All Content from Business Insider 07月28日 09:00
Their lives used to revolve around city traffic. They gave it up to build an island home in the Philippines for $85,000.
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一对夫妇Matthew Straight和April Pasilang放弃了喧嚣的城市生活,在菲律宾保和岛(Bohol)上建造了一个离网(off-grid)家园。他们花费约8.5万美元建造了这座包含客房、池塘和菜园的房产。搬到保和岛让他们重新掌控了自己的时间,减少了对物质的依恋。曾经在宿务市(Cebu City)饱受交通噪音困扰的他们,如今享受着宁静、自给自足的田园生活,并通过YouTube频道分享他们的经历,其乐融融。

🏡 逃离喧嚣,拥抱自然:Matthew Straight和April Pasilang夫妇从菲律宾宿务市的嘈杂交通中解脱出来,选择在保和岛(Bohol)建造了一个离网家园。他们花费约8.5万美元,拥有了一个包含两居室主屋、一居室客房、池塘和菜园的房产,彻底告别了过去无法开窗的城市生活。

🌱 自给自足,绿色生活:为了最大限度地实现自给自足,他们为房屋配备了雨水储存系统和太阳能电池板,并积极种植蔬菜,如茄子、秋葵和辣椒。未来还计划养鸡和在池塘里养殖罗非鱼,以减少对全球供应链的依赖。

🤝 淳朴社区,人情味浓:与宿务市的冷漠形成鲜明对比,保和岛的社区氛围温暖而互助。他们与邻居们分享自家花园的产出和自制食物,感受到邻里间的善意、体贴和慷慨,这种紧密的社区联系是他们在城市生活中未曾体验过的。

🧘‍♀️ 慢节奏生活,找回自我:离开城市后,他们能够按照自己的节奏生活,不再为待办事项和交通烦恼。每天早晨,他们会在花园中悠闲地喝咖啡,根据花园的需求安排日常活动。这种生活方式让他们重新掌控了时间,减少了对物质的执念,并显著改善了心理健康。

💡 重新定义幸福:Matthew Straight在母亲因病去世后,深刻反思了时间的价值,认识到与家人共度时光比单纯的物质追求更重要。搬到菲律宾后,他有意识地购买真正需要的物品,并与April Pasilang一起通过YouTube频道记录他们的离网生活,这种生活方式让他们在简单的日常中找到了与过去获得同样甚至更强烈的满足感。

Matthew Straight and April Pasilang swapped city living for an off-grid home on Bohol, an island in the Philippines.

When Matthew Straight and April Pasilang lived in Cebu City, the oldest city in the Philippines, the constant hum of traffic made it hard to slow down.

"We didn't really ever get to open a window. It was always closed," Straight, 46, told Business Insider.

Straight, who grew up in New Zealand, met Pasilang, now 44, in the Philippines in 2016 while working in the fitness industry. In July 2024, he moved from his base in Australia to Cebu City to be closer to her.

The bustle of city life got old fast.

When they lived in Cebu City, the traffic noise meant they rarely opened their windows.

Straight had always thought about living off-grid in the countryside, but he didn't think Pasilang would be interested.

"When he mentioned it, it was like, oh my God, I wanted that too," Pasilang, a yoga instructor, told BI. She grew up on the outskirts of Cebu City, where space was plentiful and her family grew their own crops, and she longed for that kind of simplicity again.

They didn't plan to leave Cebu City, but a two-night trip to Bohol, an island about two hours by ferry, changed everything.

The couple built their off-grid home on a piece of land they bought in Bohol, an island about two hours away from Cebu, in the Philippines.

They stumbled upon a piece of land they liked in a small town called Corella. Although it was only about a 15-minute drive from a large market and mall, the area was quiet, with few neighbors, and just a short drive to the beach. They bought it on a whim.

"I thought it would happen maybe in five years or something. It never crossed my mind that it would happen so quickly," Pasilang said.

Building an off-grid home

The couple paid 1.3 million Philippine pesos, or about $23,000, for the plot of land, which measures about 15,500 square feet. In October, they broke ground on the construction of their off-grid home.

