Alison, 42

Facts

Alison is a mum of two children from Kent in England. She spent most of her life in the UK, until she met her future husband.

She worked hard to be a solicitor, but in the end gave up on her own career to accompany her husband and travel the world.

Alison has already moved countries four times and is now awaiting her next destination.

I got to know Alison two years ago. Although our children are in the same school, our paths did not cross until we both volunteered to take over the school’s second-hand uniform shop. 

In the time we spent together selling uniforms I got to know her better and when I started this blog, I knew that I would DEFINITELY have to tell HER story! In fact, she was one of the mums that inspired me to start that blog in the first place.

I had to be quick with Alison though, as she was about to move this summer! When we met for a coffee at very short notice, their plans had changed again…

Alison’s “normal” life

Alison’s life seemed to be very UK-based with no plans to live abroad. She started studying in Aberdeen, where she met her future husband and after changing her subject to law, she ended up studying in London. 

When they both completed their degrees, Alison’s boyfriend had to go to the Netherlands for work and Alison joined him for a year before she would start her own career as a solicitor in the UK.

There, she did a short intensive Dutch course and also volunteered at a local international school. Additionally she wrote and edited articles for her husband’s work expat magazine.

When Alison started her solicitor training in London, they started to fly back and forth for weekends and holidays, as her boyfriend’s contract in the Netherlands was for four years altogether.  

They got married in East Sussex in the UK and when friends and family questioned them, where they would be living as a married couple, they had no answer to that and were just continuing a separate, although married life for another year.

Keen to resolve this issue of being MARRIED but still living APART, they were trying hard to find a solution, when Alison’s husband was offered a job in Houston in 2006!

Alison’s work was both interesting and challenging, with getting to know and learn in a new law department every six months, but something had to change and her husband got her thinking about a total transformation of her life.

The weekends away or even the long drives to and from the airport to collect her husband on a Friday night and send him off on a Sunday night again were getting a bit stressful. It sounded like an exciting opportunity to go to Houston and she would not have been offered such a chance in her own job.

Alison was also keen to have children around that time anyway and she had seen colleagues struggle with their job as solicitors when they became a mum. There were always problems with childminders and deadlines and it all seemed to be rather stressful.

She now had the choice between trying to find the balance amongst having children whilst staying in her job or escaping it all to a whole new world! Four years in Houston would not harm anyone, she could have children and then return to her job in the UK after that time!

Alison would never had thought that the start of the assignment in Houston would send her off to be an expat mum for many years to come!

Houston

As Alison and her husband had never properly lived together before, they had to have two shipments to Houston. One from the UK and one from the Netherlands.

Alison had taken a HUGE exciting step to a new future and quit her job even without ever been to Houston before!! At least, they would finally live together.

The day after they had arrived in Houston, they were shown four houses, from which they chose the first one without making a big deal out of it. Everything seemed so easy being just the two of them!

On the other hand, it was rather hard for Alison to meet new people being just the two of them. The Houston expat scene revolved around the international schools, so without having children, it was a lonely beginning for Alison.

After a while, they got a Golden Retriever to keep Alison company and she found some expat ladies for coffee mornings, whose children already had left their house. It was lovely to talk to other women, as you need the exchange with people in a similar situation as yours, but they were still in a different stage of their life’s than Alison.

As Alison had done that before, she once more volunteered in a school and helped out with Maths and English what brought her joy.

When her first child was born in 2008, she automatically came in touch with a lot of mums and she started to enjoy motherhood with all the experiences that Houston had to offer, e.g. hurricane season or poisoned snakes!

Alison was living a happy life, but she knew that the next change was around the corner. It was the week, when she found out that she was pregnant again, that they found out about their new destination…

Brunei

It certainly was an EXOTIC new destination they had agreed on in 2010 although both Alison and her husband never had been ones of these big world explorers. Still, they both had decided, that Brunei would be a good place for their little family. 

As with Houston, Alison had never been to Brunei before, but this time, having a little child and also being pregnant, she was more anxious as with their last move!!

For the first month they had an apartment which was not in the best condition and even kept hidden hazards for a small child! Therefore, Alison was very relieved when they were able to move into a much nicer house.

Very shortly after arriving in Brunei, Alison had to find out, where it would be best to deliver a baby! She was lucky that English and Malay were joint first languages in Brunei.

She decided she would not opt for the government hospital but for the sultan’s hospital, which was supposed to be better. The only tiny dilemma was, that they were not as experienced in delivering babies!!!!

Speaking of babies, what do you do with your first born if you fancy having your husband at your second baby’s birth when you just moved to a country million miles away from your family???

Well, as it is common to have maids in Brunei, the maids without a job would just knock on people’s doors and offer their labour. Alison of course never had a maid before nor did she know how to hire one, but she knew that she had to go to the hospital for a check-up soon. She finally hired one of the knocking maids for that appointment to see how it would go.

The trial run of looking after her child during that first appointment in Brunei went well and the maid then moved in with them.

