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Friday, October 30, 2009

Lee Wei Ling's Half Glass in Washington DC

The article below is extracted from The Malaysian Insider [Link]

The glass is really half full — Lee Wei Ling

OCT 30 — This is the last week of October, well into autumn. As I do my step-aerobic exercises, looking out of my hotel window in Washington DC, I see a lone maple tree.

Half of its leaves have fallen. Of the remaining leaves, only a few are red; the rest are partially brown and partially green. They are wilting before they get a chance to display the splendid red that makes autumn my favourite season in the United States. The sad-looking tree reminds me that the year is drawing to a close.

It has been a dreary year, both for myself and the world-at-large. Yet, in spite of my misfortunes, there are many things that I am grateful for. The five months I spent in hospital earlier in the year gave me a chance to reconnect with old friends, some of whom I had lost touch with for three decades. I made new friends among the nurses and doctors who looked after me. I enjoyed writing my columns for The Straits Times and The Sunday Times, and still do.

After being discharged from the hospital, I was happy to see my patients again, and they were happy to see me. I have resumed travelling with my father Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew, something that I used to do in my late teens and in my 20s, until work and my conference schedule put a stop to it.

This time, when my father asked me to accompany him on his trips, I dropped everything and joined him. I am travelling not for fun but to keep him company. As a result, I have had quality time with him.

While I have always known that my father was wise, I was surprised to see the movers and shakers of this world seek his opinion and advice on a multitude of international problems.

Over the past weekend, my father stayed in the home of Henry and Nancy Kissinger in Connecticut. For dinner on Saturday and again for lunch on Sunday, the Kissingers invited people from politics, academia, the media and business to meet my father. On Monday evening, Fed Malek of Thayer Capital organised a gathering at his home in Washington DC for my father to meet more movers and shakers. My father learnt about US perceptions of the world and the views of the Obama administration and Congress.

On Tuesday evening, at a black-tie dinner, my father was presented the Lifetime Achievement Award by the US-Asean Business Council. Former US Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton sent taped tributes. President Barack Obama sent a statement that was read out on his behalf by Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell.

Kissinger and George Shultz — both former US secretaries of state and old friends of my father — attended the event. Both paid glowing tributes to my father. I am proud of my father, not for the award per se, but for making Singapore and Asean better places.

And for this event, even I, usually heedless of convention, was appropriately attired. I wore a Chinese jacket that my sister-in-law Ho Ching had bought for me, carried a bag that my friend and colleague, Professor Helen Tjia, had given me, and wore shoes bought by another friend. Together, they had conspired to ensure that I was dressed appropriately for the occasion.

I did not know how similar my thinking process was to my father's until after a private lunch with the Kissingers last weekend. Kissinger and my father were lamenting the state of the world, when my father said: “Henry, we must do what's right.”

My father has always tried to do what is right for Singapore, and for humanity. He will stand by friends who fall out of public favour to show the world: “To hell with you, he is still my friend.” These are the same rules by which I have tried to lead my much humbler life.

According to the psychologist Hans Jurgen Eysenck, sons think more like their mothers and daughters more like their fathers. My father believes in Eysenck's theories and blames himself for his non-conformist daughter.

He is a world-famous statesman, one whom world leaders consult. As Kissinger noted on Tuesday evening: “Over 40 years, when Mr Lee comes to Washington, he gets to see an array of people that almost no foreign leader gets to see... because he does not come as a supplicant.” Today, my father is to meet Obama.

But, after all is said and done, my father will leave it to history to have the final say on his life. In the meantime, he will simply continue to do what is right for Singapore and for the world. I believe that if there were more politicians like him, the world would be a better place.

This article began on a sombre note. I admire the Stoic philosophy, and had decided to take a stoic view of this year. But I have since come to the conclusion that the glass is half full, and that really, I and most Singaporeans are not in such a bad situation.

It is more likely to stay that way if we continued to do what's right — in season as well as out. — The Straits Times

The writer is director of the National Neuroscience Institute.

My thoughts:

After reading the article by Lee Wei Ling, some may be moved to think of their father and the quality time they wish to spend with their Dad. But how many can have the good fortune of "dropped everything and join him".

Being "lesser mortal", most would have difficulty getting approval for leave from work and would be scared stiff of being "dropped" from their job as money is needed to pay HDB mortgage, children's education and putting food on the table for the family.

No, I'm not talking about spending time with Dad in USA receiving accolades, I'm talking about some poor souls wishing to spend time with Dad who's sick and bedridden at his HDB flat with no maids or Amahs to help.

To be able to stay 5 months in a hospital without losing one's job is to have a very caring and generous employer. To be able to drop everything and have quality time with Daddy is to be luckier than Lucky Tan [Link]

With life come challenges and traumas. It goes with the territory of living. Rich or poor, elite or not, to every life a little rain must fall. Having gone through some serious health challenges and misfortunes of my own, I can appreciate, though not totally agree, with LWL's writings during and after her 5 months stay in hospital.

