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Serious Sinkie High Flyer PMET Found Real Happiness after Leetrenched from 20K/month Job!

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
At 36 years old, he was already earning $20,000 a month as an expatriate in Hong Kong. But two years later, Eugene Seah was retrenched from his investor relations job with Nomura, a top Japanese bank, in 2014.

His world came crashing down. Until his retrenchment, he was leading the high life.

“My boss flew my whole family to Hong Kong, we were all very happy being treated like a king… and the bank paid me really well — $20,000 a month. I felt that I had arrived, I was set for life,” said the 41-year-old father of three kids.

His life was then unfolding according to the Singapore success story script: A lower middle-class kid who studied hard to get into Hwa Chong Junior College, became the president of the students’ council, and was later awarded a Singapore Exchange (SGX) scholarship for his university studies.

But reality hit him hard when he realised he couldn’t pay his credit card bill. He had remained jobless for nine months despite intensive job search after his return to Singapore.

“I cried a few times… how could this happen to me? I was so successful in my studies and CCAs. I was the HCJC students’ council President for goodness sake,” he recalled.

“There’s a board in Hwa Chong JC that listed every year’s students’ council president, these people were CEOs or CFOs of their companies. I kept looking at their names and wondered what’s wrong with me.

"How did I end up as a good for nothing when we went through the same education, joined the same CCA, elected as president? That’s how I treated myself — a good for nothing. It’s really horrible.”

Eugene, who now runs a successful personal branding and training company, was sharing his life story with me in an interview held at the LifeLong Learning Institute.

He’s my senior in NTU’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information. He’s from class of 2001, I was from class of 2007. We never knew about each other until we connected on Facebook.

Intrigued by his work as a personal branding coach — most mass communication graduates work in the media field — I decided to interview him for Happiness Notebook. My intention was to help my readers to explore more career choices.

But during the interview, he shared candidly about his darkest moments, the struggles and humiliations, and how he later came to acceptance of his failure, learnt about humility and the importance of financial literacy.

Back then, Eugene was living his life according to the society’s expectations, not on his own terms. He’s like one of those people who are caught in a race to obtain more expensive and high-status commodities. They subconsciously believe that success is about having bigger cars and bigger houses.

“My son was (then) still going for expensive tuition at Learning Lab, the most expensive tuition centre in Singapore. I wasn’t very good in financial planning, I even bought a car without a job. My savings depleted a lot faster than it could have,” he said.

Why buy a car when you just lost your job?

“I was confident of getting a job very soon. And because I had a car in Singapore before I moved to Hong Kong, so when I came back to I wanted to go back to my previous life as if nothing had changed.”

He was living in denial. And when he finally got a job offer that pays $8,000 a month, he rejected it! Could you believe it?

“To me, it’s an insult,” he said, adding that headhunters had told him that he could command $14,000 salary based on his work experience.

His arrogance soon gave way to desperation when he saw his savings dwindling fast. He started looking for any kind of jobs. “Very ironic, I gave up a job that would pay me $8000 a month, then I ended up looking for jobs that pay $4,000 a month,” he said.

Despite lowering his expectation, he still couldn’t find a job. He almost went into depression, but thanks to his religious faith as well as support from his wife, friends, counsellors and pastor, he was able to lift himself up. His elder brother lent him a five figure sum to tide over.

With no luck in the job market, Eugene co-founded a training company called Trainium Academy, with an entrepreneur friend in 2014.

As a trainer and consultant, Eugene provides training for executives in sales, communication, and leadership. He also runs a personal branding programme called SuperBrand Me, and a kids’ programme called Megachamps.

“I am now earning nowhere close to $20,000 a month but I feel very comfortable. I live very frugally, I don’t own a car, I stay in a HDB flat, and go to restaurant perhaps once a week,” said Eugene, who has been the sole breadwinner of his family since 12 years ago.

He is just glad to be able to make a decent living from his passion. Since young, he has always been interested in being on stage. He loves speaking, acting, directing, scriptwriting, and watching videos. Hence he chose to study mass communication in NTU. But along the way, he gave up his dream to enter the rat chase.

After graduation, he joined the Singapore Exchange as a marketing communication executive. He was promoted every two years or so, and later became assistant vice-president of investor relations.

“My desire to work in the media field was replaced by KPIs (Key Performance Indicators), money and stability. Before I knew it, I had subconsciously changed track from pursuing my dreams to pursuing promotions.

"Every time, I got promoted, my desire for my dreams lessened and my desire to earn more money increased. I slowly became a corporate zombie, working for money,” he said.

Today, Eugene has found the sweet spot in his life, running a successful and purposeful training business. He finds joy in helping people to avoid repeating his past mistakes.

He sees training people in personal branding as a way to help them to stay employed, find better jobs or build their businesses. To create a greater impact, he’s adding personal finance into his repertoire of training and consulting services.

Reflecting on his disastrous financial management in the past, he said: “Looking back, I realised we never study finance from primary school to secondary school to junior college and university. My first financial education came from the book Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki. Why didn’t our schools teach such critical skills?”

Key lessons from Eugene's life story

1) Study personal finance — be rich, don’t appear to be rich.
2) Live life on your own terms, not according to society’s expectations.

