Travel-related food issues are usually caused by new species of "good" bacteria you've never encountered before. The local food will always have some. They initially clash with what's already in you, and eventually everything settles down after a few days. You could go to places that have the strictest food safety standards (French, German, Japanese, etc.) and _still_ get discomfort. It's just the way it is. Best solution really is constant exposure to everything, increasing your resistance.
This. if you want to eat street food from other countries, eat just a small bit to introduce the bacteria in your gut and wait for a day or two to see if your tummy will react. But i would never eat anything from Indian street food. lmao
Im actually happy they got to experience provincial life in the Philippines. Even I have a hard time adjusting to that as someone who lives in a city in the Ph much more to them whos very used to the LA lifestyle. Its very humbling and it really does let you see the things youre blessed with. ❤
Anyone else will forget city life and techs for days yummy food,rivers,beach,lagoons,falls,animals,nature,happy locals smile,public transpo joyride...etc...
Filipinos never tend to eat in silence, they may be silent, but its either we have a friend to talk to about random things or we are watching TV or a on a Phone
@ We stayed for 5 days in Boracay and we weren’t able to do any of the usual activities because the winds were so strong even walking along the coast was quite dangerous because of coconuts falling from trees.
Rule #1: Always drink from bottled water. I'm a filipino and whenever my friends and family from US or EU go back here in PH for vacation, they always get food poison and it is because of the water.
@@konaqua122 Yup, everywhere is like that not only in the Philippines as the tourist's gut is not used to the places' water or local food because the bacteria they are exposed to is different from their country. So if we go to a different country even in the first world, there is a risk we will fall sick also.
@@konaqua122 Traveler's diarrhea , tap water in different countries may still contain bacterias even after filtration due to contaminated pipelines. Not isolated to PH but a general traveler's dilema
no one drinks tap water tho... like you or your family would be an anomaly if you were to drink tap water HAHAHA we have refilling stations for purified water carried in galloons It's most definitely the food. she might have encountered new type of shi, or just straight up got served bad food lol, I feel sorry for her.
I think so too. It's pretty common for all tourist to have a "Traveler's diarrhea" because of the sudden change of water. Gut bacteria can easily be disrupted. It's unpleasant but pretty much treatable as what Miyoung said, she recovered quickly.
@@Englandflick I'm Filipino and that's cap lol. Even I get Traveler's diarrhea from water in the province. Also, when my Filipino mom who grew up in the province came home from Japan after living there for a decade, she got diarrhea the first time she went home lol. Access to safe water in non-cities is a known challenge here.
Wow. You gotta do something about that. You can't just daay of eating food you're not familiar with. If it's only you that got sick thrn that's a you problem and you need to fix it.
The contrast between guest and family in PH hospitality is hilarious. First time guest, Filipinos be like: "Hey, do you need anything? Is it too hot? Want me to put the ac on?" Repeat guest/family, Filipinos be like: "You hungry? You can buy your own food near here. You hot? Get fan in the living room or go outside" This is hilarious to me as a filipino. So people have always this thought of filipinos being hospitalble? Lol. Stay at least a month and see the difference between day 1 and day 30.
@@yume8666 I agree. You see your parents be all welcoming and asks yourself, "Who are these people? What happened to my parents?" because you wont recognize them for the next few hours until your guests leave.
@@nuketurnal2 Let me applaud you for 100% successfully missing my entire point. I feel sad for you. Hope you get better on your reading comprehension in the future.
As a Filipino Ur weird...u should be a good guest too..we all have things to do.,especially if u just went their randomly without any reason..the fact that you are going to the same house for a month and they welcome you there..damn,.if that was me i would help out in household chores already..
Is food poisoning a bad thing or a actually a good thing?!! Does it only matter because it's terrible for people(tourists) with weak stomachs or is it because people(local) that eat too much contaminated food that they get used to it eventually?!! edit: "Terri" to "terrible"
evolutionarily a good thing. It means anything your body injests that' your body starts to struggle with it rejects to protect it. for miyoung, it's not surprising considering the way she eats. Even a pizza with toppings is a foreign concept for her stomach
@hogrider5059 from what I've seen, even asians & africans(vloggers) have had food poisoning in places like Taiwan, Bali (Indonesia), & Thailand... I think it's more like privileged people that only eat processed food with a decent safe/healthy facilities and IIRC Rae said Miyoung used to only eat cup noodles & frozen pizzas like Sykkuno that might solidify it
@@cabs0110 yeah maybe that... There are a lot of travel vloggers eating street foods and be just fine... Maybe it all depends on how strong the immunity is... Bali is infamous for this cases...
