This doesn’t match my other pics but how could I not share it? 😍
Taken last night when we were randomly treated to a fireworks display from home. Not sure what’s going on but I’ll take it 🎆 the Baltic said ‘Rolex’ so they must have been the sponsor. It feels like being back in Singapore again watching the National day warm up fireworks 😊 personally I think they were just celebrating the fact that we are off today 😜 and on our way to @centreparcsuk 🎉 have a great weekend all! 😘
同時也有2部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過57萬的網紅JEBBEY FAMILY,也在其Youtube影片中提到,It's a day before our anniversary and Debbie has a surprise planned! Follow us on IG: http://www.instagram.com/thejianhaotan Debbie: http://www.instag...
「rolex singapore」的推薦目錄:
- 關於rolex singapore 在 Melis Living Facebook 的最佳解答
- 關於rolex singapore 在 Lee Hsien Loong Facebook 的最讚貼文
- 關於rolex singapore 在 JEBBEY FAMILY Youtube 的最讚貼文
- 關於rolex singapore 在 Khoa Pug Youtube 的精選貼文
- 關於rolex singapore 在 FOUND the NEW Rolex GMT at Singapore's Changi Airport ... 的評價
- 關於rolex singapore 在 Singapore Rolex Club - Facebook 的評價
- 關於rolex singapore 在 Rolex - Singapore | Store design, Design, Interior concept 的評價
rolex singapore 在 Lee Hsien Loong Facebook 的最讚貼文
By now, you have probably heard about my father’s red box. Minister Heng Swee Keat posted about it last week. The red box was a fixture of my father’s work routine. It is now on display at the National Museum of Singapore in his memorial exhibition.
Some of my father’s other personal items are there too. His barrister’s wig (of horsehair) from when he was admitted to the Bar. And a Rolex Oyster Perpetual watch given to him by the Singapore Union of Postal and Telecommunications Workers after he represented them in the famous postmen’s strike in 1952.
I enjoyed my visit to the exhibition a few days ago. Was happy to hear that many of you went yesterday. The exhibition will be on until 26 April. – LHL
MR LEE'S RED BOX
Mr Lee Kuan Yew had a red box. When I worked as Mr Lee’s Principal Private Secretary, or PPS, a good part of my daily life revolved around the red box. Before Mr Lee came in to work each day, the locked red box would arrive first, at about 9 am.
As far as the various officers who have worked with Mr Lee can remember, he had it for many, many years. It is a large, boxy briefcase, about fourteen centimetres wide. Red boxes came from the British government, whose Ministers used them for transporting documents between government offices. Our early Ministers had red boxes, but Mr Lee is the only one I know who used his consistently through the years. When I started working for Mr Lee in 1997, it was the first time I saw a red box in use. It is called the red box but is more a deep wine colour, like the seats in the chamber in Parliament House.
This red box held what Mr Lee was working on at any one time. Through the years, it held his papers, speech drafts, letters, readings, and a whole range of questions, reflections, and observations. For example, in the years that Mr Lee was working on his memoirs, the red box carried the multiple early drafts back and forth between his home and the office, scribbled over with his and Mrs Lee’s notes.
For a long time, other regular items in Mr Lee’s red box were the cassette tapes that held his dictated instructions and thoughts for later transcription. Some years back, he changed to using a digital recorder.
The red box carried a wide range of items. It could be communications with foreign leaders, observations about the financial crisis, instructions for the Istana grounds staff, or even questions about some trees he had seen on the expressway. Mr Lee was well-known for keeping extremely alert to everything he saw and heard around him – when he noticed something wrong, like an ailing raintree, a note in the red box would follow.
We could never anticipate what Mr Lee would raise – it could be anything that was happening in Singapore or the world. But we could be sure of this: it would always be about how events could affect Singapore and Singaporeans, and how we had to stay a step ahead. Inside the red box was always something about how we could create a better life for all.
We would get to work right away. Mr Lee’s secretaries would transcribe his dictated notes, while I followed up on instructions that required coordination across multiple government agencies. Our aim was to do as much as we could by the time Mr Lee came into the office later.
While we did this, Mr Lee would be working from home. For example, during the time that I worked with him (1997-2000), the Asian Financial Crisis ravaged many economies in our region and unleashed political changes. It was a tense period as no one could tell how events would unfold. Often, I would get a call from him to check certain facts or arrange meetings with financial experts.
