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Serious Brit PR Who Taught English To Sinkie Native Kids Considers Himself Sinkie With Brit Passport!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
neil-humphreys-1.jpg


SINGAPORE: The normally light-hearted, witty and fast-talking Neil Humphreys pauses for a moment. He looks increasingly perturbed as we discuss why, for all the love that he professes for Singapore, he hasn’t fully committed to the country by becoming a citizen. At times, he is almost defensive.

While he’s unassuming, often seen in a T-shirt, jeans and sneakers, Humphreys’ tall and lanky frame guarantees that he stands out in a crowd. In a sea of largely Asian faces in Singapore, the Caucasian also stands out simply because of his race.

In every other way, he likes to think he has assimilated.

In his 20s, Humphreys was hit by the travel bug. While studying at the University of Manchester, he became friends with a Singaporean who let him stay at his late grandparents’ home in the city-state. It was 1996 and he had planned to stay here for only three months, but fell in love with Singapore immediately and ended up staying for 10 years.

He lived in the heartland of Toa Payoh all that time and among his favourite everyday hangouts are hawker centres. He is the friendly ang moh with no airs about him. He has more or less mastered Singlish and during this interview with me he uses words such as “tekan” at times. Among his friends are local taxi drivers and hawkers. While he left in 2006 to go to Australia for five years to “scratch a travel itch”, it was Singapore he came back to.

“I feel Singapore is home. Sometimes, it really is as simple and profound as that. When I go to Changi Airport, it’s home. I’m in the hawker centres, it's real, it’s natural, it’s home,” he says.

A “SINGAPOREAN” WRITER?

In an interview with another publication a few years ago, he even said he’d like to be known as a “Singaporean writer”.

There is no doubt that he is prolific. His many works on Singapore include Notes from an Even Smaller Island (2001) and Saving a Sexier Island: Notes from an Old Singapore (2015). He has also written two football novels, thrillers and children’s books.

But Humphreys is not a Singaporean. After all these years, he is still a Permanent Resident (PR), and has not attempted to become a citizen.

“I feel like I’m being pressured,” he says as I attempt to find out why he hasn’t taken what would seem like a natural step for someone who claims to love this country and calls it “home”.

Some might say his reason for not seeking citizenship is perfectly understandable. While his wife and daughter live here, the rest of his family still lives in the UK.

“Last year, there was a very unexpected and sudden death in my family. It was an accidental death and out of respect for my family, I don’t want to talk anymore about that.”

“But because of that, I needed to get to the UK instantly and urgently and I needed to stay there for an undetermined length of time.

“That brought home to me that I still have all of my family in the UK, my parents, my wife’s parents. Being a PR helps me go between the two countries. If I had to stay in England to look after my parents for six months, a year, two years or whatever, it would be a lot simpler if I still had a British passport.”

The unfortunate death that led to this realisation however took place only last year.

Humphreys had lived in Singapore for many years before that. Why hadn’t he ever thought of becoming a citizen before this?

HE CONSIDERED CITIZENSHIP

neil-humphreys-2.jpg


“I looked into citizen issues but I was always aware that I have aging parents. I have a British citizen friend who lived in Singapore for many years. He married a lady from Thailand and she has had enormous visa issues, even though she’s married to a British citizen.

“I wouldn’t want to be in a position where I’d have to be in the UK for a long period of time, dealing with grief and having to deal with long-term visas as well," he says.

“It’s a pragmatic, logistical and administrative thing. I have no problems becoming a Singaporean citizen. I possibly see that happening at some point. But while my family is still in the UK, it’s difficult.”

He claims he does “everything else".

“I pay my taxes. I get all mushy on National Day. I cried when Joseph Schooling won the gold medal. If Singapore plays England, in any sport, I want Singapore to win.”

Assimilation was effortless for him.

“I just swapped one working class culture for another. I also grew up in London where everybody was a different colour, Indians and Chinese and Bangladeshis and Pakistanis so it was no big deal to me, to eat in a coffee shop in Toa Payoh.”

We discuss whether he ever thought of moving his family here.

“You’re talking about people in their late 60s, early 70s. They’ve lived in the UK their entire life, they’ve lived in the same town their entire lives. The culture shock would probably kill them. I have enough issues with them on holidays when they come and they come here two, three times a year. To them, chicken rice is exotic.”

