In My Hands Today…

Twilight Cities: Lost Capitals of the Mediterranean – Katherine Pangonis

Its name means ‘centre of the world’, and since the dawn of history the Mediterranean Sea has formed the shared horizon of innumerable cultures. Here, history has blurred with legend. The glittering surface of the sea conceals the remnants of lost civilisations, wrecked treasure ships and the bones of long-drowned sailors, traders and modern refugees.

Of the many cities that dot this ancient coastline, Tyre, Carthage, Syracuse, Ravenna and Antioch are among the oldest and most intriguing. All are beautifully situated, and for layers of history and cultural riches they are rivalled only by their sister cities of Rome, Istanbul and Jerusalem. Yet their fates have been remarkably different. Once major power centres, all five have declined into relative obscurity. Nevertheless, their entwined history takes in Alexander the Great, Nebuchadnezzar, Archimedes and the Roman, Byzantine, Arab and Norman conquests, and their greatness still lingers for those who seek it out.

To bring these mysterious lost capitals to life, historian Katherine Pangonis sets out on a voyage from the dawn of civilisation on the Lebanese coast to a modern-day Turkey wracked by the devastation of the 2023 earthquake. Combining on the ground research with spellbinding storytelling skills, here is a revelatory new story of the Mediterranean, and a powerful reflection on the sometimes fleeting glory of empires.

SAF Day: A National Pause

Every year on 1 July, Singapore marks SAF Day. It comes with the familiar grammar of national occasions: formal language, steady cadence, and a sense of continuity carefully maintained. For a long time, it was easy to let the day pass as part of the background. It existed, it was acknowledged, and then life moved on. But perspective changes when someone you love puts on the uniform. What once felt distant begins to register differently. SAF Day stops being an abstract marker and becomes a pause. A moment where something usually taken for granted is briefly brought into focus.

SAF Day commemorates the founding of the Singapore Armed Forces in 1965, when defence was not a matter of long-term planning but immediate survival. The logic was straightforward. A newly independent, small state could not afford strategic ambiguity. It needed a credible defence force, quickly and decisively built. Over time, that urgency evolved into a system defined by professionalism, deterrence, and the principle of citizen service. That history is well documented. What tends to receive less attention is how the meaning of SAF Day shifts as society itself changes.

By 2026, SAF Day sits in a more complex social landscape than it once did. National Service remains central to Singapore’s defence model, but it now intersects with longer working lives, smaller families, rising caregiving responsibilities, and a generation more willing to ask how obligations are shared and explained. These shifts do not weaken the defence case. They complicate the story of how defence is lived and sustained.

National Service cannot be skirted in any honest discussion of SAF Day. It is the primary point of contact between citizens and the military and often the first moment when national security enters the domestic sphere. The argument for NS has always rested on necessity rather than idealism. Singapore lacks strategic depth. A credible deterrent requires manpower, and conscription remains the most workable model. That logic still holds. What has frayed is not the rationale, but the way its costs are acknowledged.

Those costs are uneven. Two years of full-time service, followed by reservist obligations, land differently depending on where a young man is in his education, his family structure, or his economic circumstances. For some, it is a manageable interruption. For others, it compounds existing pressures, delaying income, intensifying caregiving responsibilities, or narrowing already tight margins. These realities have always existed, but they are harder to gloss over now. SAF Day, if treated only as a celebration, risks flattening these differences instead of recognising them.

This is where SAF Day’s role as a ritual matters. Rituals are not designed to resolve tension. They exist to acknowledge it without destabilising the system. At its best, SAF Day is not a spectacle or a rally. It is a moment of recognition. Recognition that defence is collective, even if participation is not evenly distributed. Recognition that readiness depends not only on those in uniform but also on families, employers, and institutions that absorb the quieter consequences of service.

In 2026, this recognition takes place against a regional backdrop that is outwardly calm but strategically crowded. Southeast Asia remains largely stable, yet increasingly shaped by forces that operate below the level of open conflict. Pressure points emerge slowly, through economic leverage, maritime friction, and information flows rather than dramatic confrontation. In this environment, defence is less about visible strength and more about sustained attentiveness. SAF Day reflects this shift. It marks not victory or mobilisation, but preparedness without noise.

At the same time, it would be a mistake to lean too heavily on regional uncertainty as justification for everything at home. A light geopolitical awareness should inform the conversation, not end it. Singaporeans tend to be pragmatic rather than ideological. They understand vulnerability. What they resist is the sense that difficult questions are indefinitely postponed. SAF Day does not need to answer those questions, but it should not pretend they do not exist.

One reason SAF Day can feel distant is that institutional language, by design, changes slowly. Over time, messages become standardised. This is not unique to the military. Any organisation that prizes discipline and consistency faces the same risk. The result is a ritual that remains relevant but struggles to resonate. The challenge for SAF Day in 2026 is not whether it matters, but whether it feels sufficiently connected to lived experience.

