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Tuesday, February 3, 2026
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When tired rakyat stop clapping

Between cost-of-living pressures, endless patience and policies that rarely touch Mondays, the rakyat are simply running out of energy.

LET Makcik start gently because we are polite people – even when exhausted.

The rakyat are not angry all the time; we are tired – bone-deep, soul-level tired. The kind of tired that no long weekend, motivational quote or “we hear you” press statement can fix.

And before anyone gets defensive and reaches for a committee, let me save you the trouble. This isn’t opposition talk. This isn’t negativity. This is observation – something you may recognise if you’ve been reading theSun like Makcik suggested.

So sit, breathe and let Makcik explain why the rakyat are yawning through your announcements.

Tired of running just to stay in the same place

Ministers, the rakyat wake up early, sleep late, work harder and somehow still end up poorer. Salaries creep but prices sprint. Groceries now require strategic planning, emotional resilience and sometimes a quiet stare before items are returned to the shelf. It is not because we are dramatic; it is because maths is unforgiving.

When people say “cost of living”, they don’t mean an abstract economic term; they mean standing in the supermarket, wondering which item can be sacrificed this week without sacrificing dignity.

If your policy sounds impressive but doesn’t make life lighter, it becomes background noise. And Malaysians are already drowning in noise.

Tired of being told to be patient (again)

Patience is something Malaysians have – in abundance. We queue, we wait, we tahan, we adapt and we joke through hardship because crying is inefficient.

But patience without progress becomes fatigue. When the same problems resurface year after year – education stress, transport, healthcare strain, job insecurity – the rakyat do not explode; we sigh. That sigh should worry you more than anger – because tired people don’t riot; they disengage.

Tired of announcements that don’t change our Mondays

Press conferences are energetic, slides are glossy, hashtags are catchy but Monday mornings still look the same – bleak. Traffic still crawls, parents still worry and young people still ask: “Is this all there is?”

The sandwich generation is quietly crumbling under responsibility no policy speech has acknowledged properly. If policies don’t translate into lived relief, they remain… speeches. And the rakyat have listened to enough speeches to last several lifetimes.

Tired of feeling like data, not people

Somewhere along the line, the rakyat became “stakeholders”, “demographics” and “case studies”.

But we are also tired mothers, anxious fathers, burnt-out workers, confused youths and elderly parents who just want dignity without paperwork that feels like an obstacle course.

When policies are designed without empathy, people feel it immediately. You can’t spreadsheet human exhaustion. If a policy requires 10 clarifications, three counters and a hotline that never answers, the rakyat don’t feel helped; we feel tested.

Tired of being told the problem is us

This one needs a gentle lempang (symbolic). Every time something goes wrong, there’s a subtle suggestion that the rakyat need to adjust their attitudes, mindsets or expectations. Work longer, spend wiser, be grateful and be resilient. We already are. Resilience without relief becomes exploitation wearing a motivational badge.

Tired but not hopeless

Now listen carefully, dear ministers, because this part matters. The rakyat are tired, yes – but we are not cynical by default. We want this country to work because we still care. We still show up, pay taxes, vote, contribute, complain and hope.

But hope needs evidence; not perfection, not miracles – just consistent, visible effort that puts people before optics.

Small wins matter. Clear communication matters. Admitting mistakes matters. Fixing them matters even more.

What are the rakyat actually asking for? Not grand visions that only make sense in conference rooms. Not slogans that age badly. Not empathy expressed only during disasters.

We want:

stability that lets us plan life without fear;

policies that reduce pressure, not add to it;

leaders who listen even when the feedback is uncomfortable; and

progress we can feel, not just applaud politely.

That’s it. No drama.

Makcik’s closing note (because someone has to say it)

Dear ministers, if you’re wondering why applause feels quieter these days, it is not because the rakyat are ungrateful; it is because we are tired.

Read theSun. Read the room. Read the exhaustion between the lines. Because a tired rakyat don’t need more motivation; we need leadership that understands fatigue is not laziness – it’s a signal. And signals, darling, are meant to be responded to.

Now go. Let the policies rest on empathy; not just ambition.

Azura Abas is the associate editor of theSun.

Comments: letters@thesundaily.com

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