Dr. John's Wishful Thinking

Dr. John’s Wishful is a blog where stories, struggles, and hopes for a better nation come alive. It blends personal reflections with social commentary, turning everyday experiences into insights on democracy, unity, and integrity. More than critique, it is a voice of hope—reminding readers that words can inspire change, truth can challenge power, and dreams can guide Filipinos toward a future of justice and nationhood.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

When Silence Becomes the Impeachment of the Heart: Understanding Love, Trauma, Emotional Ambiguity, and the Difficult Art of Letting Go

*Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope, PhD, EdD, DM

As someone who has spent a considerable part of my life analyzing politics, institutions, governance, crises, leadership, and human decision-making, I have often observed that one of the most exhausting conditions any nation, institution, or even any human being can endure is uncertainty. We are seeing this vividly in the continuing national discourse surrounding the impeachment issue involving Vice President Sara Duterte. Whether one supports or opposes impeachment is not even my immediate point here. My point is something deeper. In politics, when institutions delay clarity, when processes remain uncertain, when silence replaces communication, when decisions are deferred, people begin to speculate, narratives multiply, anxiety grows, emotions intensify, camps are formed, and interpretations become substitutes for facts. The vacuum gets filled not by truth, but by assumptions. Then it struck me one morning that what happens in institutions also happens in human relationships.


Kapag ang isang tao ay hindi malinaw, kapag ang komunikasyon ay putol, kapag ang katahimikan ay mas malakas kaysa salita, ang isip ng tao ay gumagawa ng sarili nitong impeachment hearing. We gather evidence, interpret behavior, replay events, summon emotional witnesses, and become prosecutor, defense counsel, judge, and sometimes even executioner of our own peace of mind. As an academic, I have spent years reading about systems of instability. Ngunit habang nadadagdagan ang numero sa aking age, mas lalo kong naiintindihan na ang pinakamahirap na instability ay hindi laging political. Minsan, ang pinaka-mapanganib ay emotional instability. Walang constitution na susundan. Walang rules of court. Walang parliamentary procedure. Walang clear jurisdiction. Ang meron lang ay puso, isip, takot, attachment, at uncertainty.


Modern psychology has long taught us that human beings are wired for attachment. John Bowlby, one of the great thinkers who transformed our understanding of emotional bonding, explained that attachment is not merely for children. It remains with us throughout adulthood. We seek safety in people, emotional predictability, responsiveness, reassurance, and belonging. Kapag ang mga bagay na ito ay threatened, hindi simpleng lungkot lamang ang nangyayari. Our emotional alarm systems activate.


That is why I have come to realize that an unanswered phone call is rarely just an unanswered phone call. Silence is rarely just silence. A seen post without a reply is rarely neutral. A sudden disappearance after emotional intimacy is rarely psychologically empty. The human mind hates ambiguity.


At ito ang problema sa panahon ng social media. In previous generations, silence was cleaner. Kapag walang tawag, wala talagang communication. Today, silence has become psychologically crueler. Someone may ignore your calls yet still view your Instagram story. Hindi ka kinakausap pero visible sila. Buhay sila online pero emotionally absent sa iyo. That creates a unique emotional torture because absence is no longer absolute. Presence exists, but engagement does not.


This is where speculation begins. Modern relationship scholars increasingly discuss what may be called digital ambiguity. Ito iyong painful emotional space where information is incomplete. Hindi mo alam kung galit ba siya, busy ba siya, takot ba siya, ayaw ba niya, nananadya ba siya, nasasaktan ba siya, o tapos na ba talaga. And when ambiguity exists, the human mind fills the vacuum.


As someone trained to think analytically, I have learned something humbling. Even intelligent people become emotionally irrational when attachment systems are activated. Kapag ang isang taong mahalaga sa atin ay biglang naging silent, the nervous system does not calmly behave like a constitutional law professor analyzing due process. Hindi. The body reacts. The heart reacts. The mind seeks restoration.


This is where attachment theory becomes painfully real. Some people cope with emotional threat by seeking connection. Others cope by withdrawing. One pursues. The other distances. The more one chases, the more the other escapes. The more the other escapes, the more panic develops. This is what relationship scholars have long described as the anxious-avoidant cycle. Hindi ito simpleng pagiging dramatic lamang. It is psychological activation.


A person who repeatedly calls is not always weak. Sometimes, that person’s emotional alarm system is saying restore connection, restore certainty, restore safety. But here lies the tragedy. The person withdrawing may not necessarily be evil. They may themselves be overwhelmed, emotionally flooded, traumatized, avoidant, confused, or grieving. This is where relationships become extraordinarily complicated.


