Saturday, 21 November 2015

Day 53: A Case of Glasses

Yes, that's right. Can you believe it really has only been 53 days since I left you? I know that it must feel so much longer to you all...or not long enough.

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Anyway, my glasses have lasted all these 53 days. But after the unfortunate run-in with the Polish vodka bottle on day 46, I noticed that one of the arms was looser than usual, to the point where I would have to keep adjusting the frame as it would quickly slip off my nose. This was the parlous state of imminent blindness in which I lived for the last week, before finding the chance to head out today to get them fixed.

There are many exotic-sounding opticians and optometrists you can visit: Mee Mee Optics, Optics Dee (whose logo is a creepy eye inside a triangle - the Illuminati have finally found me!), Visio Optical, Koolook, YSH Optical Solutions, as well as several small, local ones based in certain districts. But the internet suggested that the best one is called, simply, Owndays. And the internet surely knows, you see? As far as reviews go, different branches of Owndays occupy positions 1, 6 and 7 of the top 10. The top-rated one is at the far end of the highbrow shopping street Orchard Road in Bugis district, a mere 15 minutes from Geylang on the MRT from Paya Lebar. However, as I had intended to do some light shopping, I decided to find an Owndays branch in a more affordable part of town, and there is one in Clarke Quay. Clarke Quay is very near Chinatown, and if you fight your way through the persistent street vendors and market traders of Chinatown, you find on the other side a small but convenient shopping centre with an affordable supermarket.

Calling in at the Owndays at Clarke Quay Central, I was told that one of the pins in the frame was beyond repair and was turned away. But it was just not possible to stagger on with that feeble frame any longer, so I decided to upgrade to a new pair of glasses. It was about time. I had had the same pair for four years.

One of the annoying curiosities of Singapore that I have reported in a previous entry is that for all the hustle and bustle, all the technological advancement, all the people going slowly crazy in their offices from 08:30 to 18:00 every day, most things only seem to get done at the pace of a snail on valium. So far, only two of my dealings with officialdom have been mercifully short. First was when I went to the bank at the end of October to cash my first pay cheque. That was a bizarrely laissez-faire process. The cashier took my cheque and counted out a wad of banknotes for me to carry right out of the place there and then. There was no waiting around three days for it to clear or anything! And second was today. After choosing my favourite frame and lens combo, ordering any extras (like transitions) and paying, I was told that they offered a same-day service and the new specs would be ready for collection in just two hours! And I wouldn't even have to bring my grandma along to prove lineage!

Satisfied with my work, I had lunch at the Clarke Quay Central food court and then did my shopping. Another curiosity I have not been able to fathom yet is that you occasionally get money off at the till on items that are not reduced. This phenomenon appears to be random, as far as I can tell, and so too is the amount of discount you get. But I'm not complaining about that! Today, I got $1.65 off my shopping, for seemingly no reason at all, along with the usual accumulation of so-called "Passion points" on my bankcard, which I will probably figure out how to spend one day.

Almost two hours later to the minute, and just as I was finishing up at the shops, I received a phone call from the optician to say that the new glasses were ready. When I left the shop, I put my bags down to re-pack my shopping more tidily, and as I knelt down to do this, the loose arm of the old pair fell off and slid away into the gutter before I could catch it, never to be seen again. And so I thought, it was meant to be, divinely ordained. My choice of glasses was the right one, and a timely one, too, for the old ones knew that their work was done! I still had to get back to the optician, though, and now with about three feet of visibility, but you become an expert at blindly weaving in and out of people in this country, so I made it, and not a moment too soon. I have the new glasses now, and for near-enough half of what they would have cost back home. To dispose of what's left of the old pair, I should go to Specsavers...next time I get the chance.

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By 
The Imperial Orange
21st November 2015

Saturday, 24 October 2015

Day 25: China Syndrome

My brazen attempts to pass off as a model immigrant got off to an uninspiring start today...

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I was supposed to go to a Mandarin lesson today. Of course, there is no practical need form me to learn Mandarin. After all, English is one of the official languages, and you'll never find anything in business written in Mandarin that isn't written in English first (unless you go to a super-traditional food court or something, but you'd only do that if you don't mind things like frog porridge - or things that you don't know are frog porridge, I suppose). However, I always say back home that people who move to the UK should learn English, and so it would be hypocritical of me to move here and not at least show a modicum of cultural awareness by trying out the home language spoken by Singapore's largest ethnic group. So I booked in for a trial class with a woman called Linda and her school. The first class is free.

Well, unfortunately I didn't make it. Having seen the haze reports, I succumbed to temptation to sit at home and do nothing. I spent the afternoon listening to the Test match (very disappointing). After going for dinner to the local food court at the Paya Lebar Square, I found Neil watching the West Ham match (much more pleasing!), so that's how I spent the evening.

As it's a Saturday, I'm going to take in a film before bed. Tomorrow is the traditional Sunday routine of doing the weekly shopping. I don't think I'm ready for another trip to Malaysia just yet, so I'll stick to Paya Lebar Square for now. 

In addition to the shopping, I now find my Sundays occupied by a non-West-Ham type of ironing. In this country, you can only wear your shirts once before they begin to wreak to the high heavens of roasting human flesh and require washing. So, while I could get away with doing no ironing for several weeks back home, Sunday evenings now are perpetual ironing evenings. I guess it's nice that there is something to fill my Sundays now that it is even less economic than it was before to get to the Santo Lounge quiz.


