• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Lao Chiobu Entrepreneur say…u will not have a life in Singapore despite you earn well, why hah??

k1976

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
May 16, 2023
Messages
46,350
Points
113
fcff3cd4-3acc-4947-9531-fc4b5d6f7c83.jpg
'You will never have a life in Singapore' — Former SG resident of 20 years says, 'Everything is just fake' (@jenn_balute/Instagram)
OPINION
3 min.Read

‘You will never have a life in Singapore’ — Former SG resident of 20 years says, ‘Everything is just fake’​


Nick Karean
ByNick Karean
May 1, 2026

https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php...ent-of-20-years-says-everything-is-just-fake/
https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?te...just-fake/&via=The+Independent+Singapore+News
https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=...ent-of-20-years-says-everything-is-just-fake/
https://www.linkedin.com/shareArtic...t+of+20+years+says,+‘Everything+is+just+fake’
https://telegram.me/share/url?url=h...t+of+20+years+says,+‘Everything+is+just+fake’


arrow_forward_ios
Read More


Play
00:00
00:37
Unmute

Play
Powered by
GliaStudios
16.8kShares
facebook sharing button
Share
twitter sharing button

linkedin sharing button

whatsapp sharing button

SINGAPORE: In an Instagram (IG) video posted on April 20, women’s strength and identity coach Jen Balute shared her thoughts after leaving Singapore for the Philippines.

“It’s been 20 days since I left Singapore, and it feels like I left ages ago,” she said, adding that while she is unsure what comes next in her life in the Philippines, she knows the kind of life she wants, which she said, “Sadly, I didn’t see it in Singapore,” expressing her disappointment.


Jen, however, made it clear she wasn’t criticising the country outright. “Singapore is a lovely place, a great place to be,” she explained. “You can make a lot of money. You can have the lifestyle you want,” but “You’re just grinding there,” she shared her perspective that comes from living there as a foreigner and solo entrepreneur for two decades
 

“You will have a lifestyle, but you will never have a life in Singapore…” Coolie Genes Negative Vibes??

Jen then described her last 10 years in Singapore as intense and isolating, saying, “You will have a lifestyle, but you will never have a life in Singapore,” because according to her, “Everyone is fighting for power. Everyone is hustling.”

She added that many people seem stuck in “survival mode,” driven by competition and ego, and even “competing for no reason,” leading to a cycle in which they chase success yet feel burnt out.

“You constantly believe you need to hustle and go on holiday to glamorise your lifestyle,” she added further, describing what she sees as a constant pattern of burnout in the people of Singapore.
 

“You will never have a genuine connection in Singapore…”​

A major part of her message focused on relationships among Singaporeans. She opined that “You will never have genuine support, a genuine connection in Singapore. You’re constantly looking for a connection somewhere else.”

She elaborated more that families she knows tend to fill their schedules with activities rather than spend time together. “Even couples or families in Singapore that I know choose to add more activities to their lives rather than spend time with their own families,” she said.

“As a solo person in Singapore, grinding alone, you wonder, where are the genuine connections here?” she pondered, adding that this environment can change people over time: “You become numb in Singapore. You become the kind of person you wouldn’t want to be when you actually observe the people around you in Singapore, people around you in your industry.”
 

“Everything is just fake…”​

She also spoke about how people’s true selves are revealed during difficult times. “You’ll never know who your true friends are and who genuinely cares about you until you go through these three [hardship] phases in your life:

Not when you’re making a lot of money, not when you’re glamorising your life on social media, [but] when you go flat broke, when you become fully honest with yourself, and when you choose to keep going and not give up,” Jen shared her Singapore experience.

“Aside from that, everything else is just fake,” she concluded.
 

Who am I without my work?’ — Singapore worker grieves after losing her job and the identity it gave her​


Nick Karean
ByNick Karean
May 1, 2026

https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php...-losing-her-job-and-the-identity-it-gave-her/
https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?te...-gave-her/&via=The+Independent+Singapore+News
https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=...-losing-her-job-and-the-identity-it-gave-her/
https://www.linkedin.com/shareArtic...r+losing+her+job+and+the+identity+it+gave+her
https://telegram.me/share/url?url=h...r+losing+her+job+and+the+identity+it+gave+her

arrow_forward_ios
Read More


Play
00:00
00:17
Unmute

Play
Powered by
GliaStudios
255Shares
facebook sharing button
Share
twitter sharing button

linkedin sharing button

whatsapp sharing button

SINGAPORE: A Singapore worker who had nearly a year to prepare for retrenchment still found herself unready when the final day arrived. Her story shows that job loss affects more than just income for some, as they link their career loss to a loss of identity, routine, and a sense of place in society.

She was given 10 months’ notice as her company moved operations overseas. During that time, she trained a replacement team and kept work running. On paper, it looked like a smooth transition, but in reality, it became a slow, drawn-out goodbye, Channel NewsAsia (CNA) reports (April 27).


A grief that stayed buried in silence​

Instead of processing the loss, she focused on staying productive. Work became her shield. The grief stayed buried.

Colleagues left one by one. The office shrank. By her final day, only two people remained from what was once an 18-member team.

The ending didn’t come with a dramatic send-off. There were no meetings, no speeches. Just a silent return of her laptop and access card. That silence hit harder than expected.

She left the office and cried in a cinema, alone​

She tried to stay composed. That image held for months… but then it collapsed in minutes.

A simple exchange with a colleague triggered it. Then another brief conversation. Words became difficult. Emotions surfaced all at once. She left the office and cried in a cinema, alone, during a weekday screening.

From the outside, retrenchment can look clean. Severance is paid. Work ends. Life moves on. But what disappears is harder to measure. It is the daily rhythm. The sense of usefulness. The quiet pride in doing something well.

Her identity had become tied to her job role​

Over time, she realised her identity had become tied to her role. For two decades, her value was linked to output and performance. Without that title, there was a void.

She tried to stay busy at first, updating her resume, planning next steps, and filling time, but it didn’t help. The emotional impact came in waves. Some days were productive. Others were slow and heavy.

Friends who had gone through layoffs told her the same thing. The feeling doesn’t vanish overnight.

Mindset shift: Seeking internal value instead of chasing external validation​

With space to think, harder questions surfaced. Was she chasing senior roles out of interest, or validation? Would she accept less pay for more time with her family?

These weren’t urgent questions before, but they became painfully unavoidable after her job ended, so she decided to pause job seeking for a few months. Not to delay, but to reset.

That reset led to small mindset changes, such as writing for herself. Spending free time without guilt. Trying new things without a work outcome attached to it.

Eventually, one of those efforts led to a children’s book deal. It then changed how she saw her own value. Different didn’t mean any less.
 
She's a foreigner, did not grow up in SG. Finally realised she couldn't make it here, too tough for her. Seems like she's not smart or driven enough. So finally decided to take the easy and lazy way. Go pinoyland for a cheaper lifestyle and lower standard of living. Good luck on not getting mugged....or raped!:biggrin:
 
Because sinkie only twice the size of gaxa strip. With 3 times the population.
And as we all know, gaza is a concentration camp.
 
Last edited:
She's a foreigner, did not grow up in SG. Finally realised she couldn't make it here, too tough for her. Seems like she's not smart or driven enough. So finally decided to take the easy and lazy way. Go pinoyland for a cheaper lifestyle and lower standard of living. Good luck on not getting mugged....or raped!:biggrin:
Take $$$$$ and run road back to kampong , then turn to their morale high ground to belittle poor Hardland cookie gene

Good job !!
 
Back
Top