Humphreys taught English at a local school when he first came to Singapore and proudly says that he needed the help of a Singaporean coach to neutralise his Cockney accent.

He then started writing for a local football fanzine. It was working for the fan club that brought him in contact with local journalists. He applied for a job in the media and became a full-time journalist and writer. Today, he freelances for various media.

He attributes his success as a satirist to having grown up “in a very funny household".

"I grew up in a culture and an environment and a school system that encouraged us to speak out and encouraged us to laugh at ourselves.”

His wife currently teaches at an international school here and his daughter is a student at the same school.

To not go to a Government school was not a deliberate decision.

“My wife was teaching in a local school with me in the beginning but she had a friend who worked at this international school that was looking for people. She had worked there before we went to Australia. While we were in Australia, they asked if she would come back and said they’d have a place for my daughter as well. My kiasu light bulb went off. We felt that’s perfect. They can go to school together and come home together.”

“It was just a convenience thing. My daughter takes a lot of classes outside school. She just started an aikido class at the community club. She’s exposed to Singaporeans. Integration is not an issue.”

NATIONAL SERVICE

A few years ago, Humphreys even considered doing National Service.

“Because I always get that: 'You ang moh, arh? You never do National Service what.' That’s the only stick left that Singaporeans have legitimately got to beat me with.

“I had a meeting with some people from MINDEF and some TV people about the possibility of me doing Basic Military Training. The TV people were considering making a documentary out of it. I was running out of time, approaching my 40th birthday. But at that time my PR status hadn’t come through yet, so there were some issues with that.

“Now I’ve passed the age.” He’s 43 now.

NOT HERE BECAUSE HE COULDN’T “HACK IT” ELSEWHERE

After graduating from university in the UK, Humphreys worked as a stockbroker for six months in the UK, a job he claims paid him well.

He asserts he’s not one of those foreigners who couldn’t make it in his own country and came to Asia to “rip off Singapore".

He claims he has options even today – job opportunities from media organisations in the UK and Australia.

His books have done well in those countries as well. But he says he continues to choose Singapore and he does so because he truly loves it here, not because he can’t “hack it” elsewhere.

“I’ve said before that if I meet one more foul director, foul writer, foul producer, foul commentator, or foul teacher who couldn’t hack it in their own country and then came to Singapore and get a nice cushy expat job, I don’t know what I’ll do.”

Cushy expat packages are less common these days anyway.

WHITE WAS RIGHT

He admits the deferential attitude Singaporeans had, especially in the 90s, towards Caucasians had a part to play in his success. It helped him be heard.

“I’ll never lie about that. In the early days, I sensed people here were interested in me. It was more apparent to me because I’d come from a working class background back home where I was essentially written off as trash as soon as I opened my mouth. Then I came here and suddenly everybody listened to me. In the early years, white was right. That has thankfully faded now.”

But he claims that the deference and novelty, rightfully, didn’t last.

“If my work had no substance, my skin colour wasn’t going to save me. Maybe with my first book, yes, there was a slight novelty factor, but that novelty ended a long time ago.”

He cautions against being wowed by “ang mohs” with no substance, but “can talk for weeks”.

“Ang mohs are constantly encouraged to speak up and that’s not always the case in Singapore. So when they come here, they’re very confident in front of a crowd or a business delegation whereas a Singaporean, even some of our politicians, are quite timid, they can’t sustain eye contact. That’s a real problem. We need to fix that.”

In 2006, Humphreys left Singapore to go to Australia where he became increasingly bored.

“Within about two or three years of being in Australia, I got homesick for Singapore. I went to the suburbs of Australia and I was basically cutting the lawn and waiting for death. It wasn’t for me.”


Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...-not-here-to-rip-off-singapore-on-the-9877284
 

Kotekbengkok

Alfrescian
Loyal
Another typical example of how a smart ang moh has milked the system to his max advantage. And his "creative" reasons not to take citizenship or send his kid to a local school is laughable if not for it being insulting to ones intelligence. His wife earning big bucks in international school and he is maximizing the Ang Moh tua kee syndrome. He knows that once you are white, in Spore u are king ,rated just below PAP ministers.


neil-humphreys-1.jpg


SINGAPORE: The normally light-hearted, witty and fast-talking Neil Humphreys pauses for a moment. He looks increasingly perturbed as we discuss why, for all the love that he professes for Singapore, he hasn’t fully committed to the country by becoming a citizen. At times, he is almost defensive.