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By
The Imperial Orange,
24th October 2015

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

Day 22: EE Bah Gum

A little deviation from my usual sort of story, for a tale of rare success against the corporate behemoths...

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"On 28th September, I telephoned your customer service and asked to cancel my SIM-only contract with EE, as I would be moving to Singapore. I asked for an unlock code for my Nokia Lumia 635 (which I purchased last October, along with the contract, at an EE shop on Above Bar Street in Southampton, UK) so that I could use it with my Singapore SIM card. For some reason, your adviser [redacted #1] thought that I was still using my old phone, an HTC Desire, but I asked for that information to be corrected. He took my phone's IMEI number and told me that the code would be e-mailed to me in 7-10 working days (latest 10th October).

"I phoned back on 10th October because I had not received any information. Once again, the adviser [redacted #2] thought that I was using my old phone, so again I asked her to correct it. She took my IMEI number again and I confirmed with her that my e-mail address is correct on your system. She suggested I call back the next day if the code had not arrived.

"So the last time I phoned was on 11th October, 14 days after submitting my request, and still without the code. I spoke to [redacted #3] in the billing dept (and his manager is [redacted #3's manager]). For the third time, the adviser thought that I was using my old phone, and for the third time I asked for that information to be corrected. Once again, he took my IMEI number. I was then informed that mine was a "non-EE phone" (not registered with EE, apparently). [Redacted #3] said he would put in a request for my phone to be unlocked anyway as a priority and that I would have the code within 72 hours.

"It is now 21st October, 24 days after I first requested the code and 7 days after [redacted #3]'s 72 hours ran out. I am still waiting for the code. In making these three calls (including two unnecessary follow-ups that I should not have had to make), I have incurred charges for calling from abroad. Your customer service was happy to keep me running up a bill without helping me with my request. I do not expect to be billed for the charges I have incurred as a result of following-up my initial request.

"Please send me the unlock code within 72 hours of this e-mail. And please contact me only by e-mail, as I do not wish to incur more charges by receiving calls from you from abroad.

"I will have no choice but to lodge a complaint against your company with Ofcom if the unlock code is not provided to me promptly and if the unnecessary charges for calling you repeatedly are not deducted from my final bill."

It worked. Between phone calls, I cancelled my direct debit to make sure that no money was taken from my bank account without my permission. I now have the code, plus credit in my account to cover their charges.

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By
The Imperial Orange,
21st October 2015

Day 21: Smog Gets In Your Eyes

A little something to celebrate World Statistics Day in this record haze...

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Apparently, today is World Statistics Day. So here are some world statistics to go with a desperate appeal from a man in Kuala Lumpur, suffering as we all are under Indonesia's haze.

The air quality index (AQI) is a measure of particulate concentration in the air. Most often, this refers to PM10 (particulates less than 10 microns in diameter) or PM2.5 (less than 2.5 microns). The latter category is particularly dangerous because sub-2.5 micron particulates are carcinogenic.

In Southampton, the 24-hour average AQI (PM10) reading, in micrograms-per-cubic metre, varies between 50 on a good day and 80 on a bad day; today, it is a fairly easygoing 56. In Central London, the 24-hour average is 60 to 100; today, it is a bearable 75 in Charing Cross and just a fresh 19 in Hillingdon. Consistent readings above 150 are considered unhealthy for high-risk groups and above 250 are a severe risk to public health.

Now you might want to sit down for this...

Five days before I arrived in Singapore, the 24-hour AQI (PM10) peaked at 320. Yesterday night, after a few quiet weeks of swaying either side of 120, it reached its highest instantaneous reading of the year, 442 in the city centre, while I was on my way back from Ola's party. Today, we have blown that out of the murky water with a lung-busting reading of 471. The 24-hour reading is 160. In Kuala Lumpur, it is 180. On the Indonesian island of Sumatra, where the fires have been burning at their worst for months, today's 24-hour average is 581. These staggering numbers are scarcely believable in the context of the UK's figures.

It's imperative that the Indonesian government take its hands out of the till as a matter of urgency, not merely for its own people but for those of us coughing and spluttering through our days in Singapore and Malaysia, too.

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By
The Imperial Orange,
20th October 2015

Sunday, 18 October 2015

Day 19: Ex-Patria Mori

I've not updated my blog in a few days, so here's a story about an unnerving shopping trip, all in the name of my continuing effort to make friends...

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Last week, my Polish colleague, Ola, invited me to join her and some colleagues for a do at her condo tomorrow. Ironically, Fusionopolis will be closed for its opening ceremony, where Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong is to officially declare Death Star 2 operational. We mere plebs who work there have been told to stay at home and watch the ceremony by video link, lest we turn up and be rugby-tackled into pancakes and possibly shot by the Prime Minister's bodyguards. So, of course, we're having a party of our own! Now duty calls and the time has come to cement my fledgling office alliances, and so I turn to the one thing that always gets people coming to my parties, my spinach and paneer samosas. I decided that if I make enough of those and take them along to the party to distribute to Ola et al., then it might buy me at least one more week of lunchtime conversation.

After singularly failing to get to the Tesco in Johor Bahru (Malaysia's second city) to buy ingredients yesterday, I had no choice but to shop for my groceries much closer to home today. So, this afternoon, I took the 67 bus from Lorong 34 to the neighbourhood known as Little India, in Rochor district, about 20 minutes away.

