Monday, 14 August 2023

Letter to a Ranger 1

More than half the year has passed and this is my first post on this blog for the year and what a meaningful way to get going. It's a letter to my son, who has just started the challenging Ranger Course

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I have been writing to you (and you to me) for two decades now. Over the years, the exchanges have become more infrequent as we both got busier. So, the opportunity to share deeper thoughts – those that are more considered rather than hurried spontaneous exchanges over meal times – are rarer now. Funnily enough, it’s with my younger colleagues (some of whom are your age) that I share my thoughts about life with.

At this juncture, in the midst of your Ranger Course, I wanted to pen some words so that you will be able to read what I really think of you and all the love and unceasing support I have for you.

Before I start, I want to state upfront that you have inspired me. In fact, some of the advice that I dispense to my team are directly motivated from observing how you lead your life. That is also why I wanted you to appear in my corporate video. In a way, the messages below are a co-mingling of our thoughts and deed, which I have summarized coherently into a high five of life!

So, here goes…

1                    Adversity maketh the man

Life is full of ups and downs. It’s inevitable. I had mine relatively early: after a spectacular first 17 years (troop leader, top student, ASEAN scholar), I fell. As you know, I didn’t ace my A-levels, didn’t get into the course nor university of my dreams (which you instead have fulfilled for me, thank you!). I did find the love of my life though in NUS (now, that is a real high!). After I had graduated (by the skin of my teeth) and started working and earning money, there were more hardships to follow – office politics, naïve upward management, unexciting station postings, bad investments and even outright carelessness with money. However, these hardships shaped me. “Adversity maketh the man”, as the saying goes. In my case, these trails are necessary to make me stronger for I might have remained naïve, playful and irresponsible.

You know my life story. In the case of your grandparents and helper, they all faced up to our disadvantages in their lives and used it as a foundation to shape their futures. As you know, they were either too poor, too uneducated, too small or simply just born in the wrong place. In my case, when I hit rock bottom, I realise that there is in fact more solid a foundation to bounce up from. You too have been tested these past few years and I am proud to see you moving on. Tough times don’t last, but tough people do. Bad times will pass and if one has not given up, you’ll have something that will serve you well your entire life: not just crossing the finish line but the ability to overcome hardship. And by the time you read this letter, you are well into the Ranger course and the high of the finishing line is getting ever closer. In fact, it’s the lows sometimes that really make the highs all the sweeter.

2                    Don’t settle for a life less than the one you are capable of

There is poster of Nelson Mandela’s sayings on your bedroom wall. The first line reads, “There is no passion to be found playing small; in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living”. He might as well had been describing you, Josh, because that is indeed how you have led your life.

What Mandela didn’t say, though, that the big life is not usually immediately visible or available. Some people think they know what they want to do in life, while others are still searching. Some think they have made the right choices but then find out it’s not their preferred cup of tea. The way ahead if not being afraid to keep trying things until you find something that really gels with you. Again, like my first tip, you already live this principle. You are already thinking ahead, while fulfilling your current obligations.

It took me three jobs and I was well into my thirties before I found one that suited me. You might have to try a few jobs you don’t like and it might be hard for a while, but never settle.

And it is not just jobs; this also applies to our social network. Contrary to what many think, career success isn’t just about qualifications and skills. Your ability to build quality relationships - talking to and caring for people - is far more important. You have already shown you know that by organising the barbecue for your mates before the course started. And I see how they are all there for you and for one another. The brotherhood I saw at the morning sending you off really touched me. I have not ever been in a company (in all my 33 years of working) of colleagues that will wake up at 4am on a Sunday to wish me well on a Sunday morning. Don’t settle for working with those who will betray you. We only get one life, don’t spend it doing something you don’t like.

There is one exception to this rule: and that’s with your life partner. Once you find the right soul-mate: someone you can share your hopes and fears with, who understands you and will support you (and also not afraid to disagree with you to get her points across), then really settle down and work on making the relationship. You are so blessed to have found her and we love her very much too. The both of you have such a beautiful journey ahead too. We will all make sure of that.

3                    Your attitude is the winning trait

Speaking of not settling, I know quite a few people that was unsure about their purpose in life. Some of them didn’t even get to university and many went from job to job. Despite this, they ended up extremely successful. The common factor was a great attitude and work ethic.

