Friday, October 25, 2019

Need a quick fix again, damn it

Another handsome and promising stranger took his own life yesterday after he snapped his final dawn and posted it as Instagram story at 6.38am (it might be gone at anytime soon from now). Since the identity is revealed by press, I took hours at midnight to browse his past 10 years on social media. 

What read can’t be unread. I can’t get over the sadness and the sense of loss. As there are still a workday and a short buddy getaway ahead, I need a quick fix to contain (or better, to digest) the emotions without much luxury of time. 

While commuting, I wrote down these approaches: 
- Brainwash myself that outliving a suicide victim makes me outshine him, regardless of how outstanding he was compared to me. 
- Force myself to hit the gym, no matter how sleep-deprived I am (after browsing his profiles for hours) and how short the remaining time I have (before work). Getting closer to the physique that I am always eager for makes me feel better. 
- Pack myself with tasks at work today. The first thing in office is to make a to-do list. 
- Constantly remind myself not to affect the people around me with my emotions. My colleagues have work plans to complete, and travel buddy is not paying to be a counsellor in a ruined trip. 
- Write this post. It helps me to reorganize my mindset and vent things off my chest. 
- Clock more sleep time whenever I could today. Lack of sleep makes me irritable and vulnerable to illness. (Well, I am supposed to take a nap while commuting, but upon finishing this whole string of texts, I’ve reached gym). 


In short, I really hate how easy I can be swayed by people’s demise. Shall update again today if there is improvement/deterioration. 

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Deceased Estates (Unclaimed) as at 30 September 2018

SIN MONG XING, 2013,  TA13070303
NIGEL YAP YEW CHEONG, 2013, TA13074929
DONAVAN YAP TECK SIONG, 2013. TA13076209
YEO HUNG SONG, 2013, TA13073974
GOH CHUAN KIET, 2014, TA14008264
CHIANG YUAN WEI DENNIS, 2017, TA17000375

https://www.mlaw.gov.sg/content/dam/minlaw/pto/docs/PT.pdf

Thursday, September 5, 2019

List of All Booked Cremation Sessions: 05/09/2019

MANDAI CREMATORIUM
MCC SERVICE HALL 01
MCC SERVICE HALL 02
MCC SERVICE HALL 03
MCC SERVICE HALL 04
09:25 AM
LI YONGZHE 

10:05 AM
HONG BEE YAN 

10:45 AM
KUA CHOW WENG 

11:25 AM
KONG KIM KIAW 

12:05 PM
LEE SOO WA 

12:45 PM
NG HONG MUI TERESA 

01:25 PM
TEO HOCK LYE 

02:05 PM
TAN MONG CHEE 

02:45 PM
TIEW CHO HEE 

04:15 PM
SUTHARENI 

05:45 PM
TIO KONG SONG 
09:40 AM
SHIU WING WAH 

10:20 AM
SEAH SIEW HONG 

11:00 AM
TAN GEK HONG 

11:40 AM
YAP PUEH YEW 

12:20 PM
GAN BENG GUAT 

01:00 PM
KOH KIM LUAN 

01:40 PM
AH FONG @CHONG KUEN YIN 

02:20 PM
GOH MENG HUAY 

03:00 PM
FOO KIEN POH 

03:45 PM
LOW GWEE WAN 

05:15 PM
NG AH KHAI 
09:40 AM
ANG KAY 

11:00 AM
TEH SIEW LAY 

11:40 AM
KHOO AH MENG 

01:00 PM
GAN AH SENG 

01:40 PM
NG THENG POEY 

03:00 PM
CHUA TECK HUA 

03:45 PM
CHARLES NG POOH CHEOK 

05:15 PM
YOUEN SWEE KEA 


  



  



  
09:25 AM
LEE LEE BIN 

10:45 AM
HUI KOK FONG, ANDREW (XU GUOFENG) 

11:25 AM
CHIANG KAI 

12:05 PM
TAN KIA WAN 

12:45 PM
ENG YANXUN,JEROME 

01:25 PM
LIM AI WAH 

02:05 PM
LIM BOON HUA 

02:45 PM
LOH CHOON PAR JOHN 

03:30 PM
BEINS DUNSTAN JUDE 

05:00 PM
TAN CHWEE KOON @TAN KIM TEE 

05:45 PM
TAN JUAT HUAH

Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Thank you for the flame :)

Hey A,

Less than a week ago, I happened to know your story and your Facebook post. Then, the news broke.

This morning, I happened to find your blog. Spending the whole day reading your posts, I decided to pay respect to you at your wake. The atmosphere was calm and peaceful. Through glass, I met you for the first time.

We might be strangers to each other, but I see many qualities in you that I am truly envy of:

  • You are intelligent and mature. You read a lot, you reflect a lot, you know how to express your thoughts, and you clearly know the directions in your life. 
  • You are truthful and firm to who you are and who you like since young, in spite of all internal and external conflicts. It’s not easy for atheist, let alone a devotee. 
  • You are a man of action. Once decided, you will do your best to achieve your targets. 
  • You are persevered against the odds, be it in your relationships, studies, career, or even in your final battle. 
  • You are compassionate, empathetic, and selfless. You are willing to change yourself to protect the softest part deep inside your heart. 
  • Most importantly, you are brave and optimistic. You may once had fragile moments, but you manage to cheer yourself up and spread optimism to your loved ones. 


