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 10, 2026

The Weight of a Vote: A Congressman’s Constitutional Burden in the Impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte

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


A neophyte Congressman friend of mine recently asked me a question that, at first glance, appeared simple, but upon deeper reflection, carried the full gravity of constitutional democracy.

 

He asked me, almost in the manner of a man quietly seeking both legal advice and moral clarity: “If you were in my situation, how would you vote in the plenary on the impeachment of Vice President Sara Duterte?”

 

I paused.

 

Not because I had no answer, but because some questions deserve silence before words.

 

In today’s Philippines, where political loyalties are sharp, social media narratives are weaponized, and public discourse often becomes a battlefield of emotion rather than constitutional reasoning, any answer to that question risks being misunderstood. Some will immediately categorize you. Others will demand ideological purity. Still others will accuse you of weakness if your position does not align with theirs.

 

But governance is rarely that simplistic.

 

I told him that if I were in his shoes, my vote would depend not on political fashion, not on pressure from peers, not on fear of social media outrage, but on a careful balancing of constitutional duty, representative democracy, public conscience, and national stability.

 

If my constituents overwhelmingly believed that impeachment was necessary, then I would seriously consider voting YES.

 

Why?

 

Because in a representative democracy, a Congressman is not elected to become an isolated philosopher king inside the halls of Congress. He is called a Representative because he carries the voice of a district. If the people he represents, after thoughtful public discourse, have clearly spoken in favor of accountability, then democratic humility demands listening.

 

A YES vote, in that context, is not necessarily a declaration of final guilt. It may simply be an acknowledgment that serious constitutional allegations deserve due process, evidence, formal scrutiny, and institutional examination.

 

Public office is a public trust. That constitutional phrase is not decorative language. It is a governing principle. If credible allegations exist involving betrayal of public trust or other impeachable grounds, refusing to act merely because the official involved is politically powerful or electorally popular would be a betrayal of democratic accountability.

 

Congress must never become a sanctuary for untouchable officials.

 

But if I were in the shoes of a Congressman whose district overwhelmingly believed the impeachment was politically motivated, constitutionally weak, or destabilizing, then I would seriously consider voting NO.

 

Because impeachment is not an ordinary legislative instrument.

 

It is not a press release. It is not a social media trend. It is not a popularity referendum.

 

It is one of the most severe constitutional remedies available in a democracy, designed not for partisan warfare but for exceptional circumstances.

 

A NO vote may be entirely principled if one believes the evidence is insufficient, the process is rushed, or the proceedings are being weaponized as an instrument of political elimination rather than constitutional justice.

 

Legislators are not expected to rubber-stamp accusations simply because they are emotionally compelling or politically convenient.

 

There is also the reality of national stability.

 

The Philippines has endured enough cycles of division, distrust, and institutional confrontation. If a Congressman sincerely believes that impeachment, under current conditions, would deepen social fractures, create governance paralysis, disrupt economic confidence, or inflame public disorder without overwhelming constitutional necessity, then a NO vote may reflect prudence rather than cowardice.

 

And yet there is a third path, one that many instantly criticize because modern politics often distrusts nuance.

 

Abstention.

 

If my constituents were bitterly divided, with no clear collective mandate, I told him I might vote ABSTAIN.

 

Some would call that indecision.

 

I would call it democratic honesty.

 

How can a Congressman confidently claim to represent “the people” when half the district passionately demands impeachment while the other half fiercely opposes it?

 

In such a case, any definitive vote may not be representation. It may simply be personal preference disguised as public mandate.

 

Abstention, when exercised sincerely, is not always avoidance. Sometimes it is a recognition that democratic clarity does not yet exist.

 

It may also reflect genuine constitutional uncertainty.

 

Impeachment is not a simple yes-or-no administrative measure. It involves legal interpretation, evidentiary evaluation, procedural legitimacy, and political consequences of historic magnitude.

 

A legislator should not be forced into artificial certainty when legitimate doubts remain.

 

And perhaps most importantly, abstention can be a refusal to be weaponized by either political faction.

 

There are moments in governance when pressure comes not from constitutional duty, but from tribal politics demanding obedience.

 

A principled abstention may be a declaration: “I refuse to become an instrument of factional warfare.”

 

Of course, critics will argue that elected officials are chosen precisely to make hard decisions, not to avoid them.

 

That criticism deserves respect.

 

A legislator cannot hide behind abstention merely because the issue is controversial.