In the years that I worked for him, Mr Lee’s daily breakfast was a bowl of dou hua (soft bean curd), with no syrup. It was picked up and brought home in a tiffin carrier every morning, from a food centre near Mr Lee’s home. He washed it down with room-temperature water. Mr Lee did not take coffee or tea at breakfast.
When Mr Lee came into the office, the work that had come earlier in the red box would be ready for his review, and he would have a further set of instructions for our action.
From that point on, the work day would run its normal course. Mr Lee read the documents and papers, cleared his emails, and received official calls by visitors. I was privileged to sit in for every meeting he conducted. He would later ask me what I thought of the meetings – it made me very attentive to every word that was said, and I learnt much from Mr Lee.
Evening was Mr Lee’s exercise time. Mr Lee has described his extensive and disciplined exercise regime elsewhere. It included the treadmill, rowing, swimming and walking – with his ears peeled to the evening news or his Mandarin practice tapes. He would sometimes take phone calls while exercising.
He was in his 70s then. In more recent years, being less stable on his feet, Mr Lee had a simpler exercise regime. But he continued to exercise. Since retiring from the Minister Mentor position in 2011, Mr Lee was more relaxed during his exercises. Instead of listening intently to the news or taking phone calls, he shared his personal stories and joked with his staff.
While Mr Lee exercised, those of us in the office would use that time to focus once again on the red box, to get ready all the day’s work for Mr Lee to take home with him in the evening. Based on the day’s events and instructions, I tried to get ready the materials that Mr Lee might need. It sometimes took longer than I expected, and occasionally, I had to ask the security officer to come back for the red box later.
While Mrs Lee was still alive, she used to drop by the Istana at the end of the day, in order to catch a few minutes together with Mr Lee, just to sit and look at the Istana trees that they both loved. They chatted about what many other old couples would talk about. They discussed what they should have for dinner, or how their grandchildren were doing.
Then back home went Mr Lee, Mrs Lee and the red box. After dinner, Mr and Mrs Lee liked to take a long stroll. In his days as Prime Minister, while Mrs Lee strolled, Mr Lee liked to ride a bicycle. It was, in the words of those who saw it, “one of those old man bicycles”. None of us who have worked at the Istana can remember him ever changing his bicycle. He did not use it in his later years, as he became frail, but I believe the “old man bicycle” is still around somewhere.
After his dinner and evening stroll, Mr Lee would get back to his work. That was when he opened the red box and worked his way through what we had put into it in the office.
Mr Lee’s study is converted out of his son’s old bedroom. His work table is a simple, old wooden table with a piece of clear glass placed over it. Slipped under the glass are family memorabilia, including a picture of our current PM from his National Service days. When Mrs Lee was around, she stayed up reading while Mr Lee worked. They liked to put on classical music while they stayed up.
In his days as PM, Mr Lee’s average bedtime was three-thirty in the morning. As Senior Minister and Minister Mentor, he went to sleep after two in the morning. If he had to travel for an official visit the next day, he might go to bed at one or two in the morning.
Deep into the night, while the rest of Singapore slept, it was common for Mr Lee to be in full work mode.
Before he went to bed, Mr Lee would put everything he had completed back in the red box, with clear pointers on what he wished for us to do in the office. The last thing he did each day was to place the red box outside his study room. The next morning, the duty security team picked up the red box, brought it to us waiting in the office, and a new day would begin.
Let me share two other stories involving the red box.
In 1996, Mr Lee underwent balloon angioplasty to insert a stent. It was his second heart operation in two months, after an earlier operation to widen a coronary artery did not work. After the operation, he was put in the Intensive Care Unit for observation. When he regained consciousness and could sit up in bed, he asked for his security team. The security officer hurried into the room to find out what was needed. Mr Lee asked, “Can you pass me the red box?”
Even at that point, Mr Lee’s first thought was to continue working. The security officer rushed the red box in, and Mr Lee asked to be left to his work. The nurses told the security team that other patients of his age, in Mr Lee’s condition, would just rest. Mr Lee was 72 at the time.
In 2010, Mr Lee was hospitalised again, this time for a chest infection. While he was in the hospital, Mrs Lee passed away. Mr Lee has spoken about his grief at Mrs Lee’s passing. As soon as he could, he left the hospital to attend the wake at Sri Temasek.
