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Culture shock becomes nostalgia

Editor’s note: This is the last column from former Daily Lobo staff members studying in a different country this semester. We would like to thank our contributors, Zach, Hunter Riley, Nicole Raz and Kallie Red-Horse for their insightful and entertaining columns.

Moving abroad is like getting thrown on your ass by an all-encompassing wave — so hard that afterward you feel nauseous.
You get plunged into instant identity crisis in every facet of your life. It’s terrible and wonderful at the same time, like too many similes in a paragraph.

If you come from the United States, there isn’t really anywhere in the world that hasn’t had some exposure to Western culture. There are, of course, the outliers North Korea, the deep southern states and bits of Africa. But anywhere you go these days, there always seems to be Coca-Cola and McDonald’s, and that’s probably the most common perspective of what America is. Sometimes living abroad, you feel like it might be the most honest depiction.

But in between that first day and that second to third month, the new and exciting of it all falls away, and culture shock sets in.

Going to a new ethnic restaurant is fun and just outside of your comfort zone for as long as you choose. But deciding to live there and not leave for six months to a year is a whole other story. The fun of not knowing what you’re eating turns to frustration, and always being on the outside of a joke is embarrassing.

The clothes you think are cool seem even odder than at home. And this is where the wave comes in: You get knocked down.

You know nothing — not the language, the culture, the food. And you’ve decided to live here for the next little chunk of life. It sucks.
Then a funny thing happens. It’s the most surreal feeling. You leave the town you’ve been in and travel around the country. And when you get back to the bus station or airport tired and haggard, you feel like you’ve come home. And like the ocean receding the horizon, it comes into view again. That wave that just knocked you on your ass doesn’t look like it ever could have. Maybe you don’t crave all the new food you’ve encountered, but a dish or two.

I had been on a bus for nearly eight hours, which in Chile is laughably nothing, and I was super hot, and the one thing I craved more than anything was an ice cold Piscola.

It’s a type of grape brandy made only in northern Chile/Southern Peru, mixed with a soft drink. But I remember the moment fondly because I wasn’t craving something from home in a time of hot stress; I was craving something from right now — from Chile.

And this is the Zen-like mantra that moving abroad forces you to accept: You know nothing; you are nothing; you cannot predict anything. You are golden once you’ve accepted this mindset — strong like stone, smooth like water.

I am at about five months in, and about a month and a half ago, I started getting into the swing of things. Spanish is bueno. I have a good amount of friends, and I know where and when to do things. One of the downsides about studying abroad only a short time is that once you get used to things, you move on.

I am coming back in early January and will start school almost immediately.

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And while it will be nice to get back to normal, I am going to miss Chile.

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