By Annika Reyes
For people who are homebodies, relocating to another state or farther to another country may be a truly huge challenge. The effort of readjusting to another environment and forming friendly bonds with a new nationality of people may be too much for them to face.
However, when things become harsh especially in the matter of economics in their established home base, they could very likely accept the choice of going abroad as acceptable and realistically logical. These home base enjoying individuals will then be ready to depart from the boundaries of their comfort zones if but to benefit from more financially comfortable possibilities in another country.
According to the study of habits of mother eagles, they cuddle and feed their baby eaglets in the comfort of their nests full of soft bird feathers from hatching till the young ones are grown up enough to be at flying capacity. At this stage of capable adulthood, the mother eagle strategically takes away the comfortable feather cushions to uncover the unyielding and rough section of the nest bottom.
The resulting discomfort and relative pain should stimulate desire for the young eaglets to abandon the nest and so test their wings. Challenging as the process may be, this is the one sure manner in which nest-convenient eaglets dare to consider the leap of faith to learn to fly and eventually soar to greater heights.
With the current economic decline experienced worldwide, the more under-developed countries in Asia and Africa are being severely affected. This has caused a developing trend of two-thirds of the world's migrant workers moving to the more economically stable West.
Like eaglets suffering unprecedented discomforting pain in their nests, home grown teachers, in the Philippines for example, abandon their impoverished beloved nation and families to get better paying teaching jobs UK offers international contract workers along with other developed nations.
Filipino migrant workers make their tactical moves to the west, having labored for many years as domestic workers in the once British colony country of Malaysia, for instance, where they get comparatively better pay than other Asian domestic laborers because many of them are college graduates. As university trained instructors, their having baccalaureate degrees in education and capability to speak English easily qualifies them for skilled teaching in the UK schools.
After all, the Philippines has been on the global listing as the third largest English speaking culture on earth next to the USA and Great Britain. With an expanding awareness of the supply of teaching jobs UK has made available to overseas workers, a good number of these teachers who have laboured as nannies for quite a while in Malaysia may well look for much greener pastures in prospective London teaching jobs.
When the movement of east to west relocation of teachers develops a lot of the so-called young flying eaglets might be propelled to expeditious progress to become rising global eagles.
However, when things become harsh especially in the matter of economics in their established home base, they could very likely accept the choice of going abroad as acceptable and realistically logical. These home base enjoying individuals will then be ready to depart from the boundaries of their comfort zones if but to benefit from more financially comfortable possibilities in another country.
According to the study of habits of mother eagles, they cuddle and feed their baby eaglets in the comfort of their nests full of soft bird feathers from hatching till the young ones are grown up enough to be at flying capacity. At this stage of capable adulthood, the mother eagle strategically takes away the comfortable feather cushions to uncover the unyielding and rough section of the nest bottom.
The resulting discomfort and relative pain should stimulate desire for the young eaglets to abandon the nest and so test their wings. Challenging as the process may be, this is the one sure manner in which nest-convenient eaglets dare to consider the leap of faith to learn to fly and eventually soar to greater heights.
With the current economic decline experienced worldwide, the more under-developed countries in Asia and Africa are being severely affected. This has caused a developing trend of two-thirds of the world's migrant workers moving to the more economically stable West.
Like eaglets suffering unprecedented discomforting pain in their nests, home grown teachers, in the Philippines for example, abandon their impoverished beloved nation and families to get better paying teaching jobs UK offers international contract workers along with other developed nations.
Filipino migrant workers make their tactical moves to the west, having labored for many years as domestic workers in the once British colony country of Malaysia, for instance, where they get comparatively better pay than other Asian domestic laborers because many of them are college graduates. As university trained instructors, their having baccalaureate degrees in education and capability to speak English easily qualifies them for skilled teaching in the UK schools.
After all, the Philippines has been on the global listing as the third largest English speaking culture on earth next to the USA and Great Britain. With an expanding awareness of the supply of teaching jobs UK has made available to overseas workers, a good number of these teachers who have laboured as nannies for quite a while in Malaysia may well look for much greener pastures in prospective London teaching jobs.
When the movement of east to west relocation of teachers develops a lot of the so-called young flying eaglets might be propelled to expeditious progress to become rising global eagles.
No comments:
Post a Comment