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dagi
Joined: 01 Jan 2004 Posts: 425
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Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2004 6:04 pm Post subject: ... |
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Someone asked where I wanted to go. Well, I've been in contact with a school in Turkey and they told me to apply in sept/oct and if they have a position available will then consider my application. The school would be in Istanbul and the job's just a dream, mainly because they employ German language teachers which is what I am studying for. As I am not a native speaker of English, China would be my second option. Been there before and quite liked it. |
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Weona

Joined: 11 Apr 2004 Posts: 166 Location: Chile
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Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2004 6:26 pm Post subject: |
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Go abroad! Go! Teach! Seriously... statistics show that you're more likely to meet a partner abroad than at home. At least that's how it was with me. And yes, it had a lot to do with an exotic white girl being in a country with a predominantly dark-skinned population which made men naturally drawn to me (you will know which ones to weed out and which ones actually want to get to know you for YOU).... but if you're careful you will meet him.
So yeah, in my personal experience, I would say that you have better odds at meeting someone and making a family elsewhere. If anything though... don't think 30 is old. I wouldn't settle down just yet. Go and have fun for a while before thinking of mister right. And then eventually... he'll just magically appear. They usually do when you least expect it.
I'm not a guidance counselor, spiritual adviser, or fortune teller.... I promise. |
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leby26

Joined: 30 Jan 2004 Posts: 68
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Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2004 7:13 pm Post subject: |
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I'm a newbie too, and when I tell people about my plans about living abroad most of their reactions are either laughter, disbelief (laughter out of disbelief - 'o you silly girl'), and a lot of them ask when I plan to 'get a husband during all of this' which always makes me laugh (again, laughter out of disbelief). To some extent it worries me mainly b/c marriage is so equated with 'settling down', something I don't plan on doing for a while (in any capacity), so I can see it being difficult establishing relationships in my haphazard plans - but to be honest, I would rather spend my life with someone who wants to explore and dream as much as I do or someone from another culture who can teach me more than I could ever know on my own than give up my dreams and stick around my hometown waiting for some elusive 'mr right'! You meet the person you love when you love life on your own and are ready to share it with someone wonderful - follow your own dreams and plans and you'll meet him/her along the way - don't think too much, just trust it  |
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Aramas
Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Posts: 874 Location: Slightly left of Centre
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Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 2:13 am Post subject: |
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I haven't even told my family. I'll send them a postcard  |
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Eijse
Joined: 17 Dec 2003 Posts: 119 Location: Yemen (Aden)
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Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 5:47 am Post subject: |
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...
Last edited by Eijse on Tue Aug 31, 2004 4:29 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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hesterprynne
Joined: 16 Sep 2003 Posts: 386
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Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 9:03 am Post subject: fertility charts and statistics |
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[quote]hesterprynne wrote:
But a year abroad as a teacher probably won't make a difference one way or the other. Five years would.
Why do you think this?[/quote]
JOE GAHONA- statistics and fertility charts- there are certain ages when your chances of becoming pregnant take a big dip |
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shmooj

Joined: 11 Sep 2003 Posts: 1758 Location: Seoul, ROK
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Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 10:20 am Post subject: |
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leby26 wrote: |
To some extent it worries me mainly b/c marriage is so equated with 'settling down', something I don't plan on doing for a while (in any capacity), |
don't bank on it. My wife lived in the same village from birth until she married me. Since then, she has spent over 7 years of her decade long marriage outside her native land. If she had wanted to settle down, staying single would have been a safer option  |
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justcolleen

Joined: 07 Jan 2004 Posts: 654 Location: Egypt, baby!
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Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 11:03 pm Post subject: |
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leby26 wrote: |
You meet the person you love when you love life on your own and are ready to share it with someone wonderful |
One word: Wow.
Many more words: That was profound, beautiful, and enlightening.
I tried that marriage thing before. It was bad. I don't do marriage well. It's that thing, commonly called courtesy, where you tell someone you're leaving and when you'll be home, and all that jazz. I'm just not the type, and I'll never put anyone through that again.
There is much to be said for being single and independent. It's been working for me.
Aramas wrote: |
I haven't even told my family. I'll send them a postcard  |
Oh! People behave like you're running from a felony charge! It's absurd, and I can understand not wanting to say it OUT LOUD. Does that ever change?
Colleen |
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Alitas