Little India is named for the Tamil Muslims who settled there between the 1950s and 1970s. You can't miss the Indian influence. Everywhere you turn there is a food stall selling parathas stuffed with anything you can think of and Tandoori everything, shops selling exotic spices and fine fabrics, women browsing the shops in saris, and cafes pumping out Bollywood music as people scoff ras malai and barfi.

The most famous attraction in Little India is the appropriately-named Mustafa Centre, an all-consuming leviathan of a department store. Mustafa has six distinct sections plus an eponymous kebab restaurant (serving actual kebabs, not Portswood takeaway kebabs) occupying nine floors, and is open 24 hours a day; that is how long you'd need to be there to get through two of the sections! When I got off the bus, I was just outside the entrance to section 6. Thinking I would get lost if I didn't do things right, I decided it would be better to go in through section 1 (as per Google's orders when I looked up the directions before leaving), which turned out to be a 15-minute walk away from where I was, around two corners of the block of which Mustafa is the sole occupant.

Outside each entrance is an attendant behind a desk. Before you go in, you are obliged to have all your bags tied shut by the attendant. I wasn't sure why. I thought it might be because the shop is so big that they just can't see who might be stealing what, but then I thought it might be because they can't see who is being stolen from! Either way, it was another indication as to the magnitude of the place.

I'm not sure how to describe my initial impression when I got in. Before arriving, I had imagined something like a John Lewis blown up by a factor of ten. What it actually resembles is a cross between John Lewis, Aldi and Argos. It has all the fancy-pants jewellery, clothes and gadgets a la John Lewis, arranged in sometimes random order like Aldi, and with the occasional sight of something resembling a catalogue item out of Argos' Elizabeth Duke. But it's all there, no matter your taste or price range!

My fellow expats told me it was the only place to buy genuine British chocolates, not the local knock-offs that have the same labels but actually contain lesser-quality chocolate. And, my, they weren't joking! At the back of section 1, you find 25 whole aisles - yes, 25 aisles! - of nothing but sweets, chocolates and biscuits, stacked five shelves high. When you hear the old saying about being a kid in a sweet shop, only this could be what they're talking about. Alas, I wasn't there for chocolates and biscuits. As tempting as it was to slot a couple of dozen bars of Dairy Milk and ten boxes of Ferrero Rocher into my basket, I had come with a shopping list and was determined to stick to it.

They say that you can think of any item you like, and if you can't find it at Mustafa, then it doesn't exist! It was with this sage advice in mind that I had decided to venture there. Despite the large Indian population, paneer is quite hard to come by in the general supermarkets. But all the online advice swears by Mustafa...if you can get to the right part of the right section of the place. I beat a hasty retreat from section 1, turning on the sweets and doubling back through the five aisles of kitchen appliances, five more of cameras and telephones, and the sea of wall-to-wall watches.

I re-entered the building at section 2, which had more electronics in it. Down in the basement level were rows upon rows of cottons, silks and linens for clothes-making. I hadn't the slightest idea which way I was going. I only knew that I had seen photos of the in-store supermarket. I just had to get to the right section, past all the fabrics and electronics and appliances and sweets and clothes and shoes and musical instruments and furniture and bed linen and pharmaceuticals. Going down into the basement, I pressed on through crowds of excitable sari-clad women arguing over the correct choice of cloth and arrived, somewhat inexplicably, at the luggage area. Mustafa's luggage collection is no less impressive than its sweet tooth. I counted 17 aisles of bags, backpacks, hand luggage and suitcases of all shapes and sizes, among them Samsonite but many other brands I had never heard of. Some of them must not have been selling very well, because part of the section resembled an Argos conveyor belt, with cardboard boxes of items piled high and waiting to be collected. Usually, these were hidden behind show items, but there was so much merchandise that I wondered if they could very well have got rid of the boxed-up stuff and just sold the show items at no cost to their profit margin!

Here I caught a lucky break, a young Western family debating the easiest way to get to the supermarket. They thought they were in the right section but that the supermarket was on level 4, so that's where we headed. We shuffled back through the luggage towards the escalators. The trip up to level 4 took 15 minutes and required going around to opposite sides of each level to get to the next escalator.

When I arrived, I encountered another problem. Level 4 has at least three stepped sub-levels, and there are four supermarkets to choose from. As far as I could tell, there was no distinguishable start or end point to any of these, and they just merged into each other at random places, where you'd suddenly go from aisle 4 of one to aisle 12 of another. The first one I came to was, I assume, the biggest. I assume this because I couldn't see to the end of it. I could only count 29 aisles of goods several hundred yards away before things went blurry and my eyes started to hurt. Fortunately, the aisles are numbered (or else you'd never find your way out), and I had got off the right escalator and was perfectly poised for my mission at aisle 1. So, off I went on my trek. I went down every aisle I could find. It took over two hours. Sometimes when I shop back home, I have to visit two or three shops to find everything I need. There's always something that isn't available. Folks, I can guarantee that what they said about Mustafa is true. There is everything in the world that you could ever think of and then some, right here under this one roof. Even the most specific items like ginger-green chili paste (which would normally require a trip to Portswood's International Foods, where they might have one or two varieties) was available in 12 different varieties and degrees of ginger-ness and chili-ness right here! Same for dried mango powder, of which I knew of only one variety back home, but which was to be found in six different brands here. As for the paneer...well, going from a position where I was not aware of any supermarket that sold any paneer at all, I found in Mustafa three entire freezers, each one the length of a large bed, devoted to all manner of paneer: blocks of paneer, cubes of paneer, fried paneer, spiced paneer, paneer stews, paneer in things, things in paneer!

