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Showing posts with label Flora Fong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flora Fong. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 July 2014

2014 Installation Night!

It's our 21st Installation Night, since the day Tampines Changkat Toastmasters Club was chartered on the 26th Jan 1993. It was a night of exuberance, excitement and enjoyment!

Notable Learning Points:



  • Special address by Guest-of-Honour Tampines MP Irene Ng:
    "leadership begins with everyone. Step up!" 
  • Opening Address by previous Area S4 Governor Zhuo Shuzhen:
    "every member has contributed to the success of the club. Take ownership, Grow."

  • Immediate Past President Gurmit Singh: 
    After a year of success, reflect, reminisce and remember to show gratitude to those who made this possible. Gurmit thanked each and every one of the exco team (2013-2014). Indeed, everyone was instrumental to what Tampines Changkat Toastmasters Club is today.












  • Inaugural Address by President Ng Kin Foong:
    "Why did you come to the club for?"
    The upcoming President shared his vision of reconnecting with the older members of the club, for the club to fulfil members' intentions of joining the club in the very first place.



  • Distinguished Keynote Speaker and Trainer Roy Lai:
    "Every moment is a learning moment"
    Life only stops when you stop learning. In his inspiring speech, Roy shares how he loves what he do; being a trainer allows him to constantly learn from the people he meet everyday. 





A great thank you to all the appointment holders who made this possible!

Our diligent attendance Takers | Crowd Control: Flora Fong and Kim Low

Our enthusiastic sergeant-at-arms: Chan Chee Wai


our toastmasters of the day, the humorous Joe Wan!



Our table topics masters: guests from Barclays Toastmasters Club,  2014 International Speech Division Champion Vikram Sivakumar and 2014 Table Topics Area S4 Champion Deb Pal!

It was all cheers and smiles the entire night.









Presenting Exco 2014 - 2015!





Monday, 14 July 2014

Tampines Changkat Toastmasters Installation Night 2014








It's a new term for Tampines Changkat Toastmasters Club again! There is an amazing line-up of events carefully planned out by the incoming exco members. To just name a few, we would be having a keynote address by distinguished international speaker Roy Lai, an engaging table topics segment hosted by our guests from Barclays Toastmasters Club: table topics winnerDeb Pal and Division Champion Vikram Sivakumar!



It's going to be an exciting, enlightening and engaging Thursday Night! Do not miss out on such an opportunity. RSVP in the Google Form below to join us for a light-hearted yet informative Thursday night :)

Friday, 28 February 2014

471st Meeting Recap (20th February 2014), or The Nails, The File and The Fire Engine

Best Prepared Speech: Darren Loh
Best Evaluator: Ang Wee Yong, ACG, ALB

Our Toastmaster of the Day, Toastmaster Joe Wan, gave the meeting his own unique flavour when he asked us to pair up in groups of 2, and tell each other “I think I'm going to love this guy!!” (“This guy” meaning Joe)

Club President Gurmit Singh, CC, officially started the meeting with a story: there was once a boy who used to get angry often. His father told him, to control his anger, he had to hammer in a nail into a wooden fence post, each time he got angry. It took quite a bit of effort to hammer the nails in (these were the days before nail guns, or his father didn't allow him to use one). Soon, the boy learned to control his anger. After a few consecutive days of angerless bliss, his father told him to pull out each of the nails: but he could only pull out one nail per day. When he finally finished pulling out ALL the nails in the fence post, his father told him to look carefully at the wooden fence post. There were holes in the fence post (the boy was a genius), where the nails used to be. His father told him, “You see, these holes are like the hurt we cause whenever we say something in anger. Even though the nails are gone, but the hurt remains”

The first Prepared Speech by Toastmaster See Shunwei, began with him showing us a coin. He told us that it had 2 sides, a head and a tail. And Shunwei talked about how many of the things that we see can be interpreted 2 ways, eg pictures of schoolkids sleeping on the MRT train seats. Are they really tired, or do they just want to occupy the seats by pretending to sleep? Or consider the case of a guy with tattoos and piercings wanting to share a table with us, during mealtimes. Would we be willing to share the table with them, or say that the seats available are occupied, even though it is not?

