Kenny’s Realty

Kenny’s Realty A Real Estate Sales Person of RCD Pearl Homes Realty, Inc.

The 5 F’s of life — Fitness, Finance, Faith, Family, and Friends — all have biblical foundations.For Fitness, 1 Corinthi...
22/10/2025

The 5 F’s of life — Fitness, Finance, Faith, Family, and Friends — all have biblical foundations.

For Fitness, 1 Corinthians 6:19 reminds us:

‘Do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit?’
So we must honor God by taking care of our bodies.

For Finance, Jesus said in Matthew 6:21:

‘For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.’
And 1 Timothy 6:10 reminds us that
‘The love of money is the root of all evil.’
Money itself isn’t the problem — it’s our attachment to it.

For Faith, Matthew 6:33 says:

‘Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you.’
And 2 Timothy 2:7 adds:
‘Consider what I say; and the Lord give thee understanding in all things.’
Faith is our compass — it directs all other areas of life.

For Family, 1 Timothy 5:8 teaches:

‘If anyone does not provide for his own, especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.’
Family responsibility is a mark of true faith.

And finally, for Friends, 1 Corinthians 15:33 warns us:

‘Do not be misled: bad company corrupts good character.’
Our circle influences our direction — choose your company wisely.

May you live balanced in all your 5 F’s: Fitness, Finance, Faith, Family, and Friends.

Torres Farm and Resort, Naic Cavite

26/09/2025
Kumuha ka ng rentals, kahit anong paraan. Kahit konti lang, ibang level na ang takbo ng buhay mo pati pamilya mo. Wala t...
26/09/2025

Kumuha ka ng rentals, kahit anong paraan. Kahit konti lang, ibang level na ang takbo ng buhay mo pati pamilya mo. Wala talagang tatalo dito kasi sobrang daming benepisyo. Ang pinakamalupit pa, pera ng iba ang gamit mo para gawin ’to.

26/09/2025
WHY FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE MATTERS MORE THAN HIGH INCOMEMost people assume the path out of money stress is a bigger payche...
09/09/2025

WHY FINANCIAL DISCIPLINE MATTERS MORE THAN HIGH INCOME

Most people assume the path out of money stress is a bigger paycheck. That’s comforting but incomplete. Income is obvious; discipline is invisible. You can double your salary and still live paycheck to paycheck if you let every increase become an excuse to spend more. Financial discipline, by contrast, turns any income level into a foundation for freedom.

Discipline is the set of daily habits that decide whether you keep wealth or let it leak away: automated saving, delayed gratification, budgeting that reflects priorities instead of impulses, and steady reinvestment of surplus. These habits compound. A disciplined person with a modest income builds a buffer, grows assets, and gains optionality. A high earner without discipline builds stress, liability, and fragile status.

Here’s the practical truth: discipline buys time and choice. It creates a runway for risk, courage to invest, and peace when markets wobble. Discipline allows you to say no to lifestyle inflation, to treat raises as leverage rather than reward, and to convert small wins into durable wealth.

Do this now:

1. Automate first, pay yourself before you spend. Set transfers the moment money hits your account.

2. Build a 3-month emergency buffer, then accelerate to six months, this is non-negotiable stability.

3. Track one metric for 30 days (net worth, savings rate, or monthly cash flow) and improve it weekly by tiny margins.

4. Reinvest X% of any extra income into income-generating skills or assets before you upgrade comforts.

5. Use accountability: share goals with one person who will call you on it.

Income can open doors. Discipline keeps them open. Choose the slow, steady architecture of habits over the false glamour of higher pay without a plan. True financial freedom isn’t found in a bigger paycheck, it’s built in the way you protect, grow, and steward what you already have.

How to invest based on age.
09/09/2025

How to invest based on age.

📣REOPEN! READY FOR OCCUPANCY. Paragon Village Cabuco Trece Martires.Along hiway. Katabi ng bagong kapitolyo.Paunahan po ...
26/06/2025

📣REOPEN! READY FOR OCCUPANCY. Paragon Village Cabuco Trece Martires.

Along hiway. Katabi ng bagong kapitolyo.