Straight drew a simple floor plan, and the couple worked with local architects and builders to design their new place.

The property includes a two-bedroom, two-bathroom main residence and a one-bedroom, one-bathroom guest house.

The two-bedroom, two-bathroom main residence was designed with an open plan layout to maximize natural light and airflow. Steps away, a separate one-bedroom guest house offers a comfortable stay for visiting family and friends.

Outside, there's a pool, a vegetable garden, and a pond — plenty of space for the couple to grow their own food and unwind.

Hoping to be as self-sustainable as possible, the couple outfitted the house with rainwater storage tanks and a solar panel system.

"We don't want to be at the whim of global supply chain issues," Straight said.

They spent 4.84 million Philippine pesos on building the property, which included the costs of their appliances, furniture, fencing, drainage, and their solar energy system.

They moved in in April.

Hoping to be self-sustainable, the couple also outfitted the house with rainwater storage tanks and solar panels.

"Now we're getting the veggie gardens going," Straight said. "We just picked some eggplants, okra, and chilies in the morning."

The couple also has plans to buy some chickens and raise tilapia fish in their pond for their own consumption.

They've grown close to several neighbors, often stopping by with extra produce from their garden or homemade treats, like Pasilang's banana bread.

Among the familiar faces is a 75-year-old woman who runs a small convenience store where kids from the nearby elementary school stop by to buy snacks.

"Then there's another neighbor who's 83 and fit as a fiddle. He walks around carrying big bottles of water, and he's ripped," Straight said.

The couple worked with local architects and builders, and the house was completed in about half a year.

The sense of community is unlike what they experienced in Cebu City, or even in Australia, where Straight lived for more than 10 years.

"Everyone looks out for each other here. They're just so kind and thoughtful and generous, even if they don't have much," he said. "And you reciprocate that."

Their friends from Cebu drop by regularly, and the couple says they've also connected with new people through their homestead-focused YouTube channel — a hobby they picked up when they started building their home.

Living with intention

Moving away from the city has allowed the couple to live at their own pace.

Apart from growing their own vegetables, they're also hoping to raise tilapia fish in their pond.

"We wake up, open the sliding doors, put a pot of coffee on, and take a look at the garden. We just decide what to do based on what needs to be done in the garden, like filling up the garden beds," Pasilang said.

In the afternoons, Straight does online nutrition consulting work, and once he's finished, the couple brainstorms ideas for their YouTube channel.

They're no longer rushing from place to place, worrying about their to-do lists.

"Everything was always go, go, go and structured, because you really have to time it due to the traffic," Straight said.

It's all in line with their goal to slow down and lead a more purposeful life, especially for Straight.

Leaving the city has allowed them to reclaim their time.

Back in Australia, Straight juggled multiple jobs: managing a gym, running a taco business, and overseeing a café. He also owned several rental properties.

Losing his mother to pancreatic cancer in 2017 shifted his outlook. Straight traveled back and forth between Australia and New Zealand to spend time with her while she was sick.

"I thought, gosh, I'm having to leave her to go back to a job — where I'm just exchanging time for money, which will come and go — instead of spending time with my mom," he said.

The experience made him realize that he wanted control over his time. After reassessing his priorities, Straight saw that he could live with less and be happier for it.

When he moved to the Philippines, he only had three boxes and two suitcases.

"It was actually quite therapeutic, getting rid of all my stuff and then coming to the Philippines and buying things intentionally — quality stuff that's not going to just be thrown away in a year's time," Straight said.

They haven't found any downsides to their new life yet. "We have everything we had in Cebu but with a much easier, slower-paced life," he added.

Apart from being less attached to material things, the couple says their lifestyle change has improved their mental health.

"When you get a text message or you're checking social media, you get that dopamine reaction in your brain," Straight said. "But now, we get the same thing by going out to the garden and seeing that the okra has grown an inch in a day."

Do you have a story to share about building your dream home in Asia? Contact this reporter at agoh@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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