Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Sympathy needed
Today whilst taking a shuttle from SGH to the Outram MRT, a heavily overweight man got up from the National Heart Centre. I don't know his name but did recognize him as an ex-colleague. He looked very much older than when I last saw him 7 years ago and can certainly be considered as obese. Instinctively I lowered my head to avert meeting his eyes as he occupied 2 seats in the small bus. Rightly or wrongly I thought he might feel embarrassed about his weight when meeting someone he knows . At the bus stop I was behind him whilst waiting for the senior people in front to take their time to alight. As he stepped down slowly one old man in the bus commented loudly "What a clumsy man". I was taken aback and gave the old man a dagger stare.
Of course the old man's behavior is not typical of the general public but I do get a feeling that most Singaporeans tend to be sympathetic only with people who are afflicted with physical illnesses (which they too may succumb when bad luck strikes) and less with people afflicted with mental disorder, addictions, differing sexual orientations or physical appearances out of the norm.
Not long ago at a gathering of friends the conversation turned to another friend who is suffering from depression and who did not show up. A remark was made by someone that if the depressed person chooses to be so inward looking and does not help himself by being more active socially no one could help him. Another person in the group was puzzled as to why someone can suffer from depression without a circumstantial trigger,ie. when things seem fine for him.
Generally there is a lack of sympathy when one is deemed to be not making sufficient effort to get better when it is within one's perceived ability to do so. Unfortunately this attitude is increasingly extended to physically ill people who may be accused of not having the will to fight the disease when they turn down more aggressive treatment options.
I guess the least we can do is not to be judgmental and if possible be patient and just be there for them. I should have acknowledged my ex-colleague with a smile.
Friday, September 26, 2014
In a trance from China TV dramas
I have a weakness for China made TV dramas in a historical setting especially those during the pre and post WWII China (in particular with CCP vs KMT conflict and civil war). Recently I watched 2 of such, "Red Dust" on Starhub and "Huang Yanpei" on dvd. Since both are made in China there is of course loads of KMT slandering. Refusing to adopt a more objective view, I just enjoyed believing that Chiang Kai Shek is a true villain.
Inevitably, however, I would walk away after these shows thinking about the lives of ordinary people in China during that era. Of course my perception is obtained mainly from such dramas and the limited modern Chinese history I took in school and may in no way represent the real facts. Nevertheless I am always kept pondering about the Chinese people who had to make decisions in 1949 whether to flee to Taiwan, HK and overseas or to remain in China. In particular I wonder how those intellectuals who remained (believing in the making of a better society under Communist rule) and later suffered the persecutions during the Cultural Revolution would have felt about the road they had chosen.
I imagined to myself 2 persons, one a corrupt official under KMT who amassed enough wealth to flee overseas versus perhaps an academician or engineer who remained in China to help rebuild a new country but who was later declared a counter revolutionist by the Red Guard and persecuted. If I were in the latter's shoes where my best intentions lead to disaster, what philosophy in life or approach I would need to adopt to lessen the feeling of painful injustice in destinies.
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Heritage trail
Last week my siblings and I made a short trip (out of nostalgia) to KL, the place where we grew up. It is quite amazing that the flat that we lived in still stands, though in a state of filthy grime and debilitation. Jalan Alor more than 50 years ago where I first touched foot as a child was a quiet dead end street with a row of 3-storey residential flats. From the balcony of our 3rd floor flat we could gaze at the moon above a durian tree, standing tall amongst other trees and undergrowth in a piece of unused land across the narrow street. Jalan Alor now is a busy food street lined with food stalls and listed in TripAdvisor as one of KL's top attractions. In addition to spending time sipping coffee at a coffee shop which gave us a direct view of our flat, we also climbed the filthy steps that led to the flat and took several pictures of its front and back. We were also enthusiastically sharing with my sister in law amusing anecdotes that happened in that neighborhood.
On the coach trip back to Singapore I began to daydream as usual. I thought of my mother, the centre of our universe within that unit. I could even feel her hopes, her worries and her dreams for her whole brood that pulsated within that abode. I reflected on how we have turned out and concluded that most of her worries were unnecessary but at the same time nothing which she tried so hard to plan could forestall some unpleasant experiences that befell us. In other words we have our own life destinies to follow.
Yet with the image of the flat lodged in my mind, I imagined what I would do to it. I felt the urge to clear the flat, empty everything in it, scrub away all the grime, suck out all the filth, pull down all fixtures, whitewash the empty walls, strengthen the pillars and rebuild a home.
Another day we also did a short heritage trail retracing by foot the route which my brother took to go to school and then continued on foot to the road where my father's shop was situated. St. John's institution still stands in all its grandeur on the hill top but in place of my father's shop is a boutique hotel. We joked that we should check into the exact room where the shop used to be, just to relive the presence of the past. There was and still is a western colonial cafe just opposite my father's shop. I had always wondered what the interior was like. Fifty over years of wondering materialised when we stepped in for coffee last week. We examined the old photos on its walls just to see whether our father's picture is amongst those faded yellow frames. My brother then chatted with the guy manning the counter who seemed to be the boss and discovered they were from the same alma mater. We also got from him the direction to the famous Ampang yong tau fu. Before we left we asked him whether he actually owned the cafe to which he retorted, "If I am the boss, I would be like you going places and looking for Ampang yang tau fu."
We also fantasized what we would have been had we remained in KL and not come back to Singapore. "Haha I might have married a Datok and became a Datin," I jested. However given the lack of equal opportunities, being a taxi driver or a hawker might not seem impossible or for that matter a cashier helping tourists find the famous Ampang yang tau fu.
Who Knows?
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
This too shall pass
Did a bit of counselling with a relative who is advanced in age and feeling lonely and distressed when his wife is hospitalised.
Sometimes when counselling people especially adults, the things I say occasionally bounce back into my consciousness as if an inner voice tells me I should respond to those words at my own personal level as well. So for instance when I asked my relative to recall a past worry that turned out to be totally unnecessary, an inner voice seemed to remind myself of the very same follies I made. Also when he called God a fake for not answering his prayers, I challenged him whether the things he prayed for were really the best solutions. This in turn makes me ask myself how certain I can be that the things I quietly wish for are really in my best interest too.
Then there is " The Story of My Life " which everyone has one and which can be so real and painful for each Ego that writes it. The stubbornly held beliefs, perceptions and memories, the unrelenting habitual emotions that may seem so blatantly logical to abandon; and yet so difficult to do so. I wonder how I would react when put to similar test and whether constant awareness and disciplined rational thinking can override emotional distress.
Witnessing the exhibit of deep hurt reminds me that endurance is so often called for in life.I got him to hold his palm over the pain he felt in his heart and I noticed the constriction eventually subsided for he suddenly began to engage me in mundane conversation.
I then make it a point to remember that no matter how difficult a situation " This too shall pass".
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