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Story of the day: A mother's selfless giving

cooleo

Alfrescian
Loyal
A mother’s selfless giving

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At the start of each month, we share with you the inspiring journey of one person, who has, through passion and hard work, overcome tremendous odds and achieved amazing feats. Our hope is that he or she will be able to inspire you to reach for your dreams, too. This week, we feature a mother who has spent the last 11 years taking care of her bedridden son, and yet she continues to go the extra mile for others.

Like many mothers, she makes time to talk to her son before she goes to work and after she returns home. But unlike other children, the only response Leong Poh Yin's son, Clement, gives — on a good day — is a grunt.

Clement, 32, is unable to move or speak. He has been bedridden for the past 11 years, after suffering severe brain damage from a motorcycle accident.

"When I see him like this, my heart aches. I keep praying for God to cure him," said Leong, a regular church-goer, in Mandarin.

Coupled with a painful childhood and a less-than-happy marriage, Leong, 65, has faced many difficulties. Yet, she continues to willingly reach out to help other disadvantaged children in need.

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Leong and her son, Clement, holding a World Vision award for outstanding child sponsors. (Yahoo! photo)

Leong, who is now Singaporean, was born in Malacca and given up for adoption because her birth parents could not afford to raise her.

Her adoptive mother, who died last year, treated her as just an additional pair of hands to help out around the house, and she objected strongly when Leong's loving adoptive father sent her to school.

After Leong's Primary Six examinations, her adoptive mother eventually succeeded in stopping her from studying by sending her to Singapore under the guise of further studies.

Leong, who ended up playing nanny to her elder sister's son, believes she was also sent to Singapore so she could not reconcile with her birth mother.

But Leong does not harbour grudges. There is no point in regretting what could have been, she said.

So, while she may have loved studying, frequently coming in top 10 in her class, Leong never studied beyond the primary level. She married at 27 and worked as a seamstress to support her family.

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Leong, who learnt to sew on the job, made her own wedding dress. Her marriage, however, did not last. (Yahoo! …

The divorcee did not want to go into details of her marriage, but said her ex-husband did not "manage" the family well. After her children grew up, she requested for a divorce.

In 1999, just as the divorce was finalised, Leong's youngest son, Clement, was severely injured in a motorcycle accident.

Only 10 days after he returned from Australia, Clement -- an aspiring pilot -- was hit by a car while riding his new motorbike. He was hospitalised for nearly a year and was left completely paralysed because of a blood clot in his brain.

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Clement was in Australia for pilot training but returned before he completed it. (Leong Poh Yin photo)

'Unwavering compassion for the less privileged'

While caring for her disabled son 24-7 has been physically and mentally gruelling, Leong's face lights up with love when talking about her three children. The grandmother of four proudly displays photographs of her eldest son's wedding in 2003.

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Leong's eldest son, Clifford, 36, is married. Her daughter, Claudia, 37, is working in Vietnam.

Despite her many setbacks and her humble background, she still finds the time to sponsor other kids in need through World Vision Singapore. Her motivation? Not wanting other children to be deprived of opportunities as she had been.

Having been a child sponsor since 1998, she is one of the program's longest-serving child sponsors. Last December, she was given an award for being an outstanding child sponsor.

Even after Clement was injured, Leong went on to sponsor her third child. She is confident the compensation from Clement's accident -- a six-figure sum -- will be more than enough to pay his bills.

So out of her meagre monthly income of about $1,000, she still sets aside $45 a month to ensure her "adopted" World Vision child, who lives in a rural village in Thailand, has access to clean water, food, education and healthcare. Her earlier two "children" have left the programme, but she keeps all the letters and drawing they sent her in a file.

The executive director of World Vision Singapore, James Quek, praised Leong's "unwavering compassion for the less privileged".

He noted, Leong is a "shining example of selfless giving; and her devotedness to the cause of helping the poor inspires us daily as we serve needy children all around the world."

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Coincidentally, the third child Leong sponsored was born in the year Clement met with his accident. (Yahoo! ph …

Apart from sponsoring a child, the animated and cheery woman still finds the time to volunteer at Lions Befrienders, a local organisation that looks after the physical and mental welfare of lonely and poor elderly. She has been a volunteer for over 10 years.

"I hope others who are well-to-do could help the less fortunate," she stressed, with no trace of bitterness at the cards life has dealt her.

William Lim, 38, has known Leong for about 10 years. He described her as "dedicated", "emotionally strong" and one who does not let her personal circumstances prevent her from helping others.

The "little things" she does leaves a "strong impression", said Lim.

Some five years ago, their church youth were visiting the elderly in a hospital during the Chinese New Year Period. Leong prepared the yu sheng -- when other adults were busy with their reunion dinners -- so the youth could celebrate with the elderly.

Leong has also not traveled for many years because of her dedication in looking after Clement, she added. When Lim and other friends visit her, Leong makes sure Clement knows who's visiting so he does not feel left out.

Refusing to feel sorry for herself, the former seamstress who built her business from scratch now works as a ham promoter. Based near her four-room HDB flat in Tampines, the job gives her a stable income and distracts her from worrying about Clement.

She recalled, "I was very depressed (after Clement's accident). … I had paranoia. I was scared if something happened to me, there would be no one to care for Clement." Thankfully, friends distracted her then with mahjong, she laughed.

Leong credited her church and friends for supporting her. She said, "There will always be troubles in this world, you just have to trust God."

Her final parting words? "Be optimistic. When you face difficulty, share your troubles with your friends and let them help. Don't keep your problems to yourself, one person can't handle it all."
 

ivebert

Alfrescian
Loyal
Fucking O Levels Ah Beng cooleo :p

Are you a fucking little rat?

Comment on your thread to guide the discussion :oIo:
 

Frankiestine

Alfrescian
Loyal
Hai there was a program on CNA about aging parents and their handicap kids. Very sad what will to be of these kids once their parents pass on? Those who parents are rich, arrangements can be made for them to be taken care of but what about those that are poor like the old lady who is already in her 80s and yet have to take care of her mentally handicapped son in his 40s.
 

singveld

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
oh a believer of heavan, can teekee explain when the son go to heavan, will he be the retarded version or the healthy version. anyway any one who ride a motorcycle in singapore is retard.
 

therockz

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Loyal
Giving away your own child seems to be part of Singaporean culture in the 1950s. These people have such golden hearts filled with compassion and selflessness. They would give away their own flesh and blood to strangers just for a one dollar red packet. And they feed their own children rice porridge every meal and tell them they are lucky to even have food to eat.

I guess that is why they call the younger generations "selfish". The young ones no longer give away their own babies, they only care about their own happiness. They also feed their children more food, hence depriving the poor Burmese and Africans of food.

Young ones listen up. You are the selfish, illiterate generation! You all are immoral and lack wisdom! Shame on you all!
 
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