
…
His colleague was not selling a dream.
He was just describing his Tuesday.
The conversation lasted about 20 minutes.
That was enough.
He stayed initially in a service department in Mandaluang 3 months just to see.
He explored on foot and by jeepnney.
He ate at local places and hated the traffic and loved the energy of the markets and felt by the end of month two that this was somewhere he could actually build a second life.
He extended his stay, then extended again.
He found a longerterm rental in Quaison City, 11,000 pesos a month, furnished with a small balcony and decent internet.
He started learning basic Tagalog phrases.
Not enough to hold a conversation, but enough to make people laugh when he tried, which turned out to be enough to open doors.
After about 6 months of living there, he had a real social life.
Other expats, yes, but also Filipino colleagues and neighbors and people he met at community events.
He was not floating above the place, looking down at it like a tourist who had stayed too long.
He was actually in it.
That distinction mattered to him then.
It still matters to him now.
He met her at a birthday gathering for a mutual friend, a party held on a rooftop in Pacig on a warm Saturday in October.
A Filipino woman in her early 40s, divorced, two adult children living independently.
She worked as an operations manager for a logistics firm in Mikatti.
A real job with real responsibilities that she talked about the way people talk about things they are actually engaged with.
She was sharp, organized, completely fluent in English and comfortable switching mid-sentence without making a performance of it.
She had absolutely no interest in him that first evening.
That is what made him pay attention.
He had been to enough expat social events in Manila by then to recognize the difference between a woman who was genuinely present in her own life and a woman who was scanning the room for opportunity.
She was talking to her friends, laughing at things that had nothing to do with him, and did not once drift toward him the way he had noticed some women did at those gatherings when a foreign man arrived alone.
They ran into each other three weeks later at the same mutual friend’s house.
This time they talked for almost two hours, mostly because she disagreed with something he said within the first 10 minutes and they had to work through it.
She was direct in the way that people are when they are not managing your feelings.
She told him he was wrong about something, explained why clearly, and turned out to be right.
He found her completely exhausting in the best possible way.
He asked if she wanted to have coffee sometime.
She said she would think about it.
She texted him 4 days later and said yes.
That was 21 months before the lawyer’s office in Mikatti.
For the first 8 months, the relationship was exactly what it appeared to be, normal.
They saw each other two or three times a week.
She never asked him for money.
She paid her own way often enough that it was clearly a point of personal importance to her, not a gesture.
She had opinions about things entirely outside their relationship.
She complained about her company’s IT systems and the way her building handled maintenance requests and a particular politician she found especially infuriating.
She was a full person with a full life that predated him.
He had not expected to find that as reassuring as he did.
He met her children around month four, a son of 23, a daughter of 20, both polite, both somewhat reserved with him, which was completely appropriate.
He was not their father and made no attempt to position himself as anything of the kind.
They warmed up slowly over the following months, which felt more genuine than immediate warmth would have.
Her son eventually started sending him memes about Canadian weather.
Her daughter asked him once, seriously, what the actual difference was between ice hockey and field hockey.
He spent 20 minutes explaining it, and she seemed mostly unimpressed.
He liked them both considerably.
He met some of her friends.
He liked them.
He felt for the first time in several years that he was inside something real.
Around month nine, he started thinking seriously about property.
His rent was reasonable, but the money left every month with nothing accumulated.
He understood the legal landscape for foreign nationals.
You cannot own land in the Philippines.
You can own a condominium unit in a qualifying building, or you can arrange for a Filipino partner to hold a land title with the understanding that the structure belongs to you.
an arrangement that is legally murky and dependent entirely on the trustworthiness of the person holding the paper.
He had decided before any conversation about it happened that a condominium was the only structure he was willing to consider.
They started looking together, not because he was buying property for her, but because they were genuinely discussing a future by that point, and because she was practical and organized, and noticed things about buildings that he would have missed.
She had no instinct toward extravagance.
She kept steering him toward buildings with solid management records and realistic maintenance fees rather than the ones with glossy marketing materials and rooftop infinity pools that nobody used.
He trusted her judgment.
