For people who are known to be homebodies relocating to another state or farther to another country may be a real big challenge. The struggle of readjusting to a new environment and developing friendly relationships with a new breed of people may just be too hard for them to face.
But when things get tough especially on the side of economics in their established home base, they could very well take the option of going abroad as acceptable and practically valid. These home base enjoying individuals would then be willing to leave the confines of their comfort zones if but to take advantage of more financially comfortable opportunities abroad.
According to the study of the behaviour of mother eagles, they cuddle and feed their baby eaglets in the comfort of their nests stuffed with soft bird feathers from hatching until they are grown enough to be at flying capacity. At that point of capable maturity, the mother eagle strategically removes the soft feather cushions to expose the hard and rough part of the nest base.
The resulting discomfort and relative pain is supposed to stimulate desire for the young eaglets to leave the nest and so try out their wings. Difficult as the process maybe but this is one sure way that nest-convenient eaglets dare to take the leap of faith to learn how to fly and later soar to greater heights.
With the economic recession experienced worldwide, the more under-developed countries in Asia and Africa are quite severely affected. This has caused a growing trend of two-thirds world 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 country and families to seek better paying teaching jobs UK has to offer international contract workers together with other developed nations.
Filipino migrant workers make their strategic moves to the west having worked for years as domestic helpers in the once British colony country of Malaysia, for example, where they get comparatively higher pay than other Asian domestic workers because many of them are college graduates. As university trained teachers, their possession of baccalaureate degrees in education and ability to speak English fluently highly qualifies them for professional teaching in the UK schools.
After all, the Philippines has been on the global record as the third largest English speaking country in the world next to the USA and the UK. With a growing awareness of the availability of teaching jobs UK has opened to international workers, many of these teachers who have laboured as nannies for many years in Malaysia could very well seek much greener pastures in prospective London teaching jobs.
When this trend of east to west migration of teachers develops then a lot of the so-called juvenile flying eaglets would be propelled to expeditious advancement to become soaring global eagles.
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