I write here
We were in the toughest part of the Guards Conversion Course. A military boot camp that a selected few in the Singapore Army had to go through.
This was where I first discovered something I didn't know I had in me before.
If you've read a few of my posts you know I do a lot of introspection.
And I've noticed something through my writing.
I have a bad habit.
It may sound masochistic, but... I enjoy the struggle.
I love putting time and effort to learn a new skill. Yet, I have this habit of stopping once I've obtained it. It may be fatigue after the sprint. But I would wait for a few months before practising it again.
It's an underdog complex.
A disengaged friend was busy typing on his laptop over dinner. We haven’t caught up in a while and I was getting annoyed.
I asked: “Why do you let your manager push you so hard?”
He replied, “So they know I can 吃苦.”
Mulan is one of the most impactful movies I’ve watched. The legend of Mulan is about a woman who left the idea of being a dutiful daughter. And as war loomed, she decided to be a soldier and took her father's place in the royal army. In the army she took on a new role, she became Hua Jun.
I was in the ‘start-up’ world for 3 years in Yangon. Pursuing business ideas and building them.
Everyone had hopes of finding the next big thing that would 10x revenue. Venture capital was everywhere, but innovation was not. To stand out in a sea of copycat businesses, innovation is key. There's a form of capital key to innovation and it’s abundant. Belief Capital.
People are creative by nature. I love being creative, it’s fun, satisfying and interesting.
But as someone who is transitioning to being a full-time content creator, I find creativity and inspiration are two sides of the same coin. That they shouldn't be the fuel to do great work.
I’ve seen the future of business and it’s not what you think. No code, no crypto. You don’t have to like what I’m about to tell you, but I’m confident it works. I’m not keeping it to myself either.
I spent 3 years living in Brighton & Hove, an idyllic seaside city 1-hour south of London. As a Singaporean being part of a student body in such a liberal atmosphere, was an unbelievable experience. But there is a lack of what schools can provide and what the real world is looking for. This left me stranded on the unemployed island with just seagulls for company.
There is something in Po that was familiar, his journey was one I have read in the biographies of Steve Jobs and Elon Musk, people I wanted to emulate. But, what was with the Kung Fu Panda I wanted to emulate?