Essayer OR - Gratuit
That long and winding path to pleasure
The Straits Times
|October 26, 2025
Shortcuts may be efficient but detours and being a little lost yield surprising rewards.
A hillock in the Holland Road area offers the writer a nice vista of the surrounding area, and sparks some joy in a routine.
(LESLIE KOH)
The walk from my home to my parents' takes about 25 minutes and is as simple as it gets: out of my Housing Board estate, onto the main road, straight down for 20 minutes, then a left through an HDB block to their home.
But I've found several other ways to get there, all of them taking far longer. One meanders along a winding road of old bungalows before cutting back into my parents' estate. Another takes a long loop around my own estate of ageing HDB blocks before getting back to the main road. A third includes a detour up and down a hillock packed with swanky condos.
Taking these unnecessary detours has revealed some interesting sights, such as a section of the pipes carrying water from Johor, a new posh condo or opulent bungalow to ogle at, an old uninhabited home reeking of mystery, and the odd pocket of greenery that brings a breath of fresh air to the urban landscape, both literally and figuratively.
Each time I spot something new to me, I feel a little thrill, a tiny tingle of excitement from making a discovery of something new, at least to me.
It's not an overwhelming joy by any stretch, but a little sense of satisfaction at having spotted something unusual or interesting, much like a bird spotter might catch a flash of a rare winged breed in the trees. Never mind that all of these discoveries, if I'm honest, are hardly significant or consequential.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition October 26, 2025 de The Straits Times.
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