肮脏死,not 安葬死。The latter means "died a peaceful burial".
Nabeh ! NUS some more.
lol! See? Sinkies have half past six English AND Chinese!
And sinkies are also the ones who came up with "half fuck". How fitting!
肮脏死,not 安葬死。The latter means "died a peaceful burial".
Nabeh ! NUS some more.
I assume the grey area you mentioned means having the guts to take risks, the motivation to keep the course. I know of many kids from poorer families who have done very well for themselves, through legal means and venturing into the "grey area". Because they were deprived of many things when young, they worked hard in school and in their careers or business so that they do not remain poor. In all honesty, sometimes their hunger for success and wealth can be scary. I also know of many kids from wealthy families who grew up to be useless bums.The true test is whether the person is willing to traverse the grey area.
You cannot succeed if you decide that things are right and wrong. You need to play the game both sides.
Children of business people do not have this problem because they have seen their parents walk in the grey area.
Children of some professionals will have been taught that they must always do the right thing and even losing honestly is better than winning by cheating. Which in my opinion is absolute rubbish. Winning is always better than losing. Just dont get disqualified. These kids will have to go against their programming to succeed.
Nothing to do with household income levels.
You might be referring to some kids from poorer households who do not have a problem with taking the dark route.
In this example it seems like this cleaner's son has been imbued with good values and believes strongly in one right way. He will find it hard. Likely that this fella is also an officer in SAF.
Yes, children from financially well off families usually have a significant start in life. Some will benefit from this, while others will squander it away. Not all well raised kids with turn out to be good and productive adults. And not all kids who grew up without constant parenting will turn out to be rotten adults. This is one of the great mysteries in my opinion. It seems either the kid has it in him or he does not, as if he was born with it. Nature and not nurture.Probably, this will happen.
However, I find that those children from financially well off families, have a very significant start in life,
and most of them, if they are well raised with good values and good parents, will do well and become
productive and responsible citizens, and compassionate individuals.
I believe that the cause in Singapore, is partly the government's attitude and culture, as well as the undesirable trait of many Singaporeans "looking down" on others.
I assume the grey area you mentioned means having the guts to take risks, the motivation to keep the course. I know of many kids from poorer families who have done very well for themselves, through legal means and venturing into the "grey area". Because they were deprived of many things when young, they worked hard in school and in their careers or business so that they do not remain poor. In all honesty, sometimes their hunger for success and wealth can be scary. I also know of many kids from wealthy families who grew up to be useless bums.
Yes I get your drift. At the risk of over-generalising, and in my opinion, those kids from poorer families are more street smart than those from wealthy families. They seem to have more attuned survival instincts. Due to the fact that they've had to fend for themselves and maneuver through rough terrain all their lives. Rich kids usually are buffered and protected from life's harsh realities.Yes take risks.
But also things like being ruthless in competition. Knowing how to play your cards and who to put your allegiances with. It is not always the "good righteous honest" camp that wins the promotions or plum positions.
Also in sales, knowing how to close the sales versus having a conscience and not wanting to sell to someone who you "judge" not able to afford or need the product.
Things like this
Not true lah, it's up to the individual.Minorities got it worse,
Yep. Success through Adversity...
Yes I get your drift. At the risk of over-generalising, and in my opinion, those kids from poorer families are more street smart than those from wealthy families. They seem to have more attuned survival instincts. Due to the fact that they've had to fend for themselves and maneuver through rough terrain all their lives. Rich kids usually are buffered and protected from life's harsh realities.
Back to this NUS undergrad with the 70-year old father. I can sense this undergrad's angst and hurt. Besides being at NUS (I assume this undergrad is paying his/her own way), he/she has the right values in wanting to pay for the father's dinner. So he/she's got hard work and filial piety down pat. I wish him/her all the very best.
my guess is male lahthe writer is a male student or female ???
picture of Father , got ???
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I agree. Sad but true...
my guess is male lah