Thursday, February 23, 2012

Narrative Essay: A Difficult Decision

              It’s been three years now. Studying in Taiwan, this experience has been like a roller coaster ride. Sometimes I wonder what if I had not been brave enough to accept the challenge of living alone several thousands of miles away from home.  
          In mid December 2008, it was already a month after I finally graduated from high school. The result of UEC, the transcript that we use for application for universitiey, was announced a few days back and I got the best results amongst my friends. I felt like being on top of the world. I decided to apply for one of the world’s finest universities in the field of engineering, Nanyang Technology University in Singapore. Confident about my results, local universities were not in my consideration, nor were Taiwan’s. One day when I went back to the school to deal with some paperwork, I saw some of my friends starting to fill application forms for admission to universities in Taiwan. And I thought, “Why don’t I apply as well? It causes no harm anyway.” So roughly a week after dealing with the paperwork, the application process was done. In the form I only filled in eight of the national universities in Taiwan, because frankly I was not really taking the application seriously and NTU was the only choice in my mind. My sister was working there, my dear aunt was living nearby and Singapore is near to home yet I still get to “study abroad”, these were the perfect combination. With my fingers crossed, I pushed the envelope encasing the application form into the mail box in front of the post office. It was early January, a merry period with Chinese new year celebration around the corner.
          And I was hopeful.
          4th March, it was my dear sister’s 24th birthday. As usual, I woke up, switched on the computer, brushed my teeth, and sat back at the computer desk. I was going to send a birthday email to her when the title of one email in my inbox attracted me at once. My heart raced and I got a slight goose bump. The title read something like “Results of Admission Application” and the email was sent by the admission committee of NTU. Nobody was at home: Mum went out for grocery shopping. Dad was working while my brother was at school. I sat up straight, drew myself closer to the screen, clicked the mail, then closed my eyes and waited. I could not bear failure. Ten seconds later I peeked, carefully scanning for the key words. I was ready to jump and scream in excitement.
          My heart dropped. “No, they can not just do that to me,” I murmured to myself.
          For the whole month, I gasped every time I thought of the perfect but ruined plan. Then I applied for admission to a local private university that was just an hour drive from home. It was merely a desperate move.                  
          Early April 2010, I received a text from my friend who had applied for admission to Taiwan’s universities as well. She sent me a list of our names who got admitted by respective university. I scrolled down the text and saw my name: “Ng Zhen Yoong – National Cheng Kung University”. I was glad but wasn’t too excited. So I was torn between two extreme choices at the time: to stay very close to home and study in a small university or fly to another country and study in one of the best universities in Taiwan. There wasn’t the perfect “in between” plan anymore, though I was still mourning for it. 
          Deep down inside, I was eager to try new things. But when I thought of the kind of life so far away from home and had to start everything from scratch, I flinched. My parents were anxious too. Though they told me it was all up to me to decide, I could still see from their eyes that they wished I would stay. For three weeks I kept thinking about this question, and had not been able to made up my mind until my dad started to rush me.  He said he had found a shared apartment for me near the local university. If I chose to stay I would have to sign the contract for it in a week’s time. He gave me three more days for making the final decision. Great, a dead line now.
          Two days later the family headed out for a dinner. Sitting on the backseat of the car, I looked out at the street and the same old town through the window. I was immersed into the stream of thought again. For 18 years, I had been playing everything safe. I dared not do anything outrageous. I was a teacher’s pet and followed every rule in school. I did everything within my comfort zone. The night was warm, the breeze from outside was cosy. And out of nowhere, I felt a sudden urge inside. I needed to escape from this small old town; I should explore some other places, not just merely visiting foreign places as a tourist, but living in a foreign land and enjoying the whole experience of “living abroad”. I must get a taste of it. I was young and should go on an adventure. I knew it would be hard but there would be trials and tribulations that will make one grow. This was the only chance, and college life should be the most important stage of my life. “It will be worth it. Let’s do it,” I thought to myself. And while my dad was still driving and my mom sitting beside, I told them my final decision. For several seconds, there were only sounds of the car and the traffic outside. But at last, they let out a resigned smile and nodded as a gesture of approval.
          And from that day onwards, I did not look back. I have had the best and worst time of my life. What’s more, I even feel glad that NTU did not grant me admission. And if I had chosen to stay in Malaysia, I would not have tasted so many exotic foods, to have experienced a whole new culture, to have met my besties and had the blasts of my life. Good or bad, they are all precious. I will never trade them for the world.
          It was hard, but I believe I had made one hell of a good decision.