A considerably dramatic, life evaluating,
question that I would not be alone in asking: I have graduated from a good
University with an honours Arts degree, in Spanish and French; and very little money. Not
wanting to immediately commit to scaling the ‘career ladder’, presumably in an
office and with notions of cabin fever, meant a 7 month stint of soul crushing hospitality
work.
This was shortly followed by a CELT course (Certificate in English
Language Teaching) which at that point I was more than ready for. A project
that challenged, motivated, and helped me to develop new skills was just what I
needed to get the ball back rolling. Despite asking myself why I hadn't just done the course a year previous, the somewhat
painful transition from modern language graduate, to minimum wage worker, to
TEFL Teacher, gave me time to evaluate exactly why I wanted to do it and where
I wanted it to take me.
This period for reflection/self-evaluation/occasional despair
has resulted in a far greater personal gain than if I had done the same course
a year ago – when stressed by finals and unsure of where I would end up. Now, a
job with which I can further develop language skills, travel, and teach has me
feeling like I'm back on track and that the world is, perhaps, not so bad.
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