For Love and Language: Finding My True Career in Santa Marta

The ledger pages of my old life were filled with numbers that spoke of tensile strength, melt flow indexes, and bulk densities. For years, my world was the air-conditioned hustle of Dubai, a city of shimmering glass and ambition, where I worked for my family’s business supplying chemical raw materials. I could talk for hours about the plasticizing properties of DINP in flexible PVC compounds or the impact resistance of polypropylene copolymer. It was a world of tangible things, of granules and pellets shipped in colossal white sacks, their value measured in metric tons and profit margins. It was a good life, a comfortable life, but one that existed in a climate-controlled bubble, devoid of the messy, unpredictable humidity of human growth.

The shift did not begin with a grand epiphany, but with a quiet, persistent voice that belonged to a woman in Santa Marta, Colombia. We met not in person, but in the digital ether, and our connection quickly became the most real thing in my life. Love has a gravity that can warp the trajectory of a life, pulling it from its calculated orbit. To be with her, I had to travel 13,000 kilometers, from the arid, gilded coast of the UAE to the lush, tropical foothills of the Sierra Nevada. I was trading a known, stable identity—the chemical materials provider—for the terrifying and exhilarating unknown.

The initial feelings were a cocktail of thrilling anticipation and profound disorientation. Leaving the family business felt like cutting a tether. There was a deep-seated fear of failure, of being an imposter. Who was I without the business card that so neatly defined me? In Dubai, I was someone. In Santa Marta, I was just another foreigner, my identity as fluid and unformed as the hot Caribbean air. The first few weeks were a lesson in humility. I fumbled with Spanish in grocery stores, missed the structured urgency of the business world, and felt a loneliness that was amplified by the fact that I was there for the one person who made it all worthwhile. It was a paradox: I had never been happier in my personal life, yet I had never felt more professionally adrift.

Necessity, as much as a burgeoning desire, led me to teaching. My English was my most readily marketable skill. I took a TEFL, CELTA, TESOL courses online, the grammar rules feeling sterile and theoretical compared to the dynamic chemistry data sheets I was used to. My first job was at a small language institute, a world away from the corporate towers of Dubai. The night before my first class, a group of twenty teenagers, I was gripped by fear so visceral it was nauseating. This wasn’t a negotiation with a procurement manager where the worst outcome was a lost contract. This was standing in front of human beings, tasked not with transferring information, but with sparking understanding. The stakes fell infinitely higher.

The night before my first class, a group of twenty teenagers, I was gripped by fear so visceral it was nauseating. This wasn’t a negotiation with a procurement manager where the worst outcome was a lost contract. This was standing in front of human beings, tasked not with transferring information, but with sparking understanding. The stakes fell infinitely higher.

I remember walking into that classroom, the faint, chemical scent of dry-erase markers hanging in the air, the sea breeze drifting through the open windows. The students’ eyes were on me—curious, bored, skeptical. My palms were damp. I uncapped a blue marker and wrote my name on the pristine whiteboard, the squeak of the tip the only sound breaking the silence. My handwriting looked strangely foreign, a stark declaration of my new identity. I took a deep breath, turned to them, and began.

«Good morning. My name is…»

And at that moment, something shifted. The fear didn’t vanish, but it was eclipsed by a new, overwhelming sensation: connection. I was no longer just a former salesman or a lovesick immigrant. I was a conductor, however clumsy, of a shared endeavor. We stumbled through introductions together. We laughed when I mispronounced a Spanish name and when they butchered an English vowel. The transaction was no longer about goods and currency, but about confidence and comprehension. In that first class, I didn’t teach them much grammar, but I hope I gave them a glimpse that English wasn’t a monster to be feared, but a tool to be played with. The feeling that washed over me afterward was a pure, undiluted joy I had never found in closing a six-figure deal. It was the joy of usefulness, of human resonance.

That feeling only deepened and evolved as the months turned into years. Watching a student’s mind expand is nothing like watching a quarterly sales report trend upward. It is a slower, more organic, and far more beautiful process. It is exactly like tending to a garden. You plant the seed of a complex concept, water it with patience and repetition, and provide the sunlight of encouragement. For weeks, sometimes months, there seems to be nothing. Then, one day, a reserved student who struggled with academic syntax raises his hand and deftly employs a conditional clause to debate a point. A green shoot breaking through the soil.

I have watched these seeds become sturdy saplings. I’ve seen Ana, a first-year biology major, transition from stumbling through simple greetings to confidently presenting her research on coral reef degradation to a visiting professor. I’ve seen Mateo, who was initially paralyzed by the fear of making mistakes, finally find his voice, leading a spirited classroom debate on Gabriel García Márquez with passion and imperfect, but wholly effective, fluency. These are not metrics of success; they are milestones of a human spirit expanding its territory. The pride I feel is not personal, possessive pride, but a wondrous, shared pride. I was merely the gardener who provided the water; they did the hard, brave work of growing towards the sun.

The shift in my work, my residence, and my very soul has been the most profound education of my life. I left a world of defined quantities for one of unquantifiable qualities. I traded the certainties of polymer chains for the beautiful uncertainties of the human mind. The man who once worried about the shelf life of plasticizers now worries about the lasting impact of his words on a young person’s confidence.

And the reason for it all, the love that drew me across the world, is now my wife. We sit in our garden in the evenings, the lights of Santa Marta twinkling below like a terrestrial constellation, and I tell her about my day. I tell her about the student who finally understood the present perfect, and she smiles, knowing that she was the one who led me to this purpose. The 13,000-kilometer journey wasn’t just a trip to find my heart; it was a pilgrimage to find my true work. I went from selling the materials that shape objects to participating in the far more sacred task of helping to shape potential. And in that fertile, humid soil of a new country and a new vocation, I found not just a life, but a self I never knew I had the capacity to become.

With love Talal AlMoeen

T0 dieron "Me gusta"Publicado en Docentes innovadores, Humanidades, Idiomas

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