The Grumpy Expat: How My Brain Works Sometimes
One of my favorite comics by the incomparable Oatmeal, whose observations are invariably spot-on. This one's from a comic called, "If My Brain Were an Imaginary Friend,." It's relevant to this post. Really. |
Today's topic, dear readers, is "The Expat Brain and How It Works. Sometimes." We'll be investigating the daily realities of living in a foreign culture and how our brains perceive them. Or, at least, how MsCaroline's brain has been perceiving them.
MsCaroline has moved enough - and is old enough - to know that no one, anywhere, has a perfect life. If Keeping Up With The Kardashians has done nothing else for society, it has shown us that even the beautiful, the famous, and the über-wealthy have their crosses to bear. The strings of pearls will get tangled during our photo shoot for Playboy. The new custom-ordered Bentley will not be ready for pickup when it was supposed to be. Sex tapes will be released. These people - they're just like you and me, putting on brave smiles even in the face of the most devastating crises.
With that in mind, MsCaroline did not expect to find her life in Seoul to be just one glamorous expat adventure after another. She knew there would be down days, just like everyone has no matter where they live. What she was not prepared for was the recent irrational reactions of her brain*** when these incidents took place, in which it (her brain I mean) repeatedly asserted something along the lines of "This is all crap, and if you were living back home, nothing like this would ever have happened."
Anyone who has read any of MsCaroline's early posts when she was still in the US can see that that is
Experts on expat living refer to this sort of reaction as the end of the 'honeymoon period.' According to them, when one first arrives in a new country, one's brain is bathed in endorphins and dazzled by the strange, exotic delights of living in a new culture. Everything is seen through the lens of a besotted newcomer. Life is glamorous, interesting, different, and new.
But after a few months, the glow begins to fade, and the expat finds that life in the fascinating new culture has the same ups and downs as it did in the last place - and sometimes, even more, leading on to subsequent stages of frustration and even rage. This happened to MsCaroline (more or less) last Autumn, and -she assumed - that she had moved on to the acclimation stage, accepting her life in a new country and even beginning to put down some roots. She was surprised, however, to discover that, for an expat, these feelings can resurface, even after quite a while.
"Oh, MsCaroline," you are saying, "Living in a foreign country is an adventure! You are living a life that many would love to experience!"
MsCaroline realizes this, and - when she is feeling more rational - agrees with you. However, right now, as she mentioned, her brain is getting the best of her - even though she realizes its assertions are specious at best. As evidence, she submits the following graphic organizer:
Unpleasant
Incident
|
Normal
Response
|
Irrational
Expat Brain Response
|
Lost for an hour underground in the
subway station looking for a nonexistent exit.
|
This
could happen to anyone and keep in mind if you’d studied more Korean you
probably could have avoided it.
|
Korean
is too hard and would it have killed them to put up a sign – just one sign –
somewhere in English? This would have never happened back home.
|
Discover transportation card –
recently loaded with more than KRW2,000,000 (about $20) suddenly will not
work, with the line backing up behind her and no one available to help her
sort it out in English.
|
Sometimes
magnetic strips on cards stop working, and if you’d studied more Korean, you
could have explained yourself and gotten some help.
|
Back
home I could DRIVE everywhere without fear of death and with certainty of
easily finding ample parking and I did not NEED a stupid card to get on and
off the bus every day on my way to work.
|
Umbrella turns inside out due to
powerful winds and rain on the way to bus stop. Miserable huddling in rain at
bus stop under broken umbrella ensues.
|
Your
umbrella would have turned inside out just as easily back home in this sort
of weather.
|
Back home I could DRIVE to work and
didn’t NEED to stand in the rain with a disabled umbrella for 10 minutes at a
bus stop with no kiosk to protect me from the rain. If my umbrella had turned inside out, I
could have run quickly from my CAR to the building without getting soaked.
|
Message is left on apartment door
stating ‘You Get Mail!’(Yes, it really said that) and apparently describes a package waiting for
you. A phone number is circled in
red. You call it and no one is
available who speaks English to help you.
|
If you'd just learned more Korean, this would not have been a problem. Besides, the
postal service in the US wasn’t exactly a paragon of efficiency, and
you couldn’t always guarantee that you’d get someone who you could communicate
with there, either. Take the note to work and
ask one of your Korean colleagues to help you.
|
Back home, I would have been able to
READ the damned note left by the post office BEFORE I called, before I went
to the management office at my apartment building, and BEFORE I finally got a
colleague to look at it and inform me that the package was for a Mr. Cho and had been sent to the wrong address.
|
Unfortunate biting incident takes
place during otherwise-idyllic reading of ‘The Little Engine That Could.”
Perpetrator insists she was just pretending to be a ‘biting sort of animal’
which, of course, required biting.
|
Children
bite each other sometimes. It happens.
|
The children in my country never, EVER bite each other. And anyway, I taught
high school in my country, so they were past the biting stage. All classroom interactions in my country
were peaceful and enjoyable at all times.
|
“Super Margarita” ordered in Mexican
restaurant turns out not to be a margarita at all, but instead a liter of
tepid soju served in a margarita glass.
|
If
you had read the menu more carefully, you’d have noticed that the ‘Super
Margarita’ was in the section under the menu marked ‘Soju Cocktails’ so it’s
your own fault.
|
Margaritas.
are.not. made.from.soju. This is an inviolable fact of nature
understood by every rational being in the universe. This would never have
happened back home.
|
As you can see, the ordinary slings and arrows of life, when viewed through a disgruntled expat lens, can sometimes be overwhelming, but MsCaroline is confident that she will prevail. She's said it before: life in another country is not so different from life at home, but everything is a bit more complicated.
99% of the time, MsCaroline is grateful and thankful to be living here, having these fabulous experiences, and sharing this adventure with her family. Sometimes, though - you just miss home. MsCaroline is not sure if this is a universal feeling, but she hopes that she is not the only expat who ever feels this way- even after 18 months of living somewhere. She is looking forward to a speedy return to normal brain function and the vibrant renewal of appreciation of her good fortune in living in one of the most exciting cities in Asia.
***See? I told you the comic was relevant to this post.
Comments
So thank you for the reminder and making me laugh.
And it happens even in countries where they speak the same language as you. For me it's usually about customer service in Britain--no I don't mean people have to bend over backwards for me, I mean that it would be wonderful to even be acknowledged when you walk into a restaurant and instead you stand there watching no less than 7 (I counted) staff walk past and when someone finally does stop they say 'can I help you?' like you're in their way and you want to say 'only if you want a tip' but instead you just say sweetly 'I have a reservation...' because you've learned that One Must Apologise in Britain, even if in the Right, and even if one is the customer.
But rationally? That's actually quite rare these days. It's just me being a hyper sensitive expat, I know!
So no, it's not just you :)
ps: very funny post!
As far as the expat grumpiness goes, I'm sure you have ample 'this would never have happened back home' stories from your travels!