I have also come to appreciate that people do not enter relationships as blank slates. We bring our histories. We bring our wounds. We bring our family scars. A woman abandoned by her father does not simply forget abandonment. A person who grew up in instability may unconsciously normalize chaos. A person who has known repeated emotional loss may experience love not as calm companionship but as emotional survival. Trauma researchers have repeatedly shown that people often recreate familiar emotional environments, even unhealthy ones, because familiar pain can psychologically feel safer than unfamiliar peace.


Napakalalim nito. Because sometimes, what appears to be irrational behavior is actually an old survival script.


Then there is the rescuer. And this is perhaps where many mature men, builders, thinkers, and future-oriented individuals become vulnerable. The rescuer believes in solutions. The rescuer sees potential. The rescuer thinks in systems. The rescuer says let us solve this, build this, fix this, create this. But what if the other person does not primarily seek solutions. What if they seek emotional containment.


Dito nagkakaroon ng mismatch. One partner says let us build the future. The other says see my pain first. One offers strategy. The other seeks empathy. One thinks in opportunity. The other thinks in emotional survival. Both may care, yet both remain unsatisfied. And over time, compassion becomes fatigue.


This is one of the most dangerous relationship transitions. Because pity is not partnership. Awa is not always love. Empathy is noble, but empathy without boundaries becomes emotional self-sacrifice. I have realized that some relationships slowly shift from companionship into emotional management. You stop feeling like a partner. You begin feeling like a fixer. Or worse, a stabilizer of recurring crises. That is psychologically exhausting.


Sex further complicates this reality. People often underestimate the emotional symbolism of sexual intimacy. It is not merely physical release. Neuroscience and relationship psychology repeatedly show that intimacy can reinforce bonding, emotional attachment, vulnerability, reassurance, and symbolic belonging. But what happens when intimacy becomes the strongest contribution in a relationship lacking broader alignment. That is when emotional accounting quietly begins. One person remembers sacrifice. Another remembers emotional giving. Another remembers loyalty. Another remembers intimacy. And love risks becoming transactional.


Then comes pregnancy uncertainty. Pregnancy is not merely biological. For some, it symbolizes permanence, family, belonging, security, emotional continuity, legacy, and hope. That is why a negative pregnancy test can emotionally affect two people very differently. One may feel relief. Another may feel grief. And this is something many men fail to understand immediately.


A woman saddened by a negative result may not necessarily be thinking irrationally. She may be mourning an imagined future. Maybe not even a child itself, but what the child symbolized. A home. A family. Emotional certainty. Permanent connection. That is psychologically profound.


But again, emotional explanation does not automatically create compatibility.


This is where we must be intellectually honest. Understanding why someone behaves a certain way does not obligate us to remain in a relationship that repeatedly destabilizes our peace. This is where many emotionally compassionate people become trapped. They understand the wound, so they stay. They understand the trauma, so they endure. They understand the sadness, so they postpone boundaries. But compassion is not a lifetime contract.


One of the most dangerous myths in romance is that love is enough. It is not. Love without communication becomes torment. Love without emotional maturity becomes chaos. Love without aligned vision becomes loneliness. Love without mutual effort becomes burden. And perhaps this is the most painful realization of adulthood. A person may genuinely care for you and still be the wrong life companion.


That truth hurts.


Because relationships are not simply about affection. They are about architecture. Can this emotional structure sustain adult life. Can this communication style survive real crises. Can this person stand beside you, not merely emotionally lean on you. Can peace coexist with passion. These are mature questions.


Toxicity is another word often used carelessly. Not every disagreement is toxicity. Not every emotional need is toxicity. But recurring emotional destabilization deserves serious reflection. If a relationship repeatedly produces anxiety, uncertainty, emotional flooding, panic pursuit, confusion, exhaustion, and erosion of mental peace, then whether we call it toxicity or simply incompatibility, the effect remains psychologically damaging. This is where disengagement enters.


Letting go is one of the hardest emotional governance decisions a human being makes because silence feels unfinished, ambiguity feels unresolved, the heart wants explanation, the ego wants closure, and the mind wants facts. But life does not always provide neat hearings. Sometimes there is no final witness, no explanatory memorandum, no closing argument. Sometimes there is only silence. And then we must decide whether we continue emotional litigation or quietly withdraw our participation from a conflict that no longer gives us peace.


Silent disengagement can be unhealthy if it is used as punishment, but it can also be psychologically healthy if it is rooted in self-preservation. The difference lies in motive. If silence says now suffer too, then that is retaliation. But if silence says I no longer participate in what destabilizes me, then that is boundary. Malaking pagkakaiba. Healing, however, does not happen merely by saying I am done. The body remembers. The mind loops. The heart bargains. This is why many people seek rebounds, because attention from another person can temporarily calm abandonment distress. Validation can feel like medicine, but in truth, it is often only anesthesia.