 

But neither should a legislator be bullied into false certainty simply because political camps demand immediate allegiance.

 

At the heart of this entire conversation lies an old democratic debate: Is a legislator merely a delegate of the people’s current sentiment, or a trustee expected to exercise independent judgment?

 

The truth is that public service often requires being both.

 

There are moments when one must listen.

 

There are moments when one must lead.

 

And there are moments when one must pause.

 

That is why I told my Congressman friend that no single answer can universally apply.

 

A YES vote can be principled.

 

A NO vote can be principled.

 

An ABSTAIN vote can be principled.

 

What matters is whether the vote emerges from constitutional conscience rather than political convenience.

 

Because in the end, history rarely remembers the noise surrounding a vote.

 

It remembers whether those entrusted with power acted with wisdom.

 

And perhaps that is the most difficult burden of democracy.

 

Not casting a vote.

 

But carrying its consequences long after the applause and outrage have faded.

#DJOT

_________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academicpublic 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, managementeconomicsdoctrine 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.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Legislative Contempt and Judicial Intervention: Reexamining the Supreme Court’s Role in the Vice President Sara Duterte Impeachment Controversy

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

Imagine a situation inside a university governed by a strict and highly respected Board of Discipline. A graduating student is accused of serious violations that may lead to expulsion. After lengthy hearings, document reviews, and internal deliberations, the Board finally moves toward disciplinary action. But before the process can reach its conclusion, another office within the university system, one not directly tasked to handle student discipline, suddenly intervenes and begins dictating how the Board should interpret its own rules, how quickly it should act, and whether its internal procedures are constitutionally proper under the university charter. Members of the Board begin asking among themselves whether the intervention is still guidance or already intrusion. Some faculty members defend the intervention as necessary oversight. Others quietly worry that the disciplinary body is slowly losing its independence. Soon, tensions rise not because of the student anymore, but because one institution now appears to be entering deeply into the constitutionally delegated functions of another. In that atmosphere, the issue evolves beyond individual accountability and transforms into a struggle over institutional boundaries, authority, and respect.


This analogy mirrors the growing constitutional tension surrounding the impeachment controversy involving Sara Duterte and the intervention of the Supreme Court of the Philippines. The issue has expanded far beyond the political fate of one official. It now raises larger constitutional questions involving judicial review, legislative autonomy, and the doctrine of separation of powers. More importantly, it invites discussion on whether excessive intervention into constitutionally delegated legislative functions may itself be interpreted, philosophically and institutionally, as a form of legislative contempt.


Legislative contempt is a constitutional mechanism rooted in the inherent power of legislative bodies to preserve their authority, dignity, processes, and institutional independence. Traditionally, it refers to acts that obstruct, disrespect, or undermine the lawful functions of Congress or any of its chambers. In parliamentary and constitutional systems, legislative contempt may arise when an individual refuses to comply with subpoenas, disrupts proceedings, disrespects legislative authority, or interferes with the constitutional functions entrusted exclusively to the legislative branch. More deeply, however, legislative contempt also carries a philosophical dimension. It embodies the principle that no branch of government should intrude upon the exclusive constitutional domain of another in a manner that weakens institutional autonomy. In this context, the question emerges with constitutional gravity: when judicial intervention reaches into an impeachment process constitutionally vested in Congress, can such intervention itself be interpreted as a form of legislative contempt against a co equal branch of government?


This question has become increasingly relevant in the controversy surrounding the impeachment proceedings involving Sara Duterte and the subsequent intervention of the Supreme Court of the Philippines. The issue is no longer confined to the innocence or liability of a political figure. Rather, it has evolved into a broader constitutional debate concerning the limits of judicial power and the preservation of legislative independence under the doctrine of separation of powers.


Under the 1987 Philippine Constitution, impeachment is fundamentally a political process entrusted to Congress. Article XI vests the exclusive power to initiate impeachment cases in the House of Representatives and the sole power to try and decide impeachment cases in the Senate. The constitutional text itself demonstrates deliberate compartmentalization, assigning these powers not to the judiciary but to the legislative branch. This arrangement reflects the framers’ recognition that impeachment is not an ordinary judicial proceeding. It is a political accountability mechanism designed to allow elected representatives to determine whether certain high officials remain worthy of public trust (Bernas, 2009).


