circuit breaker zine lockdown stories from singapore issue 01 october 2020
twenty writers and artists on: heartbreak • inequality • isolation • coming home • being an essential worker • nature
Editorial Credits Co-Editors
Michelle Lee Wenxin Gao
Production Manager
Wenxin Gao
Designer
Michelle Lee
Email (General/
circuitbreakerzine2020@gmail.com
Media Queries) Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/ circuitbreakerzine/
This publication is supported by the National Arts Council under the #SGCultureAnywhere campaign.
The views expressed in Circuit Breaker Zine are that of its respective contributors and do not necessarily represent the publication or its editors. No part of this publication may be reproduced or published without written consent by the editors of the publication.
All Rights Reserved Š 2020 Circuit Breaker Zine
b l a t e of contents Editor’s Letter by Wenxin Gao
5
Where I Know I Must Be by Alysha Chandra
6
Gathering of Flocks by Khairullah Rahim
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Heartbreak in the Time of Coronavirus by Bhawna Sharma Almost Blue by Miranda Jeyaretnam The Resilience of Wild Things by Izyanti Asaari The Other Virus by G.S. Deepak From Clown School to Quarantine by Shanice Stanislaus
Interview with a Medical Post Doctor (Who is Also My Mother) by Michelle Lee
56
Naghihingalo (“Gasping for Air”) by Bhinali Wallah
62
Poetry by Low Kian Seh
67
Citizenship in Crisis by R.Y. Zhang
72
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Mariko by Ma Ruonan & Tan Ying Ying
76
22
How Inequality Holds Us Up by Leong Yee Ting
80
32
Fun Fields by Lunastry
84
36
Comics & Posters by Hong Hu
14
Blackout in Strange Times by Cheryl Gan
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Teaching during Home-Based Learning by Hazirah Helmy
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Class of 2020 Stay Home by jace & chris
21, 41, 61, 65, 75, 79
54, 55, 66
e
r ’ s o l t e i tter d
Dear reader, Where were you on 3 April, 2020, when the circuit breaker was announced? My family had gathered nervously around the living room TV, bracing ourselves for the news. After hearing of the Covid-19 horrors in other countries, a lockdown had seemed inevitable after weeks of rising cases. My parents, ever practical, wondered aloud if we should have skipped the news and joined the ‘hoarders’ at NTUC Fairprice. While countries beyond our borders orchestrated lockdown measures in an attempt to contain Covid-19 outbreaks, our government had imposed a ‘circuit breaker’ in Singapore to the same effect. To most of us, who are unfamiliar with terms used in electrical engineering, it was a curious turn of phrase. Even stranger was the circuit breaker itself, which disrupted all of our lives in a multitude of ways. We wanted to document some of these stories in Circuit Breaker Zine, a project that was conceived of and produced (almost) entirely during the circuit breaker. In these pages, you will find intriguing forms of artmaking, such as Cheryl Gan’s blackout poems made from newspapers she received during her quarantine order, and Izyanti Asaari’s photos of wildflowers that bloomed around our unmanicured estates as we stayed at home. The effects of Covid-19 have also deepened the socio-economic fault lines that already existed in our society, as illustrated in Leong Yee Ting’s essay, “How Inequality Holds Us Up”. In “Where I Know I Must Be”, Alysha Chandra writes movingly about how home-based learning has made classes difficult for her brother, a student with special needs. This difficulty is acknowledged in “Teaching during Home-Based Learning”, where Hazirah Helmy interviews her mother, a teacher, about her new experience of teaching students from home. How do we move forward from this moment? None of us have all the answers. All of us are trying our best to settle into this ‘new normal’ that still feels unfamiliar; where everyone still has to mask up before going out, where workers fear losing their jobs to the recession, and where a sense of unease still hangs between every social interaction we have. We hope that you will enjoy reading this first issue of Circuit Breaker Zine, which has kept us editors busy through the lockdown months, and given us pockets of time to reflect on the unfolding crisis. Here’s to all ‘non-essential’ artists and writers, whose livelihoods have been impacted by the virus, yet who have persisted in pursuing their craft and believing in the importance of their voices.
Sincerely, Wenxin Gao (Wendy) Editor
r e I know I e h w must be
Alysha Ch 6
handra
I returned to Singapore in the middle of March, crying silently and staring out at the bougainvillea in the car ride home from Changi Airport like a character in a Channel 8 drama. Usually that stretch of the Pan Island Expressway (PIE) made me feel safe and lucky, like when we would land in Changi and the Singapore Airlines pilot says, “and to all Singaporeans, a warm welcome home.” But this time, everything happened so fast. I was completely unprepared for the humidity, steaming in my sweats and long sleeves, not quite believing that I was back from my exchange in Paris two whole months before I was meant to return. I had feared something like this would happen. I hadn’t expected it right then, but I always knew that straying too far from home would only make the inevitable return more difficult. Even leaving my family in Geylang for my Clementi dorm room felt like stretching a rubber band tight, tense with the anticipation for the moment it would snap, when I would have to be home again. My autistic brother is not a burden, but I cannot pretend that being his sister is easy. He is sweet, funny, and loving; but our system is difficult for people who do not fit into it, and my brother does not. As much as our home is a place of warmth and joy, almost all our doors are splintered from being repeatedly battered. I learned not to be precious with my possessions, which were so easily used as weapons or collateral. The moment we got the grilles removed from our windows, we began to have to pull my brother off the edge. While I was gone, I lit candles in churches all over Europe for my family. It felt good to do something tangible while far away and unable to help them. With a 7-hour time difference between us, they couldn’t call me as much as usual. No more tearful 8 a.m. recounts of the morning’s battle, or surprise appearances of my brother in my dorm room when everything got too hard for him and he had no place else to go. Still, I never let go of the dread and worry I feel whenever I get a notification on my phone, always waiting for the news that someone has gotten hurt. Feeling pretty saintly after lighting all those candles, I decided that there was nothing more important than my family. I couldn’t be happy if they weren’t, and once I returned home, they’d be my top priority. I just didn’t know if I’d ever be able to leave again. As we drove through the lorongs, windows down to disperse potential virus droplets, my mother said, her voice choppy through the wind, that maybe I just wasn’t meant to leave.
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Jetlagged and sick of staring at my screens, I found a book of Emily Dickinson poems in my bedroom while serving my stay-home notice. I had picked it up in a primary school Scholastic book fair and promptly forgotten about it, its pages mottled and yellow. I began to read. Emily’s life didn’t sound too different from many Singaporeans I know – she lived with her parents, never to move away. She became known as a recluse, dying in her childhood bedroom where after her death, volumes of her poetry, hand-bound and lettered, were uncovered, changing the landscape of poetry forever. Emily became the poet laureate of my quarantine, carefully transcribing the escapist fantasies she would never fulfil. In “Could I but ride indefinite”, she longs to be a bee “upon a raft of air / and row in nowhere all day long / and anchor off the bar, - / what liberty! So captives deem / who
“I said ‘But just to be a Bee’ Upon a Raft of Air And row in Nowhere all Day long And anchor “off the Bar”
tight in dungeons are.” I know it’s ridiculous for me to relate to this. I had all the freedom of a steady Wi-Fi connection and no financial responsibilities. Still I felt the rubber band binding me to the place I grew up growing tauter and thicker, my freewheeling bee sucked into vortexes beyond mine or anyone’s control. Outside my door, my family raged outside.
What Liberty! So Captives deem Who tight in Dungeons are.”
Lockdown is hard for all of us, but it is doubly hard for my brother and other kids like him, who are expected to focus on busy Zoom calls when they can barely maintain their attention in regular class. We fielded daily calls and texts from his teachers asking us to push him to show up and finish his assignments as we repeatedly explained that we had to pick our battles. Even more socially isolated than he already was, unable to go to therapy for a good part of the circuit breaker, and with his school counsellor unwilling to meet him over Zoom, my brother was under a lot of stress. If he could sit through a Dickinson poem, I think my brother would relate. It’s not that things 8
- Emily Dickinson
were much better before the circuit breaker. I’ve burst into tears while pleading his case to stonefaced educator-bureaucrats as they refused to adapt their disciplinary policies to a special needs child, dismissing his autism as a phase. The same institutions that set up neurotypicals like me for success harmed more than they helped him, holding him back from the many opportunities I have had to ride indefinite – the rubber bands tying him to our country growing tighter the more he struggles. In National Day celebrations of my secondary school past, my friends and I would link hands and belt along with Kit Chan about the place that would stay with us no matter where we’d choose to go.
I loved the song Home and its idea of Singapore – where you know every street and shore, where dreams come true for us. The cool blue hues of the home that Kit Chan flows through was all distance and memory, everything I wanted my home to be. I thought then that I’d never let myself get stuck in this country, in my home. Years later, I’m still here but far from where I was before. So is the song. It’s been rearranged and rereleased year after year in increasingly overwrought and nationalistic renditions, miles away from the reflective ambiguity of the original. Home reached its performative peak in April’s coordinated singalong, where the whole country was encouraged to sing it out their windows in honour of frontline workers battling the virus. I rolled my eyes as hard as the next social justice warrior, shaking my head at the futility of the gesture, how it glossed over questions of adequate compensation for these staff and its obvious exclusion of the tens of thousands of migrant workers left vulnerable while we sat safe in homes they built. I laughed along at the viral video shot out the window of a HDB block during the singalong, where a family cackled as a phone fell out the window of an opposing block, its flashlight illuminating its descent. But I felt really sad too, watching videos of people I once loved – family friends, my primary school teachers, posting videos of themselves singing that familiar chorus together; wondering when the distance between us grew wider than streets, greater than shores. ∎ ---
Collage on p.6-7 by Alysha Chandra
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Gathering of Flock
ks
Khairullah Rahim
untitled (circuit breaker exercise 1), 2020
Extending on my recent explorations with objects and communities, Gathering of Flocks is a new body of assemblages influenced by my daily observations of my everyday urban landscape. During the initial stages of the lockdown, I spent some time revisiting recent thoughts and ideas from my explorations in my neighbourhood, Boon Lay, where I had relocated in late 2018. Commonplace objects lining the corridors of my building, including altars and potted plants, act as uncanny gatekeepers of each respective housing unit, revealing fragments of the private lives and social demographics of its occupiers. Negotiating between aesthetics, materiality, form, function and meaning, this time around, these accidental assemblages were resourcefully created utilising only materials I can find lying around within my immediate surroundings; masking tape, cardboard boxes, hole puncher, invoices and leftover craft materials. In my previous iteration of Gathering of Flocks, the assemblages were made from familiar household items such as furniture parts, 12
untitled (circuit breaker exercise 3), 2020
0
View from corridor
laundry pegs and kitchenware. Upon closer inspection, these garish and flamboyant ‘almostaltars’ reveal an array of forms and materials that have been selectively chosen, manipulated, and reconfigured with the deliberate intention to evoke both a sense of congruence and opulence. The very act of beautifying and transforming these everyday objects also points to the strategic means in which other possibilities to thrive and flourish are carved out and made possible within the fabric of our daily lives.
