sources:

National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2020, July 24). Comorbidity: Substance use disorders and other mental illnesses drugfacts. Retrieved March 10, 2021, from https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/comorbidity-substance-use-disorders-other-mental-illnesses

Martinez, A.B., Co, M., Lau, J. et al. Filipino help-seeking for mental health problems and associated barriers and facilitators: a systematic review. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 55, 1397–1413 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-020-01937-2

Tugade, R. (n.d.). We need to talk about mental illness in the Philippines. Retrieved March 10, 2021, from https://cnnphilippines.com/life/culture/2017/04/25/mental-illness-stigma.html

Gharib, M. (2018, November 22). How I learned to talk to My Filipino mom about my mental health. Retrieved March 10, 2021, from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/11/22/669960524/how-i-learned-to-talk-to-my-filipino-mom-about-my-mental-health

Tomacruz, S. (2018, September 11). Is the Philippines ready to address mental health? Retrieved March 13, 2021, from https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/in-depth/philippines-readiness-address-mental-health

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

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The Political Constitution of 1899

The Political Constitution of 1899 is amazing fodder for the ‘what if’ game. Ultimately, the Philippines might not have stuck with the constitution they use today, so it’s worth thinking about what could have been.

Sources:

Calderón, Felipe (1907). Mis memorias sobre la revolución filipina: Segunda etapa, (1898 á 1901). Manila: Imp. de El Renacimiento. p. Appendix I, p. 17. https://archive.org/details/arb8046.0001.001.umich.edu

And of course, the full Constitution - https://lawphil.net/consti/consmalo.html

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

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The First Philippine Republic

Ahead of National First Philippine Republic Day, Marcy is going to go into what that holiday is celebrating, but we also should quickly go over who helped make that happen.

Sources:

Agoncillo, Teodoro A. (1997). Malolos: The Crisis of the Republic. University of the Philippines Press. Manilla: Philippines.

Agoncillo, Teodor A. (1990). History of the Filipino people (8th ed.). Quezon City: Garotech.

"Emilio Aguinaldo". Malacaňan Palace Presidential Museum and Library. http://malacanang.gov.ph/emilio-aguinaldo/

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 10 - As It Had Been

[Apologies for the delay: ‘malfunctioning fire alarms’ is the sort of problem that compounds quickly in the podcast world.]

The final act in Teresa Magbanua’s story. In some ways, it’s a familiar one.

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter! And our newest show Searching for the Aswang

Sources:

1. Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Vol 6, No 1, 1996.

2. Caraccilo, Dominic J. (2005). Surviving Bataan And Beyond: Colonel Irvin Alexander's Odyssey As A Japanese Prisoner Of War. Stackpole Books

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

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Teresa Magbanua Part 8 - The Tragedy

[Editor's Note: Apologies for the delay. It was a long week in the US...]

Things were supposed to go well. Or at least better than they had been. But then tragedy strikes. And a downfall begins.

Sources:

1. Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Vol 6, No 1, 1996.

2. Foreman, John, “The Philippine Islands: a political, geographical, ethnographical, social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago, embracing the whole period of Spanish rule, with an account of the succeeding American insular government,” New York: 1907, C. Scribner's Sons. - https://archive.org/stream/island00forephilippinerich#page/478/mode/2up

The Text is in the Public Domain

3. Centennial Resource Book. (n.d.). Pascual Magbanua and Teresa Magbanua: WESTERN VISAYAS, Philippines Unsung Heroes. Retrieved November 3, 2020, from http://www.msc.edu.ph/centennial/hero/wv/page7.html

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter! And our newest show The Mountain's Heart

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 7 - The Final High

The family bond will always be sacred, and what it generates may seem impossible. But never invincible.

Source:
Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Vol 6, No 1, 1996.

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter! And our newest show The Mountain's Heart

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts

Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com

Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia

Tumblr: miscellanymedia

Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 3 - The Fighting Begins

[Studio note: Our sincerest apologies for the delay. Equipment broke down, which required replacements that took a few days to acquire. This hopefully spells out an end to delayed releases.

Next Friday will have an episode release, and a normal schedule will resume.]

Battles fought. With stakes so high, Teresa Magbanua could only settle for one outcome.


Sources:

1. Guererro, Milagros; Encarnacion, Emmanuel; Villegas, Ramon (1996), "Andres Bonifacio and the 1896 Revolution", Sulyap Kultura, National Commission for Culture and the Arts, 1 (2): 3–12, archived from the original on 2010-11-15, retrieved 2009-07-08. https://web.archive.org/web/20101115193832/http://www.ncca.gov.ph/about-culture-and-arts/articles-on-c-n-a/article.php?i=5&subcat=1

2. Lanzona, V. A. (2012). Amazons of the Huk Rebellion: Gender, Sex, and Revolution in the Philippines. Manila: Quezon city Ateneo de Manila University.

3. https://cnnphilippines.com/life/culture/2017/06/07/5-filipino-heroines.html


Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Sound Effects from Freesound.org
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Teresa Magbanua Part 1 - Origins

Marcy found a historical figure she could connect to, and that's where she wants to begin. But it's not the sort of connection you might be thinking. Because Marcy isn't brave or strong, but she always thought she was supposed to be. And that's where Teresa Magbanua seems to come in.

Source 1 - Elyang, L., 2020. Teresa Ferraris Magbanua, Visayan "Joan Of Arc.". [online] Available at: <https://web.archive.org/web/20160310100252/http://www.philstar.com/cebu-lifestyle/2014/03/02/1296265/teresa-ferraris-magbanua-visayan-joan-arc.> [Accessed 23 July 2020].

Source 2 - Funtecha, H., 2006. Nay Isa, The Bravest Woman Fighter Of Iloilo. [online] The News Today. Available at: <http://www.thenewstoday.info/2006/10/20/nay.isa.the.bravest.woman.fighter.of.iloilo.html> [Accessed 23 July 2020].