I am sure you have come across people who are always bitching about how they aren’t getting anywhere or that no one listens to them. When he was imprisoned for 27 years, Mandela could have given in to all sorts of demons but he didn’t because “resentment is like drinking poison and hoping it will kill your enemies”. Quite an apt phrase considering you are now training to outwit and outlast the enemies.

On the other hand, I am sure you know people who seem to be so purposefully driven – not just for material success, but also to work for societal well-being or even to bring about planetary impact. It’s clear where each group will end up. And that’s what you are doing right now in Ranger Course: to show up and do the best you can every day. It’s not important that you are the best. No one is the best at everything. What’s important is that you do your best. That attitude will surely advance you even if you go on to other vocations because someone like you will pick up valuable experience and insight along the way whereas others merely pick up a paycheck and more cynicism, never becoming more valuable in the process.

4                    Acquire experiences and learn from them

Experiences are what make life worth living, not material things! I know it may sound ironic coming from me, but I mean it sincerely. At the end of the day, one defines oneself more meaningfully based on experiences rather than possessions. So, if you have things you want to do or try, get out and do them! If you want to be in the Ranger Course, go and do it! Wait, you already are 😊! Don’t let other people tell you it’s unreasonable. The fact that you are now in the course already sets your soldiering experience apart from others. You are already in the elite forces and now you will be the toughest amongst the elites. Well before you are 30, you have been all over the world, stayed in a Japanese household, attended a global imagination festival, got a scuba diving licence, led a scout troop with distinction, earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree, served in the military, and so much more that I cannot remember off the top of my head. This is way more than what I had accomplished by the time I was 30.

In fact, I celebrate the fact that you do make it a point to go chase experiences and have scaled mountains in four corners of Earth. I have said on many occasions that you have already topped your old dad and I would only urge you to keep going. Life experiences are the world’s best teachers.

You might recall the personal statements for college admission you wrote seven years ago now and in one of them you talked about how you had tried to bend nature to your will and learned that it is better to understand what and how mother earth provides and learn to fit into her ecosystem. There is so much wisdom in that young person that wrote that essay. And you have accumulated more since. I should add that while it is wise to learn from experience, it is wiser still to learn from experiences of others, because you multiply your points of learning. No expensive item is worth anything close to those experiences. These are the real treasures.

5                    The courage to go on a hero’s journey (for we are with you)

This last high five tip is particularly modelled from observing you, my son, grow up into a hero  rather than from my own life experience. I say this with real pride in my heart. It is why you are in the book about notable scout citizens. Its why your name graces the wall of fame in RI.

There will be times, however, when you question if you had taken too big of a leap. You had on the handle of your Instagram account a phrase about courage. In turn, I am reminded of the words of the priest last Sunday when talking about Peter’s faith in stepping onto the stormy water. Peter, already the recognized leader amongst the disciples, and always the most daring among them, showed himself ready to risk drowning in order to prove his trust and confidence in Christ. While he trusted in Christ, all went well, but when his faith weakened he would have been lost were it not for the outstretched helping hand of his master. “Courage is not the absence of fear but rather the faith that something else is more important".



So, every time you play big, every step into the formidable unknown, you do so because you know you are aiming for something heroic that is more important than the fears and pains of today. I trust that you will also know deep in your heart that the fear is also mitigated by the fact that you have faith that you can make it. The faith comes from your natural abilities and careful training and from the support and love of all your family nd also the grace of God. We may not have walked in your shoes exactly but you know that we will do all we can to catch your fall or get you new shoes metaphorically speaking should you ever need them. You are on a hero’s journey and we are all so very proud of you.

I conclude this letter with a thought and a picture taken I found in my archive. As I said, even as a young boy you had all these attributes:

·         the leader with the fortitude to overcome adversities,

·         the desire to go for something better,

·         the attitude to do one’s best even if you cannot be the best,

·         the learner gathering life experiences and

·         ultimately, the courage to go on a hero’s journey .

I am merely an observer here and am repeating what I see: a man who is making his own special mark in the world, with dignity, courage and confidence.

Take care, my hero son and all the best for the next phases of the course.

I love you dearly, Dad


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