untitled (circuit breaker exercise 3), 2020
In contrast to the earlier body of works which were informed by the very same reference subject, these almost-altars were precariously assembled, not durable and will probably not stand against the
---
All photos by Khairullah Rahim
stand of time. Perhaps, it was also a projection of my sentiments during this period of endless limbo. ∎ circuit breaker zine
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heart break
m e i t of e h t in coronavirus Bhawna Sharma If love in the time of coronavirus is hard,
imagine heartbreak. A few days before the circuit
pandemic forced me to reconcile my feelings
breaker measures kicked in, my ex and I parted
mindfully. Going to the gym, running errands,
ways over commitment issues. In what would be my
socializing with friends, and drinking one’s sorrows
last outing before Singapore came to a standstill,
away became the vestiges of a past life where
we dined at a French restaurant. I needed face-
escape was just one bus ride away. Time suddenly
to-face closure, and I needed to see him at least
stretched indefinitely, and every minute was ripe
once before he was gone for good. Punctuated by
for introspection. Within a week, the resentment
heavy silences and trivial banter, the dinner felt
I held towards him melted into acceptance, and
like an insincere reunion. I was profusely nervous
acceptance into forgiveness. Who was I to nit-pick
and giddy the entire time, and somewhat taken
and vilify him for prioritizing his career? With
aback by how unfazed he was. By the end of it, his
all the time in the world, I was compelled to take
effortless demeanour, his signature silver Bose
a long hard look at myself in the mirror before
headphones, the crinkly knots of stubble I loved to
writing off my ex.
run my hands through, and the smile which spoke for his sureness in life were all etched in my mind. In that moment, it dawned on me that love is as much about letting go of someone as it is about holding on to them. I didn’t have to be with him to be happy for him. 14
Bounded by the walls of my home, the
As my feelings crystallised into clarity, I also started to piece together what went wrong. When fleeting moments of longing threatened to devour me, I saw my own shortcomings in addition to his. Under normal circumstances, it would be easy to throw myself into the arms of my friends
and Tinder dates, and conveniently brush off yet
times of adversity. With everyone confined to
another failed relationship. This time, though, I
their homes, the need to reach out to others for
oscillated pensively between denial, rejection, and
emotional support eclipsed individual hedonism
forgiveness. It was wrong of him to leave me high
and self-expression. Thanks to social media, we no
and dry over text, but looking back, the tell-tale
longer have to find ourselves alone in trying times -
signs were there all along. I took his efforts for
we can connect with anyone, anywhere, one click at
granted without truly understanding the pressure
a time.
he was under. Ignorance was bliss during the borrowed time we were together.
It’s day eighteen of the circuit breaker, and I’ve made peace with my ex – well, ninety percent at
Days rolled into weeks as I slipped into a
least. We text each other sporadically, asking each
homey routine composed of studying, mindlessly
other how we’re keeping sane in these distressing
quarrelling with my parents, binge-watching Money
times. I don’t know if I’ll ever completely get over
Heist, and listening to John Mayer on repeat.
him, because when people say they’re ‘over’
Tucked away from the cosmopolitan grind of
someone, they’re not saying they’ve expunged all
Singapore, I found happiness in my small world,
the memories. They’re just saying they’ve learnt
and deliberately disengaged myself from a hyper-
to distance themselves while reminiscing about
connected culture.Sure, dating him was full of
them. He made his choice, and with a little help
wholesome moments and conversations, but it
from isolation, so have I. Covid-19 has hit the
wasn’t everything. Sometimes, it takes a pandemic
brakes on relationships, greed, and productivity,
for lovelorn souls to discover that life without
forcing us to re-examine our fundamental place
romance isn’t necessarily dull. I was glad to have
in the world. For my ex, the pandemic came as a
taken a step back in more ways than one – not
jolt, eradicating whatever remaining complacency
just romantically, but also digitally, economically,
he could afford to practice in pursuing his career
mentally, and spiritually. We are so preoccupied
ambitions. The irony is that when we’re out and
with the modern desire for acceptance, that we
about, we yearn for time to slow down, but when
forget to look inside ourselves, to ask ourselves
it does, we suddenly realise how much we have to
how we are feeling. I relished time alone, and as
achieve in the little time that we have left. As the
mornings morphed into nights, images of him
world passes me by from my window, I can’t wait to
floated in and out of my head until all at once, they
fall in love again, maybe tomorrow, in two weeks, or
disintegrated into nothingness.
six months from now… who knows? ∎
Once time ceased to have definite demarcations, old acquaintances emerged from their online hibernation: a high-school friend swiping Tinder in vain (only to be ghosted), a boy ready to plunge headfirst into the corporate world, and online strangers whose lives paralleled mine behind a thin screen. The more I talked, the more I realised that people share much more in common
self love
than they think. If it wasn’t for Covid- 19, I would have never rekindled these rusty connections. Transcending distance, time, and ego, social media brings people together in unexpected ways in circuit breaker zine
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almost blue Miranda Jeyaretnam A month before the circuit breaker was announced, the family had shuffled Mama out
you don’t feel comfortable wearing a
of her home of 40 years and into theirs. It was a
mask.” Still, the first couple of weeks
collective decision by Mama’s three children and
passed smoothly. Her daughter and her
their spouses — but one that had largely left Mama
husband adapted to working from home
out — because she’d been living alone for a year
and her grandchildren enjoyed staying
ever since her husband had passed away from a
home from school. She mothered them
heart attack. It was decided that it would be best
to keep herself busy and help her
to have her staying with her eldest daughter Irene
daughter out, and they’d cook together
in case of any emergencies, and so she wouldn’t
in the evenings.
get lonely. They’d spoken to each other about how lucky it was that they moved her before all hell broke loose. Mama occupied the small room that used to
Squatting on the kitchen floor, on the low wooden stool she had brought over from her home, she taught them to fold bamboo leaves over glutinous rice, meat,
double as the study and as one of the grandkids’
and chestnuts into a pyramid and to tie them with
rooms (the two children, a boy and a girl, both in
raffia. They planted seeds from the pods of blue
primary school, were now lumped together despite
pea flowers in a little pot as she instructed, “One
their protests). It suited Mama fine, aside from the
day they’ll flower and we can harvest them, then
fact that she could only see her friends a couple of
we can make more bak zhang but with blue rice.”
times a week and the family complained the walls
She was kind and patient, even though she teased
were too thin for her to listen to her songs all day.
the girl that she would put on weight from all that
She liked to watch Chinese dramas in the living
they were making and eating.
room with her two grandchildren sitting beside her. It conjured up memories of her own children sitting on her lap when she was a young mother. When the circuit-breaker commenced, Irene’s
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is. You’re in the vulnerable group. And
Dinner was filled with the usual assent of “mmm”s and busy slurping that took up most of the conversation, interrupted only by comments on whether something was overcooked or
family had bought enough food so they wouldn’t
satisfactory. If one thing connected the family,
have to get groceries for the next three weeks.
it was food. But not in the way of passing down
Mama suggested she could go to the market on
recipes or dissecting flavours, or at least that
some mornings like she usually did but was quickly
had been reserved for their late Gonggong who
shut down. “Ma, you don’t know how dangerous it
would bring the family together every other month
to recreate one of his mother’s dishes. But one evening, a week into the circuit-breaker, Mama started telling the grandchildren stories from their mother’s childhood. “Do you remember we used to have rabbits?” she said to Irene. She turned to the children, “It was when your mummy was still little.” Irene piped up, “My God, those rabbits bred like crazy. I remember they’d have a bunch of new babies in the night, but by morning they’d all be dead. We had to throw them away by the trayful...” “They were so small and grey, almost blue.
“Yes, you were always so angry. I remember you tried to run away when Pa caned you because you wouldn’t finish your food.” Irene muttered something under her breath and Mama knew she had struck a nerve. They ate the rest of their dinner in silence. When the kids started to have online classes more regularly, Mama took to calling her friends for company. They’d call and gossip about their families, complaining that their daughters were impatient and shrill, and try to find someone to blame for what was happening. Sometimes they’d watch the same drama and call to discuss it after. Mama told
I put one in the palm of my hand and it was still
her grandchildren about some of her friends, about
smaller than that. You were angry with me for
her sister, Siu Ang, who had taught her to cook and
touching them.”
sew and been like a mother to her. She told them
“Why would you stroke them when they were already dead?”
about how she liked to frequent Bukit Panjang market and talk to the stall aunties, to the bakery shop owners, to the old women and men who shared circuit breaker zine
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her table at the coffee shop. She often bought
was looking at her. She made out the shape of a
something from each stall, things she did not need,
woman. The woman walked closer, her long body
things for which she would get yelled at by her
moving languidly and her sad wan face loomed over
husband for wasting money. She missed talking,
Mama’s. Mama recognised her as her old friend
talking to people who did not think of her as old
Choo Leng whom she had spoken to only a week
or stupid, and she found that people often shared
ago.
their stories with her, because she would listen. She tried to call anyone she could. But the walls in the house were thin and the rest of the family had more important work, video conferences, online classes, and Mama was told that the calls needed to stop, or at least quieten down. She barely protested, feeling that this need to shrink herself down, to make herself a little easier to live with, was only natural. She quietly returned to her mobile phone, which her late
“What happened? Why did you scream?” Irene shook Mama, who still lay stiff like a corpse, as her husband ushered their children, who had wandered in bleary-eyed and concerned, back to bed. “We need to call Choo Leng’s family now. They don’t know she has died. Where is the phone?” “Died? Ma, it’s 4am, what are you doing?”
husband had spent weeks teaching her how to use,
“I saw her. Give me the phone.”
and told her friends she could not talk for a while
“Ma. It’s early. Go back to bed, okay? We’ll call
and not to call. The isolation sunk into her, weighing her skin and bones down so that she felt sluggish all the time and yet simultaneously anxious. She worried that this was the end of the world, that she didn’t really know what was happening, that her daughter and son-in-law might lose their jobs, that her granddaughter was too tomboyish, that her friends might just disappear. She had a constant headache and perpetually placed a warm towel over her head, waiting for the days to pass. Mama slept with the fan on and one small window cracked open. She believed the cold draught from the aircon would give her a migraine and then she wouldn’t be able to focus on anything, her eyesight blurring into shapes as her head throbbed. Draped in her thin polyester pyjamas, she hardly felt the heat of Singapore. Yet, she awoke one night, her bare skin sticking to her sheets and her eyes stinging with sweat or perhaps tears. She tried to get up and look around, but her body would not move. She felt trapped. Someone 18
Her cry awoke her daughter and son-in-law.
them in the morning, I’m sure she’s fine.” They could not assuage Mama’s turmoil, and Irene glanced sharply at her husband who moved to take Mama’s phone into their room. Later, as they went back to bed, they talked in low voices about dementia, hallucinations, Irene promising that she would take her for a checkup once the circuitbreaker ended. The next morning, Irene helped her mother call Choo Leng. Mama spoke to her friend, and Choo Leng reassured her that all was well and she was not sick. Everyone tried to convince her that it was just a nightmare. Mama listened but did not say anything. She wondered if she was being punished for her many failings in the past. She thought of the way she’d called Irene ugly and shapeless as a child, though she’d only wanted to see her become a little more feminine. She recalled with pain the way she’d objected strongly when her daughter chose to marry outside of her race, but she’d quickly come round, hadn’t she? She did not want to remember the times her husband’s temper had exploded onto herself and the children, the many canings when they were little, the many harsh
words meant to belittle. Mama began to spend more and more of her days in her room. She came out for meals but was quiet and withdrawn. She smiled a little at her grandchildren but would say she was tired and retreat to her bedroom soon after dinner. There were no further disturbances after that night, but Mama was still perturbed. She worried at a lump that she felt on her forearm until the skin became sore and cracked. When she was out of her room, she watched how Irene helped her children with homework, how she hugged them often and
still working, but in recent years it had become less and less frequent, with them opting to go to their paternal grandparents or one of their aunts’ houses. She remembered how Irene had yelled at her because she had tried to cane her granddaughter for spilling a sweet drink in her old home. Her husband had blamed her and said she was incapable of controlling her grandchildren just as she had failed at raising her children properly. She felt exhausted, and wanted only to forget, to stop thinking for a second so she could get some sleep.
