When a Change is Made
I was invited to go to a corporate toastmaster
meeting two weeks ago and I heard one toastmaster’s speech, which was about change. His
speech triggered thoughts about my own change.
Definitely, after moving to Canada from China three and a half years ago, I
have undergone big changes in my life.
Before the move, I had gotten used to some
sort of change by working in a fast paced 500 Fortune IT company–Cisco Systems-
for almost 10 years as my first job. Cisco is in a cutting edge technology
field with lots of new changes everyday, Employees had to get used to change. Every year, we
had new products, new management teams, new business strategies and new
marketing slogans. We used to joke, “In Cisco, one thing that never changes is
CHANGE.” In my 10 years career in Cisco, I reported to 7 different managers, with
one reason : I changed positions and then got promoted about every 2 years.
There is an old saying in Chinese: “A tree
will be dead after it is moved several times. A person will make progress after
he/she moves. “In my opinion, changes make people leave their comfort zone and
embrace the new challenges and new tasks.
I have a friend who has been in the same
position with the same company in the same department for 15+ years. One day we
had a talk at lunch we talked about our career plan. She told me that she was
quite comfortable to stay in her position and she was not willing to accept big
changes. That is true, comfort zone makes people feel very comfortable since
there are no new challenges and no surprises to shake you up. People feel confident and safe staying
in that zone and feel like everything is under control.
Before my family immigrated to Canada, I
felt comfortable staying in the same company and the same city working with lots
of familiar people. Although my job as a Regional Marketing Manager was quite
challenging and changing, it was not until I moved to Vancouver that I found
what change really meant.
In fact, I should clap for myself . I was
not aware that I was that brave when I said yes to my husband when he asked me whether
to immigrate to Canada 6 years ago. At that time , I was busy travelling
between different cities on various campaigns and projects. I even did not have
a chance to think about what the change meant to me. I just agreed by instinct
since I believed the change would be good for our child.
On the day before I was leaving my city and
my homeland, my parents and friends just could not understand why I made the
decision to make this big change since everything seemed perfect in my life. In
terms of career, I had been rewarded and gotten promoted quite frequently for
my outstanding work .I had been rewarded as one of the best employees to the
company. In my personal life,
I had a nice one in China .I had a nice live-in nanny at home so that I could
free myself from housework and spend more quality time with my kid and my
family. Besides, I had so many good friends and professional partners in China ,everything
just worked perfectly and my future
seemed quite promising.
Although I knew my husband had submitted
the immigration application I thought that was far away.
Until three and a half years ago, my
husband had reminded me that we were going to move now otherwise we would lose the opportunity;
At that time, I started to realize that big changes would happen very soon in
our lives.
Saying goodbye to my parents, my mother
company and my motherland and flying to another country made me have very complicated
feelings. Although my parents had found that I was not afraid of changes and
new things when I was a child, I still found this change was something
different from anything else in my past.
I had moved from city to city with my
parents in my childhood and as a teenager along with my father’s business.
Everytime I moved to a different city and went to a different school, I usually
felt quite excited. On the contrary, it would take my brother quite a while until
he felt totally comfortable with it.
My father used to play a game with my
brother and me when we were 3-4 years old. He put us on a high table top first
,then he stepped away and asked us to jump into his arms. Everytime he asked me
to jump, I just jumped into his arms immediately no matter how far he adjusted
his distance to me. But my brother would be very cautious and asked my father
to get closer and closer to him until he could lean in into my father’s arms
easily. At that time, my father had recognized me as a fearless kid who would like
to make changes and enjoy new
tasks.
So far, my life can be summarized by
locations. I stayed in 3 different cities in eastern China for 10+ years, then
I moved to middle Southern China and stayed there for 4+ years, after that I worked
and lived in Southern China for 10+ years. After that, I made a big leap, and moved
to Canada for where I have
lived for the past three and a half years.
Why did I say it was a big leap for this
move? Moving in different regions in China was quite OK for me, although each
region or even each city had different dialects and lifestyles. As a food lover
who has great enthusiasm about foods, I would summarize the difference in each
region this way: usually northern cities eat quite salty, eastern cities eat
quite sweet, western and some middle southern cities eat quite spicy and some
cities eat quite plain. However, no matter how big differences there are, how
many different dialects they have, such as Shanghainese, Hunanese, Cantonese, the
fact is that those regions are all in China and we at least understand one
common language : Mandarin.
