Hey there! šš»
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Letās talk about something that hits close to homeāand I mean that literally. I come from a huge, close-knit family. Not just the nuclear setupāoh no, weāre talking close cousins, titos, titas, lolas, the works. The kind of family that takes up the whole restaurant or cafĆ© when weāre out and about. And honestly? Itās the best. š„° That warmth, the noise, the constant overlapping conversations, laughter everywhere. This is not just cultural, itās biological wellness disguised as chismis and shared meals. And oh do we love our chismis.Ā š
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How Family Time Shapes Our Inner Health
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Science agrees: family time is powerful medicine. According to a 2023 study by Dongxu Li and Xi Guo, the more time parents spend with their children (both daily and leisurely) the higher the childrenās sense of well-being. Itās not about extravagant bonding trips; itās about the simple, consistent presence of parents. šØš©š§š¦ Playing, eating together, or even doing chores side by side all make a measurable difference in a childās happiness and emotional resilience.
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The data says it straight: life and leisure time with Mom and Dad boosts well-being (coefficient 0.1020, p < 0.01). Fathers who spend educational time (helping with homework, talking about goals) leave lasting emotional impact.
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In other words: the most underrated health supplement in any Filipino home (wellā¦in any home really) might just be a shared meal togetherāmay it be breakfast, lunch, dinner, or merienda. š„
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The Science Behind āClose Family Tiesā
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Itās no secret we Filipinos love our extended families. We live, breathe, text daily in our GCs. And psychology says thereās something deeply healthy about that. ā£ļø
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Research by Qianbao Tan and colleagues found that the closer the blood relationship (and the more frequent the social interaction) the more we psychologically overlap with our relatives. Meaning, we start processing our loved onesā experiences almost as if they were our own. This self-other overlap strengthens empathy, emotional regulation, and even perspective-taking.
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So when our cousinās heartbreak makes us cry too, or when we instinctively know when our siblingās āIām fineā means theyāre not, itās connection. Itās science. š«
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Oleia and Family
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In Filipino homes, care has always been hands-on. We grew up with our momsā hilot, our lolasā healing oils, and those familiar scents that meant comfort was coming. That gentle touch has always been part of how we love. šš»
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Oleia feels like the modern continuation of that. Not only was it made from a daughterās love for her father, it carries the same warmth, the same healing touch, just made for this generation thatās always on the go. Whether itās easing a parentās tired shoulders or calming a childās growing pains, itās how we keep the old ways of caring aliveājust in a bottle we can reach for anytime.
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We canāt bottle family, but we can carry the same warmth in every drop. ā¤ļø
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Show me your bottle and Iāll show you mine. āTil next time! šØš©š§š¦
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xo, L
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References:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10106685/
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0191886914004838
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