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Emigrating to Australia 'I’ve learned that home is home'

Moving to Australia at just eleven was daunting but taught me lots about myself, writes Aimee Murphy.

IT WAS FEBRUARY 2011, the worst day. Deep breaths and 1,2,3. This was something my dad taught me. I still question whether it works, but to this day I frequently remember the words my dad would say to me.

My last day with him was a turmoil of emotions, one moment marginally exciting, and the next devastatingly dragged and dejected, as I sat on his stairs, evaluating a card he had handed me.

I could tell by his swollen, soggy eyes and his rosy coloured cheeks that he had been crying. He left as I began opening the envelope with trembling hands. I couldn’t hold back the endless tears that slid down my cheeks.

Moving to Australia

Moving to Australia was a very daunting thing, especially because I didn’t know how it would affect my identity, not only culturally, but socially and personally too.

I had heard that some children thrive when they enter new environments, depending on their own circumstances, but I felt like this was potentially not going to happen for me.

How would the Australians view me? Would they think we looked and sounded different? Would they make fun of me?

These questions raced through my mind. Having to establish new, important relationships outside my family was extremely intimidating. The threat that the move had on my relationship with my friends was hard to accept.

Culture shock

It was obviously disruptive to the stability of my established core friends and family. The culture that I had grown up was about to dramatically change. My wardrobe was a small but drastic modification, as the weather was radically different.

Not all homes had a solid structure made from brick. We had two fireplaces in our Irish house. How did Santa come down the chimney in Australia or did they even believe in Santa?

As years passed the longing to return to the Emerald Isle didn’t disappear, but sometimes I have the ability to shut it out of my thoughts. I don’t live with a sudden absence and ache in my heart.

But at other times it will hit. The sense of melancholy and misery echoes through every particle in my body, as the absence of home reverberates.

I miss my family and friends. I miss the culture. I miss the endless fields of green, the fresh air that rejuvenates my lungs, the infinite number of castles, folk music and dance, the verdant landscape and the mythological stories told by older relatives.

Family connections

shutterstock_550843786 Shutterstock / amophoto_au Shutterstock / amophoto_au / amophoto_au

I don’t think anyone can try to envisage or contemplate how much one’s family means to them, and how they play a central role in the shaping of your individuality, until you are away from them.

I have realised that family are your first “friends”. You learn and grow from what you see them do. Through all that had happened with the move I became extremely close with my brother, Jack.

We did actually only have each other. Especially at Christmas, on birthdays and at other times where the whole family would be in one small cubed room parading around, gossiping about whatever relevant news they thought was important.

Homesickness

I get homesick, a lot, and with the homesickness comes dreams about Ireland. It is always worse in winter, with the lengthy cold evenings bringing so many emotions to the surface, and the thought that I may one day return to be a tourist in my own town.

I feel physically sick and can’t sleep. The oddest of things are the things I miss the most, like being amongst a crowd watching a Six Nation’s match.

Things like sitting at the kitchen table with my maternal grandmother, seeing the unconditional love in her eyes, the sadness that we are gone, the pride in who we have become.

Learning curve

I have gained a greater understanding and awareness of my place in this world because of this experience. Although as soon as I introduce myself to others I immediately feel different. My accent is a bit of a giveaway so there is an immediate division or feeling of otherness.

I have learned to overcome and live with this, but my culture is something I am extremely proud of. I’ve been here for some time now and I still don’t understand some Australian jokes and some people don’t get mine. I can be with my friends, feel so involved but always be the one step outside the circle.

I have had to mature and grow up in unexpected ways and I’m sure this will benefit me in the future.

So, what has all this taught me you ask?

Well it has taught me to shut up when I feel homesick because no one wants to hear that any immigrant might be happier elsewhere. It has taught me that I’d better not feel sorry for myself for having been dragged here, against my will, and forced to “make the best of it” throughout my formative years.

I’ve learned that home is home, even if it doesn’t have the best beaches, the best barbeques and the best opportunities.

I’ve learned that Australians are way more image-conscious and Irish people are way too attached to family and “the land”, myself included.

I have learned to look at my own country, culture and traditions from a different, long distance lens and admit it has flaws, while still being so very proud of who we are, who we have become and what we have, as a nation, overcome.

Aimee Murphy moved to Australia with her mom and brother Jack in 2011.

Column: ‘”A Right To A Home” should be put to referendum’

Opinion: ‘We don’t need female traffic lights. We do need decent maternity pay’>

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Oct 7th 2015, 8:00 AM

    also , I don’t think it should be called ” bettering ” their exams results , it’s questioning their results to make sure they were graded properly .

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    Mute Sloop John G
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    Oct 7th 2015, 10:26 AM

    Suzie, of course people are appealing to better their result. If they thought that the examiner had been generous to them do you really think they’d appeal in order for the exam to be “graded properly”?

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    Mute Suzie Sunshine
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    Oct 7th 2015, 10:53 AM

    sloop ,yes to better their result because the students believe they did better than the results they were given so therefore appeal , but if it had been graded properly in the first place then they wouldn’t have to appeal .

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    Mute Powerful Sayings
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    Oct 7th 2015, 11:20 AM

    But its not called bettering?

