Australia relocation reality collapses years into weeks. You spend years thinking about international moves, assuming gradual preparation. Then visa approval arrives. Your work permit processes in days. Weeks later you’re at the airport with eight duffel bags for four people. That’s your entire life. You’re making lunches and grocery shopping in Melbourne now except Christmas happens at the beach and you have windows down looking at lights because it’s hot.
Teacher shortage visa 192 allowed simultaneous temporary and permanent residency applications. Gold standard scenario. Permanent residency came through months later giving family access to work anywhere in Australia or New Zealand without employer ties. Age deadline exists at 45 for certain visas. Meanwhile kids say you ripped us away from our home. Same kids talk about warm water and zoo animals hours later. Instagram shows smiles. Off
camera isn’t always that.
Moving countries doesn’t eliminate mundane life. It relocates it. You’re still making lunches, doing grocery shopping. Difference is Christmas decorations minus snowflakes, windows down at light displays because it’s hot. This isn’t vacation. It’s ordinary life in different place. The question becomes whether doing regular things somewhere extraordinary matters more than staying where regular already feels normal.
Topics: Australia relocation experience, teacher shortage visa, moving internationally with kids, permanent residency timeline, Melbourne family life
GUEST: Scott Frank
RUNDOWN: Scott Frank relocated his family from Calgary to Melbourne on teacher shortage visa, went from years of planning to weeks of execution, and tracks why kids say you ripped us away even while loving the beach.

