Separate but Equal?

 There’s no denying that a Fil-West marriage is, in many ways, different from a “conventional” marriage (on in which both partners are from the same country and culture).  In most cases, both partners in a Fil-West union have purposely deviated from the norm by seeking mates from cultures other than their own.  Courtship is usually a long distance affair.  A Filipina and her fiancé/husband must appease government officials if they ever hope to be reunited in the husband’s homeland.   Expenditures of time and money are considerable.  Cultural adjustments are unavoidable.  Etc. 

Don’t be fooled, though.  Despite all these differences, your marriage is just as legitimate, important, and binding, as any “conventional” marriage.   And, importantly, it deserves just as much respect.   

You and your wife owe it to yourselves not to make a spectacle of your marriage.  There are a few folks out there (thankfully, fewer with each passing day) who find Fil-West relationships objectionable.  Some of these people are bigots, some are radicals looking for a cause, and some are just gullible television fanatics.  Such people feed off the sensational stories about Fil-West relationships that are so often found in the popular media.  Radicals, in particular, cling tightly to the stereotypical “mail order bride” scenario which casts the Filipina as young, pretty, submissive, and naive, while the westerner is old, ugly, dominant, and exploitive.  

Certainly, there are Fil-West relationships that are mirror images of that stereotype, and as a community we need to address ways to prevent such ill-conceived unions.  But we know that those relationships are deviations from the happy marriages most of us enjoy.  The problem is that today’s media are addicted to the profits sensational stories generate, and happy marriages are hardly sensational.  A story about a western guy who pretends to engage a Filipina only to put her to work in a brothel is a moneymaker for a network.  A story about a western guy who marries a Filipina and enjoys a pretty normal life with her is a “yawner”.   

I’m happy to report that most Fil-West relationships are, indeed, yawners.  They are marriages like any others, once the difficult courtship and immigration period ends.  Within a few months or years, things settle down, and a normalcy sets in.  There will be happy times and sad times, arguing and lovemaking, feast and famine.  Fil-West couples experience the same ups and downs as other couples, and after awhile… 

(End of book excerpt – if you’d like the entire text, please consider ordering The ASAWA Guide to Fil-West Relationships.  Thank you!)  


All original materials on this website (www.asawa.org, www.filipinawives.com) are copyrighted by the author, Bob Lingerfelt, 1997 -2007  with materials on file at the U.S. Copyright Office.  No reproduction is authorized, in any form, without express permission of the author.

Home 

Disclaimers

Introduction

FAQ

The ASAWA Guide

Correspondence Service Advice

Links

 

 

 

 

 

 

What is the #1 financial mistake of men who are new to Fil-West relationships?  They call the Philippines using their regular long distance carrier! 

Don't do it!  Please visit SpeedyPin, one of ASAWA's primary sponsors.  As most Fil-West couples already know, using a phone card can save you a lot  of money! 

 

Section I: Pre-Relationship Education

 

Fun Trivia About The Philippines

Philippine History In A Nutshell 

Religion

What's In A Name?

A List of Famous Filipinas

The American Romance

The "Average" Fil-West Couple

So You Want To Marry A Filipina

So You STILL Want To Marry…

Heaven Or Hell?

Mail Order Brides Fact & Fiction 

Correspondence Services

Legal Concerns

Age Differences

The Attack On Feminism

A Shortage Of Filipino Males?  

The Problem With Submission

City Vs. Province

Questions For Her

Questions For Him

Suggested Books

Midnight Sunshine, a novel

A Long Way to Go for a Date

Recommended Movies

 

Section II: Courtship

 

Your Travel Budget

Flying to the Philippines

What To Take To The Philippines

Travel Tips

Philippines Travel Guide

Ninoy Aquino Int'l Airport

Security In The Philippines

Recommended Hotels

Social Situations

Learning To Communicate

Sex And Virginity

The Visitor's Visa

 

Section III: 

Engagement/

Marriage                       

                      

Taking Your Relationship Public

Expenses

Prenuptials

Annulments

So You Want an Annulment?

Wedding Costs In The Philippines

Marriage - Where and How

A Filipina Abandoned

"Separate But Equal"?

 

Section IV:

Immigration

 

Immigration Pointers

Proof Of Your Relationship

The Marriage Application

Fiancée Visa (K-1)

Spousal Visa (IR-1)

K1 & K3 Procedures

Evidence of Non-Immigrant Status (SSN)

Employment Authorization for Immigrants

St. Luke's Clinic

Immigration Numbers And Addresses

Minimum Income Requirements

 

Section V: 

Lifetime Issues

 

Health And Dental Issues

Filipina Transitions

Superstitions

Dealing With Intolerance

Tampo

Financial Support Of Relatives  

Sources of Conflict

Appendix:

 

Immigration Forms

Statistics

CIA Fact Sheet On The Philippines 

Map Of The Philippines

Electricity

Currency

Holidays

Name Structure

How To Send Money

How To Send Mail And Packages

Republic Act No. 6955

Family Code Of The Philippines

Terms And Acronyms

Filipino Communities

 

Guest Articles:

 

John's Story

Maligaya Means It

You May Be  Married to a Filipina if…

Imee

Weddings in the Philippines

The TownHouse Hotel, Manila