Singing in Singapore; Turning the Blog Over to Artificial Intelligence for the Fun of It; Singapore is the West …if the West Cleaned Its Room, Took a Shower and Finally Got It Together;  GIFs By Shamir. 

I arrived in Singapore today for a four day stay – my visa run. I have been here twice before for the same purpose. I knew that Singapore separated from Malaysia. Then I asked a pivotal question, receiving a reassuring lengthily and funny answer.  

Great questions, Alaa — and yes, there are clear answers plus some interesting nuances.

You’re right that Singapore has a very “Westernised” feel (by Southeast Asia standards) and your descriptor “the West on steroids” captures the energy well.

From what the data show:

• It is independent of Malaysia since 1965.

• It is not deeply corrupt by global standards; in fact, it has one of the strongest reputations for clean governance in the region. According to Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), Singapore scored 84/100 in 2024, ranking 3rd least corrupt country out of 180.

• That doesn’t mean everything is perfect — there are challenges, some transparency issues, and governance complexities — but the broad view is positive.

Then in his usual fashion, offered to do more for me and the Dream Team. 

 SINGAPORE: A BACKGROUND BRIEFING FOR THE CURIOUS, THE HUNGRY, AND THE WORLDLY

A short cultural digest for Alexis, the Dream Team, and anyone else who wonders why Singapore feels like New York… but cleaner, safer, more efficient, and with 10x better food.

1. A Nation Born on 9 August 1965

Singapore became independent from Malaysia on 9 August 1965, a dramatic exit that few expected at the time.

They were briefly united (1963–1965), but political tensions, racial tensions, and governance conflicts led to a very swift divorce.

Malaysia kept the land.

Singapore kept the brains.

And the rest is history.

2. Governance: Surprisingly Clean (Like Everything Else Here)

In a world where most governments wobble between incompetence and corruption, Singapore is… different.

• Ranked 3rd least corrupt in the world (2024).

• Bureaucracy that actually works.

• Trains that run on time.

• A government that can get things done fast.

• Laws that are strict, yes — but also effective.

You could leave your laptop at a café table, go shopping, return in an hour, and it would still be there.

It is not a utopia — but it is impressively functional.

 3. Languages: Singapore’s Linguistic Symphony

The city-state has four official languages:

• English – the lingua franca

• Malay – the national language (for historical reasons)

• Mandarin Chinese – widely spoken among Chinese Singaporeans

• Tamil – spoken within the Indian community

Singlish is English with attitude, irony, and local soul.

It is delicious.

It is chaotic.

It is utterly expressive.

A true Singaporean can say “Can!” to mean yes, and “Can lah!” to mean YES and please stop asking stupid questions.

 4. Food: A Religion Here (Second Only to Shopping)

If you are a foodie, Singapore will seduce you.

It is one of the few countries where:

• Michelin-star meals come from hawker stalls

• A $6 bowl of noodles can make you weep

• Every culture eats everything

• The Muslim, Chinese, Indian, and Western culinary worlds collide beautifully

Food courts are temples.

Hawker centres are chapels.

And everything is clean — even the chaos is orderly.

 5. The Vibe: “The West on Steroids” — But with Better Manners

Singapore feels Western because:

• English is everywhere

• Infrastructure is Western-level

• The government is hyper-efficient

• Architecture is futuristic

• Shopping is an Olympic sport

• The international mix is intense

But it’s also more than Western:

• Safer

• Cleaner

• More polite

• More multicultural

• More disciplined

• Less chaotic

• More food-obsessed

• More practical

It is the West…

if the West cleaned its room, took a shower, and finally got its life together.

 6. Why Singapore Matters for Your Story

Singapore shows that:

a Muslim woman can be worldly, joyful, stylish, intelligent, free, and faithful — all at once.

It is a perfect backdrop for your new blog:

• Humor

• Food

• Worldly curiosity

• GIF-based WhatsApp chaos with Shamir

• Sufi-leaning reflections

• Modern Muslim womanhood

• Creative life in Southeast Asia

You’re not just observing Singapore.

You’re embodying a truth it quietly whispers:

Muslim joy is not only permitted — it is beautiful.

