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Friday, January 24, 2025

Parents brace for higher kindergarten and daycare rate

 

      746Jalan Sungai DuaPenang , Contact Person: Ms. Ling Ling mobile 012-4059013 

Parents are bracing for the increase in fees for private kindergarten and daycare centres this year, but most generally understand the financial burdens faced by operators.

Private sector employee Nisa Diana Halim, 36, said sending her four-year-old to a private centre is her only option as there are no nearby government kindergartens in her area.

Right now, she has to pay RM750 monthly for kindergarten and daycare services at a centre in Sungai Buloh, Selangor.

She currently pays RM495 per month for kindergarten fees and the rest for daycare services.

The fees have yet to be increased, but she was notified that for the 2025 term, they would be higher, she said.

“I have tried getting more details, but the school has not responded. For now, I will remain with the centre for my second born, as my eldest is already attending school and only stays at a transit centre before school.

“I prefer to send my daughter to a place I am familiar with and will prepare for the fee increase because I want the services from the school, which is close to our house,” said the mother of three.

Housewife Low Chiew Yee, 34, said her five-year-old son attends kindergarten while her three-year-old daughter is in daycare.

The kindergarten fees remain at RM405 per month, but miscellaneous charges have increased slightly.

“The increase in miscellaneous charges is less than RM50, but our monthly expenses have risen by almost RM600. However, the kindergarten offers good services, so I don’t mind,” she said.

Low has three children, with her eldest son in Year 2, costing RM500 per month, while her second son’s co-curricular classes costs RM400 monthly.

Due to rising costs, she had to drop some enrichment classes for her children.

“With only my husband working, I stay at home to take care of the children and manage school runs. We save wherever we can,” she added.

Another parent, Lim Li Wei, 38, said she anticipated the increase in fees since the government announced an increase in the minimum wage last year.

She has received a notice on the potential of fee increases from her daughter’s kindergarten, but no amount was specified.

“My daughter’s kindergarten fees were RM380 per month and now, for a five-year-old, it’s RM400,” she said.

A bank employee, Karlye Fong, 35, said her child’s kindergarten fees increased from RM400 to RM420 per month this year, which is still manageable.

“Our child is at the kindergarten from 8am to noon every day. Fortunately, my parents help with pick-ups, saving us transportation costs,” said the mother of one.

Fong said working in a financial institution means her daughter’s medical expenses are covered by the company under the dependant category.

“My daughter’s clinic fees range from RM100 to RM200 per month. If she is hospitalised, even though the insurance covers the expenses, we still pay RM350 monthly for insurance,” she said in emphasising their commitment to their daughter’s education over the long term.

Soleha Amin said it is necessary for her children to attend kindergarten even if the fees are increased.

“Right now, children are advanced due to social media and technology; parents send their children to preschool to compete. As much as I want to educate them myself, I won’t be able to catch up as I need to work.

“I chose private kindergartens because they offer multilingual classes, and this will help them when they enter primary school. If public kindergartens offer similar options, I would have sent them there, but government centres are always full.

“As a parent, I am willing to work extra hard for my children’s future. I am aware there are subsidies, but unfortunately, I am in the middle-income group. I hope the government can consider expanding aid for those of us who are supporting the private education sector,” she said.

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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Youth-chasing US millionaire Bryan Johnson says S’porean Chuando Tan’s agelessness is ‘encouraging’

 

Bryan Johnson (left) acknowledges that Chuando Tan appears to have found the fountain of youth with a much simpler lifestyle.
Bryan Johnson (left) acknowledges that Chuando Tan appears to have found the fountain of youth with a much simpler lifestyle.PHOTOS: NETFLIX, CHUANDO TAN/INSTAGRAM

LOS ANGELES – Imagine spending millions of dollars on a public quest to become more youthful, only to face cruel comments about your resulting appearance.

Some people say you now look worse, and a few compare you unfavourably with Chuando Tan, the Singaporean photographer who went viral for his age-defying looks, even though he is a decade older.

This is the reality for Bryan Johnson, the 47-year-old American entrepreneur who, in 2021, embarked on a controversial one-man experiment to extend his longevity and reverse any age-related decline.

But his response to the backlash has been to take the high road, engage with critics and respond graciously to even the most savage detractors.

