Still changing lives: Events mark 50th anniversary of First Nations University of Canada
Elders and alumni shared memories at First Nations University of Canada's Regina campus as they mark the institution's 50th anniversary.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/first-nations-university-of-canada-50th-anniversary-regina-campus-9.7214360?cmp=rss
Lheidli T'enneh elders to preserve oral legends in new book series
Elders from the Lheidli T'enneh Nation are gathering together to share stories, legends, and knowledge to create storybooks written in both English and Dakelh.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/lheidli-t-enneh-legends-storybooks-9.7214344?cmp=rss
Still changing lives: Events mark 50th anniversary of First Nations University of Canada
Elders and alumni shared memories at First Nations University of Canada's Regina campus as they mark the institution's 50th anniversary.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/first-nations-university-of-canada-50th-anniversary-regina-campus-9.7214360?cmp=rss
Having my Great Aunt Ida around while I was growing up was a wonderful treat. It was like having an extra grandparent. I think of her every day. #family #families #relative #relatives #aunt #aunts #greataunt #greataunts #1970s #senior #seniorcitizen #seniorcitizens #elderly #elder #elders #nuclearfamily #grandparent #grandparents #grandmother #grandmothers

Made a new #IF for The #Elders for Eternal #TTRPG #Jam. Go into a titan - don't worry, it's dead - and photohunt #cats!

https://ranarh.itch.io/crossed-elder

#indiegames #textadventure #indiedev #gamebook #horror #miat #rollenspiel #rpg

#MissKitty managed to become the 1% of 1% of 1% of all despised people. I'm #transsexual. I'm 65. I'm in group fastest growing #homeless. Yeah baby we respect our #elders and we take care of our #babies while we kill the #mothers! Sure. Love America? Sure. And I use #AI in #art! So many hate me.🙄🙄🙄

After the Condolences End

What happens to a foreign widower when communal duty quietly expires

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

The Moment the Crowd Disperses

There is a moment after a funeral that rarely gets discussed. The food is gone. The chairs are stacked. The well-wishes stop arriving. The phone goes quiet. What follows is not closure—it is absence. For a foreign widower living inside a tight-knit barangay, that absence is not neutral. It is structural.

I did not expect grief to be shared indefinitely. I did expect a minimum level of continued human acknowledgment. What I encountered instead was a sudden social vacuum—one where I was still visible as a resource, but no longer visible as a person.

From Community to Transaction

In the weeks following my wife’s death, interactions shifted tone. Conversations that once carried warmth began to revolve around obligation, money, and silence. Questions about how I was doing stopped. Requests did not.

This was not overt hostility. It was something colder: transactional normalcy. The unspoken assumption seemed to be that my role had narrowed—to pay bills, keep the household functioning, and not ask for emotional reciprocity. Grief, it appeared, had an expiration date, and mine had passed.

Respect for Elders: A Historical Expectation

Historically, respect for elders in the Philippine archipelago predates Spanish colonization and was embedded in pre-colonial barangay structures, where older members served as custodians of memory, mediation, and customary law. Age conferred social authority tied to experience and communal continuity rather than wealth or force. Spanish colonization did not erase this framework but reframed it through Catholic moral theology, reinforcing filial obligation, care for parents and elders, and the moral duty of the community to protect the aged. The result was a hybrid system in which respect for elders became both a cultural norm and a religious expectation, persisting across centuries and surviving multiple political regimes.

That context matters, because what I experienced runs counter to that tradition.

Who Receives Deference—and Who Does Not

Respect for elders remains real and visible here—when those elders are local, embedded, and culturally legible. It does not reliably extend to an older foreigner, even one who has married into the community, contributed financially, and remained present after loss.

This is not about skin color alone. It is about classification. I occupy an ambiguous category: old, but not “one of us”; responsible, but not authoritative; expected to provide, but not entitled to care. In practice, this means deference flows around me rather than toward me.

The Language Gap That Never Closed

I was repeatedly encouraged to learn the local language. When I tried, assistance was inconsistent or absent. Over time, it became clear that language was not simply a barrier—it was a gate. Without fluency, I remained dependent on intermediaries, and dependence limits agency.