In this light, excessive judicial intervention into impeachment proceedings risks disturbing the constitutional equilibrium among co equal branches. While the judiciary possesses the power of judicial review under Article VIII of the Constitution, such power is not without limits. Judicial review was never intended to transform the Court into a supervisory body over every political process conducted by Congress. As former Chief Justice Roberto Concepcion emphasized during the Constitutional Convention deliberations, judicial review exists to settle actual controversies involving legally demandable rights, not to replace the discretionary functions constitutionally assigned to another branch (Cruz, 2014).


The concern raised by many constitutional observers is that the intervention of the Supreme Court of the Philippines into the impeachment controversy involving Sara Duterte may be perceived as an encroachment upon the exclusive constitutional domain of Congress. Once the judiciary begins dictating procedural or interpretative boundaries within impeachment proceedings beyond clear constitutional violations, it risks positioning itself not merely as interpreter of the Constitution but as an active participant in a political process reserved for legislators.


This concern becomes more profound when examined through the doctrine of separation of powers. The Philippine constitutional system was intentionally designed to prevent concentration of authority in any single branch. Each branch possesses exclusive powers insulated from unnecessary intrusion by the others. As Justice Isagani Cruz explained, separation of powers is not merely an administrative arrangement but a structural safeguard against institutional domination (Cruz, 2014). When one branch excessively interferes in the internal constitutional processes of another, tensions naturally arise because the balance envisioned by the Constitution begins to tilt.


From this perspective, one may argue that excessive judicial intervention into impeachment proceedings can be viewed conceptually as a form of legislative contempt, not in the technical penal sense, but in the institutional sense of undermining or diminishing the constitutional authority of Congress. The argument rests on the principle that if Congress were to intrude deeply into judicial adjudication, the judiciary would rightfully defend its independence. By the same logic, Congress may likewise view extensive judicial intrusion into impeachment proceedings as an encroachment upon legislative prerogatives.


This discussion becomes even more politically and constitutionally sensitive when viewed alongside the indirect contempt petition against Senate President Vicente ‘Tito’ Sotto III. If ever the Supreme Court of the Philippines were to cite Sotto in contempt for criticizing or questioning judicial intervention into impeachment proceedings, a serious constitutional confrontation could emerge. Theoretically and institutionally, the Senate itself may assert that the judiciary’s intervention into an impeachment process constitutionally vested in Congress constitutes interference with legislative functions and therefore may also be interpreted as a form of legislative contempt in the institutional sense.


This possibility is not entirely alien to constitutional theory. Legislative bodies possess inherent powers necessary for self preservation and institutional protection. In Arnault v. Nazareno (G.R. No. L-3820, 1950), the Court itself recognized that Congress possesses inherent contempt powers essential to the exercise of legislative functions. The principle underlying legislative contempt is the protection of institutional integrity against obstruction or undue interference. If legislative proceedings are constitutionally insulated to preserve independence, then Congress may reasonably argue that extensive judicial intrusion into impeachment processes threatens that same institutional integrity.


At this point, however, constitutional prudence becomes essential. A direct confrontation between the Senate and the judiciary would create an unprecedented constitutional crisis. Imagine a situation where the Court cites a former Senate President for contempt while members of the Senate simultaneously assert that the Court itself has intruded into legislative prerogatives. Such a development would transform a constitutional disagreement into an institutional collision among co equal branches of government. The consequences would extend far beyond the impeachment controversy itself. Public confidence in constitutional stability could weaken as the people witness the judiciary and legislature moving toward open institutional conflict.


This commentary, however, is not without potential criticism, and such criticisms deserve acknowledgment in the spirit of balanced constitutional discourse. Defenders of the Supreme Court of the Philippines may argue that characterizing judicial intervention as a form of legislative contempt risks overstating the limits of judicial review under the 1987 Constitution. They may assert that Article VIII, Section 1 expressly expanded judicial power to include the authority to determine grave abuse of discretion committed by any branch or instrumentality of government, including Congress itself. From this perspective, the Court’s intervention in impeachment controversies involving Sara Duterte is not an institutional intrusion but the exercise of a constitutional duty designed to prevent abuses and preserve constitutional boundaries. Critics may likewise contend that the term “legislative contempt” is technically imprecise when applied against the judiciary, since legislative contempt traditionally refers to acts obstructing congressional inquiries or disobeying legislative authority rather than judicial constitutional review. Others may further argue that discussing the possibility of the Senate asserting legislative contempt against the judiciary risks encouraging institutional retaliation and constitutional brinkmanship between co equal branches. These criticisms are doctrinally significant and cannot simply be dismissed.