never yelled. Mama would slink back to her room, complaining about a headache. “Ma, can I come in?” Irene poked her head into Mama’s room one afternoon. Mama grunted and Irene closed the door
When Mama awoke, she knew only a couple of hours had passed. It was still night and the room was steeped in darkness. But Mama heard Siu Ang’s voice. She was speaking to her in Teochew: words she had forgotten, words from her childhood. Siu Ang was telling her not to worry,
behind her. Mama had lowered all the blinds and
that Mother would get better. She remembered
the room looked smaller in the dim light. She was
the green bile that her mother had thrown up that
sitting on the edge of her bed, rubbing at her arm.
day. Its acidic smell nearly made her retch, even
“Ma… Are you okay? You haven’t been eating well.” Mama glanced up for a moment before returning her gaze to the floor. Irene went on, “Is this about your nightmares? Have you been able to sleep?” Mama’s shoulders hunched up and her back rounded. “You don’t need to worry about me.” Irene moved closer and awkwardly reached towards Mama’s sore arm, stroking it affectionately and asking what happened. She tried to keep talking but Mama would not respond, she barely seemed to be listening, so Irene left the room and promised to get Mama some cream for her arm later. As she was leaving, she thought she heard Mama mumble, “I’m sorry,” but she closed the door anyway. That night, Mama lay awake. She thought about how her grandchildren used to come to her house after school when their parents were
now. “But she died, Siu Ang. Don’t you remember? And Ah Ba was always so angry after that.” Mama continued to speak to Siu Ang. Then she got up, crept to Irene’s bedroom door and opened it without knocking. She stood there like a child who had had a bad dream. “Ah Jeh,” she called out in Teochew. It was what she called her elder sister Siu Ang. Irene’s husband swore loudly as he pulled the sheets over himself. “Shit! What is your mum doing? I thought she was a ghost!” Irene calmly got out of bed and tried to manoeuvre her mother out of their room and back to her bed. But Mama insisted on packing a bag, wanting to leave straight away to see her sister. “Ma, you know you can’t just leave. It’s so late! Where would you even go? Do you really think it’s safe out there?” “I don’t care! I just want to see Ah Jeh.” Mama wailed. circuit breaker zine
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Irene paused. “Ma, Dua Yee passed away years ago. Remember we went to her funeral? Ma, why don’t you just sit down for a bit?” Mama could not help but think of the little rabbits that had died. She began to cry. “Why did we keep all those rabbits and allow them to die?” Irene did not understand at first and tried once more to lead her mother back to bed, already thinking about bringing her to see a doctor earlier than planned. Still, Mama resisted and looked at her daughter. “I’m so sorry I did not protect you more. I could not keep all of you safe, I am just useless. Even Siu Ang… And now all this is happening. What if something happens to the children?” “It’s okay, Ma. I’m sorry too. I know it’s hard to be at home right now, and it’s scary to think about what might happen. Don’t worry about the children. They will be fine. Don’t think so much.” Irene decided that the next day she would talk to her family about spending more time with Mama and encourage her mother to call her friends more often. There was a lot to forgive for both of them, but Irene understood how Mama, who had lost her own mother so young, had thought she was doing good by keeping them all together, even when it hurt her children. She held Mama’s hand until she fell asleep. ∎
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circuit breaker zine
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the resilience of wild things field census may 2020
Izyanti Asaari circuit breaker zine
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The city was asked to rest, and it was as if the boundaries between manicured lawn and concrete relaxed. While we cooped ourselves up in our cubes of social isolation, weeds that had always been beaten back by grass cutters stretched. They were brazen, not shy at all, pushing past the sidewalk flowerbeds; and boy, they excelled. I grew up by a field in Teck Whye, but for much of my adult years had taken to ignoring its uneven, plain scruff. A month of civic neglect, however, and the field had become a whole new creature. I was struck by the contours the field took when left alone — the fingers of lalang grazing the air, the dark brambles of mimosa, the reddish haze of Japanese love grass. Beyond that, there were so many other miniature flowers and delicate weeds that I had never seen before in that field. Where did they
Above: Bluemink (Ageratum houstonianum) Below: Coatbutton / Tridax daisy (Tridax procumbens)
come from? Were they there all along? How long had they been lying dormant, waiting for the right stretch of time? I documented them. I did not want to say it then, but I knew that the field’s state of natural repose would not last. The grass cutters would be sent. I documented them as a reminder to myself, so that even when it was returned into its disciplined self, that there is magic woven in between the blades of cow grass. ∎
Left: Coco-grass, also known as Nut Grass, Purple Nut Sedge, Red Nut Sedge (Cyperus rotundus)
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Left: La
(Chryso
Right: Purpleleaved Buttonweed, a.k.a. Woodland False Buttonweed (Spermacoce remota); unknown plant
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alang; Love Grass
opogon aciculatus)
Above: White Heads (Eclipta prostrata)
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Top: unknown plant Bottom: unknown plant
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Top: Little ironweed (Cyanthillium cinereum)
Above: Oldenlandia diffusa
Bottom: Brittle False Pimpernel, also known as Round-fruited Lindernia (Lindernia crustacea)
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until next time...
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All photos by Izyanti Asaari circuit breaker zine
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SUPERHUMANS | MINISTRY OF MANPOW MAMANPOWER TO ISSUE VIRUS PERMITS | BREAKING NEWS: NOVEL
32
TS CAUSED BY VIRAL GENETIC MUTATIONS” | MARKETS SOARE AS VIRUS PRODUCES WER MAMANPOWER TO ISSUE VIRUS PERMITS | BREAKING NEWS: NOVEL PRODU
CTIVITY VIRUS-2019 DISCOVERED | “PERMANENT NEUROLOGIC NEUROLOGICAL EFFECTS CAUSED BY
BREAKING NEWS: NOVEL PRODUCTIVITY VIRUS-2019 DISCOVERED | “PERMANENT MARKETS SOAR AS VIRUS PRODUCES SUPERHUMANS | MINISTRY OF MANPOWE
the other virus
G.S. Deepak
AS VIRUS PRODUCES SUPERHUMANS | MINISTRY OF MANPOWER TO ISSUE VIRUS PERMITS | BREAKING NEWS: DISCOVERED | “PERMANENT NEUROLOGIC NEUROLOGICAL EFFECTS CAUSED BY VIRAL GENETIC MUTATI
T NEUROLOGICAL EFFECTS CAUSED BY VIRAL GENETIC MUTATIONS” | MARKETS SOAR
ER TO ISSUE VIRUS PERMITS | BREAKING NEWS: NOVEL PRODUCTIVITY VIRUS-2019 The rumours about the new virus had begun to annoy old Shabina Begum. “Whole day only virus-shirus. It’s all anyone will talk about,” she would grumble to anyone who cared to listen. She was right – all of Chittagong was obsessed with it. It had started with reports that people in the city were being hospitalised with flu-like symptoms. Bangladeshi health authorities quickly reassured the public that there was no cause for worry. But then something odd started happening. Stories started surfacing that the virus was having extraordinary effects on people. It seemed too strange to be true at first, but people were recovering from it changed. “Permanent neurological effects caused by viral genetic mutations,” a bespectacled Dhaka University professor named Chowdhury explained on television. Virus patients were emerging from bouts of infection far smarter and stronger than they had ever been. CNN covered the case of a 7-year-old boy who, weeks after testing positive, had mastered linear algebra and fluid dynamics. A septuagenarian found, after being discharged from a hospital in Cox’s Bazar, that she could suddenly deadlift 140 kilograms. One Dhaka woman, employed at a sweatshop pinning the labels onto Uniqlo t-shirts, recovered from a dry cough and was inexplicably able to work non-stop for 21 hours a day. The world was enthralled. People were calling it the Novel Productivity Virus-2019 (NPoV19). New possibilities were being opened up by the prospect of people with superhuman strength, stamina, and endurance. Business circles in New York and London and Tokyo buzzed with talk of labourers who could labour without rest. Every man, woman, and child infected by this virus could be extricated from the shackles of the body and liberated from the necessities of rest and sleep. A study by the American Enterprise Institute declared that global GDP would quadruple within the year if all of humanity could be infected with NPoV-19. It was going to usher in a new era of growth and prosperity, everyone believed. Very soon, Shabina Begum’s grandson Ismail was brandishing a copy of the Pratidin newspaper with a headline that screamed, “MARKETS SOAR AS VIRUS PRODUCES SUPERHUMANS!” Ismail, a lad of nineteen years, announced that he was going to get himself infected with NPoV19. “My school friends and I, we have a plan, dida” he declared. “First I’ll get sick, and then when I recover, I’ll be the strongest worker you’ve ever seen. Everyone will want to hire me and pay me a good salary. I’ll be a big man, you wait and see. I’ll go to Amreeka or Englaand. Or maybe Dubai!” Shabina Begum rolled her eyes. “I swear boy, something’s not right here,” she muttered. “These goings-on are the work of shaitan.” She was a hard, practical woman, one who had weathered too many storms and trudged through too many years to believe in miracles and godsends. Her husband had been a university lecturer, and Shabina Begum lived a comfortable life when Bangladesh was still East Bengal, one half of Pakistan. But when Bangla politicians started calling
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for autonomy, the Pakistani military went berserk.
military announced that any Rohingya resident of
In 1971, it unleashed a bloodthirsty rage across the
the sprawling refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar was
land, massacring intellectuals and peasants alike.
welcome to return to their Arakan homes. The
Soldiers took her husband away one night, and he
governments of Malaysia, Singapore, and Dubai
was never seen again. People were slaughtered in
handed out all-expenses-paid vacations to lure
the thousands. Children learn about it today as the
interested Bangladeshis into their territory, in the
War of Independence, but a genocide was what it
hopes that some of them might spread the virus
really was.
into their countries. All around the world, where
Something that resembled a country managed to crawl away from this carnage. They called it Bangla-desh, land of the Bengalis. It only resembled a country because it came to be ruled by the IMF
Bangladeshi men and women had long toiled quietly for a few trickled-down scraps, they suddenly mattered for the first time. Within days, Ismail announced to Shabina
and the Washington-based NGOs and the H&M
Begum that he was packing a bag. “I’m going to
factories that turned Bangladeshi sweat into
Singapore, nani!” he exclaimed. They were giving
discount apparel. Shabina Begum had worked at one
out visas – Virus Permits – at the embassy, he said.
of those textile factories herself, raising a child on
The Ministry of Labour there wanted Bangladeshis
her paltry income. Things were okay now – there
to spread NPoV-19 to Singaporeans, and they were
was food on the table and a few grandchildren. But
taking anyone who was interested in a six-month
she worried about Ismail, fresh out of school and
stay. The next day he was off. He video-called every
facing uncertain prospects. “You better get yourself
day, regaling Shabina Begum with the story of
a job, boy,” she kept telling him. “Don’t go messing
how he and hundreds of other Bangladeshi men
around with this virus nonsense.”