An occasional problem in Singapore is that you can't find a particular item because it is advertised in Mandarin Chinese but not English. In Mustafa, this was no problem, because almost nothing is written in Chinese, but even where some items were advertised using English spellings of the Hindi word, like "amchur" for mango powder, my passable grasp of the language helped to confirm that that was, indeed, what I was looking for! And some of the produce is of genuinely very high quality. In the fruit aisle, I found some of the reddest, shiniest and perfectly-ripened apples I have ever seen.

When you have recovered from gawping at the sheer size of the place and made your weary way around all the aisles, you arrive at the unexpectedly tiny tills, which all looked to be too small to cope with the amount of shopping most people had. I did most of my packing on the floor afterwards. Before you leave, the cashier will once again tie your shopping bags shut, and the attendant at the exit will glance at you to make sure that they are duly tied as you leave.

I wasn't entirely sure how to get out again. Every time I turned another way, I only came out at one of the other supermarkets. Eventually, peering over a balcony, I spotted the fabrics section again, and so I was able to retrace my steps for the 15-minute walk out of the building at exit 6, which was where I had disembarked the bus.

Mustafa is an awesome place, a must-see for visitors! I only got to explore one small part of one small section. I'll need at least another two trips if I want to see all the parts of it that might interest me, and two more after that to stock up on chocolate. It's just as well I still have 712 days.

Tomorrow morning, I will make the samosas, and we'll find out how my attempt at reeling in friends goes...

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By
The Imperial Orange,
18th October 2015

Thursday, 8 October 2015

Day 9: Computer Says Money for Nothing

Today, I had my rescheduled appointment at the Ministry of Manpower (MoM), in the old colonial heart of the city, for the assessment of my Temporary Employment Pass (TEP) application...

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There are many throwbacks to colonial days here. Although British rule of Singapore ended in 1963 (and the country this year celebrates the 50th anniversary of its independence from Malaysia, which explains all the "SG50" signs up everywhere), many of the social, legal, political and architectural traditions hark back to the era. Most obviously, English is one of the official languages (the others are Mandarin Chinese, Malay and Tamil), and all business in government, the courts, the roads and the universities is conducted in English. In public schools, pupils are taught English as the first language and one other of the remaining three official languages (according to the language of their fathers). They drive on the left-hand side of the road in right-hand-drive cars (left-hand-drives are illegal). Most measurements are given in both imperial and metric units. As you go into the centre of the city, you find that the wide, palm tree-lined avenues of green are flecked with the distinctive whitewashed verandas and magnificent archways normally associated with the Raj. All of this Britishness is very nice, but, when you're a new arrival to the country and attempting to make your way for the first time, no British pastime is quite as obvious in this country as the passion for pen-pushing, pursued with such a national zeal as to make the bureaucrats seem like the Cybermen.  

Attempting to open a bank account is a peculiar example of this. Aside from the fact that they close at half past four, and that when you go into a branch to try to open an account, they treat you like you've shown up with a balaclava and a sawn-off shotgun, there appears to be no uniformity in the way the different banks operate. (Incidentally, if you did show up like that, the staff's first reaction might be to offer you a glass of water, because you would be in no fit state to rob them dressed like that and carrying around such a weight in this heat!)

I tried DBS Bank yesterday, and they accepted my approval letter in place of the actual TEP. But they have only one account available to foreigners, which requires you to maintain an average daily balance of $3000 over a calendar month under penalty of penalties! This was unattainable for me. Next, I tried POSB Bank, a subsidiary of DBS, who - for reasons unexplained - did not accept my approval letter at all, insisting that they needed the actual TEP. Lastly, today, I tried OCBC Bank, who were happy to accept the approval letter but would not accept my tenancy agreement as proof of address, even though the others did, instead asking for a certificate of stamp duty from the Inland Revenue Authority. Almost all require a minimum deposit of at least $500 and subsequently bar you from falling below a minimum balance, which is normally in excess of $1000. It seems bizarre that you must keep $1000 sitting in your account, unable to spend it, but them's the rules. 

OCBC will be one to avoid. The catch-22 is that I cannot pay the stamp duty until opening a bank account, otherwise I will incur international transfer charges from the UK, but at OCBC I cannot open an account until I have paid the stamp duty!

Despite the similarity in some traditions, Singapore is not the UK, and in certain ways you can easily tell. In Southeast Asian culture, the convention is for people to put their surnames first, followed by their forenames. Official business is conducted this way. Wishing to conform to this tradition, I have been signing off as Khan Hamid in my correspondence with IMRE. However, it would appear that some Singaporeans consider such cultural reverence to be beyond the wit of most Western philistines (and what does that say about us?), so many locals will readily assume that you haven't bothered to switch your names around. Consequently, I have observed, even if you do switch your names, half the time you will be still be addressed as "Mr Hamid". There is a way to get around this. For the sake of clarity, most locals will - in external communications, at least - capitalise their surnames. In all e-mails from my supervisor, he signs off as Dr TENG Jing Hua, which may make it appear as though he is angry and shouting, when in fact he is simply employing a common device to avoid confusion. I might have to do the same.