Because of these, you really deserve your life transformation, your progression, the love and happiness surrounding you, and my respect. You have earned yourself the most fulfilling life a boy could have.

A, thank you for showing me the possibility that I could have become a way better man should I come to terms with myself, be braver to be myself, be more dedicated to present, and be more aspired. I hope the flame can guide me through whenever I am lost, or even bring a transformation in me. You have lived your life with impacts and difference to the world. Now, you could have further made a stranger’s life even better.

Anyway, do take your time over there (you said that it’s not darkness when you close your eyes) and bless those you care the most ;)

K. T.
9.30pm, 4 Sep 2019.

20190904 新明日报

抗癌“阳光男”遗愿:打造欢乐灵堂

发布/2019年9月4日 3:07 PM
文/李思摄影/徐颖荃
来自/新明日报

亲友不仅送鲜花,还为许国锋送来气球。 

乐观抗癌的“阳光男”不敌病魔,家属按遗愿打造“欢乐灵堂”,内设游戏机让小朋友玩乐,吊唁亲友还送来气球。

《新明日报》日前报道,这名生前从事金融业的许国锋(32岁),除了烟酒不沾外,也有健身习惯且平日爱好户外活动,他在去年6月因发烧至40度,被送入院就医后被诊断患有淋巴癌,随后癌细胞迅速扩展并恶化至末期,可是他仍然乐观坚强面对,但最终没能战胜病魔,于8月31日逝世。

许国锋乐观坚强地抗癌,只可惜最终还是不敌病魔。

家属前天在新加坡殡仪馆设置灵堂,并按照其遗愿,不愿具名的哥哥昨晚(9月3日)受访时说,弟弟生前性格乐观开朗,虽然患病后十分苦恼,但随后变得坦然。由于一家都是基督徒,因此他不认为死亡是生命的结束,而是会到另一世界继续他的人生。

设游戏机供玩乐

他透露,灵堂的设计都是按照弟弟的遗愿布置,除了播放欢快的歌曲外,还设立一台游戏机供小朋友玩乐,许多亲友也送来气球和鲜花,完全不像是灵堂。

他提到,昨日前来吊唁的亲友络绎不绝,人群一度排到大门口,很多人也写下寄语祝福弟弟。

他强调,这场仪式并不是为了“送走”弟弟,不要因此感到悲伤,而是庆祝他到了另一个国度去享福,所有亲友都应为此高兴,把这当成一场派对。

“弟弟去世的当天,在教会举办了礼拜,最后一句话就是邀请大家和他一起享受这个美好的永生,有朝一日与他在天国相遇。”

据悉,死者家人遵照许国峰生前的遗愿,日前在面子书上发表贴文,希望前来吊唁的亲友,避免穿黑白服饰,希望他们届时都能面带笑容前来。

昨日前来吊唁的亲友大多身穿鲜艳服饰,有些还穿了红色,五颜六色的衣服瞬间将礼堂染成彩色海洋。

死者哥哥表示,这正是弟弟所愿,不要为了他的往生而难过,而是要为了他能在另一个世界延续生命而感到高兴。

20190904 The Straits Times

Swimming instructor, 23, dies after virus triggers rare immune disorder

Benedict James Naden Lim (third from left) and his family on holiday in New Zealand in December 2018. PHOTO: BENJAMIN NADEN

Swimming instructor Benedict James Naden Lim, 23, swam competitively for the Singapore Institute of Management and was a fit young man who was careful about what he ate and kept a strict fitness regimen.

When he fell ill in June, Mr Naden thought his cough and fever symptoms were signs of a common flu, and a visit to the doctor did not suggest otherwise. But his symptoms were those of the Epstein-Barr virus, which triggered a rare immune disorder known as hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis.

Mr Naden, who was due to graduate in May next year, was also later diagnosed with T-cell lymphoma, a rare type of cancer, three weeks after he was hospitalised. He died last Saturday afternoon, just 2½ months after he first fell ill, and around an hour after he had surgery to relieve the pressure in his brain.

Speaking to The Straits Times at his son's wake yesterday, Mr Benjamin Naden, 52, said scans and tests conducted when his son was admitted to hospital in July found that the organs, including the liver and kidneys, were deteriorating and there was water in the lungs. But his son, who coached young children at the aquatic club where he learnt to swim, remained resolute and "felt he would be able to fight it", he added.

While he looked to be recovering initially, with his organ functions stabilising and blood test results improving, Mr Naden had a relapse shortly after. This time, the signs were not as positive: His brain and heart were weakening, said his father, who works in infrastructure and solutions at Dell.

Last Saturday, after Mr Naden suffered a seizure and bleeding in his brain, his father posted on social media with a public call for blood donation to the national blood bank. His father said: "(Calling for blood donation) was not just for my son, it's also for the general public."

The family of four - including the couple's daughter Bernadette, 21 - was close-knit. Father and son went on several diving trips together, with their last in June 2017 to Lembeh, Indonesia. The family planned to visit Osaka around Christmas, as it was "on his bucket list". "I guess now, we owe him a trip," said his father.

