• EP 5: How I Managed Full-Time Studies With Holiday Work

  • Jan 25 2023
  • Duración: 10 m
  • Podcast

EP 5: How I Managed Full-Time Studies With Holiday Work  Por  arte de portada

EP 5: How I Managed Full-Time Studies With Holiday Work

  • Resumen

  • Hello and welcome to this episode. In my previous episode, I shared about how I experienced work for the first time during the six months break in-between college and waiting for my placement in the local university. It was a liberating experience to make your own money, to be able to afford to buy presents for loved ones, have a good meal at a fancier place as a student and no longer needed to ask for more money from my parents who were already stretched to their breaking points to make ends meet with their very low incomes.The other reality that made me continue to work during school holidays was the fact that architecture school was not cheap. Aside from the school fees which I borrowed using my father’s retirement funds through the Central Provident Fund, known as CPF which are like compulsory savings deducted from the salary, the rest was mostly up to me.I also discovered to my horror, design presentations are very common in architecture school and every single drawing material medium, every tool came with a hefty price tag. It was a time where there was no carousell app nor second hand market place for pre-loved tools. For example drawing blueprints on vellum paper required at least six pens each producing different thickness of lines. Even the paper itself was a eye-watering price per sheet of A1 or even as big as A0 size because the price of that paper itself was the equivalent of a good lunch in the campus canteen for students. Every student was required to buy a standard set of drawing tools, set squares, T-square, ink pens, clutch pencil, right down to kneadable erasers. Even before I start school proper, I have to invest a fortune to get started. There wasn’t much alternative as there is only one supplier in Singapore selling all these specialised art material and tools. I saw my savings took a hit just to prepare for the start of the semester. Some of which I never even seen before nor did I even know how to use them. I made up my mind I have to help myself and my parents by being able to partly afford this journey of architecture education. It was already tough and made even tougher by the lack of money.And so through the university years, I worked during the school breaks or weekends or even holidays at local farms. I was thankful I had a close friend who remembered I stayed near the Lim Chu Kang farm area at that time and thought I might like a job nearby to earn some quick bucks. There was no contract, I was introduced to some workers that ran the farm area and we verbally agreed to an hourly rate and I started work. There was no formal training, I just followed the old hands on the job. Our job was bringing people out to see and spread awareness of Singapore’s local farms in Lim Chu Kang. They would come from Community Centre groups of elderly and middle-aged aunties and uncles, organisations for the disabled, private corporate companies, public sectors office workers and so on. I learnt through on the job training from the senior farm guides there. I would listen to how they shared about each farm and their specialities, what they breed on the farm, what was interesting about the animals and we often encourage visitors to patronise the farm by purchasing their fresh produce. They could be goat milk, vegetable that were freshly harvested from the fields that morning, quail eggs, fresh fish for soup or even bull frogs for cooking into the oh-so-yummy frog porridge. The perks of the job was a chance to meet celebrities once in a while, for example a local deejay from the mandarin radio station. I even learnt a tip or two from them. For instance he told me to stand a little more prominently in front so that people could see me. Sometimes in the whirlwind of people and bustling activities around you, it is normal to get carried away and you forget you are addressing a big group while standing near a building column that obstructed some people’s view of you.Once we were done with the day’s work, we get paid in cash straight away. There was no deductibles, no strings attached. These handy cash meant I get injections of new funds to pay for something in school, whether it was for cardboards and glue to make building models, or printing huge A1 or A0-size glossy posters and I am truly blessed the universe gave me this help along the way to help fund my educational needs.I learned that if I was willing to try and not afraid to learn on the job, I definitely can get work done and I could also improve yourself along the way. Whether it is knowledge, whether it is overcoming my initial perception of farms being smelly and dirty or overcoming my fear of public speaking and hearing my voice out loud sharing the tour agenda with visitors, I most certainly can take baby steps along the way to learn and move towards building up my self-confidence. Looking back with hindsight, I certainly placed a great deal of stress on myself. The truth is actually most people visiting the farm was looking ...
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