Overdue post: my poem, “Horrorshow”, is in A Luxury We Cannot Afford: An Anthology of Singapore Poetry, edited by Christine Chia and Joshua Ip and published by Math Paper Press.
Check out the review of the anthology by Prof Philip Holden here.
The Official Website of Laremy Lee (李庭辉)
I didn’t have anything textual or visual to add to the conversation.
So I went down the aural route instead; I created a playlist I call “Ozymandias”.
Listen to it here on YouTube.
Interestingly, none of the artists that came to mind when creating it were Singaporean…
About 10 days ago, a new and younger friend asked me what the 10 most important lessons I learnt in my 20s were.
We were walking to the train station from Empress Place, so I only managed to come up with three lessons before we parted ways.
While sitting on the train on the way home, I realised I really only needed three lessons for two reasons:
I wish I had known these three things earlier, or at least have someone tell me what to do and how to do it – then I wouldn’t have felt like I was floundering at some points in time in my 20s.
But, hey – better late than never, and I’d like everyone to benefit from this too.
So, ladies and gentlemen, the three most important life lessons I learnt in my 20s:
If you have the time, here they are, fleshed out in detail:
If you can’t value yourself, figure out what’s stopping you from loving yourself.
Perhaps you’re a manic-depressive or you lack self-confidence. Then talk to a mental health professional. It’s OK to not be OK, but it’s not OK to not help yourself.
Let me reframe this for you: We visit doctors whenever we’re physically unwell, so there’s no shame in visiting a counseller if you’re mentally unwell. Figuratively speaking, they’re both mechanics – but for different things.
Feeling fat? Exercise and lose weight.
Friends are messing you up? Stop hanging out with them. Cut them off or don’t meet with them so much. Join activities where you can make new friends who’ll be healthier for you.
Ultimately, you don’t need toxic people or people who don’t add value to your life to bring you down.
Your boss is making you work on weekends without compensation (time off, overtime pay, etc.)? Tell your boss you don’t do weekends, and stick to it.
Or find a new job that values your skill and pays you more, without you having to spend precious “you” time doing work that should be done on weekdays.
Most importantly, learn to say “no”.
Again, if you value yourself enough, this will come easily; you’ll be less inclined to commit yourself to emotional vampires or productivity thieves – things or people who steal precious time and energy from you.
Stop hoarding that shit already, yo!
But how do I go about doing that?, you ask. Well, ask yourself the difficult questions you’ve been shying away from all these years, such as:
But how do I find the answers to that?, you ask. Well, use this litmus test:
So that friend or family member who adds completely no value to your life? Cut her or him off.
That mug which you haven’t drank from and which you probably won’t use because you have five other mugs like it? Chuck it out.
That lesson p- What are you doing keeping hard copies of lesson plans when they should be in soft copy and filed away in the folder system GP>2009>Term 3>Week 4>Lesson 1?
Again, there were other lessons I learnt too, such as why it’s important to:
But as I’ve always maintained: Focus on the fundamentals and work on the root problems first, before going on to improve the other things.
Hence, remember to always value yourself, set boundaries and let go.
(Background music: “Nothing Better” by The Postal Service)