He said the family intends to donate the money collected at the wake to a charity in his son's name. The family declined to reveal the sum collected over the two days, but said some 550 people have attended the wake at St Joseph's Church in Upper Bukit Timah Road. The cremation will take place today at Mandai Crematorium.

List of All Booked Cremation Sessions: 04/09/2019

MANDAI CREMATORIUM
MCC SERVICE HALL 01
MCC SERVICE HALL 02
MCC SERVICE HALL 03
MCC SERVICE HALL 04
04:15 PM
LOO AH SOO 


  



  



  



  



  



  



  



  



  



  



  



  
10:20 AM
TAN LAY SEE 

11:00 AM
NG KIM SWEE 

11:40 AM
TAN KUANG MING 

12:20 PM
THOMAS MICHAEL 

01:00 PM
CHEW KAH YEE 

01:40 PM
NG GUAT SIONG 

02:20 PM
NGIAN KWEE WHAH 

03:00 PM
HENG KOK YEOW 

04:30 PM
MEENATHY 

05:15 PM
PHILIP JUDE GOH FU RUI 


  



  



  
09:40 AM
YEO GUAK HOR 

10:20 AM
LAU KENG SENG 

11:00 AM
LEONG AH NGAI 

11:40 AM
BENEDICT JAMES NADEN LIM 

12:20 PM
HO LILIAN 

01:00 PM
KANG YEE HWA 

01:40 PM
TAN LIAN HUAY 

02:20 PM
TANG CHERN LEE 

03:00 PM
JOSEPH CHIN 

03:45 PM
GOH HWEE HIANG 

04:30 PM
ANG KOON HOCK 

05:15 PM
HOW SAI HAR 

06:00 PM
YEO KIA JIANG 
09:25 AM
NG KIM TEE 

10:05 AM
LIM AH CHOO 

10:45 AM
CHEAH YEOW FONG @CHIA YAW FUONG 

11:25 AM
LOW HAI SAN 

12:05 PM
TAN GEK HIAN 

12:45 PM
LEONG YAN HENG 

01:25 PM
SEAH KIM SENG 

02:45 PM
LIM SIEW ENG 

03:30 PM
TAN CHENG HIONG 

04:15 PM
LOH SOH CHIANG 

05:00 PM
GUY STRONACH DURNFORD 

05:45 PM
CHAN YAU CHEE 

06:30 PM
BELONE S/O SAMINATHAN 

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

20190903 联合晚报


发布/2019年9月3日 2:40 PM
文/涂健强 摄影/陈斌勤
来自/联合晚报

林韦宾生前是一名游泳健将,多次在本地大小比赛获奖,他本身也是一名游泳教练。(取自林韦宾Instagram) 

23岁游泳健将原以为只是患上小感冒,结果在短短两个半月内经历肾脏和肝脏衰竭、肺积水、淋巴癌和脑出血等症状,上周六(8月31日)他动了脑部手术,被送到加护病房的一小时后就撒手人寰。

《联合晚报》报道,不幸离世的林韦宾是新加坡管理学院(SIM)的大数据分析系学生,从小爱游泳的他是一名运动健将,在本地大小游泳比赛获奖无数,同时也是一名游泳教练。

家人万万没想到,身体健康的他会因为一场罕见的疾病失去性命。

林韦宾拥有欧亚裔与华人血统,他的父亲本杰明·纳登(Benjamin Gerard Naden,52岁)昨天受访时指出,今年6月中,儿子突然发烧和出红疹,到诊所看医生后被当成一般感冒处理,但儿子吃药后情况不见好转,到了7月时身体状况变差,家人便把他送去医院急诊室。

父亲说,医院检查后发现,原来儿子感染的是爱泼斯坦巴尔病毒(Epstein-Barr Virus,简称EBV),这种病毒的症状很像感冒,一般人也会像感冒般痊愈,不过有些人的基因可影响人体对EBV病毒的反应,可演变成鼻癌或罕见的噬血细胞淋巴组织增多症(hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis,简称HLH),HLH则类似白血病,必须接受化疗。

“韦宾后来证实得了HLH,医生检查发现他的肝脏和肾脏已开始衰竭,后来也出现肺积水的症状。”

他说,儿子住院约三周后情况好转并准备接受化疗,岂料还没开始化疗,又再被验出患有淋巴癌。

他称儿子上周一(8月26日)左脑突然出血陷入昏迷,医生在上周六(31日)为儿子进行脑部手术后,没想手术后他被送到加护病房约一个小时突然就走了。

林韦宾的遗体停柩在武吉知马路上段圣若瑟教堂,明天(9月4日)举行葬礼。

国家血库库存不足 林父吁民众踊跃捐血

短短两个月医药费高达40万元(约120万令吉),林韦宾的父亲呼吁民众买保险做好保障,他也呼吁公众踊跃捐血。

本杰明·纳登说:“韦宾是个游泳健将,甚至有六块腹肌,谁也没想到这么健康的他会突然染上恶疾。健康并不是必然的,大家必须做好保障,免得发生事情时无法应付庞大的医药费。”

此外,他也从儿子住院的过程中发现,国家血库一直面对库存不足的问题,一旦血库不够血,病人便无法动手术,他因此在儿子动手术前夕,也通过面簿呼吁公众踊跃捐血,这不只是为了救林韦宾,也为了拯救有需要的病人。