The second Prepared Speech, by Shaun Li, ACS, ALB, started with a question: “What if, only after getting married, the true colours of your spouse emerges?” Shaun illustrated, full of drama, to show us what a daily commute to the city was like. More importantly, Shaun shared with us 2 techniques of entering MRT trains: 'The File' and 'The Prata'. 'The File' involves slotting in sideways in a narrow space (like placing a file on a shelf), and 'The Prata' is when you weave in between people to get ahead.

The third Prepared Speech, by Toastmaster Kathryn Low, was about her Chinese New Year Celebration. Kathryn spoke in detail about how she prepared for Chinese New Year, why some people avoid relatives during this time (it's like a Police interrogation, even though they may 'mean well'- they're probably just really bored) and why she makes sure there is fish at mealtimes ('fish' in Chinese sounds like 'yu' or 'abundance)

The fourth Prepared Speech by Toastmaster Darren Loh, started with “I have a dream” like Martin Luther King, Jr's landmark speech. Darren then proceeded to talk about how his son dreamed of becoming 'a fire engine' (sic). Darren wanted to correct his son's grammar, saying what his son really wanted to be, was a 'fireman' (actually I agree with his son, because to me 'fireman' conjures up an image of a man on fire. Either that, or Donald Trump). “It's really pointless arguing with a boy that has a fire engine in his hand” Darren conceded. He's right. Later when he asked his son again, his son wanted to be a 'gardener'. His son clearly took pride in his work, watering the plants in their garden with amazing regularity. Darren said he can change his original dream of becoming 'the best engineer' to 'the best father' to support his son's ambition. That's a Dedicated Daddy if I ever saw one.

The fifth Speaker, Toastmaster Flora Fong, in her speech entitled “Everything Happens for a Reason”, told the sad tale of how she flew all the way to Singapore for a job interview, and ended up not getting the job. However, Flora was persistent and asked her interviewer what she did wrong, and why she wasn't hired. Her interviewer was kind enough to tell her the area she needed to improve: her communication skills. Flora took it in the right spirit and concentrated on improving that area of her life. Long story short, Flora is now working in Singapore!

Andrew Chen, ATMB, ALS, presented a speech for the AP4 “Addressing the Opposition” project. He talked about how Tampines Changkat Toastmasters has evolved from NCOC 1 (thank goodness we got rid of that robotic name, even though it's our heritage) to the present form. Each time the club had to close down, we found a way to resurrect it! In a hypothetical situation where we were going to be charged to use the Community Centre's facilities, we basically had 3 options:
  1. Raise membership fees to offset the additional charges (not everyone's favourite option)
  2. Hand over control to the Community Centre, (including all decision making and funds!)
  3. Move to another Community Centre, which allows us free reign of usage time and fund allocation
After the presentation, there was a Question and Answer session. Then we all took a vote to decide the (hypothetical) future of the club. Can you guess which option most people went for?*

Our seventh speaker, Toastmaster Linda Low, gave a speech entitled “Who Wants To Be a Millionaire?”, which got our attention. She talked about how there are 3 types of millionaires:
  1. Those self-made millionaires
  2. Those who inherited their millions
  3. The 'windfall' type: eg lottery winners
Can you guess which type will have the millions at the end of their lives?**
(Even though I aspire to be Type 3, I just have to accept that I'm going to be a Type 1- time to get cracking!)

Last but not least, we had John Bhaddo Lee talk about a place he's travelled to: Chiengmai, in Thailand. I've personally heard wonderful things about Chiengmai, mostly involving tall, supermodel-looking women populating the city. I must go someday!

Back to John: he described the wonderful food, noodles with grilled meat and something called “Kau Soy”- a soup with crispy egg noodles. Sounds yummy! Everything except the tall, supermodel-looking women. Wonder if it's true...?

After a really short break, and listening to the incredibly energetic and enthusiastic Evaluators, we ended the meeting. Next meeting, we'll be having our club's International Speech and Table Topics Contest.

