Picture this: a man who insists on calling every student “my little emperor” because “China is full of emperors, right?”—as if the Forbidden City was just a neighborhood BBQ. He once tried to teach the present continuous tense using the example: *The emperor is eating dumplings*. Not only was the historical accuracy questionable, but the students were now convinced I was part of some royal espionage ring. Meanwhile, there was the woman who believed “grammar” meant “what sounds cool,” and once told a student that “I am having a bad day” was more “poetic” than “I have a bad day.” I almost cried. Not from sadness. From sheer, unrelenting disbelief.
And then came the one who thought the word *awkward* could be used as a verb. “I awkwarded it,” she declared, proudly, after spilling her soy milk on a PowerPoint projector. The entire staff stared in silence. She didn’t even blink. “I just awkwarded that.” I swear, if language had a chaos meter, she’d be at maximum capacity.
But honestly? The absurdity wasn’t just funny—it was oddly endearing. There’s something beautifully human about people trying to navigate a culture, a language, and a classroom full of kids who think “let’s go to the bathroom” is a great way to end a lesson. I’ve had colleagues who tried to teach idioms by acting them out—yes, *“break a leg”* became a dramatic, flailing leap from the teacher’s desk. One guy even tried to explain “raining cats and dogs” by holding up a tiny stuffed cat and dog in a stormy paper hat. It was ridiculous. It was terrible. It was also, somehow, perfect.
Let’s talk about travel. Because nothing bonds expats faster than a shared story of lost luggage, wrong train tickets, and accidentally booking a weekend trip to Tibet during a snowstorm. I once went on a “quick” weekend jaunt to Guilin with two colleagues who, despite promising me “just a quick hike,” ended up getting us lost in a bamboo forest for three hours because one of them insisted “the sun is our compass,” while the other was too busy photographing a squirrel to notice we’d passed the same stone arch three times. That day, I learned two things: never trust a compass made of enthusiasm, and always carry a backup map—preferably one that doesn’t rely on hand-drawn doodles of pandas.
Still, those misadventures? They’re the real curriculum. Not the one in the textbook. The one that teaches you how to survive a power outage during a lesson on prepositions, how to explain the difference between “sick” and “ill” when your student’s grandma is actually in the hospital, or how to laugh when your coworker tells a classroom of 10-year-olds that “I’m feeling *sassy* today” and the kids immediately start chanting “Sasss-sass-sass!” like a chant from a forgotten tribe.
Of course, none of this would’ve happened if I hadn’t taken the leap in the first place. And if you’re even slightly tempted—yes, you, reading this with one hand on your coffee and the other scrolling through dreamy photos of Beijing’s lantern-lit alleys—then I say: go for it. Find Work Abroad: Find Work Abroad isn’t just a slogan; it’s a lifeline for anyone who’s ever stared at a job board and thought, “Wait, is *this* the moment I finally leave my comfort zone?” Spoiler: yes. It is. And trust me, the worst ex-colleague you’ll ever meet might just be the one who teaches you how to laugh at the chaos.
So here’s to the unforgettable, the unforgettable-ly weird, and the unforgettable-ly wonderful. To the students who still call me “Miss Tea” because I once brought bubble tea to class and didn’t explain the difference between *tea* and *bubble* (still not sure I should’ve). To the colleagues who made me question my own sanity, my grammar skills, and my life choices. And to China—where every day feels like a plot twist in a comedy series written by a caffeine-addicted dreamer.
Because in the end, the most valuable lessons aren’t found in textbooks. They’re scribbled in the margins of your memory—next to a coffee stain, a mispronounced word, and a group photo of your entire department holding mismatched chopsticks like ancient warlords. And honestly? I wouldn’t trade that for anything.
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Beijing, Dearing,

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