据医生跟他说,捐血后的鲜血只可存放数周,而从血液中分离出来的血小板更是只能保存几天,所以健康者应养成定期捐血的习惯。”

毕业后仍回学院探望 学弟妹眼中好哥哥

毕业后仍不时回理工学院探望,林韦宾是泳队学弟妹眼中的好哥哥。

林韦宾在义安理工学院就读时是学校游泳队的一员,泳队教练谢迪健(39岁)形容他就像是队里的大哥哥,总会照顾和协助队友与学弟妹。

谢迪健说:“我对他印象很深刻,因为他真的很出色,就算毕业后也会回来探望学弟妹和帮助他们。以前他在队里时,我还没开口,他就会主动帮忙收拾泳具。如今大家知道他去世都很难过。”

除了在泳队里备受爱戴,林韦宾在家族里也是惹人疼的孩子。

父亲说:“儿子比较腼腆,他很有礼貌,是一个绅士,也很聪明,有时会动小脑筋,在想要某样东西时,就会想办法来说服我,就好像他想要去国外旅行,就会想办法让我赞成。”

父亲形容林韦宾与妹妹、他和妻子的关系密切,每年圣诞假期一家人会出国旅游,原本今年计划去日本大阪,如今已无法成行。

EBV感染者患HLH 120万之一几率

每120万名EBV患者中,约有一人会进一步患上导致免疫障碍的HLH。

本杰明·纳登说:“治疗我儿子的医生告诉我,感染EBV者当中每120万人只有一个会变成导致免疫障碍的HLH,这是非常罕见的病例。

家庭医师刘志华受访时也说,不管任何年龄层的大人和小孩都有可能感染EBV病毒,此病毒并不罕见,不过演变成好像林韦宾的HLH病症则是非常少见的病例。
刘志华医生形容,EBV病毒的初期症状很像感冒,许多医生都会误以为病人是患上感冒。

他说:“如果感冒持续超过三天,就需要找医生做身体检查,只有在检查后才能发现是EBV病毒。建议大家在接触公共场合后必须洗手,尤其是在触碰鼻子和嘴巴之前,借此避免感染EBV病毒。”

Monday, September 2, 2019

20190902 新明日报

患癌“阳光男”逝世 家人吁亲友带笑容送行

发布/2019年9月2日 3:09 PM
文/曾薪机
来自/新明日报

许国峰生前热爱健身及户外运动,是个阳光型男。(档案照)

患淋巴癌,乐观面对的壮硕“阳光男”,不敌病魔逝世,家人在网络上呼吁前来吊唁的亲友,避穿黑白,最好穿上色彩缤纷服饰及面带笑容前来送行。

《新明日报》早前曾经报道,这名生前从事金融业的许国锋(32岁),除了烟酒不沾外,也有健身习惯且平日爱好户外活动,他在去年6月因发烧至40度,被送入院就医后被诊断患有淋巴癌,随后癌细胞迅速扩展并恶化至末期,可是他仍然乐观坚强面对。

许国锋前天(8月31日)晚间11时25分逝世。

许国峰的家人随后在他的面簿上发贴文,指遗体将会停柩在新加坡殡仪馆,5日早上9时45分出殡。

家人在贴文中指出,希望前来吊唁的亲友,避免穿黑白服饰前来,同时也希望届时他们都能面带笑容前来。

许国峰生前在隶属青年基督徒的平台“YMI”访问时指出,他患病后,曾难以接受现实,并因遭受呕吐及脱发等痛苦,一度对自身的信仰抱持严重的怀疑。而患病之后,最痛苦的一件事莫过于见到母亲无能为力,只能在一旁落泪。

根据该平台报道,许国峰在两个月前停止接受治疗,而在他去世前的最后一个星期,出院返家接受慈怀疗护(Palliative care)。

许国峰(档案照)

盼亲友能快乐继续生活下去

许国峰上个月16日发布的贴文中向所有的亲友指出,虽然即将离去,但仍然会继续陪伴在他们的身边,并希望他们能带着笑容继续生活下去。

许国峰生前提及,当初他罹患的是淋巴癌初期,医生向他透露痊愈率高达90%,但病情却不断恶化,即使随后更换另一种更高强度的化疗方法,也无法根治。

他在三周前左右也曾发布面簿贴文,称预计能多活二至三个月,不料随后病情突然恶化后逝世。


19960407-20190831

In Loving Memory of Benedict James Naden Lim
who was called home to be with the Lord on 31 August 2019

Age: 23

Dearly missed and fondly remembered by his loved ones:

PARENTS
Benjamin Gerard Naden 
Josephine Lim

SISTER
Bernadette Jane Naden Lim

And all beloved relatives and friends.


Obituary as published in THE STRAITS TIMES on 02 Sep 2019

Saturday, August 31, 2019

19870502-20190831

https://ymi.today/2019/08/andrew-hui-im-32-and-im-dying/

ANDREW HUI: I’M 32 AND I’M DYING

Aug 29, 2019/in FEATURES /by Contributor



At 32, Andrew Hui now has an estimated two to three months left to live.

His latest treatment option of radiation was ceased a month ago after it was deemed no longer effective in controlling the spread of the cancer cells in his body. Since then, the tumor has been growing rapidly, and the lymphoma has spread to almost every critical organ and is pressing against important blood vessels.

