Monthly Archive for April, 2007

Today is bookout day!

Yay!! After so many days on Tekong, wk is finally coming back today!!! He will be taking the 11.45am ferry and should reach Pasir Ris at around 12.30pm ba… Those who want to see his botak head can go there to stalk him! Hahaha….

But next week is his field camp = 2 weeks on Tekong. :’( boohoo…

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NS 4th Week

I haven’t been updating a lot for wk last week due to:
1) I was working, and was too tired to update at night
2) It was a short week, and hence one post for the 4 days seems fine

Wk says that he has gotten used to sleeping there, but he still cannot get used to losing his freedom, and having to obey those higher-ranked-people in Tekong. Well, who would want to listen to people who spews vulgarities every minute? I won’t.

Wk had his route march yesterday and this morning, and there were abrasions between his legs due to the sweat and blah blah blah, and his neck had some rashes due to carrying the rifle strap around his neck. Yucks! Don’t know how many people had been using that strap previously and how much sweat is there. Bacteria!!!! Gross. And the bedsheets, he said, had green patches and not like the ones we saw when we visited the bunks - clean and white. I guess the bunks we visited were like the ’showflats’. For show only lah!

And then, wk will be coming back in another 3 more days! :) But after this weekend, I will not be seeing him for another 2 more weeks. Field camp :(

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together with my dear

these 25mths have been great, being together with my dear. we do things together, things such as eating and drinking. haha… and the only thing we have left is to blog together. This is it.

even thought we had been together for 25 months le, everyday and every moment which each other feels very fresh as if I had only just proposed to her yesterday. we are always madly in love.

:)

the things we have in common is countless, and we think that we are made for each other, like how the edge of a puzzle piece fits perfectly with a corresponding one. since dear’s enlistment, we have been loving each other even more than before and i know that this person will be staying by my side, as my spouse, till our hair white white. but his hair will turn white first cos he always think too much. haha…

everytime when I get to book out from tekong I will be overwhelmed with joy, happy that I finally get to see my dear again after a difficult week. And when the time comes for me to book in, I’ll be filled with sadness, sometimes so overwhelming that tears would flow. Crying is not something guy should do, but in the foreseeable future I would expect my eyes to be leaking every sunday.

i love him. i love the way he cares for me and love me. i love it when he would look at my eyes and tell me that i am ****. this he should know. he would take care of me when i am ill, or when i stupidly clumsily falls down. his heart would ache when he sees that i am in pain. i love you dear! :)

my dear’s 2 yrs, i believe, will pass quicker than anyone else’s as i will be his supporter, and he can also look forward to meeting me everytime he books out. most people do not have this privilege. haha…

lalalalala…. <<<<<<<<<< dear’s favourite tune. haha… :)

another booking in again. A sad night for me, no doubt, especially considering that I flopped my SMU interview just now also.

but inside my mind, the countdown had already began. I am counting down to the next time I get to book out, and to see my beautiful girlfriend again, and to drown myself in the love, care and concern that she showers me with.

people say that it is easy for couples to break up when the guy enters NS. We say is is impossible for us to break up when I am serving NS.

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3rd Week @ Tekong

My third week @ Tekong was a very short one, which is good, thanks to Good Friday. However, it was shiong too. Everyday there are 3 strenuous activities. Sian. But time flies very fast, and only 1 week of PTP and 9 weeks of BMT left. I can only look forward. Look forward to POP, and then ORD. After that, time to embrace my passion and interest full fledge with SMU SIS. There is no more turning back, and no more pesky Vice Principal of some lousy JC who shouldn’t really be called educators.

Next monday, receive rifle, then the week after next, field camp. Time sprint away from my life and never come back. I’m loving it.

While other people enjoy 3 days of holiday this weekend, I have to go back to camp tomorrow night. This is because I am damn suay to kena guard duty, and not because I did something wrong, but because I was chosen randomly.

But to spend time in there more fruitfully and meaningfully, I bought a spare PSP battery, and a 4GB MS for my PSP, which I loaded with tonnes of videos and photos of me and my girlfriend, tonnes of games, and even movies. Guard duty shall be fun for me on Sunday.

My biceps grown bigger because of the crazy amount of pumpings, which are dished out quite reasonably in my opinion, when compared to people from other company of platoons. Our sergeants are nice people, except for one sergeant on temporary attachment to BMTC School 1.

Stay tuned for my next book out.

PS: I had a fantastic day with my dear today:)

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NS Day dunno-wat

Yeaps, Weikiat is back in Tekong after less than 48hrs on mainland. But…….. He will be coming back this THURSDAY! That’s because Friday is Good Friday and the sergeants decided that the recruits need to rest on Good Friday. Haha… That’s what I feel… Then, he will be going for an interview with SMU on Saturday and the rest of the time will be spent with his beloved gf, laptop, PSP, and Poh Wei. Hahaha… His beloved buddy ;p

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Back to Tekong once more.

In less than 3 hours I’ll be back to Tekong. Will miss my dear again.. :( Bringing in my game boy to tekong, but not for playing games. I store my gf photos in my programmable cart:)

Sian. Cya again next Thursday.

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Survival @ Tekong

Finally, I am back to what i call home.

Before I get on with talking about the 15 days @ Tekong, let me begin by giving my thanks. A big thanks to my fellow blog readers for staying with me. A super duperly big thanks to my girlfriend, Si Hui, for giving me emotional support, and helping me to settle and arrange external stuff while I am totally cut off from the internet, such as my SMU interview schedule, running of Slops, and helping me to blog.

