Another Week Beyond – 1902

Dear Friends,

It is said that we often know more than what we give ourselves credit for. The danger is not so much what we think we do know but what we think we know when we really don’t. Anyway, eight mothers who are a part of Bakers Beyond, were tasked to design a part of our premises that is to be repurposed as a workplace for baking and sewing activities. All came to the session wondering how they could actually take on the task without the necessary expertise.

After greeting the mothers warmly, Raja a volunteer from the School of Design & Environment, Ngee Ann Polytechnic got the mothers to share information about themselves that was related to baking. “What’s your favourite cookie?” was one and when he got the answer, he asked them to elaborate why it was so. The conversation continued in the same vein and the mothers shared about the bakeries they liked, the celebrity chefs they followed on television, the cafes they admired and such.

Each response was an important piece of information that was sorted onto billboards that were decorated with related pictures. The mothers had fun and soon caught on that Raja was gradually getting them to connect with their experiences and eliciting their preferences and opinions how a shared workplace could look like. So, when they were eventually asked what they wanted in a workplace and how it should look like, they had quite a good idea.
To test the plausibility of their ideas, the mothers also got to shift the furniture on a model that was built to scale.

Over the years, our efforts in promoting a healthy respect for work and the opportunities to do so, no matter how small have enriched our members’ quality of life. Not so much a quality measured by material gains or comfort but the quality of feeling alive; a sense of independence and the ability to care for others. It is work we aim to further develop, and we are looking forward to the designated workplace that our mothers have designed.

Enjoy your week.

Gerard

With realization of one’s own potential and self-confidence in one’s ability, one can build a better world. – Dalai Lama

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Written by The Beyond Editorial Team She has always cared for others. Long before we knew her, Mdm Sng* was already checking in on elderly neighbours, helping them navigate services, passing along information, gathering what they needed. When we began working in the area, she reached out quickly. Not for herself. For others. Over time, though, something shifted. There was no single incident. Just the quiet accumulation of strain. Our team had become leaner. Priorities evolved. Expectations were not always spoken clearly. Along the way, misunderstandings surfaced. Community tensions are rarely linear. They sit in the middle of relationships –

Read more >