I know there are lots of 'recent immigrant' resources for my husband, but can anyone help me get through this?
-
I knew this would be a hard time, but I had no idea how hard it would be. Please, help me get through it. This might be a bit of a long shot, because it's a pretty specific request, but I need to give it a try. My husband recently immigrated from a developing country to Toronto. In many respects he is doing well, but the job search has been tough, and he is not happy with the way it is gone. It took him about 5 weeks to find a job, which in his mind was way too long. By the end of it, I was worried how much longer we could take since he was becoming more depressed and miserable. He has high expectations, and a lot of stress since he has family at home that he needs to support. The fact that everyone was telling him that he was doing wonderfully didn't seem to matter to him. That first job was pretty awful (long commute, not particularly safe, serious problems with repetitive stress injuries), so when he got a second job, he waited two weeks, then quit the first. Three days later the second job let him go citing difficulties with his language (which I don't entirely believe, but that's neither here nor there). His English is excellent and I know firsthand that he's a hard worker. The first job won't take him back since they just hired 5 new guys, and now we're back at the beginning. Only he's angry and hurt, and lashing out at me because I wanted him to quit the unsafe job. In this moment, where he is so frustrated and upset, I fear that he'll pack it all in and go home. I have lived in his country and I could again, but a life there means that we will always struggle to get by, and won't be able to help his family the way that we will eventually be able to here. There are a tonne of resources in Toronto for finding a job if you're a new Canadian, but that is not what we need right now. I know how to find a job, it's the delay before he gets another one that might just do us both in. My questions are: 1. Does anyone know of any supports/groups for people who have sponsored recent immigrants? Everything is focused on him, and he is definitely having the harder experience, but I'm not sure how much longer I can hold us both up while trying to manage my relatively-stressful job. And I can't take a break from that both because I am the boss and because we need at least one income. I really feel like I'm sitting on the ledge right now. 2. I know that there are a tonne of 'how to find a job' resources for him, but do you know of anything that would help him deal with the adjustment. It would have to be suitably 'manly'. In his country of origin, therapy is not socially acceptable. Some sort of mentoring program would be ideal. Due to the fact that we're down to one income, any solution needs to be affordable or free. I appreciate any help you can give me. Throwaway email - [email protected]
-
Answer:
Oh, and: Only he's angry and hurt, and lashing out at me because I wanted him to quit the unsafe job. In this moment, where he is so frustrated and upset, I fear that he'll pack it all in and go home. Don't fear it; embrace it. Tell him "Look, if you were a pathetic waste of a person, I would let you go right on working that dangerous job, because I'd worry you would never find another one. But you're not a pathetic waste; you're a strong, intelligent, useful and wonderful person, and I love you, and you will get another job, and a safer, better one. I don't want you dying before you have that chance. Now stop giving me such a hard time, and take out your frustration on the job market."
anonymous at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source
Other answers
Only he's angry and hurt, and lashing out at me because I wanted him to quit the unsafe job. In this moment, where he is so frustrated and upset, I fear that he'll pack it all in and go home. This would be a bad thing? Get someone he respects to lay down the law and tell him that this kind of behavior is not helping either you, him, or his family. If he is blaming you already for semi-random bad luck this is not a great sign.
benzenedream
The Mennonites do a lot of work to help new immigrants. See thehttp://nipost.org/mennonite-new-life-centre-toronto. I notice that they offer family and marital counseling. I'm sure they would be willing to help you, or help find support for you. Good luck.
kitcat
Here are two places you could try: http://www.211toronto.ca/index.jsp http://www.settlement.org/index.asp
ThatCanadianGirl
"It would have to be suitably 'manly'." ... "Some sort of mentoring program would be ideal." I don't know how it works in Canada, but in the U.S., many skilled tradespeople (e.g., plumbers, electricians, carpenters, etc.) begin their careers either by working as an apprentice to an experienced person in their trade or through a formal training/apprenticeship program for their trade. Many immigrant communities are tightly knit and full of people willing to lend a hand to new arrivals from the old country. If there is a local community for people from your husband's country of origin, he could network within that community to find a fellow countryman working in a trade he's interested in and ask that person for advice on how to get started in that trade. That person might even be willing to hire him as an apprentice or help him find someone who would.