Resonance does not require emotional storytelling or individual hero narratives. In fact, those often distract from the larger reality. What resonates is clarity. Saying openly that National Service is necessary but imperfect. Acknowledging that fairness is not achieved by insisting everyone bears the cost in identical ways, but by being honest about how different lives absorb the same obligation differently. Recognising that adaptation is not concession but institutional maturity.

For families with sons in service, SAF Day carries a quieter weight. It is not about grand pride or dramatic sacrifice. It is about routine competence. Training completed, systems functioning, and risks managed rather than advertised. There is reassurance in knowing that defence, most of the time, is meant to be uneventful. Boredom, in this context, is not failure. It is evidence that deterrence is working as intended.

This perspective also explains why SAF Day does not need to be loud. Singapore’s defence posture has never relied on display. Its strength lies in credibility and restraint. The SAF exists to preserve choice, not to perform identity. SAF Day, when stripped of excess symbolism, returns to this foundation. It marks continuity, not spectacle.

Looking ahead, the questions surrounding National Service will continue to surface. Demographics will tighten manpower. Opportunity costs will sharpen. Social expectations will evolve. None of this renders SAF Day obsolete. On the contrary, it makes the day more necessary as a point of collective pause. Not to demand agreement, but to sustain trust.

Trust that the institution remains competent. Trust that it is willing to adjust where needed. Trust that acknowledgement does not weaken commitment. SAF Day 2026 works best when it holds that balance. It does not need to persuade or proclaim. It needs to recognise what already exists: a defence system built on quiet professionalism, sustained by shared obligation, and worthy of confidence rather than noise.

That is where quiet pride comes from. Not from ceremony alone, but from trust maintained over time.

In My Hands Today…

The Patient Assassin: A True Tale of Massacre, Revenge, and India’s Quest for Independence – Anita Anand

The dramatic true story of a celebrated young survivor of a 1919 British massacre in India, and his ferocious twenty-year campaign of revenge that made him a hero to hundreds of millions—and spawned a classic legend.

When Sir Michael O’Dwyer, the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab, ordered Brigadier General Reginald Dyer to Amritsar, he wanted Dyer to bring the troublesome city to heel. Sir Michael had become increasingly alarmed at the effect Gandhi was having on his province, as well as recent demonstrations, strikes, and shows of Hindu-Muslim unity. All these things, to Sir Michael, were a precursor to a second Indian revolt. What happened next shocked the world. An unauthorized gathering in the Jallianwallah Bagh in Amritsar in April 1919 became the focal point for Sir Michael’s law enforcers. Dyer marched his soldiers into the walled garden, blocking the only exit. Then, without issuing any order to disperse, he instructed his men to open fire, turning their guns on the thickest parts of the crowd, filled with over a thousand unarmed men, women, and children. For ten minutes, the soldiers continued firing, stopping only when they ran out of ammunition.

According to legend, eighteen-year-old Sikh orphan Udham Singh was injured in the attack, and remained surrounded by the dead and dying until he was able to move the next morning. Then, he supposedly picked up a handful of blood-soaked earth, smeared it across his forehead, and vowed to kill the men responsible.

The truth, as the author has discovered, is more complex—but no less dramatic. Award-winning journalist Anita Anand traced Singh’s journey through Africa, the United States, and across Europe until, in March 1940, he finally arrived in front of O’Dwyer himself in a London hall ready to shoot him down. The Patient Assassin shines a devastating light on one of history’s most horrific events, but it reads like a taut thriller and reveals the incredible but true story behind a legend that still endures today.

Survivor Bias: The Stories We Hear, and the Ones We Don’t

Most of what we learn about life comes to us in the form of stories. They are passed around casually, offered as advice, and framed as inspiration. Someone made a bold choice, and it worked. Someone persisted when others gave up and was rewarded. Someone trusted their instincts and landed exactly where they were meant to be. These stories are not false. But they are incomplete.

Survivor bias is what happens when we mistake the stories that rise to the surface for the full picture. It is the quiet error of learning only from those who remain visible, while forgetting those who tried, struggled, diverted, or disappeared from view. Nothing is being hidden deliberately. The absence is simply built into how stories travel.

Once you notice survivor bias, it begins to appear everywhere. Not in dramatic ways, but in small assumptions we make about effort, merit, and outcomes. It shapes how we judge ourselves, how we interpret advice, and how we decide what is worth attempting in our own lives.