And he acknowledges that Tan, 58, appears to have found the fountain of youth with a much simpler lifestyle.

Johnson displays this disarming attitude in recent podcast interviews, as well as a new documentary, Don’t Die: The Man Who Wants To Live Forever, now streaming on Netflix.

If sensational headlines such as “Millionaire spends US$2 million a year to live forever” suggest an eccentric vanity project, the film adds nuance and humanises the man, who comes across as earnest, curious and humble enough to admit when some experiments go wrong.

Johnson’s programme, which he calls Blueprint, entails a rigorous diet, exercise and lifestyle regimen, as well as taking dozens of supplements and injections, including a novel gene therapy to boost muscle mass.

The technology entrepreneur, who made millions when his digital payments company was acquired by PayPal for US$800 million (S$1.09 billion) in 2013, was overweight, overworked and severely depressed as he was building his early businesses.

And he did become fitter and healthier after doing the Blueprint programme, but his rapid weight loss and pallor – the by-product of trying to avoid sun damage – attracted numerous negative comments.

In the film and on his YouTube channel, Johnson acknowledges that the haters had a point. Even though he had become healthier overall, he lost facial volume, and with it, the appearance of youthfulness.

Bryan Johnson in Don’t Die: The Man Who Wants To Live Forever.PHOTO: NETFLIX

Yet, despite a concerted effort to rejuvenate his visage, he is still routinely the target of barbed comments.

On an episode of the popular More Plates More Dates podcast released in December 2024, Johnson is shown a tweet in which SpaceX founder and Tesla chief executive Elon Musk, 53, agrees that he looked better before he began his anti-ageing journey.

But Johnson laughs good-naturedly, describes Musk as a friend, and embraces the joke often made about his vampiric complexion.

He is then asked about Tan, whom the podcast host cites as an example of “people who seemingly pay very little attention to what they’re doing and yet look way better than people who are doing everything”.

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Johnson reveals that he and Tan, founder of Singapore modelling agency Ave Management, had actually planned to meet. “I was just in Singapore, but didn’t get a chance to meet him,” he says.

Agreeing that Tan looks at least 20 years younger than his age, he adds: “I don’t fault people for being confused.

“They look at that person (Tan), and then they see the headline, ‘This guy is spending US$2 million a year’, and they conclude, ‘This guy should look like that guy in one year’s time.’”

Johnson argues, however, that this is because people do not understand “the biological principles of ageing” and advancements in rejuvenating technologies.

It would be interesting to run the same tests he does on himself on Tan, he adds. “What do his insides look like? Is it as pristine as his appearance?”

Still, the fact that Tan looks as ageless as he does is promising to Johnson.

“To me, that’s really encouraging because biology is capable of the things we’re asking it to be. We’re just trying to sort it out.”

Johnson’s programme measures health and ageing using dozens of biological markers, ranging from established metrics such as bone density and VO2 max – a measure of cardiovascular fitness – to esoteric ones such as DNA methylation “clocks”.

These clocks track chemical processes in DNA to determine “biological age” or if someone is ageing faster or slower than his age in years.

The validity of these clocks is still debated by scientists, but they are one of the main tools Johnson uses to calculate his speed of ageing, and the basis of his 2023 claim to have reversed his biological age by five years after two years on his protocol.

addie08 - Screenshot. Chuando Tan

Source/copyright: Chuando Tan Instagram
Chuando Tan is the Singaporean photographer who went viral for his age-defying looks even though he is a decade older.PHOTO: CHUANDO TAN/INSTAGRAM

The Netflix documentary details the lengths he goes to daily to adhere to and document this demanding programme.

It includes swallowing 88 pills, eating a calorie-restricted vegan diet that always leaves him hungry, and something called “penis shockwave therapy”, which he hopes will boost his sexual health and performance.

He has also created a community that follows a pared-down version of his protocol and attends his Don’t Die Summits, where attendees get to test their biological age and see the latest longevity-boosting therapies. One was held in Singapore in September 2024.

But equally fascinating is what drives Johnson to do it all – a touching backstory that includes growing up with little money, becoming estranged from his family, then reconnecting with both his father and his 19-year-old son.

Whatever you think of the longevity goal, this is a father making up for lost time – and trying to extend that as much as he can. - The Straits/Asia News Network

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