As if that wouldn’t have been enough to stress out a highly pregnant woman, there were huge thunderstorms and heavy rains in the week before Alison gave birth to her second child!!

To finish up the unbelievable story about Alison’s first experiences in Brunei as a pregnant woman, it was just as well that she had found help early, as around three weeks later, another routine appointment, where she left her two-year old first born with the maid, took a little bit longer than expected…

…and when she came back home to her first born, she already had given birth to her second child!!!

After this rather crazy first six weeks in Brunei, Alison slowly got used to her new life. 

In contrast to Houston, in Brunei they had more than a proper expat community. Here, they lived on an expat camp in their closed expat world. 

All of the expat children were going to the same school and even food shopping was mostly done in a special international supermarket located just off the camp.

The only needed clothes were summer clothes, but it was not easy to buy „our“ type of clothes in Brunei and Alison was shopping for the whole year when they were on vacation in England once a year.

There were a lot of house parties on the camp, and with most people having childcare, sometimes it felt a bit like being back at university.

Of course, also this time, Alison found herself jobs to keep herself busy. As everything on the camp was run by volunteers, it got rather easy to feel useful. She was helping out in the school again and she was on the committee of the camp dance school.

Nevertheless, when after three and a half years the opportunity appeared to go back to Houston, Alison was rather happy to move on!

Houston AGAIN

This second start in Houston in 2013 was a lot easier. This time they knew exactly where they wanted to live and what Houston had to offer. At least this time Alison had been to her “new destination” before!

Although they moved to the same community, some of their friends there had moved on, but so had Alison. As this time she had children which were in school already, she easily got in contact with the other mums.

Again, she volunteered at a school, but also helped out in the Houston food bank.

She very much enjoyed having daily morning dog walks with the other expat mums after dropping off the children to the bus. There, they could exchange sorrows, laughs and issues, what is so important when you are so far away from friends and family.

Time flew by quiet easily and soon it was 2016 and for the first time Alison was hoping that her husband would not get the job in the even more adventurous country they had agreed on beforehand. Bolivia.  Her hopes were heard and her husband did not get that job.

When his next application was approved, Alison was super excited, as Norway was her DREAM DESTINATION!!

Norway 

As Alison moved so many times already and she really was looking forward to Norway, she didn’t feel anxious this time.

Unfortunately, she still went through some kind of culture shock, as she did not speak Norwegian at all! Of course, most of the people around Stavanger will speak English to you if you ask them nicely, but until now, all her destinations had English as a first language!

It took some time, but with the first friends came the feeling of settling down. Institutions like the PWC (People Who Connect) definitely helped her, as there loads of expats get together and do several activities together.

Of course, Alison could not be without any jobs to do, and so she volunteered in our children’s school and shared the responsibility for the second-hand uniform shop with me.

Alison loves to live in Stavanger and enjoys her time here very much!

Summing up…

So, when I rushed to meet up with her, she was nearly leaving for Kuala Lumpur or maybe London. She then told me, that plans had changed, they will stay in Stavanger until December!

It seems, that in December they will go back “home“ to the UK, but until then it’s a lot of months and everything can change 180 degrees again!

Although Alison does miss her job sometimes, she loves being an expat and would have made the same decisions again. She is convinced that the expat life gives her a safer and more content life, than they would have had if her and her husband would still work in London and commute half of the time!

Alison seems to be a MASTER of finding herself jobs in the community as well as finding other expats in organizations like the PWC in Stavanger to enjoy herself in her free time. She seems to have found the perfect BALANCE between not mourn after her job, being there for her children and in the same time feeling content and needed through several tasks she takes on at every one of these assignments.

Some might think, that it is a lot of pressure for the children to move every three to four years, but Alison’s children are happy with how their life is! Maybe it also comes down to their mum being around whenever they would need her. On the other side, Alison enjoys being around her children when they come back home from school. Something, that in her “old life” would not have been possible.

Her children also seem to be very open to new situations and are getting along with everything new or different rather easily. That will definitely be useful in their further life’s.

If they will return to the UK in December, Alison will have to retrain after such a long break in her job. She definitely would want to have some kind of job, but actually she is not even sure if she wants to return to her profession.

Alison’s dream would be, to end up living in the UK close to some of her expat friends. Of course, she still has some old friendships in the UK, but a lot of these crumbled off, as everyone is continuing with their own lives and she and her family often do not fit in anymore.

Alison is sure, that repatriation in your home country is the hardest bit of the whole expat process, but still, she would always do it again and never change a thing!!

Tanya, 36

A few facts

Tanya is a mum of four boys who spent her childhood and youth near Lviv in the Ukraine. She studied economics in Lviv and co-founded a company for car components where she worked in logistics.

Tanya moved countries twice so far and hopes to spend another summer in Stavanger.

I have heard about Tanya even before I knew who she was or how she looked like! It turned out that we had a common German friend who, about two years ago, was spending some time in Stavanger for work. When I met up with that common friend, she told me that her friend’s children just joined the same school as my boys and if I knew her.