What does survivor bias actually mean? Survivor bias occurs when we focus on the people or outcomes that made it through a process and draw conclusions based only on them. The ones who did not make it through are missing from the data, which quietly distorts our understanding. A commonly cited example comes from the Second World War. Analysts studied returning aircraft to determine where additional armour was needed. The planes that came back showed clusters of damage, and the instinct was to reinforce those areas. Statistician Abraham Wald pointed out what was missing. The planes that had been hit in more critical areas never returned. The absence of damage in certain spots was precisely the information that mattered most. In everyday life, survivor bias works in much the same way. We study what we can see. We forget to ask what we cannot.

How survivor bias settles into daily thinking

Survivor bias is not limited to statistics or history. It quietly informs how we understand success, failure, and choice. In careers, advice often comes from those who took risks that paid off. Someone left a stable job, followed a passion, or chose an unconventional path and eventually found their footing. These stories are reassuring. They suggest that courage is rewarded and that deviation leads somewhere meaningful. What is less visible are the parallel stories. The people who made similar choices with similar conviction and found themselves stuck, exhausted, or forced to retrace their steps. Many of them learned valuable lessons, too, but their stories do not circulate as advice. There is no neat takeaway, no satisfying arc. This does not mean the successful stories are misleading. It means they are partial. They show us what is possible, not what is probable.

Personal finance offers another clear example. We hear from investors who timed the market well or committed early to an asset that later surged. Their strategies are dissected and shared. Far less attention is paid to those who followed comparable logic and saw different results. Over time, luck begins to look like skill, simply because it is the version that survives.

Wellness advice carries a similar distortion. Someone adopts a routine, a diet, or a mindset and feels transformed. The implication is subtle but powerful: consistency leads to improvement. Yet bodies respond differently. Circumstances vary. What stabilises one person may quietly erode another. The people for whom it did not work are rarely centred in the conversation.

In Singapore, survivor bias often wears the language of meritocracy. We are surrounded by examples of people who followed the expected paths, studied hard, made sensible choices, and arrived at stable, respected outcomes. Their stories are visible because the system is designed to surface them. What is less visible are those who also did “everything right” and still fell through the cracks. The student whose results were good but not exceptional. The mid-career professional who plateaued despite competence. The person who stepped off the track briefly for caregiving, health, or burnout and found reentry harder than expected.

Because Singapore prizes efficiency and clarity, the stories that survive are the ones that align cleanly with progress. The quieter experiences of drift, delay, or opting out are rarely framed as legitimate outcomes. Over time, this creates the impression that success is simply a matter of alignment and effort, when in reality it is also shaped by timing, institutional fit, and tolerance for narrow definitions of achievement. Survivor bias here does not shout. It reassures. And in doing so, it can make perfectly ordinary detours feel like personal failures.

In India, survivor bias often takes the form of the exception story. The person who rose dramatically across class lines. The small-town student who made it to a global stage. The entrepreneur who beat the odds in a hostile system. These stories carry real emotional power, partly because the structural barriers are widely understood. When someone breaks through, it feels meaningful not just for them but symbolically. The problem is not that these stories are told. It is the weight they are made to carry. When exceptional outcomes are repeatedly highlighted, they begin to stand in for the system itself. If one person succeeded, the implication is that others could too. Structural constraints fade into the background, replaced by narratives of grit and belief. Those who do not make it are left navigating a quiet moral undertone, as though effort alone should have been enough. Survivor bias in this context does not erase struggle. It instrumentalises it. It turns hardship into a prerequisite for legitimacy while overlooking the many who endure similar conditions without dramatic resolution.

Why survivor bias feels comforting

Survivor bias persists because it offers a sense of order. If success follows certain behaviours, then effort feels safer. If other people found their way through uncertainty, then uncertainty feels manageable. Survivor stories reassure us that the world responds predictably to intention. There is also something deeply human about learning from examples. We look for patterns because patterns help us decide what to do next. Survivor bias does not arise from carelessness. It arises from our desire for coherence. The problem is not that we learn from those who succeed. It is that we forget to ask what conditions made their success possible and how many people with similar intentions experienced something else entirely.

The quieter costs of survivor bias

One of the more subtle harms of survivor bias is how it shapes self-judgment. When advice is drawn primarily from success stories, failure begins to feel like a personal shortcoming rather than a statistical outcome. This is particularly evident in discussions about perseverance. We admire those who persisted through difficulty and eventually thrived. Less visible are those who persisted and paid a lasting cost. Their endurance does not resolve into a lesson we are comfortable sharing.

Survivor bias also influences how organisations and societies learn. When only visible wins are studied, flawed systems are repeated. Projects that succeeded under specific conditions are scaled without examining whether those conditions still exist. Meanwhile, quieter failures are treated as individual missteps rather than sources of insight. Over time, survivor bias can flatten complexity. Structural advantages fade into the background. Timing is reframed as foresight. Support networks disappear from the story altogether.

The myths that grow around survivor bias

Several familiar ideas draw strength from survivor bias. One is the belief that perseverance guarantees results. Another is that risk is inherently noble, even when outcomes are uneven. A third is that advice from those who succeeded is broadly transferable. Each of these ideas contains a grain of truth. Perseverance matters. Risk can open doors. Advice can be useful. The distortion lies in treating these ideas as universal rather than conditional. Survivor bias encourages us to extract rules from exceptions. It turns lived experience into instruction without pausing to ask whether the conditions are repeatable.

Noticing survivor bias as it appears

Survivor bias often announces itself through certainty. When conclusions are delivered with confidence but supported mainly by anecdotes, it is worth slowing down. Another signal is moral language. When outcomes are framed as deserved or undeserved, effort is often being substituted for analysis. This is especially common in wellness, productivity, and financial advice, where personal responsibility is emphasised and context fades. 

It also helps to pay attention to silence. Who is not being quoted? Whose experiences are absent? Which stories feel too messy to circulate? Even the tone of a story can offer clues. Narratives that smooth out doubt, randomness, or reversal often rely on hindsight to create coherence that did not exist in real time.

Thinking more clearly alongside it

Avoiding survivor bias does not require cynicism. It requires curiosity. One useful habit is to look for base rates. Before asking how someone succeeded, ask how many people attempted the same thing. Another is to seek out reflections that include what did not work, not just what did.

It can also help to separate inspiration from instruction. A story can be meaningful without becoming a roadmap. Not every example needs to be actionable. Perhaps most importantly, it is worth holding space for chance. Timing, health, support, and sheer randomness play larger roles than we often acknowledge. Recognising this does not diminish effort. It places it in proportion.

A gentler way of learning

Survivor bias tempts us to believe that clarity comes after the fact. That if we study enough success stories, we can protect ourselves from uncertainty. Letting go of that promise can feel uncomfortable at first. But it also creates room for a more compassionate way of thinking. One that allows for thoughtful choices without demanding guaranteed outcomes. When we notice survivor bias, we do not lose guidance. We gain perspective. We become less harsh with ourselves when things do not work out, and less prescriptive with others when they do. The stories we hear matter. So do the ones we do not. Holding both in mind may be one of the quieter forms of wisdom available to us.

2026 Week 26 Update

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was a German poet, novelist, playwright, scientist, and philosopher, widely regarded as one of the greatest literary figures in history. Best known for works such as Faust and The Sorrows of Young Werther, Goethe explored themes of human potential, creativity, nature, and personal growth. His writings continue to inspire readers with their timeless insights into the human experience. This quote speaks to the transformative power of self-trust. Many of us spend a great deal of our lives looking outward for answers, seeking approval, advice, or reassurance before making decisions. While guidance from others can be valuable, Goethe reminds us that the most important compass we possess is within ourselves.

Trusting yourself does not mean believing you will always be right. It means having confidence that, whatever happens, you can learn, adapt, and find your way forward. Self-trust is built through experience. It grows every time you make a difficult decision, recover from a setback, or discover strengths you didn’t know you had. Over time, you begin to realise that uncertainty is not something to fear, but something you are capable of navigating. The quote also suggests that much of life’s confusion comes not from a lack of answers, but from doubting our own judgment. When we constantly question ourselves or compare our path with others, we become disconnected from our values and intuition. Trusting yourself brings clarity because your choices become aligned with who you truly are, rather than with who you think you should be.

This doesn’t mean life suddenly becomes easy. Challenges remain, mistakes still happen, and unexpected turns are inevitable. But with self-trust, you approach them differently. You stop waiting for certainty and start living with confidence that you can handle whatever comes next.

This week, the Bhagavad Gita in verse 2.50 tells us that knowledge must culminate in action.The Gita does not end clarity in contemplation. It directs it into conduct. Yoga is skill in action. Wisdom refines execution, it purifies motive, it sharpens discernment in decision. Clarity is not withdrawal from responsibility, it is precision within it. June closes where it must, not in abstraction, but in competent action guided by understanding.

This week was a super productive week and there seems to be small slice of happy news. BB may be getting his first big boy job. While university has been postponed for a couple of years for him, it is not off the table. GG will end her six month internship this month and then, it’s back to school for her last year. As for me, work and writing keeps me busy.

This week I learnt that when you attach yourself to a particular label, you limit yourself. Don’t forget that we are constantly evolving. We have many dimensions. These labels limit what is possible for you. A few years down the line, you may feel like a completely different person. Practice observing your thoughts and stories you believe about yourself. When an unhelpful thought pops up in your mind, you have to choose not to believe it. It will lose all power over you if you don’t give your attention to it. Allow beautiful, new possibilities to be fulfilled by yourself.

And on that note, have a beautiful week, and a wonderful month of July!