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LIFESTYLE AND WELLBEING

Confronting the Loneliness of International Teaching

By Mushfiqua Zabeen
19-Nov-25
Confronting the Loneliness of International Teaching

When people imagine international teaching, they often picture adventure with new cities, vibrant classrooms, cultural exchange, and opportunity. What’s harder to picture is the quiet space that follows once the day ends: the loneliness many educators quietly carry. This is not about sadness, but about recognition and connection. It speaks to teachers living far from home, sharing quiet dinners after long school days, and scrolling through photos of family and friends they have not seen in months. These experiences are not isolated; many educators around the world feel the same sense of distance and longing, even if it is rarely spoken about.

The Hidden Side of an International Life

Loneliness for international educators rarely arrives suddenly; it grows quietly. Between lesson planning, meetings, and managing classrooms, there’s little time to form deep bonds. You can be surrounded by colleagues and still feel unseen. It’s eating alone after parent conferences. It’s missing your child’s birthday over a video call. It’s realizing that while you spend your days giving connections to students, few spaces exist where teachers receive that same care in return.

For years, I believed this was part of the job, that isolation was the silent cost of professional growth. But over time, I’ve learned that teaching abroad demands more than resilience; it demands belonging.

How We Cope and Why It’s Not Always Enough

We learn to fill the silence: subscriptions to streaming platforms, online shopping for small comforts, learning to cook for one. These little rituals create temporary calm, but they don’t always reach the deeper loneliness that comes from disconnection. Even with routines, some evenings feel heavier than others. You might finish grading late and realize you haven’t spoken to another adult in hours. You might look around and realize your friends have all moved on to their next posting, their next country.

And yet, we continue to show up each day with a smile for our students. Because that’s what teachers do: we care, we guide, we give. But in caring so much for others, we sometimes forget to care for ourselves.

A School’s Role in Teacher Belonging

The good news? Schools can make a difference. I’ve seen how simple, intentional acts of connection can shift a school’s culture.

  • Mentorship networks that pair new teachers with experienced colleagues foster meaningful relationships beyond orientation.
  • Wellbeing check-ins (not evaluations) offer space for teachers to share how they’re really doing.
  • Professional learning circles or reflective writing groups help staff connect through shared inquiry, not just logistics.
  • Community involvement, like school-organized volunteering or environmental clean-ups, allows teachers to feel rooted where they live.
  • And even simple staff gatherings with purpose — cooking nights, language exchanges, book clubs — remind us that connection can be built, not waited for.

When schools model compassion and community, teachers bring that same spirit into their classrooms.

Finding Connection as an Educator

If you’re an international teacher feeling the quiet weight of distance, here’s what’s helped me, and might help you too:

  • Reach beyond your classroom walls. Join local communities, teacher associations, or online educator networks. The simple act of sharing your story creates belonging.
  • Redefine self-care. It doesn’t have to mean perfection. Sometimes it’s enough to step outside, breathe fresh air, and allow yourself to be human.
  • Start small. Learn greetings in the local language, connect with your students’ families, visit a neighborhood café until it feels like “your place.”
  • Talk about it. Loneliness loses power when we name it. Find one colleague you can speak honestly with; chances are, they feel it too.

When Loneliness Teaches You

Ironically, loneliness has deepened my understanding of connection. It’s made me more aware of the quiet students who hesitate to speak, the colleagues who seem withdrawn, and the importance of asking, “Are you really okay?”

Over the years, I’ve realized that loneliness can be a teacher too. It teaches patience, empathy, and awareness. It reminds us that every warm gesture — every smile, every check-in, every act of kindness — matters more than we think. Because when we create communities of care, we’re not just helping teachers survive, we’re helping them thrive.

Closing Reflection

If you’re an international educator reading this at the end of a long week, this is for you. You are not alone in your silence. You are not weak for feeling isolated. You are simply human in a profession that asks for extraordinary empathy. Let’s remind each other that beyond curriculum, beyond results, and beyond the classroom walls that what sustains us is connection. Loneliness shared becomes understanding. And understanding becomes community.




Mushfiqua Zabeen leads curriculum development at Peninsula International School Australia, where she fosters inquiry-based learning and actively supports English language learners. She is an educator with over 20 years of experience in international schools, specializing in Middle Years Programme (MYP) Individuals and Societies, humanities, English as an Additional Language, and Diploma Programme Environmental System and Societies. She holds double master's degrees in English Language Teaching and geography, along with a City and Guilds diploma in Teaching and Learning and an Applied Scholastics Teaching license. Recently, Mushfiqua completed certifications in leadership and coordination for MYP,  Service as Action (SA), Community Projects (CP), International Baccalaureate Lead and Managing Team. Having taught in diverse countries such as Vietnam, Brazil, and Qatar, she is passionate about enhancing student engagement through innovative curriculum design. Her commitment to global mindedness is reflected in her extensive professional development and community initiatives, including her work with underprivileged students in Bangladesh. In her free time, she enjoys exploring new educational practices and sharing insights through her blog.

 

 

 

 

 




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