Well, Mr Hamid's TEP application was approved today at the MoM! However, my card will not be arriving at IMRE until Wednesday (a day's delay, all for another useless H&S lecture), which probably means another week until I can open a bank account. And who knows which way around they will put my name? In the meantime, I have $58 left (but that's okay because I saw a food stall at Paya Lebar MRT station selling some courses for $2.20, and that was where I ate this evening).

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By
The Imperial Orange,
8th October 2015

Wednesday, 7 October 2015

Day 8: A Little Corner of Southampton

On Monday, my first day in the office, I discovered that my desk had been double-booked and that there was, in fact, nothing at all for me. Today, I went in to be assigned a so-called "hot desk" until a permanent (and presumably cooler) one can be found...

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You fly 6770 miles to a tiny dot in the Indian Ocean, an island less than half the size of London. You squirrel around through the hazy alleys to your workplace, which comprises three separate buildings, each with 11 floors of office space. In one of these buildings, on one of these floors, you arrive at a desk full of other students that don't look like they are from Singapore. You are advised to find a temporary seat somewhere among them while HR searches its soul for a permanent space for you. You attempt to mingle with some of the regulars: Ola, who is from Poland but studying under UCL in London (the de facto boss of this group of friends); Andrew, a Briton, also from UCL; Aled, from the University of Liverpool; Ceilidh from Australia; one or two other international people not from the region; and one bloke called Sam...from Southampton, a PhD student in ECS who tells you he used to sit next to one of your ECS supervisors while the latter was a mere postdoc (and who thinks the other one is a bit weird). Of all the places in the world or the city or the research institute that he could now have been sitting, he ended up sitting right behind me on this here tiny dot.

That was how I met some of my fellow ARAP (A*STAR Research Attachment Programme) students. I don't think I'd call them a group, exactly, because they're all working under different supervisors, but it seems that I will be sitting with them for now. They seem good fun, so it would be nice to be assigned a permanent seat that way. Ola, the top cat, described Geylang, the district in which I live, as "durians and blowjobs". I have tried neither, but I certainly hope she didn't mean that people attempt to juggle both at the same time...

My travails last year at the hands of ECS will be well known to you all by now. That was why it took until June before I did a day of practical work. It now transpires that the same problems that plagued me in Southampton have followed me here, but much worse! Namely, in Southampton, I couldn't get into the cleanroom for months; here, there isn't yet a finished cleanroom for me to get into! Dr Teng believes that IMRE's cleanroom will not be ready until January, but Sam, the fellow Southamptonite, said he had on good authority that it could be later yet. Either way, my transfer report is due in December and will apparently now be written on the topic of a single, half-finished transistor...

Today I had been pencilled in for an appointment at the Ministry of Manpower (MoM) for the issuance of my Temporary Employment Pass (TEP), which is in effect a visa. Armed with this TEP on your person, you can open a bank account and start going about life without the looming threat of leaving your passport on the MRT or of bureaucracy stamping on your day. This appointment very sadly happened to coincide with the new health & safety briefing that was delivered to all the staff and students at Fusionopolis 2. Making my best show of disappointment, I mentioned this clash to the HR lady, who, unbeknown to me, set about rearranging my TEP appointment at the MoM so that I could healthily and safely attend the H&S lecture instead! Me and my big mouth! Let that be a lesson to you: health & safety bureaucrats will yield to the whims of no government.

After the (mercifully short) briefing - unlike any other H&S course I've attended, it only lasted half an hour! - Jo and I escaped for morning coffee at the MRT station, where she told me about a website call 'Meetup', which is for foreigners living in Singapore who want to try new activities in order to build up a social group. I signed up for that website and joined a ballroom & Latin dancing group, a couple of general groups for British ex-pats, a weekly quiz night at a bar somewhere and a Chinese cultural group or two! Here's hoping that soon the hands of friendship will be extended...

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By
The Imperial Orange.
7th October 2015

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

Day 7: On the Lavender Bus

Day 7 was a day of very important business: I attempted to open a bank account...

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When you look up "hawker centre" on Wikipedia (you can try this one at home!), the first photo you see is of Lavender Food Square, one of the region's most iconic hawker centres, located in Singapore's Kallang district. That much-loved hawker centre (a complex with stalls where food is freshly cooked and served to diners who sit in the middle of it) closed in September 2014, but maybe the closest I have ever come to touching a piece of Wikipedia history was when I had dinner this evening at one of the smaller food courts that have popped up around Lavender since then and which have absorbed some of the old stalls.

Adorned with my new face mask, I took the bus for the short trip into Kallang district, the one adjoining Geylang. Kallang is a much more urban place than Geylang, which is not surprising given that it is on the cusp of Marina Bay, the mega-rich heart of the city. In particular, I needed to visit a development in Kallang called Lavender, which houses the local branch of the bank where I want to open an account. There are many shops, businesses and offices that stay open until very late indeed in Singapore, with most shopping centres trading on past 9pm. And I can only conclude that bank managers must need quite a bit of retail therapy, because the banks close at half past four! Not knowing this, I came along half-an-hour later to find that a floor-to-ceiling glass panel had been erected just inside the door of the bank, to safely separate the ATMs from the tellers. So I will have to try again tomorrow after I have experienced yet another round of health & safety talks, this time at the mercy of Fusionopolis...

