You know it is there.
Your shirt knows it is there.
Your wife or partner has definitely noticed, even if they are kind enough not to say it at dinner.
The beer belly — that slow, patient, well-fed accumulation of fat around the abdomen that appears somewhere between your late 30s and the moment you stopped caring about your late 30s — is one of the most common and most ignored health issues among Filipino men.
And I say this as someone who has looked down and not seen his feet clearly in a while.
This is not about looking good at the beach, although that would be a fine bonus.
This is about what that belly is actually doing to you on the inside, and what you can realistically do about it without turning your life upside down.
The fat around your midsection is not just the soft kind sitting under your skin.
A significant portion of it is visceral fat — fat that wraps around your internal organs like the liver, pancreas, and intestines.
Unlike the fat on your arms or thighs, visceral fat is metabolically active (meaning it does things — bad things) and is directly linked to higher risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease, high blood presure, and stroke.
In that is further worsened in the Philippines because we have lechon, crispy pata, and rice always available.
| Waist Circumference | Health Risk Level for Asian Men |
| Below 90 cm (35.4 inches) | Normal range — maintain it |
| 90 cm to 99 cm | Elevated risk — time to take this seriously |
| 100 cm and above | High risk — see a doctor, not just a gym |
Asian men, including Filipinos, carry higher metabolic risk at lower waist measurements than Western benchmarks suggest.
The 90 cm threshold is the one that applies to us, not the 102 cm you might read on foreign websites. Measure at the widest part of your abdomen, not where you wish it was widest.
What You Can Actually Do
- Cut rice by one scoop per meal — not eliminate it, just reduce; this single change creates a meaningful caloric deficit without requiring willpower you probably do not have at 10pm
- Stop drinking your calories — one bottle of Red Horse is roughly 200 calories; three bottles at a Friday drinking session is 600 calories of pure carbohydrate with zero nutrition
- Walk for 30 minutes daily — not jog, not gym, just walk; consistent moderate movement reduces visceral fat more reliably than occasional intense workouts
- Sleep seven to eight hours — poor sleep raises cortisol (the stress hormone), which directly signals your body to store fat in the abdomen; this one is underrated and free
- Eat protein at every meal — fish, eggs, chicken, tofu; protein keeps you full longer and preserves muscle mass while you lose fat
- Get your waist measured and your blood sugar checked — a fasting blood glucose test at any Davao clinic costs PHP 150 to PHP 300 and tells you whether this has already become a medical issue
Nobody is asking you to become a different person.
But that belly is a slow-moving health risk that Filipino men have a remarkable talent for ignoring until it becomes a crisis.
You do not have to fix everything at once.
Pick two things from the list above and do them consistently for thirty days.
Then see a doctor and get your numbers checked — blood sugar, cholesterol, blood pressure.
A basic metabollic panel at SPMC or any Davao clinic costs PHP 500 to PHP 1,200.
Know your numbers.
Then decide what to do with them.
The belly did not appear overnight.
It will not leave overnight either.
But it will leave, if you actually start doing something about it.
DISCLAIMER
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Please consult a licensed physician before beginning any diet or exercise program.