Ooohhh Gary you do like to ask these questions don't you
I think both Verity and Jean have given excellent explanations as to there reasons and it is wonderful that they both are so happy and contented.
Why did we come? Many reasons factored into our decision but to begin with from leaving college I had always wanted to live abroad and in fact had a job offer in th Cayman Islands the very week I met my husband!! As I fell head over heels I obviously declined
As the years passed I still craved the warmer climate and my other half would always sensibly say we will do it when we retire. Then our daughter came along and I took a job that for a chef should have been better hours as there were no evenings involved. It turned out I was doing 12 hour days, only getting 2 days off together every other week, exhausted, managing up to 35 troublesome staff (when they bothered to turn in) and missing my daughter grow up. The stress of budgets, deadlines and general exhaustion started to get the better of me. I both suffered mentally and physically, almost reached melting point and was constantly under the doctor for two years because I simply couldn't breathe. They kept telling me it was stress related, turns out they were right!
We visited Cyprus in 96 and got married here in 2000, so we decided to explore the possibility of moving here. We visited a few more times, looked at schools, work options etc and even put a deposit down on a house, just as the housing market slowed in the UK. It took us almost 3 years to get here, we didn't buy in the end and still have our house in the UK which we rent out. I think for us this was definately the best move.
We came out in August 2006 with our container following two weeks later. Found a place to rent and I quickly sank into a mild depression. With all my excitement to get here and start my new life, I had no idea this would happen to me and even found it difficult to get out of bed in a morning. My daughter was devastated we had taken her away from her friends and our extended family, we quickly realised the local village school was going to be the worst possible thing for her and enrolled her into the International. A huge expense we never budgeted for.
Work was not as forthcoming as we had been previously promised and the wages that had been talked about also did not materialise. I know this has happened to countless people here.
After approx 3 months my husband finally found steady work with decent pay and a good company and has gone from strength to strength with them. One of the most demoralising things over here is being almost worthless within any industry and luckily he is working for a firm that really values his experience. Had he not got this work we would definately have returned after a year.
I then needed to find something for me, I have worked all my life and found myself in the position of housewife
The school day ends at 12.50 and there is no after school care and I suddenly have no friends or family to rely on!! What can I do that will fit around school. Then someone posted the question on another forum asking where could they get a traditional English style wedding cake? A light bulb suddenly lit above my head, Well I thought I have spent many years as a chef and studied/worked in patisserie and cake dec but in the UK I never had time to persue the cake dec side and commit to it. In fact I got to the point that if someone asked me to do a cake for them I would groan as because of work I never really enjoyed it. So my business was born. I really enjoy it and I have time for both the cakes and my daughter. Most of the time anyway.
In answer to your question 'what makes you stay'? Quite simply the fact that we turned our lives upside down for this so we have to give it a chance. And the sunshine
Would we go back to the UK? Well this is when I get lambasted, Yes, most definately.
We went back at Christmas and I loved it. I had so much fun with friends and family that I had missed so much, I loved the shops, the choice and the prices even better. Nice cinemas, great restaurants that offer something other than kebabs and stifado. I am afraid I get extremely bored of the food here. Yes there are many wonderful tavernas but they all offer the same dishes. We ate far better in the UK than here, I have never had a ready meal in my life!! Here or the UK. (well apart from pizza obviously)I find the choice in supermarkets very limiting and you have to traipse around so many different shops to get all you want for just one dish. Not too much of a problem if all the shops are on a highstreet, but they are so far apart you can spend a good couple of hours in your car just tracking stuff down. That's fine if your retired but not so good for me.
Don't get me wrong, I think Cyprus is a great place, and I agree much safer than the UK. I also look out of my window everyday and think how lovely it is. I think it is a great place to retire to, if you have no mortgage or rent to pay and you are happy to potter about, a walk on the beach, a drink in the sun. All fab but just a bit too slow for me.
I am finding it very difficult to commit to Cyprus because I hate being so short of income and yes some things are cheaper but I find it in general as expensive here as in the UK. Some times more so! I also find it far to cold in the winter and I find no pleasure living somewhere where I am freezing in my home. We didn't have central heating last year but I have central heating in the house we are in at the moment, unfortunately this villa is temporary and I would not even consider another year here without. I would go back to the UK for that reason alone.
My husband would earn far more money in the UK and I would carry on with my business there. Another frustration I have here is that there are no local suppliers for a lot of my products and I have to import practically every thing. I have learned from Cyprus that life does not need to be full of stress and I don't think I would revert back to the old me.
I do worry about the state of the UK and that also was a motivating factor but I also wonder what will happen if all the good people simply just leave. But I don't know what the answer is.
If we return I think I will be a little wiser and know more what I want from life. I think I would still like to live somewhere warm and more laid back, but perhaps a little nearer to the UK. One other thing I hate flying and find the flight times to long for me when I am a nervous wreck
I hope I have been honest, I don't think I have really slagged off Cyprus, just told my story. I will be very sad if someone comes on and starts spouting about how I didn't do my homework, or Cyprus isn't Utopia you should have known that, hindsight is a wonderful thing and I am glad of the adventure, and who knows in six months my opinion may have changed
We are all different and want different things from life and part of me wishes I could feel the same as everyone else here seems too, but I don't, sorry.
Cheryl xx