Despite having just a month or so left where he would still be conscious and lucid, Andrew enthusiastically made time for this interview  at the hospital before being discharged back home to be made comfortable on palliative care as death looms.

“I want to encourage people to trust in God during the darkest points of their lives,” he said.



A SHOCKING DISCOVERY

Andrew hadn’t always viewed his condition this way. It took months of wrestling before he was able to reach this stage of peace and acceptance towards his prognosis—which came as a bolt from the blue last June.

Doctors had found out about the cancer in his body during a visit Andrew had made to the hospital’s emergency department one night because he was running a high fever. X-ray tests showed signs of a tumor growth in the upper part of his chest. Further biopsy tests identified it as Stage 1 Aggressive Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma.

Yet, doctors were confident that his was not a complicated case and had even told him that 90 per cent of people who had this cancer at this stage have been cured.

So Andrew put his hope in probability and medical science, presuming that his treatment would be like a few months of “holiday”, and confident that he would recover soon enough.

But he was in the 10 per cent.

Undergoing six rounds of R-EPOCH therapy, a form of chemotherapy, did not help him.

So doctors gunned for a stronger form of chemo—RICE therapy. This time, they said, some 70 to 80 per cent would successfully have their cancer treated by it.

Again, he went for four rounds of treatment but was found to be in the 20 to 30 per cent of people for whom this treatment did not work.

He was next put on immunotherapy which was deemed to be suitable for 99 per cent of patients.

Andrew, however, once again found himself in the one per cent deemed unsuitable for the treatment due to the severe side effects that emerged.

“This is as straightforward a message you could get from God, don’t you think so?” Andrew said matter-of-factly, with a laugh and a glint in his eye.

“I had placed my faith in medical science and when that failed, He has shown me I need to drastically change my perspective and fall back on Him totally,” he added.



A TIME OF QUESTIONING

Despite being a believer from young and one who actively served in church as a musician and leader, Andrew wrestled with God over his sickness earlier this year.

Why me?

Andrew was not one who was careless with his diet or lifestyle.

The young banker did not drink or smoke. Instead, he would have salads for lunch five days a week and frequently head to the gym after work.

Why now?

His questions to God piled up thick and fast. “I have barely fulfilled 10 per cent of my dreams and I thought You would be able to use me to a greater extent. I have been serving in church for 20 years and this is the way I am to go? This is how You tell the world that you care for Your servant?”

In his anger and disappointment with God, Andrew also lashed out at other Christians.

“They proclaimed or declared healing on me as they believed that by His stripes, God has carried our pain and bore it all (Isaiah 53:5). But I can’t reconcile it with the fact that I am not only not healed but also getting worse. It gave me false hope. So I scolded them and shut them out,” said Andrew.

“The way I see it, if He chooses to heal me, then his task for me on earth is not done. If I am not healed, then it is time for me to go home, so either way it is a win-win situation.”

Part of Andrew’s struggle and despair also stemmed from the fact that he was in a lot of pain.

He had to deal with nausea, lethargy, and hair loss, and many a time he would throw up so violently that his stomach contents would hit the wall.

Bad coughing fits would leave him curling up into a ball on his bed and his heart would shatter whenever he saw his mother crying by his bedside.



A TURNING POINT

However, a profound sense of peace and acceptance of death came when Andrew’s view  of God shifted.

“I have always viewed His sovereignty over my life as something that can’t be questioned. He can do as He likes and pleases, and we have no right to ask for, say favor, unless He gives it. I saw His sovereignty as judicious and high and mighty,” said Andrew.

“But later I realized that the way He expresses His sovereignty is through love. What is happening to me may not be good but He is good and His sovereignty is seen in how He carries me through the storms in life,” he added.

One of the verses that has helped Andrew arrive at this understanding is Ephesians 3:17-18, which says, “And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God”

His trust in God’s love and sovereignty has cast out any fear he used to have in facing his mortality.

“I have zero fear of death now. When I close my eyes for the last time, I am more certain about being with Him than I can have in boarding a plane and being assured of reaching my destination,” said Andrew, who worships at St. Matthew’s church.“I have zero fear of death now. When I close my eyes for the last time, I am more certain about being with Him than I can have in boarding a plane and being assured of reaching my destination,” said Andrew, who worships at St. Matthew’s church.
“That is the certainty I cling on to. Without that, if God or Jesus didn’t exist, I would have committed suicide because then all my hope is gone and there is no point or meaning to life,” he added.

He is also immensely grateful for having a church family who fasted, prayed, and cried with him throughout his period of illness. Many volunteered to buy food for him or to drive him to and from his home and the hospital.



A DYING TO SELF

Though Andrew was born into a Christian family and grew up in church, he only truly “came to faith” or owned his faith when he was 16.

He was in a Boys’ Brigade service in chapel one day and the lyrics of the song “So You Would Come” touched him immensely:

Nothing you can do
Could make Him love you more
And nothing that you’ve done
Could make Him close the door

These words pierced Andrew’s heart as he used to throw himself into doing good works or serving in church to try to atone for his sins.

The lyrics of the song gave Andrew a sense of freedom as he began to realize that God loves him and that he did not need to do anything to earn it. It also gave him the hope that despite his sins, God will never close the door on him.

But the journey since then hadn’t always been smooth-sailing.

