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Leaving Korea? Top 10 Tips to Do it Well

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Top 10 Tips for Expats Leaving Korea

The day has come! I’m leaving Korea! After 10.5 years in Korea, I’m down to my last 3 days in the land of the kimchi. Overall, I’m feeling pretty upbeat about the whole thing and know it’s the right decision. Just this very morning I completed the last little bit of paperwork I needed to do and it’s now smooth sailing straight to the homeland.

Here are my top 10 tips for those leaving Korea. They’re more applicable to those who’ve been here at least a few years like myself. Newbies are usually still living out of a couple suitcases so it’s much easier to pack up and go.

Leaving Korea Tip #1: Decide Early Whether to Stay or Go

The first tip is to make the decision about staying or going early enough. In my case, it was half-way through my two year contract which meant that I had a year to pull everything together. I went through busy phases, and then lulls but there was a lot of loose ends to tie up. At the very least, allow yourself 3-4 months. I’ve seen some expats over the years who decided on a whim to just go and they left in a flurry of crazy activity. It stressed me out to even be around them!

Leaving Korea Tip #2: Hire Someone to Help You

The best decision I made in this whole process was to hire someone to help me. Although I speak basic Korean, I had to do an overwhelming amount of things that required some serious Korean skills. Important stuff that I didn’t want to be left open to misunderstanding. And the other problem is that I know precisely a total of “0” vocabulary words related to things like junking a car, getting a housing deposit back, or taxes.

So, about six months ago, I asked one of my best (former) students if he’d be willing to do things like contact my landlord, arrange stuff for my car, come to the tax office, etc. He’s a chill, but very responsible guy and also speaks English freakishly well, so I knew it’d work out well. He made some money. I had way less stress. Everyone was a winner.

Leaving Korea Tip #3: Start Recycling/Giving Away Stuff ASAP

As soon as I decided I was going to leave Korea, I started the process of getting rid of all my stuff. One of the best things I did was to make a “junk-pile” in the corner of one room. Then, I would insist that every single person who came over to my house take at least three things. I’d also take pictures of the pile and post it on group events for a house-party or whatever and offer to bring whatever people wanted. I felt so happy that people were getting some use out of my stuff instead of just throwing it in the trash. However, this method takes time so start early!

Another thing I did was to throw away or recycle one thing every single day for around six months until I had almost nothing left. It made the last couple days before I moved out of my place really easy.

Leaving Korea Tip #4: Organize Stuff at Home

I found myself a place to stay in Canada, as well as a job (of sorts) about three months before I left Korea. This was huge for me. It’s hard for me to imagine going home without a job or a place to stay. Those first couple of months would be so, so chaotic. And after almost nine years teaching in Korean universities, if there’s one thing I’ll all about, it’s the happy zen place.

Leaving Korea Tip #5: Say Goodbye

I’ve known a lot of expats over the years who didn’t say goodbye when leaving Korea. Here one day, gone the next. Some of them were my good friends and it made me sad not to give them a hug and wish them well on their journey. A goodbye party isn’t just for you, it’s for the people that you were close to as well. Even something simple like a last round of BBQ with a few close friends is a good thing so make time for it.

Leaving Korea Tip #6: Move out of your Place Early

If you’ve taken care of your own housing, move out of your place a few days early in case something goes bad with getting the housing deposit back. Also make sure you don’t tell your landlord you’re going back to your home country because this will make it way too easy for them to keep delaying until you have to leave the country. I just said I was moving to Seoul (from Busan). I also had my student phone the landlord at various intervals (6 months-2 months-1 month-1 week) before I moved so that he’d have no excuses for not having my money on the day I moved out.

I found a place to stay for a few days by posting on Facebook, asking friends if they’d take me in. Lots of people volunteered so just ask.

Leaving Korea Tip #7: Tie up all the Loose Ends

It’s 1000x easier to deal with Korean paperwork in Korea than from your home country. Get organized and get it done here when you’re leaving Korea. Things like employment certificates, taxes paid, reference letters, driving records for insurance, etc.

A pro tip: make sure you organize Internet banking before you leave, along with international transfers. Do a test-run while still in Korea to make sure it works. Then you can take care of your pension payment as well as final pay yourself from your home country.

Leaving Korea Tip #8: Bring your Pets with You

Don’t be that guy who abandons your pets when you’re leaving Korea. Adopting is for life. “It’s too hard” is not an excuse. Use Pet Airline. I paid them around 1,000,000 Won to send my two cats cargo about a week before me. Then, I paid someone with a cat hotel in Vancouver to pick them up at the airport and keep them until I can get them. It was unexpectedly easy.

Leaving Korea Tip #9: Ship your Stuff, the Cheap Way

Shipping stuff in post office boxes is annoying. Shipping stuff door to door with shipping companies is ridiculously expensive. Instead, find yourself an agent and ship your stuff port to port. You’ll have to pick it up in Vancouver or whatever, but it’s strangely cheap. I paid about $250 to ship 6 large boxes of stuff including a bicycle and inflatable stand-up-paddleboard.

Leaving Korea Tip #10: Money Buys Less Stress

Money makes this whole process way easier. Having money (or not being desperate for it) made my life easier in the following ways:

  • I junked my piece of crap car instead of trying to sell it for a pittance. It took me a total of around 10 minutes.
  • I gave away almost all my furniture and possessions. People like free stuff and it’s way easier to get rid of stuff if people come to you rather than schlepping around the city and wasting your time.
  • I paid people to get my cats to Canada. I could have done it myself but it seemed way too annoying.
  • I hired a student to help me. He was a champ and everything went really smoothly.
  • I’m not so worried about life in Canada. I know it’s expensive there and it’s not going to be easy to make enough money online to support myself, but at least I won’t be forced to take a terrible job that I don’t want to do.

Leaving Korea? You’ll Need Life After ESL

Job Ideas for former ESL teachers

Life After ESL is the book I wrote mostly for myself in order to alleviate my panic about going back home after 10 years teaching abroad. Leaving Korea was a pretty scary thought a year ago!

I interviewed 55 people who’d gone before me and tried to glean every little bit of wisdom I could from them. The book I wrote is the result of that process. Here’s what a few people are saying about it on Amazon:

So here’s my verdict: This book should be the starting place for anyone thinking of going home after a stint abroad.” Steven D.

I’m sure there are many of us TEFL teachers who are thinking, “What the heck am I going to do when I go home?”. This book tells us what people have done: what works and what doesn’t.” Sharon

You can buy Life After ESL: Foreign Teachers Returning Home on Amazon in both digital and print formats. The digital format can be read on any device by getting the free Kindle reading app.

—>Get Life After ESL on Amazon Today<—

The post Leaving Korea? Top 10 Tips to Do it Well appeared first on .


Jackie Bolen: How to Get a University Job In Korea

Amazon
amazon.com/How-Get-University-South-Korea-ebook/dp/B00ORLRP2Y 

My Life! Teaching in a Korean University
eslteacherinkorea.blogspot.com

University Jobs Koreauniversityjobkorea.com

YouTube:youtube.com/playlist?list=PLL0Q8kr18oQIo12jZrwIUdnU4C6eJV5rK


 


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