zoebartlett
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2006
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Rhea|1356449677|3339567 said:At 21 I studied abroad in England and met a very nice man. We did the long distance thing for 3 years and I moved to England when I was 24. It was much harder than I ever imagined it would be. I had a steady job, friends, and family in the US and I left all of that behind. I grew up in the suburbs of a Southern US city and moved to London.
It was really hard. My previous work experience didn't translate into getting a descent paying job, the cost of living is terribly high here, and it's not that easy to make friends in a large city. DH and I both thought that I'd settle in better than I did. I ended up very depressed and everything was hard. I had to learn to drive again, opening a bank account by myself was a huge task, and I got pulled up in work a couple of times for something I said which didn't translate well (American English and British English can be very different!).
It took me a good 5 years to settle in. I'm happy now. I never once thought that I'd move back but the daily life is so different that it was a real challenge. It might have been different if DH and I were both American and moved there and started over again together. Everyone seemed to assume that because both countries spoke English that it would be easy. My friends didn't stay in contact with me, one of them keeps asking when I'll call her. I call her and we chat and I mention how inexpensive it is to call the UK, my mother pays 1 cent per minute. In 7 years I've gotten 3 phone calls from friends. It can be lonely. I think it's much easier if you have a community of other Americans around you. One of my friends works for the embassies and he finds moving easy, but his house is found by the gov't, he lives in a community of other Americans, and he gets his medical and schooling through work so he doesn't have to source those things.
I've found a few things that help. We started celebrating Thanksgiving a few years ago, on the proper day. We invite all our friends over for dinner and serve the traditional food. We make hand turkeys and hats and write what we're thankful for. It's very much a kindergarten version of Thanksgiving, but I love it! I celebrate the local holidays and introduce my holidays to others. I don't just try to stay American or source American things. I think it's important to attempt to submerse yourself into the local culture. It can be so hard at first. It seemed everything was working against me, but one day it just clicks and it gets easier. I can't ever imagine moving "back home".
ETA: Since I've been here 2 grandparents have died, my father had a major emergency hospital stay, and countless old friends have gotten married and had children. If you move aboard you can't and won't make it home for everything...or even most things. That's when it hits me the most. Something big happened recently in my family and I couldn't be there. This is probably why my post is a bit melancholy. My parents are getting older and I can't uproot my life and my work to be there for them. My sister has also actually become cool in the last 7 years. I miss them terribly some days.
innerkitten|1356474793|3339711 said:How long do you have to have lived there for it to count? I spent 6 months in Tokyo and a year and a half in Seoul. Otherwise I've always lived in San Francisco. Although I did spend a year in L.A.
Phoenix|1356519209|3339888 said:Well, I've lived in six different places - Vietnam, Lille - France, London - UK, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Singapore. I have loved every single place I've lived in, some more than others though.
I love London and am proud to be a Brit but I may not move back there. It's cold, dark and dreary most of the time. I miss the fashion sense there, the going-out/ socialising "culture" and strong "British-ness" (for lack of a better word) amongst the majority of Brits I came across. Plus, it's where my family is so it's like my home.
I am also proud of my Vietnamese roots and love it when I go back to visit but I don't think I can live there either. It's really such a shame! The Vietnamese people are so hard working, so intelligent, the literacy rate is like 95% (that's very high for a third world country). It's such a shame that the government is so corrupt!
Lille was superb. My dad, three brothers and I were only there for six months but the people welcomed us with open arms (we were political refugees) and I loved school there. And the food was amazing!
Hong Kong, well..I moved there for a supposedly 3-year secondment from the UK, except I met my DH there and never went back to the UK. I went there alone, didn't know anyone there - didn't have any friends intially and didn't even know my HK colleagues initally. I was a bit scared at first and was homesick - for like 2 whole weeks!![]()
I LOVED HK and still really love it, still have tons of friends there. It's so vibrant, the city is alive..pulsating practically 24 hours a day! I loved the "expat circle" - everyone was so welcoming, everyone worked hard and so intelligent and played equally hard. I also made lots of friends with my local ex-colleagues and had a blast with them too. HK is rough on the surface but once you get to know the culture, the people, you can easily assimilate and have soooo much fun there. The food - OMG, the food is TDF!
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Shanghai...hmmmm...what can I say, I loved learning the language (Mandarin is such a beautiful language), but the place is so polluted, smoggy all.the.time! Winter is cold and summer is unbearably hot. The people (with the exception of a few friends) are rough, loud, indifferent (even unkind) to animals and other human beings (did you see the Youtube videos of the dog being roasted alive and the little 2 year old girl being run over and over ....and finally she died)...Well, I reckon it's because it's such a busy and crowded place (China as a whole, SH is not an exception) that everyone is too busy taking care of themselves and they don't have time nor compassion for others. It didn't resonate with me so much. I loved the fact that I had a different kind of experience and got to live in and experience China and the Chinese culture and its people, but would I go back? Most probably not
Singapore...SG is home and has been on and off for about 13 years now. DH and I LOVE it, it's clean, orderly, safe, has loads to offer in terms of culture (yes, the SG govt has been trying very hard to inject more and more funds and efforts into the arts scene for example), food (he he, you can tell I love my food), shopping (SG is such a shopping paradise) and we have friends that we adore. We've bought a house here and can't imagine this not being our home. We'll be here for a loooooong time.
justginger|1356512736|3339882 said:innerkitten|1356474793|3339711 said:How long do you have to have lived there for it to count? I spent 6 months in Tokyo and a year and a half in Seoul. Otherwise I've always lived in San Francisco. Although I did spend a year in L.A.
I thought about this a bit, and I don't know the answer to that. To some extent, I'm not sure it would have "counted" for me if I had any return date at all. For me, I moved forever. Knowing that I was NEVER going back introduced far more emotions and challenges than it would have if I had known the entire first year, first two years, first three years, that it was only a temporary arrangement. You can tolerate an awful lot without any real upset if you know it is only something to be endured for a set amount of time. When that time stretches into forever, you find yourself being forced to do a lot more growing and changing.
Rhea|1356449677|3339567 said:ETA: Since I've been here 2 grandparents have died, my father had a major emergency hospital stay, and countless old friends have gotten married and had children. If you move aboard you can't and won't make it home for everything...or even most things. That's when it hits me the most. Something big happened recently in my family and I couldn't be there. This is probably why my post is a bit melancholy. My parents are getting older and I can't uproot my life and my work to be there for them. My sister has also actually become cool in the last 7 years. I miss them terribly some days.
Zoe|1356520195|3339890 said:Rhea, I can imagine how hard it would be to leave friends and family and to settle in a new country that has different ways of doing things. I'm sorry it's been hard maintaining friendships with friends back home. The out of sight, out of mind thing bugs me, and it sound like that's what it was. I can imagine how isolating it can feel at times, but I'm glad that it's helped you to continue some American traditions in England. I also agree with you on immersing yourself in local culture.
Phoenix|1356528388|3339940 said:Rhea|1356449677|3339567 said:ETA: Since I've been here 2 grandparents have died, my father had a major emergency hospital stay, and countless old friends have gotten married and had children. If you move aboard you can't and won't make it home for everything...or even most things. That's when it hits me the most. Something big happened recently in my family and I couldn't be there. This is probably why my post is a bit melancholy. My parents are getting older and I can't uproot my life and my work to be there for them. My sister has also actually become cool in the last 7 years. I miss them terribly some days.
This has really struck a cord with me, Rhea. One thing I feel REALLY horrible about being so far away is not being able to come home quickly enough when something happens. When my mom died, I didn't make it to say the final "I love you" and goodbye to her (I am tearing now typing this) and I fear the same thing may happen when my dad passes!But like you said, I am sure our family wouldn't want us to uproot our whole life just so we could be back with them.
