The Inside Track on Working Outside the United States
- By Pat Corcoran
- Published 05/18/2008
- Business
- Unrated
Pat Corcoran
Pat Corcoran is a lawyer, owner of numerous businesses and author of several books. He resides in Boston, Massachusetts,
View all articles by Pat CorcoranOverseas work is something that I tried out on a whim when I
was graduating from college. I had never pictured spending my life working
abroad. I had pretty conventional dreams actually. Although I talked a pretty
counterculture talk, in the long run I intended to settle down. I wanted a
wife, dog, three kids, and a white picket fence. I would build a wooden deck in
the backyard and host barbecue parties.
Working abroad was a way to put this off for a few years. I
was actually in a volunteer abroad program. They gave me a small living
stipend, with room and board in exchange for international human rights work.
It was a really rewarding program. Until you have seen how the other half live,
you can't possibly understand this world. My work abroad really taught me the
startling inequalities that exist, and the need to establish a more just and
equitable world.
The weird thing was how addictive the whole experience was.
Once you get a taste for working abroad, sometimes it never goes away. When I
started my work abroad, I was surprised at how many older people were on the
same volunteer program that I was. Literally half of us were over the age of
40, and about 10 people in a program of 60 were over the age of 55. Soon,
however, I understood why. There is a thrill in traveling that is beyond
anything else in the world.
When I was working abroad, I was living in quite spartan
accommodations in a village in the middle of
Just be aware that working abroad is not for people who can't stand to make sacrifices. Unless you are a CEO working for a professional company, you will have to face all the travails that a foreigner faces working abroad. You'll meet people who don't speak your language, occasionally be discriminated against, and frequently feel disoriented. Nonetheless, it is worth it in the long run. You will have the adventure of a lifetime.
