there are days when we get stuck in the perspective of preconceived notions, or spiral into the rabbit hole of negative thinking about the Philippines, and consequently, Filipinos. given the current state of our nation, i’d be more surprised if you haven’t.
‘the Philippines is not a small country’ is an essay collection that forces us to confront this reality (and more) so that we can formulate our own thoughts and engage in productive discourse. at the end of the day, it aims to make us believe that the Philippines is not “small” and shouldn’t be treated as such; in fact, there’s more to this country (and our culture) than we can ever imagine.
i’d say this is required reading for EVERY filipino. with the entries spanning various topics from the Philippines’ total island count, the tradition of buying “pasalubong”, habal-habal, cyberbullying and the slow and corrupt justice system, to our love for rice, traveling, social media aesthetics, and selfies; there’s definitely something that’ll stick with you in the days, weeks, months, and hopefully years to come.
most essays were written from 2015 - 2019. while it’s disheartening to see that some of the issues present then are still wild and rampant a decade later, reading about them now becomes an eye-opener to any kind of progress that might have occurred. like what we tell ourselves when studying for exams, reading a few chapters, or running a few kms without stopping - progress is progress no matter how small; and we must take time to acknowledge and appreciate how we’ve been able to move forward.
that being said, i’d like to challenge us all to not stop at just reading and reflecting. instead, i encourage us to also do our part in ensuring that we do something about anything in this book that sparked anger, empathy, joy, sadness, or frustration. use those emotions and turn them into action — be it supporting an environmental foundation or animal shelters, engaging in regular discourse about the current political landscape, visiting new local destinations, taking small steps to lessen trash output, reconnecting and reaching out to friends online, and even just being a little bit kinder to other people — these small actions eventually snowball into bigger outcomes. who knows, maybe in our lifetime we get a glimpse of a Philippines that’s way “bigger” — better, and learns from history.