Community

myNotebook:  You're invited! Join myNotebook: today. It's FREE! Member benefits  Log in
notebook

Search Search




proudly brought to you by


Quote

“Every exit is an entrance somewhere else” – Tom Stoppard



Out Now!


Current Notebook Magazine Cover

Subscribe
Give as gift

Notebook
Turning points

 Life Change

Turning points


Sometimes we actively seek change, but at other times, change comes looking for us. DAWN MOLONEY, 45, quit her career and embarked on a new venture in a new country in the pursuit of a better life.


“I’m originally from England where I qualified as a pharmacist when I was 22. I worked in a pharmacy for a couple of years and I was very much a home body – I’d never really done much travelling.


“Then one morning I woke up and thought, ‘There’s got to be more to life than this.’ Three weeks later I got on a plane to Australia – it was completely out of character. I arrived with very little money and moved to Geelong in Victoria, where I worked as a hospital pharmacist for nine months. Unfortunately though, I became really homesick and made a foolish decision to go back home to England.


“I had never been terribly maternal and never really had a desire to get married, so when I was 27 I decided to go back to university and study part-time for an MBA. It was at the end of that course that I met my future husband, Ian. We married and, nine months later, had a baby. It was all a bit of a shock really. I became a full-time working mother. About the time our daughter turned four, I was very disenchanted with working for everybody else. So I went freelance and set up my own consultancy, which I did for the next five years.


read on below advertisement



“Then I became pregnant with our second child and for the next couple of years we worked incredibly hard, with my husband commuting two hours every day to work. One day we both sat down and said we didn’t want this lifestyle to continue forever. We thought the only way we could change our lives was to really go for it.


So we decided to come to Australia. I adore England, but when I was in Australia, I felt more relaxed. We were very conscious that we had young kids and we wanted them to grow up outdoors. I also wanted them to have us around more so we could do more family-orientated things. So we just sold everything and left.


“Since we arrived, we’ve never looked back – we live in a beautiful area, found great schools for the kids, and I ended up doing some marketing for a small vitamin company. Once things had settled, I woke up one morning and thought it was time I did something that I really wanted to do with my career.


“When I was younger I had always been quite arty. I had wanted to go to art school but it just wasn’t something you did at the time. So I decided to try my hand at something creative and started making my own cards and things, and I just loved it. That was about eight years ago.


next page »

12 Next Page » Last » Page 2   |  Single page


Comment on this article...  


Notebook: is about sharing your comments, ideas, opinions and experience with others. To make a comment you must be a member of myNotebook: Members, please Log in.


  Flossi, at 10:36am Tue 22nd January, 2008
Your article gives me hope of finding a job that I can do from home to fit around my children.
  Alisondog, at 4:58pm Wed 26th March, 2008
Why are the people always in the same clothes? You are stripping them of their originality

Issue cover for this articleMore in the magazine!


Subscribe now!

 
Notebook: Magazine

More great titles from News Magazines




Notebook: Magazine
Notebook