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Singapore skyline. |
When I arrived in Singapore, I was not prepared for what I
was about to experience. I knew its geographical location on a map, but I had
not done any research on its language, culture, people, etc. Ignorantly, I
assumed I was going to a country similar to Indonesia; a developing and
populated country in Asia with crowded streets and a national identity not yet
known to me. I was instead shown something far from my stereotypical visualizations.
My first surprise was at the airport. Singapore has one of
the nicest, most modern looking airports I have visited. There are massage
chairs where you can get a free massage while waiting for your flight, international
chain stores where you can get all sorts of high end products, impeccable bathrooms
you can electronically rate, and all the signs are multi-lingual since the
country has four official languages: English, Malay, Mandarin, and Farsi. To
get to the place where Alicia and I were staying I had a couple of options: I
could take a taxi or the MTR (metro). There were clear signs for both, and
since I only had a small backpack as luggage, I went for the MRT –which was
only about $2. The station was connected to the airport and there were ticket
machines to the left and a friendly station manager in front of the turnstiles.
I got a ticket and the station manager gave me a map and explained to me how to
get to my destination. Two transfers with exact waiting times displayed on
screens, spotless stations that looked more like science fiction labs, and I
had made it to my destination. Almost.
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Chinatown. This is when I realized I was lost. |
I exited the station and according to the directions from
the Airbnb host, which Alicia had previously emailed me, I had a short
ten-minute walk along the river before arriving to the apartment. However, my
poor sense of direction decided to send me the opposite direction. I walked for
about 6 or 7 blocks without any signs of the river and ended up in Chinatown. I
looked at a map and realized that I was walking away from my destination, so I
turned around feeling a little annoyed with myself. On my walk back towards the
train station, a lady started a conversation and told me that she was going the
same way, so I stuck to her and we chatted while walking towards the river. She
worked at a Japanese restaurant, had migrated to Singapore from China 24 years
ago, was extremely talkative and lively, and told me about the terrible smoke that
engulfed the city (which I had already noticed), and how, according to her, it
was Indonesia’s fault. She added that Indonesia should stop the burning of
forests and instead just use machines to cut the trees. I was speechless and
confused by her reasoning, but decided not to argue. You have to pick your
battles. I listened silently, thanked her for her help, and continued walking
on the direction she pointed. I spent several minutes trying to find the
entrance to the apartment building in which I was going to stay, and then I ran
into Alicia, who was just wandering in the mall across the street. Lucky
coincidence! I was getting tired of walking in circles.
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One of the many images of Buddha. |
After dropping off my backpack, Alicia and I went in search
of a Buddhist temple she wanted to see. We walked through a park, zigzagged
across the city, and finally saw a large, beautiful building that housed the
Buddha Tooth Relic Temple. We were given shawls to cover our shoulders and then
we looked at hundreds of Buddha statues in different postures, observed a
Buddhist ceremony, and, as good tourists, took tons of pictures. Next, we went
to the food area in Chinatown to get some dinner. I ordered some noodles and
Alicia had a veggie soup. We were both unsatisfied with our orders, but after
combining them, we both had a delicious spicy veggie-noodle concoction. We
headed to the apartment to take showers and dress up to go check out the
nightlife scene. Since I hadn’t done any research on where to go, Alicia
suggested a club on the top floor of a tall building, but before going there,
we walked into a bar near the river to have a drink and listen to some blues
played by a band with members from Singapore, Australia, and the USA. We then
walked to the bar Alicia suggested. The place didn’t really look like my kind
of joint, and after being there for a few minutes, a guy trying to initiate a
conversation with me called me a bitch for not being too enthusiastic about
talking to him. This made me quite unhappy, and I told Alicia I was ready to go
home. The night was short and we got lost on our way back, but we finally made
it to the apartment and went to sleep after a very long day of touring around the
city.
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Buddhist ceremony at Buddha Tooth Relic Temple. |
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Performance of traditional Indian dance. |
The next day we walked over to Little India to get swallowed
by a sea of colors, smells, and sounds. Someone told us that since it was
Sunday, lots of Indian immigrants were going to be hanging out in the streets spending
their day off. Little India was packed and bursting with energy, and as we
walked among aisles of colorful trinkets and incense smoke, I thought that it
was refreshing to see some real people doing ordinary things. We went to a
Hindu temple, got a snack at a small restaurant, and then took the MRT to the bay
area. There was a festival going on at the Gardens by the Bay and there were
free cultural performances, tons of food vendors, and a display of lights that
made me think of Christmas. We listened to a group of Chinese ladies singing
traditional songs, watched some Indian women dressed up in beautiful costumes
performing expressive dances, and ate some Thai food on the lawn while looking
at the colorful lights around us. On the way back to the apartment, we decided
to sneak into an interesting-looking building and somehow got to the top floor to
have a couple of cocktails while contemplating the amazing skyline of
Singapore.
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Market in Little India. |
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Korean coffee shop |
On Monday, we got up early and walked to the building where
our visas were to be handled. We just had to drop off our passports and the fees,
and then go back in the afternoon to pick up our extended stay permits. On the
way back to the apartment we stopped at a couple of museums, had some Korean
snacks at a coffee shop, and Alicia and I separated for a little bit so I could
go to another museum while she shopped for some oleh-oleh to take back with her
to Indonesia. We spent the rest of the afternoon by the pool of the apartment
complex, and then walked back to get our passports. To celebrate finally
getting our visas, we had some sushi at the Japanese restaurant where the lady
I had met on my first day in the city worked. She wasn’t there though. The plan
for the rest of the day was to go back to the apartment to relax before
returning to Indonesia the next morning, but we ended up walking to a busy
street full of shops where Alicia got some clothes (I ended up just getting one
pair of pants), and then went to a grocery store to buy cheese, good bread, and
a few other delicacies that are not available in Lombok (or at least I haven’t
found them yet). We were exhausted and ready to drop.
When I first got to Singapore, my impression had been that
it was a city so perfect, clean, and extremely well planned that it seemed
unreal. I still don’t know what to think about the place… I read somewhere that
Singapore is like a mini version of our global society, and I can definitely agree
with that. The streets look like they were traced with a ruler, there is no
trash to be seen anywhere, the noise is kept to minimal levels, and Western
influences are everywhere. You can find French wine and Swiss cheese in any
supermarket (unlike in Lombok), and racial, religious, and cultural diversity
abound. I have mixed feelings about this place, and even though I admire the
careful city planning and the huge variety you find here, I still feel like
this city is like something out of a dystopian fantasy. Maybe I just got to see
one side of it and I am making incorrect assumptions once again. Now I’m back
in the “real reality” of Indonesia. This place is so real!
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Display of lights at Gardens by the Bay. |
PS. I found cheese in
Mataram after getting back from Singapore! I visited the new mall and there is
a supermarket with lots of imported products. I guess my cheese addiction will
be satisfied after all!
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