Every weave tells a story. For generations of Filipino weavers, each strand on the loom has carried history, identity, and pride. These artisans rise before dawn, sit before their looms, and let their hands speak in color and thread, each pattern a reflection of communities and cultures that refuse to fade.
Like the weavers, whose craft demands patience and an eye for detail, Captain Niel Siñel follows his own intricate sequence in the cockpit. Where the weaver pulls the strands tight and guides yarn through the loom, Siñel moves through switches and levers with the same deliberate attention. It’s a routine that the Cebu Pacific pilot lives by, knowing that precision is what keeps every flight safe.
“Before any aircraft is dispatched for flight, it has to meet stringent regulatory requirements to ensure that the highest level of safety is met in all aspects,” Siñel said, recalling his safety checklist. “Part of which also is to assess the weather if it satisfies the prescribed conditions, including that of the alternate airports.”
Because of his commitment to safety, Siñel was recognized as one of Cebu Pacific’s top-performing pilots, a distinction given to those who go above and beyond in serving passengers and providing them with reliable and comfortable flights.
As a symbol of honor, he and his fellow honorees received a special tie crafted in the Binakol weaving tradition of Ilocos Norte. Once reserved for important occasions, the Binakol tie now serves as a badge of excellence and inspiration for all other pilots of the airline.
Though their worlds rarely intersect, Filipino weavers and Cebu Pacific’s flight crew share the same devotion: to create meaningful stories and lasting memories for others. One weaves fabric, the other weaves journeys, but both do so with hands refined by craftsmanship, and hearts dedicated to excellence and service for every Juan.
Keeping Filipino Traditions Alive In-Flight
Inside the cabin, Cezzye Basa moves through her own ritual. She checks safety equipment, briefs her team, and straightens her scarf—a small gesture that signals she’s ready to welcome hundreds of passengers on board.
“I’ve been with CEB for 11 wonderful years,” Basa said, her smile reflecting the ease and confidence that come from more than a decade of service.
Like Siñel, Basa is one of Cebu Pacific’s top-performing cabin crew, and she was given a Ramit scarf featuring the traditional weave of Occidental Mindoro, woven with nature-inspired patterns passed down through generations. Like the Ramit’s distinctive bands, Basa’s service is marked by care and continuity—values she helps pass on to junior crew members.
“Sa CEB, we also have our own culture. We want to hand it down to our colleagues,” she said. “The service we provide our passengers is like how they make the weaves — meticulous, hindi lang nila binabara-bara.”
Siñel’s Binakol tie, with its unique patterns, for him reflects the threads that bind their identity together. “From how they make the weaves, it shows unity. It symbolizes pride, not only for me but also for my coworkers,” he said.
Like the Ramit and the Binakol, the skills and mindsets of Cebu Pacific’s flight crew are rooted in tradition but adapted for today—each flight a new pattern, each journey a fresh weave.
That sense of shared responsibility begins long before the doors close. In every preflight briefing, pilots and cabin crew align their goals, review safety measures, and check on one another. “On the perspective of a pilot, first we have to check ourselves. Not only me, but also our crew—we ask them if they’re ready to fly,” Siñel said. “Even though we have different jobs, we should be aligned on our intention. And it’s important for everybody, especially the crew.”
Basa believes in creating a safe and open environment where her team can thrive. “During our briefing, I like to create a fun environment,” she said. “Personally, if I feel na takot sila sa’yo, they’ll be rattled throughout the flight. So, I try to be friendly and approachable to my colleagues. But at the end of the day, safety is still the priority.”
Going Above and Beyond
Though they work in different spaces, Siñel in the cockpit and Basa in the cabin, their craft runs parallel. Both began their journeys for different reasons—Siñel to trade the long absences of military life for more time with his family, Basa to build a career rooted in service—but they are bound by the same discipline and purpose.
That unity becomes most visible during disruptions—storms and diversions—moments when training and empathy are tested. Basa recalls a particularly tense international flight, when severe weather forced a diversion to Clark. Passengers were upset at the crew, and resources were limited. “I felt helpless,” she said. “But now, we’ve become more innovative and adaptive. We have more resources, and we’re better at managing situations.”
For Siñel, these moments are where professionalism defines leadership. “Whatever happens in your flight, you must take it positively. We were trained for this, and we are ready in case something happens,” he said. “Most of the passengers are understanding, just let them know what is happening.”
Both also see themselves as custodians of Cebu Pacific’s culture—one woven from openness, service, and resilience. Wearing the uniform, Basa said, feels like carrying that culture visibly. “One quote that stuck to me during one of our monthly cascades is, ‘I am you, you are me.’ We represent each other. Whenever I’m in uniform, it’s not just me. We represent the company.”
For Siñel, the lesson came early on. “One of the senior captains told me that before you go to the flight line, you have to be 101% ready, because the life of your crew and the life of the passengers are entrusted to you—so you must be ready.”
This sense of duty is part of a larger culture, one that inspires crew members not just to be ready, but to go above and beyond in the service they provide. “For me, I don’t take it as a job that I have to do,” Basa said. “I go above and beyond because giving customer service is more than a job—it’s leaving a positive mark to our guests.”
Just as every weave tells a story, every flight carries hundreds of hopes and memories. In recognizing its top-performing pilots and cabin crew with the weaves, Cebu Pacific is not only honoring exceptional service—it is celebrating the artistry and culture behind it. From Ilocos Norte to Occidental Mindoro, from the loom to the sky, these weaves echo a shared commitment to skill, care, and continuity.
Each stance, gesture, and smile becomes a living thread in a fabric larger than any one flight, connecting tradition to tomorrow, and carrying the Filipino story forward.