Visiting home as the expat

I will be flying to Europe tomorrow and living abroad for two years now my feeling about this holiday and coming “home” has changed a bit. In this blog post, I want to share my view about this. If you are an expat yourself, you might resonate with this, if you are a friend of an Expat this might help you to understand your friend a bit better. 

"Aren't you excited to come home?"

This is one of the most asked questions recently. Everyone around me is assuming that I am 100% excited about flying home and seeing all my family and friends again. The truth is: Yes, I am excited (and grateful that I am able to) but also, my definition of home has changed a bit in the meantime. This new place I am living in has become my home more than it was a year ago and while I am missing things when living abroad, I am also missing the local culture when visiting back home. Moving abroad brings a funny culture shock experience along. I am trying to illustrate that in that image below: 

 

First, you are missing things from one country; later you are missing things from the other. It is the natural process of adaptation and growing as a person. I am now one of those “in-between” people, and I am excited to see what I will say about this next Christmas. 

 

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"Tell me about you!"

Another typical thing of visiting home as an expat: You are always in the middle of attention. No matter how often I am asking my friends to tell me about them and their life, our conversation will soon go back to me. I understand where this is coming from. Moving abroad is exotic, and I did not only switch countries but culture, lifestyle, hobbies and even my career. So there is a lot of change going on in my life people want to know about. However, I am also very interested in how my friends are feeling. The general answer is something like “You know, same old. Same job, same partner…let’s talk about you!”. If that is true, we would have had nothing to talk about before I left. Of course, things are going on! And only because they don’t entail turning your whole life upside down, they are not less important. So please my dear friends: Let’s also talk about you <3 Also, let’s face it: I will be answering the same questions about me again and again for the next couple of weeks 😉

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I  have the feeling of never doing enough. I am not doing justice to the friendships I want to cherish.

"Why did you not say you are visiting home?"

Christmas for an expat can be a stressful time. I sometimes have this image in my head that everyone wants to have ” a piece of the cake.” I  have the feeling of never doing enough. I am not doing justice to the friendships I want to cherish. My dear friend, I want to meet you! And not only in passing. Best case scenario would be to sit down with a cup of coffee for a couple of hours and really talk about life and not just meet in a bigger group discussing small talk topics.  But it is also draining. Not only is it overwhelming to be back in a culture that suddenly feels foreign, but there is also always these thoughts: Have I told her I am in town? Should I call her or is it too late now? Should I meet with my former colleagues? Where do I get some last minute Christmas gifts? And just like that one week is over and I am rushing to the next city, and the struggle starts again. Each year I am telling myself that I want to be more present in the moment.  Let’s see how this is working this time 🙂 

If you are having a friend who is living abroad here are my 2 cents:

So these are the thoughts in my head when visiting home. I am so looking forward to hugging everyone! I want to walk around town without a tight schedule, to re-connect with the German culture that was home for me for such a long time, shopping all the food I missed and smile about the different cultural differences I totally forgot about. 

 

So, friends, the countdown is on! I am coming “HOME” and I am looking forward to reconnecting and being shocked by the German straightforwardness and I will definitely pay to much tip out of habit 🙂 

Thanks for sharing the love and stopping by

Kate from Share the Love, expat, expat wife, expat life

5 Responses

  1. This blog post absolutely nails it. After living in Chicago for two years now, the definition of “home” has become way less clear to me. When flying to Germany for Christmas, this becomes even more clear.

  2. It does hit the nail on its head. I’ve been living in the US for 4 years now, and we lived in 3 different places moved a total of 4 times. