lol i have a community of 'fans' in a singapore subreddit who love to hate on my posts about my immigration journey

(not everyone... but some of them there tried to report me to ICE a few months ago. I found out later it was a public school teacher)

https://www.reddit.com/r/SingaporeRaw/comments/1rw0s2p/singaporean_migrated_to_usa_with_then_gf_now_wife/

#Singapore #TootSea #LGBTQ

it's also funny coz somewhere in the middle people are wondering how i achieved any of my 'amazing' tech achievements with 'just' a political science degree

i would say it's because of it that i did any of those things

i was just talking about exactly this to my friend who is visiting:

sometimes when i talk about work, people in singapore have this overwhelming sense of 'i didn't do all the right things... how and why did i deserve any of the things that i got?

(to be clear, i did get an 'elite' and 'prestigious' education there but i didn't choose the 'right' things)

no one ever says it to my face but i know it comes down to:

- i didn't go to an ivy league or oxbridge school
- i didn't have a technical degree
- why did i always have access to work opportunities nobody else seems to have at a faster pace than my peers

i have lots of thoughts on this, but sometimes it gets to me, that i feel like i didn't 'deserve' any of these things because i'm not 'conventionally successful' by singapore standards

@skinnylatte Tech built by people who have only studied tech tends to produce tech that's only fit for people who have studied tech. Good tech is built by people with diverse backgrounds. Best boss I ever had in tech graduated in Theatre and Dance.
@technicaladept @skinnylatte I think in general, it's easier for someone with the right insight/attitude/expertise to gain technical skills than the other way round