At 73 My Kids Put Me in a Home. I Fled to the Philippines
👉 https://ruthinthephilippines.com/?r=y... 📖 MY BOOK — "Still Somebody" ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — seven true stories + the honest $1,150-a-month Philippines budget. $27, instant PDF. At 73, one slip on the ice cost a thirty-year school bus driver her house, her keys, and her good name — so she signed herself out and bought a one-way ticket to Davao. 00:00 — The week after Thanksgiving 02:50 — One fall on the ice 05:30 — Day ninety, a one-way ticket 08:20 — First night in Davao 11:10 — The bell still ringing in my head 14:00 — What they took: my route, my clipboard 17:00 — Nang Bebot and the fruit mountain 20:00 — The durian and thirty laughing strangers 23:00 — Kaye, the nurse I shut out 26:00 — The numbers, plain 29:00 — Dr. Reyes and twenty-seven dollars 31:30 — The caged eagle 34:00 — A jeepney to Eden, and free at last I'm Joan. Seventy-three, Rochester, New York, and I drove a school bus thirty years. Up before the sun, ice on the roads, forty kids and their whole racket behind me, and I never once put that bus in a ditch. Not one. For thirty years I was the woman folks counted on to get somewhere on time and safe. Then one fall on the ice out front changed the whole of it. Just the one. I got right back up, but the neighbor saw it and called my daughter, and after that my kids had meetings about me, without me in the room. Words like "for her own safety." The week after Thanksgiving they walked me into a very nice facility like I was a coat they were checking at the door. I lasted ninety days. Ninety days of meals at a bell and lights out at a time and a little cup of pills with a nurse watching me swallow. There was a code on the outside door so the ones who wandered couldn't get out. I wasn't a wanderer. But a door that locks from the outside feels the same whether you're the reason for it or not. So on day ninety I put on my good coat and I signed the paper that said I was leaving against everybody's advice. I emptied what was still mine and I bought a one-way ticket to a city called Davao, on the far side of the world, and I did not tell my children until I was already gone. I'm seventy-three, ten thousand miles from a single soul who knew me, and nobody on this earth locks my door anymore. This is where my story really begins. Footage Attribution: Portions of the video footage used in this production are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. The original footage has been edited, color graded, trimmed, or combined with additional footage, and paired with original narration and storytelling to create a new transformative work. Credit for all original creators is provided below in accordance with the CC BY license. Video Credit: "Walking the 2nd Most Densely Populated District in Manila Philippines [4K HDR]" by Krypto Trekker Source: • Walking the 2nd Most Densely Populated Dis... Video Credit: "Watch This Before Visiting Manila Philippines [4K WALK]" by Krypto Trekker Source: • Watch This Before Visiting Manila Philippi... Video Credit: "Exploring Masville Parañaque Metro Manila Philippines [4K HDR]" by Krypto Trekker Source: • Exploring Masville Parañaque Metro Manila ... Video Credit: "SUPER HEAVY RAIN HITS MANILA CITY-Afternoon walk in tondo Manila [4k]" by JOHN WALK TOUR Source: • SUPER HEAVY RAIN HITS MANILA CITY-Afternoo... Channels: Krypto Trekker — / @kryptotrekker | JOHN WALK TOUR — / @jwtrealninja Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY). #RetireInThePhilippines #StartingOver #TrueStory #Davao #RetireAbroad #NursingHomeEscape #OlderWomenStartingOver #SocialSecurityRetirement #ExpatPhilippines #NeverTooLate retire in the Philippines, retire abroad on social security, American grandmother, starting over at 70, starting over at 60, cost of living Philippines, Davao Philippines, retire on 1200 a month, expat Philippines, retire abroad, moving to the Philippines, single woman retire abroad, older American woman, retire overseas cheap, affordable retirement, healthcare in the Philippines, cheap doctor Philippines, Philippines retirement budget, living in Davao, American retiree Philippines, retire alone, retire without family, senior woman moving abroad, escape the nursing home, nursing home alternative, aging in place abroad, retire on a fixed income, Social Security abroad, low cost of living country, retire in Asia, Philippines cost of living 2026, one way ticket Philippines, starting over after 70, retire at 73, plain living Philippines, true story retirement, real story expat, older women starting over, financial freedom retirement, monthly budget Philippines, rent in the Philippines, retire on a small pension, safe places to retire, retire far from home, life after loss, second chance at 73, Davao durian, Philippine Eagle sanctuary, Samal Island Davao, jeepney Davao, school bus driver starts over abroad

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