and women had been ushered into air-conditioned
It was not exactly easy to get NPoV-19. It just did not spread like the common flu, said the World Health Organisation. There was talk of an inoculation, a shot that could render you
coaches at the airport and ferried to gleaming hotels. “I have my own room, carpet and TV and all,” he told her. “I feel like a big man already.” “But what’s the catch, boy?” Shabina Begum
superhumanly productive in days. But scientists said
asked. According to Ismail, he just had to contribute
it would take years to safely develop. It was not even
to Singapore’s NPoV-19 propagation efforts. Every
possible to reliably test if someone had the virus;
morning, he was transported to community centres
you could be asymptomatic and still spread it.
and neighbourhood malls, where thousands of
For now, it seemed, your best shot of getting NPoV-19 was just to be around someone who had recently been in one of its epicentres in urban Bangladesh. And everyone wanted a share of this productivity-enhancing magic. Flights into the country were booked out for months. Borders that had once been impermeable to Bangladeshis suddenly dissolved away. India, which only months earlier had been hell-bent on expelling every
ordinary Singaporeans lined up to meet and greet him and his compatriots. Aspiring NPoV-19 patients came up to them and clamour to shake hands. Some got a little frisky, touching his face and clothes and wherever else the virus might have deposited itself. One particularly good-looking aspirant full-on made out with him, which he might have enjoyed more if he had been asked first. But it was all good and well in the service of
Muslim in the Gangetic delta into Bangladesh, now
the national interest. The Ministry’s objectives
announced that land crossings were open to all
were to spread it into 40% of the country’s
Bangladeshis, no questions asked. In Myanmar, the
population over six months, and to subsequently
34
achieve an ambitious target of 400% productivity growth by the end of the financial year. The stakes were high – Hong Kong was making prodigious progress in its own virus-spreading efforts, and financial markets there were surging in anticipation. There was no time for Singapore to lose. “I don’t like this stuff one bit,” Shabina Begum told Ismail. “You don’t know if they’re going to let you come back after your six months are up. And I’m just worried about how they’ll treat you in a foreign land.” “Chill, dida,” Ismail replied languidly. “It’s a new world – these are different times we live in. They want us here. They say we’re contributing to the future of this country.” “This is a strange new world that an old woman like me knows nothing about. But some things don’t change. They’re using you, Ismail,” said Shabina resignedly. “They’re going to toss you away like a sucked orange once they’re done with you.” ∎
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from clown school
to quarantine
Shanice Stanislaus “Your flight to Singapore on 22 March has been cancelled”. An email alert had popped up on my phone as I came back to my apartment in Étampes after a hearty dinner with my friends on 13 March, a Friday night. I started to panic.
worth it. Our classes filled me with great joy as we spent 6-8 hours a day doing movement training and theatre-based training with our master Phillipe Gaulier. He is notoriously known for giving harsh feedback in order for you to be able to be extremely self-aware as a performer to the audience. Many broke in his classes, but I found
I was enrolled in a clown school in Paris called
a great sense of wisdom and loved that I had the
École Phillipe Gaulier. After working in a corporate
opportunity to train at such a high level with this
job making digital content for corporations in
master. I was doing incredibly well in his classes,
Singapore, I had made a big decision to take a
feeling aligned with the choice I had made to
break from the job to pursue my love for theatre.
pursue the arts in this way. After soul-searching in
I had been worn out from working relentlessly as
Singapore about what kind of job I really wanted to
a freelance artist, and I felt I had lost my sense of
do, this calling into the arts felt right in my soul.
play, joy and curiosity. Realising that this feeling was a deep problem
I was really thriving in Paris, and in school. I had looked forward to finishing up my second
for my soul and finding my life’s purpose, I decided
term before heading home for a small break, and
to enrol in one of the world’s most famous clown
to wrap up the term with a bang. We had planned
schools to try to get my inner child back. I enrolled
to end the term with a nice celebration at Cafe Du,
in the school in hope to also chase my dream as an
the only bar in the small town we were in. Little did
emerging theatre and dance practitioner, and to
I know, a week before that was meant to happen,
find a way to practise my craft full-time. This year
plans would change drastically.
was going to be epic for me as I had saved up to make this big transition for myself. The process of working non-stop for 2 years to save money, taking time off to pursue this, and leaving my life at home was incredibly difficult for me and required a great amount of courage, perseverance, and belief. Clown school was a highlight. It was totally 36
When the email for my cancelled flight popped up on my phone, I hurriedly went onto the Singapore Airlines website to check on my flight. However, all direct flights home were getting cancelled as France started to see a rising number of Covid-19 cases.
My flight was cancelled with no options. I frantically tried to call the airlines, but there was no answer. The next day, I tried again, this time spending more than 4 hours trying to get through to the airline. My M1 phone bill eventually came to a whopping $1,850 from all the emergency calls I made to figure out how to come home. My school announced that they will continue for the last week of the term. After talking to my loved ones, we decided that I will stay in France to finish school. It might be safer for me to stay in one place as compared to travelling, especially since school was continuing. The decision was made after laborious hours of trying to get through to the airlines, trying to
call the embassy, and weighing the pros and cons of staying in Paris. My mind was weary and tired. It didn’t help that my family was extremely anxious which made me unable to calmly make decisions with all the noise and anxiety of the media and the people around me. Eventually, I decided to stay and finish school. It’s just one more week. I went to bed that night exhausted but with my mind made up. The next day, on 15 March, I woke up ready to do laundry when I saw an urgent message from my school: “School will have to close immediately as the
situation in Paris is escalating.” My classmates also started sharing rumours that France will go into lockdown.
Get out. Get out now. That’s what my instinct
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told me. I jumped out of bed without brushing my teeth, still in my pyjamas, and called my loved ones to help me find a flight home. Most flights available were transiting through European Union (EU) countries, which might be difficult and risky because I might end up getting stuck in transit as EU nations were closing their borders by the day. I called Singapore Airlines again. No response. In that moment, my survival instincts kicked in. My mind went on autopilot as I tried to logically figure out the best way to go home. Luckily, my loved ones found that there was one last direct flight leaving to Singapore that very night via Air France, and I had three hours to pack and leave for the airport. I booked it, paying a ridiculous amount of
My flight home was smooth. Nobody was on the plane, but when I arrived, I was immediately ushered to a corner where the ICA (Immigrants & Checkpoints Authority) collected our passports. We filled in a stay-home notice (SHN) form and had our numbers taken down by ICA officers, who would confirm with us that we received a “location check” text message sent by the ICA. Only then were our passports returned to us. ICA would then continue to send “location check” messages twice a day for those on SHN. It was a huge juxtaposition for me to return home. In 24 hours, I went from exploring my freedom in expression at clown school to being locked in a room for two weeks. Having come from a Covid-19 hotspot, I feared that my elderly parents might be put at risk of contracting the virus and agreed not
money for the ticket, and started to throw all my
to leave my room for two weeks. I didn’t even go
things in the luggage. I had gone grocery shopping
to the living room, except once when ICA officers
the night before so I gave away all my fresh food
came over to check if I was home.
to a good friend who had chosen to stay in Paris. I called my Airbnb host to tell her of my immediate departure. I rushed to the airport with three other clown
The first few days of quarantine was spent on catching up on sleep and ensuring that my apartment paperwork in Paris was settled, as I had left abruptly before my rental period was up. I also
friends. Two of them were from Spain and the
came home to the news that all my projects were
other from the UK. We all sat tensely because we
cancelled. I had some freelance projects that I was
were all trying to get out as quickly as we could
running from Paris, and they were all cancelled or
to catch our flights home. We also knew that we
suspended.
might be going home to unemployment and to an indefinite period of quarantine. As we parted ways at the airport, we embraced each other as we wished each other good luck. No one knew when we would see each other again. My friends were deeply upset with the school
The first few days, the feelings didn’t hit me. I was operating like a machine, doing all the paperwork and catching up sleep. On Day 5, I was also told that one of my classmates who I worked with had contracted the virus, and that I had to monitor myself. It caused a great amount of
closure. Some international friends chose to stay
anxiety, as all I could do was wait and overdose
put because they wanted to be around when school
myself on Vitamin C.
re-opened in April, but of course, that didn’t happen. They remained stuck in France until June when they could finally fly home and reunite with their family. 38
In hindsight, maybe I didn’t want to let myself feel the anger and perhaps, grief of having to say goodbye to a place so abruptly. I began to try to occupy my mind in positive ways. I played a lot with
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a ball in my room, worked out, did some virtual
all still awaiting for when theatres might reopen
dance classes, and tried to occupy myself with
and for life will go back to as it is. I’m still waiting
positive podcasts and TV programmes.
for the time when I can return to finish my clown
I remember Day 10. Day 10, it hit me. I felt the great anger, helplessness, sadness, and depression that was brewing in me. I lay on
journey, but there is no doubt that we will be returning to those things with more appreciation for each other, our health, and our ability to practice the arts no matter what circumstances we may be in.
the floor staring at the ceiling for the longest
The arts are a saving grace for me during
time that day. I didn’t understand why this was
this time, as it kept me going and gave me a space
happening, and how I went from pursuing my
to express all the emotions that came with the
dreams to literally being locked up in my room and
Covid-19 pandemic. I am grateful for this time
not being able to see my loved ones.
that was forced upon me so that I could be more
When my SHN ended, Singapore went right into the circuit breaker. I wanted to cry. But it
introspective on what I was doing with my life, what was essential, and what was not. ∎
meant that I could leave my room and now just be in my house, which was a relief as I was going a bit mad from staying in a room for two weeks. SHN gave me a lot of time to think about how I wanted
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All photos courtesy of Shanice Stanislaus
to deal with the situation. After the emotional roller coaster that is SHN, I decided to use the circuit breaker as a period of self-learning and growth. During the circuit breaker, the creative industry was badly hit and I watched a lot of my close friends and colleagues really suffer from the massive impact from the circuit breaker measures. I used the time to run virtual dance classes from my living room called AnyBody Can Dance Sundays, which started as a simple idea to share my love for dance with whoever that wanted to dance with me. I started the first one with 3 people attending and ever since then, I have run 14 sessions with as many as 60 people showing up for class! This experience taught me more about bringing ideas to life, and what it meant to be entrepreneurial in a time of a crisis. I also took the time to look again at the kind of work I really wanted to do, and to bring what I have learnt in clown school to potential projects. The circuit breaker has affected the creative industry greatly, and we have had to be extremely innovative and resilient during this time. We are 40
Watch the video Shanice made during her stay-home notice at https://youtu. be/08O6Q3R66ro
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black out in
strange
times Cheryl Gan
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The only fresh, new, physical, tangible thing that came to our door besides food was the daily newspaper. My family was served a 14-day quarantine order (QO) when a loved one was tested positive with Covid-19. I began creating blackout poetry with the daily news reports about its evolution and effects worldwide, day after day, as part of my routine. Connections, possibilities, humour surfaced through the process. Tucked away from the distractions that were being served in high definition frequencies, I found myself in a flow. What did I do when the quarantine was faithfully and diligently completed? Nothing, as the circuit breaker began on that very same day... Enjoy the poems. â˜ş ∎
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Day 1: Apart
Mac’s trusty Preview tool
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Day 4: home with mummy
Pentel Oil Pastels circuit breaker zine
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Day 8: Pause ?
Patterned Washi Tape 46
Day 5: Silver Lining
Circle Foam Sponge, Black Stamp Pad
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Day 10: Quiet Respite
Crayola SuperTips
Day 14: Stiller
Crayola SuperTips 48
Day 12: doing nothing
Crayola SuperTips
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i h n c g d a u r g i n e t
home-based learning Hazirah Helmy It’s always easy to tell when my mother is having class with her students. It doesn’t matter that her door is closed, or that I’m in a different room and plugged in: I can still hear her voice, reminding students to speak up. The circuit breaker meant that teachers were challenged to reassess their existing pedagogy and adapt it to meet their students’ new
Q: How is HBL different from your usual timetable? A: We have a HBL-specific timetable, and
needs. Studying in the National Institute of
students have a mix of online and offline lessons.