While he’s unassuming, often seen in a T-shirt, jeans and sneakers, Humphreys’ tall and lanky frame guarantees that he stands out in a crowd. In a sea of largely Asian faces in Singapore, the Caucasian also stands out simply because of his race.

In every other way, he likes to think he has assimilated.

In his 20s, Humphreys was hit by the travel bug. While studying at the University of Manchester, he became friends with a Singaporean who let him stay at his late grandparents’ home in the city-state. It was 1996 and he had planned to stay here for only three months, but fell in love with Singapore immediately and ended up staying for 10 years.

He lived in the heartland of Toa Payoh all that time and among his favourite everyday hangouts are hawker centres. He is the friendly ang moh with no airs about him. He has more or less mastered Singlish and during this interview with me he uses words such as “tekan” at times. Among his friends are local taxi drivers and hawkers. While he left in 2006 to go to Australia for five years to “scratch a travel itch”, it was Singapore he came back to.

“I feel Singapore is home. Sometimes, it really is as simple and profound as that. When I go to Changi Airport, it’s home. I’m in the hawker centres, it's real, it’s natural, it’s home,” he says.

A “SINGAPOREAN” WRITER?

In an interview with another publication a few years ago, he even said he’d like to be known as a “Singaporean writer”.

There is no doubt that he is prolific. His many works on Singapore include Notes from an Even Smaller Island (2001) and Saving a Sexier Island: Notes from an Old Singapore (2015). He has also written two football novels, thrillers and children’s books.

But Humphreys is not a Singaporean. After all these years, he is still a Permanent Resident (PR), and has not attempted to become a citizen.

“I feel like I’m being pressured,” he says as I attempt to find out why he hasn’t taken what would seem like a natural step for someone who claims to love this country and calls it “home”.

Some might say his reason for not seeking citizenship is perfectly understandable. While his wife and daughter live here, the rest of his family still lives in the UK.

“Last year, there was a very unexpected and sudden death in my family. It was an accidental death and out of respect for my family, I don’t want to talk anymore about that.”

“But because of that, I needed to get to the UK instantly and urgently and I needed to stay there for an undetermined length of time.

“That brought home to me that I still have all of my family in the UK, my parents, my wife’s parents. Being a PR helps me go between the two countries. If I had to stay in England to look after my parents for six months, a year, two years or whatever, it would be a lot simpler if I still had a British passport.”

The unfortunate death that led to this realisation however took place only last year.

Humphreys had lived in Singapore for many years before that. Why hadn’t he ever thought of becoming a citizen before this?

HE CONSIDERED CITIZENSHIP

neil-humphreys-2.jpg


“I looked into citizen issues but I was always aware that I have aging parents. I have a British citizen friend who lived in Singapore for many years. He married a lady from Thailand and she has had enormous visa issues, even though she’s married to a British citizen.

“I wouldn’t want to be in a position where I’d have to be in the UK for a long period of time, dealing with grief and having to deal with long-term visas as well," he says.

“It’s a pragmatic, logistical and administrative thing. I have no problems becoming a Singaporean citizen. I possibly see that happening at some point. But while my family is still in the UK, it’s difficult.”

He claims he does “everything else".

“I pay my taxes. I get all mushy on National Day. I cried when Joseph Schooling won the gold medal. If Singapore plays England, in any sport, I want Singapore to win.”

Assimilation was effortless for him.

“I just swapped one working class culture for another. I also grew up in London where everybody was a different colour, Indians and Chinese and Bangladeshis and Pakistanis so it was no big deal to me, to eat in a coffee shop in Toa Payoh.”

We discuss whether he ever thought of moving his family here.

“You’re talking about people in their late 60s, early 70s. They’ve lived in the UK their entire life, they’ve lived in the same town their entire lives. The culture shock would probably kill them. I have enough issues with them on holidays when they come and they come here two, three times a year. To them, chicken rice is exotic.”