Source 3 - Locsin-Nava, Cecelia. "Teresa Magbauna: Woman Warrior". Review of Women's Studies. Retrieved 20 July 2020. https://journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/rws/article/viewFile/3093/2910

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

What Is This Podcast Really?

[IMPORTANT NOTE: Schedule change. This podcast will now release episodes every other Friday. Next week will have an episode as a reset week. Then every other Friday will start. Ingat po.]


So the answer to this question really should have come by now Like how long has this podcast been running? But seriously, it's time to really stop and think what this show will be.

My most recent book purchase: https://www.amazon.com/Outline-Philippine-Mythology-Landa-Jocano/dp/1790400864/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=outline+of+philippine+mythology&qid=1593829002&sr=8-1

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

Interlude #9 - Connections

So... apparently there's a very small connection between F. Landa Jocano and your humble, amateur podcast host. It's small objectively, but it means a lot to Marcy.

Source: Cruz, Vida. 10.28.2013. "F. Landa Jocano, anthropologist and UP professor emeritus, passes away". gmanetwork.com. Diliman, Quezon City: GMA Network, Inc.. https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/lifestyle/content/332871/f-landa-jocano-anthropologist-and-up-professor-emeritus-passes-away/story/ Last Accessed 5.16.2020

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

The Final Trinity of Tagalog Mythology

Just before the massive change brought to the Philippines, there was one last trinity of deities watching over the Tagalog people. They say good things come in threes, not that the sets of things would also be in threes, I guess.

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart

Thanks to the Aswang Project! - https://www.aswangproject.com/bathala/


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Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

A Third Set of Threes


Back to Tagalog mythology, the third set of gods reveal themselves. And with them comes some shifts in Tagalog history.

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart - launching April 20th!
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Things that Come in Threes

[So this has been a really taxing and scary time for me because of a close call with my family in the Philippines. For now nondescript, but I think you can imagine why I might be super worried for my older family members right now. Overall, be kind to yourself and others. We can make it through this. Ingat po.]


Back to Tagalog mythology, in a religion where deities can die, what comes next? Why, other anitos rise to take their place, of course! One trinity came to an end, and another rose to take its place.

Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!


And check out our newest show The Mountain's Heart
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


Something I Hadn't Thought About Before

When the new thing you learned is that something exists... A religious icon you had seen dozens of times before but never thought about.


Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

Sources:

Sison, Antonio D. (2015). "Afflictive Apparitions: The Folk Catholic Imaginary in Philippine Cinema". Material Religion. Routledge. 11 (4): 421–442.

Jaime C. Laya (2001). Letras Y Figuras. Manila: Anvil. pp. 89–90. ISBN 978-971-27-1143-5.

Elizabeth H. Pisares (1999). Daly City is My Nation: Race, Imperialism and the Claiming of Pinay / Pinoy Identities in Filipino American Culture. University of California Press. p. 58. OCLC 43832108
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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

Christmas Symbols

Christmas time again! Let's talk about a couple of the things you might see. Partially because I love them so much.


Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

Sources:
“Christmas in the Philippines.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 18 Dec. 2019, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_in_the_Philippines.

Tabora-Roberts, Toni. "Retired Printer Shares the Tradition of the Parol, the Filipino Christmas Lantern." Asian Reporter [Portland, Or.] 2007: 11. Web.

Dayrit, Christine. “A Decade of Belenismo Sa Tarlac.” Philstar.com, https://www.philstar.com/lifestyle/travel-and-tourism/2017/12/09/1766831/decade-belenismo-sa-tarlac.

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

Lechón

In a month when so many Filipinos go back for a visit, we should talk about a food that seemingly defines the holidays. (And other parties)


Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

Sources:
https://news.abs-cbn.com/life/06/11/18/best-pig-ever-with-that-one-phrase-bourdain-put-ph-lechon-in-global-spotlight

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lechon

https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB119075618625939123

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Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

Filipino Saints

Catholicism is an important part of the Filipino identity. Let's take a closer look at some of the figures involved.


Check out @hugotPodcasting on Twitter!

Sources:
St Rose of Lima
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Saint-Rose-of-Lima
https://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=446

St. Lorenzo Ruiz
https://aci.archchicago.org/asian-icons/st-lorenzo-ruiz
https://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=231?r=1&l=ri&fst=0

St. Pedro Calungsod
https://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=7581
https://www.catholicsun.org/2018/04/02/feast-of-st-pedro-calungsod/

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Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

A Duwende's Tale

A different type of tale for you all today... One that hits close to my home. Literally, I guess.

The next phase: @HugotPodcasting

Be sure to check out Oracle of Dusk and Aishi Online

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Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful
Soundslikeanearful.com
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www.miscellanymedia.online
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
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Transcript available: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Support the studio: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios

Behind the Scenes Special

And of course this episode is late. See you next week.


Sources:
1. Ramos, Maximo D., and Dani Reyes. The Creatures of Midnight. Phoenix Pub. House, 1990.

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Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast

A Lizard Tale

This week, we have a not so fun tale. Or maybe it's funny. I don't know. It miht jsut depend on your perspective.


Sources:
1. Ramos, Maximo D. “The Man and the Lizard.” Philippine Myths, Legends, and Folktales, Phoenix Pub. House, 1990, pp. 56–58.

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Transcript available on our website: www.miscellanymedia.online/transcripts
Music for this Episode by Sounds Like an Earful: Soundslikeanearful.com
Twitter: @MiscellanyMedia
Tumblr: miscellanymedia
Support the project: www.ko-fi.com/mmstudios


And check out The Oracle of Dusk or Aishi Online wherever you are listening to this podcast