Friday, September 11, 2015

Being and Breathing, WSPW 2015

“We are surrounded by other people and that each person is living a story and every single story has questions and pain of its own. If we only ever think about ourselves and our drama, we will miss the priceless privilege of stepping into the stories around us. We have to fight to not get lost in our own pain. We have to fight to remember the good, the things we love around us, the things not lost, the things that we are thankful for. Don’t buy the lie that your story is just a tragedy. And don’t buy the lie that you are the only character in your story.” – Jamie Tworkowski, If You Feel Too Much

It’s hard to know where to begin, whether in conversation with someone or with yourself.  But that’s always the first step. This week was a hard week for me. It started out troubled, frustrated and confused and I’m not quite sure if it improved as the week went by or if work distractions and commitments led me to indifference and apathy.

But it’s only now on this long weekend that I feel the hollowness inside. When I have a moment of stillness, my thoughts echo through me and remind me tenfold that I’m not as strong and brave as I hope and wish to be. But I’m still here, and each inhale and exhale means that I’m still breathing. We do what we can to get through the days, whether that’s work, exercise, coffee, long walks, medication, friends, family, quiet moments, therapy, crying, laughing… Most days I feel really alone here and the listlessness, loneliness and depression can become overwhelming. It clouds my perspective and makes remembering why I’m still here a struggle. It makes me forget how lucky and grateful I am for the community and friends I am surrounded by, even if we are continents apart. It is those people that always bring me back to myself. People need each other. Each sunrise is different, and we have to see every one. I’ll be the first to tell you that I don’t always believe what I say, that I forget that other people are their own stories with their own struggles and I am their community too. But I try even if some days are much harder than others. People need each other, and perhaps it is in the dark that we find in each other comfort, companionship, understanding and trust.

This past week has been World Suicide Prevention Week, and it’s probably just me that never noticed that it falls at the same time as September 11, so let’s just take a moment to remember everyone who’s been lost, directly and indirectly from that day and its aftermath. As I go through this period pulled between two different places, it seems like it’s more prevalent than ever to remember that you and I are not alone. Hurt and pain is different for everyone but the story is universal, even if no one talks about it.


I can imagine how heavy hearts were present this week, for all the mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, grandparents, nieces, nephews and best friends lost before they should have. It’s okay to have bad days, even if those bad days stretch on for weeks or months or years. Whenever my nephew starts crying, I often find myself telling him that it’s okay and that I’m right there for him. There are people here for you, and I am one of them.

Sunday, March 29, 2015

An Open Letter to My Passport Country on the Passing of its Founding Father

I've never pretended to know (or let's be honest, to care very much) about Singapore or it's history; my thoughts and relationship with this country have always been complicated. But it's hard to deny the opportunities this place has offered me and how very different my life would be if this country wasn't the country of influence and prospect that it is. I have been so fortunate that a life of opportunity and experience is all that I have known, all of which Singapore owes to the late Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew and his leadership.

I've learned more about Lee Kuan Yew this week than I have in my entire life and though Singapore's founding father and first Prime Minister might have been seen as many things, some good, some bad, there is no denying or ignoring all of his work and influence in making Singapore the first world political, economic and cultural powerhouse it is today. It's amazing how much power and influence one tiny little nation can hold. My experiences in Singapore and my relationship with it sometimes leaves a bad taste in my mouth, but if I'm being honest, the influence this country has had on my family and upbringing can never be replaced. Because of the economic and educational changes Mr Lee first envisioned and implemented, my parents were given the chance of a full education and the ability to freely move to wherever they desired. Because of those opportunities, my parents were able to give me the chance to live pretty much comfortably in three different countries and complete tertiary education overseas debt free (among many other things). I can't even begin to imagine what my life would be like if Singapore hadn't been transformed into the first world country it is. Singapore as it is now is all I've known it to be and I forget that this country is a mere 50 years old - my parents were young children when Singapore's independence was announced and they remember a very different Singapore to the one that I was born into.

With birth inevitably comes death and even the best of us succumb to the great unknown eventually. Saying goodbye when you leave something is never easy, and saying goodbye to someone you know you won't see again is even harder. I can't even imagine having to say goodbye to a parent in front of a whole country, but also having to say goodbye and honour him as a country's Prime Minister, as opposed to a son. My heart tightened each time Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong called his father "Mr Lee" instead of "papa". I joined my family in watching Mr Lee's body being moved from the Istana to Parliament House on Wednesday, as well as his funeral procession today as it passed by Tanjong Pagar GRC (where my family lives is a part of that GRC, and it was formerly led by Mr Lee) and even a cold heartless person like me was moved to tears on both occasions. As his body went by me on Wednesday, I said a prayer to guide him to paradise, and I haven't said a prayer in years that isn't the automatic and ingrained grace before each meal. I've lived away from this country for over 10 years, only coming back for short visits, and more often than not, I feel like a foreigner in my own passport country, but this tragic and sombre occasion and its significance was not lost on me.

