1. " No one gives you tuition on what to do in Parliament!": Kuik Shiao-Yin on taking risks for God.
We were 10 minutes into the conversation when Ms Kuik Shiao-Yin declared: “I’m not very big on following, for following’s sake, just because people say that’s the way to go. I like to question, to figure out what’s real, what’s authentic, what works.”
“The fact that I have God in my life gives me a way to steer and navigate. His gift to me is that I know that He has my back even as I take risks," said popular former Nominated Member of Parliament Kuik Shiao-Yin.
Main photo by Glen Goh. All other photos from The Thought Collective Facebook page.
Main photo by Glen Goh. All other photos from The Thought Collective Facebook page.
We were 10 minutes into the conversation when Ms Kuik Shiao-Yin declared: “I’m not very big on following, for following’s sake, just because people say that’s the way to go. I like to question, to figure out what’s real, what’s authentic, what works.”
You don’t get more plain speaking than that.
Former Nominated Member of Parliament (NMP) of Republic of Singapore, Kuik Shiao-Yin, is now famed for her farewell note to the Singapore Parliament, where she urged politicians to do a better job at speaking plainly, and to limit their use of “fancy words”.
It takes guts to say that to a roomful of seasoned politicians, including senior leaders of the country, to say the least.
Her earlier Parliament speeches had also struck a chord with the public on social media.
Kuik is full of guts and no guile.
The 42-year-old ex-parliamentarian’s day job as co-founder of The Thought Collective is to nurture the next generation’s leaders.
Between 2014 and 2018, she served two terms as a Nominated Member of Parliament.
But few know that she had turned down the role when first approached.
“My first response was, ‘No, why would I want to do that?’
“I had all these assessments mentally: Parliament is only for certain types of people. I don’t know anything about law or economics and blah, blah, blah,” she shrugged.
No one could have faulted her for declining – at the time, Kuik was a busy, new mother.
But then she stopped herself.
“A ‘no’ would be dishonouring of every person who’s had to put himself or herself out there.”
“I realised that the ‘no’ came from a place that didn’t sit right with me,” she said. “And when I thought it through, it felt very wrong to say ‘no’.
“I had been teaching young people that, if an opportunity to do good shows up, they should take it.
“For myself, I know that to be a good and faithful servant also means I have to steward the opportunities that come up in my life.
“When I dug down deep, I realised the deepest reason was: I wasn’t interested in getting flak online,” she said with trademark forthrightness.
“If I stood out, I would attract all kinds of criticism. Who wants to do that?
“That’s when I knew I had to say ‘yes’.
“A ‘no’ would be dishonouring of every person who’s had to put himself or herself out there.”
“I don’t know how He works with others, but with me, God doesn’t give me a plan from the sky.”
And where was God in this decision?
She let out a chuckle and said: “I think God was in the background having His laughs. He was not exactly like, ‘Come, let Me give you the holy message.’
“It was more like Him asking me, ‘Why are you scared?’
“So I thought to myself: Worse comes to worst, I lose face lah! And if I made a fool of myself, God is with me.
“The first year was a steep learning curve. I had to make sense of the Parliament jargon, lingo and the rules. No one gives you tuition for what to do in there. You just figure it out yourself. It’s the same for God’s will in my life.”
“What does being a Christian mean for my life?”
Kuik came to faith at the age of 20, in her second year of university.
She went to church to humour a friend who had invited her.
“The fact that I had God in my life gave me a way to steer and navigate.”
But the service ended with Kuik crying without reason. Moved by the Holy Spirit, she subsequently came to faith.
“When you convert as a young adult, you have to make a very clear, existential choice. I took that choice very seriously.
“I thought: If I’m going to call myself a Christian, what does this mean for my life?
“Since I was in architecture school, I asked myself, ‘Does God wants me to be an architect?’ It wasn’t a career path that I was enthusiastic about.
“I don’t know how He works with others, but with me, God doesn’t give me a plan from the sky.”
“I do not want to waste my life, I want to seek and create meaning in this world.”
With no clear answers, but an internship with a prestigious architectural firm in the United States in hand, Kuik’s next thought was: “Okay lah, just suck it up for the Lord!”
Even though she had an enjoyable stint in the United States, Kuik was increasingly convinced that architecture was not what she wanted to pursue.
Uncertainty continued to loom but it was lined with hope.
“The fact that I had God in my life gave me a way to steer and navigate.
“Although I didn’t know what I wanted, at the same time, I was very clear of the final destination I want to get at.
“The end point for me is to live in a way that, when I die, I’d hear God say, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant.’ I do not want to waste my life, I want to seek and create meaning in this world.
“I have since developed a stronger sense of personal agency. It was God’s gift to me. I know that He has my back even as I take risk.
“If it wasn’t for my faith, I would have a significantly boring life!” she mused, then let out a laugh.
“Now God is the foundation that I always go back to, and the destination that I want to reach.”
Organic messiness
Kuik’s confidence in God has shaped her life, which she describes as “organic messiness”.
“You often hear Christians’ cleaned-up stories like, ‘You know, God told me this crystal clear plan, I just followed it, and got my way right.’
“For me, I feel that the Bible has already taught me the major lessons I need to know.
“God gives me the free choice to grow into who I’m meant to be … If God is an authoritarian father, that’s not great parenting!”
“He has put everything in my hands and gives me the free choice to grow into who I’m meant to be and realise it for myself.
“If God is an authoritarian father who just tells me what to do every time, then that’s not great parenting!”