In the meantime, there was I, in Lavender, holding $500 of banknotes and with nothing to do. So I wandered around the MRT stop and the nearby shopping centre. Shopping centres are not a rare sight here. You can walk out of one and scarcely get across the road before the next one pops up! There are many devilish ways by which businesses attempt to make the fool part with other people's money, and this is a rather simple one. Most people are happy to oblige, of course, because there is one significant advantage that the shopping centres have over, say, the parks: they are air-conditioned.

Anyway, it was getting on towards dinnertime by the time I finished exploring Lavender's three shopping centres, and I called in at a Chinese stall for my evening meal. You always take your chances at these places, because I'm never quite sure how seriously they attempt to keep pig items separated from the normal food. This food court seemed okay, though, because they had separate collection areas for halal and non-halal dishes. In any case, you're better off not worrying about it or else the food prices become exorbitant! I had spiced prawns cooked in soy sauce, served with pak choi on a bed of olive rice with a bowl of soup, all washed down with a refreshing glass of iced lemon tea. The soup seems to be served with every Chinese meal, whether requested or not. I'm not sure what it is, but I always see spring onions floating it. I'm generally not a fan, but it's okay between mouthfuls of something else.

Having spotted a sweet stall while walking around, I was never going to be sated by mere spiced prawns. Given the affordability of the main meal, I decided to treat myself to dessert. One item in particular caught my eye, a "choc ice kacang". The photo of this dessert looked like chocolate ice cream served with mixed fruits, from which I convinced myself of the health benefits of eating it! However, the "choc ice" bit was rather more literal than I expected: it was a mountain of nothing but ice slush on top of the fruit, with a garnish of chocolate powder, and decorated with a few hundreds-and-thousands (more like tens-and-twenties, really). Still, it tasted okay in the end, once some of the ice had melted and dissolved the chocolate powder.

My culture shock tip for today is that you must never ever underestimate the Southeast-Asian predisposition for the humble soya bean, whether it be as a sauce, as a replacement for dairy, as the main course of your dinner, a side dish, part of a salad or soup, or even...in a dessert. The soya bean will be with you from the start of your meal right through to the end and beyond! I couldn't get all the way through my ice mountain; there are only so many syrup-coated soya beans you can eat in one sitting, especially when accompanied by syrup-coated sweetcorn. But it was nice enough!

My entire meal, the soup, the prawns, the rice, the vegetables, the iced lemon tea and the dessert, cost $7.80 (about £3.50).

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By
The Imperial Orange,
6th October 2015

Monday, 5 October 2015

Day 6: The Phantom Laboratory

Today, I officially began my attachment with the Institute of Materials Research & Engineering (IMRE) at Fusionopolis Park...

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Fusionopolis 2, Fusionopolis Park's newest complex, is a bit like the Death Star 2. It is open for business, operating quite soundly with all manner of nefarious overlords pedalling away within, but on closer inspection, you find that it probably shouldn't be, because only half of it is finished! Although it opened its doors on 21st September, I discovered today none of the research labs have been finished. 

My supervisor, Dr Jing Hua Teng (written in the Western style), informed me that our wet chemistry lab will not be open until the end of the month and I have to wait until January to use the group clean room! He then looked wistful for a moment as he remembered IMRE's old home on the main campus of the National University of Singapore (NUS).

At this point, the Death Star analogy ends, because the old IMRE was not blown up by rebellious Indians; it is still sitting there with all of its facilities intact and in perfect working order, soon to be converted to new labs by the NUS.

The only Force around here is the radiative forcing from Indonesia's haze, which continues to bathe Singapore in a noxious grey cloud. The haze develops every year when unscrupulous palm oil companies set fire to forests in order to clear land for the following season's plantations, a practice which is illegal in Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia, but to which Indonesian ministers turn a blind eye in exchange for bungs. Because of our proximity to the Indonesian island of Sumatra, the wind carries the pollution right over us and into Malaysia, too. The crisis was so bad this year that the government was forced to shut the schools and send children home. I didn't think it was noticeably bad until today, but while having lunch with my supervisor I was seized by a coughing fit, which didn't abate until I was provided with an N95 mask, the kind you see people wearing whenever the news channels need some stereotypical footage of Southeast Asia. So maybe you'll see me on TV soon!

I hoped to see my new desk before the day was done. I had been assigned a space on level 11 of Kinesis tower (those with sharp memories will remember from my description of Fusionopolis Park a few days ago that that is the one next to Innovis). In my office, there are several rows of desks. The penultimate row contains ten desks numbered #250 to #259. I had been assigned #256. On arriving in the office, I discovered that only one of these desks was occupied. Can you guess which one?

Ultimately, it turned out that not very much work was done on my first day of work, but it still counts as one day down. My placement ends on 4th October 2017, so there are just 730 days to go!

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By
The Imperial Orange,
5th October 2015

Sunday, 4 October 2015

Day 5: Hot in the City

Day 5 was a hard-hitting day. But the placement begins in earnest tomorrow morning, when I start doing what I actually came here to do.

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There are few cities I have been to--

I could very well leave it there, for I suspect that would suffice, but that is not the whole story...

