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The Irish Voice


Struggling to survive back home

Irish who left America are struggling




Returning home someday is the dream of many an Irish immigrant who comes to the U.S.  APRIL DREW spoke to some of the many who have made the move, and found that their lives aren’t all that they hoped they’d be.

Several Irish immigrants who moved back to Ireland during the Celtic Tiger boom are now struggling on a daily basis to have a fraction of the life they had while living in the U.S.

Some of these returned immigrants spoke candidly to the Irish Voice about the realities of their lives in Ireland, and what they would do differently if given a second chance.

Norma Lynch, 36, spent nearly four years living in New York. She was 29 when she arrived and 33 when she left.

Lynch, who returned to Ireland because she missed family too much, worked various jobs here and always had money in her back pocket.

Since returning to Ireland Lynch has been unable to have the same standard of living she once was accustomed to in New York.
She has been working as a supermarket supervisor since October 2007, but her income is proving difficult to live on.

“It’s very tough to live on a wage here, what with the cost of living and accommodation being so expensive and trying to pay for a car, petrol (gas), tax, insurance … it’s just so hard,” said Lynch.

“And forget about taking a holiday, there is no money left over at the end of the week to save for any vacations,” she added.

Lynch, while living in New York, was earning triple her current wages, and treated herself to many a shopping spree.

“I just miss having the financial freedom to go where I please and spend what I want,” she said.

Lynch, if given an opportunity again, would move back to New York “in a heartbeat.”

“I guess for now I’ll just have to make do with what I have and count my blessings that I even have a job in this crazy economy,” she added.

Like Lynch, Hugh Shalvey, 30, left the U.S. after spending five years working as an elevator engineer in Manhattan because he too missed family and friends. 

Shalvey, from Co. Monaghan and now living in Co. Donegal, returned to a prosperous Ireland in 2007.  He was lucky to secure employment in the same trade upon returning home, but admits his job is currently “very unstable.”

“I worry every day for my job. Things have gotten super quiet so I just don’t know,” Shalvey told the Irish Voice.

Shalvey, who lived in Queens while he was here, said life was much easier when he first returned to Ireland.

“It’s so much tougher financially now than it was when I first came back home,” he said.




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Remember readers these people who moved back to Ireland were actively courted by the Irish Government with job fairs in New York and elsewhere. I feel sad for them, had I been younger I would have been with them. Who among us that emigrated to the US has not dreamed of moving back and remarked that if the same opportunities existed in Ireland we would go back. Ireland is a democracy, vote those bums out, corruption in Ireland would make the mafia blush.
Raised in Ireland with an acre and a cottage, we learned to be independant, we grew all our potatoes,turnips and onions which could be stored and used through the winter, we grew all other in season vegetables. some apple trees and berry bushes, a cow a pigand quit a few hens, trout and silver eels from the nearby river. wild mushrooms, home made bread, and all organic. mother mended clothes and darned socks. father worked for the farmers, making hay,mending fences, draining land, milking cows, delivering calves. There was very little money needed, my parents raised ten healthy, educated children, never bellyaching or looking for pity.Maybe the Irish homeowner should discover the land again, dig up that lawn, drills of fresh sprouted potatoes,young cabbages,parsnip and carot beds look a lot better than a chemically fertilised lawn.
That's a pity *Sings.. New York..New York..If i can make it there I'll make it anywhere..It's up to you. New York, New York.Got to be a hell of alot smarter to make it in Ireland. Get out and make contact's,the Irish grapevine is very vibrant.Employers are very choosy at the moment.openings are happening all the time,but irish people like recommendations before they employ, it's not what you know, it's who you know
The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence, but it still has yo be cut..
Its sad.. People were used to living well in the USA, then go back home and cant find a job. I have been over since1959, never been back. Plan on a trip spring 2011.
Axiom #1) The Grass is ALWAYS greener on the other side of the pond. Axiom #2) Vision is always 20/20 from 3,450-miles away.
I hope these people aren't forced to leave again, due to the economic hardships they're facing. There aren't too many places that have escaped this scathing recession.
Very sad to read that
Be thrifty.
I have often thought of living back in the old sod, I've lived in Canada for 34 years but I think it would be very difficult to adjust to living back home especially if I had to work to make ends meet, retiremnt maybe. Sure I miss the family and the people but I dont think I could do it.
 




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