lifestyle

M'sian City Life #5: I Was A College Dropout And I Spent A Night With A Prostitute

"Her name was Jaz and she was 19 years old from an isolated village.”

Cover image via SAYS

When Nicky Lim was three, his parents got a divorce.

At 17, he dropped out of college 10 months after he started a pre-university program.

Image via SAYS

Nicky wanted to study mechanical engineering but his father shot the idea down. He considered hotel management and business, but these courses never seemed to be good enough for his father and stepmother as they continued to disapprove of his choices.

There was also the physical and verbal abuse at home.

When he was 18, the arguments and abuse at home drove him to leave home.

"I wanted to make fast money because I wanted to shove it in my dad’s face. I want to show him that I don’t need him to succeed," Nicky said.

Photo used for illustration purposes only.

Image via Coupay

Nicky landed his first job at an international courier company when he decided to move out from his dad's place.

"I decided that I wasn't going to deal with this abuse anymore. I didn’t have anywhere else to stay but I found a house near my workplace, and I was begging the landlord to let me spend the night. But he refused, and I ended up sleeping in a storeroom on the floor, with no air-con or fan."

Nicky survived the next two years on his own and moved on to do multi-level marketing (MLM) to earn quick money, but he stopped after he realised that he didn’t want to sacrifice relationships for business.

More hardships awaited Nicky. He ​didn’t only find himself sleeping in another​ storeroom on a sofa infested with fungus, but had to endure living in that condition for six months.

Nicky met a friend who recruited him to Singapore to start a business. His friend promised him a place to stay, food, and some allowance.

Little did he know that he was actually going to stay in ​(yet another) storeroom full of boxes, sleep on a fungal-infected sofa and survive on instant noodles and plain white rice for the next six months of his life.

"I was just so stubborn and I just tahan (persevered) until I came to the point when I told myself, 'This is just not working out'," Nicky said.

When the promised job in Singapore did not materialise, Nicky returned to KL and soon landed a job as an investment salesman while he took up extra roles as a driver and did marketing for the same company.

One day, as Nicky was attending a business deal meeting with his boss, a client "treated" everyone with a prostitute for the night.

Nicky respectfully declined but he finally gave in to the client's stern request, and took it as a chance to get to know a new friend.

Photo used for illustration purposes only.

Image via Getty Images

"Her name was Jaz and she was 19 years old from an isolated village on the outskirts of Thailand where people lived below the poverty line. As we spoke, she shared her experience of growing up as a village kid running and cycling around paddy fields before coming here after being promised a lucrative job and was abruptly introduced to prostitution," he called.

Nicky found out that Jaz was enticed by the promise of a prosperous future of wealth and freedom. Trapped in the trade and thrill of fast money, Jaz used drugs and alcohol to numb her pain as "both young and middle aged men would come over daily, pay a fee to sexually violate and assault her."

"The night soon ended and she tightly grabbed both my hands, left a gentle peck on my cheek and thanked me for being a friend and not a predator. Speechless and reeling in from feeling unexplainably broken, I went into my car and wept uncontrollably," Nicky shared.

"I cannot do this anymore," Nicky said, after that personal encounter with the prostitute.

During this time, Nicky moved back to live with his father for the sake of his grandparents.

While all this was happening, Nicky was losing his hair rapidly due to the different stresses from work, family and life. He continued to struggle with his self-confidence and suicidal tendencies.

"I was 18 but I looked like I was 30."

Nicky during his investment salesman days.

Image via Nicky Lim

"Everyone would be talking about my hair. When I was working as an investment salesman, people refused to buy (investments) from me because I was wearing a hat to cover my hair. I even purposely went home late so that nobody could talk about my hair. I had no social life, and barely had any money," Nicky recalled.

"My friends challenged me to shave my head, and so I did. I wasn't sure what people think of me but people begin to tell me that I look pretty good. It was amazing to receive all this positive reinforcement."

That encounter with the prostitute was the last straw that made Nicky quit his job in November 2014. He slipped in and out of depression until he discovered hope again at a church camp in October 2015.

After the camp, Nicky founded his own company, his fifth business venture.

Nicky speaking to a group of students.

Image via Nicky Lim

Nicky founded Be+: The Social Enterprise, which stands for Bridging Opportunities Towards A +better Community, aims to empower and inspire others through motivational speeches and business consultancy. Although the business is still at its infancy stage, Nicky has engaged with many people with the desire to inspire many lives with his motivational talks.

"Previously, I started four businesses out of selfish reasons because I wanted to make as much money as I could. I failed all four times. This time, I wanted to start something that creates and add values for others," Nicky said.

Nicky has been successfully running his company single-handedly for the last few months and he believes this fifth business venture is a God-inspired one.

Now, at the age of 25, Nicky is happy that he now has the platform and opportunity to reach out and help those in need. He also hopes to publish a book in the near future.

Nicky receiving an appreciation from Rotary Club KL.

Image via Nicky Lim

Although Nicky and his father live in the same house now, they rarely talk.

"As much as I hate to admit this but despite all that has happened, I'd like to believe that all my dad ever wanted for me was to do well and be the better person in life. He just probably didn't know how to teach me and over the years."

Nicky in February 2016.

Image via SAYS

Living in the city ain’t a piece of cake but it could also be exciting and adventurous. How are you coping? How are you making the best out of things? Do you have a story or experience to share?

SUBMIT YOUR STORY NOW, or work on it and send it soon. Share a personal experience, your story as an urban city-dweller in Malaysia, whether it’s yours or from someone you know. FB message us or email [email protected].

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Stay tuned for the next episode!

Previously on M'sian City Life #4, Francis Poh shared his experience as an animal rescuer and his special method of getting people to adopt puppies and kittens:

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