Paunahan po ito. Reopen on June 30, 9AM

Requirements:
2 valid ids
1 month payslip or job contract

PASALO ‼️ PASALO‼️🏡🏠🏡 DIRECT TO OWNER‼️340K 🔥🏠CITADEL RESIDENCES PHASE 2Brgy Uwisan Calamba LagunaRight of way to Mamati...
01/02/2025

PASALO ‼️ PASALO‼️🏡🏠🏡 DIRECT TO OWNER‼️
340K 🔥

🏠CITADEL RESIDENCES PHASE 2
Brgy Uwisan Calamba Laguna
Right of way to Mamatid Road

Inner Lot Baretype turn over
44 sqm floor area
36 sqm lot area
17 months PAID Updated to Pag ibig
₱6,297 monthly amortization (30 years term)
due date is every 1st day of the month
HOME EQUITY (PAID NA PO)

✓Never pa po natirhan
✅MOVE-IN FEE (PAID NA) kaya anytime pwede na tirhan o lipatan
✅Electricity/Kuryente (PAID)
Water (Si buyer na lang po magpapakabit ng tubig para sa kanya nkapangalan)

Reason for sale: Dalawa po bahay ng owner, wala pong titira diyan 😊

For interested PM me po. Thank you.😊❤️

GONG XI FA CAI! 🎆Wishing you a year filled with good luck, prosperity and success, Kapatid!
29/01/2025

GONG XI FA CAI! 🎆

Wishing you a year filled with good luck, prosperity and success, Kapatid!

27/01/2025
WHY BUILDING DREAM HOUSES BACK HOME IS A MISTAKEFor many Filipinos living abroad, especially in North America, there’s a...
27/01/2025

WHY BUILDING DREAM HOUSES BACK HOME IS A MISTAKE

For many Filipinos living abroad, especially in North America, there’s a common dream: to build a big, beautiful house back home. It’s a symbol of success, a way to show family and friends in the Philippines that all the years of sacrifice have paid off. But more often than not, this dream benefits others more than the person who worked so hard to make it happen.

Take Victoria, a caregiver in Toronto. She left the Philippines in her 30s to work abroad, dreaming of building a big house for her family in her homeprovince of Ilocos Sur. Over the years, Victoria sent most of her earnings back home to construct a two-story, six-bedroom house with a balcony overlooking the fields. The house was her pride and joy, something she imagined retiring to someday.

But Victoria never got to live in that house. Her siblings moved in to "look after it," enjoying its cool breeze, spacious rooms, and fresh paint. Victoria, meanwhile, stayed in a cramped apartment in Toronto, working long hours to pay bills and send more money home for repairs and maintenance.

She visited every few years, but only for short vacations. By the time Victoria was ready to retire, almost 20 years had passed. The house was no longer as grand as she imagined. The paint had faded, the furniture was worn, and cracks had started to show in the walls. Worse, Victoria, now in her 60s, was diagnosed with colon cancer. She passed away before she could even book her flight back to Philippines.

It’s not just Victoria’s story. Many Filipinos abroad sacrifice their present for a future that may never come. Take Juan, another Ilocano working as a warehouse supervisor in Vancouver. He spent 12 years building a nine-bedroom house in Ilocos Sur. He planned to retire there, but in the meantime, his cousins lived in the house. They held parties, enjoyed the comforts, and even rented out some rooms to neighbors.

Juan worked tirelessly, ignoring his health, and delayed medical check-ups. By the time he was diagnosed with lung cancer, it was too late. He passed away at 55, never setting foot in the house he worked so hard to build. His wife and children, who had no plans of returning to the Philippines, sold the property.

So why do we do this? For many Filipinos, building a house back home is tied to pride and societal expectations. It’s about showing the neighbors and relatives that “I made it.” But at what cost?

When you finally return home in your old age, what will you do with a massive house? At 65 or 70, you’ll likely want something simple and easy to manage. Maintaining a mansion—cleaning the rooms, repairing the roof, or paying for electricity—can become a burden, not a joy.

Compare this to retirees in North America. When they grow older, they downsize to smaller homes or retirement communities where life is simpler. Yet many Filipinos choose the opposite: they live modestly abroad and pour all their resources into a house they’ll barely use.

The lesson here is simple. Life is short and unpredictable. Plan for the future, but don’t forget to live today. Instead of building a mansion that others will enjoy, why not invest in experiences, health, or financial security that you and your family can benefit from right now?

As the saying goes, "A good home isn't about being big; it's about being happy with the people living in it."
So, while dreaming of Philippines, don’t forget to make the most of your life wherever you are. Live wisely, live fully, and don’t let your dreams become someone else’s reality.

thanks from

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