Nevertheless, this commentary does not deny the constitutional authority of judicial review. Rather, it raises concerns regarding the extent and manner of judicial intervention when the Constitution itself vests impeachment powers primarily and exclusively in Congress. The issue being examined is not the existence of judicial power, but whether excessive intervention into inherently political and constitutionally delegated legislative processes may unintentionally disturb the delicate equilibrium intended by the doctrine of separation of powers. In constitutional democracies, the challenge has never been merely about identifying which branch possesses power, but about determining how such power may be exercised with restraint, prudence, and institutional respect.


This is precisely why restraint is indispensable in constitutional governance. The doctrine of separation of powers was never intended to create isolated branches operating in hostility against one another. Rather, it was designed to establish balance, mutual respect, and institutional self limitation. As Alexander Bickel (1986) argued, the legitimacy of courts depends heavily on prudence and restraint, especially in politically charged controversies where excessive intervention may produce institutional backlash.


Critics of judicial intervention argue that the impeachment process was never intended to be judicialized to the point where courts effectively shape or suspend legislative political accountability mechanisms. Such a development may unintentionally weaken Congress by signaling that even constitutionally assigned political powers remain subject to judicial recalibration. In effect, the legislature may appear subordinate rather than co equal.


At the same time, defenders of the Court maintain that judicial review is necessary precisely to prevent constitutional violations and abuses within impeachment proceedings. They argue that no branch is absolutely immune from constitutional scrutiny. This position is doctrinally valid. Yet the constitutional challenge lies in determining where legitimate judicial review ends and impermissible judicial overreach begins.


The controversy therefore reveals a deeper constitutional tension within modern democratic governance. Courts are expected to protect constitutional boundaries, yet they must also avoid appearing to dominate political processes constitutionally entrusted to elected representatives. Public perception becomes critical here. Once the judiciary is perceived as excessively intervening in highly political controversies, the risk emerges that the Court itself may be viewed as entering the political arena rather than remaining its constitutional referee.


This perception carries institutional consequences. Confidence in the judiciary depends heavily on the belief that courts act with neutrality and restraint. As Bickel (1986) warned in The Least Dangerous Branch, courts derive legitimacy not from force or electoral mandate but from public trust in their prudence and constitutional discipline. Excessive intervention in political questions may weaken that trust by creating impressions of judicial activism or institutional favoritism.


The impeachment controversy involving Sara Duterte therefore transcends personalities and partisan affiliations. It forces the nation to confront larger constitutional questions regarding the proper boundaries between judicial review and legislative autonomy. Can the judiciary intervene without effectively reshaping a process constitutionally entrusted to Congress? At what point does constitutional review become institutional encroachment? And when does intervention, even if legally framed, begin to resemble a form of legislative contempt against the independence of a co equal branch?


Ultimately, constitutional democracy survives not merely through legal correctness but through institutional restraint. The strength of the Philippine constitutional system lies in the mutual respect among co equal branches of government. Courts must remain vigilant in defending constitutional rights, but they must likewise exercise caution not to unintentionally diminish the independence of Congress in areas where the Constitution itself grants exclusive authority.


In the end, the issue is not whether the judiciary has power. Clearly, it does. The deeper issue is whether wisdom, restraint, and constitutional balance are equally exercised in moments when political tensions place the separation of powers under extraordinary strain. For once one branch begins crossing too deeply into the constitutional territory of another, the nation risks not merely a legal conflict, but a gradual erosion of the very structure designed to preserve democratic equilibrium.


References 


Arnault v. Nazareno, G.R. No. L-3820 (1950).


Bernas, J. G. (2009). The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A commentary. Rex Book Store.


Bickel, A. M. (1986). The least dangerous branch: The Supreme Court at the bar of politics (2nd ed.). Yale University Press.


Cruz, I. A. (2014). Constitutional law. Central Lawbook Publishing.


Francisco v. House of Representatives, G.R. No. 160261 (2003).

#DJOT

_________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academicpublic 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, managementeconomicsdoctrine 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.

