Back in June there were various news stories about how high school students felt that they were being robbed, by the pandemic, of sacred high school experiences, like prom and graduation. My reaction was that in ten years, their pandemic year stories will be much more meaningful than most people's graduation stories.
As I thought about it more, it seemed that the pandemic has been, in many (not all) ways - a lot like living living abroad for a year.
Of course, there are lots of ways to live abroad - with work, in the military, a school year overseas, traveling from country to country, etc. The impact of the year (or more) abroad ranges widely, depending on whether you live in an ex-pat bubble or you're the only foreigner in your community. Most people's experiences are somewhere in between those two extremes.
Some key factors that affect the experience include:
- whether you have to learn and to speak the other language(s)
- how many others from your culture are there with you
- whether you work with locals or not
- your new culture makes you think about your home country differently
- you think about things you miss, but also learn that the new culture has alternatives, some of which are better
- you start comparing the two cultures, which is the first step to realizing that the way you've always lived isn't the only way to live, or even the best
- things you thought were necessary turn out not to be
- you see that your new culture interprets news about your culture differently - whether it's in the newspapers or comments from your new friends and colleagues
- you start thinking about what the new culture does better than your old culture and vice versa
- if you learn to speak the language well enough to negotiate life in it
- you find out that your native language is just one of many, many ways to communicate
- that translation is not simply substituting the foreign words for your native words
- you learn that there are words in the new language that don't exist in your own, that give you different ways of thinking about the world,
- as you master the grammar, what first seemed awkward or just plain weird, now becomes an alternative to what you once thought was the only way words could be arranged together
- there's a certain freedom to navigating without ever using your native language, a liberation from the biases and limits every language imposes on its native speakers
- If the new language has a different alphabet or characters instead of letters, you have to rearrange brain cells to adapt even more
- when you return you are not the same person who left - your mind and expectations have been expanded
- there's the pleasure of old food favorites and seeing friends and family
- but you start missing food specialties from the new culture
- and your old friends haven't gone through what you've gone through and they don't realize you see things differently, and while they like the exotic pictures, they don't understand the less visible aspects of the other culture and how that's changed you
- It interrupted our routines and forced us to find other ways to do things.
- We learned to order delivery or use curbside pick up for groceries and other items.
- We learned to wear masks and gloves.
- We learned to use zoom and streamed a lot more videos.
- There were many things we didn't understand - particularly about the virus and how to respond to it - and it took time to figure out what worked and what didn't.
- Some people resisted changing their routines.
- They refused to believe that the virus was real. This happens, say, to US citizens overseas who insist on only eating US food and will only speak English and think they are not subject to the new country's laws and customs
- We've had more time home alone or with our families. Time to think.
- We've learned new vocabulary, from COVID to community spread and Zoom
You are optimistic about climate change.
ReplyDeleteWe do not need more awareness, we need ACTION. The Florida condo board had TONS of information, tons of awareness, tons of wokeness, but there was no action. Zero. It collapsed.
Anon, don't know who you are or how much of this blog you've read. But I see climate change seriously. It's the issue most threatening to human kind (other than human kind itself, which are the cause of climate change) we face. I've posted on many posts my belief that the biggest, most impactful, and politically feasible first action we can take is a carbon fee with dividend.
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