Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Chapter 5. Why NZ?

I was working under a great deal of stress in 1976 as a wireline operator in SSB because I felt that I needed to make JG5, to get enough money, for sending all my three children one day to overseas universities for their further education. So, I changed my job to trainee driller in 1978 in order to have a chance to make tool pusher (JG5). I was unaware that there was no serious intention on the part of Shell to finish the driller training programme. As it turned out, the driller training scheme was merely a political ploy used by SSB to bluff Petronas. Shell owned no oil rigs in Sarawak and did not require drillers because drillers are all included in the rigs rental contracts of Sea & Land or Reading and Bates.


By 1982, I was convinced that I was there only for the ride. My hope of having three graduates in the family was no longer possible. The fact was, in twenty years of working and saving hard, my wife, Christine and I managed to save barely enough money to send just one child, Kevin, to uni and our other two children were destined to become bus drivers in Pujut!? I knew that it was unfair to Pearl and Eugene; but there seemed to be no other way out at the time. We needed to have another 400K!! We have just two more years to save this impossible amount. Because of this big problem and job stress off-shore, I almost went crazy with worries and I had a near nervous breakdown in 1983.

One friend, Chen Ah Ngiaw said to me "David, be smart like me, resign from Shell and come with me to Australia, play golf and become rich!" I thought that he was an idiot! How could I possibly become rich by resigning from Shell?! I was making very good money then as an assistant driller, working on the oil rigs. All my efforts were just starting to pay dividends. I would soon become a driller (JG6) after I passed my round one exam in Holland. The JG5 promotion to tool pusher appeared to be within easy reach.

However, another friend, George Liew, who migrated to Canada in 1973, was back on holidays in the 80's and he also said something similar to me. So, I started to think. Was it possible that I, David Chin have two stupid friends?! I came to the obvious conclusion: two to one, I was the idiot, not my friends. I then realized that if it has taken my wife and me twenty years to save 200K for just one child's overseas uni education, it will take us another 40 years to save enough money for the other two children. I was certainly the idiot, not my friends! By the time I have the money, I would retire aged 90. Pearl and Eugene would be too old to go to uni. So when the VSS opportunity presented itself, I took my friends' advice, quit my "lucrative" job working for Shell and migrated to New Zealand in 1995 as a permanent resident. I played golf and became rich. Smile!


Actually, I did not play golf initially and no one became rich; but Christine and I were able to send all our children to university to do the degree courses they chose to do, not those courses decided by the Malaysian authorities or whatever courses were left, after all the bumiputras have made their choices. It was no fun to be second class citizens in Malaysia. Chinese were 5th class, after the Malays, Ibans, Kadazans and Kelabits. We certainly are better off in NZ. Strangely we have more rights here as permanent residents compared to our rights as citizens of Malaysia!

To enter NZ as an immigrant, there is this points-system devised by the NZ government to screen all incoming Asian immigrants. I had no points; but my wife, Christine, being a staff nurse and midwife with 20 years working experience, had 24 points. Using the 200K we had saved for Kevin (for Harvard), we bought 2 more points @ 100k/point and just qualified for PR at 26 points! So, my family became Permanent Residents (PR) of NZ in 1995. After finishing form 5 in Malaysia all my children managed to complete a one year pre-U course (called form 7 in NZ). They have to sit for the bursary exams which fortunately they all passed and entered university a year later. The rest is now history.

Eugene, our youngest son began work in 2002 as a design engineer with Fisher and Pakel in Auckland. Today, I am very proud to say that we have no bus drivers in our family, all engineers! Do you know the Sermon on the Mount, in the bible? After Jesus preached to the Jews, he fed them all with two fish and five loaves; all 3000 of them! A miracle, you say? Certainly! I realized in Hamilton that a similar miracle was happening right before my very eyes! That 200K which we had got ready for Kevin's education in Harvard, Oxford, Yale or Cambridge; suddenly was enough to pay for all the three children's uni fees in NZ! The Lord be praised! God works in wondrous ways etc. etc. Amen! Instead of having to pay full fees like all foreign students do, PR pay only about a third, same as for NZ citizens.

The NZ govt gives PR all the rights of a citizen except one! I cannot stand for election for member of parliament against Winston Peters or Helen Clark, but who cares about all that. All I really wanted was for my children to get their degrees so that their lives can be a little easier than mine, that is all! What I needed to do was find a job in NZ, put food on the table for 5 years and we are home free! Perhaps a management degree from Waikato U is not as good as getting a Harvard law degree for Kevin. We are not complaining! The Americans have a saying: there ain't no free lunch! One cannot have the cake and eat it too.

There was a little money left over after spending most of our life savings in NZ, I tidak tahan any more and I bought myself a Mercedes Benz in Feb.1998! OK, it was a second hand one. I used the 280SE for two years and traded it in May 2000 for a Volvo! These are great cars to drive; but very thirsty and too expensive to maintain. Actually, I am working my way through the big 5 and then the small 3! I need to find a job because these are very thirsty cars with huge tanks to fill up! I also need to get myself a Rolls Royce, Lamborghini, Humvee, Harley and a 50 foot yacht to go to Fiji! It is good to have dreams isn't it? (Big 5: Mercedes, Volvo, BMW, Jaguar and Rolls Royce. Small 3: Porsche, Ferrari and Lamborghini. Small because these cars have only two doors.)