The Wisdom of the Raw Leaves: Rediscovering Nature Through Herbal Food Shakes

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


Unknown to many of my readers, beyond my work in governance, public safety, political analysis, and academia, one of my doctoral specializations is in Alternative Healing Systems and Integrative Wellness Studies. For years, I have quietly maintained a genuine interest in the relationship between nature, nutrition, preventive wellness, and the body’s ability to sustain itself through natural means. While many know me through my writings on law, governance, national security, and public administration, only a few are aware that I also spend time studying traditional healing practices, herbal systems, and holistic approaches to wellness.


Recently, I had the opportunity to visit an Alternative Healing House in Parañaque City together with my daughter, Juliana Rizalhea. During that visit, we were introduced to what they simply called a “Green Shake,” a blended mixture of numerous natural leaves, grasses, herbal plants, and plant-based ingredients prepared as a food supplement. Out of curiosity and openness to learning, both Juliana Rizalhea and I personally tried the drink. What initially began as a simple wellness experience unexpectedly sparked a deeper intellectual and professional interest in me.


As someone trained to critically examine ideas before embracing them, I did not immediately rely on testimonials, marketing claims, or popular narratives. Instead, the experience encouraged me to conduct further reading, careful study, and deeper research regarding the nutritional and wellness aspects of blended herbal leaf supplementation. I began examining both the traditional foundations behind these practices and the scientific perspectives surrounding plant-based nutrition, phytonutrients, chlorophyll, antioxidants, fiber, and herbal wellness traditions that have existed for generations across different cultures.


What fascinated me most was not merely the drink itself, but the broader realization that many people today are slowly rediscovering the value of natural plant-based nourishment in an age increasingly dominated by processed food, artificial additives, synthetic consumption, chemical preservatives, and fast-paced lifestyles. In many ways, the Green Shake represents more than just a beverage. It symbolizes a growing desire among people to reconnect with nature, preventive wellness, healthier living, and a more disciplined appreciation of what the earth naturally provides.


Interestingly, the people in the Alternative Healing House never really gave the drink an official or commercial name. To them, it was simply a Green Shake, humbly prepared and quietly shared among those seeking a healthier lifestyle. Yet as I reflected on its composition, its philosophy, and the sheer diversity of leaves being blended together, I felt compelled to give it a descriptive identity of its own. Thus, in my personal appreciation and observation of the concept, I began referring to it as the “Century Green Shake.” The word “Century” was inspired by the idea that the drink contain a hundred or more different raw leaves, grasses, and plant-based ingredients carefully blended together using a high-wattage blender into a concentrated green nutritional shake rich in natural fiber and plant compounds.


To me, the name does not signify a miracle formula or a commercial brand. Rather, it symbolizes abundance, diversity, and the vastness of nature itself. A century is often associated with completeness, longevity, and fullness, and in many ways the drink reflects that symbolism through the blending of numerous leaves coming from different trees, plants, vegetables, grasses, and herbal sources. It is almost as if nature itself is being gathered into one glass through a process that remains surprisingly simple and unpretentious.


What deeply struck me during my visit to the Alternative Healing House owned by a humble Uncle Celso as called by the people around the neighborhood, retired business executive, was not merely the Century Green Shake itself, but the spirit and philosophy surrounding it. Contrary to what some people might immediately assume, the place does not operate like a commercialized wellness center aggressively selling miracle cures or expensive treatment packages. In fact, what I witnessed was something far simpler and more human. People merely come, request for a Green Shake, sit quietly, share stories, and continue with their personal journeys toward healthier living. The owner, whom I found to be remarkably generous and compassionate, does not project himself as a healer, miracle worker, or medical authority. Rather, he simply offers what he believes to be a natural food supplement composed of blended leaves, grasses, fibers, and plant-based ingredients freely given by nature itself.


There was something profoundly sincere in the atmosphere of the place. No loud advertisements. No dramatic promises. No aggressive recruitment of followers. There were simply ordinary people quietly seeking wellness through natural means. Some arrived carrying physical burdens. Others came carrying emotional exhaustion, anxiety, or fear brought about by illness and uncertainty. Yet what united many of them was a shared hope that perhaps better nutrition, discipline, and a return to natural living could help improve their quality of life.


As I spent time talking to several individuals there, I encountered people carrying deeply personal stories of struggle, survival, hope, and transformation. Some shared that they were once diagnosed with serious illnesses, including cancer, and that over time they shifted toward a highly disciplined plant-based lifestyle centered around natural leafy nutrition and the consistent intake of the Century Green Shake as part of their daily food regimen. Several of them described themselves not as “healed by medicine,” but as people who gradually became stronger, healthier, and eventually survivors while embracing a lifestyle rooted in natural nutrition, dietary discipline, positive outlook, and simplicity.


