Skip to the main content.

2 min read

Teaching in Thailand Will Change Your Life

Teaching in Thailand Will Change Your Life

October 19, 2018, I am 30,000 feet above the Pacific Ocean on Singapore Airlines flight 708 to Tokyo, Japan. There was a sense of urgency to get off the 12 hour flight and see what Asia had in store for me, but there was also a sense of caution. Me, myself and I, alone in a city of 35 million people, no one to lean on for help with directions and no one to go to restaurants with. I just had myself, 6,700 miles away from home and I am loving every second of it.

I am not new to the travel game, I have worked 3 summers in Alaska, worked on an island off the coast of Southern California and even worked in Yosemite national park. I have also studied abroad in Italy and did a volunteer trip to Central America. But this trip was different, the purpose of this trip was simple; teach English in Thailand for four months and travel to 10 countries and 2 continents in the process.

October 30, 2018, I will never forget the 2.5 hour drive north of Bangkok to my school. I had never seen rice paddies until that moment. A cloud of mystery and fear was over me, I had no idea what to expect. My first day of school, the kids couldn’t stop looking at me and touching me, they were fascinated by my presence. Every time I get lunch and I’m carrying the dishes back to my office, the kids get on their tippy toes and try to get a full look as to what I will be consuming for lunch; they find me to be so interesting and I love it.

darby4I am now writing this on January 30th, 2019, I have been teaching for 3 months, with one more month left on my contract. This last month will be a bitter sweet one; I am one step closer to fulfilling my contract and seeing the destinations that were once just a figment of my imagination but at the same time, saying goodbye to all these kids will not be easy. I easily give over 1,000 fist bumps, high fives, handshakes, as well as partake in countless rock, paper, scissors matches a day. Teaching alone in a foreign land gives you such a sense of accomplishment.

There were times along this journey I would ask myself questions like; what am I even doing here? Or how am I going to last for another 3 months? And every time one of these questions arose, I always looked at the glass half full, instead of half empty. I knew I was over here to make a difference in kids lives and I was over here to ultimately enrich my soul. Every time a young Thai kid, waves to me and says hello, I have to stop and say to myself, wow I am so lucky to be having this amazing interaction and how genuine this experience is. This is the type of experience 20 years down the line, when I look back on my life, when I look back at the pictures I’ve taken, I can honestly say “I actually did that, what a beautiful experience that was.”

Teacher Diversity Here And Abroad

5 min read

Teacher Diversity Here And Abroad

When I checked my email first thing this morning, I noticed an article from Education Week entitled How COVID-19 Is Hurting Teacher Diversity. I...

Read More
Top Five Teach English Abroad Programs For 2020

12 min read

Top Five Teach English Abroad Programs For 2020

If you could go anywhere in the world, where would it be? And what if money were no object? THEN where would you go? Soon, you could be in a place...

Read More
Teaching English Abroad: Alumni Extraordinaire!

2 min read

Teaching English Abroad: Alumni Extraordinaire!

Don’t ask jetsetter David Papier what his favorite country is, because the 66-year-old won’t give you a direct answer. It’s not that he doesn’t want...

Read More