After leaping to North America, I would say
that I am still on the planet and have not yet moved out to the outer space.
But the change is still somewhat big here.
From the career perspective, no matter how
good I was in China, the Canadian recruiter would think they are taking a risk
to hire me since I am from another country. I need to prove to everybody that I
am good firstly. But where can I find my stage to play? Who will be the first
risk-taker and who will give me a chance to prove my ability?
I got an interview last month by a fortune
500 company. After the interview, I asked the hiring manager her feedback on me.
She said that my background and qualifications are great; however, my English
is excellent but not yet perfect compared with the native speakers and I have
accent.
I realized again that I am living in
another different country, which looks at you as an outsider sometimes.
In China, language was not a significant factor
for the success or failure for my career. Although my Mandarin has some mixed
accents, since I moved with my parents from region to region and city to city
in China, but nobody would think my accented mandarin would be a barrier or a concern.
In fact, almost everybody in China except Beijingnese does not have an accent
when they speak Mandarin; nobody will think accent is an issue to find a good
job.
But I am living in an English-speaking
country, my accent is proving to be a stumbling block to landing a good job.
It wasn’t until I first went to school in
Canada that I found that students could be divided into 2 groups: native born
Canadians and immigrants. And sometimes I was dreaming about what it might look
like if my native Canadian classmates were sitting in a Mandarin instructed
class in China and they needed to discuss, talk and present in Mandarin?
Although it is my daydream sometimes, but by thinking a bit of it makes me feel
amused.
As a result, no matter how great an attitude
I have and how enthusiastic I am toward work, I have to make people feel that
hiring me is not taking a risk.
From the perspective of my everyday life, I
have to deal with all cooking, housework, childcare things by myself. Having
not cooked one meal in China, I found that I am a talent in cooking although I had
made some silly mistakes in the beginning. I cooked the fish without cleaning
its abdominal organs. Boiled the whole chicken without cutting it. Learned one
recipe and successfully cooked a meal and then I ate the same dish for 1 week.
Soon I found my origin of enthusiasm, I
would like to feed my son in a mothering way. I enjoyed watching him eating the
meal happily and compliment me on being a good mother.
I started to learn cooking seriously. I
watched cooking on YouTube. I called my friends to get their recipes. I downloaded
cooking applications to my iPhone and iPad and I learnt a lot from there.
In just 5 months, my friends and my family were
amazed by how many changes I made and how well I can cook now.
Another change I made was on study.
In order to prove myself to this new
country, as well as my enthusiasm on continuous study, I went to a business
school in downtown at nights after work. Comparing studying in China with
studying in Canada is also a big difference. In China, it’s a teacher-instructed,
student –listening, work –on- homework , then exam-taking mode. In Canada, it’s
quite different. First it’s student reads lots of materials first ,next teacher
instructs and students work on a projectsas a group, then students work on
papers as a group . Students also need to work on papers individually and then take
an exam.
It was not until I came to school in Canada
that I found how important writing skills are. After being asked a few times to
revise my individual paper at school, I registered myself to an Advanced
English writing course at night. After the course I still found I should learn
more on writing, I started to have a writing tutor after that.
In China, not many people are good at
Chinese writing unless they are working as a columnist , editor or writer. Or
some people are going at writing if they are working for the government. I had
not written a paper or a project in Chinese after I graduated from university.
I should admit that I am not good at Chinese writing although Chinese is my
mother language.
Having been working in the business field
for many years, I am very good with numbers, analysis, charts and bullet points
,which are used for presentations. But I have not written things longer than a
paragraph unless I have to write a new year card to my kid’s teacher.
Since the change of moving to Canada, I
have to prove that I am good not only on speaking but also on writing. I
started writing and started my English blog a few months ago. Now I would say
that my English writing probably is better than my Chinese writing since I
practiced more and wrote more in English than in Chinese.
Besides writing, I have also made some
changes to speaking. While I was in China, I made presentations frequently but I
had not worried about my public presentation before.
In Canada, in order to be familiar with English
presentation, I joined toastmasters in 2012. I have found that there are a lot
of presenting and public speaking skills to learn as well.
After having delivering my 7 speeches, and
now working on my last 3 speeches before getting a Competent Communication
title, I found that working on public speaking was also a change I needed to
cope with.
In my three and a half years life in
Canada, my life is continuously changing. Changing is the key tone in my life
now. The only thing that does not change is the fact that everything changes.
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