It's because the body has no immunity to the new bacteria they are presented with. If they stay long enough, they would have built immunity. This happens everywhere even in the first world countries. This is why bottled water is always recommended to tourists. At least some of those new bacteria have been filtered.
Ganon talaga pag pumupuntang ibang bansa kasi di sanay sa bacteria sa binisitang bansa. Pag tumira sila dito ng matagal, mawawala na yun kasi immune na. Ganon din tayo pag pumunta ibang bansa, may risk ma-food poison.
Travel-related food issues are usually caused by new species of "good" bacteria you've never encountered before. The local food will always have some. They initially clash with what's already in you, and eventually everything settles down after a few days.
You could go to places that have the strictest food safety standards (French, German, Japanese, etc.) and _still_ get discomfort. It's just the way it is. Best solution really is constant exposure to everything, increasing your resistance.
This. if you want to eat street food from other countries, eat just a small bit to introduce the bacteria in your gut and wait for a day or two to see if your tummy will react. But i would never eat anything from Indian street food. lmao
👍
Well said.
So true
Im actually happy they got to experience provincial life in the Philippines. Even I have a hard time adjusting to that as someone who lives in a city in the Ph much more to them whos very used to the LA lifestyle. Its very humbling and it really does let you see the things youre blessed with. ❤
Anyone else will forget city life and techs for days yummy food,rivers,beach,lagoons,falls,animals,nature,happy locals smile,public transpo joyride...etc...
Filipina aunties be asking those trick questions. Lol
think it was just a little joke tbh or just saying it to open up something to chat with
That's like the satisfaction survey that comes after every service catered
@@abbychannel4591 fr. I be acting like that nowadays
Filipinos never tend to eat in silence, they may be silent, but its either we have a friend to talk to about random things or we are watching TV or a on a Phone
Karaoke 🎤
I went last year for 3 weeks in August and it rained hard, EVERY SINGLE DAY!!!
please don't come here during monsoon season TT
Yeah we are loaded by typhoons during August to December.
@@lifeisagem I could only come from July to August because it’s summer break from school
@acquillesdaillest6838 Unfortunately that's the worst month to visit the Philippines, that's the peak of rainy season.
@ We stayed for 5 days in Boracay and we weren’t able to do any of the usual activities because the winds were so strong even walking along the coast was quite dangerous because of coconuts falling from trees.
Typhoons in the Philippines are traumatizing.
Yep. And it happens annually.
@@RandalReidPH got hit by 7 in a row this year. Four of which were classified as Super typhoons. Shit is insane.
10mins -30mins of rain is so real in ph
Them Filipino aunties be on their A-game.
If you want rain, come during august
I drink mineral water at work, and drink jetmatic water at home,.my stomach was used to mineral water, i get stomach ached at home.
Rule #1: Always drink from bottled water. I'm a filipino and whenever my friends and family from US or EU go back here in PH for vacation, they always get food poison and it is because of the water.
This also happened in a story shared by a Hololive vtuber when she stayed in PH. I guess we filipinos are accustomed to our own water.
also no ice
@@konaqua122 is it the chama chama or someone else?
@@konaqua122 Yup, everywhere is like that not only in the Philippines as the tourist's gut is not used to the places' water or local food because the bacteria they are exposed to is different from their country. So if we go to a different country even in the first world, there is a risk we will fall sick also.
@@konaqua122 Traveler's diarrhea , tap water in different countries may still contain bacterias even after filtration due to contaminated pipelines. Not isolated to PH but a general traveler's dilema
Filipino type shi fr. we are so nice
Miyoung❤
lol she missed all the 6 typoons hahaha
It's either street food or tap water.
no one drinks tap water tho... like you or your family would be an anomaly if you were to drink tap water HAHAHA we have refilling stations for purified water carried in galloons
It's most definitely the food. she might have encountered new type of shi, or just straight up got served bad food lol, I feel sorry for her.
Did Tina came along?
Miyoung: please give me rain
Rain: Ok, have rae..n
I think her gut is just not use to a new kind of bacteria sometimes its like that.
it's probably the water. Filipino water has different contents I think
Stop spreading false information. 🙄 Philippines specially in some cities have the cleanest potable water
@@Englandflick yeah, no.
