Back to Uk for 10 days
#31
Forum Regular
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 120
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
Sounds as if you're one step ahead of us with the interview lined up so you just need to concentrate on your escape plan now.
I did feel a little better once we were actually back its mainly the trauma of all the goodbyes (or at least it was for me) which were so much worse 2nd time around.
Thinking of you and sending you some karma
Diane
#32
BE Enthusiast
Joined: Jun 2008
Location: oakville ON
Posts: 350
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
Keep your chin up! Hope all works out for you. We are going back to Uk for christmas and will probably be exactly the same!! Gonna have to throw my husband on the plane!!
#33
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
But, chin up, you will get through it and now you know where you want to live the only life you have, then you can start to work out how to achieve that. In the mean time if your doctor offers you medications or therapy - try the therapy, there are tricks for helping the mind think that things arent as bad as they seem (thought stopping works for me). And start planning for your next trip back to sanity! Good luck tomorrow, it will be a sh*t of a day but you will live through it!
#34
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
Thanks all - will let you know when we have arrived - just off to scrape daughter off floor !! poor thing is one big soggy snotty mess! am JUST holding it together! but tids v v hard!
#35
Forum Regular
Joined: Oct 2007
Location: Richmond, Vancouver, BC
Posts: 161
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
I go back for 10 days on Sunday also leaving hubby here, he's afraid I won't come back...... tempting as I miss home so much. I will see my contract through till March 2011, then I know it's time to go back. May even leave a bit early and return for xmas next year. Hope all went well, will exchange notes on my return.
Karen
Karen
#37
BE Enthusiast
Joined: Mar 2009
Location: Torbay, North Shore
Posts: 744
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
in our family another name we use is for people you avoid is 'Barry Lagers' young groups of lads wearing footie shirts and very drunk
I recounted this in my NZ office where we have Chinese, Ozzies and NZ's they thought this was a great term in fact is now officially adopted here!
I recounted this in my NZ office where we have Chinese, Ozzies and NZ's they thought this was a great term in fact is now officially adopted here!
#38
Forum Regular
Joined: Mar 2006
Location: Maple Ridge
Posts: 165
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
Don't think about leaving, think about it positively - got to come back to close up and get back, it is a temporary phase and you will do it
Take care of yourself, see you on the 6th?
Elaine
Last edited by Griff; Oct 30th 2009 at 4:15 am. Reason: oops spelling error
#39
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
Just think that coming back is a necessary part of planning your permanent return - which it is.
Don't think about leaving, think about it positively - got to come back to close up and get back, it is a temporary phase and you will do it
Take care of yourself, see you on the 6th?
Elaine
Don't think about leaving, think about it positively - got to come back to close up and get back, it is a temporary phase and you will do it
Take care of yourself, see you on the 6th?
Elaine
#40
BE Forum Addict
Joined: Apr 2004
Location: CHELTENHAM, Gloucestershire, England
Posts: 1,494
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
We call them Neds here in Scotland but they are the exact same species.....they are being bred quite steadily.....disaffected youths in the main, disadvantaged through no fault of their own at all for the most part as the most discriminated against section of UK society are first and foremost....young males, whether white, black, brown but mostly white young men.
These guys are brought up in single parent families with no male around at all as some kind of role model.....this has increasingly been the case since the 1980s.....single mothers who have no desire at all to have a man around the house....so boys are at a major disadvantage from the moment they emerge from the womb.
They then go to school and find themselves even more sinned against and disadvantaged as the education system they enter up on massively feminised under a policy and a system which is heavily geared to favour girls so from the word go the boys are virtually regarded as some kind of "underclass". In many cases in primary schools they will find all the teachers are female, and a fair proportion of those female teachers go so far as to marginalise the boys in many ways - often driven by some kind of agenda in which a higher value is placed on girls and their education and development rather than on boys. So even at school these young boys find there is no role model for them. Even the classroom curriculum is heavily weighted in favour of the girls.
So, both at home and in schools very many young boys are actually discriminated against and made to feel of less value.
When they go home and watch TV the heavily feminist agenda influenced media further impresses on the minds of the young men that they are a sort of second class species and very often the male of the species is portrayed in a negative light in so many ways. Positive portrayals of males are underplayed while those of the females are either ignored or very much underplayed.
TV ads show males as either stupid, ignorant or useless while females are routinely shown as being super efficient, sweetly innocent in a permanent state of victimhood - all sugar and spice and all things nice sort of thing....
So what else is there for these young lads to do but to act as they do? All in all it isn't their fault that they turn into neds or chavs, dependfing where you live in this island nation of ours.
