Dealing with Culture Shock
Culture shock is one of the most common fear that people must overcome in order to travel the world. Unfortunately for most of us, travelers, we grew up thinking that the only culture and normal way of life that exist is ours. And let's face it, what do we always see on the big screen, books, magazines, and in the news? It would be understandable to think this way, especially if our 'own' has been magnified and glorified by the media all our lives, our environment molded our behavior and thinking, making us believe that nothing else exists, only observing other people's lives from a distance, at the comfort of our own home through TV and internet. Until we have learned to travel, a chance to understand and be part of other people's lives. We realized that there's a bigger world than ours with bigger problems. Unfortunately, due to our conditioned thinking and behavior, they are still what we call 'others'.
We seldom realize, for example that our most private thoughts and emotions are not actually our own. For we think in terms of languages and images which we did not invent, but which were given to us by our society.
― Alan W. Watts
Personally, I'm not a big fan of 'ALL' culture, not that I don't respect it but I blame it for all the ugly faces of human civilization. I have traveled and exposed myself to different cultures to satisfy my own curiosity. It is just like art to me, something created to be appreciated. But there is no need for me to be attached to ideologies and cultural beliefs, and the over-patriotism of people sends chills down my spine. What makes human nature is just something I can't trust. I believe that the need to protect and fight for culture brought all these world issues and false divides.
Culture shock is an emotional disorientation, a sudden blow, and feeling of anxiety that happens when we go to a foreign country very far from our own. It can be an overwhelming and exhilarating experience to be exposed to a different language, people, smells, and sights. And the only way to overcome this shock is to just go through it.
This is one of the things that I like about the couchsurfing community, it helps me deal with culture shock by actually living with the locals. There are no other people who can help us deal with this sudden change but the local people themselves. They welcome a stranger in their house to show their culture and the real hospitality. I can easily just stay in a hostel or a cheap hotel just like any other travelers, make friends with the receptionist and other fellow travelers. I will listen to my fellow travelers' cultural experience, then that's about it. Then I will go back to my own country just with all that kind of experience.
Real travel is about getting out of our comfort zone. For me, being with the same people who speak the same language and staying in hotels cheap or not is just what the rest of the travelers are doing. Paying attention to the world and understanding culture is what makes a real travel experience. I'm done with this hostel chitchat, lonely planet, overrated backpacker's destinations, travel blogs and party places. If I really want to grow and learn, I will stay in villages, travel the road less traveled, volunteer in communities and live the lives of locals. I will conquer my own fear of culture shock by being curious and understanding people's way of life, and this for me is what travel is all about. I'm not asking everyone to do this as we have our own ways. But at least for me, I would do this type of travel once or at some point in my life so I could come back with a sense of awareness and a deeper appreciation of my own life. It is a choice.
I understand that it is not easy for some, or for most travelers coming from the same parts of the world. We should understand that travel is a privilege for most countries, some people don't see travel as a need, especially if they have to take care of their own necessities first - food, shelter, education, clothing. We can't impose travel in other people's lives if we really don't understand their environment and culture. To travel is also to understand why another way of life is different from ours, why do other people think and behave not within the context of what we deem as 'normal'.
It would be hard for young travelers to understand this at this point as most of them are just going out there, just for the experience. Later on, there's a deeper meaning that travel will show and make us learn. If we are brought up in the well-pampered western society with a big problem such as the government, we travel to realize that there exist real issues outside our own little world. Bigger problems than our own - hunger, poverty, government control, war... And it is up to us travelers to make an impact, to spread awareness and to make the change ourselves. Understanding is the first step. Then creating our own 'culture', one that unites us all.
The first step - especially for young people with energy and drive and talent, but not money - the first step to controlling your world is to control your culture. To model and demonstrate the kind of world you demand to live in. To write the books. Make the music. Shoot the films. Paint the art.
― Chuck Palahniuk
Very impressed with your article, you are really exploring yourself.
I identify with the programming of culture and its need to stereotype the differences or just make them up or over emphasize certain behavior mockingly.
Patriotism certainly will intensify the propaganda.
Once back in grade school a good teacher made me realize that most likely one day in the future once enough development takes place people will become more homogeneous so humans will be more alike then different.
Sharing more genes similar then dissimilar. Hope we get there.
And good to see you willing to drop your biases and blend with the locals, but there are always some who won't be so open minded, so please be careful.
Thank you, I'm impressed with your comment as well. It is hard for people to get out this 'programming' and the only way is to understand them, like why it is hard for them. Even understanding them is hard. Free-thinking is a choice, breaking out of this shell that enslaves us is really up to us.
I agree.
I know and I have already taken your advice long time ago. Thanks.
It certainly can be a chock for many to realize that your own culture and experience is not the norm for everybody. And once you learn to not always think right or wrong but accept other cultures as different instead of wrong you will have lost a part of the culture that was yours before. Most do not realize this until they return to what used to be normal and find that it now also seems different to you. A world traveler that really learns and experiences a new culture will gain much, but it comes at a price, home will not feel the same afterwards.
There is a poem presented in many different languages in the international terminal at Arlanda airport in Sweden that sums this up very well:
all countries are my home.
I am a stranger everywhere."
Totally agree with you, it won't feel the same anymore. I have changed, and the rest is still the same at home. I feel more alone than ever. That is the price to pay, freedom is not free.
I totally agree staying with, or st least being guided by, locals when it comes to dealing with culture shock.
The second thing for me is a personal private space (room) and maintaining a few rituals from my own culture.
Your rituals sound scary to me, I hope it does not involve some candles in the dark and some chanting.
Haha, nothing like that! Simple things like washing my hands after leaving a cemetery. It's based on a Maori custom. I guess it's like Catholics that cross-themselves. These are little things that remind me of who I am and how that is different to the culture that I am experiencing (and that's ok!). But, nothing that creates an imposition for other people.
Great post, I like it ^^
The things that most affect us are our environment (I have a post on this), the mentality of the country plays a huge role in this and every country has its own social norms.
Please check my new post, I think you will like it!
@paps
Thank's I'll check.
LOL, no more culture shock for me.
My first one was from within India in 2001 when I moved from a small town to the Indian capital, Delhi.
This post has received a 1.04 % upvote from @drotto thanks to: @banjo.
I completely agree with your views. The concept of travel is to break down our own barriers and leave our 'comfort zone'. Then we realize that there is no such thing as the 'right way' but just 'another way'. And at the end of the day, people travel to find themselves because changing the world starts with one person, yourself. Great post! Upvoted and followed!
Please also check out my blog from time to time as well!
Good one. Thanks for dropping by.
For myself I find a sort of "reverse culture shock" or "reentry culture shock" the most challenging. It's the feeling of returning home to the familiarity of one's own culture after the novelty of a different one.
It's interesting how we simultaneously crave novelty (podcast on novelty and the human brain with transcript) and still value a level of safety and familiarity.
Yeah, reverse culture shock is one thing I dread as well. When everyone seems the same but you.
Was going to say this, reverse culture shock can be depressing. I think it's one of the reasons many people end up not coming "home" and end up continuously traveling.
It's like damned if you do, damned if you don't. And maybe why many other people don't travel as well.
Very true.
Beautiful place..
enjoy the upvote and you can do the same...
upvoted as well
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