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A Little Help from My Friends (Imagine...)

Visualise this. Imagine you were retiring and wanted to settle in a faraway country.

Imagine some kind soul set up a conference for you so you could go to that country and learn all about it.

[More:]

Imagine that the first day of the conference went like this:

- a welcome speech
- a talk by the Minister of Tourism
- a talk about the country's legal system and taxes
- a talk by an estate agent
- a talk on property insurance
- a talk about redefining retirement

In the afternoon, you would go on a half-day city tour, and in the evening to a welcome cocktail reception.

The next day would start with
- a talk on the legal aspects of opening a business in that country

And then... da-dah... an expat living in that country would give you a talk.

Bearing in mind that in the next couple of days there would be talks on moving your household goods, buying and renting property, health care, and builders and architects would also be speaking...

What would you want to hear about from that expat early on Day 2?
What would you be curious about?
What would you need to know?
What would make you feel that the expat wasn't wasting her/your time?

I would be grateful for ALL your ideas!

Thanks.

Paola

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216 Words . chausiku , add to friends . 08/10/07 . 08:20:45 pm . Permalink . . 91 views  3 feedbacks

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: marilyn [Member] Email · http://www.writelink.co.uk/blogs/marilyn
This is interesting actually and I/we will think about it some more before answering.
PermalinkPermalink 08/10/07 @ 21:18
Comment from: lorraine [Member] Email · http://www.lorrainemace.com/
Hi Paola, I've been an expat for so long, I'm not sure my thoughts will be 'original' enough. I'm trying to remember how I felt when I first arrived in South Africa, but we're talking almost 30 years ago, so it's not that easy.

I can remember feeling bewildered by how different EVERYTHING was, from the weather to the type of houses everyone took for granted. I think I wanted reassurance that I would be able to fit in, but I was so young at that time, that it is possible I might have felt that way even if I'd only moved town instead of continent.

From a purely female pov, we went to SA because my husband had a good job opportunity, but I had nothing to fill my days. It depends on the breakdown of the group, but it might be worth looking at how spouses can occupy themselves - I recall long, lonely and boring hours not knowing where to go or what to do.

Homesickness and culture shock kick in after about six months in most cases, so how to deal with that would be useful. Also how to recognise that people are suffering from either of those and not from depression - the symptoms are so similar.

I expect you've already thought of all the above, but I'll try to think up some other suggestions.
PermalinkPermalink 10/10/07 @ 06:55
Comment from: chausiku [Member]
Thanks, Lorraine, you've hit the feelings spot on. I wonder whether it's the same for people who actually choose to relocate, rather than are 'trailing spouses'...
PermalinkPermalink 10/10/07 @ 10:43

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