Let’s be real—there’s a certain kind of expat in China who walks into a bar, orders a pint of local beer with a side of existential dread, and somehow still manages to laugh about how they’re “a loser back home.” It’s not a new narrative, but it’s one that sticks like a sticky note on a laptop someone left behind in a Beijing café. Enter the LBH: Losers Back Home. A nickname so casually tossed around in expat circles it sounds like a nickname you’d give your slightly awkward cousin at a family reunion. But why does this label stick so firmly to English teachers in China? Is it because their LinkedIn profiles look like a time capsule from a pre-2015 job market? Or is it simply that some of us, in our mid-twenties with a TEFL certificate and a suitcase full of questionable life choices, decided that teaching 8 a.m. conversation classes to sleepy college students in Chengdu was the next best thing to a second chance?

The truth? Most English teachers in China didn’t *choose* this path because they were unemployed—they chose it because they were tired of the rat race, the soul-crushing 9-to-5s, or the emotional toll of trying to explain “the difference between ‘affect’ and ‘effect’” to a room full of disinterested students while sipping lukewarm coffee from a 500ml plastic cup. Some were nurses, accountants, or even former social media managers who discovered that their real passion wasn’t spreadsheets but the thrill of watching a student finally say “I’m going to the supermarket tomorrow” without flinching. And yet, despite all that? The internet still whispers, “Oh, you’re just an LBH.” As if the act of teaching English abroad is somehow less noble than, say, working in a hedge fund or building a startup in Silicon Valley. But let’s be honest—how many people in those “glamorous” jobs can say they’ve taught a 17-year-old in Xi’an how to debate the meaning of freedom using only their own broken English?

And here’s the irony: the very people who call us LBHs are often the ones living in the same apartment complexes, buying their groceries from the same 24-hour convenience store in Guangzhou, and sharing the same Wi-Fi password. The ones who laugh at our “low-tier” visas, scoff at our “average” salaries, yet still show up to the same karaoke nights where we all sing “I Will Always Love You” with the passion of people who’ve just survived a 12-hour teaching day. We're not losers—we're adventurers with a bad passport and a better sense of humor. We’re the ones who can explain idioms like “barking up the wrong tree” while also being the first to help someone find their lost phone in a restroom during a thunderstorm. We’re not here because we failed back home—we’re here because we’re still learning how to live.

Now, let’s talk about travel—because honestly, that’s where the real magic happens. While some people are stuck in their hometowns, scrolling through Instagram and dreaming of places they’ve never seen, we’re the ones who’ve hiked the Great Wall in the snow, sipped oolong tea with a local farmer in rural Fujian, or danced at a village festival in Yunnan so loud it made the rice fields shake. A 20-hour train ride from Shanghai to Kunming isn’t just a commute—it’s a story in the making. And sure, we might have lost our luggage in Hangzhou, but we also made friends with a street vendor who taught us how to cook dan dan noodles using only a gas stove and a smile. We don’t need a luxury resort to feel alive. We just need a cheap hostel, a map with half the streets missing, and the courage to ask, “Where is the bathroom?” in broken Mandarin.

If you’re thinking about joining this chaotic, beautiful, slightly absurd world of teaching English in China—don’t just Google “teaching jobs in China” and call it a day. Dig deeper. Look at places like Dongguan Jobs Teaching Jobs in China, where you might not find the glittering skyline of Shanghai, but you’ll find real people, real classrooms, and real moments that make you feel like you’re not just surviving—but living. Dongguan isn’t the first place you’d think of for expat life, but that’s exactly why it’s perfect. It’s quiet enough to hear the cicadas at dusk, chaotic enough to find street food that makes you cry in joy, and full of schools that actually *need* passionate teachers. No pretense. No ego. Just a chance to teach, grow, and maybe even rediscover yourself—without having to sell your soul to a corporate ladder.

So yes, we’re called LBHs. Fine. Let them label us. We’ll wear it like a badge of honor, like a scar from a fight we didn’t even know we were in. Because at the end of the day, we’re not here because we’re broken. We’re here because we’re building something new—out of second chances, mismatched socks, and the occasional misunderstanding that somehow turns into a friendship. We’re not losers back home. We’re just people who found their way to China, not because they had no other choice, but because they finally had the courage to choose *something different*.

And honestly? That’s not a failure. That’s a revolution—in flip-flops.

Categories:
Because,  People,  China,  English,  Teaching,  Still,  Expat,  Somehow,  Teachers,  Broken,  Learning,  Local,  Laugh,  Someone,  Losers,  Nickname,  Slightly,  Label,  Students,  Second,  Chance,  Explain,  Passion,  Finally,  Building,  Taught,  Using,  Living,  First,  Honestly,  Places,  Shanghai,  Street,  Courage,  Chaotic,  Enough,  Chengdu,  Dongguan,  Guangzhou,  Hangzhou, 

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