By Paul Yung
As we step into March, our Muslim friends and neighbours are either in the final stretch of Ramadan or preparing to celebrate Hari Raya Aidilfitri. In Subang Jaya, you can already feel it. The bazaars are buzzing, families are planning balik kampung trips, and WhatsApp groups are alive with menu discussions.
I’ve always admired Ramadan, not just for the spiritual significance, but for the discipline it represents.
For a whole month, millions of people wake up before dawn, fast through the day, control their impulses, guard their speech, increase their prayers and give more generously. That level of self-control is intentional, structured and really tough.
And that is why fasting brings an introspective discovery that is spiritually enlightening.
But what happens after Raya?
In business and in life, I’ve noticed that most people can be disciplined for a short season but very few build a disciplined life.
It is easy to commit to something when there is a clear start and end date. Completing a 30-day challenge, pushing through a fasting month, following a fitness programme before a holiday or hitting a sales target before the quarter ends.
We rise to the occasion, focus and tighten up.Then once the season ends, so does the intensity. This is where the real difference lies. Builders are not seasonal, builders are steady.
Ramadan trains the muscle of discipline. The question is whether we allow that muscle to weaken once the celebration begins.
Hari Raya is about forgiveness, humility and reconnecting with family. Seeking forgiveness from our parents, our spouse, our friends, even our colleagues, requires emotional maturity. It requires us to lower our ego. That is leadership.
In my experience, long term success, whether in business or in family, is rarely about big dramatic moves. It is about small consistent behaviours repeated over years.
Controlling your temper when you are stressed. Managing your finances when no one is watching. Showing up for your children even when you are tired. Doing the right thing even when shortcuts are available. Calm discipline compounds.
I often remind my team that intensity impresses people, but consistency builds institutions. If Ramadan helped you become more patient, don’t leave that patience behind after Raya. If you became more generous, don’t let generosity become seasonal.
If you found more clarity through reflection, protect time weekly to think, even when work gets busy again. Structure creates freedom, and discipline creates options.
In Malaysia, we are blessed with beautiful celebrations throughout the year. Each one reminds us of something important, but reminders alone do not change lives, systems do.
As we gather around dining tables filled with ketupat and rendang, laugh with cousins we haven’t seen in months and hug our parents a little tighter, I hope we also carry something else forward. Carry the restraint, humility and the calm strength that Ramadan built.
Because anyone can be focused for 30 days. Very few remain focused for 10 years. And the future belongs to those who build steadily.
To all who celebrate, Selamat Hari Raya Aidilfitri, Maaf Zahir dan Batin.
May this season not only renew your spirit, but also strengthen your discipline for the long road ahead.













