The choice made that this post is about was so scary and so out-of-character, but I really think this decision was one of the biggest and best I ever made, and it made me so much more that I would have been otherwise, I'm sure of it.
It was around January after graduation in England, I lived on the third floor of an old house in a poxy box-room with roughly enough room for a bed and a little floor space for the door to open. I had no job and was struggling to find any, even something as benign as a cashier.
The only money I had was grant money left over from my University, which to be fair was a fair amount since I basically never went out to get drunk or went shopping and had basically no social life. I was also for some reason in Lincoln, rather than my home town of Leicester. This is mostly because half my family moved abroad and the other half lived far away in the countryside and I wasn't about to give up my independence so I took over the room from a friend.
There were 5 housemates and I basically hated them all: A girl I semi-dated but was an evil... so and so, a crack addict girl, a pedophile (seriously; convicted), a really promiscuous camp gay guy who kept trying to get me into bed with him, and a regular gay guy who was generally nice but we had nothing in common to even pretend to exchange pleasantries.
I was miserable, i was stressed, my money was running out and I refused to give up, making matters worse. I could certainly have just asked my dad to fly me off to his tropical paradise, or moved in with my mum or anyone really, but the most it came to was calling my friend in tears after breaking down because I passed a Greggs bakery and wanted some pastry but I was 4p short. He lent me £100 if I remember right.
Anyway clearly things were not going well. In fact, in my misery, often locked away in my room hiding from civilisation, my hair started falling out quite substantially. One night I made a giant pile of hair just by running my fingers through it and noticed a startling receding hairline over the period of a week or so. Thankfully that was the only time that happened and my hairline hasn't changed since! (I think).
I had some nights out, like when I was dating that housemate who worked at a bar and I'd pretend to enjoy the boring nature of sitting around exchanging awkward banter to people I shared nothing in common with. I even went to a club with that promiscuous gay guy who would show off how he often turns straight people gay with his charm and he would show me him doing so. But for the most part I just stayed in my room playing Bioshock 2.
My friend, J, was also doing quite badly financially, though he had a job and friends, just terrible spending habits, presumably all on alcohol. He messaged me one night saying we should go and live in South Korea, you can actually teach ESL (English as a second language) with just a degree in any subject. No experience required and the pay is really good.
I liked the idea a lot. J was my only friend at this point, somebody I had known since we were kids. I'd do it if he did it. So we trawled the jobs for a while and soon enough I found one, and they got my details, my CV, my picture and took me on!
I told James, who told me he doesn't want to do it anymore... Damn.
But this is the moment everything changed
Rather than backing out too, something in my miserable existence made me continue on this path. Come February 25th (I think) I was on a plane to South Korea.
Terrified.
Alone.
21 years old.
This street terrified me... so many lights...weird symbols everywhere...
My first week was mortifying and slowly killing me, but this is what changed everything for the better. it's also around when I first met @hugmug. I'll save that bizarre encounter for another day!
I've been on an exchange myself (Australia) and though it might be terrifying at times, I can say it truly changed my life - for the better! Good luck and I'm sure you'll enjoy it as well
Well, I did, this wass 8 years ago lol. But best of luck to your adventure! Do as much as you can while you can =D Every second counts
Well Mr Mobbs, I for one am proud of you that you took this step. It scared me when you did. In fact I wondered if I would ever see you again. If you would make it past the first month. But you grew strong and confident. I agree that had you stayed your life would probably be various shades of grey. You have stepped out of the expectation bubble, made your own path and your influence reaches a lot further than I think even you realise.
I would encourage anyone to at least try it. Maybe not 5000 miles away from home, but go somewhere, anywhere where you have to deal with your life your way whilst you're young. A whole new world may be all you need to make you YOU. The best way to learn is to try. If you fail try another way. If you succeed then share it.
Sometimes, the action that defines our future is "taking the first step". A lot of people fail because they were too afraid to take the first step. I am glad you have a success story for this experience. It is a motivation to people like me who are just starting life!
Waiting patiently for subsequent posts!
Well I wouldn't necessarily call mine a success story, but it depends how you define it. It has brought so much more colour to my life than I could have imagined back then yeah, but at the same time it still comes with 8 years of various regrets!