Education (NIE) means that I get to hear about
Online lessons are what people tend to think
how different schools have been managing
of when they think of HBL – it’s the sessions
this transition, but living with my mother
over Google Meet where teachers and students
means that I get to see (and to some degree,
have face time with each other. The lessons are
experience) what this is like.
scheduled for the morning or the afternoon,
I’m learning how to teach Social Studies and History, and discussions form a core element of our preferred pedagogy. My mother has been teaching for over 20 years, and currently teaches English to Secondary 3 and 4 students. She utilises discussion
but never both so the students would spend the remaining time completing their tasks for their offline lessons, which are usually a set of tasks or lesson packages that students have to complete in their own time. For English, the students’ offline lessons are
strategies frequently in class, so it’s been
before their online lessons, so the offline lessons
intriguing to hear how her execution strategies
that I set for the week are meant to prepare them
have shifted to meet her students’ new needs.
for their online session. For example, I would assign notes or articles that they would have to read, and a set of questions they would have to answer on their own. During the online lessons, I would put them into groups, and they would have to discuss their responses to the articles before consolidating and deciding on a group response.
50
Q: It sounds a lot like a university seminar. How do you monitor their understanding? A: I give feedback in two stages. I usually assign work through Google Classroom, so their discussion would be on Google Docs. For the first
I know what I can improve on for the next time. Some teachers use Student Learning Space (SLS), a consolidated platform for online learning, so their feedback channels are a bit different, but it’s something we all look into and plan for.
stage, I use the comments function on Google Docs to give feedback on their work directly as they are discussing. This allows me to engage with the specific groups of students and push their thinking a bit further with targeted questioning. At the end of the discussion, the second stage of feedback is when I consolidate all my observations from their discussions and share more general feedback with the class. I find this really important, because the students can not only clarify their own confusion, but also share with me their feedback on the lesson. That way,
Q: What do you take into account when you plan for your lessons? A: Since I need to inform my students of the plan for the whole week, I have to really consider whether the tasks or activities planned are sufficient. At the start, I had to check in on my students more often, but over time, I didn’t have to as much because they got used to it and they adapted fast! They’re quite independent and driven, so it does help. It has also settled into a routine, so
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there’s less troubleshooting on the tech side. That being said, over the course of HBL, there were quite a few changes in terms of platforms we could use because of the various security breaches. For example, with Google Meet, the chat function was disabled because of those security breaches, so I had to use the comments function on Google Docs to interact with the students. With live conferencing, I try not to introduce too much new information, because it’s hard for the students to keep track as opposed to a chat where they can just copy-paste the comments or information for their own revision. Beyond thinking about the learning objectives, I also think about how to best utilise the technology to engage the students and deliver the lesson. There have also been various tech hiccups. I once presented a video in Google Slides during the live lesson, not knowing that audio does not get shared when using the “present screen” function on Google Meet. Now if I want to share a video with my students, I share the link with them first so they can watch it before the online lesson.
Q: Do you still have lessons like Character and Citizenship Education (CCE) or Form Teacher (FT) time? A: Yes! We have FT time with the students. It’s about 30 minutes each week and meant for the form teachers to check in on the students to see how they’re coping with their workload and the circuit breaker. On the school’s part, they do prepare lesson packages with resources for us, but my co-FT and I always plan what to do for our class. Sometimes we play games with our students, but we always make sure to check in with them. If it’s not too personal, sometimes we teachers will share too! After all, the point is to encourage them and remind them that their struggles are valid, and that this is something we can get through together. 52
Q: How did the whole HBL experience help you grow as a teacher? A: My experience with HBL isn’t universal. I teach at a school where the students generally own their own electronic devices and are quite disciplined and self-motivated, so the concerns my colleagues and I have might differ from teachers who teach learners with a different profile.
Q: How did the whole HBL experience help you grow as a teacher? A: I’m quite thankful to my colleagues as well. They’re very enthusiastic about all the possibilities and are very open to sharing whatever resources they find. They’re a bit younger and more
as easily. It also makes me more cognisant of the feedback I give the students. Written words carry more weight, so I am more conscious of what I say to the students. It’s a good point of reflection. Something I’ve realised is that if you tell
technologically-inclined, so I was quite heartened
students what to expect for the week, it helps
that they accommodated my questions as we
them to plan their schedule and they will be able
explored the different options. They were also
to deliver on the tasks you set. It helps them
really encouraging, so this made the trial process
see the bigger picture, and also encourages
more accessible. Their enthusiasm was quite
them to take charge of their own learning. By
intimidating at first, but it was also infectious,
clearly communicating my expectations with an
and made me want to explore more options for
overview of the week, they are also able to pace
teaching and learning as well.
themselves and produce quality work, so we
Overall, I think I was actually quite surprised by my own adaptability and mental strength in transitioning to HBL. As an older teacher, I didn’t think I was going to take it to it so readily,
should trust our students! ∎ ---
Photo by Hazirah Helmy
but it ended up being a lot easier than I initially anticipated. HBL has been tiring, but I think I feel quite accomplished that I took on the challenge and was able to learn and grow from it. Of course, my experience with HBL isn’t universal. I teach at a school where the students generally own their own electronic devices and are quite disciplined and self-motivated, so the concerns my colleagues and I have might differ from teachers who teach learners with a different profile.
Q: Moving forward, what would you incorporate into future lessons? A: I find that technology is really useful in making thinking visible and retaining it as well. Since everything is recorded online, students can go back to their discussion or my feedback from past lessons when working on their present assignments. In a classroom setting, this would be recorded on a whiteboard or mahjong paper that will be erased or thrown away after the lesson, so students can’t go back to a previous discussion circuit breaker zine
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interview with a medical post doctor (who is also my mother)
Michelle Lee 56
My mother is a General Practitioner (GP) who
After the results of their swabs are known
has been working at a clinic in Marsiling for the
and diagnosis is confirmed, they are usually sent
past few years. Even before the pandemic, a large
to the hospitals for treatment first. Subsequently,
proportion of her patients were migrant workers,
they are sent to the community care centres and
as her clinic has contracts with these workers’
community recovery centres.
employers to serve their healthcare needs. After Covid-19 began to spread, she was deployed to a medical outpost in Woodlands, where she carried out swab tests for suspected cases
Q: Tell me more about the medical post. A: This Woodlands medical post was initially at
and also tended to the general medical concerns of
Woodlands Recreation Centre, before the present
migrant workers. She also volunteered to do tele-
location in Sembawang Drive. There are similar
medicine, where she provided consultations to the
medical posts set up all over the island as there
workers over the phone. These teleconsultations
are over 300,000 migrant workers. For instance,
took place after the medical posts stood down for
there are medical posts in Jalan Penjuru, Kaki
the day, from 6pm to 9am the next day.
Bukit in Bedok area and in Kranji. These recreation
I interviewed her about her experiences at the medical post, and her thoughts and feelings about the current coronavirus crisis.
centres were set up after the Little India riots to give migrant workers facilities to rest and relax during the weekends. Usually these recreation centres also have remittance services, shops, and a sports field.
Q: What kind of medical work have you been doing during this period? A: I’ve been working at a medical post in Woodlands. Most of the migrant workers who report sick here are under quarantine. They’re from the active clusters in their dorms, and they’re all under lockdown. They can’t go to the polyclinic or other neighbourhood clinics like previously, as their movements are restricted.
My current medical post in Sembawang is at the Cochrane Recreation Centre, which is brand new and has superb facilities including a cricket pitch, two huge fields for football, two big multipurpose halls, a food court, facilities for hand washing, and ample and well done up bathrooms. There is also a row of shops that are yet to be opened, as the centre hasn’t been officially opened for use. There is also a stage for performances and spaces for movie watching and
Initially, we primarily saw those with sore
other activities. In comparison, the Woodlands
throat, runny nose, cough, fever, loss of sense
medical post was situated at an old recreation
of smell - symptoms of Covid-19 - and our focus
centre and only has simple basic facilities.
was on swabbing them, diagnosing and getting them the appropriate treatment they need. As the Covid-19 outbreak evolves, workflow and swabbing strategies also evolve. So the situation is very fluid. After swabbing, the workers are sent to the
Q: What do you do at the medical post? A: Our work is fluid and depends on different strategies to diagnose and manage Covid-19 cases
isolation facilities. As long as there’s a possibility of
as the situation evolves. Initially, as the number of
Covid-19, they have to be isolated - until we know
Covid-19 cases in the dormitories were increasing,
the results. We have to segregate them from the
aggressive swabbing was done to quickly identify
rest of the healthy men in their dormitories.
the sick men and isolate them from the well men. circuit breaker zine
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Subsequently the strategy changed, and the swabbing criteria changed - if there are no symptoms of acute respiratory infection, we don’t swab. By right, workers from so-called “clean” dorms are all under lockdown and a lot of them still haven’t gone back to work. If they develop any Covid-19 symptoms, they get sent to us to be swabbed. Under current policy, the dorm manager has to isolate them in the dorm after we send them back. If the dorms are unable to isolate the swabbed men due to a lack of space, they are sent to community swab isolation facilities. When we identify older migrant workers (over
Q: What’s a typical day like at the post? A: Working hours are typically from 10am to 5pm, but I arrive earlier at 9am. We have to go in at least thirty minutes earlier to prepare for work for the day. The cleaner will have cleaned up the table but I’ll clean it again. I also clean my chair using 70% alcohol. I’ll then set out my equipment, such as the thermometer, blood pressure machine, oximeter, auroscope, stethoscope, torchlight, tongue depressor, alcohol swabs, hand sanitizer, tissue and paper towels. These are very mundane actions but are very important for infection control. I have a routine for gowning my PPE (Personal Protection
45 years of age) with comorbidities (other ongoing
Equipment) to ensure I get everything in place.
medical conditions such as hypertension, diabetes,
Otherwise, one may forget a piece of the PPE such
high cholesterol) and those who are medically
as the face shield or hair net.
unstable, we don’t swab them, but we send them straight to A&E (Accident & Emergency). This is because if they turn out to be positive, they have a higher risk of running into medical trouble - so, we let the hospital manage them. At the medical post, what we can do is
The staff also help to set up the computer and the printer. I need these to document my work as well as to fill out all the official forms for MOH and MOM - they want to know which workers we have seen and what they were seen for. The buses of workers might start coming in at 11am. Previously
very basic. We have to make decisions like when
at Woodlands, we had three buses to convey the
to send workers to the A&E - these are very
migrant workers to and from their dormitories.
different circumstances now. The Ministry of
Now we only have two buses.
Health (MOH) keeps updating us with changes in policies in managing the Covid-19 situation, and we really have to go with the flow. The latest is that we can send workers to polyclinics or PHPCs (Public Health Preparedness Clinics) for lab tests and ECG (electrocardiogram). Prior to this new development, we usually give those with chronic conditions two weeks’ medicine to tide them through the lockdown. We don’t have the facilities to do tests to monitor their condition, other than taking their blood pressure. In comparison, polyclinics can do laboratory tests like checking their kidneys. The post is very different from a regular clinic in this aspect, too. However, these people currently can’t move freely; they can only go to the medical post for their medical needs. 58
Q: What’s it like wearing personal protective equipment (PPE)? A: When the patients arrive, we put on the N95 mask, face shield, and gown. The medical post is not air-conditioned, but we have a lot of fans around the post to circulate and cool the air. Nonetheless, it still feels like being in a sauna. We have to drink plenty of water to hydrate ourselves. Once all the patients are seen and sent off, we degown quickly and change out of our PPE. I’ll switch to my surgical mask, because with the N95 it’s very difficult to breathe. At the end of the day my clothes are drenched with sweat and smell awful!