Unlike in Malaysia, no one in NZ wants a second hand luxury car. These are all very cheap. I paid only 7.8K for the Mercedes 280SE and 9K for that Volvo 760GLEI paid 6.8K for the Honda Accord in 1995 when I first came here. That was my dream car in Borneo. In NZ my dreams have become slightly bigger! It is heaven here for the car enthusiasts and boy racers. I must drive them all before I leave this place and return to Borneo, he-he! 

All my children have found good jobs in Auckland and Wellington. As parents, we now rarely see them. The one big question is: What happens next!? Is it time for me to consider Pujut again? After ten years in NZ, it is unlikely that we will ever want to live in hot and hazy Miri once more. The air is clean and fresh here and we truly enjoy the freedom of speech and the equality in every way for all residents or citizens in NZ. No one has ever asked me yet whether I was a bumiputra or not. It is true that there is no EPF here in NZ and some times it is cold and foggy in the winter months; but I am sure that my family can learn to adapt.
golfer, handicap 16 (April 2010)

15 comments:

Kuching Remisier Blog said...

hi i am really glad to have a retire friend visit my blog and give me comment. i sorry to say that you have so many blog and i dont have time to view it now. hahaha.

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crazyfool2986@hotmail.com

enjoy your life! :) i respect you!

David Chin said...

Voon,
Thanks for your comment. At least I know now that some one still reads my blog.

Rich said...

Hello David,
I appreciate you visiting my blog. You are the 1st visitor (I think, my counter said six visitors but you were the first to leave a comment so I'll count you as first) to my blog. Thank you for the advice on my problem. The problem was I couldn't delete the space because of all the pesky HTML code before it, don't know how it got there. Anyway, when I deleted the code it just gave me errors. Instead I cut the HTML code above my post and pasted it at the bottom of the post, now I have a big space down there, oh well. I appreciate the help though. As a courtesy I'll take a gander at some of your posts. Thanks a lot.
Rich

David Chin said...

Rich,
Thanks for the visit and your comment. The user forum is the place to go with all your blogging questions. Some one is sure to know the answer.
David

Anonymous said...

Dear David,

Thanks for pointing this page to the Ex-Tanjongs. I really enjoy reading this part because it tells me a lot about the experiences and hardships that you had to go through in order to provide a decent life and future for your family. You have made a lot of important sacrifices for your children. This blog will remind them of your most important contribution to their happy future. That near nervous breakdown story - I thought I was the only who had that nasty experience during my struggle with my PhD. Apparently you went through that piece of twilight zone too. Well done brother for doing well.

hasmadi

David Chin said...

Hasmadi,
Thanks for your very kind words. Children will understand the meaning of the word sacrifices when they have children of their own one day.
David

johntsh said...

David,
Really entertaining reading your blogs.You really got the time to write.I visited your blog twice accidently. First time last last looking for any gargets for my photos of Sibu.Thanks for the recommendation of "Slide" and today, looking some gargets for the feed back.
Yes, I'm John and I only managed one blog.

Nice reading your blogs.

John.

David Chin said...

John,
Thanks for the comment. I really enjoyed your Iban sape music on You-tube!

Anonymous said...

Very interesting account of your migration story. Unfortunately (and not because of you, or your writing), what you've narrated is all too familiar for a lot of people.

I was interested because you mention JG5. I was in Personnel in Shell (downstream) and am familiar with their JG system for job classification. It brought back some memories.

A lot of Shell people have migrated to NZ and Australia. You're in good company.

regards

David Chin said...

Adirya,
Thanks for the comment. It sure is a small world. 6 out of the 9 nurses working in a small clinic in Borneo, are now working in NZ.

adriancck said...

David,
It was good reading your life story on your blog, I guess your wife and children do not mind...

Congrats for having put through your children thru University, guess if you were still in SSB, times wil be much togher than you have it in NZ.

Thanks for sharing your blog...

Rgds

Adrian

David Chin said...

Adrian,
Thanks for your comment. I look forward to a game with you!

David

Pungut said...

Hi David ... great story...I agreed as you have succeed.. wish you the best
Hj Pungut

KLBA Chin said...

HA ..ha..What a good worte up about David Chin family .
I did have a lot of friend have migrated to NZ and Australia for the past 20 over years , but no many of them are in contact, except my carson brother , the cardiologic speciallist in willimpton ..

KLBA Chin said...

Dear David,
I think one of this day , I will be there ...I did have a lot of my IBM collegue and friend have migrated to NZ and Australia since 1988 ( After the operation Lalang in KL , and curfew in KL ) . But, I think I will put all children in Chinese school , and next time, send them back to China , where my ancestor came from ...