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In Singapore, Grandmothers Dive Into Aging With a Splash
In Singapore, Grandmothers Dive Into Aging With a Splash

New York Times

time19-06-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • New York Times

In Singapore, Grandmothers Dive Into Aging With a Splash

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. Last year, I came across an article in Rice Media, a news outlet based in Singapore, with the headline ''I'll Play Till I Die': The Rowdy Ah Mas Confronting Mortality Through Water Polo.' In the article, Michele Pek wrote that her grandmother was one of the first members of the Ah Ma Flippa Ball team, a group of women mostly in their 60s, 70s and 80s who started playing flippa ball — a version of water polo that does not require treading water — in Singapore in 2016. 'Ah ma' means grandmother in several Chinese dialects. It was 'the first time I've seen an 80-year-old lady dive headfirst for a ball,' Ms. Pek wrote. I was born and raised in Singapore, one of the world's most rapidly aging countries. For years, I kept track of the government's various initiatives to engage older residents. The National Silver Academy, for example, offered courses teaching them how to use TikTok. This month, two 'silver generation ambassadors' — volunteers who help Singapore's government connect with seniors — visited my 83-year-old mother to ask about her chronic diseases and if she had friends. They encouraged her to exercise and told her that she could play Rummy-O with other seniors. And recently, the city-state hosted the World Aging Festival, which featured a cheerleading squad made up of seniors. I have always been interested in how seniors live. I previously covered demographics in China, where I was based for a decade. There, I wrote about people in their 70s and 80s who went to parks to find love. When I started covering Southeast Asia in late 2021, I was keen to continue that focus. I am always searching for new ways to tell the story of demographic shifts in the region. I knew that the story of the Ah Ma Flippa Ball team presented an opportunity to highlight Singapore's dynamic, aging population. So I contacted the coach, Ting Kum Luen, and asked if I could watch the team play at the Yio Chu Kang Swimming Complex. Mr. Ting told me how skeptical he was when an official from Sport Singapore, a government agency, asked him in 2016 to try to teach flippa ball to seniors. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Singapore's elderly cheerleaders show off their moves
Singapore's elderly cheerleaders show off their moves

Korea Herald

time23-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Korea Herald

Singapore's elderly cheerleaders show off their moves

SINGAPORE (Straits Times/ABB) — Lydia Lee pulled off her first cheerleading routine at the age of 77. Decked out in matching blue and white outfits, she and her teammates punched the air with their bright red pom-poms, spun each other around and grooved in sync to the beat. Rah Rah, as their 60-member squad is known, made its debut performance at the World Aging Festival on April 8 at the Marina Bay Sands Expo and Convention Center — the culmination of three months of weekly practice. Their ages range from 59 to 82, making the squad Singapore's first seniors' cheerleading team. Twenty members — Lee included — were on stage, while the others danced offstage around the audience. Those on stage had a more "complex" routine, and training was "very intensive," Lee said, but she did not mind. "I'm retired, and I'm free from family commitments," the former primary school teacher said. "I'm single and I live alone, so I have a lot of time." She initially struggled to remember the three-minute routine and keep to the rhythm, as she has gradual hearing loss. But she went through the steps every day, watching a video made by the squad's instructor Nah Jieying, a dancer and choreographer. "I forced myself to learn to be good in it," Lee said. "When I made mistakes sometimes, I would be very angry with myself. I tried harder to remember what the next step was, so I did (the routine) many times on my own." She said everyone was very respectful and patient. "I think I'm one of the most senior in the group, so they accommodated me. They would help me and remind me," she said, adding that the instructor was encouraging even when she made mistakes. "I made many new friends. We had makan sessions after practice, tea, coffee and sometimes dinner," said Lee. She was happy with her performance. "I tried my best," she said coyly. Vincent Ng, 68, one of the four men in the squad, said group performances take the pressure off individual performers. "There's no need to shine. People won't point you out one by one, but see the overall performance. And if, at your age, you can do this, it's already appreciated," he said. The World Aging Festival, held at the Marina Bay Sands Expo and Convention Center on April 8 and 9, was the 16th edition of the annual event. Organized by local social enterprise Aging Asia, the festival featured panel discussions on topics such as brain health, longevity, financial security and age-inclusive workforce policies. The two-day affair also showcased innovations by various companies in assisted living, elder care technology and wellness. It was attended by some 6,000 participants from more than 50 countries. The cheerleading group was the brainchild of Aging Asia founder Janice Chia, 46, who extended the invitation to join to members from her network of 10,000 seniors from Aging Asia and Aspire55, a social health club she founded for those above 50. Aspire55 and food and beverage company Nestle sponsored three months of dance choreography classes for the seniors. Chia said she threw in new segments to challenge the seniors, for instance, introducing a runway walk the day before the show. Joining the squad was a no-brainer for Ng, a freelance fitness trainer at the Energia Fitness Club in Clarke Quay and Aspire55. "If life is too easy, we turn lazy. You won't feel like doing anything," said Ng, who is single. It was Lee's second year taking up the challenge. She had tried activities at the senior activity center near her home in Eunos but did not find them stimulating enough. So when her friends from her church's dance group told her about a drumming performance, she signed up immediately. That took her to the 2024 World Aging Festival, where she was among 300 drumstick-wielding performers — all seniors and pre-schoolers — who energetically thumped out the beats on exercise balls. They set a world record for the "Largest Swiss Ball Drumming" performance. Lee is one of around 15 seniors from the group who still keep up with weekly drumming sessions today. They have gone on to perform at events such as the annual Chingay street parade and the Purple Parade, a ground-up movement promoting disability inclusion. Chia said, "When I meet seniors, I always ask them what's their dream. And even if somebody says 'I don't know what's my dream', now they have drum clubs to try, they have cheerleading. "We are trying to create ways to find different purposes, different aspirations. I think seniors need to be invited to things." She said seniors helped to run the show at the World Aging Festival, from manning a festival booth to recruiting more senior participants and hosting the festival's speakers. They also did ushering and coordinated the cheerleaders and ironed the jerseys. They were given an allowance of $36.70 and $11.40 in meal vouchers for at least five hours' work a day. Other seniors who helped out at the event were paid $11.40 an hour. "What we want to do is to empower seniors with new skills, so they can go out there and teach other seniors," Chia said. When they get good enough, they can get "micro jobs" — task-based temporary work — and earn some money, she added. While her cheerleading teammates headed home or out to lunch after the performance on April 8, Lee went to volunteer at the Aspire55 booth. "I get myself involved in things, and then time passes very easily and I don't feel bored," Lee said, adding that "it can be lonely" at night. She watches dramas at home when she has no activities. "Normally, my days are full of events. I will try to get out of the house. "Now that I've got all these places to go and all these places to 'play', I enjoy a better life than before." Lee wants to delay the onset of dementia. "No one will look after me if I don't take care. I don't wish to burden other people. So as much as I can, I will keep myself fit." Nearing her 80s, her goal is simple. She said, "Stay alive, be active, have fun while aging. While we are growing old, don't bury yourself in misery. Go and explore. Fun has no boundaries." She laughed and added, "It's never too late to have fun."

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