Aussiemika
New Member
Hi y'all, 2 months in from arriving here permanently with my wife (now 6 months pregnant) and 3 year old from Australia and we've found I guess we have found it to be a tough transition so far.
I was bought a house here prior to us arriving (having seen done so in May on our activation trip) so do have a place to call home, our shipping container arrives next week from Australia after it's 2 month voyage across the globe.
We sold our house in Australia which gives us a nest egg in case things go wrong here. We also took 12 months leave from our roles in Australia as a fall back and are fortunate to both of had substantial long service and annual leave owing. Had to leave our Rotweiller in Australia as the $7000 to bring her was too much and her 9 year age was probably getting a little risky too.
For the first week of being here we stayed in a hotel whilst we bought beds etc to stay in our house. We had a rental car until we found one to buy, probably rushed in to what we bought on account of our 3 year old being hard to live with! It was tough to transition with her also going through the changes and not understanding what was happening.
Work
I have had no success in finding work so far despite having applied for over 80 jobs, no interviews to date, gets to be a little demoralising. I have 20 years experience in my professional field however no college degree. This seems to be a big issue with the applications (I work in finance). We had allowed 12 months so still have plenty of time but it is frustrating! My wife will not be looking for work for at least another year.
Child care.
It's been interesting to compare from back home. We have looked at many daycares and finally settled on one which she starts at next week. $190 a week full time, which compared to $110 a day in Australia is great. Not 100% convinced on the center and will look at another couple this week even though she is starting there. The great schools have 12 month waiting lists (or longer), sools that have vacancies have very poor reviews. My tip on this would be to start looking before you go. Once you have a date, start researching straight away. We left it till we arrived. Big mistake.
Healthcare.
Given I do not have work at present, we are paying $1000 a month with a $7300 deductable. Ludicrous, however given the baby will be born in February, the only other choice was to go back home. The system is hard to understand however we do have a broker that is assisting us. We need to choose a new marketplace policy by 15th December so another meeting coming up this week with the broker.
Have been thinking of starting a blog to diarise the transition and experiences. For all of the similarities between Australia and the US, there are a lot of differences which even after coming here for 15 years I did not realise until actually living here.
I was bought a house here prior to us arriving (having seen done so in May on our activation trip) so do have a place to call home, our shipping container arrives next week from Australia after it's 2 month voyage across the globe.
We sold our house in Australia which gives us a nest egg in case things go wrong here. We also took 12 months leave from our roles in Australia as a fall back and are fortunate to both of had substantial long service and annual leave owing. Had to leave our Rotweiller in Australia as the $7000 to bring her was too much and her 9 year age was probably getting a little risky too.
For the first week of being here we stayed in a hotel whilst we bought beds etc to stay in our house. We had a rental car until we found one to buy, probably rushed in to what we bought on account of our 3 year old being hard to live with! It was tough to transition with her also going through the changes and not understanding what was happening.
Work
I have had no success in finding work so far despite having applied for over 80 jobs, no interviews to date, gets to be a little demoralising. I have 20 years experience in my professional field however no college degree. This seems to be a big issue with the applications (I work in finance). We had allowed 12 months so still have plenty of time but it is frustrating! My wife will not be looking for work for at least another year.
Child care.
It's been interesting to compare from back home. We have looked at many daycares and finally settled on one which she starts at next week. $190 a week full time, which compared to $110 a day in Australia is great. Not 100% convinced on the center and will look at another couple this week even though she is starting there. The great schools have 12 month waiting lists (or longer), sools that have vacancies have very poor reviews. My tip on this would be to start looking before you go. Once you have a date, start researching straight away. We left it till we arrived. Big mistake.
Healthcare.
Given I do not have work at present, we are paying $1000 a month with a $7300 deductable. Ludicrous, however given the baby will be born in February, the only other choice was to go back home. The system is hard to understand however we do have a broker that is assisting us. We need to choose a new marketplace policy by 15th December so another meeting coming up this week with the broker.
Have been thinking of starting a blog to diarise the transition and experiences. For all of the similarities between Australia and the US, there are a lot of differences which even after coming here for 15 years I did not realise until actually living here.