Misunderstandings compounded. Requests were interpreted as impositions. Clarifications were framed as embarrassment. Silence became the default response to discomfort. The result was not integration, but containment.

Grief Without a Net

My wife acted as a cultural bridge. She translated tone, intention, and expectation in both directions. When she died, that bridge collapsed. What I encountered afterward was not cruelty, but indifference shaped by habit: once the ritual obligations were fulfilled, the system moved on.

Grief, in this environment, is private unless it aligns with collective rhythm. Mine did not.

What This Is—and What It Is Not

This is not an attack on Filipino culture. It is an observation from inside a specific moment, in a specific place, under specific conditions. It is not an argument that people here are malicious. It is an argument that systems can fail quietly, and that failure has consequences for those who fall between categories.

I am still here. I am still functioning. I am still contributing. What is missing is not resilience, but reciprocity.

Why This Matters

Foreign retirees, spouses, and long-term residents are often told that the Philippines is uniquely communal and caring. That can be true—until it isn’t. When loss occurs, and when the person grieving lacks cultural insulation, the gap between expectation and reality can be severe.

This essay exists to document that gap. Not to inflame, but to record. Not to demand sympathy, but to insist on clarity.

Because what happens after the condolences end is where the real story begins.

For more social commentary and high-quality horror stories, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

#barangayLife #culturalObservation #elders #expatriateLife #FilipinoCulture #grief #Philippines #socialNorms #widower #WPSNews

*~*God Giving Good Gifts!*~*

*~*Paul Speaks to the Ephesian Elders!*~*

*~*In all things I have shown you that by working hard in this way we must help the weak!*& remember the words of the Lord Jesus!*how he himself said!*‘It is more blessed to give than to receive!’”*~*

(Acts 20:35)

#God #Giving #Good #Gifts #Paul #Speaks #to #the #Ephesian #Elders #And #All #Of #Us #In #The #World #Today

#Somaliland’s #elders extended #parliament by 27 months — despite #election officials, @NEC_Somaliland, saying #polls could happen sooner. Critics warn of risks to #democracy & #credibility. #Elections #2026Elections

https://saxafimedia.com/elders-parliamentary-terms-timeline-credibility/

Somaliland Elders Extend Parliamentary Terms, Igniting Dispute Over Election Timeline And Democratic Credibility | Saxafi Media

Somaliland’s House of Elders has extended parliamentary terms by 27 months, defying electoral commission guidance and raising concerns over democracy and transparency

SaxafiMedia

#HostileArchitecture #homeless #disabled #elders

"Civil engineering to achieve social engineering.

Hostile architecture, also known as defensive architecture, exclusionary or defensive design or anti-homeless architecture is an urban-design strategy that utilizes elements of the built environment to intentionally guide or restrict behavior deemed undesirable by urban leaders. It often targets people who use or rely on public space more than others including youth, low-income people and people experiencing homelessness, who are disproportionately Black and Indigenous people. The effect is to also make the designs hostile to seniors, people with disabilities, pregnant women, and care givers for children and seniors.

Roots in social control & segregation:
Antecedents of 21st century hostile architecture can be seen in the following examples:

Social Control: The narrow streets of 19th century Paris, France were widened to help
the military quash protests;

Segregation: Robert Moses an American urban planner, designed a stretch of the Long Island Southern State Parkway in 1929 with low stone bridges so that buses could not pass under them. This made it more difficult for people who relied on public
transportation, disproportionately low-income and people of color, to visit the beach that wealthier, white, car-owners could visit.

(. . .)

Anti-homeless architecture

As homelessness enters into its 5th decade as both a rural and urban crisis,
not only in the USA but also in Europe and Japan, elected officials instead
of investing in affordable and accessible housing, have invested in anti- homeless architecture as a way to make it uncomfortable and encourage people experiencing homelessness to move on to another community.

Tobias Armborast, Daniel D’Oca and Georgeen Theodore, architects and
urban designers, inventory more than 150 'tools' or 'weapons' that are used
by planners, policymakers, developers, real estate brokers and community
activists that can be used to answer the question, 'who gets to be where?'
in their 2021 book, *The Arsenal of Exclusion and Inclusion*."

https://nationalhomeless.org/wp-content/uploads/Design-Against-Humanity_Hostile-Architecture-paper-2023.pdf