Hi Pook075,
Thanks for your response. Yes, my GF and I have met in person twice, for many weeks. My GF is indeed in the Philippines. I am quite familiar with the tendency of Filipinas to ask for financial support. I don't mind supporting my GF since after some months, we made a decision to marry so it seemed appropriate for me to support her. Have you moved to the Philippines indefinitely? Are there other "red flags" that I should be aware of?
Interesting that we have similar stories... It's a small world!
Hi Confused,
When I saw your "7,000 miles" comment it made me curious, since I'm right at 7k miles from my home in the US. For my journey, we're going through the marriage visa process and I'm waiting for the final interview in Manila, which could be a few months or another year...it's hard to guess currently. I've lived here for almost 2 years now and I really enjoy it.
So you know, the average Filipina's expenses here are around $200-300 per month, although many live on a lot less. My current expenses here are around $750 a month all-in (house, car insurance, food, utilities, gasoline, etc), to give you an idea.
Some have joked that the Philippines national pastime is young women stealing married men, so jealousy is a cultural thing here and it's very common. On the flip side of that, everyone local would know your fiancée is dating a foreigner and they'd look at her like she's filthy rich and expect to share in that wealth.
So she is likely getting comments from her sister and neighbors asking about you...hoping that she'll give them money. Before I moved here, I had two of my wife's relatives/neighbors reach out to me on Facebook Messenger just to say hi and ask about my life. My wife was furious and ready to fight them since this was when we were still dating. That's so common here though and there's so much jealousy since families have very little.
If you do plan to marry, do you have actual plans on what that looks like? With the current administration, you'd either have to move here to get married OR bring here there on a fiancée visa. Some of that jealousy will subside once you're in person, but it could be a long-term challenge as well due to family/culture/etc (plus the mental illness aspect).
My advice would be to just keep doing what you're doing but also be more aware of the money you're sending each month. It's so hard because everyone here needs help and women are looking for a better life. Before I met my wife, she worked in Saudi Arabia and Qatar as a maid in horrible conditions. It was her only choice to support her family though since there's zero opportunity here.