So it was only after a few meanders that she found her groove.
There was a time she considered entering seminary. But teaching and development was the career that spoke to her spirit best, and so The Thought Collective was born.
The collective includes social enterprises School of Thought (described as a school that “drives innovation in civic learning to nurture generations of thought leaders”), Food for Thought (an eatery at the National Museum of Singapore that “transforms community spaces and brings people together to enjoy good food for a good cause”), Think Tank (which “curates content and designs information to make meaning in a complex world”) and Common Ground (which “bridges the public and private sector to facilitate social innovation for pressing national concerns”).
At The Thought Collective, Kuik had a class of students who weren’t her top scorers but were hungry to learn. They asked to stay on for free lessons even though they had completed the course.
“I didn’t need to serve in an overseas mission field when there was so much that could be done right here.”
“The students knew that I was a Christian and told me they wanted to learn about the different religious viewpoints, about good and evil and suffering in the world.
“I was shocked, but in a good way.
“I started with Christianity since that’s the religion I know best. The students had many questions and were so motivated that they bought their own Bibles. Later, on their own, they went to sit with a monk to ask questions.
“That, for me, was an amazing testimony of how much meaning you can find in the marketplace.
“I knew then that I didn’t need to go to seminary or serve in an overseas mission field when there was so much that could be done right here.”
A nation preserved for a purpose
When it comes to Singapore, Kuik is “very optimistic”.
“I feel that God has a plan. I have no idea what it is but I know that God has preserved our country.”
“We are a country that should not have succeeded,” she said matter-of-factly.
“There’re so many odds that are against this country and yet we have become one of the most successful countries in the world.
“But if we only have a pragmatic view, without faith, keeping ahead would be an exhausting perspective.
“How much harder can we work when we are already one of the hardest working countries where people do not sleep enough?
“I have a naÏve faith lens. I don’t believe what we have is just a perfect confluence of historical factors.
“I feel that God has a plan. I have no idea what it is but I know that God has preserved our country. You don’t keep a country in this state for no good reason!”
Ms Kuik Shiao-Yin, the co-founder and director of The Thought Collective, stepped down as a Nominated Member of Parliament this week after completing her term. She has been an NMP since August 2014. She shared her thoughts on her time in Parliament in a Facebook post.
I will miss this season and Parliament’s part in it.
At church this weekend, I was reminded about all the challenges that come with the choice to truly love anyone or anything.
Carry out your role with as much love as you can muster: Kuik Shiao-Yin’s farewell thoughts from Parliament
Kuik Shiao-Yin // September 11, 2018, 12:07 pm
Ms Kuik Shiao-Yin (second from right) with her fellow outgoing Nominated MPs. "A very fun cohort - sadly, missing the very funny Azmoon Ahmad."
Ms Kuik Shiao-Yin, the co-founder and director of The Thought Collective, stepped down as a Nominated Member of Parliament this week after completing her term. She has been an NMP since August 2014. She shared her thoughts on her time in Parliament in a Facebook post.
Yesterday was the last Parliamentary session for us NMPs of the 13th Parliament.
For some of us it was the end of 2.5 years of service. For some of us who served a first term in the 12th Parliament, it was about 3.5 years.
I came into Parliament in 2014 when I was pregnant. I leave Parliament about to celebrate my toddler’s 4th birthday. Parliament has been part of a significant season of learning and growing for me. I crossed over from late 30s to early 40s here. I went through a season of major professional and personal challenges – and the Parliamentary experience was definitely one huge area of growth amongst many.
I will miss this season and Parliament’s part in it.
I will miss the mad rush to prepare speeches. It was a painful process but it forced me to read wider, think deeper, write faster and speak out more on behalf of people who did not get the chance to be at the table.
I will definitely miss hanging out with my really fun, fellow back-row NMPs. Some days it felt like being back in university again, conspiring about when to go for tea break together or looking out for who was still rushing their “homework” in the library.
I will miss being in the chamber, hearing Parliamentary speeches live and learning from other MP’s Parliamentary Questions that there are so many questions you would not have thought of asking, so many issues you would never have thought were happening at the same time. It gives a small insight into the complexities of running a country.
I will miss experiencing the humanness of the people who make up both sides of the House. They will no longer be just names on a newspaper to me, but individuals with thoughts, quirks, personalities, stories of their own. I’ve learnt that there are many people – both inside and outside of Parliament – who love this country and have a heart for particular communities of people that make up this country.
At church this weekend, I was reminded about all the challenges that come with the choice to truly love anyone or anything.
In the Book of Corinthians, love means being patient, being kind, not envying, not boasting, not being proud nor resentful, not insisting on one’s own way. Not rejoicing at wrongdoing, but rejoicing with the truth. “Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things” – it’s a remarkably tall order but for those who profess love for fellow citizens and our home country, those challenges come with the territory.
“Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things” is a remarkably tall order, but those challenges come with the territory.
My wish as I leave this House is that come what may, we, the people of this one small island nation, will remember to keep loving each other. I hope we keep choosing to seek common ground – especially with those who seem different. For if we seek, we are more likely to find.
The position of a solo NMP is objectively not a powerful one – our voice is a small one amongst many other voices and we have no support system that comes with being part of a formal party.
But if we NMPs can carry out our small role with as much love as we can muster, and not go at it alone but seek the input of a greater community and find the support of good friends, we can make a difference.
I’m looking forward to discovering who will make up the next batch of NMPs and rooting for them to make the most of the small but special position they have been privileged with.
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