These are not capsules manufactured inside laboratories, nor chemically processed commercial products filled with artificial preservatives and synthetic ingredients. The Century Green Shake is simply composed of raw leaves carefully cut, gathered, and blended into a natural high-fiber shake using a high-wattage blender. In many ways, it resembles nature itself being transformed into liquid nourishment. The taste, admittedly, may not immediately be welcoming to everyone. Unlike commercial beverages loaded with sugar, artificial flavoring, and sweeteners, the raw leafy taste of the shake reflects its natural and unprocessed character. It tastes like leaves because it truly is leaves in their raw and natural form.


Yet despite its strong earthy taste, many people continue to drink it not because of flavor, but because of the wellness lifestyle and positive physical effects they personally believe and experience over time. Many spoke not of miraculous overnight cures, but of gradual improvements in how they felt physically, mentally, and emotionally. Some described feeling lighter, more energetic, more disciplined in their eating habits, and more conscious about their overall health and lifestyle.


What is important to clarify is that the Century Green Shake itself does not claim to be medicine. It does not present itself as a pharmaceutical cure, nor does it officially declare itself capable of healing diseases. There are no exaggerated promises, no dramatic declarations of guaranteed recovery, and no attempt to replace legitimate medical science. It is simply a blended shake composed of numerous natural leaves rich in fiber, chlorophyll, plant nutrients, and natural compounds consumed by people who believe in nourishing the body through nature-based nutrition.


In many respects, the philosophy behind the Century Green Shake revolves around the belief that the human body, when consistently nourished with natural plant-based nutrition and protected from excessive toxins, may function better and maintain stronger overall wellness. The emphasis is not on promising impossible cures, but on promoting a lifestyle centered around prevention, discipline, and healthier living. It encourages people to become more mindful of what they consume daily and to appreciate the role of nature in supporting long-term health.


This distinction is extremely important. In an era where misinformation and false medical claims easily spread through social media, one must be careful not to romanticize or exaggerate the role of herbal food supplementation. The Century Green Shake is not being positioned as a miracle drug. Rather, it is being embraced by many as part of a broader lifestyle focused on conscious eating, increased plant intake, discipline, moderation, wellness-oriented living, and reducing the toxic burden brought about by unhealthy food consumption and modern lifestyle habits.


There was a time when people did not immediately run to pharmacies for every discomfort they felt. In many homes across the provinces of the Philippines, healing and nourishment often began in the backyard. A grandmother would quietly gather leaves from the garden early in the morning while dew still rested upon them. Guava leaves for cleansing, papaya leaves for digestion, Moringa for strength, pandan for comfort, banana leaves for freshness, and countless others that generations before us had already trusted long before modern laboratories existed. These practices were not born from trends or aggressive advertising. They emerged from observation, experience, culture, and the intimate relationship between man and nature.


In many rural communities, nature itself functioned almost like a silent pharmacy and nutritional source. Families understood the value of leaves, roots, fruits, herbs, and grasses not because of scientific journals, but because generations observed their effects over time. While modern science now rightfully demands clinical evidence, it is also true that many traditional wellness practices were born from centuries of lived human experience.


Today, modern science itself increasingly acknowledges the importance of nutrition, antioxidants, fiber, plant diversity, gut health, inflammation reduction, hydration, and lifestyle in supporting human wellness. Medical experts continuously remind society about the dangers of excessive processed food, unhealthy dietary patterns, sedentary lifestyles, stress, and toxic consumption habits. In this context, the renewed public interest in natural plant-based supplementation becomes understandable.


The growing interest in blended herbal leaf shakes and multi-leaf nutritional mixtures reflects a deeper longing among people to reconnect with simpler and more natural forms of nourishment. For many individuals, a blended mixture of diverse leaves is not viewed as medicine in the pharmaceutical sense, but rather as a concentrated form of plant nutrition derived directly from nature itself.


When carefully selected and properly prepared, many leaves contain nutrients that the body may benefit from. Leaves such as Moringa, guava, papaya, lemongrass, pandan, grasses, aloe vera, banana, jackfruit, and other edible greens contain varying amounts of fiber, antioxidants, chlorophyll, vitamins, minerals, and plant compounds that may contribute to overall wellness. In many ways, a blended leaf supplement resembles an intensified green vegetable intake, especially for people whose diets have become dominated by processed meals and insufficient plant consumption.