The first day I worked at the medical post,
least three months. They worry about their families,
I was dehydrated and woke up in the middle of
they can’t get out of their room, they have to eat
the night with a nasty headache. Since then, I
what’s provided to them. There’s only so much you
learned to have a schedule for my fluid intake and
can do on your handphone to entertain yourself.
my meals. Every day before gowning, visiting the
They’re especially stressed out when they see the
toilet is a priority because once you have gowned
people in their room disappearing because their
up, you can’t go to the toilet or drink until after
roommates are being taken away to hospital for
the next doff off. Having a heavy breakfast is also
treatment.
important, because lunch is unpredictable and may be delayed depending on when the patients arrive.
After I see them, they are either isolated in the community swab isolation facilities or in their own dormitories until their swab results are known. If their swabs turn out positive, they are usually
Q: What’s it like interacting with the workers who have been exposed to COVID-19? A: I find many of those who come to the medical post to be quite stoic, especially the young men. A few might be a bit more worried. I’ve come
admitted to hospitals. When they’re medically stable, they’re sent to the community care facility. This is especially so for the older patients. I saw one man with a very rapid heart rate and chest discomfort, which could have been due to anxiety. He was in his late thirties. He initially saw another doctor, who referred him to A&E to
across a couple who are mentally stressed out.
rule out a cardiac cause for his rapid heart rate.
The lockdown has been going on for a long time, at
Unfortunately, there was a miscommunication. circuit breaker zine
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Instead of sending him to A&E in an ambulance,
as well as psychological support. There are a lot of
the dorm operator just brought him to a GP, who
unmet mental health needs among them.
didn’t do any tests on him. He was quite distressed when he came to see me again two days later. It was very smart of him to continue seeking help. Can you imagine - he was sent back to his room thinking he was
Q: Any last thoughts, as you leave the medical post and begin working at your usual clinic again? A: We’re still under DORSCON Orange where
going to die? I sent him to A&E where they did a
the Covid -19 pandemic is concerned. I’m flexible,
Covid-19 test and some other tests on him. Luckily
and just happy to help with wherever my skills
everything turned out okay for him.
and help are required. I’m going to be back at my regular clinic in a HDB estate in the north. I’m still going to wear my PPE there because I know that
Q: Can you tell me more about a particular case that stood out to you? A: There was a young patient. We shall call him Ali. He’s a recovered Covid-19 patient, who was discharged from the hospital and the community care facilities, then sent to stay at a dormitory which was not his original dormitory. The accommodation was in Senja, and was part of a construction site, which had been converted
some cases of Covid-19 can be asymptomatic. One never knows in the frontlines who we will be encountering next. I’m just going to protect myself, protect the patients, and practise infection control. A lot of people are still avoiding the clinic, but for some of our chronic patients (with chronic health conditions like diabetes or hypertension), they have no choice but to come to see us at the clinic. Some workers have gone back to work
to accommodate the foreign workers who have
already. The situation in the dormitories has been
recovered from Covid-19.
improved as they are less dense nowadays. As
He consulted me through telemedicine for a cough, which I diagnosed as a post-viral cough. (I stopped doing teleconsultations with the migrant workers after a while because it is a lot of responsibility on top of my regular job.) I advised him to eat more fruits to aid his convalescence, but he said he could not leave the facility to buy
such, the government has ramped up swabbing for community, not just workers, to detect community cases of Covid-19 as we gradually open up after the circuit breaker ended. When I go back to work at the clinic, I will be mainly doing swabbing of our local community. Working with a new team, in a new environment
fruits. He’s the same age as you and kor kor, and
at the medical post - it’s a refreshing change from
Hari Raya was just round the corner. I decided to
the usual clinic routine, almost like an adventure or
drop off fruits and some Hari Raya treats for him
going for a medical mission abroad. It’s interesting,
at his accommodation.
and I learnt so much. It’s more than just working
Some doctors did a great job at organising and getting contributions from their contacts, collecting money and vitamins, and distributing to the migrant workers on a larger scale than what I did. On my part, I also supported HealthServe through a donation for the great work they are doing for the migrant workers. HealthServe volunteers give the workers medical treatment 60
with my usual clinic assistants. It is good to be able to contribute to the national efforts in controlling the pandemic. ∎
--Note: Policies and information in the article may have changed since the interview was conducted in July 2020.
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naghihingalo “Gasping for Air”
Bhinali Wallah As I watched my parents climb into an airport-
When I returned home to Metro Manila in
bound taxi on my first day of college orientation,
December of that year, I beamed at the sight of
I didn’t cry because I was scared to live without
the single escalator in the arrival hall that has
them for the first time. I cried because they had
never failed to remain broken, and couldn’t even
dropped me off in an unfamiliar place – one where
bring myself to be upset at the thirty-minute
an app could tell you exactly when the next bus
wait between my first suitcase and my second.
arrives at your stop; where if you miss that bus,
During the ride home, I found myself overcome
you can rest assured knowing the next one is
with exhilaration as we glided upon worn asphalt,
just around the corner; where you can use your
digging my nails into my seat every time another
cellphone to reserve a table in a crowded food
vehicle came too close for comfort. My right palm
court; where you can walk the streets alone, as a
pressed against the car window as I took in the
woman, and not have to worry about whether or
expletives and depictions of genitalia graffitied
not you’ll make it to where you need to be.
upon walls painted with reminders to “keep our
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city clean.” This is the ideal of a city that I grew up with: where congested streets ensure that no two
exercise “compassion,” deciding not to file charges against him. While Pimentel was pardoned for his
trips from point A to B ever look the same; where
transgressions, over 30,000 civilians were
knowing someone means knowing their parents,
arrested for breaching various COVID-19
siblings, and second cousins twice removed; where
measures – however minor – in the month that
going to a party entails leaving with more gifts
followed. Images of quarantine violators being
than you came with; where music emanates from
stuffed into dog cages circulated the internet,
churches, ice-cream carts, and home karaoke
while on 21 April, an innocent man was killed while
machines alike, drowning out the rest of the noise.
smoking a cigarette outside of his own home
It is through this lens of juxtaposition that I came
following a televised address by President Duterte
to resent Singapore. Its unrelenting functionality
in which he empowered his police force to “shoot
and robotic artificiality – I told myself – would
[violators] dead.” Amidst the public uproar, pro-
never feel like home.
government influencer Mocha Uson silently joined
But things are no longer as they once were. On 16 March – when President Rodrigo Duterte declared a state of community quarantine upon 60 million people in the region of Luzon – his supporters from all over the country praised him for his dedication to the battle against Covid-19. Indeed, the Philippines was one of the first countries to declare such stringent lockdown measures, representing what I thought to be a significant step in the right direction. The weeks that followed, however, turned my home of 20 years into a place I barely recognize – devastated by an administration riddled with double standards, driven by bigotry, and devoid of empathy. After Senator Koko Pimentel tested positive for Covid-19 on 25 March, it was uncovered that hundreds of frontline workers and civilians alike had gained undue exposure to the virus at his hand. Upon developing symptoms of the virus, Senator Pimentel not only exploited his VIP status to gain access to expedited testing, but also deemed it appropriate to go grocery shopping and accompany his expectant wife to one of Manila’s foremost Covid-19-fighting hospitals while under strict home quarantine orders. Despite this utter disregard of public safety and evident breach of protocol, the Department of Justice decided to
Senator Pimentel in the ranks of those pardoned by the Duterte administration, after she managed to get away with hosting a mass gathering of over 300 Overseas Filipino Workers. On this same day – my 36th day in isolation – I jumped on a video call with a handful of my Singaporean friends also serving out their stayhome notices in an attempt to lift my spirits. One by one, I witnessed each of them fetching their freshly-cooked dinners from the doorsteps of their government-sponsored hotel rooms, which arrived promptly at 6pm as they did every night. I thought about the millions of Filipinos going hungry as we spoke. In between bites of food and stories about our respective semesters abroad, my friends shared their grievances surrounding the virus – the closures of their favorite restaurants, cancelled internships and travel plans, and their inability to meet each other in person. Amidst the bustling conversation, I couldn’t bring myself to share the extent of chaos happening here, a mere three-hour flight away from them. Even if I did, I figured that they wouldn’t be able to comprehend the plight of institutional corruption in developing countries like the Philippines, given that they’ve never had to experience it for themselves. circuit breaker zine
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Once we hit the first week of May, it was
we sing, we party, and we smile to forget that
announced that 1,886 healthcare workers had
we live in a country of four-hour commutes to
been infected with the virus – comprising over
and from work, lives lost to extrajudicial killings,
18% of total cases across the Philippines. I find
slum dwellers by the millions, rampant child
it difficult to grapple with this number – how
sex exploitation, and government officials that
could we have let it come to this? I keep thinking
will never be held accountable. These are not
back to a recent press conference, in which the
idiosyncrasies, but vast systemic failures of
President thanked fallen frontliners by proclaiming
administration after self-serving administration
what an “honor” it must have been for them to
that have run this country into the ground.
“die for [their] country” – when in fact it was his administration’s lack of support for the healthcare system that killed them in the first place. I remember, too, the Department of Health’s
The story of the Filipino people, therefore, is one of survival. In the months leading up to the pandemic, we bore witness to the displacement of 390,000 after the unprecedented eruption of
promise of mass testing by 14 April, and how
Taal volcano. We’ve outlasted five of the world’s
the Filipino people rejoiced at this victory of
ten deadliest typhoons, including Typhoon Haiyan
being provided the bare minimum. Then came
in 2013 (from which we are still recovering). With
the awaited day, and we realized it was all one
only prayer and heart as weapons, we overthrew
big lie, along with the promise of government aid
a dictator of 21 years – but not before tens of
to low-income households, which had “run out”
thousands were abducted, tortured, and murdered
by as early as 16 April. But how could this be
at his hand. In the centuries before that, we
the case after the administration had managed
endured over three hundred years of Spanish
to accumulate a pandemic war chest of over 16
imperialism, only to be sold to the US for forty-
billion dollars, sending the Philippines even deeper
eight more. Each time, we’ve come out of it alive –
into debt than it already was? If not PPEs for
but just barely. We laugh off death and devastation
frontliners, mass testing for civilians, or aid for
as quickly as our politicians sidestep accountability,
those stripped of their ability to work, where could
because making light of our pain is the only way we
this money possibly be going if not the pockets of
know how to cope.
politicians themselves? In the final week of May, I touched down in
These past few months appear to be just another exercise in exactly what we’re used to, only
Singapore after spending two-and-a-half months
it isn’t: A pandemic is not a tropical depression that
locked down at home in Metro Manila. Upon
will come to pass, a dictator to be dethroned, or
arrival, I was whisked from plane to immigration to
a colonial influence to be overcome. Without any
baggage collection all in the span of 20 minutes
political resolve to fight against it, the threat of
– after which I was escorted to a chartered bus
infection will be here to stay.
