Why Crimes Rise During the Christmas Season—and How to Avoid Them

When Christmas shines with money and noise, peace fades. Remember who it’s for.

Every Christmas, the Philippines glows brighter—but crime rates also climb. It’s a pattern that repeats every year, and the reasons aren’t hard to see.

Why it happens:

• Money everywhere.
December means bonuses, 13th-month pay, and cash-heavy streets. Criminals know people carry more money than usual.

• Financial pressure.
Some struggle to keep up with the season’s expectations—gifts, parties, travel—so temptation kicks in.

• Crowded and distracted.
Malls, terminals, and markets are packed. Perfect cover for thieves and pickpockets.

• Overconfidence.
The “Christmas spirit” makes people relax their guard—phones out, bags open, houses unlocked.

• Alcohol and parties.
Holiday drinking often leads to fights, accidents, or reckless behavior.

• Opportunity mindset.
Law enforcers get spread thin during the holidays. Small streets and residential areas end up less guarded.

• Return of old offenders.
Some ex-offenders return to their old habits when they can’t find work or feel excluded from the season’s joy.

• Scams and online fraud.
December is peak time for fake online shops, phishing, and parcel scams. Everyone’s buying, so everyone’s a target.

• Transport chaos.
Crowded terminals and traffic jams create confusion—perfect for pickpockets and bag switching.

• Emotional triggers.
Loneliness or jealousy can push unstable individuals to act out when they see others celebrating.

• Weak neighborhood watch.
Many families travel, leaving homes empty and easy to break into.

What criminals should remember:

If you’re thinking of stealing this Christmas, remember—you’re not just taking money. You’re stealing peace, joy, and trust from families who worked hard for it. You might fill your pocket, but you’ll empty your soul.

You don’t need to choose that path. There’s always another way. Every street vendor, delivery rider, and jeepney driver proves that honest work still feeds the table. Christmas is meant to change hearts, not harden them. So before you do wrong, think of the Child in the manger—He was born with nothing, yet He gave everything.

How to stay safe:

• Carry only what you need.

• Avoid crowded or dimly lit areas when possible.

• Don’t flash gadgets or thick wallets.

• Keep homes locked and lights on.

• Be alert with online purchases and delivery texts.

• Spend wisely—love doesn’t need a price tag.

When we remember that Christmas is about Christ, not cash, the noise fades—and peace takes over the streets again.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Merely Christmas • Darem Placer
Out this season on Bandcamp.

The Quiet Crisis Before Retirement

The common worries people feel before retirement, and how this stage eventually comes to everyone.

Lately, I’ve been curious about something I’ve seen in other people—the quiet crisis that appears before retirement. It’s not dramatic. It usually begins with a small question in their mind: “What happens after all of this?” And watching them face it makes you realize that sooner or later, every one of us will reach that same turning point.

You can see how long-time workers start to shift inside. They’ve spent years carrying responsibilities, solving problems, and being the steady presence everyone depends on. So when retirement comes into view, the whole idea feels unfamiliar. Not frightening, not sad—just a different rhythm they haven’t tried before.

Then the deeper questions follow.

What will my days look like?
Will I still feel useful?
Who am I when the routine slows down?

People call this a pre-retirement crisis. It’s not a breakdown. It’s the heart adjusting after decades of structure and purpose. When someone has poured so much of their life into work, stepping away from that rhythm naturally creates a pause.

But retirement isn’t an ending. It’s a shift in tempo. A season where people can choose their own pace, their own mornings, and their own kind of purpose. They don’t lose themselves—they just begin shaping a personal chapter that’s been waiting in the background for years.

Maybe this whole phase is life giving them space to prepare for that new chapter—one that finally belongs to them after giving so much to everyone else.

Old • Darem Placer

Thoughts drift like clouds across a fading sky—until I find myself in a quiet room—Alone With a Piano.

Listen to Alone With a Piano on Apple Music and YouTube Music

Alone with a Piano includes Old.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