Though he majored in communications and media studies, he joined the banking sector after graduation as it was more financially lucrative.

The number-crunching did not interest or excite him, but he had put money above fulfilment then as he loved to travel to experience different cultures and food. He also wanted to support the church by funding its missions work.

So Andrew worked long hours to climb up the corporate ladder and 12-hour workdays were the norm. His last position was as a manager in private banking.

But what he learned at the age of 16 never completely left him. The peace that comes with being convicted of God’s full acceptance and love for him, said Andrew, is the same peace that guards his heart now that he faces a larger battle of faith in confronting death.



A BLESSING THROUGH FAITH

Besides having the assurance of peace and knowing that he will meet Jesus in heaven after he dies, Andrew said his faith also makes a difference in mitigating his present pain.

“When I call out to him for help at night because of the pain, I find that the pain lessens when I focus on God and I will fall into deep sleep after that,” said Andrew.

Andrew’s faith has also enabled him to see the blessings that have arisen out of his illness, such as being able to know when he is going to die, and to be able to die without pain.

“This is so that I can prepare for death and say what I need to say and do what I need to do.

The pain medication and palliative care also enables me to be comfortable and die with a smile on my face,” he said.

Lately he has been able to talk to his parents about topics such as what they would be doing when he is gone and what they would use his room for.

“It is a blessing to be able to have such conversations because then there will be closure for them as well,” said Andrew, who is preparing a “death box” that contains all his farewell messages to his loved ones and friends.

“I don’t believe in having sad funerals. I want mine to be happy and I also want to have a gathering now when I am around to thank and affirm people who are important to me and enjoy good food together,” said Andrew, who enjoys cooking, and used to cook anything from kaya to sambal to mooncakes for church fundraisers.

These days, he finds himself not really thinking about death, but about “short-term” things such as his craving for tulang, or bone marrow soup.

One unrealized dream he has is to set up a soup kitchen with his two close friends for migrant workers or anyone who needs a meal.

“If I were to live my life again, I think the only part I would change is perhaps going into social service because that may bring more of a difference to the lives of others. But then again, I don’t know. I am who I am today because of all the moments in the past that shaped me,” said Andrew, who has a father with polio.



A FINAL WISH

His greatest wish now is to reconnect with people in his life, such as his primary and secondary school friends whom he has lost touch with.

When asked why he prioritizes his precious time with people he is not close to, Andrew said his heart is for them to come to know the peace that they can have through Christ.

“Whether they are busy working adults or battling their own problems, I want to share this peace that I have with them. So that when they come to the end of their lives, which may happen any time, they would know of a peace that money or toil or relationships or health or wealth cannot bring,” said Andrew.

“I want them to not hear of me as just someone who died, but a person who is waiting to welcome them in heaven and who desires to see them again in heaven.”



Editor’s Note: Andrew passed away peacefully at 11:25 p.m. (Singapore time) on 31 August 2019. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends.

我鄙视那个贪图被人怀念的自己

读了G给N写的悼文后,我开始明白自己对整件事的情绪不仅仅是不甘心,还包括羡慕。
我羡慕他们曾有过要好的时光,我羡慕他们的关系紧密到无人能取代。
我羡慕他这样被怀念着。

与其羡慕,不如开始珍惜自己身边的人,建立我们之间的专属关系和自己被怀念的可能,不是更好吗?

但是,
希望被人怀念这个想法,对生者而言是痛苦的,是自私的;
为了希望被人怀念而建立关系,根本不是真心,这只会让我鄙视我自己。

作为惩处,我是否应该开始不再对任何人付出真心,然后一直撑到世上对我的最后一分怀念消失以后,才作一次无人记得的告别?

Thursday, August 29, 2019

不甘心好好的人就这么被带走
真的不甘心

类似蝴蝶效应的狂想——真的,只是个狂想

有一天,有个陌生人给你一个文件夹,然后在人海中消失。
文件夹里有则新闻声称你因某件事在某地点死亡,在未来20XX年X月X日X时;
文件夹里还有几份亲朋好友社交网站上为你写的悼词,日期也是在20XX年X月X日之后。

你会觉得这是不安好心的恶作剧,还是某个人从未来回来提醒你、试图把你救下来?

Sunday, August 25, 2019

19970226-20190822

来不及参加选美赛 22岁男生昏迷亡

发布/2019年8月25日 2:45 PM
文/张曦予, 陈玉能
来自/新明日报

22岁国大理学院俊俏帅哥新生,忽然在购物中心昏倒紧急送院,原定参加的新生选美赛为表尊重临时取消,新生挣扎一周后不幸离世。

8月正逢许多大学新生迎新之际,各个大学旗下学院科系都会各自主办迎新活动,以及新生选美赛。新加坡国立大学理学院原定在本月16日晚间在Bugis Plus购物中心内的欣艺坊(Joyden Hall)举行,不料却在当天早上基于一些不可预知的情况,必须临时取消迎新晚会兼选美赛。

《新明日报》辗转探知,这次选美赛共有6对男女参赛,其中一名22岁的男参赛者于15日晚间在Bugis Plus忽然晕倒,当晚紧急送院。由于情况严重,这名男生必须待在加护病房。负责选美的学校筹办方为尊重出事的参赛者,决定取消活动。

