Wanderlust and Culture Shock (Courtney McKinney-Whitaker)
I love to travel. And I hate to travel.
I've always had my fair share of wanderlust, but as
Jane Austen says, "Ah! There is nothing like staying at home, for real
comfort."
Preach it, Sister Jane.
I've always had my fair share of culture shock, too.
It has affected me everywhere I've ever gone, and at least now I know to be
prepared for it—and to prepare my fellow travelers for the fact that I might be
the teensiest bit of a grump the first couple of days.
Brazil: (Why all these gunshots? They found how many bodies on the beach last night?
There are bugs in the shower! What do you mean I can't flush the toilet
paper?!)
West of the Mississippi: (This is truly a different
world. Where are all the people? These landforms are too big! Where are all
your Targets, Utah? I don't want to know what that smell is, Nebraska, but I have my suspicions. That gas station/convenience store is called Runza, which does not give me great confidence in the quality of their food or their restrooms. Oh, here
are all the people—crammed into Colorado.)
Québec: (How dare you be hot in July, Canada! Why is
there so much poop on the sidewalks of Montreal? Like, just right in the
middle. Seriously, why tho? Is it because you give the side eye to anyone who
possesses a plastic bag, and therefore no one has any plastic bags with which
to pick up dog poop? I really hope it's dog poop.)
Scotland: (It's 50 degrees—or whatever that is
Celcius, and the sun never goes down! Time for winter coats and sunscreen, I
guess. I have to rent a shopping cart
in the grocery store? Is there a major problem with people stealing shopping
carts in Inverness? Why are all the appliances just in random places around the
house? This water is so cold except when it's scorching hot! Why is this
strange washer-dryer combo thing in the kitchen? On a related note, why are all
the appliances made for Hobbits? Yes, I always like to step directly into the
street when I exit a shop. Who needs sidewalks?)
I've loved every one of these places, been fortunate
enough to spend weeks there, and had a wonderful time in all of them. But the
above quotes are all things I have also actually said. It's a flaw in my
character that my feathers get ruffled by new things and I require some
smoothing down. And generally, after traveling, I need some sleep and some food
before I can truly appreciate a new place and its culture. I wish that
character flaw weren't there, but it is.
It's not confined to travel, either. My wanderlust
and susceptibility to culture shock come up in my everyday life, when I'm lucky
enough to have at least the illusion of a choice about where to live.
I never wanted to live in one place my whole life.
I've lived in four states so far. The U.S. is a big country, and the regions
are very different, so I don't even have to get out my passport in order to
experience the delights of culture shock.
New Jersey: (Everybody says, "Come on!"
here, to borrow from Alice in Wonderland. It's so fast. Too many cars, too many
people, too much busyness. I had to snatch my mom out of the entrance of
Wegmans before she got run over by people with their shopping carts. Side note—I
will forgive anywhere a whole lot for the sake of Wegmans.)
Illinois: (It's so flat. I finally learned what that
smell is—fertilizer. Please people, just say what you mean. If you are mad, say
so rather than smiling and keeping the peace and letting things fester until
you explode all over the pulled pork and walleye potluck.)
Pennsylvania (where in fairness I have lived for
only a month): (I know I said I missed hills, but this might be too many hills.
I don't want to ride a roller coaster every day in my minivan. Where are my nice
wide flat roads? Why are there so many people here? I know I said Illinois was
the middle of nowhere, but what if I liked the middle of nowhere? Ah, things
are so close together!)
I even have culture shock now when I go home to
South Carolina: (Must all things be monogrammed? Are we all at great risk of
having our Thirty-One lunchboxes swiped otherwise? I would believe in both your
essential Southernness and your Christianity without it being loudly proclaimed
on a t-shirt, but at least now I know the initials and congregational
affiliations of all the strangers in line at the grocery store.)—Side Note:
Y'all know it's true, but I hope I don't get Thomas Wolfe-d for that. He really
couldn't go home again after he wrote You
Can't Go Home Again. Or so I have been warned. #mischievousface
I hope you have laughed reading this because I
laughed writing it, mostly at myself and the contradictions of my personality.
Because I love to travel, and I hate to travel. I love to explore new places,
and I hate to explore new places. All of these places have a soft spot forever
in my heart, and I will always care about them. And I will always poke fun at
them, at least a little bit, because I only tease you if I love you.
Oh, I feel the same way! I love the idea of travel, not necessarily the actual conditions of traveling. Even on some of the best trips of my life (England, Scotland, Hawai'i), I found myself longing for the comforts of home. And home (at that time) was freakin' New Jersey. Come on!
ReplyDeleteAhh....I totally forgot to do Hawai'i!
DeleteI'll admit, I'm kinda with Jane on this one!
ReplyDeleteIf ya loooove to travel, dear,
ReplyDeleteyou'll looooove this:
just imagine going to Seventh-Heaven.
Lemme show you how to wiseabove...
When our soul leaves our body
(without which nthn can exist)
and we riseabove to meet our Maker,
only four, last things remain:
death, judgement, Heaven or Hell.
And dats d'fak, Jak
(which is exactly what happened to me:
Im an NDE - my colorFULL nomenclature).
Find-out what RCIA is and join
(ya might wanna check-out
'Lui et Moi' by Gabrielle Bossis -
a French writer, translated;
a wonderfull novel which'll
ROCK, YOUR, WORLD, earthling).
Make Your Choice -SAW
If ya loooove to travel, dear,
ReplyDeleteyou'll looooove this:
just imagine going to Seventh-Heaven.
Lemme show you how to wiseabove...
When our soul leaves our body
(without which nthn can exist)
and we riseabove to meet our Maker,
only four, last things remain:
death, judgement, Heaven or Hell.
And dats d'fak, Jak
(which is exactly what happened to me:
Im an NDE - my colorFULL nomenclature).
Find-out what RCIA is and join
(ya might wanna check-out
'Lui et Moi' by Gabrielle Bossis -
a French writer, translated;
a wonderfull novel which'll
ROCK, YOUR, WORLD, earthling).
Make Your Choice -SAW