that transported me and 15 fellow Filipinos to a five-star hotel, where I would spend the next 14 days quarantining free of charge. A part of me feels ashamed for seeking refuge here, after all the time I’ve spent touting Manila for its countless idiosyncrasies, and resenting Singapore for its lack thereof. In the Philippines – I’ve realized – we eat, 64
This time around, the Filipino spirit will no longer be enough to save us. ∎
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poems by low kian seh an zua ai chut khi nobody graduates properly anymore a dream home | sweet home
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an zua ai chut khi ----
ah ma jin tee kee geh geh gong gia gia tao tao dua zhua lee mng gia si kuay sio teh tit toh tan tio ngeh si buay beh bio meh yee mng zai si lao liao luan luan lai gong wa jiat liao bee
Hear Low Kian Seh reading the poem in Hokkien (with English subtitles) here: https://youtu.be/l7eB-1w7DrY
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nobody graduates properly anymore ---these days, everything is made remote: learning, work, contact, you – all these leap in value with each measure. I am learning: coping mechanisms for pan(dem)ic, that leaps of faith are never easy, that in coping with absence the heart grows fonder of you in the most torturous way possible with no recourse – short-term isolation from you is fine compared to jail term or fine, barely; no way to list you in my household since ROM is not an option. we telecommute affection, away in separate homes – hiatus, and even love is not excepted. withheld: ceremonies to graduate in school; funerals to graduate from life, except for kin – weddings, from singlehood. we are schooled to wait, but the best things are still worth waiting for
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a dream – home I have never wanted much and expressing what I want is my freedom and why should it reduce why is a man physically stronger; it is never easy hiding marks left behind to avoid the humiliation of persistent interrogation his absence changed to over-presence, and he now often claims I am out of line; even as a member of this family myself, I have no say. I avoid and I remain in my room, all the time – the toilet though, no choice. I now fear the sound of skin tearing I cannot stay here any longer school was at least the one safe place but now no one can escape this house
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sweet home friction does not only result in argument: a force that abrades me to less than what I am I know too well the pressure: on a wrist grabbed too tightly, of a hand on the face, with forehead against the wall but the impact is not just on me. so what if canes were sold out? I have to hide the knives, just in case. but his belt is worn and everyone still needs to use clothes hangers. and he calls it discipline agonizing in silence while my daughter suffers with me – a turning point for her is only if I can stand and resist and I have yet to run out of tears
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Citizenship in
Crisis
Hardly had my boyfriend and I gotten
R.Y. Zhang
The lockdown had not yet begun when I
engaged before we realized our marriage
arrived in mid-March. But by the time I was done
application was untenable. We became bona fide
with my self-quarantine, it was April, and the
pre-law scholars and detectives of the decree, yet
borders were closed. I watched as cases began to
it was no use. “It’s us and the state,” my boyfriend
grow in Singapore and the US, and spike in South
tried to explain, when I attempted to find one
Korea, China, and Italy. Five days before I was to
loophole or another, looking for a more flattering
be discharged from my quarantine, my boyfriend’s
angle through which to present ourselves in the
landlady called with bad news: she’d been watching
marriage application form. “It’s not a negotiation,
the news, too, and no longer wanted to host me in
honestly. They have power to find discrepancies
her property. Fine, we told ourselves, feeling along
based on technicalities and reject our application
the subterranean register of panic that limned the
or prosecute us under the law. It’s not worth
baseline of this alert.
fudging anything.” Let me explain. Like many millennials, my
If there was any surprise, it quickly melted away. Anxiety was in the air: we started to sense
boyfriend and I are in a long-distance relationship.
a wariness about my American identity, and an
Unlike most others we know, however, the
understandable reproach toward those arriving
difference between us hosts three nationalities
from the West. As we browsed budget Airbnbs
(me, formerly Chinese, now American; him,
for a place to stay, we alerted potential hosts of
Singaporean), two flights, 12 hours, and at least
my situation (post-quarantine) and citizenship
5,000 miles. Make no mistake—we are lucky: not
(American) in long, taffy-like sentences, afraid
only to have met when we did (three years ago, on
to say too much but wary of saying too little.
New Years’ Eve during one of my research trips to
Dutifully, we felt it our obligation to flag my
the island) but to be able to mobilise, for the most
potentially parasitic presence; to give our hosts
part, our passports, our wallets, and ourselves
the grace of foresight. “Oh, American, issit,”
to visit each other at least twice a year. When
some of them said. “Better not.” Others, more
the pandemic arrived in the US in late February,
euphemistically, “You will have to tell the landlord
and my East Coast liberal arts college suddenly
about that.” Theirs was a refusal that bespoke
cancelled in-person classes for the rest of the
a spooked distance from the fever dreams of
semester (conveniently offering FinAid students
American empire, no longer a place of refuge but
like me a reimbursement for flights out of our
a treacherous giant felled amongst meeker peers
rural town), I knew that Singapore was the only
in hellscapes afar. I put myself in their shoes and
place I could go.
thought: the virus, uncontained by the West’s crumbling borders, were too rapid and too sudden
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to be the responsibility of a little island whose postcolonial existence was built on the crucibles of resource scarcity and a vision of survival against all geopolitical odds. In hindsight, I marvel at the strange turn
that was the object of resentment? Perhaps not. The changing attitudes toward the Western foreigner could never measure up against the longer arc of social and legal vulnerabilities that beset migrants from the non-
our circumstances had taken; the red tag that
Western developing world. As my boyfriend hunted
now came with my Americanness, respected and
for a new apartment, I read about the growing
coddled during peacetime. Part of me was almost
numbers of migrant workers being tested positive
pleased, giddy at the fact that in that moment
for Covid-19. We watched as cases spiked and
of crisis, something like naked antipathy—a
news of living conditions for workers—most of
loosened kernel of anticolonial sentiment?—might
them Bangladeshi, Tamil, and Chinese—broke in
be emerging toward the Western expat. This
the media. Remember the ditzy social media star,
generalized wariness of whiteness, I thought, was
that Chinese Singaporean heiress who’d married
surprising and not entirely undeserved. As a racial
into Indonesian royalty, who dreamt that brown
minority and second-class citizen of my country,
migrant workers “invaded” her mansion? I kept
I felt vindicated at the thought that the social
thinking about that woman, myself, and the migrant
strike against me might be an equivocated as a
workers—triangulated subjects of this country,
strike against whiteness writ large—whiteness,
one citizen and two types of immigrants, three
the social, historical, and economic system of
categories of differing treatment. I was struck
domination, that orb at the centre of empire’s
by the tragic irony of this woman’s dream: the
core. Yet suspicion lingered: was it truly whiteness
paradox of her fear, a fundamental belief that migrant workers were filthy and disposable, deathbound and abject. Yet it occurred to me that she could not get away, for our relation to disgust is always self-reflexive. In this woman’s fear of invasion is something of an acknowledgement—of her own closeness to those that she despises; of her historical proximity to their labouring status. Our shared diasporic Chinese-ness joined me to this woman: we were both descendants of coolies, only now she thought she was madame.
** My boyfriend and I considered getting married, so that I might apply for a long-term visit pass. He proposed, jokingly, with a soju bottle cap as a ring, and I accepted with equal nonchalance, quipping that our informal union was more an engagement to be engaged. Even
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if we’d been serious, however, we knew that actual marriage was near-impossible. I had not yet officially graduated from university and had no tenable professional future in Singapore. To top it all off, the American embassy the Registry of Marriage closed long before I had stayed the requisite month to become eligible, as a foreign citizen, to even apply for a marriage license to a Singaporean. Citizenship is a funny thing: I could not refuse my prismatic recognition from the American
Like Singapore, I’d gone from third world to first, only, how funny it was: I could only become American in Singapore, and Asian in America.
empire, nor could I refuse my legal binding to it. At times, my American citizenship was a halfbaked promise, at other times it was a vengeful reminder of my country’s desperation to consume me in its process of disintegration. Yet in my schadenfreude, I’d forgotten that empire is always built within a protective rind of disposable flesh, its circumference lined with a roster of those made to die; few of whom had real stake in the white-hot orb at all. Daily I watched the number of confirmed cases grow and was reminded of the suicidal selfishness of the moneyed global north, who fled abroad at news of infection at home. I felt both convicted by and incontrovertibly a part of their deathly trajectory. Singapore became a first world nation not through capitulation or assimilation, but relentless discipline and meticulous planning, so that the island nation may rise to the occasion as a firstrate investment node for Euro-American capital
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on the frontier of the Pacific Rim. Mercenaries— and indeed, Singapore’s economic position on the global stage is akin to that of a brilliant latecapitalist mercenary—are survivors roped into forces of strategic alliance. What Singapore has carved out for itself, by hook and by crook, is a tenuous legal and cultural autonomy that few in the non-Western world possess. That autonomy, won by playing ball with the devil, comes at a high price. In a way, I felt similarly. My game, too, is one of strategic manoeuvring conducted at the helm of transnational capital. Like Singapore, I’d gone from third world to first, only, how funny it was: I could only become American in Singapore, and Asian in America. ∎
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1.
2.
My name is Mariko. I’m a 5 months old boy.
This is where I live. It’s cosy and just the right size. 4.
3.
One day, my human told me that we are moving out and won’t be back for some time.
mariko
Written by Ma Ruonan Illustrated by Tan Ying Ying 76
She brought me to her friend’s place. At first, the room didn’t smell like home.
5.
6.
The other humans here don’t seem to like loud sounds. 7.
And they make big fusses over little things. 8.
But they give me chin scratches and treats aplenty.
Some days I go to sleep in my carrier. It smells like home.
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9.
10.
I dream dreams of a warm hand and a gentle voice calling “Sayang”.
11.
12.
At night, I curl up and listen to the human’s breathing.
78
When I awake, I hear the rattle of dinner and forget about it all.
It’s quiet. I wonder when I will hear that familiar voice again.
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how inequality holds us up Leong Yee Ting 80
Covid-19 took a while to hit home for me.
have been laid off because of the pandemic, or had
As a young, middle-class, employed Chinese
their working hours and wages cut, and yet others
Singaporean, I am one of the privileged. For
were made to work harder for the same wages. But
us, Covid-19 simply means no more bubble tea,
what struck me were the structural inequalities
working in the comfort of pyjamas, pleasant
they lived in. Day-to-day struggles that had been
hours saved from commuting, and plugging into
invisible before the pandemic are now thrown into
e-commerce and Zoom. We cannot meet our
stark relief.
friends, but the circuit breaker was on the whole very manageable. Yet, for many others, Covid-19 is a world
The story that touched me the most was one of a father striving to provide for his family. Months ago, he had attempted the leap from part-time gigs
turned upside down. On top of lost jobs and
to full-time employment. He got the job, and things
reduced wages, they have to deal with rising food
sailed smoothly until the 26th of his first month
prices and soaring electricity bills. Theirs is a
in. By then, he had run out of cash to feed his kids,
cash-strapped, precarious, uncertain existence.
and could not wait until month’s end for his wages.
These are the stories we need to hear.
Desperate and without options, he quit the full-time
I understand the limitations of my perspective in representing them, but in these
job and resumed food delivery gigs. As he shared, the pain in his voice came not so
strange times we live in - what Donald Low calls
much from his failure to transition into full-time
our “Parasite moment” - it is more important
work, but from the condemnation he faced from
than ever before that we acknowledge and talk
his social worker. He asked me, “Is this fair? Was I
about this disparity. In the film Parasite, the
wrong to give up that full-time job to provide for
hard-up Kim family creatively deceives their way
my kids?” Now, even though the circuit breaker has
into employment with the wealthy Park family,
decreased cash flow for the family, he doesn’t dare
who are ignorant and oblivious of their privilege.
to approach the social worker for help again.
