Dear Jericho,
You have many fears and your fears are preventing you from making the right decision. You also seem to be engaged in a battle with your father for control over your personal and professional future. You want your own life, yet you are afraid of displeasing him.
So, first things first.
Review the goals you set for yourself – you said you wanted to have your doctorate in Engineering by age 30, plus a condo unit, if not your own home. I sense from your letter that you would rather stay on the engineering track. Weigh what is more important to you – the condo unit or a career. You can get the condo unit with a job from the airline company but would that fulfill the longing you have for an engineering career? Will the condo unit be the proper symbol of the fulfillment of all that you could be? I have an uncle who also works in the Middle East, and he started at a low-level, low-paying job despite his CPA credentials and experience. His employers, however, saw what he could do and began to give him more and more responsibilities – and better pay. You have to start somewhere whether here or abroad.
You are too young to have these words in your vocabulary – what if, should have, could have, would have. Just do it! Life has its risks. Everything has consequences - some good, some bad.
The full measure of an adult lies in his ability to move towards his goal using all his gifts, take calculated risks, pick himself up if he falls, review his actions, and reorient his life’s direction.
Decide whether you still want to stay in the Middle East or not. You should be the one to decide. Deciding by default is not deciding at all. You default by letting circumstances decide for you – your father’s displeasure, your other family members whom you miss, the influx of new graduates, what other companies will say, your visa expiration date. There is much freedom to be gained from making a decision. Your next steps will be clearer to you, even what to say at interviews. You will be able to see which opportunities are aligned with your decision and weigh their value.
Now, to practical matters.
You fear that companies will think you are a lazy man because you did not work for a year – but you do not know this for a fact.
Fact - many local companies have a hard time looking for engineers of any kind.
Fact – many engineers leave for opportunities abroad.
Fact - you can still do something about it. One option is to get that engineering job in Dubai, however low-paying. What you will learn in terms of experience is invaluable – how to get along with superiors and peers in a different culture, how to work in a corporate set-up or in an organization, how to handle professional challenges. You may also discover how you could apply your new knowledge to Philippine contexts.
Another option is to return to the Philippines. You could always say that you did not find suitable opportunities for an engineering career in Dubai. You must, however, be willing to start somewhere. Smart companies always are on the lookout for talent they could develop. It is cheaper for them to keep good people than to continue recruiting and training new ones. So be one of the good people they would want to keep.
As for your struggles with your father, he probably just wants the best for you, and seeing that you could not make a decision or are unwilling to make one and stand by it, he makes it for you. He may just let go, you know, once you decide and show that you want to make it on your own.
Warm Regards , |