Military life is totally different from that of a civilian’s. The first few days there, I felt very disorientated inside. A better word to replace “disorientated” would be the one that is more commonly referred to as the “F” word. As recruits, we are the lowest life form on the island, like horses on a farm ready to be abused in any way possible by the farmer. Even your parents don’t yelp and bark and hurl vulgarities at you and expect you to follow instructions without questions and blindly. But that is the way of life for a recruit @ Tekong.

The longing for my loved ones is very unbearable in the first few days there. Whenever I think of only being able to see them on weekends (and only approximately 24 hours) every week, I began to feel giddy and my head starts to throb. Emotional pain can lead to very physical consequences. The giddiness and headache was so unbearable that I was given 2 days of light duties, or “Attn B” for short, meaning I do not need to participate in any physical activities for 2 days. The panadol given helped, so did the medicine to help remove my giddiness, but soon after I felt worse off. I was constantly out of breath for no particular reason (I was still on “Attn B”). I went to visit the medical centre again, thinking that my childhood asthma had come back. But the X-ray showed nothing. The doctor diagnosed that I was suffering from Dysphoria, but that he kept it to himself. I only happened to see what he wrote on a piece of paper. I was then given a further 3 days of “Attn B”. After being there for slightly more than 1 week, I finally start to feel better. The physical trainings helped released the negative feelings in me too. That much for mental well being.

Living condition there was much better than that of many years ago. SAF loves to boast about that. But everything in the world had improved and became better since my father’s or grandfather’s time. How can living condition at BMTC not improve? On enlistment day our parents were given a tour of our bunks, with pure white bedsheets, an annex room with pool table and TV and air-con for games, basket ball courts, and beautiful toilet. On our first night there we were told that the bedsheets were called “Display sets”, and we had to take them off and replace them with the real one, which looks dirty and yellowish. There is no time to use the annex room (we were not allowed to use it during the first 2 weeks, and our daily free time of 1 hour is too short for us to bath, wash clothes, shit, call loved ones, and still go and play pool). Game sports are not included as part of the trainings. The basketball court was used by sergeants at night for their own basketball game, and by us in the day to do our warm-ups on.

Food doesn’t taste too bad. At times it is delicious. But it is very repetitive. We had chicken drumlets at least once a day since 7 days ago till my book out day. For lunch and dinner, everyday we eat rice. The lack of variety is sickening, but we need the food for energy. So just eat lor.

Being away from loved ones had taught me not to take them for granted. I feel that this is the most valuable lesson learnt during the 2 weeks @ Tekong. That much for now. Life @ Tekong is pretty repetitive and uninteresting. It had severely made my brain grow retarded and I find thinking and writing a very draining and tiresome task now. So I’ll just stop this entry here, and let myself enjoy my remaining minutes of freedom before booking in again.

Let the time flow, and the next weekend comes again for me to see my dear again. And the next, and the next…

Our encik told us to write an essay about our 2 weeks @ Tekong and hand it to him. Lazy to write another one, I just make some really really small changes to the above.

Military life is totally different from that of a civilian’s. The first few days there, I felt very disorientated inside. As recruits, we are like blank sheets of paper, ready to be filled with knowledge and skills about military by our commanders. However, it takes some time to get used to. Even your parents don’t shout commands at you. But that is the way of life for a recruit @ Tekong.
The longing for my loved ones is very unbearable in the first few days there. Whenever I think of only being able to see them on weekends (and only approximately 24 hours) every week, I began to feel giddy and my head starts to throb. Emotional pain can lead to very physical consequences. The giddiness and headache was so unbearable that I was given 2 days of light duties, or “Attn B” for short, meaning I do not need to participate in any physical activities for 2 days. The panadol given helped, so did the medicine to help remove my giddiness, but soon after I felt worse off. I was constantly out of breath for no particular reason (I was still on “Attn B”). I went to visit the medical centre again, thinking that my childhood asthma had come back. But the X-ray showed nothing. The doctor diagnosed that I was suffering from Dysphoria, but that he kept it to himself. I only happened to see what he wrote on a piece of paper. I was then given a further 3 days of “Attn B”. After being there for slightly more than 1 week, I finally start to feel better and was able to join back the physically trainings. The physical trainings helped released the negative feelings in me too. Physical trainings are good.
Living condition there was much better than that of many years ago, since my father’s or grandfather’s time. On enlistment day our parents were given a tour of our bunks, with pure white bedsheets, an annex room with pool table and TV and air-con for games, basket ball courts, and beautiful functionable toilets.
Food doesn’t taste too bad. At times it is delicious. But it can be very repetitive. We had chicken drumlets at least once a day since 7 days ago till my book out day. For lunch and dinner, everyday we eat rice. The lack of variety is very sian, but we need the food for energy. So just eat lor.
Being away from loved ones had taught me not to take them for granted. I feel that this is the most valuable lesson learnt during the 2 weeks @ Tekong. When we get to see our loved ones all the time, we began to take things for granted. It is with absence and not being around our loved ones that makes us miss our loved ones even more and learn how to treasure and love them even more.
The 15 days @ Tekong had come to an end. Although it is overwhelming psychologically, I am proud to say that I had lived through it and learnt many things. It is certainly a fulfilling experience.

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