This poses the question of who the real parasite in society is. Just as the heavy rain in the film completely floods the home of the poor while leaving the rich unscathed, the Covid-19 crisis
This father is one of an estimated 250,000 Singaporeans, or 7.5-10% of households, belonging to the “absolute poor”. According to Yeoh Lam
has thrown the lives of the poor into disorder and left the privileged relatively unaffected. Since the circuit breaker started, I have been calling up residents of rental communities as a volunteer with Project Stable Staples. We wanted to find out three things: firstly, if their family has lost income during this period, which would qualify them for the grocery vouchers we raise donations for; secondly, how their kids are coping with home-based learning; and thirdly, what other needs they may have, such as masks, diapers, and milk. Yet, as the conversations loosened up and meandered, I realised that their difficulties went beyond the circuit breaker. It’s true that many circuit breaker zine
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Keong, these are people whose income does
disadvantages people like them, to the extent that it
not allow them to meet their basic needs –
undermines basic human rights. I believe we can do
nutritious food, a roof over their heads, utilities,
better.
transport to and from school and work, out of pocket expenses for medical needs and school programmes. We grow up being taught that no one owes
In pre-Covid-19 days, I ran tours on Samsui women in Chinatown, mostly for Singaporeans and long-term residents. Samsui women are female migrant workers who came to Singapore in the
Singapore a living, and we must rely on ourselves
1930s and 1940s to do construction work. I spoke
to survive. But for these people, it is not for the
of their sacrifices, their hard work, their courage
lack of trying that they are stuck. As hard as they
in crossing the seas at a young age. I always end
try, they can barely make ends meet for their
off with a comparison between them and today’s
families, much less pursue better opportunities.
migrant construction workers. The Samsui women
It then becomes our responsibility as a society to
are valorised as pioneers and nation-builders now,
ensure they have access to basic needs. It is not
but back in their time, they were treated with
even about levelling the playing field, but ensuring
contempt. One former Samsui woman recalled the
these people stay in the game. As this pandemic
feeling of being seen as inferior “because after all,
has shown us, we as a society are only as strong
we carry mud”.
as our weakest links. The other story that stuck with me was of a
In our treatment of migrant workers today, I question if we are giving respect where respect is
girl younger than me. She turned 21 this year and
due. After all, it is on the back-breaking labour of
works as a grass cutter on a HDB estate. She had
our construction workers, cleaners, and shipyard
been sick for a month but assured me that it was
workers that this city gleams. Perhaps history
not Covid-19. I advised her to see the doctor, take
repeats itself, but it is incumbent upon us, as those
time off work, and rest up well. She told me that
alive in 2020, to at least try to learn from our past.
she could not afford to take any more medical
∎
leave. During the pandemic, construction sites and shipyards have emerged as Covid-19 clusters, meaning that migrant workers had continued to go to work while infected. This accelerated the spread of the virus across dormitories. I imagine their struggle was the same – between taking care of their health and earning a living, the choice was clear. Health is a function of inequality in our society. It should be a fundamental human right, but instead it has become a privilege inaccessible to many. There were other stories of anxiety about the kids, struggles with mental health, making do with what they have. As a human being, I am inspired by their resilience. As a citizen, I am deeply uncomfortable with the injustice. This system privileges people like me and 82
Fun Fun Fields Fields A PLAYGROUND COLOURING BOOK
by Lunastry
1. Playgrounds were places where I spent a lot of time as a kid.
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2. I remember how most of us would come down at 4pm in the afternoon on our bicycles to go around the blocks.
3. They have also changed in appearance and form over the years, like this one in my neighbourhood. When it was first built, many of us wanted to go on and try out the new slide! 84
4. This was another playground that was close by. Occasionally we’d head over here where there were more kids, to play “ice and water”!
5. “Oh ya, peh ya, som!”
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6. However, during the Circuit Breaker, these places that are usually filled with joy and laughter became empty, barricaded structures.
7. Playgrounds are places where you can have fun and socialise. Although they are open again, we should still be careful. 86
8. I hope that this colouring book can inspire and encourage you to draw and create your own expression of a space that brings you joy.
Download the free printable colouring pages here: https://tinyurl.com/CBZfunfields
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pitches OPEN FOR issue two
Did you write or make art during the circuit breaker? Have a unique personal experience or perspective on the Covid-19 pandemic? We welcome creative submissions of all forms (essays, short stories, poetry, art, photos) at https://tinyurl.com/CBZissue2 or by email (circuitbreakerzine2020@gmail.com). PITCH DEADLINE: 30 November 2020
88
r i t b n u o to c
rs’ bios
Alysha Chandra is an arts and humanities student based in Singapore. Previously the Editor-
Cheryl Gan is a community arts facilitator, a daughter, a sister, a partner, and a friend.
in-Chief of Yale-NUS College’s student newspaper The Octant, she has also written for The New Paper.
G. S. Deepak writes about migration and
You can see more of her work at https://muckrack.
diaspora in the Indian Ocean world. He is maybe on
com/alysha-chandra/articles.
his way to being a historian someday, and his work centers around the tensions of decolonization and
Bhawna Sharma is in her penultimate semester
nation-statehood in South and Southeast Asia.
at Singapore Management University, majoring in Politics, Law and Economics. Her lifestyle and
Hazirah Helmy is currently trying to ensure
opinion pieces have featured in several online
that her youngest sister makes edible cinnamon
platforms, including Campus Magazine, The Blue
rolls. An aspiring social studies and history
and Gold, and CNBC.com. In her free time, she
teacher, she has a small interest in learning
enjoys reading corny romance novels and watching
about everything, but acknowledges that she
Hollywood cult classics.
spends a bit too much time thinking about how to incorporate cultural productions into her classes.
Bhinali Wallah is a Sociology student who is
She hasn’t really written anything since submitting
currently pursuing her undergraduate education in
her thesis in 2019, so she hopes she isn’t too
Singapore, but secretly hopes that she will one day
rusty.
be able to make it as a freelance musician. Jokes aside, her long-term ambition is to play a part in
Hong Hu (b. 1990, Malaysia) is a Singapore
increasing access to affordable public services
based artist and filmmaker. The idea for ‘When I
and music education in her home country, the
Was Thirty’ came about when the pandemic hits
Philippines. In school, you can find her tutoring
and the world scrambled to adapt. Drawing on
writing, playing board games in lieu of doing
his daily experiences living in the circuit breaker
actual work, and late-night jamming with various
and beyond, he attempts to analyse, satirize and
music groups. During this time, Bhinali has found
capture the zeitgeist of our times. FB: http://
fulfillment interning for a regional NGO and serving
facebook.com/wheniwasthirtycomic IG: http://
as a research assistant at her university.
instagram.com/wheniwasthirty Website: http:// wheniwasthirty.com
Chris has a compulsion to talk and write nonsense in spite/because of his Science degree.
Izyanti Asaari keeps an even eye on the world
He wishes he was employed, or at least cool enough
with a professional practice in visual design, and
to have his own website like his fellow collaborator,
a search for understanding through language.
Jace.
Her work picks at the fabric of the stories we circuit breaker zine
89
inherit, creating a margin where discomfort is
preoccupation. For the love of the craft, he makes
the lens which best explores the covert nature
time to write, despite being a busy civil servant
of our desires. The joy of existing in a city is
and father-of-three. His works had been published
encountering all the motions that make the
in SingPoWriMo anthologies, A Luxury We Cannot
machine tick. She previously has been published
Afford, A Luxury We Must Afford, Twin Cities,
in anthologies, Ceriph #3 and This is Not A Safety
Anima Methodi, Contour and Seven Hundred Lines.
Barrier (Ethos Books).
He won first prize in Singapore’s National Poetry Competition 2019, and he is better known for
Jace has an Engineering degree, but a passion for graphic design. She’s done branding and
his twin cinema poem, Singaporean Son, that had gone viral, twice.
marketing work for startups and publicity design for the university clubs she was in. See more of her work at https://jacelyn.myportfolio.com/
Ma Ruonan is a freelance writer, producer and percussionist currently based in Singapore. Her written works have appeared in digital lifestyle
Khairullah Rahim (b. 1987, Singapore) is
publications such as VICE Asia and CityNomads.
a multimedia artist working across painting,
She enjoys good storytelling and getting involved
assemblage, video and photography. His practice
in creative projects.
is concerned with the stories and experiences of marginalised communities whose identities
Michelle Lee is a writer, researcher,
do not subscribe within societal normativity.
and designer. Her research interests include
Incorporating everyday and found objects from
performance art and global modernisms. Find her
spaces in which these specific communities
portfolio at http://michelleleeyy.contently.com.
inhabit, his works allude to the veiled and lived experiences of his varied subjects. His work
Miranda Jeyaretnam is an undergraduate
has been presented internationally and he has
student at Yale University. She is based in
participated in several artist residency programs,
Singapore and New Haven, USA. She is an opinion
namely Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg, Austria
columnist for the Yale Daily News and enjoys
(2018); Hubei Institute of Fine Arts, Hubei, China
working in theatre.
(2018); Taipei Artist Village, Taiwan (2017); and YOUKOBO Art Residency Programme, Tokyo, Japan (2013). www.khairullahrahim.com
R.Y. Zhang is a writer based, at turns, in Singapore, the US, and the UK. She is a graduate student at Cambridge.
Leong Yee Ting is a banker by day, and a recent history graduate from the University
Shanice Nicole Stanislaus is an artist who
of Oxford. She has experience working in the
strongly believes in making the arts accessible
NUS Museum, Singapore Heritage Society and
through multi-disciplinary mediums. She believes
ASEAN Foundation. Her work has appeared in The
in the power of arts empowerment for all and uses
Jakarta Post, and she is interested in inequality,
her role as a performer, creator and educator to
development and microhistories in Southeast Asia.
create meaningful work for communities around her. Her artistic practice is strongly influenced by
Low Kian Seh has a chemical engineering
90
her work as an international performing artist and
degree but is an artist to a larger degree. He is a
arts educator. She is the founder and director of
chemistry teacher by occupation but has poetry as
Creatives Inspirit, a creative arts company with
the mission to empowerand nurture a community of socially responsible thinkers, artists, problem solvers and creative change-makers. Tan Ying Ying is a graphic designer, illustrator and art teacher currently based in Singapore. One of her favourite comic series is the Sandman series by American author, Neil Gaiman. She volunteers with Animal Allies and is passionate about animal welfare. Terence Lim a.k.a. Lunastry is a creative who enjoys exploring ideas and creating visuals in a variety of mediums! You can see more of his work at https://www.instagram.com/llunastry.
a g m e i credits p. 9 photo by John T on Unsplash
p. 17 Photo by FOODISM360 on Unsplash p.32 Photo by awar kurdish on Unsplash p.35 Photo by Charles Deluvio on Unsplash p.56 Photo by Allie on Unsplash p.59 Photo by Brian McGowan on Unsplash p.62 Photo by Jae Tabuada on Unsplash p.80 Photo by Christian Chen on Unsplash p.81 Photo by Afif Kusuma on Unsplash
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circuit breaker, noun
/ˈsəːkɪt ˈbreɪkə/
1. An automatically operated electrical switch designed to protect an electrical circuit from damage caused by excess current from an overload or short circuit. 2. A stay-at-home order implemented as a preventive measure by Singapore in response to the Covid-19 pandemic in the country from 7 April 2020 to 1 June 2020.