English, asked by rgrueguuguyt3gyegy, 10 months ago

Your parents are both working I multinational companies and ofen return home late . you have to return to an empty house everyday. You hate warming up the food and staying alone in empty house or going to various tution classes till about eight in the night. Write a letterto the editor of a leading newspaper on the plight of such students with working parents, who ,in fact are toiling for their children alone. Sign your name shivani/shivam

Answers

Answered by Gurusharma
3

Explanation:

Examination Hall

Delhi

09 November 11

The Editor

Delhi Daily

Park Street,

New Delhi

Sir,

Subject: Plight of children of working parents

I would like to attract people's attention to the fact that children are very adversely getting affected by the dynamic work schedules of working parents in cities nowadays. This lack of focus and time leads to children falling prey to various vices. They might also feel depressed, lonely and insecured all the time.

My parents are both working in an MNC whose timing are from second half of the day to almost 10pm everyday. They also have to travel a lot for work purpose. Due to work pressure, they are unable to catch up with the household chores and this has led to chaos in my house. Afterall, responsibilities cannot be fully taken by maids and servants. I hardly find a chance to discuss my problems and share my loneliness with them. They find me impractical and lose patience while talking to me.

This is very depressing for me. The scenario needs to change and parents should be more enlightened towards gaining an appropriate balance between their professional and personal lives. Hope you highlight this issue in the columns of your esteemed newspaper.

Yours faithfully,

Guru Aulakh

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Answered by Nafeeza25
0

Answer:

Returning Home after Living Abroad? Not as Easy as Expected!

BY SEBASTIAN REICHE

Posted on April 5, 2013

p.coming_home01Undoubtedly, expat life can be very exciting. The experiences and challenges of life abroad develop one as a person, teach new skills and enhance capabilities, create new meanings in life, and generally translate into valuable memories, which are worth remembering for many years ahead.

Nowadays, the young generation gets involved with a globally mobile lifestyle already during their formative years, by planning for university studies and the first valuable working experiences abroad. According to a Unesco report, by 2009 there were 3.4 million students on the move each year, and the number is expected to grow. Students get more globally mobile than ever before. For many, experiencing globetrotting before ‘settling down’ at home becomes very sought-after. However, when it is time to pack up and head back, the reality of repatriation turns out to be not as easy as expected.

As noted in a recent International Herald Tribune article, there is ‘the dark side of expat life’. The comments provided in the article imply that young people living away from their home countries feel somewhat ‘stuck in limbo, neither here nor there’. This feeling is quite understandable given that for many, life in the host country is perceived as temporary, however as time passes ‘home’ in the native country becomes more distant. The main concern is that while being temporarily abroad, the lives of one’s peers, relatives and friends back home move on too: families get established, careers progress and house mortgages get paid. And even though equipped with new skills, experiences and prospects, at the moment of repatriation the recent traveller finds him/herself in a situation where a job needs to be found, new accommodation arranged, and social ties renewed.

This is how the problem is reflected by the young generation:

“I’ve watched as peers back home have married, had children, bought houses, advanced in their careers. Meanwhile, most of us here in Seoul find ourselves living Peter Pan-like existences. I’m entering middle age with nothing tangible to show for it”

“I do worry whether I should return and put down roots permanently for once in my life”

“So should I go home pre-emptively and try to build a life there? But therein lies the expat’s problem: there’s nothing back home for me now”

(“The Dark Side of the Expat Life” By THE INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE)

Well, plainly speaking, the solution to such ‘rootless’ situation is quite simple, as it is up to only two choices: either settle abroad, or return back home. As discussed, returning back home may not be easy, and indeed, it may be perceived as starting all over again. However, there are ways of making such transition more positive

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