At the end of the night, he was under doctor’s orders to return to the hospital. But he asked his security team if they could take him to the Singapore River instead. It was late in the night, and Mr Lee was in mourning. His security team hastened to give a bereaved husband a quiet moment to himself.
As Mr Lee walked slowly along the bank of the Singapore River, the way he and Mrs Lee sometimes did when she was still alive, he paused. He beckoned a security officer over. Then he pointed out some trash floating on the river, and asked, “Can you take a photo of that? I’ll tell my PPS what to do about it tomorrow.” Photo taken, he returned to the hospital.
I was no longer Mr Lee’s PPS at the time. I had moved on to the Monetary Authority of Singapore, to continue with the work to strengthen our financial regulatory system that Mr Lee had started in the late 1990s. But I can guess that Mr Lee probably had some feedback on keeping the Singapore River clean. I can also guess that the picture and the instructions were ferried in Mr Lee’s red box the next morning to the office. Even as Mr Lee lay in the hospital. Even as Mrs Lee lay in state.
The security officers with Mr Lee were deeply touched. When I heard about these moments, I was also moved.
I have taken some time to describe Mr Lee’s red box. The reason is that, for me, it symbolises Mr Lee’s unwavering dedication to Singapore so well. The diverse contents it held tell us much about the breadth of Mr Lee’s concerns – from the very big to the very small; the daily routine of the red box tells us how Mr Lee’s life revolved around making Singapore better, in ways big and small.
By the time I served Mr Lee, he was the Senior Minister. Yet he continued to devote all his time to thinking about the future of Singapore. I could only imagine what he was like as Prime Minister. In policy and strategy terms, he was always driving himself, me, and all our colleagues to think about what each trend and development meant for Singapore, and how we should respond to it in order to secure Singapore’s wellbeing and success.
As his PPS, I saw the punishing pace of work that Mr Lee set himself. I had a boss whose every thought and every action was for Singapore.
But it takes private moments like these to bring home just how entirely Mr Lee devoted his life to Singapore.
In fact, I think the best description comes from the security officer who was with Mr Lee both of those times. He was on Mr Lee’s team for almost 30 years. He said of Mr Lee: “Mr Lee is always country, country, country. And country.”
This year, Singapore turns 50. Mr Lee would have turned 92 this September. Mr Lee entered the hospital on 5 February 2015. He continued to use his red box every day until 4 February 2015.
(Photo: MCI)
rolex singapore 在 JEBBEY FAMILY Youtube 的最讚貼文
It's a day before our anniversary and Debbie has a surprise planned!
Follow us on IG: http://www.instagram.com/thejianhaotan
Debbie: http://www.instagram.com/debbwie
Starley: http://www.instagram.com/starleytan_
Get your merch NOW: https://teamtitanstore.com
Business: hao@titandigitalmedia.com
Titan Digital Media:
https://www.titandigitalmedia.com
rolex singapore 在 Khoa Pug Youtube 的精選貼文
Giang hồ Dubai - Khoa Pug đi mua 3 cây vàng vô tình vào nhầm động giang hồ tại chợ vàng Dubai - Dubai gold market - Hotel Sofitel Dubai
- Nhiều bạn yêu cầu mình review chợ vàng lớn nhất Dubai cũng như các bạn thường hay nghe câu qua Dubai mua vàng về chơi vì rẻ thúi như rau ngoài chợ, thực hư ra sao về chợ vàng này các bạn theo chân mình :D
- Tọa lạc cách trung tâm Dubai khoảng 20km về hướng Đông là ngôi chợ vàng nổi tiếng, không chỉ khu chợ, mà dọc theo dãy các khu phố đều là các tiệm vàng bạc đá quý.
- Khác với cảnh tấp nập sầm uất ở trung tâm, ngôi chợ này nằm ở khu khá là vắng vẻ, công trình xây dựng ngổn ngang và đa số là dân nhập cư Ấn Độ sinh sống và làm việc tại đây, khá giống Little India của Singapore.
- Bước đầu mình cảm nhận khi đặt chân xuống khu chợ này đó là cảm giác khá bất an, vì tại đây khá tạp nham, dân Ấn Độ tụ tập và vẻ mặt rất nguy hiểm. Mình cầm theo số lượng tiền mặt khá nhiều, tầm 5000$, nên vừa đi vừa quay vừa canh chừng cameraman, do tụi Ấn cứ nhìn chằm chằm vào cameraman.