There are few cities I have been to - with the exception of Pakistani ones, where you would have to be half-mad or in league with the Taliban (completely mad) to do this sort of thing - where going for a refreshing evening stroll is a terrible, terrible idea. In most cities we are used to, you want to leave your stuffy house to venture outside and get some fresh night air. In Singapore, it is quite the opposite! Stepping outside your air-conditioned confines will sap all your energy in a moment and have you almost gasping for the front door handle so you can get back in again and turn the fan on, even in the darkest hours of night. When you do get in, you are less refreshed and stuffier than ever! And I suppose that goes some way to explaining why people always seem to be in such a crazed hurry. Few go outside for pleasure; there is always a purpose. In my case, it is usually to seek out food. Indeed, since moving into my new house this afternoon, that is the only I reason I have been out.

Geylang, as several people have taken the liberty of pointing out to me, is the city's red light district - not that you can tell, mind, because most of the lights are perpetually green and it's enough of a day's work just finding a place to cross the road! Anyway, that is the location of my apartment, on the highest storey of Fuyuen Court on Lor 35. All the residential roads coming off Geylang Road are numbered very simply as "Lor" followed by even numbers on one side and odd ones on the other. The last one, nearest Paya Lebor MRT station, is Lor 41. It sure does break the back of navigation. The Europeans could learn a lot from this system!

Generally, it was a very hard day today. I was overwhelmed by feelings of homesickness, especially thinking of the cosy old house I left on Wessex Lane as I move into one that isn't all that nice. It's modern and well air-conditioned, but plain and not very homely, and the kitchen has a big hole in the wall behind the sink, which is a completely intentional part of the design but does nothing to keep the heat and humidity out. That was hard enough without the prospect of being turned away by the landlord when I couldn't muster enough cash to cover the deposit and the first month's rent. Ultimately, I ransomed my passport while awaiting the international bank transfer.

I have been trying to overcome these anxieties with the knowledge that most of the good things I have left behind in Southampton will soon come to an end anyway or have done so already, by which I can convince myself that, in the long term, I am better off out here.

My hope is that once I have got to know my new colleagues at Fusionopolis, those pangs of unease will dissipate as old (but treasured) friends are "augmented" with new ones. That process starts tomorrow morning. For the time being, though, that seems far off, and my main thoughts today have been for those I can't see any more.

Still, if it all gets too much, these new tablets of mine work a treat. They knock me out stone cold for eight hours until I can't remember what the problem was any more!

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By
The Imperial Orange
4th October 2015

Friday, 2 October 2015

Day 3: The Colour Brown

Day 3 in Singapore turned out to be rather more bracing than the first two. Wednesday and Thursday had been optimistic, but the reality of being in a faraway land with different customs (and the prospect of being there for a very long time indeed) hit home on Friday

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In the weeks before I arrived here in Singapore, I trawled through several rental websites (some of which were recommended by IMRE). There was always one glaringly sinister thing that stuck out about some of the adverts: the horrible line, "No Indians, please" (or words to that effect).

Now, you might think that a country full of dozens of nationalities, where there is such a mix of cultures as there is on this island, would give discrimination a wide berth. But that says nothing of a culture that is full of contradictions. For instance, it is illegal for men to be gay, yet openly gay men are allowed to serve in the military and women can do what they like! In much the same way, the government of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong (more on him another day) will tell you that racism does not exist "officially". Of course, no one "should" discriminate against race/gender/sexuality. But that doesn't mean anyone will mind if you do! There is a dearth of anti-discrimination law, for such things are considered by the government to be too "Western".

So I kind of knew what to expect when I was looking for a house and actually went to great lengths to point out to potential landlords that I am from the UK, not India, lest there be any confusion. But I always got the feeling that the reason I was having so much trouble is because this racism is more primitive than even the adverts suggested. It is sufficient grounds for discrimination that you have an "Indian" name, be you from India or not, and so my vain phone calls and e-mails and messages went unanswered for weeks. I even signed up for WhatsApp (which, I'm told, is used by almost everyone here as the primary means of communication). That was no mean feat for a man of my limited nous, but I did it with great help. Even that didn't do me any favours!

I received a very enthusiastic e-mail on my very first day here, from a landlady near Fusionopolis. She seemed nice and said she had seen through the website that "someone" was interested in her advert. Of course, she didn't know until I responded to her e-mail that that someone was named "Hamid Khan". After her initial enthusiasm, I have not heard a peep from her, despite my repeated attempts via telephone, e-mail and WhatsApp to arrange a viewing. This has been the typical case since I arrived, with the notable exception that most landlords haven't bothered with the initial courtesy e-mail.

And I imagine that that treatment would have continued were it not for the timely intervention of a man whom I can only assume would be branded an "Indian" by some of the locals. The landlord, Fauzi, seems nice. After showing me the house, he took me out for a drink. Unfortunately, it's a very plain house in Geylang district, which is further east than I would like. But it's the only house I have yet seen, from the only landlord that has yet spoken to me. There's currently another Brit living there, too, so, if I do have to take it, then at least someone else has half a chance of understanding when I seriously talk about that mythical place called Southampton!

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By The Imperial Orange,
2nd October 2015

Thursday, 1 October 2015

Day 2: Which Fish is What?

Day 2 was much as the first, in fact, some moments for my greatest hits collections, but the translation department leaves a lot to be desired...

