iwant2_r2i: My R2I (Bangalore) Diary
Posted: Tue Jun 15, 2010 12:11 am
Overall:
A year later we are still glad that we decided to return. There have a few times my wife felt like we should've stayed back, but those were just fleeting moments. We get lots of help from our parents and without them the transition would have been very hard.
If I could use only one work to summarize how I feel about R2I, it is "thankful". Living in India reminds me how fortune I'm with the opportunities I've had in my life and the resources we have at our disposal. One gets reminded of our good fortune quite frequently while living in India.
Work and work life balance:
I enjoy what I do at work and nothing has changed since the return. Since I transferred to the same company, the work culture is pretty much the same and our team has quite a few returnees. It is a fun team with lots of confidence and optimism.
I spend quite a bit of time in the night talking to teams in US, but there is flexibility in my job to make the necessary adjustments. The adjustments are difficult, but I'm glad I have the flexibility to make it work. I had to travel a few times to US in the past year and my time away was hard on the family. My wife's schedule is pretty packed as well. She works with teams in US, India and Europe so there is no window in her day for a downtime. But overall work life balance is ok.
We get a lot of *feedback* from parents and relatives that our work life balance is messed up. My wife and I discuss this and don't think that it is a valid observation. Yes, we work long and late hours, but we manage to spend more quality time with our kid than most folks do (or can afford to). We drive our kid to and from school, one of us takes him to the Piano and Slokha class and one of us hang around him when he does his homework. Most of our relatives have not seen work following you home and they are not comfortable with Blackberries and VPNs as yet.
Work and work life balance will continue to be top of the mind items for us to keep track of. We are fortunate to have a short commute and a supporitive work environment.
Child and schooling:
My son has adjusted quite well and is doing well at school. In another few months, it would be hard to spot any difference in his accent. He now prefers to speak in Tamil and has become quite eloquent in expressing complex thoughts better in Tamil than in English. His English has also deteriorated a little bit to my US English exposed ear, but I guess we are like this only :)
My son's reading habit has continued to grow since our return. IMO, there is not much emphais on reading in India as it is in US. The exposure we got living in US helped us provide the appropriate encouragement at home. He has taken an very active interest in Maths upon return and in my opinion, thats an influence from his present school. He is academically inclined and has a voracious appetite to learn new things. He has already started mentioning that the stuff covered in class is easy and boring to him. We'll need some guidance on how to keep him challeged and engaged at the same time. I'll post some queries in the appropriate threads.
Will post more as time permits........Let me know if there are any specific topics of my experience that will be useful to future r2i-rs.
Having successfuly executed a return to India, our new long-term-with-no-timeline-in-mind goal is to settle down in a tier 3/village when we are ready to retire. I'm sure there will be return2villageforum.com somewhere all the relevant topics will be dicussed by knowledgeble people.
A year later we are still glad that we decided to return. There have a few times my wife felt like we should've stayed back, but those were just fleeting moments. We get lots of help from our parents and without them the transition would have been very hard.
If I could use only one work to summarize how I feel about R2I, it is "thankful". Living in India reminds me how fortune I'm with the opportunities I've had in my life and the resources we have at our disposal. One gets reminded of our good fortune quite frequently while living in India.
Work and work life balance:
I enjoy what I do at work and nothing has changed since the return. Since I transferred to the same company, the work culture is pretty much the same and our team has quite a few returnees. It is a fun team with lots of confidence and optimism.
I spend quite a bit of time in the night talking to teams in US, but there is flexibility in my job to make the necessary adjustments. The adjustments are difficult, but I'm glad I have the flexibility to make it work. I had to travel a few times to US in the past year and my time away was hard on the family. My wife's schedule is pretty packed as well. She works with teams in US, India and Europe so there is no window in her day for a downtime. But overall work life balance is ok.
We get a lot of *feedback* from parents and relatives that our work life balance is messed up. My wife and I discuss this and don't think that it is a valid observation. Yes, we work long and late hours, but we manage to spend more quality time with our kid than most folks do (or can afford to). We drive our kid to and from school, one of us takes him to the Piano and Slokha class and one of us hang around him when he does his homework. Most of our relatives have not seen work following you home and they are not comfortable with Blackberries and VPNs as yet.
Work and work life balance will continue to be top of the mind items for us to keep track of. We are fortunate to have a short commute and a supporitive work environment.
Child and schooling:
My son has adjusted quite well and is doing well at school. In another few months, it would be hard to spot any difference in his accent. He now prefers to speak in Tamil and has become quite eloquent in expressing complex thoughts better in Tamil than in English. His English has also deteriorated a little bit to my US English exposed ear, but I guess we are like this only :)
My son's reading habit has continued to grow since our return. IMO, there is not much emphais on reading in India as it is in US. The exposure we got living in US helped us provide the appropriate encouragement at home. He has taken an very active interest in Maths upon return and in my opinion, thats an influence from his present school. He is academically inclined and has a voracious appetite to learn new things. He has already started mentioning that the stuff covered in class is easy and boring to him. We'll need some guidance on how to keep him challeged and engaged at the same time. I'll post some queries in the appropriate threads.
Will post more as time permits........Let me know if there are any specific topics of my experience that will be useful to future r2i-rs.
Having successfuly executed a return to India, our new long-term-with-no-timeline-in-mind goal is to settle down in a tier 3/village when we are ready to retire. I'm sure there will be return2villageforum.com somewhere all the relevant topics will be dicussed by knowledgeble people.