Some of the ingredients I encountered being discussed include leaves from banana, guava, papaya, jackfruit, aloe vera, grasses, gabi, corn, onion, avocado,mango, cactus, kangkong, ginger, sinkamas, camachile, balimbing, santol,macopa, grape, duhat, coconut, and many others carefully blended together into a high-fiber green shake. While not every leaf may be appropriate for excessive or long-term consumption without proper understanding, the general philosophy behind the practice centers on maximizing natural plant diversity as a source of nutritional support.


The appeal of these herbal food shake is understandable. Many individuals who consume them often describe feeling lighter, more energetic, more hydrated, and more conscious about their health. Some report improved digestion and bowel movement, while others simply appreciate the discipline of returning to a more plant-based lifestyle. Whether one fully embraces herbal wellness or remains cautiously observant, there is something undeniably valuable in encouraging people to consume more natural plant sources rather than excessive artificial substances.


And perhaps this is where the deeper lesson truly lies. Sometimes the transformation people experience may not come solely from the drink itself, but from the total lifestyle changes surrounding it. A person who begins consuming natural green shakes may also begin reducing processed food, increasing hydration, improving sleep, lowering sugar intake, becoming more physically active, developing a more positive outlook, and becoming more mindful about health. The combined effect of these lifestyle shifts may significantly influence overall wellness.


Critics sometimes immediately dismiss multi-leaf blends simply because they contain numerous ingredients. Yet humanity has long consumed combinations of plants in various forms. Salads, soups, teas, vegetable dishes, and traditional herbal preparations all contain multiple plant compounds interacting naturally within the body. Nature itself is diverse. A forest is not composed of one tree alone, and human nutrition has never historically depended on a single plant source. Diversity in plant intake has often been associated with broader nutritional exposure.


At the same time, wisdom must accompany enthusiasm. Herbal food supplements should not be viewed as magical cures capable of replacing proper medical care, balanced nutrition, or scientific diagnosis. Moderation remains essential. Responsible users understand that even natural products should be consumed thoughtfully and with proper knowledge. The true value of herbal supplementation lies not in exaggerated miracle claims, but in its role as part of a healthier and more conscious lifestyle.


Listening to the testimonies of those present at the Alternative Healing House, one cannot simply dismiss the human dimension behind their experiences. Whether viewed from the perspective of nutritional science, personal faith, psychological optimism, holistic wellness, or the body’s natural capacity to recover under healthier conditions, the stories themselves reflect a sincere search for hope and better living. Many of these individuals are not fanatics blindly rejecting medicine. Rather, they are ordinary people searching for ways to improve their quality of life through healthier eating habits and natural food intake.


What makes these blended leaf supplements meaningful for many people is not merely the ingredients themselves, but what they symbolize. They symbolize a return to nature in a world increasingly dominated by chemicals and synthetic consumption. They symbolize self-discipline, wellness awareness, moderation, and the belief that the body deserves nourishment drawn from the earth rather than constantly from factories. In many respects, these herbal blends represent an attempt by ordinary people to regain balance in modern living.


Perhaps that is why herbal food supplements continue to attract attention despite skepticism from some sectors. They remind people of a forgotten truth: that many of the resources for nourishment have always existed quietly around us in gardens, farms, trees, grasses, and leaves that generations before us once deeply respected. While science must continue to study and validate their effects carefully, it is also fair to recognize that the desire to seek wellness from nature is neither foolish nor primitive. It is deeply human.


Ultimately, the Century Green Shake may not be medicine, and perhaps it does not need to be. Its significance may lie in something more foundational. It encourages people to consume more natural plant-based nutrition, to become mindful of what enters their bodies, to embrace discipline in eating habits, and to rediscover the forgotten wisdom that nature itself still holds tremendous value in human wellness.


In the end, the conversation about blended herbal leaves should not be reduced to blind belief versus total rejection. The wiser perspective may be balance. When responsibly prepared, properly understood, and consumed with moderation, natural blended raw leaves may serve as supportive food supplements that encourage healthier living, increased plant intake, and greater awareness of the natural gifts surrounding humanity.


Sometimes, wellness does not begin in complexity. Sometimes, it begins quietly in the leaves.

#DJOT




________________

*About the author:

Dr. Rodolfo “John” Ortiz Teope is a distinguished Filipino academicpublic 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, managementeconomicsdoctrine 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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