Anthropological Field Notes
Ethnographic observations from across Asia, drawn from fieldwork, travel, and the daily practice of operating within cultures that approach ageing, family, care, and death in profoundly different ways.
These are not academic papers. They are practitioner field notes: specific, situated, sometimes uncomfortable. They document what I see, hear, and learn in the communities, facilities, and households where senior living is not an abstraction but a daily reality.
The anthropological lens doesn’t replace operational thinking; it sharpens it. Understanding why a Shanghainese grandmother refuses to leave her lane house, or how a Javanese family negotiates elder care responsibilities, directly shapes how we design facilities, train staff, and structure services.
Topics & Geographies
Field notes will cover observations from China, Singapore, Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, and other Asian markets where I have worked or conducted research. Themes include:
Rituals and daily routines of ageing in different cultural contexts
Family decision-making around care transitions
The physical and social architecture of ageing-in-place
Cultural attitudes toward institutional care, death, and dependency
Encounters between “modern” care models and traditional practices
Field notes will be published progressively. For updates, connect on LinkedIn.