Till next meeting, be a millionaire so that you can support your kids' ambitions!

Carl Wong HL
Vice President of Public Relations

*Option 3: Move to another CC

**Type 1: Self-made millionaires, barring any financial catastrophes, eg planes dropping down and totally destroying their cargo ships. Hey, it happens. Or, if they were in said cargo ships, then yes, they did die with their millions.

Best Prepared Speech: Darren Loh

Best Evaluator: Ang Wee Yong, ACG, ALB

Roy just joined us as a member!

Pijush who just joined Tampines Changkat TMC, giving his thoughts about the meeting

Irene Choo, one of our guests

Kheng Soon

Shaun Li and Johnbosco: Do they look like brothers?

Wednesday, 8 January 2014

468th Meeting Recap, or "Resolutions, Phones and Lip-smacking Laksa"

Best Prepared Speech: Darren Loh
Best Evaluator: Yew Runbin, ACS, CL
Best Table Topic: Shaun Li, ACS, ALB

President Gurmit kicked off the meeting with his Opening Address, in which he said that it's easier to achieve our resolutions, if we shared them. Also:
  1. Know our why- Gives us a deeper sense of purpose
  2. Specific and measurable checkpoints- by such and such a date, I will have lost x kg, or will have run y km
  3. Don't just think it, ink it- A Stanford University study showed that by writing down goals and putting them where they are easily seen, chances of succeeding increase by over 70%
This is also relevant to Toastmasters. Eg we can book a project speech slot every 2 meetings.

The First Prepared Speech was by Toastmaster Terence Chong, P1 entitled “The Aspect of Life” He talked about his nervousness during presentations. And also his experiences in a nursing home where he learned perseverence by watching the residents walk and do their physiotherapy. Terence also likes classical music, watches soccer, and swimming. He wants to be an allied educator in MOE and is
glad to join Tampines Changkat Toastmasters, where the people are “very welcoming”

The Second Speech, entitled “Life Unplugged” was by Toastmaster Darren Loh. He related his recent holiday experience where he had to ensure that he had mobile phone during the entire holiday, his wife asked if he brought the phone charger and a 3 way multi plug to fit the foreign wall power sockets: the phones have become more important than passports!

In his “rest and relax” tour package, in the past, he would have asked for a map. But now, the first question is which telco offers the cheapest data plan, and people are queuing up for SIM cards.

He was constantly checking his phone for updates, and had to make a difficult decision- should they turn off handphone?

Darren's 3 year old daughter took to their family iPad like a fish to water, and so even in Taiwan, without the iPad- his “unplugged daughter” kept asking for the iPad, and phones so she could play with them. “Unplug and smell the roses!” was Darren's parting words.

The Third Speaker was Toastmaster See Shunwei, with his speech “Resolution, Make It Count”. Shunwei is an extremely energetic speaker who has an awesome voice, and he managed the energy of the audience by asking them to help him 'lubricate' his speech, ie applause!

He asked us to reflect for 15 seconds, the events of the past year, and gave us a few ways to make resolutions turn from dreams to accomplishments:
  1. Big resolutions- eg resolution is to lose 10kg, but if not much progress, will default back to laksa and MacDonald's. We need small goals- checkpoints, otherwise we may lose sight and direction. The point is to “give yourself a pat on the back”. The ultimate goal could be to have a “Dancing chest” (muscular pectorals that can twitch in time to music. Or not. What's important is that they can twitch!).
  2. Accountability – share resolutions with others. One of Shunwei's resolutions is to obtain his CC title before the end of this “financial year” (term).
  3. Fear of change – some people have the fear of being laughed at. There's nothing to be afraid of. We are the author, creator and executor of our lives.

The fourth and final speaker was Toastmaster Richard Jia, who delivered a speech called “From chaos to order, logical order of things”
Richard talked about Organizing- how we should organize our physical space, emails and speech. He did his spring cleaning recently- his living room was “half empty” and there was a lot of clutter.

