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RE: Minimalism Lessons Learned After Surviving the Super Typhoon and Other Unforeseen Catastrophes

Hi Kim @ybanezkim26, grateful we found a signal today. It would take several weeks for Globe to resume its internet connection.

Thank you so much to you both for dropping by after Christmas, it was nice to have you and Claire @indayclara over, for bringing in news from the city, solar lamp, for bringing in a festive vibe and gifts. At that time we were in a "survivor" peg. I still remember we had pizza made of tortillas and tomato paste. Hopefully next time, we'll have more food 😁

I will follow your advice regarding writing stories about each treasured item lost.

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I remember I almost finished that whole bag of salami! 🙈 I should buy that one.

Haha, that's okay 😊 we're glad you enjoyed it. Hope all is well over there. Hope to see you again soon.

Things are getting better here. I hope the internet connection will be fixed soon.

We'll definitely visit soon! We'll have to dive in Panagsama to document the damage of the corals there.

I'm curious to see the status of the corals. We drove to Panagsama the other day and the local folks were doing some clean-up along the coast. The low pressure this weekend with all of the rain made it worse. Some of the establishments were further getting eaten up by the sea.

I saw some videos from a friend and it was unrecognisable. There's no single living coral around. Seems they're broken into thousand pieces. It's really heartbreaking but fascinating at the same time that what takes thousands of years to grow and develop can die in an instant.

I just mentioned this to Yohann. We heard there are still sardines around but without the living corals, it won't be the same 😢