He felt that her judgment had been earned.
Then she mentioned the house.
Her family, she explained, had a connection to a residential property in Paranake that had been sitting in a complicated legal situation for years.
The connection was her divorce.
The property had been part of the settlement.
Her former husband currently held the title, but she had a right of first refusal written into the divorce agreement, meaning she had the first opportunity to purchase if the title holder wanted to sell.
He wanted to sell.
He needed money, and this was the asset he could move.
Because of the history and the circumstances, the price was below what the property would otherwise fetch, 11 million pesos, around $200,000 Canadian at the current exchange rate.
She said all of this carefully, not as a pitch, more like something she had been weighing and was only raising because they had been talking about property and this was technically an option.
She said she understood if it was not something he wanted to consider.
She was not pushing.
He spent two weeks asking questions before he said anything resembling a yes.
Who was the title holder? Her ex-husband.
Was the divorce fully registered? Yes.
Was the right of first refusal in the divorce agreement documented formally? Yes.
When did it expire? She paused on that one.
She said she believed it was still valid, but that she would need her lawyer to confirm the exact terms.
He said he wanted his own lawyer separate from anyone connected to the deal.
She said, “Of course, that was completely sensible.
He found representation through his Canadian colleague who had used a reputable firm in the city for his own property transaction several years earlier.
He met with a lawyer there, explained the full situation.
The lawyer said she would need to review the title documents and the full divorce settlement before forming any view.
He provided everything he had been given.
She took two weeks to complete her review.
She came back and told him the title appeared clean, the divorce was registered properly, the right of first refusal clause appeared valid, the transaction was structurally sound.
She recommended proceeding with a deed of sale and standard title transfer process.
He wired $200,000.
The transfer was supposed to take 60 to 90 days.
At 45 days, he asked for an update.
She said it was moving but slowly, normal for the registry process.
Nothing to be concerned about.
At 70 days, he asked again.
She said there had been a technical problem with one of the notorized documents that needed to be refiled, which would add a few more weeks.
He accepted it.
He had read enough about Philippine bureaucracy to find this entirely plausible.
He did not push.
At 95 days, she began answering his calls a little slower than she used to.
She still answered.
She was still warm.
But there was something in her voice that he noticed and did not examine too carefully because he did not want to find what might be there.
He recognizes now that he was choosing not to see it.
He does not say that with self-pity.
He says it as fact.
At 112 days, he went to the lawyer’s office himself without telling her first.
That is where he learned that the title had never been transferred, that the ex-husband had not presented to any sale.
That the right of first refusal clause in the divorce agreement had expired 18 months before any of this began and had not been renewed.
That the ex-husband had approximately 3 weeks after receiving the wire transfer used the property as collateral for a business loan from a private lender.
The house was mortgaged against debt.
The $200,000 was gone, and the firm that had reviewed the documents had apparently not verified the expiry date of the clause they had confirmed as valid.
He sat in that office for a long time.
The parallegal offered him water.
He did not take it.
He asked a few questions that he does not fully remember now.
Then he walked to the parking structure below the building and called her.
She answered on the second ring.
He told her flatly what he had just learned.
There was a silence that lasted long enough to count.
Then she said she was sorry, that she had believed the right of first refusal was still valid, that she had not known about the mortgage, that she had trusted her family lawyer and he had given her information that was wrong.
She was crying or something that resembled it very closely.
He does not know to this day whether she knew.
That is the part that is hardest to carry.
Not the 200,000, the not knowing, because two entirely different stories fit the same sequence of events.
In the first, she was a willing participant in something designed from close to the beginning, a patient extraction of funds from a foreign buyer who trusted her because she had spent 21 months making herself trustworthy.
every conversation, every genuine seeming disagreement, every moment she paid her own way, all of it potentially architecture.
In the second, she was a woman who genuinely believed everything was legally clean, who had been lied to by a family lawyer, possibly working in coordination with her ex-husband, and who lost the relationship she had built along with whatever she thought she was going to gain from the arrangement.
He cannot prove which version is true.
His current lawyer is pursuing what can be pursued.