- Dọc theo con đường chính của chợ vàng bạn sẽ gặp nhiều thành phần lừa đảo, họ tiến sát lại bạn và giơ đồng hồ fake Hublot, Rolex...nhá nhá dấu dấu, kiểu như là vừa giật được hay cướp được nhằm lừa khách du lịch mua. Chiêu này ở VN cũng thấy sài khá nhiều.
- Tiếp đến mình vào 1 tiệm vàng khá khá to, nằm khuất phía trong khu chợ, vừa vào thì 4 5 anh nhân viên Ấn Độ đã la to không được quay phim chụp hình, cameraman khá ngạc nhiên vì đây là khu chợ, ngta quay phim chụp hình ầm ầm, bao nhiêu Vlog thử vàng trên youtube chả sao, tự nhiên tiệm này mấy anh Ấn không cho quay nên mới hỏi tại sao không được quay, do tiệm cũng ko có bảng cấm quay phim.
- Tưởng mấy ảnh nói quy định là cấm quay phim, nhưng không, mấy anh Ấn ra giá 500 đô cho 1 bức hình :D, muốn quay phim chụp hình thì đưa 500 đô, bà mẹ tui không biết là tiệm này bán vàng là nghề tay trái hay là chặt chém khách du lịch là nghề tay phải nữa :D
- Việt Nam mình nên học hỏi mấy anh Ấn Độ khoản này nha, chợ Bến Thành thằng Tây lông nào vào quay là bắt đóng 500 đô hết, chẳng mấy chốc VN giàu bằng Dubai, cần gì buôn bán :P
- Trờ lại câu chuyện, mình thấy cameraman và mấy anh Ấn đứng cãi nhau nên kêu thôi đi ra, tụi Ấn nó sống bầy đàn, đây là khu chợ ko có cảnh sát, sợ bị đánh hay bị hiếp hội đồng bởi mấy anh Ấn thì mệt :D
- Với lại ngày cuối rồi, mình khá mệt, chủ yếu muốn vào mua vàng review cho các bạn xem mắc hay rẻ mà gặp mấy ông nội Ấn Độ là mất vui nên cameraman chán không thèm quay nữa haha
- Lúc sau mình vào tiệm vàng khác cũng là của Ấn Độ để mua thử 1 cái lắc tay nam 3,2 cây loại vàng 22k. Giá là 205tr cho 3,2 cây vàng 22k, vị chi là 64tr/cây, mình nghe xong choáng luôn haha. Tiệm niêm yết giá vàng 24k là 42 triệu/cây. Vậy mà mình mua vàng 22k là 64tr/cây, bà mẹ mấy anh Ấn chặt chém kinh hồn và phi lý hết sức :D
- Tui review giá vàng và cách mua vàng ở chợ vàng Dubai rồi đó, ông nội nào chém gió qua Dubai xách vàng về rẻ thúi thì tát vỡ mồm nó ngay nha, có tiền cứ ở VN mà mua vàng, bao rẻ, tui mua quài tui biết mà haha.
- Dạo qua sơ sơ thấy khu chợ vàng toàn Ấn Độ này có mùi mấy anh Ai Cập ở đâu đây nên thôi tui bắt taxi về đảo cọ dọn đồ qua khách sạn 5 sao Sofitel ở ngày cuối rồi ra sân bay về VN cho lành :D
- Mình sẽ làm 1 video cuối cùng tại Dubai, các bạn muốn mình review cái gì nữa thì cmt nha, mình đáp ứng các bạn video cuối cùng rồi chúng ta chia tay Dubai :D
- Đăng kí kênh và bật thông báo để xem video cuối cùng tại Dubai, cảm ơn các bạn đã đồng hành trong suốt hành trình gần 1 tháng tại đây :P
rolex singapore 在 Singapore Rolex Club - Facebook 的推薦與評價
Singapore Rolex Club. 5986 likes · 1 talking about this. Appreciation of horology especially Rolex. ... <看更多>
rolex singapore 在 Rolex - Singapore | Store design, Design, Interior concept 的推薦與評價
Rolex - Singapore Vitrine Design, Environmental Research, Watch Display, Store Windows, Interior. More like this. Phimood. 374 followers ... ... <看更多>
rolex singapore 在 FOUND the NEW Rolex GMT at Singapore's Changi Airport ... 的推薦與評價
Summer travel is here! For those of you travelling to Singapore, or simply transiting to a nearby beach resort, here are some of the Luxury ... ... <看更多>