Monday, September 14, 2009

Get a Real Job

I'm 32 years old. I have been 'granted' a 4-year degree that gets me into lots of career doors, and I am in the middle of a master's degree that will open even more. I have yet to find a job that inspires me here at home. I love school and learning new things (though I'm less-than-enamoured with my current program). I started the master's degree because after coming home from my last trip to Korea I thought it was probably time to get a 'real job', do something with my life that the rest of the world thinks is worthy of my intelligence and abilities. "Leaving your friends and family behind so you can go caravanning around the world, living in a foreign country, travelling to yet different countries on long weekends and holidays - this is for kids," says the World. "When are you going to grow up and make something of yourself?"


Well World, I've taken your words to heart. I've spent a lot of time in the past 2 years thinking about what kind of footprint I want to leave behind, what kind of impact I want to have on the world around me. I'm aware that I'm a good counselor, and that I will make a fabulous child psychologist (thanks for the reinforcement there by the way!).


Here's the point for pause though: Who says that teaching in a foreign country can't be a career too? Who says that it isn't a valid contribution for me to go to work every day in order to teach children a skill that can hugely impact their future? What part of the scenario in which I wake up happy and excited to go to work every day is not in my best interest? Who says I have to do what everyone else is doing at the same time they're doing it? Can you answer me any of those questions while you're telling me what to do World?


Here's what I think: My happiness is important. Who I am is not the same as what I do. If I can wake up every day happy and excited about the adventure that has become my life, why shouldn't I choose that over "putting my nose to the grindstone," "doing what I have to do to get by," and sleeping my way through life until I get to a more exciting part?


It seems that there is only one answer if I am to be true to myself. I know that it may disappoint some other people in my life, but how can I do what makes them happy if it means that I can't be true to my own heart? I can't. It's time that I figure out how to make my happiness come first again in life, for me to remember who I am, what I want and where I'm going. It's just that time... so look out World!

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Why on Earth...

For some, travelling to a faraway country where the people, the language and the culture are all different than your own, is just a ‘lark,’ something to do before they force their square-peg-selves into the round-peg-lives that home holds waiting. I say this because it seems that most people I met travelling (save for those 1 or 2 I can think of that rushed back home after hating every second of living abroad) are definitely square-pegs. They don’t necessarily fit in with, or agree with, the paths that life sets before them, (graduate, go to school, graduate again, get a job, keep the job, get married, get a new job, have kids, retire, buy a motorhome, blahblahblah) and they go off in search of some kind of adventure or excitement, leaving friends and family behind to make a mark of their own upon the world.


It seems to be considered pretty normal for people to stay a year, mayyyyyyyyybe two in Korea, before returning home to their normal lives. Once you've been there more than two years you start down that road where people call you a lifer, and there are some hushed conversations about you with new teachers that come over about  how you prefer Korea to living in your own country.


Now most people seem to manage to return home after their teaching experience to find life is pretty damn unchanged for everyone who stayed behind (other than the occasional new hairstyle/boyfriend/tv show). The biggest group seems to be able to jump back into it all, either one foot at a time or both feet at once. There are many of us though who return home and feel a bit lost, a reverse culture-shock that you never really seem to get over, always homesick for the land that was every so briefly considered to be home. Me - I'm one of the lost ones.


I loved my time in Korea, both trips. I loved life there, and every day was out of the ordinary, even after being there for a couple of years in a row! I enjoyed the people I worked with, my jobs, the kids I taught, the moms I taught, the grocers down the road, the dude that owned the pet shop, the Saturday morning bus driver – all of it! But don’t get me wrong here, it wasn’t all roses and candy apples! I didn’t love the smog, the pushing and shoving in the crowded grocery store aisles, missing my friends and my mom (and taco bell!) – but other than that, I loved every frigginminute of it.


Now I think I've already discussed the fact (I think) that I didn’t come home for myself from either trip. During my first trip in 2003 I got myself involved in a really yucky (hindsight being what it is!) relationship with a New Yorker who was living in Seoul, got engaged (more bad choices), and came home in 2005 because he was ready to. The second time I went in 2006, and I had to come home before I was even gone a year because there were family issues and my mom needed me. I've been home now for just over 2 years and I've wanted to go back ever since.


After I spent the required amount of time at home with my Mom I moved back to my 'old' city, applied for grad school (got in), got a job (and then a few more along the way as I tried to find something to do that I could love), started grad school, got involved in a few community groups, found a decent job, and tried to buy into the life-at-home. I worked on ignoring the loud voice at the back of my head that chattered on and on about going back, about skipping out of this version of life that feels like a grind, and returning to the speed of life that made me happy. I think mostly what has kept me here is graduate school, and the idea that I'm getting older, and it's getting time now to choose a career, have a grownup job, do right by the family, and all that crap. I call it crap because it seems that no matter how I try to make it fit and make myself believe it, it doesn't and I don't. I don't want to buy a house. I don't want a new car. I don't care if I can go up to visit family every month or so, I don't care if there's a taco bell on every corner, and I don't care that my post-post-secondary education is going to help me make the world a better place. The thing I keep getting hung up on is this - how am I to make the world a better place if I can't even be happy in it myself?


So here I still sit in small town Alberta taking classes, working in a good full-time job, visiting my family, hanging out occasionally with friends. Why on EARTH am I still here?

My to-do List (May it Continue to Grow!)

Take a 'real' Korean class (check!)

Spend a weekend in the country (check!)

Try some kind of art class (maybe painting?)

Take the ferry to a farming island and hang out for a weekend minbak-style in the summer

Check out some kind of art exhibit (check!)

Go to Everland and see the animal safari

Go to Caribbean Bay in the summer

Take a martial art for 6 months consecutively

Cliff dive over near ChiriSan, if I can find the spot

Practice yoga for 3 months (in a class maybe?) (check!)

Take a digital photography course

Spend my weekends doing stuff (check!)

Make Korean friends (check!)

Visit JeJu Island

Do the Vagina Monologues again

Go to the fun concerts that visit (check!)

Work as a counselor in one of the schools

Reconnect with old friends (check!)

Join a hiking/touring group and do stuff (check!)

Let go of my obsessiong w/converting KRW to CAD (check!)

Do a 5km run just for the fun of it

See the Broadway shows that visit

Climb a mountain (check!)

Go to the mud festival in July (check!)

Keep in touch regularly with friends and family back at home

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