Tag: Hope

  • Commentary: Comfort Taxi Driver Went Above And Beyond, A Crybaby Moment For Me

    Commentary: Comfort Taxi Driver Went Above And Beyond, A Crybaby Moment For Me

    Today I was shown kindness by a Comfort taxi driver – Mr Yeo Choon Hwa.

    I had to report for my flight at 730am.
    I booked a taxi and when I got into the cab, I told the Uncle (yes we call any elderly male stranger Uncle in Singapore) to ‘please rush for me?’

    Which is highly unfair because now I am partly making it his responsibility to get me to work in time… but I was that desperate.

    Halfway through the journey – I started reaching out for my wallet so that I can quickly pay him and get out.

    As the search got more frantic, I realised the worst. I forgot my wallet. I couldn’t believe it. I was now 12 minutes away from the airport. There was NO WAY out. Turning back will mean a day of havoc for me.

    Resigning to my fate, I came clean with Uncle.
    I told him I forgot my wallet and I wouldn’t be able to pay him at the end of this journey.
    He looked up at me through the rear view and gave the most stunning reaction.

    He smiled. Kindly. And then asked me what I would like to do. What I would like to do!? This was his taxi, his rice bowl and he had every right to tell me to get out from his taxi or turn back – but yes – he asked me what I would like to do.

    So I told him, that if he is ok – I’ll take down his details and do a bank transfer when I touch down.
    And without skipping a beat, he agreed.

    I got to the airport just in time. Uncle even came out and helped me with my bags and just before I dashed off – he asked me if I had enough money for my travels and if I needed some.

    Yeah. Crybaby moment for me. Still is.
    Even after transferring the amount + bonus, I don’t think any amount can ever repay what he did.

    Apart from his compassion and kindness, he completely left it to his faith in humanity that I will not go back on my word.
    And I can’t help but think, what a lot of faith that must be.

    Here’s to all our Taxi Uncles. ❤️❤️❤️

    #TaxiUncleFTW#SHD4927J

     

    Source: Noor Mastura

  • 9 More Months To Live, Malay Naval Logistics Command Corporal Holds Solo Art Exhibition In Fight Against Cancer

    9 More Months To Live, Malay Naval Logistics Command Corporal Holds Solo Art Exhibition In Fight Against Cancer

    In battling his illness, CPL Muhammad Khairul Ikwan has shown us what it means to be resilient, to be hopeful, and to fight unyieldingly, even in the face of cancer.

    “I want people to see that hope can be anything – even negative things, like illness, can become positive things as well. I don’t want people to see pain as a hindrance to stop them from what they want to do in life.”

    This is why Khairul chose the title ‘Hope’ for his solo art exhibition.

    A naval material assistant with Naval Logistics Command (NALCOM), Khairul was diagnosed with Stage 4 colorectal cancer last year and lost much of his vision and hearing since. Despite the pain and the side effects from his fortnightly chemotherapy, he continues to stay positive by directing his attention to arts – a passion of his since young.

    And this Thursday, he will be fulfilling his greatest wish of holding an exhibition to showcase his art works, expressing the experience in which he battled his illness. Jointly organised by Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (NAFA) and HCA Hospice Care, it will be held at NAFA on-air gallery from 21 – 25 Apr.

    Your support would mean much to Khairul and us here in the Navy.

    ***

    The nightmare began with a ringing in Mr Muhammad Khairul Ikwan’s ears last July.

    Then he developed a migraine so severe he could barely stand and had to crawl to the toilet.

    Doctors discovered he had Stage 4 colorectal cancer, which had spread from his intestines to his brain.

    At age 23, the young man has lost much of his vision, hearing and hair, and no longer parties as he once did with friends.

    But the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (Nafa) graduate is not wallowing in despair. Instead, he is launching an exhibition of 87 art pieces at the school on Thursday.

    Titled Hope, the works represent his experience battling his illness.

    He said: “I want people to see that hope can be anything – even negative things, like illness, can become positive things as well.

    “I don’t want people to see pain as a hindrance to stop them from what they want to do in life. ”

    Jointly organised by Nafa and HCA Hospice Care, the exhibition fulfils one of Mr Khairul’s greatest wishes under the Star Pals palliative care programme for youth with life-limiting illnesses.

    Mr Khairul is the second of four children. His mother is a secretary in a law firm, while his father is a safety supervisor in a shipping company.

    Ms Nur Alwiyah, 25, a customer service officer at a call centre, said her brother is expected to live about nine more months .

    Said Mr Khairul: “It’s shocking to go from healthy to seriously ill, but anger won’t make the illness go away.”

    He now has chemotherapy fortnightly and wears a stoma bag to collect his waste, which goes out of his body through a hole in his abdomen.

    In the four months he spent on art, he had to battle the side effects of chemotherapy, such as fatigue and vomiting but he soldiered on.

    He used to listen to music while painting, but having lost most of his hearing. He now reads song lyrics or poetry for inspiration.

    His favourite work in the exhibition is a series titled Spirits & I (Eye), a set of six watercolour paintings.

    Three are in red and have an eye motif, which he describes as “surgical, with veins”, while three in blue are “water spirits rising up”.

    “Because of my affected vision, I am going through so much pain. But at the same time, there are so many people lifting my spirits,” he said.

    Apart from paintings, he is also exhibiting mixed media works with synthetic hair, photographs, a video and a fabric piece.

    Calling art a therapeutic outlet, Mr Khairul said his role model is Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, who uses her artwork as a way to express her mental illness.

    The exhibition, which is free, will be at the Nafa on-air gallery from April 21 to 25.

    And he is already dreaming of his next project, a photography exhibition with himself as the subject.

    He said: “What’s the point of giving up when you’re still living? The only moment you give up is when you’re dead.

    “If I can recover, it will be a miracle, but if I can’t, I will just keep on fighting, make more works of art and leave a legacy.”

     

    Source: Republic Of Singapore Navy and Straits Times