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18 Comments
Padmini
January 24, 2020
Annie, I enjoyed your beautiful writing, brought back some lovely memories of my young age travels in Europe. the feeling of nostalgia, cultures and missing family. Thank you, keep writing
Erika
December 29, 2019
What a lovely slice of life....thank you for sharing. I moved to the UK for graduate school a few years ago, and you captured the dissonance of living in another culture beautifully. It's such a blend of yin and yang! I can absolutely relate to the joy of returning to that drugstore aisle. <3
LynnV
December 28, 2019
I was a student studying French in 1973, living in Grenoble. I left after the first semester, pining for home exactly in the same way. However, I began the rest of my life after this, as a dedicated Francophile...lover of all (most) things French. I take language lessons each week, and plan trips with my girlfriends every other year. So, with the longer lens of experience, she will come home as a different person, and appreciate her experience. I, too, would like to hear about what happened when she returned to Paris....
Strasbourg86
December 28, 2019
This is spot on: “... it was the tiny differences of daily life that felt slightly, jarringly off, as though I was living in a very refined alternate universe...” We called it culture shock when I was a student in France many years back and that sums it up precisely! Things so much the same... but different enough that they get under your skin. And how many times I dreaded the Post Office where it seemed they loved to torment almost-French speakers. The key perhaps is how one adapts- or does not; embracing and coming to celebrate the differences is harder than one might imagine... and having the support of other American students going through the same thing made a big difference.
Isa
December 26, 2019
This is beautiful, and I totally get it. I'm on a little of the other side, being in the US for Christmas and not really getting why so many lights and why such a colorFUL decoration. But after being here for a few years, I miss it when I am not here, and I miss moslty the people when I am not there.
Marie
December 25, 2019
I wonder if your experience would have been different as an actual traveler. I think going to a foreign country to work, especially work that is service-oriented in someone's home, and therefore intimate without connection, would be a very different thing than traveling deliberately to experience something new. I think what you wrote very clearly conveys the disconnect you felt. Even if I can't understand nostalgia for CVS! :-)
Château L.
December 19, 2019
A very honest perspective. I can totally relate, having just uprooted my family from S.F. to France. We live in the countryside so I sometimes miss the conveniences of the city. Luckily, Paris is only a train ride away...
Alex E.
December 18, 2019
I loved this. Beautifully written, and I could really feel within myself the "dysregulation" you describe while reading. I agree with some of the commenters that it's hard to admit things like this sometimes. But we have a right to feel how we feel, and I'm so glad you shared this with us!
Sarah L.
December 17, 2019
I’m a New Yorker living in Madrid. I’m so excited to experience the holidays here that I can’t understand why people keep asking me if I’m going back. And while there is no Thanksgiving here, my new friends and I got together for dinner that Thursday night. We might have even started our own traditions.
If you constantly compare new surroundings to old you’ll always be unhappy. Opening up to new experiences is the only way to enjoy them.
Although, the pharmacy thing is a little weird to me, too.
If you constantly compare new surroundings to old you’ll always be unhappy. Opening up to new experiences is the only way to enjoy them.
Although, the pharmacy thing is a little weird to me, too.
Jennifer W.
December 17, 2019
What a whiny brat you are. I suggest you stay home for the rest of your life, since you are clearly a horrible traveler who appreciates nothing.
coffee317
December 22, 2019
I'd like to politely disagree, she was grateful for the beauty of Paris but sometimes the heart wants what it wants - and to her it was her home. Some people just feel more rooted than others. I had similar feelings when I packed up and left home for college, I cried during Thanksgiving break in my dorm room because I was so homesick.
Strasbourg86
December 28, 2019
There is a huge difference between being a “traveler” and actually living in another culture... until you have done the same and experienced the reality of culture shock, don’t be so quick to condemn.
Kathleen T.
December 17, 2019
I lived in Paris as an au pair when i was quite young and found after a few months the romance had worn off. I didn't miss my home country as much as I did get sick of the culture itsekf which I found cold and inpersonal. I went back this year for a really quick visit and with maturity had a whole different perspective. Although my heritage is French, its not a culture I readily embrace but I appreciate its beauty and intricacies.
liz A.
December 17, 2019
altho i can't say i've ever missed parts of our wintertime like incessant carols or boxes of candy-canes in flavors like "oreo" or "fruit punch" -- in fact, i never miss winter here in general while i've been abroad. but at the heart of what your saying ... all the tiny differences that pile and pile. i know what thats like. i used to never want to admit homesickness but i'm learning to be honest about it... and i also have a newfound respect for anyone else willing to examine their own feelings of it!
Arati M.
December 18, 2019
That's such a thoughtful comment, Liz. You're right about homesickness being sometimes very hard to be honest about, especially because you're always thinking: "They're never going to get it." It's so profoundly personal. I'm often surprised at all the totally unexpected "trite", "cliched", "inelegant" things I miss about India (along with the expected, like friends and family and familiarity)...
Krista L.
December 17, 2019
This is such a wonderfully written piece that brought many of the things I've experienced as an expat (in Morocco, then the UK, now Canada) into focus. Well done, Anne. I'd love to hear about your experience after you went back, too.
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