无奈,这名22岁的许姓男学生情况没有好转,最终于8月22日离世。网上有传这名国大男生的死因或跟脑部动脉瘤有关。这名学生长相俊俏,据悉人缘很好。

国大理学院在回复媒体询问时表示,所有受影响的学生已被告知取消的决定,并且都能谅解背后原因。另外,国大发言人也证实这名22岁男学生离世,并为此深表遗憾与伤感,而校方也将在这段期间给予家人所需的支持。

死者的家人透过社交媒体告知死讯,并表示这个消息对大家来说都非常沉重。

据一名友人透露,对于22岁爱儿就这样走了,毫无预兆,父母都感到非常难过,也哭了好多回,让大家都非常心酸。

Friday, August 16, 2019

16 August 2019 at 13:55

https://www.facebook.com/xtremer87/posts/10157765006010312


Dearest Friends, Family, and everybody I have had the great fortune to have crossed my life with,

It has been a wonderful 32 years that God has granted me. To have known each and every one of you. Words cannot sufficiently express my gratefulness and happiness to have all of you as part of the jigsaw puzzle that competed my life.

This journey, however short, requires me to depart at the next station, approximately 2 months from now.
The darkness of cancer has enveloped almost all the critical functioning organs in my body, and has begun to do what it was meant to do.
It has been a long, painful and drawn out battle for the past year.. and finally my strength has almost been completed depleted. My status is beyond the reach of medical sciences as well now.

Though my armor is battle worn and broken, my peace remains. As sure as the sun rises on the dawn, my destination awaits me.

The purpose of this post is to let all of you, my dear companions know that I appreciate all of you so much. I pray that the memories I have made with you will remain a part of you even as I get off the train of mortality. Remember me for the good that I did, and I plead with you to forgive me if I have done anything that has wronged you.
Remember me for the battles I fought alongside with you, and I pray for your forgiveness if I injured you in any way.

32 years is a relatively short time for most people, but in the ocean of eternity, even a hundred years is a speck of dust.
Death is but a gateway to my eternal home. Where there will be no more pain, no more suffering, no more tears and always, always peace.
As my Master awaits me with open arms in heaven, i invite each and every one of you to join me at the very end when inevitably we all reach the great equalizer.
I will be waiting for all of you with the widest smile, to hear all your stories and adventures in life.
Live the life I could not have, and may your days be filled with joy, peace, and an eternal hope that transcends even death.

To all who are reading this post, I leave you with a permanent blessing:
I pray that my Lord grant you Shalom, a peace that grants you an unshakable joy, health, favor, love, prosperity, strength, kindness, goodness. That each an every one of you will live life with a smile, knowing that at least one person is watching over you from above.

WIth all my heart, thank you for giving me the best life a boy could have.

Andrew

Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Meet the Millennial - May 22, 2019

MEET THE MILLENNIAL Having Stage 4 Cancer At 32 – “The Greatest Lesson In Life Is To Learn How To Die”

Lim Bei Ling
May 22, 2019



“It’s the absence of hope that makes cancer patients lose all sense of life.”

At 32, Andrew has only about four to six months to live, should his current treatments fail. He has Aggressive Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, and it isn’t the first time medical treatments have failed on him. He had already gone through 10 rounds of what is supposed to be the most effective, available chemotherapy for his case, only for the cancer cells to return with a vengeance.

Within the span of less than a year, he has gone from optimistic and hopeful to terminally ill. 

When I first met Andrew about 9 years ago, he was an assistant producer at the place I interned at. In short, just an ordinary, healthy person who is few years my senior. Yet, when I met him at a cafe near his home earlier last week, he had to walk with the help of a cane. What used to be the physique of a sportsman is now this frail person with a slight hunchback, pallid face, and a bare head, save for a soft fuzz of hair that has started to regrow.

He was first diagnosed with stage 1 Aggressive Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, a type of cancer that affects certain types of immune system cells, last June. The tumour has since grown to a point where he is unable to ‘survive’ without the use of morphine. The tumour growth near his lungs presses on his rib cage every time he takes a breath, causing him immense pain.

Andrew needs to take Morphine every few hours as the medication numbs the constant pain he is in 
Image Credit: Andrew Hui

‘Pain patches’ like the one pictured above also helps to relieve the pain 
Image Credit: Andrew Hui

Back then, it was only by pure coincidence that the doctor stumbled upon the tumor. 

STAGE 1 ONLY, NO BIGGIE

It was only when Andrew checked himself into A&E for a high fever one night when they found out.

He had gone to the hospital as a precautionary measure, as he had a history with Pneumothorax (collapsed lung). Fearing complications that could have arose from the major surgery he did for Pneumothorax prior, the doctors ran some x-ray tests on him. The tests returned with signs of a tumour growth at the upper part of his chest.

Further biopsy tests identified it as stage 1 Lymphoma.

“Back then, the doctors were super confident—it wasn’t a complicated case. 90 percent of people who had this [cancer] at this stage have been cured.”

With that assurance and his strong belief in the medical system, he proceeded with the recommended treatments—chemotherapy—confident that it was nothing to worry about.

“I had great trust in our medical treatments. Like eh, stage one [only], what is this man! You know, I thought this will just be something like a few months ‘holiday’ where I go for treatments, then I’ll be out soon enough.”

