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Home can suck the life out of you. And Andrew would know. After graduating from one of those fancy, elite American colleges, he spent the next year and a half thrashing about in a call centre in his hometown in Canada. Then in a moment of impulsive boldness, he moved to South Korea.
The average person talking about the expat life won’t shut up about how amazing it is. And that’s a lie. Living in another country can be really hard. And coming back can be even harder. But that’s no reason not to go.
Through his own story as well as the narratives of thirteen average-extraordinary expats, Andrew presents the ups and downs of living abroad in an honest, punchy, humourous tone. Living abroad isn’t all sunshine and smiles, but because of the hardships—not in spite of them—it’s an adventure worth pursuing.
258 pages, Kindle Edition
Published November 10, 2015
There’s a t-shirt in my top drawer that features a bunch of green and blue fish all swimming in the same direction. Battling in the opposite direction, sporting something of a grimace, is a tiny red fish determined to go against the flow. At the top of the shirt are the words Think Different.
Completely nude and resembling the chiselled gods of an ancient tribe, Pete and I strutted into the bathhouse area, a room with maybe a dozen hot and cold tubs and a ceiling stretching up to Olympus.
“Those kids over there are laughing at me,” said Pete.
“You think so?”
“What are the chances a group of fourteen-year-old Korean boys has seen red pubic hair before?”
At twenty-eight, he felt too young to get married, and Yun Hong also had a dream of moving to the West where life would be grand and perfect. Bill felt that if they were to move somewhere outside Korea, the burden would be on him, and that wasn’t the kind of responsibility he was prepared to assume.
Comfort breeds apathy, and if there is something we have a lot of -those of us with college diplomas and brown loafers – it’s comfort… Imagine the changes we could effect if we used our time and resources a little better, if we pushed ourselves out of the comfort we’ve been blessed with and into a world that forces dirt on our hands.
Living abroad should be a rite of passage. It’s so invaluable that there’s no reason to not do it for at least a while. And it’s not enough to just visit another place. You need to live there. And to take it one step further, you need to become a part of that country. What you gain from the experience is something you can’t learn in a book. You can read about it all you want. Someone can tell you about it like in this interview, but the changes it makes – well, you need to do it to really understand… Pushing yourself should be an everyday thing for everyone.