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When Loren Lung Chi-ho and Lau Chun-ming first encountered the CLAP@JC programme, they were both grappling with uncertainty, emotional turbulence and the fear that they would never find their place in the world.
Lung had just scored four points in his Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE) exams, feeling hopeless and disconnected, while Lau struggled to reconcile her love of theatre with the pressure to pursue a “practical” career.
Today, both are registered social workers, dedicated to helping others find purpose and direction.
“I couldn’t see a future. I didn’t know who I was or what I was meant to be,” Lung, now 29, recalled. Bullied in his younger years and still grieving the loss of his father, he found himself spiralling emotionally.
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“I was so lost back then, mentally and emotionally. But then I was introduced to CLAP@JC by a school social worker, and that was the turning point.”
For Lau, now 22, the journey was equally profound. “I used to think having a steady job meant giving up what you love,” she said.