Nobody would have expected that he was that 10 percent.

Instead of shrinking, the tumour grew from 8cm to 13.5cm. By this time, the cancer cells had began to spread to his other organs—the worst sign of any cancer. The 10 rounds of chemotherapy, which comprised of R-EPOCH therapy, and another stronger, RICE therapy, had failed.

As he went on to explain how chemotherapy works on cancer patients, Andrew added that it is something he would never wish upon anybody.

“It lives up to its reputation as a very uncomfortable process.”

The side effects of chemotherapy varies for each person. For Andrew, the sessions completely sucked the life out of him and made it impossible to palate anything.  “I would eat and then ‘Merlion’ everything out.”

Besides the nausea, lethargy, and hair loss, there was also a general uneasiness in his body which he could only describe as “an oily feeling,” and “it’s like your body is rejecting [what’s being done to it]”

COMING TO TERMS WITH THE TRUTH

When he saw the PET scan and heard the doctor’s remarks, his first thoughts were: “So how long more do I have left?”

“I don’t want to be in a situation where I haven’t said my goodbyes and I haven’t done my final things before I pass away.”

Any cancer patient would have mentally prepared themselves for the worst, but knowing that the worst that they could expect came true is another thing altogether. The news gutted Andrew and his family.

A Christian, he had on many occasions questioned why God allowed this to happen to him. He questioned why it had to be him. Why it had to be cancer.

Acceptance only came later, and it came from the pain that he had to go through.

“There was one night I really thought I was really going to die.”

He recounted to me about the night a bad coughing fit left him curled up into a ball on his bed. Besides the physical pain he felt at his ribs and the stars he was seeing from it, it also broke his heart to see his mother crying by his bedside.

“My mum said that she wished she could take the pain from me. She said that she wished she could be the one who had cancer instead of me. For me, for a child to see your mother crying for you so helplessly, it was so painful.”

In our generation, a lot of us spend long hours at work or with our friends. It was no different for Andrew. Looking back at the times he had placed work and friends above time with his family, his biggest regret is not having spent enough time with his mother.

“Ultimately, during the most difficult time of my life it was my mum who sat at the side of my bed. She cannot do anything but sit there and cry, but it’s this kind of relationship that [reminds me that this is something] we should never compromise.”

WHEN YOU’RE IN THE FACE OF DEATH

Andrew’s everyday life now revolves around rest. His therapies leave him with little energy for anything else. Besides the 16 or 17 hours of sleep he needs a day, he spends his time on simple pleasures like reading, catching up with friends, or fulfilling his wanderlust through travel shows on Netflix.


Since the traditional treatment of chemotherapy has failed, he has gone on to alternative therapies, which works slower and have a lower success rate. And because his is an aggressive cancer, it is now a race against time—for the alternative therapy to save him before the cancer takes his life.

However, the prognosis, or ‘time till death’ is not something that the doctors can determine as he is on a relatively new treatment. If it does not work, he will only have up to six months to live.

“The truth for cancer patients is that we cling on to every bit of hope if possible because otherwise, there’s really nothing else to cling on to anymore.” 

Hope. It is the one thing that keeps Andrew alive despite being in the face of death. Besides, cancer is unlike the common cough and flu, where you know recovery is only a matter of time with the help of medications.

Reflecting on his journey, he tells me about how the worst part is when the doctor looks at him with a look of defeat—when they look like they have no idea what else to do.

“It’s the absence of hope that makes cancer patients lose all sense of life.

The fear of death is what makes people struggle with coming to terms with being terminally ill, he explained, and stressed the importance of seeing death as a happy closure. The change in mindset and the understanding that death is one end to the pain and suffering is what helped him accept death.


Screen capture taken from Andrew Hui’s Facebook page
LAST WORDS: PRIORITISE HAPPINESS & HOLD ON TO HOPE
As someone who used to be extremely health conscious, Andrew joked about how he regrets not living life previously. “I used to actively clamp down on a lot of things believing that I have my health under my control. I should have just eaten whatever I want!”

Lymphoma, however, is one of those mysterious diseases that do not discriminate. He just happened to one who has it.

“I think we should live our life as happy as possible. Make a commitment to live as happy as possible. Happiness is now. Happiness is eating dinner with friends and family instead of doing paperwork at 9pm thinking that your boss and company will appreciate.”

For those who are also terminally ill, “Never stop fighting. Fighting on is a big part of fighting cancer.”

Many patients get very depressed and scared as they fear the ultimate result of cancer: death. However, one needs to believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel and believe that the pain will end.

“You need to believe that it will not be darkness when you close your eyes for the last time. [For me,] that is the hope I need to cling on to because otherwise I will fall into depression.”

Even loved ones will not be able to help in this journey, for it is a very personal battle when it comes to accepting death.

“We need to cling on to something larger and stronger than ourselves,” Andrew emphasised.

“The moment we give up hope, the battle is lost.”


Editor’s Note: Andrew passed away peacefully at 11:25pm on 31 August 2019. We’d like to extend our heartfelt condolences to Andrew’s family and friends.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Gone too soon, Y and A

It is heartbreaking seeing young souls unable to make it for reunion dinners forever.
2 lives gone within few days. I am thinking of how to get completely away from news and media till things subside, so that I won't sink into gloom.