Joined: 19 May 2003 Posts: 187 Location: Maine
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Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2004 11:27 pm Post subject: |
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There's three rules about lovin' abroad (and I am talking locals).
1. Your beloved has the same level of education as you.
2. Your beloved has the same amount of dough in the bank as you, even if it is local currency. You have $500, he has 500 pesos.
3. Your beloved has access to a visa to live somewhere other than his own country and that access is not through you. (Eliminates the jumpers).
(These three rules came from a wise man named Hillbilly, from the DR1.com board. That place is inundated with posts from tourists who have met their "true love" and then later posts about how they were burned, or how things worked out. Different scenario, I know, but I felt these were valuable to post.)
Maybe this will help as you go on your discerning way. |
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Aramas
Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Posts: 874 Location: Slightly left of Centre
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Posted: Thu Apr 29, 2004 3:13 am Post subject: |
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justcolleen wrote: |
Aramas wrote: |
I haven't even told my family. I'll send them a postcard  |
Oh! People behave like you're running from a felony charge! It's absurd, and I can understand not wanting to say it OUT LOUD. Does that ever change?
Colleen |
Not at all. My family are barbarians, albeit lovable ones. Firstly. I never tell them anything I wouldn't want to see on the front page of the local paper, since anything I say becomes the main topic of conversation with everyone they speak to for weeks afterwards. Secondly, I couldn't bear the ignorant questions and the recycled tabloid cliches regarding my destination - not to mention the inevitable 'When are you going to settle down?', 'Perhaps it's time you started to think about the future?', and my all time favourite 'Whatever happened to<insert random ex-gf's name>? We were looking forward to welcoming her into the family', etc..
After all these years (and girls) they still think I'm probably gay because I'm not a suburban breeder (and it doesn't help that I speak 'properly' and use words of more that two syllables), and they can't imagine anything else. They believe that there are only two kinds of people in the world - people like them and people that wish they were like them. I'll never understand why the peasantry assume that non-conformists invariably lust after hairy bottoms. Where's the connection? The mind boggles.
I suppose I could say "Look Dad, I'm not even vaguely interested in men's bums. I just happen to be a pretentious tw#t - live with it".
Unfortunately he wouldn't know what 'pretentious' meant and would be too proud to admit it. Then he would criticise my pronunciation of tw#t. *sigh* |
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khmerhit
Joined: 31 May 2003 Posts: 1874 Location: Reverse Culture Shock Unit
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Posted: Thu Apr 29, 2004 6:38 am Post subject: |
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Let me guess, Aramas, you're an Essex lad. Correct?
No, you're nt even a pom, are you? Yes you are, from Newcastle or somewheres.
I met a guy like you in Cambodia--working class Londoner with a spot of education, MA in fact. he went back to blighty to get his ma and returned to cambodia to mary his local gorlfriend. most interestin guy, but working class thru and thru.
Edyacatiuon is a funny thing, innnit? |
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Aramas
Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Posts: 874 Location: Slightly left of Centre
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Posted: Thu Apr 29, 2004 4:45 pm Post subject: |
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lol - close. That's Newcastle in Australia. 'Working class' has a different meaning here. My mother was from Melbourne and terribly bourgeois - she even had elocution at school - lol. I take after her. Fortunately my parents were divorced when I was young. My father then married a rather bovine country girl who can even spell her own name on a good day - if she mouthes the words. My brother is certainly not the sharpest tool in the shed, and is a constant reminder of what can happen if you breed with someone posessing the intellectual prowess of a shiny pebble.
I spent summers with my mother in Sydney, and it was a refreshing change to spend time with her friends, among whom were writers, musicians, film directors, IT people etc. In the 70's she travelled overland to the UK with her Rhodesian ex-mercenary boyfriend. Her adventures formed an interesting counterpoint to my mundane suburban upbringing.
When she died she was the managing editor of a Sydney publishing company and three months from completing her Ph.D.
So it would be inaccurate of me to claim that I was 'working class through and through'. It would perhaps be fair to say that I have been exposed to a working class environment and found it somewhat tedious  |
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khmerhit
Joined: 31 May 2003 Posts: 1874 Location: Reverse Culture Shock Unit
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Posted: Thu Apr 29, 2004 9:11 pm Post subject: |
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good post. I like Australia. i think I'll emigrate. North america is just too dumbed down. |
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Aramas
Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Posts: 874 Location: Slightly left of Centre
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Posted: Fri Apr 30, 2004 3:16 am Post subject: |
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You better hop on the next plane then, and when you get here don't talk to anyone under thirty. These days we're just an insignificant US territory with a third rate popularist, suburban culture. |
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clarus
Joined: 13 May 2004 Posts: 1 Location: Italy, for the moment
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Posted: Tue May 18, 2004 12:25 pm Post subject: still single and erm - loving it |
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I was glad to read your post, OP. I left South Africa in my early 20's, planning to work for a year and see a bit of the world, then go back and settle down like most of my middle-class uni grad friends. I am now in my late 20's, not any closer to settling down in any sense. My parents make gentle enquiries about my "social life" about as often as they remind me I still don't have a pension. I am really glad I'm not a late-twenties / thirty-something Taiwanese woman - my ex-flatmate told me that whenever she goes back to her hometown, the NEIGHBOURS all want to know if she has a boyfriend yet! |
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