I very soon found out who Tanya was and a close friendship arose. We not only share a mutual background in Germany but also in Eastern Europe, so we got along very quickly.

Tanya’s first “new life”

Tanya was basically living an expat life, depending on how you define it, even before she heard of that terminology. As she spent the first half of her life in the Ukraine, she finally left her job in her home country to follow her then still boyfriend, to Germany in 2009. 

He, being from the Ukraine as well, had been working in Germany for quite some time by then, but she had also already been in touch with her new home country. Whilst studying at university, she decided for a one-year break to be an au pair in Germany to deepen her school German language skills.

When she joined her boyfriend in 2009 to start a new life in Bremen, at least she knew the language and was dreaming of finding a job in Bremen as well.

At first, she was living from savings and was trying to get used to her new life, but she was also planning for their wedding to happen in the Ukraine very soon. Then, as life has it, they had to relocate to another city in Germany, so she was planning for the move. 

When they arrived as newlyweds in a tiny city called Emlichheim, she was already pregnant with their first son and soon Tanya started motherhood. She really enjoyed having a baby, so they didn’t wait long to have another child, and not much later their second son was born. 

It turned out that having two little children at once was rather tough with no family around so Tanya postponed her plans to work and fully concentrated on her family.

When both boys started nursery, Tanya was ready to work again, but the nursery was only open from 8-12 and without a job to go back to, it was rather impossible to find a part-time employment.

Since they had two lovely boys already, Tanya was still dreaming of a girl…and so in 2015 they had…yet another boy!!!

With the two older ones perfectly settled in nursery, Tanya enjoyed her days with her new baby at home. She always loved being a full-time mum and taking care of her children. Trying out new recipes for some lovely lunches or baking yummy treats, that was her thing!

With the arrival of her next son in 2017, Tanya gave up on dreaming about a daughter and announced her family to be complete with a total of four boys!!! (very brave mummy!)

Ready for a second “new life”

Before Tanya was able to properly get used to being a mum of four children, her husband came home with a proposal to leave everything behind again and move to Norway!!

They were all happy and settled in Emlichheim, with a lovely house and a great neighbourhood. The two older boys already being in school, the younger one in nursery and the youngest one at home, they had a perfect life!

But as everyone around her was always talking so positive about Norway, and her husband was keen for a while now on going abroad anyway, Stavanger as a destination seemed to be a good offer and Tanya being adventurous enough quickly agreed!

Not without keeping in mind a million of uprising problems though, e.g. to convince the older boys that changing school to an English one (without speaking a word of English) would be “fun”, that it might be tricky to move with a little baby, that it wasn’t problematic at all to ORGANIZE a move to another country with a baby, that it wasn’t a problem that she already had learned another language (German) and had to get going on English now….!!!

In January 2018, Tanya’s husband left for Stavanger, leaving her behind in Emlichheim with four children and the daily organization of school runs and afternoon clubs, so that the older ones could at least finish the school year…If it hadn’t been for the help of au pairs, Tanya would have struggled a lot! 

Living a great life (most of the time)

In summer 2018, Tanya and the boys followed her husband to a life in Stavanger. 

Since then, a lot has changed in their lives! Coming from tiny Emlichheim, Stavanger felt very big in the beginning, but also offered more possibilities for the whole family!

After all 4 children had settled in the new school, nursery and new environment (you have to keep in mind that it’s not only hard for grown-ups to leave behind what you know with all the friendships and security), after Tanya got used to the fact that she is not always able to reply to nursery teachers as she wants to (simply because her language skills do not allow), for the first time since having children, Tanya started to really enjoy herself!

She loves the expat life and is very happy that her husband earns enough so that she does not have to work and is able to explore Stavanger and surroundings whilst the children are in school. She is happy about the possibility to get to know another country with its culture, but also about the possibility, as an expat in Stavanger, to get to know so many more cultures and their people!

Tanya joined lessons to improve her English, she also very much enjoys her hiking group and loves the nature surrounding us here in Stavanger. We go for runs along the fjord together and she appreciates the open swimming pools although it barely gets warm around here.

More recently, Tanya started to learn Norwegian too and sometimes I wonder when she sleeps because of course the children come back from school every day and need to be fed and get to their after school activities and play dates, but she has all of it perfectly under control too!

She is also happy and thankful that her children are in an international school learning in a different way to what they were used to and that they are getting open minded and open to the world.

Of course, Tanya’s thoughts sometimes circle around the question about her future and how it will continue workwise for her at some point. But for now, she is living the moment and enjoys it as long as it lasts!

The diverse community with expats from all over the world and all of their stories also gives Tanya a lot of insight for her own life what on the other side makes it tricky sometimes to get along with old friends who do not always understand her new view on life. Nevertheless she is very happy about that experience which she will keep in her heart forever, when they move back to Germany in probably about a year’s time.

Tanya is such a positive mummy, always seeing the bright side of things and always keen to keep the negative side small without allowing it to grow. She barely ever moans or complains and is simply happy about the possibilities life has given her.