I have never seen a country come together this significantly as Singapore has this week. Mourners lining up for hours on end for a chance to pay their last respects to Mr Lee; businesses and volunteers handing out free food and water for people waiting in line; people sheltering strangers from rain and heat; taxi drivers offering free rides in honour of Mr Lee; Singapore's transport system assembling 24/7 transport services in minutes; local and overseas companies with offices in Singapore allowing their employees time off from work to pay their respects; stores closing, choosing to honour and respect Mr Lee over economic opportunity, and much more... What a 180 from people verbally and physically assaulting each other over Hello Kitty toys. On one hand, it's disappointing that it takes such a tragedy to bring this nation together. But on the other hand, this unity is just more evidence of the incredible impact that Mr Lee has had.

In Lee Hsien Loong's eulogy at his father's funeral today, he recounted a story about Mr Lee's experience with meditation, how when he was told to relax and let go of his mind, Mr Lee asked, "but what will happen to Singapore if I let go?" Well, Mr Lee, keep that unwavering faith and belief in the country and community you have created, but most of all have faith in the children that you raised. You have much to be proud of. Rest in paradise and peace, dance into the heaviside layer.

Majulah Singapura, and thank you Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

Sunday, February 22, 2015

I Will Regret This In The Morning

I Will Regret This In The Morning - Danielle Shorr

I will regret this in the morning
But I will do it anyway
My impulsivity often overpowers my conscience
Yet I am almost always fully aware
Of the decisions I make
And their consequences
I am not exactly mentally stable
But I am sane enough
To know right from wrong
Yesterday from Today
Love from lust
Although sometimes I mix them up
I have a tendency to lunge at any pair of arms that open for me
My mind and body often disagree
My body saying yes to eager hands
My mind saying no
Constantly looking towards my heart
Thinking how stupid one must be
To fall repeatedly
Get hurt every single time
And still manage to do the same
Over
And over
Again
I wonder
How many times I will have to hit the ground
In order to learn to stop falling face first
I often say things
That should be left unsaid
I often do things
That should not be done
Sleep in beds unfamiliar
Make believe love to strangers
Get to know people who will not remember be tomorrow
I am gone as quickly as the hangover
I can be washed off the tongue
Just as quickly as the liquor
I often believe I am capable of inciting change
I kiss temporary lips with permanence
Hoping that I can train them to stay
I love temporary people with permanence
Hoping that I can train them not to leave
And when they do
I claim to have seen it coming
I am incapable of forgetting
A scrapbook memory of skin and heartbeat
Of touch and moments
I know not to look directly into the eyes
For they can be blinding
And I still
Do it anyway
I know of the risks that shouldn't be taken
Well aware of their consequences
And I still
Take them anyway
You could say
It is my own fault
For the way that things continue to turn out
But I can make no promises of apology
Instead
I will live momentarily
Fuck up intentionally
Love recklessly
Fall unguarded
Break enough times to learn how to put myself back together
Crash into concrete enough times to learn how to shift a crooked smile
Into something worth seeing
I have been told that a life lived in fear
Is hardly a life lived at all
So I intend to live every second
Like it is the last one I will have
I will write each night as it happens
Narrate my own stories
And hope they turn out okay
I will regret this in the morning
But I will do it anyway.


Tuesday, January 13, 2015

How To Leave When You're Not Ready

1) Pick the harshest time in Ithaca to leave: winter.

2) Pick a time period where no one is around and you couldn't say goodbye to a lot of people before said time period because everyone is stressed and freaking out about assignments and exams: finals week and winter break.

3) Leave packing to the last minute.

4) Cry unstoppably while you pack at the last minute.

5) Cry about having left packing to the last minute because you have so much to pack or throw out.

6) Cry about how much shit you've amassed and how it happened without you even realizing it.

7) Take periodic breaks to watch all 10 seasons of Friends.

8) Put off looking for flights for two months.

9) Book your flight just over a week before it leaves.

10) Cry while you book your one-way plane ticket.

11) Continue crying as you pack three and a half years of your life into two suitcases, a duffle bag and two boxes.

12) Cry as you eat your weight in Ben & Jerry's while "taking a break" from packing.

13) Fantasize about staying in Ithaca. Get excited.

14) Fantasize about leaving Ithaca. Get excited.

15) Cry again because you realize you have no idea what you're doing with your life.

16) Leave making arrangements to the last minute because you refuse to think too much about leaving.

17) Write a blog post about it.

Basically if there are a lot of tears involved, you should be all set.