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Today, I ventured far from the safety of my hotel, to find my way to Fusionopolis Park, my workplace for the next two years. I used the MRT (Mass Rapid Transit) system, which is the most euphemistic name for "train" that I have ever seen.

For my culture shock tips, there are two things you should know about the MRT. First, return ticket doesn't mean return ticket at all; it means keep going back three times in 30 days. You do get value for your $4.70! Second, when you're on the escalator, STAND ON THE LEFT FOR THE LOVE OF SHIVA! This is in contrast to what we are used to back home in London, where fellow escalatorians will grimace in horror and tut disapprovingly while looking at their shoes if you so much as stick your elbow out on the left. No, in Singapore, there are signs up to make sure that you stand on the left, or so help you when the Chinese bloke late for his train runs up behind you on the right, clutching his triple espresso!

The MRT is extremely clean and punctual, and there is a train every minute or so. Most trains have bulbs on the maps, above the station names, which turn green when the station is yet to come, red when it is approaching, and off when you have passed it. So if you have fallen asleep and missed your stop, and wake up halfway between platforms, you will know exactly where you are by way of consolation! As you approach the station, a matrix above the platform-side door will light up green and the opposite one red, so that, in contrast to, say, the London Underground, here you can at least stampede over each other on the correct side of the train.

Fusionopolis Park comprises two complexes known by the very imaginative monikers of Fusionopolis 1 and Fusionopolis 2. Fusionopolis 1 is the older of the two, housing three buildings, Connexis, Symbiosis and Galaxis. The MRT stop, One North, is directly below Connexis, so that is the first one you see. On the other side of the road is the brand-new Fusionopolis 2, which officially opened on 21st September. There will be an opening ceremony attended by the Prime Minister in the next few weeks (19th October). And Fusionopolis 2 houses three marvellous feats of engineering with Space Age names: Innovis (the HQ), Solaris and Kinesis (where I will have my office). Solaris is billed as one of world's greenest buildings, literally and ecologically, for you cannot fail to notice all the space they have dedicated up the walls to growing plants.

This evening, I had dinner at the Broadway food court, which is near my hotel. The food court is a building that has stalls all the way around the outside, backed by kitchens, where chefs of various persuasions attempt to entice you with their offerings. In the middle of the court, there are tables laid out for you to eat at. After sampling the Chinese yesterday, I opted for South Asian today. I approached an Indian man making naan on a stove and asked him about his curries:

"What fish is in your 'white fish curry'?"

"White fish."

"Which fish?"

"No! White fish!"

"What about that one?"

"Red fish!"

Well, I had the indeterminate white fish, but it was very nicely cooked in onion, garlic and spices. It came with two naans, a side dish of chickpeas and a cup of iced lemon tea. And all for the princely sum of $11.10 (which is about £5). You wouldn't even find the iced lemon tea so cheaply back home!

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By The Imperial Orange,
1st October 2015

Day 1: Lost In Translation

At long last, I am here in Singapore, after a 16-hour journey with a short stopover at Mumbai. On my first night, I went out for dinner:

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After returning from the shops at 8pm, I decided to find out what all this street food business is all about. I had put my tiredness down to jet lag and the searing heat. It was 27 C today, but more like 37 C when you account for humidity; the air here is soggier than a Somerset farmer in April. And it can do funny things to you, like making you forget that you haven't eaten for 16 hours!

Street food is ubiquitous in Singapore, as sure as the haze itself and people in a comical state of haste. Every street is lined with stalls and open-fronted shops where people chatter into their noodles, so it is very affordable, unlike eating out back home! In the evening, a lot of the customers are smartly dressed because it is common for working people not to cook at home at all and instead call in at their "usual" for their dinner on their way home.

I found a Chinese place on the same street as my hotel and stood in the doorway for just a moment to see what they had. No sooner had I got a foot past the door than a tiny but very persistent waitress almost decapitated me with a menu and ushered me to a table. She then went away for the most fleeting moment while I attempted to make my selection. Most of the items on the menu had been translated into English, but there were several cases where the translator was obviously not familiar with the English term for that food, and had therefore simply written out the Chinese word in the English alphabet, which was useful for pronouncing it to the waitress, but I hadn't a Scooby what I was pronouncing! When the waitress returned, I asked her if she could explain what some of those dishes were. I pointed to one of them and said, "I don't know what this means", whereupon she scribbled it down on her notepad. I tried to tell her that I wasn't ordering it by pointing to something else I didn't understand, but she had no idea and just assumed I was very hungry, so she scribbled that down, too. Then she took the menu from me, turned back a few pages and recommended that the beancurd went well with whatever it was I had just ordered. Well, if you're in for a cent, you're in for a dollar, so I acquiesced.

The food was prompt and tasted delicious. The beancurd was cooked in soy sauce and came with baby sweetcorn and peppers. In one of the other dishes, I could see bits of tofu and bamboo in soy sauce, and the third dish had assorted vegetables in what I thought was a cashew-based sauce. Despite having three dishes, I did quite well and got through about three-quarters of each. I would recommend it if I had any idea what it was...

Not content, the waitress returned clutching the menu once more and placed it in front of me opened on the dessert page. I had by then had time to prepare for "lost in translation" moments. I firmly declined the offer by crossing my arms and shaking my head. Clearly sensing my fear of being there eating all night, she withdrew the menu. Otherwise, I might still have been there now on my tenth course...

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By The Imperial Orange,
30th September 2015