Rhea|1356529162|3339946 said:Phoenix|1356528388|3339940 said:Rhea|1356449677|3339567 said:ETA: Since I've been here 2 grandparents have died, my father had a major emergency hospital stay, and countless old friends have gotten married and had children. If you move aboard you can't and won't make it home for everything...or even most things. That's when it hits me the most. Something big happened recently in my family and I couldn't be there. This is probably why my post is a bit melancholy. My parents are getting older and I can't uproot my life and my work to be there for them. My sister has also actually become cool in the last 7 years. I miss them terribly some days.
This has really struck a cord with me, Rhea. One thing I feel REALLY horrible about being so far away is not being able to come home quickly enough when something happens. When my mom died, I didn't make it to say the final "I love you" and goodbye to her (I am tearing now typing this) and I fear the same thing may happen when my dad passes!But like you said, I am sure our family wouldn't want us to uproot our whole life just so we could be back with them.
I'm so sorry that you had to go through this! I'm tearing up just reading your post. So much has happened for my family this past year and it's really hit home that I can't easily get home both down to money and time.
Rhea|1356528480|3339941 said:Zoe|1356520195|3339890 said:Rhea, I can imagine how hard it would be to leave friends and family and to settle in a new country that has different ways of doing things. I'm sorry it's been hard maintaining friendships with friends back home. The out of sight, out of mind thing bugs me, and it sound like that's what it was. I can imagine how isolating it can feel at times, but I'm glad that it's helped you to continue some American traditions in England. I also agree with you on immersing yourself in local culture.
It was definitely an out of sight, out of mind thing. Don't get me wrong, I love it and can't imagine leaving. But there's a time where people in the people in US seemed to forget that I existed and I didn't know anyone in the UK yet. Think about when you made your friends. Probably a lot of them are childhood friends, friends from college, and potentially from your first job. I left all of those behind. People don't make friend the same way in the workforce in their mid 20s to early 30s.
I do truly love it and can't imagine leaving the UK, or a large city really. But moving, yeah, that's no fun. It's depressing and lonely and depending on a British spouse who thinks that you'll cope better than you ended up coping is really really hard. We went to counseling as a couple, and I made a friends with a woman whose partner is Japanese. Having her friendship is so helpful. She's a Brit but helped her partner moved her a couple of years before I did so understands when I get frustrated or can't figure out how to do something. DH has also realised the importance of providing me social activity through his social circle. DH is mostly happy to stay inside and is a real homebody but he invites over his friends and their partners. I'm not proper friends with any of the women like I was hoping, but it gives me an outlet and we all get along.
If you're moving, it does get better, I just wish I'd had more realistic expectations for what the first couple of years would be like so I could put proper things in place to deal with it.
Zoe|1356520195|3339890 said:Sarahbear, that's cool that you lived in Israel and Okinawa! Does your son have dual citizenship?
Sarahbear621|1356530883|3339958 said:Zoe|1356520195|3339890 said:Sarahbear, that's cool that you lived in Israel and Okinawa! Does your son have dual citizenship?
No he doesn't. Because he was born on a military base stationed overseas it is technically considered Japan because military installations are US soil or something like that. Basically he has a birth certificate issued by the DOS that states he was born abroad but it isnt' recongized as a state issued birth certificate. Very confusing but whatever.
I like when Phoenix said about living abroad makes you embrace life. It is so true. I have done and seen so many things from living abroad. I have taken a bath in the Nile (dont' recommend), gone snorkeling with my 3 month old son in the Eastern China Sea, and spent more time then I would ever admit strolling down night markets in Asia just for the fun of it.
I think expats or anyone who lives abroad have that citizen of the world type of vibe around them. They will try almost anything and seem to embrace the different, the unique and the extrodineray. Now that we are back on US soil life seems so much slower. Almost all the adventure is gone. If we get stationed abroad again then great! We will embrace it whole heartily and stay as long as possible. If not then as soon as DH's commitment is up we plan on moving overseas anyhow. We just have to agree on what continent!![]()
rosetta|1356530269|3339955 said:Bahrain, Saudi arabia, Australia, Kuwait, India, and the UK.
London is the most interesting by far. I'll probably stay here for a while (12 years and running!)
I've lived <6months in far too many places to mention. I don't consider myself from any country, I have 3 different passports. My husband is my home and I could live anywhere with him.![]()