Humphreys taught English at a local school when he first came to Singapore and proudly says that he needed the help of a Singaporean coach to neutralise his Cockney accent.

He then started writing for a local football fanzine. It was working for the fan club that brought him in contact with local journalists. He applied for a job in the media and became a full-time journalist and writer. Today, he freelances for various media.

He attributes his success as a satirist to having grown up “in a very funny household".

"I grew up in a culture and an environment and a school system that encouraged us to speak out and encouraged us to laugh at ourselves.”

His wife currently teaches at an international school here and his daughter is a student at the same school.

To not go to a Government school was not a deliberate decision.

“My wife was teaching in a local school with me in the beginning but she had a friend who worked at this international school that was looking for people. She had worked there before we went to Australia. While we were in Australia, they asked if she would come back and said they’d have a place for my daughter as well. My kiasu light bulb went off. We felt that’s perfect. They can go to school together and come home together.”

“It was just a convenience thing. My daughter takes a lot of classes outside school. She just started an aikido class at the community club. She’s exposed to Singaporeans. Integration is not an issue.”

NATIONAL SERVICE

A few years ago, Humphreys even considered doing National Service.

“Because I always get that: 'You ang moh, arh? You never do National Service what.' That’s the only stick left that Singaporeans have legitimately got to beat me with.

“I had a meeting with some people from MINDEF and some TV people about the possibility of me doing Basic Military Training. The TV people were considering making a documentary out of it. I was running out of time, approaching my 40th birthday. But at that time my PR status hadn’t come through yet, so there were some issues with that.

“Now I’ve passed the age.” He’s 43 now.

NOT HERE BECAUSE HE COULDN’T “HACK IT” ELSEWHERE

After graduating from university in the UK, Humphreys worked as a stockbroker for six months in the UK, a job he claims paid him well.

He asserts he’s not one of those foreigners who couldn’t make it in his own country and came to Asia to “rip off Singapore".

He claims he has options even today – job opportunities from media organisations in the UK and Australia.

His books have done well in those countries as well. But he says he continues to choose Singapore and he does so because he truly loves it here, not because he can’t “hack it” elsewhere.

“I’ve said before that if I meet one more foul director, foul writer, foul producer, foul commentator, or foul teacher who couldn’t hack it in their own country and then came to Singapore and get a nice cushy expat job, I don’t know what I’ll do.”

Cushy expat packages are less common these days anyway.

WHITE WAS RIGHT

He admits the deferential attitude Singaporeans had, especially in the 90s, towards Caucasians had a part to play in his success. It helped him be heard.

“I’ll never lie about that. In the early days, I sensed people here were interested in me. It was more apparent to me because I’d come from a working class background back home where I was essentially written off as trash as soon as I opened my mouth. Then I came here and suddenly everybody listened to me. In the early years, white was right. That has thankfully faded now.”

But he claims that the deference and novelty, rightfully, didn’t last.

“If my work had no substance, my skin colour wasn’t going to save me. Maybe with my first book, yes, there was a slight novelty factor, but that novelty ended a long time ago.”

He cautions against being wowed by “ang mohs” with no substance, but “can talk for weeks”.

“Ang mohs are constantly encouraged to speak up and that’s not always the case in Singapore. So when they come here, they’re very confident in front of a crowd or a business delegation whereas a Singaporean, even some of our politicians, are quite timid, they can’t sustain eye contact. That’s a real problem. We need to fix that.”

In 2006, Humphreys left Singapore to go to Australia where he became increasingly bored.

“Within about two or three years of being in Australia, I got homesick for Singapore. I went to the suburbs of Australia and I was basically cutting the lawn and waiting for death. It wasn’t for me.”


Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...-not-here-to-rip-off-singapore-on-the-9877284
 

Scrooball (clone)

Alfrescian
Loyal
“Within about two or three years of being in Australia, I got homesick for Singapore. I went to the suburbs of Australia and I was basically cutting the lawn and waiting for death. It wasn’t for me.”

Basically, he is the epitome and walking definition of WHITE TRASH.
 

borom

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
To all those foreigners who claim to love Singapore-I invite them to serve 2 years of NS and 10 years of reservist.
After that, I will believe them
 
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