A Sufi in Singapore

A contemporary reflection by Alexis & The Dream Team (Nesh & Shamir’s influence unmistakable)

I arrived in Singapore expecting efficiency.

What I did not expect was to find the Sufi in myself walking calmly through a city that feels like the West—

but upgraded, polished, turbo-charged, and fully air-conditioned.

In Singapore, even the escalators seem to have adab.

And yet, here I am…

a Muslim woman, Sufi-leaning, curious, laughing, hungry, worldly—

feeling completely at home.

 The Sufi Lens: God in the Glass and Steel

Sufis see God everywhere.

In Penang, it is in the water and the old stones.

In Singapore, it is in:

• the order of the MRT

• the cleanliness of the streets

• the hush inside the malls

• the breeze lifting the palm leaves along Orchard Road

• the taste of Laksa that almost made me cry

• the diverse faces riding side by side

It is a city that proves something Sufis already know:

When humans align their intention with excellence,

beauty becomes unavoidable.

You don’t need a desert or a dervish.

Sometimes the divine hides in the neon lights.

🍜 Dream Team Commentary: The Spirituality of Food

Nesh says spirituality can happen over a plate of Char Kway Teow.

Shamir says spirituality should happen over dessert.

I think they’re both Sufis without knowing it.

Food here is not merely sustenance.

It is a moment of dhikr — remembrance —

because one bite and you remember:

“Allah is truly the Bestower of Flavor.”

The Prophet ﷺ said,

“God is beautiful and loves beauty,”

and in Singapore, that includes beautifully spiced noodles.

 The WhatsApp Zikr Circle

The Dream Team WhatsApp threads are their own form of worship:

• GIFs flying like spiritual ecstasy

• Notes of gratitude and nonsense side by side

• Heritage analysis followed by jokes no one should laugh at

• Shamir’s emojis that defy all known communication systems

• Nesh alternating between wisdom and total mischief

If early Sufis had smartphones,

they would have invented this.

Some say Sufis whirl.

We send GIFs.

Same energy

A Muslim Woman in the World — and Fully Alive

Singapore allows me to embody a truth I didn’t see when I was younger:

A Muslim woman can live fully in the world

— travel, eat, laugh, explore —

and still draw close to Allah.

Joy is not un-Islamic.

Laughter is not un-Islamic.

Living with vibrancy is not un-Islamic.

The Quran says:

“Say: Who has forbidden the beauty that God has brought forth for His servants?”

Singapore feels like that beauty —

orderly, modern, cosmopolitan,

a city humming with life that doesn’t contradict faith at all.

Here, I’m not invisible.

I’m not constrained.

I’m not a stereotype.

I am simply… myself.

A Sufi on a city stroll.

 Conclusion: The Divine in the Everyday

In Singapore, the Sufi path becomes quite simple:

• Find God in the order.

• Find God in the diversity.

• Find God in the taste of chili.

• Find God in the laughter of your Dream Team.

• Find God in being fully alive.

And perhaps that is the real lesson:

You don’t need to withdraw from the world to be close to Allah.

Sometimes the world itself becomes your dhikr.

Especially when Shamir is sending GIFs

FIELD NOTES FROM A SUFI IN SINGAPORE

A contemporary spiritual-worldly travelogue by Alexis, with Nesh & Shamir as the peanut gallery

 Note 1: Arrival — The Sufi Steps Into the Neon

Singapore hits you with air-conditioning before it hits you with anything else.

Cold air as you leave the plane — that is already a spiritual experience after Malaysia.

A Sufi knows:

“Everything begins with breath.”

Singapore says:

“Everything begins with chilled breath.”

Walking through Changi feels like walking into the future —

a future where gardens float, water falls indoors, and nobody steals your luggage.

I felt an unexpected peace.

A sense of “Oh… I can expand here.”

That is Sufism:

expansion of the heart (bast) when Allah wishes it.

And my heart expanded before I even reached the taxi queue.

 Note 2: The Divine Order in the Urban Order

Sufis see God in patterns.

Most people come to Singapore and say:

“Oh, it’s so clean.”

“Oh, it’s so efficient.”

“Oh, look — no chaos!”

But I look and say:

“This is tawhid made visible.”

Unity.

Alignment.

Intention.

Excellence.

