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  • Chance of a Lifetime

    Sit back and buckle up, this is going to be one heck of a story.

    I love my job at the daycare, I truly do. But unfortunately I've hit the ceiling. I've advanced as far as I can go there, and it's still not the job I was hoping for when I graduated from college. Most disappointing, they insist on a bachelor's degree to even be considered for the job, and I'm making as much there as I was when I worked for a time at uBash.

    Last year, I applied to some 250 schools and districts across New England, trying to sell myself by stating I held two bachelor's degrees, was bilingual, held my license, was willing to relocate, etc. No bites. It was disheartening to log in to the job sites I had bookmarked and find I had been rejected. Last year just..wasn't a good year for me. I think I scared the parents a bit because I got so depressed.

    Mom came to me and pitched the idea of joining TFA, a teacher's peace corps program. The deal was I would be "stationed" in a high need area in the States for two years, but I'd be paid a yearly salary, a stipend hen my contract was up, could work toward my Master's degree, and would get the experience that the schools were looking for.

    So I applied, and a week later was asked if I'd be interested in working in high need areas such as the Carolinas, Las Vegas, and Florida. I said yes, of course, I'd be willing to go to those places if I needed to, sign me up.

    At the end of September I got a lengthy email from them that, to summarize, said "You're awesome, but no." I honestly cried for days.

    But after being rejected by them, I started getting offers from smaller corps and organizations, so I gave them all a look. Nothing really appealed to me.

    October I get an offer to apply for an immersion program funded by a certain famous mouse. This program would station me in China, and I'd be working in a classroom teaching English to Chinese children. Since it was what I went to school for (in a way), and heck, it's the Mouse, I applied. But when I hadn't heard anything by December last year, I gave up on it.


    Fast forward to the end of March this year. My uncle had passed away (don't worry, we're all doing okay, the poor guy had been so ill that when his time came we all knew it was for the best), and I was meeting the family at the funeral home for the wake. We hadn't seen them for almost two years, so they all had questions about what i was up to. I shared my story with them, and they all said the same thing: something better has to be coming along.

    I get home from the wake, check my email, and find a message from HR for the Mouse program, wanting to schedule an interview with me within the next 3 days from them. I squealed so loudly Mom thought I had seen a mouse scoot across the living room floor, until I told her what it was.

    Had the interview the next day over Skype (right after the funeral...that was tough, I knew I was gonna be a mess by the time I got home), and was offered the job right away, but they gave me the weekend to read up on the area and the program because I had honestly forgotten about it. Then the following Monday, I accepted the offer.

    I start my new job in China on August 2. I'm beyond thrilled. Closest I've ever had to leaving the country was driving up to Niagara Falls when I was 14, now I'm flying all the way across the globe. The program is paying me nearly three times what I make at the daycare now, is also paying my rent while in China, pays for my ticket over there and my ticket back when the contract is up. And I won't be alone; I have a friend from college who has been teaching in China in a similar program since last spring, so when I told him I was heading over there he was thrilled. We plan on meeting up and getting a place together to try and save some money, plus he knows where everything is over there and can help me find my feet once I land. The only thing that squicks me is the flight over. From Logan to Hangzhou (where I've been placed) it's almost 13 hrs. I'm so skittish about flying, I have no idea how I'm going to manage it.

    The last few weeks have kept me busy getting all my stuff together. My passport just arrived in the mail yesterday (super cool, first person in the family to have one), and I'm taking a TEFL-C course online that when I finish will net me a copy of Rosetta Stone in Mandarin (so I can find my way around) as well as make me qualified to teach English as a foreign language (which could help me land a job when I come back)

    So there's my story. I'm still wiggly and excited over the whole thing. Mom thinks my uncle and grandfather (who were inseparable when together) got together and raised some hell up there until somebody said "All right! Whaddaya want?" and they said "Well...."

  • #2
    Congrats! That is an amazing opportunity!

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    • #3
      That's awesome! Such an incredible opportunity!

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      • #4
        WOW, congrats! You're in for the culture shock of your life. China is sooo different! It's great to have a friend over there to help you getting started. Be prepared to get stared at alot. LOL

        I have been there a few times for business purposes, I was quite happy to have my collegue at my side, he's fluent in Mandarin and Cantonese. Now we have relocaled our factory back to Germany... no more trips to China, that's about the only drawback. Those trips were great.
        No trees were killed in the posting of this message.

        However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.

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        • #5
          Awesome! Best of luck over there!
          "Enough expository banter. It's time we fight like men. And ladies. And ladies who dress like men. For Gilgamesh...IT'S MORPHING TIME!"
          - Gilgamesh, Final Fantasy V

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          • #6
            Congratulations.
            Customers should always be served . . . to the nearest great white.

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            • #7
              Congratulations- make the most of it and enjoy it!

              Quoth BeeMused View Post

              I have been there a few times for business purposes, I was quite happy to have my collegue at my side, he's fluent in Mandarin and Cantonese. Now we have relocaled our factory back to Germany... no more trips to China, that's about the only drawback. Those trips were great.
              Your trips to Germany could be equally as good- it's such a beautiful but completely underrated country.

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              • #8
                Quoth muppet101 View Post
                Your trips to Germany could be equally as good- it's such a beautiful but completely underrated country.
                Ummmm.... I live in Germany. But yeah, there are some beautiful areas well worth visiting here and not just on see Europe in 10 days tours.
                No trees were killed in the posting of this message.

                However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.

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                • #9
                  Wow, that is awesome, Nashida! I am really jealous! (j/k) You will have a wonderful time over there.

                  I'm not a great flyer either; is it possible to take an MP3 player on the plane with you? (I have no idea what's allowable anymore.) I find if I can listen to soothing music I might actually drop off to sleep -- or at least relax a lot, LOL.

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                  • #10
                    Oh wow that sounds amazing! Huge congratulations!
                    Ne auderis delere orbem rigidum meum! - Don't you dare erase my hard disk!

                    This is Tech Support, not Customer Service.
                    What's the difference?
                    We're allowed to tell you "no".

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                    • #11
                      Also if you can read while flying, get a couple books from your favorite authors (the kind you have trouble putting down), so you can actually finish them. A good book that draws you in can really distract from flight tension. Try to sleep on the flight, I find a window seat is best for sleeping as you don't have your seatmates constantly going past to the facilities.

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                      • #12
                        Good luck Nashida! From one teacher to another, hope things run smoothly.
                        The best professors are mad scientists! -Zoom

                        Now queen of USSR-Land...

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                        • #13
                          Chat up Slytovhand over on Fratching for some firsthand information; he's been doing this sort of thing for a while now.
                          "English is the result of Norman men-at-arms attempting to pick up Saxon barmaids and is no more legitimate than any of the other results."
                          - H. Beam Piper

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                          • #14
                            Shame on me for bumping this after a month, but I have a bit of an update.

                            The paperwork for my visa has been collected, and it was submitted this past Wednesday. I don't know when that will clear, I've been told it can take at least a month. I will get my travel itinerary when it clears.

                            In my free time, I've been browsing some real estate sites to see what kind of apartments I can get with the housing bonus the Mouse will give me per month. It's kind of fun to see just what you can get with that much, when that same amount here in USD wouldn't even get a studio apartment (at least in the city in which I live, anyway).

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