The ex-husband is difficult to reach through formal channels.
The family lawyer has gone quiet.
A Canadian attorney he consulted was honest with him.
Civil recovery as a foreign national in a Philippine property dispute connected to a registered divorce settlement is in that attorney’s words an extremely difficult road.
He said it plainly.
He appreciated the plainness.
He went back to their apartment that evening.
She was there.
They talked for 4 hours.
She maintained throughout that she had not known.
She answered every question he asked or tried to.
There was one moment, small and possibly meaningless, where she looked away when he asked when she had first understood that the title had not been transferred to him after the money was sent.
It lasted a fraction of a second.
He has replayed that fraction enough times in the past 8 months that he can no longer be certain what it was.
He moved out within the week, not because he had concluded she had deceived him, because he could not be certain she had not.
And he knew he could not live inside that uncertainty while also living inside the same apartment with her.
He is back in Canada staying with his sister.
He has returned to contract consulting work, which pays less than his old full-time role, but is available.
His sister has not asked many questions.
He appreciates that more than he could have expected to.
The pension at 60 is still coming.
He is 54.
He has six years to rebuild what he can.
He does not know yet if that is enough.
He is trying not to do that math too carefully.
Here is what he wants anyone listening to take from this.
First, the lawyer connected to the deal in any way is not your lawyer.
It does not matter how established the firm appears or how thorough the review seems.
If anyone in the transaction has any relationship to the firm reviewing it, there is a structural conflict whether or not that conflict is ever deliberately acted on.
Find your own representation through a completely independent channel before a single dollar moves.
Second, never send funds until the title has been verified in person at the registry of deeds.
Not reviewed as a photocopy, not confirmed by the seller’s side, physically checked at the registry by your own representative.
It costs very little.
It takes one morning.
It is the single step that would have changed everything.
Third, a right of first refusal in a divorce settlement has an expiry.
It is not a permanent entitlement.
Confirm the current legal status of any clause you are relying on through your own independent verification of the original filing, not a copy of it.
Fourth, when the deal involves someone you love, the emotional stakes work directly against your judgment.
You will not want to appear distrustful.
You will not want to damage something real by pushing too hard.
That discomfort is doing structural work against you.
Push anyway.
Someone who genuinely loves you will understand why verification matters.
Someone who resists verification is communicating something important.
Fifth, $200,000 is an abstract number until you watch it leave.
Until you are standing in a parking structure in Makotti, understanding that it is not coming back.
Then it becomes every year you worked and every holiday you skipped and every time you told yourself it would be worth it someday.
Protect it with the same seriousness you brought to accumulating it.
He is not angry at the Philippines.
He says it without being prompted and means it entirely.
The country did not do this.
People did.
People are people everywhere.
He visited a country he came to genuinely respect.
And he will not let this experience rewrite that.
He is not even fully certain he is angry at her.
He is mostly tired and sad and quietly insisting to himself that this will not be the last thing his life amounts to.
He knows how this sounds from the outside.
He has heard the version people tell when they hear it.
older foreign man, property deal in his partner’s name, money gone.
He understands the eye rolls, but he wants to say this clearly.
When you are inside it, when everything feels ordinary and the evening is just an evening and the person across from you has spent 21 months being completely consistent with who they said they were, it does not look like a warning.
It looks like your life.
The caution that seems obvious in hindsight would have felt in the moment like an insult to something genuine.
He was careful.
He went slowly.
He hired a lawyer and asked questions and did not rush.
He still lost everything.
That is the truth that none of the cautionary stories quite say directly enough.
Caution reduces the risk.
It does not eliminate it.
And when you have been alone long enough that something finally feels like it fits, the risk of losing the money can start to feel smaller than the risk of losing the person.
That calculation is almost always wrong.
But it is a completely human calculation to make.
He is going to be okay.
He says it the way people say things they are still in the process of convincing themselves are true.
But he says it and that is where everything has to start.
Not with recovering the money because that is unlikely and he knows it, but with the decision made in the middle of losing everything to still go on building something anyway.
That is his story.