Stay tuned for the second part of Eugene's sharing where he talks in greater detail on how he turned his life around — and how you can do the same.

>>'FOLLOW' the Happiness Notebook Facebook to get the story.

>>'LIKE' and 'SHARE' this post if you feel that Eugene's life story can impact people's lives.

[Photos by Charmaine Wu photography]

Eugene Seah Megachamps Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

NTU Alumni Affairs Office SkillsFuture SG

http://happinessnotebook.com/ex-hwa...ack-from-retrenchment-and-financial-disaster/
 

dr.wailing

Alfrescian
Loyal
1) Study personal finance — be rich, don’t appear to be rich.
2) Live life on your own terms, not according to society’s expectations.

Old Fart also lived by those two principles. He was filthy rich as in he was the owner/landlord of Zikapore.
 

maxsanic

Alfrescian
Loyal
Most of the so called gurus in the self-help industry seem to follow a pretty standard and well-tested playbook to advertise their life story:

1) In the distant past he/she was a super high achiever that everyone looked up to
2) One singular major event caused him/her to fall to a seemingly bottomless pit
3) He/she emo for a while then found a 'secret' to be 'reborn again' and has now moved on to greater heights
4) The 'secret' is usually a combination of religion, vaguely defined psycho-babble and of course inspiration from the usual motivation staples like Anthony Robin, Adam Khoo or Robert Kiyosaki
 
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JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
The author is a liar. How can anyone who received a huge pay cut be happier? His current work as a low class towkay pays so little. The author is just trying to mask his feelings.
 

scroobal

Alfrescian
Loyal
Agree with you. Watch when Kong comes out from jail - a new beginning.

Most of the so called gurus in the self-help industry seem to follow a pretty standard and well-tested playbook to advertise their life story:

1) In the distant past he/she was a super high achiever that everyone looked up to
2) One singular major event caused him/her to fall to a seemingly bottomless pit
3) He/she emo for a while then found a 'secret' to be 'reborn again' and has now moved on to greater heights
4) The 'secret' is usually a combination of religion, vaguely defined psycho-babble and of course inspiration from the usual motivation staples like Anthony Robin, Adam Khoo or Robert Kiyosaki
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Is this supposed to make us feel ashamed that we are not as "successful" in our studies and cca and did not graduate summa cum laude and go on to become CEOs and cfos?I didn't know there were 36 year old sinkies that still saw themselves that way.is this the epitome of sinkie edumacation?

I also didn't know I had real happiness all along as a peasant living a life of poverty or that u could find real happiness reading Robert kiyosaki Rich Dad poor dad.i guess if u couldn't be successful earning 20k per month as a ex summa cum laude student council president and ur down on ur luck u could always look to Jesus and Robert kiyosaki for comfort or solace.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Most of the so called gurus in the self-help industry seem to follow a pretty standard and well-tested playbook to advertise their life story:

1) In the distant past he/she was a super high achiever that everyone looked up to
2) One singular major event caused him/her to fall to a seemingly bottomless pit
3) He/she emo for a while then found a 'secret' to be 'reborn again' and has now moved on to greater heights
4) The 'secret' is usually a combination of religion, vaguely defined psycho-babble and of course inspiration from the usual motivation staples like Anthony Robin, Adam Khoo or Robert Kiyosaki

You sound like a typical follower. Is it part of the NS herd mentality where one tries not to stick out less you get arrowed by the sergeant?

Leaders will always stand out in a crowd. Leaders take risks, and somethings, things fail. But leaders will always rise again. I rather they rose again because of their good Christian faith instead of listening to crap from the likes of Khoo and Kiyosaki.
 

Reddog

Alfrescian
Loyal
Most of the so called gurus in the self-help industry seem to follow a pretty standard and well-tested playbook to advertise their life story:

1) In the distant past he/she was a super high achiever that everyone looked up to
2) One singular major event caused him/her to fall to a seemingly bottomless pit
3) He/she emo for a while then found a 'secret' to be 'reborn again' and has now moved on to greater heights
4) The 'secret' is usually a combination of religion, vaguely defined psycho-babble and of course inspiration from the usual motivation staples like Anthony Robin, Adam Khoo or Robert Kiyosaki

5) Thereafter get a bunch of losers to pay good money to listen to common sense rubbish.
 

maxsanic

Alfrescian
Loyal
Is this supposed to make us feel ashamed that we are not as "successful" in our studies and cca and did not graduate summa cum laude and go on to become CEOs and cfos?I didn't know there were 36 year old sinkies that still saw themselves that way.is this the epitome of sinkie edumacation?

I also didn't know I had real happiness all along as a peasant living a life of poverty or that u could find real happiness reading Robert kiyosaki Rich Dad poor dad.i guess if u couldn't be successful earning 20k per month as a ex summa cum laude student council president and ur down on ur luck u could always look to Jesus and Robert kiyosaki for comfort or solace.

I doubt he really sees it that way, but he's smart enough to know his target customers/prey see it that way. Just the latest in the long line of rah-rah gurus telling not-so-bright underachievers what they want to hear.
 
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