Life shouldn't be about constantly striving for success, imo. But you're right, everybody should take those steps that they always make excuses to themselves not to
Well i guess it is what the individual defines success as. I think you've come a long way, there's still plenty of ways to go, but you have already seen, done and achieved so much, and it's not all about money = success, it's about how free and worthwhile you can make your life ,how much you can feel satisfied, and i think you're doing pretty darn well working hard on the things you love, making differences and supporting others where you can as you go... whilst raising a silly Smash-cat on the side :D
And i def remember how I felt when I first walked down a foreign road with lights and signs galore, in fact I imagine it would still drag up the nerves even now, overwhelmingly beautiful but terrifyingly busy and big... and always, always being done over by annoying taxi people.
I agree with @grottbags, by success, i wasn't referring to money. @mobbs a lot of us look up to you and admire you, that itself is a measure of success!
Definitely! :D
Good point! Though seems a little surreal hearing that =P
hehe! always nice having you here
Wow. Mobb i must say your story was interesting. I enjoyed every bit of it and i felt like going on to see the end of how you adapted to the new environment?. How found the job? Interesting or not? But i guess i would have to wait for some other time to read that. Stepping out of your comfort sometimes is definitely the right thing to do. You can't just sit somewhere and expect things to turn around immediately. Thanks for the story.
Yep, totally agree. Well, I've written a few 'mobbs' memoirs' in the past here on steemit, though I didn't think to use my own tag to easily find them. I wrote about a few experiences but never from the 'beginning', which is what I consider this moment. I'll post the next part tomorrow!
So young to make such a leap . The culture shock must have almost sent you running to Gimpo . It is an experience that last a life time , with many life skills that you would have never received for many years .
It's funny, nowadays I get reverse culture shock. Foreign cultures don't really faze me anymore, but going back home is like... bizarre. So much white skin, foreign folk act like outcasts, I can understand people talking passing me by, people approach me and ask me stuff, it's very uncomfortable!
I went home after three years and couldn't find the mall . The change to my mother was gradual and she didn't really notice it . I on the other hand was lost . The massive change took some time for my brain to handle . Something that was so familiar was so strange and foreign.
I can so relate .
Haha, the literal change to my dad was another factor, I left him with black hair for Uni in 2006, 3 more visits later - Grey! Tough stuff, eh?
Wow! So much for travels and some other young people too can relate with your kind of experience.. Not easy going through that stage, especially with some loneliness and the travels upon travels.. Exposes one to all sorts of encounters truly
-@yowanetwork
Loneliness is a major factor of this lifestyle, often underappreciated. You got nothing backing you up, you gotta start everything from scratch, friends, love, life, career. Practically a newborn!
Somehow I feel like I was reading a book and someone took it away before I finished! Where's the rest of the storyyy??! Moving out is already scary, I can't even imagine how it is to move out TO ANOTHER COUNTRY, with another language, another culture... But it will always be one of the best ways to grow.
Tomorrow =P
Just thinking about writing it is making me hungry... spoiler
Laughter! What an extraordinary story.
I am curious for the next one.
From how I explain things I would say that those miserable circumstances (in which you chose to stay in) and the people who seemed bad and boring to you, did you actually a great favor. Where it can't get worse, it only can get better. So actually, they earned your thanks for being not a proper company for you as well as the tropical paradise wasn't attracting you either. A friend who backs off, LOL, and you still determined to take on the adventure. THAT is something.
Good one! Like it a lot.
edit: I have some similar experiences with just one jar of chocolate cream in the cupboard and a thumb holding up to get a free ride into town.
Oh really, do you intend to write about it? I love reading this kinda stuff from peeps on here!
And I suppose you're right but I'm not about to call them up and thank them... shudder
:I maybe, I don't know yet. It has not the dramatic drive as yours. LOL. But it has some twists & turns. Would be actually a long story... there was a time I sold vacuum-cleaners at peoples doors. And promoted useless finance-products in front of a bank, having no clue whatsoever about financial portfolios. Before, I had a time during my first education where I had been bored to death in the 3rd story of the insurance agency and had to sort thousands of recipes after the status of the members. To escape the misery, I fled to the restrooms where I dozed off for some minutes waking up and being desperate about the fact that only some minutes went by.
You don't have to call them. Thank them silently. Someone somewhere loved and love them, still. If they weren't so horrible you couldn't distinguish them from those who are wonderful. ;-)
I will prepare and someday, my time will come! -- ...
Hoping to read more sir. Inspiring. :D