TedxYouth
Jon Lee
Jon Lee is a 13 year old Victoria
KartDriver with the dream of achieving F1. His message is basically to dare to
dream, and have structured plan and discipline for that. Really inspiring for
such an awesome feat at his tender age.
Josiah Ng
I really liked what he has started.
He is why I did the “While You Were Sleeping” initiative, which I really
enjoyed though my motivation died down fast. He grew up being weird, but
actually embraced this social stigma, and wore his “spandex” to be the everyday
superhero. Everyone is born for a
purpose, like superhero, that if the abilities are not used, it becomes a
fashion disaster, well, great power comes with great responsibility.
He also shared the UBUNTU culture,
where a sociologist went to a tribe in Africa for an observation. The
experiment is simple, it is simply rewarding the first child to reach the tree
and back a bag of sweets. However, to his surprise, they ran for the bag of
sweets hand in hand, on their motivation of UBUNTU - I am because you are.
Having this in mind, he actually wanted to do something for Singapore culture,
but initially flooded with the wrong questions of “who am I to do such thing”.
So my take is that, well, we must be
mindful of such wrong questions. Many wrong questions are hindrance to fulfill
our dreams. Question like “why as a nobody, should I do this?” or “why bother,
Im a loser”, can really miss the opportunity to make a difference to the
society.
Janice Wong
This speaker opens my appetite and
my hunger to create art using food. She uses food as an expression to create
interactive art, big scales of art, which would be constantly morphing as
people consume the food used for the art. This is a really really interesting
form of conceptualized art.
David Goh
What this speaker inspired me was
his perspective of dreams, to actually focus on what you wanna achieve, not
how, because if we fail to reach to a certain goal that contribute to our
dreams, it don’t mean that the dream is gone, it just means that the method is
not good, and simple take on another method, or to allocate more suitable human
resource into it.
Joanne Kwok
Joanne Kwok teaches us to Settle to
not Settle, which means to not be too happy in status quo, but reach out to
dreams and passion, or reaching for ideal. She is now a creative director with
a really cool card that could change colour by heat. She is the one that
reminded is that it is no harm to be the nail that sticks out, that people
would hammer down, because it will make the greatest dent, the greatest impact.
Since young, she have been not choosing her life path, and ignored what she
really wanted from life. Thus, after being in US, she was asked why to take on
something she did not like. That made her feel that what you do should reflect
what you are. Reminds me of work alienation hahas! Anyway, she eventually,
after jumping here and there, joined the Yellow Octopus.
Kumaran Rassapan
He is a doctor that raised 30,000
for Hospital by climbing the Mount Everest. However, he shared about the
concept about turning back. Society tends to deem people who turned their backs
as quitters, cowards, and other social stigma. They brand success so highly
that they do not understand the world they live in. For example, during the
climb, he shared that an adult came down not reaching the summit, because he do
not want his 2 sons to repeat a life without a father. In the contrary, a group
of climbers came down after reaching the summit, with 7 fingers amputated due to frostbites. He also shared
that there are actually many ways to reach the summit, by hiring, by
helicopter, or by climbing, and he believed that by climbing, we learn during
the process, and that is actually true success.
It’s the concept of conviction vs
recognition too.
Krystal Choo
This speaker is really a convicted
person. She successfully quit smoking, and started up the One Cent Movement.
She believed that action is the key factor to change. She believed that success
is personal, so it should not be something the society expects you to achieve.
She tried delving into the events sector to improve her social confidence. She
held on a strong believe that weakness is failing to Commit to your own goal. She
feels that Failure is not caused by things going wrong, but Right Actions not
taken. If everyone here choose to be better by 1%, collectively, this group
will come out with greater feats that any 1 person could do 100%, small things
do add up. SOME succeed because they are destined to, must MOST succeed because
they are convicted to.
She also mentioned about a person
with a dream of a lion chasing. So she would always run away from it, and
probably got devoured when she collapse, and then wake up. So after consulting a
lot, a pastor suggested her to turn around and ask the lion. So once, she actually
turned around and asked, and her reply was “why are you running? I am your
courage”.
Kuik Shiao-Yin
She is the founder of the Thought
Collective, the School for Thought and Food for Thought. She shared how the
magazine she designed, being thrown away, could make a difference a random girl
whose father was coincidentally the KarangGuni Man, who collected these magazines.
She reminded me that small things in life would mean a difference to others.
She reminded me how simple greetings and chats could prevent suicides and
depression, how a teacher’s words could impact a student for life and other
incredible impacts on small trivial effort.
Georgina Chan
She is the most entertaining speaker
so far. She got her proposal “I have no money, I have no job, I have no ring,
but I love you, will you marry me?, she said “walao siao…. But I said yes,
because I believe you” Anyway, so a series of random accidental events led her becoming
an accidental photographer. Initially, she did not believe in herself to
operate the camera, but came to accept it eventually. Thus, she shared “Believe
in yourself, and the accidental things that happen to you, because there is
always a purpose”.
Then, she wrote a book, and then
coincidentally stumbled across a newspaper article of DBS big shot being a avid
bird watcher, and requested him to come for her book launch on 9am. Strangely,
he actually came, because he wanted to know the “lady who had the AUDACITY to
call him at 9am for a booking that very evening”.
Btw, she shared that the National
Bird is actually the Crimson Sunbird.
Daniel Wong
He is the writer of the “Happy
Student”. His simple takeaway for us is
that Copernicus is right. Copernicus claimed that the Earth revolves about the
sun, when the society thinks otherwise. What is means is to actually focus on
making a difference to the community or society, and not for ourselves. He also
shared that what most matters is the VALUE of the dream, not the PROBABILITY of
the SUCCESS in terms of books sold.
Kan Lume
He seems to be more popular speaker.
He shared that: Many Succeed MOMENTARILY, Some Succeed TEMPORARILY, and Few
Succeed PERMENENTLY.
2 comments:
Hi there,
Thank you for writing about TEDx. I'm Krystal Choo, and I'm so happy that you had good takeaways from my speech. That really humbles me.
I'd just like to point out that I'm Marketing Director of One Cent Movement - I didn't start it. Also the lion story is not by me. :)
Always chase your dreams, and take action to make them happen. Thank you so much for listening to me speak as well. All the best!
Oh hi! Sorry I messed up the lion story, any idea who is the speaker for that? Well Ive elarnt alot from Tedx, really glad to have such awesome speakers XD
Post a Comment