So this brings about the question: “How to start?” Answer: with Questions!
Ask these Organizing questions:
1. What's the OBJECTIVE? Why are we doing this? What do you want to achieve?
Is it to Increase efficiency? Make items easier to access?
2. PLAN: Split a bigger job to smaller tasks.
3. RULES: these are critical. Gives order to the inevitable chaos that will creep up. So for maintenance of the organized space, the most important step is to set up the rules. For different functions, you need to organize it differently, eg efficiency and aesthetic reasons. Important items need to be easily accessible. Also, mark the important items.
4. ACTION! The actual organizing, decluttering, and maintenance of the physical space.

EVALUATION SEGMENT
The First Evaluator, Shaun Li, ACS, ALB, evaluating Toastmaster Terence Chong's speech, said that he had highlighted various aspects of his life, employing a device called “speaking the obvious”, a natural, and pure speech. “This is all YOU”
Shaun said Terence is natural speaker who is sincere.

The Second Evaluator, our VPE, Ng Kin Foong, CC, evaluated Toastmaster Darren Loh, based on the analogy of a 3 pin plug. The pins were:
  1. Facial expression- naturally done, posture was perfect
  2. Gestures- he had a pretend suitcase, and showed an unplug movement
  3. Recharging- What needed improvement: choose only one particular purpose, as the speech had more entertainment value

The Third Evaluator, Yew Runbin, ACS, CL, evaluated Toastmaster See Shunwei. She said his speech was humourous. She was so touched, so high on oxygen, and the speech was like a breath of fresh air.
Shunwei was charismatic, energetic, like in a Colgate commercial. The gems of his speech were:
1. Improved body language- dancing fingers, smack lips for laksa
2. “Oil” in the form of applause from audience

Areas for Improvement were: to diversify sources of information: using testimonies of ppl, in the crowd. Also to round off and mention “9 in 10 of you” – instead of 88%. Shunwei should also quote his sources, telling us where he got his data from.

The Fourth and final Evaluator was our Area S4 Governor, Zhuo Shuzhen, ACB, CL. Evaluating Toastmaster Richard Jia's speech, she made special mention of his excellent command of his English Language, wrote on the whiteboard and delivered the speech without notes. Areas for Improvement is that Richard could have provided a personal example of what he organized and how he applied the tips in daily life, as well as shortening the title to something like “Chaos to Order”

Table Topics Segment:
Table Topicsmaster Jack Chu gave us several one-word topics to choose from:
  1. Character- Ted Chong, ACB, ALB
  2. Wealth- Joe Wan
  3. Family- Flora Fong
  4. Relationship- Chan Chee Wai
  5. Fitness/Marriage- Shaun Li, ACS, ALB
See you at the next meeting!

Carl Wong,
Vice President of Public Relations

Table Topics Master Jack Chu

IPP Ted Chong, ACB, ALB expressing his heartfelt feelings about volunteering (and going away for 6 months)

Toastmaster Joe Wan's glistening smile during Table Topics

Toastmaster Flora Fong talking about her promise to visit her Mum every quarter

Toastmaster Chan Chee Wai remembering something about his relationship with his girlfriend

Shaun Li, ACS, ALB combining fitness with marriage during Table Topics, the gist of which was "discipline"

Our General Evaluator Gladys Tye, CC telling us what we did wonderfully well, and our Areas for Improvement

Tan Mingjian, CC, who is Organizing Chair for our 21st Anniversary Celebrations on 18th Jan, telling us HOW MUCH FUN WE'LL BE HAVING FOR ONLY $10!!

Best Prepared Speech: Toastmaster Darren Loh's message about being unplugged while holidaying. That means no 'live' posting of selfies and checking Whatsapp every 5 minutes

Best Evaluator: Yew Runbin, ACS, CL. Isn't that the sweetest smile?

Best Table Topics: Shaun Li, ACS, ALB shows that you should combine the Table Topic of "FITNESS" with what the crowd (ie Coen Tan, ACS, ALB) wants, "MARRIAGE" to win a ribbon