I remember it clearly. It was white, cold, and fluffy. That was my first sight of snow when I first immigrated to Canada in 1997. I remember stepping off the plane, expecting to see a scene from the hit movie Home Alone. I also remember what I was wearing – a tank top and skirt. I didn’t know what to expect just coming off a plane from the Philippines, but I was suddenly hit with culture shock, and a temperature shock.
I was nine years old and I knew the sacrifices my parents had to make to immigrate here. They quit their job, and left everything they’d ever known to move to a country to provide better opportunities for me and my siblings. Am I thankful? Heck, yes.
I’m not going to lie, moving here was hard – the snow, the temperature, the language barrier. I could go on and on. I remember my whole family trudging through the snow with a shopping cart in the middle of a blizzard just to get groceries. I remember when I stood outside for over an hour in -40 degree weather waiting for the school bus, because we didn’t adjust our clocks for daylight savings time.
But with every hardship comes an opportunity or a silver lining, as we like to call it. One of those was Career Trek, a not-for-profit organization who gave me the opportunity to experience up to 80 careers in post-secondary institutions here in Winnipeg.
It’s been 13 years and I proudly call myself a Canadian. I’m not only thankful for my parents for taking the huge risk of moving here, but for all of the people we’ve met along the way who’ve helped us one way or another.
Written by Meryl Kaye De Leon, Director of Community Relations at Career Trek
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