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    Mute Sloop John G
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    Oct 7th 2015, 12:14 PM

    Agreed Suzie, but, not wishing to sound pedantic, the article is about the results of the appeals not why the students had to appeal. Having said that, the fact that there were so many appeals raises serious questions which need to be answered

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    Mute Barry Vickers
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    Oct 7th 2015, 7:56 AM

    so nearly a fifth of results appealed were wrong? that’s quite startling

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    Mute HRH The Brummie
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    Oct 7th 2015, 9:53 AM

    Over 25% of Biology was upgraded. What a poor marking performance. And let’s not forget those marking Biology were the ones teaching it too…. scary.

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    Mute S ReiIIy
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    Oct 7th 2015, 10:18 AM

    25% of appealed results were upgraded, appealed results are not an accurate sample of exam papers, it is in fact a very small percentage of total papers.

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    Mute John Moylan
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    Oct 7th 2015, 10:39 AM

    25% of Biology was upgraded ? – where are you getting that figure from ? 245 out of 25,596 is not 25%……..

    Now if you said 25% of those appealed, that would be different………..

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    Mute HRH The Brummie
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    Oct 7th 2015, 10:57 AM

    well they don’t generally upgrade non appealed papers now do they. Think about it for a while…. 25% of all appealed Biology papers were upgraded. They are a representation of both the standard of marking a teaching.

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    Mute Barry Vickers
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    Oct 7th 2015, 5:24 PM

    I understand that S ReiIIy, but I think some thought should be put into reviewing a broader sample of appealed and unappealed papers to investigate what the actual % is, given that the percentage of appealed is so high.

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    Mute mickmc
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    Oct 7th 2015, 8:01 AM

    How can so many results be wrong? Will the teacher that gave these wrong results be marking next year?

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    Mute IrishGravyTrain
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    Oct 7th 2015, 8:17 AM

    Course they will. You can’t punish anyone in this country

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    Mute HRH The Brummie
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    Oct 7th 2015, 9:50 AM

    Except non public or state and semi state workers. we’re fair game.

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    Mute Eamon DeValera
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    Oct 7th 2015, 11:48 AM

    2000 wrong out of almost 390,000 is a pretty good result. Don’t forget that for many exams what is right and what is wrong can be a matter of opinion.

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    Mute Pat Mustard
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    Oct 7th 2015, 8:18 AM

    1,822 upgraded yet only 3 downgraded, I somehow find it hard to believe that so many were marked mistakenly in one direction only.

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    Mute S ReiIIy
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    Oct 7th 2015, 9:01 AM

    There’s always going to be more upgrades as you would generally only appeal a result if you think you should have been marked higher after viewing the script yourself, and often with a teacher. If you thought you were lucky to get what you got surely you’d leave well enough alone and not appeal it?

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    Mute Sloop John G
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    Oct 7th 2015, 10:21 AM

    I never knew there was an exam on One Direction Pat? If there was I’m sure a lot of teenagers scored well on it !!!

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    Mute David Hanlon
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    Oct 7th 2015, 9:05 AM

    Lot of good it does for students who may have missed out on a college place due to erroneously marked papers when the term started 6 weeks ago for most colleges. Shocking number of papers marked incorrectly too it seems.

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    Mute Eamon DeValera
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    Oct 7th 2015, 11:45 AM

    Is 1 in 200 really “shocking”? Bear in mind that many papers have a lot of wiggle room for answers to be “right” or “wrong”. Take Economics for example, one I got checked. For one question on the advantages of Foreign Direct Investment one could say:

    Increases Employment
    Increases State Revenue through Taxtion
    Decreases Social Welfare Spend
    Increases Consumer Spending
    Decreases State Healthcare costs.

    You could get anywhere between 5 and 30 on that answer, depending on the corrector and marking scheme. Some will come along and consider them all separate valid points, another could say that they are all spins on the same answer.

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    Mute Anne Marie Devlin
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    Oct 7th 2015, 11:38 AM

    @David Hanlon. I agree that the results have come out too late. However, if you look you will see that the highest number of exams that were marked wrongly apply to Ag Science and that was 1.8%. The total on average is 0.47%. That means that 99.53% of all papers were deemed to have been marked correctly. These figures refer to the overall number of exams corrected and not to the appeals.

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    Mute UM
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    Oct 7th 2015, 6:09 PM

    6 weeks is far too long to have to wait for the appeal results.
    All college places have to be postponed till next year now.
    It’s very important for students waiting for appeals to accept a relevant course this year so that it might count for the original course they wanted eg taking science while your hoping for medicine

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    Mute Mas Oyam
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    Oct 7th 2015, 8:51 AM

    Them percentages are all wrong

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    Mute Maria Woods
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    Oct 7th 2015, 11:41 PM

    Did my leaving this year and failed business was shocked when I seen this so decided to view my papers , when I seen I got 38% I walked out of the room, it was the most frustrating thing ever since I did 9 months of grinds for 6th year luckily enough I got a course I’m enjoying but 2% off a pass is horrible to see

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    Mute Rob Cahill
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    Oct 7th 2015, 12:30 PM

    what about the junior cert appeals when can we get the statistics on those?!

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