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“I decided I wanted to try the same thing, if only to escape my current circumstances.”said Driver, who began wanting to migrate in 2013, at a time when money was pressing her every day. After trying for a while, received a response from an academy in Daeguthe fourth largest city in Korea, where they offered him a job“I accepted without hesitation,” he said.
After that, She moved to Korea and enjoyed the country so much that she extended her stay until 2017, when she returned to the United States.precisely to Dallas, Texas. Upon returning, Driver found himself in a very expensive country“Even more expensive than when I left a few years earlier,” he said, adding that Since he did not have his own car, he depended on a friend for his trips. or had to pay for private cars. “Plus, I still had a lot of debt, so I was doing everything I could to stay afloat,” Driver said.
Added to this, Driver, who had stopped working as a teacher and had started his own business, said that “I had no idea how to run an independent business”so she panicked and took a full-time job writing for an agency.
His return to Korea and why he doesn’t regret leaving the United States again
It had been over a year since she had left Korea, she hated her job and felt more isolated than ever; until he received an email from the academy where he had worked asking if he would consider returning.
“Six weeks after receiving that email, I was already back in South Korea. with a new work visa. Landing at Incheon International Airport It was like coming home“Driver said in his interview with Business Insider.
It’s been six years since he returned to Korea and he says he has no interest in returning to the United States.“My cost of living on this side of the world, the friends I’ve made and the access I have to travel are worth more to me than I can express,” he said.
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