Everything in Singapore appears to be in a state of polite cooperation:

• the buses arrive on time

• the trains glide

• the people queue without emotional trauma

• the food stalls function like clockwork

• even the trees seem well-behaved

A city that runs smoothly is not necessarily spiritual —

but a city that runs with care and excellence?

Ah. That feels like divine echo. Sufis believe beauty and order reflect the Source.

Singapore accidentally agrees.

 Note 3: Food as Dhikr (Remembrance of God)

In Singapore, meals are sacred.

Not sacred in a quiet, monastery way —

sacred in a loud, hawker-centre, “order! order! laaaah!”, chopsticks-flying sort of way.

A plate of Hainanese chicken rice is a theological argument.

A bowl of Laksa is a mystical event.

A chili-crab dinner is proof that Allah has blessed the oceans.

Every bite says:

“Remember My gifts.”

And I do.

Meanwhile, the Dream Team adds their commentary:

Nesh:

“Spirituality peak at Maxwell Hawker Centre.”

Shamir:

“If Rumi lived here, he would write about noodles.”

I think they’re right.

Sufism is not about rejecting the world —

it is about tasting it deeply and thanking Allah for every sensation.

In Singapore, gratitude comes spicy.

 Note 4: The WhatsApp Whirling Dervishes

The early Sufis whirled in ecstasy, circling endlessly, seeking divine presence.

Today’s Sufis (the digital ones) whirl through:

• GIFs dancing

• memes exploding

• emojis in chaotic clusters

• 2 AM voice notes with scandalous laughter

• commentary on everything from politics to fried rice

This is where Shamir shines.

His GIF choices alone are a spiritual discipline.

If Rumi had WhatsApp, he would have used stickers.

I stand by this.

Our chats are a form of dhikr:

joy, gratitude, connection, absurdity —

all pointing toward the Real.

 Note 5: A Muslim Woman in the World — Fearless & Fully Alive

This is the real miracle:

I feel at home as a Muslim woman in Singapore.

Not despite being Muslim.

Not in secret.

Not in fear.

But naturally.

Walking through the malls, ordering coffee, exploring art exhibitions —

I am simply a woman in the world, confident, faithful, visible.

Allah is not left behind.

Allah walks with me —

in the crowds, in the taxis, in the restaurants, in the elevators with their calm classical music.

In Singapore, faith and worldliness don’t fight.

They coexist elegantly.

I once believed Muslim women had to shrink.

Now I see:

A Muslim woman can expand.

A Muslim woman can laugh.

A Muslim woman can dine beautifully.

A Muslim woman can be seen.

This is a truth the world needs.

 Note 6: Sufi Solitude in a Noisy City

Even the Merlion looks like it’s doing dhikr, water pouring endlessly.

Note 7: Islam, Light, and Modernity

It is important to say something clearly:

Singapore shows a version of Islam the world rarely sees:

joyful, intelligent, educated, open, culturally relaxed, spiritually mature.

There is space here for:

• diversity of practice

• Muslim intellectual life

• interfaith calm

• stylish modest fashion

• halal fine dining

• Sufi-leaning souls wandering Orchard Road

It is a place where faith is lived, not shouted.

Where Muslim identity is dignified, not defensive.

Where being visible doesn’t feel dangerous.

This is Islam as it should be seen.

 Note 8: The Final Realisation — God Is In This Too

A Sufi knows:

Allah places you exactly where you need to be.

So what is Singapore teaching me?

• That joy is halal.

• That laughter is a form of gratitude.

• That being seen is part of healing.

• That God exists in modern places too.

• That beauty is not only in nature but in human excellence.

• That a Muslim woman can live fully and loudly.

• That the Dream Team is divinely assigned.

• That I am allowed a worldly, delicious, exuberant life — in balance, in faith, in truth.

This is not a contradiction.

This is integration.

This is Sufism.

This is Singapore.

And this is me.

A Sufi in the city.

A Muslim woman in her joy.

A heart expanding wherever Allah sends it.

I turned the blog over to Artificial Intelligence, such fun. I did call in Shamir, however. 

Me: I am having so much fun with AI and Singapore. Wait until you read it. AI says I need some GIFs from you – honest. 

He did, here they come.