So here are some chavs in Manchester, England - out doing their stuff because nobody has guided them to do anything better as far too many people just don't wand to know as they are only boys after all.......lads who are not so much sinning, but very much sinned against by society.
You can bet your next month's salary that while these lads are out on the streets running wild their "mothers" (what a misnomer that one is!) are either out at bingo, down the pub getting nissed as a pewt or shagging their latest piece of you know what......probably another ned or a chav who has not been taught to know any better because he has been deprived of any kind of decent MALE role model......Ned/Chav Britannia at its best:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqyU2...eature=related
These guys are brought up in single parent families with no male around at all as some kind of role model.....this has increasingly been the case since the 1980s.....single mothers who have no desire at all to have a man around the house....so boys are at a major disadvantage from the moment they emerge from the womb.
They then go to school and find themselves even more sinned against and disadvantaged as the education system they enter up on massively feminised under a policy and a system which is heavily geared to favour girls so from the word go the boys are virtually regarded as some kind of "underclass". In many cases in primary schools they will find all the teachers are female, and a fair proportion of those female teachers go so far as to marginalise the boys in many ways - often driven by some kind of agenda in which a higher value is placed on girls and their education and development rather than on boys. So even at school these young boys find there is no role model for them. Even the classroom curriculum is heavily weighted in favour of the girls.
So, both at home and in schools very many young boys are actually discriminated against and made to feel of less value.
When they go home and watch TV the heavily feminist agenda influenced media further impresses on the minds of the young men that they are a sort of second class species and very often the male of the species is portrayed in a negative light in so many ways. Positive portrayals of males are underplayed while those of the females are either ignored or very much underplayed.
TV ads show males as either stupid, ignorant or useless while females are routinely shown as being super efficient, sweetly innocent in a permanent state of victimhood - all sugar and spice and all things nice sort of thing....
So what else is there for these young lads to do but to act as they do? All in all it isn't their fault that they turn into neds or chavs, dependfing where you live in this island nation of ours.
So here are some chavs in Manchester, England - out doing their stuff because nobody has guided them to do anything better as far too many people just don't wand to know as they are only boys after all.......lads who are not so much sinning, but very much sinned against by society.
You can bet your next month's salary that while these lads are out on the streets running wild their "mothers" (what a misnomer that one is!) are either out at bingo, down the pub getting nissed as a pewt or shagging their latest piece of you know what......probably another ned or a chav who has not been taught to know any better because he has been deprived of any kind of decent MALE role model......Ned/Chav Britannia at its best:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqyU2...eature=related
#41
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
It sounds like you've made your mind up of where you wanna be! I'd definately go back to the UK if you are feeling like this as it's difficult enough feeling depressed without feeling it in another country away from your support network.
I can totally sympathise with you though as I pretty much am feeling the same about being here at the minute. I miss my old life, my friends, family, jobs and everything that was familiar to me. There are some things about Canada I will miss, for example we were out at Jasper, etc yesterday and it was snowing and I was just loving that area and the people were great. But I'm not liking were we live at the minute, I'm unimpressed with the employers I've had and I find the people in my area snobby, along with other various reasons, I just can't say Canada has been that amazing for me and I feel like I had and achieved more back home.
If the UK is definately what you want, get cracking with the plans and it will seriously help you feel better knowing plans are underway to get back.
I can totally sympathise with you though as I pretty much am feeling the same about being here at the minute. I miss my old life, my friends, family, jobs and everything that was familiar to me. There are some things about Canada I will miss, for example we were out at Jasper, etc yesterday and it was snowing and I was just loving that area and the people were great. But I'm not liking were we live at the minute, I'm unimpressed with the employers I've had and I find the people in my area snobby, along with other various reasons, I just can't say Canada has been that amazing for me and I feel like I had and achieved more back home.
If the UK is definately what you want, get cracking with the plans and it will seriously help you feel better knowing plans are underway to get back.
#45
Erica
Joined: Jan 2006
Location: Berkeley, CA
Posts: 98
Re: Back to Uk for 10 days
Poor you. I feel like that every time we come back from the UK. It usually lifts after a few weeks but it has been hanging around for me for 2 months now. I am also thinking that I need to get some help with this depression. Whenever I think of England I just want to cry. I find that going for a walk somewhere beautiful in the trees and sunshine and just breathing and being in the moment here help me to appreciate it more. Do you have anywhere you can go for a walk in nature? I try to stay away from all the things that irritate me/get me down about it for a while if possible. At least you are very clear about where you need to be and that is better than being in limbo and indecision, isn't it? I really really hope things work out for you and you can all get home soon!