Filipina Sex Diary - Honeybabes At Fort San Pedro -

Being a Filipina Honeybabe means we are the main character, not just the love interest. We can cook adobo for a lover, but we can also eat the whole serving alone while watching K-dramas—and that’s not sad. That’s solo fulfillment .

Honeybabe, out. P.S. If he doesn’t like your chaotic energy or your loud laugh at 2 AM, he’s not your endgame. Next. 💌

Manila Rainy Season, 3:47 AM

And the right one? He won’t just give you kilig. He’ll give you kapayapaan (peace).

My current romantic plot is not about a man chasing me under the rain with a boom box. It’s slower. It’s me, looking in the mirror, and saying: “Mahal na kita, self.” (I already love you, self.) Filipina Sex Diary - Honeybabes At Fort San Pedro

Tonight, I’m writing this with one earbud playing old Eraserheads songs and the other listening to the soft hum of the electric fan. My闺蜜 (bestie) called me a “Honeybabe” again—that funny, sticky-sweet term we use for girls who love too hard, give too much sugar, and still end up wiping their own tears before applying lip tint.

Dear kapwa Honeybabe, Do not shrink your sweetness. Do not apologize for wanting romance. But let your love story be a novel—not a footnote in someone else’s chapter. You are not a plot device. You are the entire bookshelf. Being a Filipina Honeybabe means we are the

Here’s the truth we don’t post on Instagram Reels: We are raised on two things— pamamanhikan (formal suitors) and kilig . That butterfly feeling? It’s our national language. But somewhere between the third date and the first misunderstanding, we realize that being a “Honeybabe” doesn’t mean being sweet for someone else. It means being whole on your own.