Real healing requires identity restoration. You must remember who you were before emotional chaos entered your life. And for some of us, purpose becomes medicine. Career, writing, building, business, legacy, intellectual production, and meaningful work matter not because they erase grief, but because they restore agency. Kapag emotionally powerless ka, purpose gives structure. Purpose reminds you that your life is larger than one painful relationship, larger than one emotional disappointment, larger than one season of uncertainty. Still, even productivity must be approached honestly, because hyper-productivity itself can become another form of emotional avoidance.


Healing requires introspection, and perhaps the deepest introspection is this. Sometimes the relationship teaches us less about the other person and more about ourselves. Why did silence destabilize us so deeply. Why did uncertainty feel unbearable. Why did abandonment trigger panic. Why did emotional ambiguity consume so much of our cognitive and emotional space. These are not accusations against another person. These are self-knowledge questions. And maybe this is where true maturity begins, not in blaming, not in diagnosing the other, but in understanding ourselves.


As I reflect as a man, as a single father, as an academician, and as a human being, I have come to accept one difficult truth. Not every emotionally wounded person is a villain. Some are simply incompatible companions. They may be sincere. They may be deeply human. They may even genuinely care. But sincerity does not automatically equal sustainability. A true life companion is not merely someone who loves you. A life companion is someone whose emotional operating system can coexist with yours without repeatedly destabilizing your peace, someone who communicates, someone who can process tension without weaponizing silence, someone who dreams beside you and walks beside you, not merely survives beside you.


And perhaps that is where letting go becomes not abandonment, but wisdom. As in politics, uncertainty eventually exhausts nations, much like the prolonged impeachment discourse involving Vice President Sara Duterte, where ambiguity fuels speculation, fatigue, and division. In the same way, uncertainty in love exhausts the human heart. At some point, whether in institutions or relationships, clarity becomes mercy. And when that clarity does not come from the other side, we may have to create it within ourselves.

#DJOT

_____

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, management, economics, doctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.



Saturday, May 30, 2026

The Power of Thirteen: Why Senator Bato dela Rosa Matters More Than a Single Vote in the Sara Duterte Impeachment Trial



As a lifelong reader of history, political science, economics, constitutional law, and biographies of statesmen who shaped nations, I have always been fascinated by the reality that democracy, despite all its noble principles, ultimately operates through numbers. We speak of justice, accountability, constitutional safeguards, checks and balances, and the rule of law. We teach these concepts in classrooms. We debate them in public forums. We celebrate them as the foundations of democratic governance. Yet when critical political moments arrive, everything eventually comes down to arithmetic. Votes matter. Coalitions matter. Numbers matter. And as I observe the unfolding impeachment proceedings involving Vice President Sara Duterte, I cannot help but believe that many people are looking at the wrong number.


Most observers are focused on the number sixteen because sixteen votes are constitutionally required to remove a Vice President from office. That is understandable because the final outcome naturally attracts public attention. The question everyone asks is simple: Will Sara Duterte remain in office, or will she be removed? However, from a political and institutional perspective, I believe the more important number may not be sixteen. The number that may ultimately define the direction, tempo, and character of the impeachment proceedings is thirteen.


The reason is quite simple. Looking at the present political realities of the Senate, securing sixteen votes to remove Vice President Sara Duterte from office appears extraordinarily difficult. Political alignments may change. Unexpected events may occur. Senators may shift positions. Nothing in politics is ever permanent. Nevertheless, if one examines the present composition of the Senate and the publicly perceived loyalties of its members, the path toward obtaining sixteen votes appears steep and uncertain. Whether one supports or opposes Vice President Duterte, one must acknowledge the practical arithmetic confronting both camps.


Precisely because of this reality, the importance of thirteen becomes much clearer. If sixteen votes appear difficult to achieve, then the battle naturally shifts elsewhere. The objective becomes not necessarily winning the final vote but controlling the proceedings leading to that vote. The struggle moves from the destination to the road itself. It becomes a contest over procedure, timing, rulings, objections, motions, narratives, and the presentation of evidence. In short, it becomes a battle for institutional control.


This is where Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa becomes politically significant. Many see him as merely one senator among twenty-four. They view him as a single vote that may eventually be counted when the impeachment court reaches its final decision. But from a strategic standpoint, his importance may lie elsewhere. His significance may rest in his ability to help complete a solid bloc of thirteen senators who can collectively influence the mechanics of the impeachment process itself.


Many Filipinos imagine impeachment as an ordinary court proceeding where a judge simply listens to evidence and applies the law. Yet impeachment is not an ordinary criminal trial. It is a constitutional process conducted within a political institution. Legal principles certainly matter, but political realities remain inseparable from the proceedings. Every impeachment trial involves procedural disputes. There are objections to evidence. There are disagreements regarding witnesses. There are challenges to motions. There are rulings by the presiding officer. And when those rulings are challenged, the chamber itself may ultimately decide.


