When you鈥檙e chatting to this person, you might sometimes wonder why they鈥檙e still an expat, given how often they talk about wanting to go back to their home country. Making constant comparisons between your home and the country you鈥檙e an expat in won鈥檛 help you adjust and settle 鈥 though this expat doesn鈥檛 seem too interested in adapting to their surroundings. They make very little effort to hold small talk 鈥 or even say 鈥渉ello鈥 鈥 in the local language, socialize exclusively with other expats (usually from their own country), and spend most of their time stuck in a work-home-work-home routine. In the spirit of giving the benefit of the doubt: any sense of adventure and thrill of being somewhere new may have just worn off for this grumpy, tired expat.
When you meet this expat, you might realize that you鈥檙e having a much better time than some other people living abroad, though it may not always feel like it. You can鈥檛 help but wonder why they decided to become an expat in the first place. It is almost always a choice, after all. Regardless of what brought them to where they are, it鈥檚 clear not only to their friends that they鈥檙e struggling with their life abroad.
If you鈥檙e this type of expat, the best thing may be to pack up and get on a plane home. And if leaving ASAP is not really an option, think about how you can change things for the better and work on accepting what you can鈥檛 鈥 maybe you鈥檒l discover expat life isn鈥檛 so awful after all.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, we have the kind of expat who is simply too intense. For sure, you have met an expat hell bent on fully immersing themselves in the local culture of where they鈥檙e living.
This person will refuse to speak English (or any language other than that of the country) with you, most likely correcting your best efforts. It鈥檚 better than a token gesture at the odd 鈥減lease鈥 or 鈥渢hank you鈥, granted. Somehow, though, you find yourself cringing at their over accentuation of certain words and the way they class themselves as 鈥減ractically a local now鈥.
This expat is experienced, and they鈥檒l make sure you know it. With them usually making private jokes about places you鈥檝e never been to and people you鈥檝e never met, you鈥檒l likely struggle to get a word in edgeways when you run into this type of expat. They can鈥檛 stop talking about all the countries they鈥檝e already lived in and the native languages they picked up along the way. Having completely left behind their old culture, our seasoned expat can鈥檛 wait to tell you how much better life is abroad than in their home country.
Trying to have a quick chat with this person is nigh on impossible 鈥 stick to a tactical-yet-friendly smile and nod unless you have a spare hour.
Our final type of expat you may encounter is best described as a nomad, moving from country to country, continent to continent, seeking some form of higher truth. This expat searches for the meaning in everything 鈥 and I mean, everything 鈥 and they鈥檙e dying to tell you all about their ongoing spiritual journey. We鈥檙e all for self-reflection and self-improvement, don鈥檛 get me wrong. It鈥檚 that it sometimes comes across as a little boastful.
While endeavoring to find themselves, you might wonder whether this type of expat has actually lost themselves somewhere along the way. It鈥檚 something of an unspoken truth well known among these expats: how enlightened you are is, in fact, directly correlated to how many gap years you have taken.
If you encounter this expat, remember: it鈥檚 not a competition, and your expat life isn鈥檛 any less important. And with each time our transformed expat insists leaving their 9鈥5 job was the best decision they鈥檝e ever made, it becomes slightly less convincing.
Don鈥檛 let these 鈥渢ypes鈥 of expats discourage you. Socializing with other expats can help you settle into a place faster and lead to life-long connections that stay with you no matter where you live! After all, they鈥檝e been in the same situation as you and understand the importance of friendship when you鈥檙e far from home.
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Sara Naidoo is originally from London and studies German and History at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. Sara currently lives in Munich and works in the Content and Communications Team at 51吃瓜黑料网as an Editorial Office Intern.
Homesickness, it鈥檚 a feeling many, if not all of us have felt at some point in our lives. A longing for home is a state of mind that can impact your experience abroad in the most negative ways鈥 that is, if you let it! Take the tough love approach and say bon voyage to feeling blue.
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