My story…
I teach in a small, private, and (to say the least) unconventional school. It’s a place where the teachers are asked to put in all aspects of themselves (creative, artistic, emotional, sensitive and more), where everyone wears malong on wednesdays, where 5 sciences are taught in elementary, where children with special needs go hand in hand with every other kid in their class, a place where excellence and kindness have reached a harmonious compromise. For four years I’ve found myself enjoying the company of kids and co-workers, feeling a different kind of fulfillment trying to influence changes in the new generation, acquiring more and more knowledge about all sorts of things, and discovering and rediscovering certain skills that I’ve already forgotten (like drawing and playing music). But not without sacrifice… financial sacrifice that is. (It’s common knowledge here in the Philippines that the teaching career does not go well with the words lucrative or financially rewarding.) I’ve tried delaying worries about financial issues but I guess it can only be delayed for so long. It has become quite a pressing concern especially now that I’ve become a family man.
Concidentally, a friend offered me a position in a call center company he works for in Libis last Christmas vacation. A training specialist position, he said, is something that I could work with so I tried. The pay, the opportunities for climbing up the ranks, and even the medical benefits were excellent. The catch, however, is that you have to be able and willing to fire people who are not competent in their work. Don’t get me wrong. I understand the need for employee competency in a company. It’s just that telling people to go find another job somewhere else is entirely new to me. (In school, expulsion is the last resort - only, and I mean only, when absolutely all options are exhausted)
Anyway, because I don’t want to keep the kids hanging, I declined the offer. But my friend told me that the same position will be vacant again this summer. And that’s where I stand. Do I continue the life I’ve enjoyed for 4 years, trying to matter in the world as an educator but risking my family’s financial security, or do I
donn the corporate attire, leaving my co-teachers, friends and the children I’ve grown to regard as my own and finally be able secure my family’s future and buy things I’ve never bought before for myself, my wife, and our new little angel?Those are the two goals that I have.
That’s the crossroad where I stand.