Jacqueline
I have this one, anecdotal thing that you might share with your husband, to help him feel a bit better about himself personally: my (college-educated, non-immigrant, talented and intelligent and strong work-ethic) wife has been out of work for over a year, with no end in sight, and we have a friend whose husband has been out of work for three years now, despite being a college-educated, non-immigrant, talented and intelligent and strong work-ethic person. In short: the job market sucks right now, and despite his recent immigrant status, he has managed to at least land two jobs (exactly two more than both my wife and our friend's husband.) In my book, that makes him a pretty damn desirable and talented employee suffering in a bad job market, not an unemployable immigrant, and I hope he can hold it together long enough for the job market to come to him. And, in the meantime: set aside a fixed time per day to look for work, and spend the rest of the time volunteering and/or working for very little money on any job he can get, just to stay busy -- otherwise his idleness will wreak emotional havoc that his actual skills and talents don't deserve.
davejay
I don't have any resources for Toronto, because I'm in the Midwest, but I hope you already belong to groups for American women married to foreigners. When I was married to a Moroccan, it was a total lifesaver. If you need some help on where to find these groups, just email me at the address in my profile. "I fear that he'll pack it all in and go home" I doubt this. He's just frustrated, and under a lot of pressure from his family, who expect the cash to start rolling in via MoneyGram. The last piece of advice - have him start *really* networking with others of his nationality who are established here. That's the way all the immigrants I know found jobs.
HopperFan
For the time being, the best thing you can do is help him with his attitude. Whether they admit it or not, guys tend to break down a little when they feel like they can't provide. You can't fix the shitty economy, so my suggestion is to try and either empathize and give him an outlet, or smack him around and tell him to suck it up (you know him better than I do).
Gilbert
Not sure how it is in Canada but the economy in the US is pretty lousy and even people with excellent college records, lots of network contacts, and great work experience (not to mention they speak English perfectly) are having a hard time finding a job. He needs to suck it up and keep trying. I understand that people get bummed out because they are having financial difficulties but good attitude and character are important no matter what country you are in or what country you came from and his being grouchy with you isn't going to help him at all. He may want to do some volunteer work while he is waiting for a job so that maybe he can develop some more skills.
MsKim
I know you weren't looking for job suggestions particularly, but if he has a car and a driver's license, he can be working as a courier starting tomorrow by walking into the dispatch offices of any of the major downtown courier companies (even if he doesn't have a car, he can work as a walking courier, but it pays less and he might might not find it manly enough). http://www.qms-tor.com/ http://www.securedcourier.com/jobs.aspx The pay is not great, but it's a real job and he really can be working tomorrow.
Related Q & A:
- Can anyone help me do a website?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- Can anyone help me get directions to Commonwelath park in beaverton oregon?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- Can anyone help me fix my MSN Keyboard Trouble?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- Can anyone help me get the code for my stereo?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- Can anyone help with any information on where to get items to sell on Ebay?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
Just Added Q & A:
- How many active mobile subscribers are there in China?Best solution by Quora
- How to find the right vacation?Best solution by bookit.com
- How To Make Your Own Primer?Best solution by thekrazycouponlady.com
- How do you get the domain & range?Best solution by ChaCha
- How do you open pop up blockers?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
For every problem there is a solution! Proved by Solucija.
-
Got an issue and looking for advice?
-
Ask Solucija to search every corner of the Web for help.
-
Get workable solutions and helpful tips in a moment.
Just ask Solucija about an issue you face and immediately get a list of ready solutions, answers and tips from other Internet users. We always provide the most suitable and complete answer to your question at the top, along with a few good alternatives below.