Imagine a situation where the presiding officer overrules an objection. A senator rises to challenge the ruling. Another senator requests a vote. If one side consistently possesses thirteen votes while the opposing side has only eleven, the outcome becomes increasingly predictable. The majority prevails. The ruling stands. The proceedings continue according to the preferences of those holding the numbers. Again and again, the process repeats itself. What may appear to the public as a legal debate often becomes, beneath the surface, a question of arithmetic.


This is why discussions regarding virtual attendance and online voting have generated such intense political interest. On the surface, these proposals may appear to be administrative adjustments designed to address extraordinary circumstances. Yet beneath every procedural proposal lies a political consequence. If the absence of a single senator reduces a bloc from thirteen members to twelve, the balance of power immediately changes. A senator is no longer merely an individual participant. He becomes part of a numerical equation capable of influencing the entire course of the impeachment court.


What makes this entire discussion even more fascinating is that the impeachment trial may no longer be primarily about whether Vice President Sara Duterte will be removed from office. Instead, it may increasingly become about controlling what the Filipino people are allowed to see, hear, and evaluate during the proceedings. Because while a majority bloc may influence rulings and procedures, there remains one thing that cannot be completely controlled.


They may control motions. They may influence procedural outcomes. They may shape the pace of the trial. They may sustain rulings favorable to their position. But they cannot entirely prevent the public from witnessing evidence once it is presented in open session. They cannot completely stop witnesses from testifying. They cannot fully erase documents that become part of the public record. They cannot entirely silence arguments once they are placed before a national audience.


This is where the role of the prosecution becomes historically significant. The prosecution’s mission extends beyond simply persuading senators. Its responsibility is to present facts, evidence, testimonies, official documents, financial records, communications, and institutional actions that support its case. In many respects, the prosecution is not only addressing the impeachment court. It is also addressing the Filipino people.


And this is perhaps the most important point often overlooked in public discussions. History repeatedly demonstrates that legal accountability and political accountability do not always travel together. There have been leaders who survived investigations, hearings, and formal proceedings, only to suffer lasting damage in the court of public opinion. There have also been leaders who won institutional battles but lost public trust. A person may survive politically in one arena while suffering defeat in another.


For this reason, the impeachment trial may evolve into something much larger than a constitutional proceeding. It may become a national examination of leadership, judgment, accountability, and credibility. Every witness who testifies, every document that is introduced, every explanation that is offered, every contradiction that is exposed, and every defense that is presented contributes to the formation of public opinion. Senators may ultimately determine whether Vice President Sara Duterte remains in office, but the Filipino people will determine whether they continue to believe in her leadership.


And this is where the 2028 elections quietly enter the picture. Even if the impeachment proceedings do not result in her removal from office, the narratives established during the trial may follow her into any future presidential campaign. The Senate may render one judgment, but the electorate may eventually render another. The impeachment court votes according to constitutional thresholds. The people vote according to memory, perception, trust, confidence, and credibility.


As I reflect upon all these developments, I cannot help but feel that the real significance of this impeachment trial extends beyond the fate of one political figure. This is also a test of how democratic institutions function under pressure. It is a test of whether procedures can shape outcomes, whether numbers can shape narratives, and whether public accountability can survive even when political arithmetic appears to favor one side.


In the end, the struggle for sixteen may be about removing a Vice President from office. The struggle for thirteen may be about controlling the proceedings. But beyond both numbers lies a larger arena that no senator, no majority bloc, and no presiding officer can completely dominate: the judgment of the Filipino people. Because while senators may decide who remains in office today, the electorate will ultimately decide who deserves higher office tomorrow.


And perhaps that is why the number thirteen matters so much. Not because it guarantees victory. Not because it determines the final verdict. But because it may determine how the story is told, how the evidence is presented, and how the nation remembers this chapter of its democratic history. For in politics, there are moments when the most important number is not the one needed to win the final vote. Sometimes, the most important number is the one needed to control the road leading to that vote.

#DJOT

_____

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academic, public intellectual, and advocate for civic education and public safety, whose work spans local academies and international security circles. With a career rooted in teaching, research, policy, and public engagement, he bridges theory and practice by making meaningful contributions to academic discourse, civic education, and public policy. Dr. Teope is widely respected for his critical scholarship in education, management, economics, doctrine development, and public safety; his grassroots involvement in government and non-government organizations; his influential media presence promoting democratic values and civic consciousness; and his ethical leadership grounded in Filipino nationalism and public service. As a true public intellectual, he exemplifies how research, advocacy, governance, and education can work together in pursuit of the nation’s moral and civic mission.

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

Dr. Rodolfo John Ortiz Teope

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