Lest I be a accused of being a poor sour grape and being mean to a sick person, I wish to state that I had my share of "half glass full" experience (dropping dead on the road with a heart attack and ventricular fibrillation) too. Though I did not need to stay 5 months in a hospital with special exercise equipment (I can't afford it anyway), it took me more than 5 years (without a job or income) to recuperate physically and financially!

Life is funny.

In trying to humanise or philosophise, one may upset readers by being insensitive to their sensitivities. It depends on where one is coming from and where one is heading to. The line between the intention to share one's sense of good/bad blessings and an exercise in shameless adulation can get blur at times.

I guess each of us, regardless of coming from family or famiLee, will do our best to do good, to leave a decent impression, before we are fed to the fish.

Some get the support of msm, some not.

feedmetothefish

32 comments:

  1. One cannot deny the accolades LKY received from friends like Kissinger and company. However Wei Ling should take note that the true measure of LKY's worth must come from ordinary Singaporeans
    and the ultimate respect can only be earned from political opponents.

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  2. Realizing one's mortality is indeed sobering & Death is the ultimate equalizer of this one life we have. Its all Karma, what goes around comes around...we reap what we sow.

    Thanks for writing, Fish!

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  3. Her article shows how disconnected father and daughter are from the average man in the street, the lesser mortals. There is really no need for her to pile on any more accolades on his overburdened shoulders.
    She should instead write about the lot of the common man and what her father and his kakis have done to cause hardship to ordinary folk. She should come down to street level instead of hovering up there in the airy fairy atmosphere of the clouds.

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  4. Since she claims to be so understanding about humanity. Someone should bring her to chinatown streets area and look at the numerous protitutes her father brought into this country to break many happy family and those cans & cardboard uncles and aunties and interview them to see what went wrong. Closer to her work area where should could easily take 5-months off, did she questioned why some patients could not afford medical fee?

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  5. Seriously, did anyone try to put themselves in LWL's shoes without posting some "jealousy comments" on how rich her family is, how great that she can spend time with her dad, with all the maids and drivers..etc. Yes, there are poor people in Singapore. But the government has been trying to narrow the poverty gap.

    Think about US, France, Indonesia, Thailand..etc. Look at their leaders and their families' extravagant lifestyles, look at the corrupted political parties, that is what I call silverspoon fed and hypocrite and draining taxpayer's money. For her status, she could have lived in a much much more comfortable livestyles. But she chose to have a simple life. Why don't you all just accept and appreciate and respect her life.

    Talking about medical fee, think about it -how much do you pay for your tax in Singapore? (3.5% to 20%subject to the individual's income). Look at OTHER countries tax rate with the so-called "good healthcare system" - England up to 40%, Australia up to 45%, USA up to 35%. You want good healthcare? Pay that amount of tax will do the work. In fact, I would not be surprise that in 10 years Singapore will increase their tax. Of course, then you can expect GOOD medical welfare.

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  6. It sad that you think in that way, did you ever ask yourself, can you REALLY DO A BETER JOB THAN MM LEE, Given what he have done for Singapore, we must learn to be happy, given our limitation.You don't need to help him, he don't need it. Let help Singapore by not being unfriendly to those who build Singapore. I don't have to like him, but I must say he earned my repect. K.C. Ong

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  7. The LKY in the early years worked for the people of Singapore and get this right, it was a collective effort !
    Can anyone recall LKY saying he could not have done it alone or LKY giving credit to his peers and Singaporeans, especially his most recent visit to the USA ?

    Can anyone ever claim he can do a better job than LKY ? Of course not lah! KC Ong, you are absolutely right. LKY is indispensable to the spineless PM and the entire PAP. Anyway, why care about who put the spineless PM to run the country or familee corporation, right KC Ong ???

    By the way KC Ong, like you, I still respect LKY, but much less lah ! Because I am not happy with the Kangaroos in our courts, prostitutes in msm, gerrymandering, 81 stooges in parliament, ISA as a political tool, not least his daughter-in-law losing so much money lah ! LOL

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  8. Everyone change..last time is good did not mean now still be good..when ppl get old they start to turn self fish, they start to scare that they lose their power..they scare of many thing..he maybe the hero of singapore that why until now, even he do a wrong thing say a wrong word think a wrong way even he is corrupted..i don think anyone will dare to say a word

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  9. If LKY is such a loyal friend, then what about what he did to Lim Chin Siong?

    http://fashionablefacistdictator.wordpress.com/

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  10. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  11. LOL @ the comments.They all have some degree of validity, both the naysayers and the supporters. We are products of our circumstances; Ms Lee never claims to be lesser or MORE for that matter.Read somewhere that of the three prodigious Lee progenies, the sister impressed their teachers the most. It speaks volumes that she picked a "lesser" route to journey. Even if the misfortunes of the first family insult the tissue-sellers, aluminium can and cardboard collectors of Singapore, even if Ms Lee fails to make the Siddharta or Mother Teresa cut, at least she asserts a view that is grounded and independent of the gahmen yes-men that the PAP machinery churns out so rigorously.

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