It's called culture shock for a reason.
I knew it would happen when I studied abroad for a month in
Barcelona, far from Purdue's campus, but it was a shock all the same. Barcelona
is not West Lafayette. It's different in almost every way imaginable and I'm
far from learning all the details of Barcelona that make it unique. I had a few moments when the differences became extremely clear.
When I got on the metro and had someone standing so close
behind me that I could feel him breathing on my neck, I told myself it was just
part of the culture (and later convinced myself that it could have been Antonio
Banderas). When it was seven in the evening and I was starving, I reminded myself
that I could be eating on time in the states, but I would likely be eating
ramen instead of traditional Spanish cooking from my host mom. When the ATM was
different than what I'm used to and after fifteen minutes I was ready to scream
with frustration, I had to just roll with it because money for gelato is
important. When there are no water fountains to be found I remind myself that
there are trade offs for getting to visit a cool city like Barcelona (and
accept that everyone here must be perpetually dehydrated because they're
always drinking wine). There will always be things that are different and
challenging, but that doesn't make them bad. If I could give someone tips for
studying abroad they would be as follows:
1. Get some local currency ahead of time
I actually did this, but my roommate did not and we shared
the frustration of not being able to operate the ATM's we encountered. Wherever
you're going, at least have a small amount of local currency on hand whether you get
it from the airport or a currency exchange location in your home country. Most
gelato places don't want you to pay for three euros with a credit card.
2. Resist the urge to sleep at odd hours
Try your hardest to only sleep when it's night time in the
country you're visiting. The people who take naps during the day are the ones
that take the longest to adjust to their new sleep schedule. Fight the urge to
sleep at odd hours to avoid prolonged jet lag and awkward pictures of you
sleeping in public.
3. Learn how to read a map
This is especially true if you're going to a big city. You
won't be able to use your phone to navigate everywhere unless you want to pay
twice your tuition in roaming fees. Paper maps work even when there's no WiFi
(amazing, I know).
4. It's okay to not be okay
On the first night when you feel a rush of fear and
uncertainty, it's okay to cry for a minute in the bathroom as long as you wipe
the mascara stains off afterwards. When you can't watch the Bachelorette and
discuss it with your mom, it's okay to be irritated and curse America for
having such entertaining reality television. Just don't let those little
moments become your trip. Find all of the good that outweighs the bad.
Remember that study abroad is an amazing experience and
you're lucky enough to be a part of it. Remember it even when someone (who is
not Antonio Banderas) is so close you can feel him breathe on the back of your
neck. It's nothing a scoop of gelato can't fix.
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