I think so too. It's pretty common for all tourist to have a "Traveler's diarrhea" because of the sudden change of water. Gut bacteria can easily be disrupted. It's unpleasant but pretty much treatable as what Miyoung said, she recovered quickly.
Stop the cap provincial doesn’t equate to “clean” true clean water is tested not just anecdotes
@@Englandflick I'm Filipino and that's cap lol. Even I get Traveler's diarrhea from water in the province. Also, when my Filipino mom who grew up in the province came home from Japan after living there for a decade, she got diarrhea the first time she went home lol. Access to safe water in non-cities is a known challenge here.
Same, i love the rain
What did she eat to get food poisoning?
Is it because of the mango and the fruits basically cause thats good
Or is it because of the food is contaminated?
The doctor should tell you that?
food poisoning is normal because we cook food fresh.
Wow. You gotta do something about that. You can't just daay of eating food you're not familiar with. If it's only you that got sick thrn that's a you problem and you need to fix it.
Probably the water We filipinos don't drink tap water it's bad MOST of the streamer or Visit philipines got that on tap water
The contrast between guest and family in PH hospitality is hilarious.
First time guest, Filipinos be like: "Hey, do you need anything? Is it too hot? Want me to put the ac on?"
Repeat guest/family, Filipinos be like: "You hungry? You can buy your own food near here. You hot? Get fan in the living room or go outside"
This is hilarious to me as a filipino. So people have always this thought of filipinos being hospitalble? Lol. Stay at least a month and see the difference between day 1 and day 30.
Yeah, and also the fact that the most strict parents and family members will be extra welcoming to guests.
@@yume8666 I agree. You see your parents be all welcoming and asks yourself, "Who are these people? What happened to my parents?" because you wont recognize them for the next few hours until your guests leave.
if you are staying for an extended period do you still call yourself a guest tho? arent you being a freeloader of some sort
@@nuketurnal2 Let me applaud you for 100% successfully missing my entire point. I feel sad for you. Hope you get better on your reading comprehension in the future.
As a Filipino Ur weird...u should be a good guest too..we all have things to do.,especially if u just went their randomly without any reason..the fact that you are going to the same house for a month and they welcome you there..damn,.if that was me i would help out in household chores already..
Not Rae's mom tryna make the province look like shit lol
It's tap water. period
no one here drink water from the tap.
@ i drink tap water
Is food poisoning a bad thing or a actually a good thing?!!
Does it only matter because it's terrible for people(tourists) with weak stomachs or is it because people(local) that eat too much contaminated food that they get used to it eventually?!!
edit: "Terri" to "terrible"
evolutionarily a good thing. It means anything your body injests that' your body starts to struggle with it rejects to protect it.
for miyoung, it's not surprising considering the way she eats. Even a pizza with toppings is a foreign concept for her stomach
Westerners generally have weak stomachs... It takes time to get used to...
@hogrider5059 from what I've seen, even asians & africans(vloggers) have had food poisoning in places like Taiwan, Bali (Indonesia), & Thailand...
I think it's more like privileged people that only eat processed food with a decent safe/healthy facilities and IIRC Rae said Miyoung used to only eat cup noodles & frozen pizzas like Sykkuno that might solidify it
@@cabs0110 yeah maybe that... There are a lot of travel vloggers eating street foods and be just fine... Maybe it all depends on how strong the immunity is... Bali is infamous for this cases...
It's because the body has no immunity to the new bacteria they are presented with. If they stay long enough, they would have built immunity. This happens everywhere even in the first world countries. This is why bottled water is always recommended to tourists. At least some of those new bacteria have been filtered.
search ondoy haha
Wait.. hindi kaya na usog sya? Hmm But then if the doctor said its food poisoning then it is indeed food poisoning
Ganon talaga pag pumupuntang ibang bansa kasi di sanay sa bacteria sa binisitang bansa. Pag tumira sila dito ng matagal, mawawala na yun kasi immune na. Ganon din tayo pag pumunta ibang bansa, may risk ma-food poison.
Usog isn't a real thing. FFS it's already 2024 and you folks still believe in those BS.
Puke pass out ??? That's the sign you're pregnant 😅😅
what? no it isnt
This uneducated filipino thinks its funny 😂
james im pretty sure youre a boy, do more research babes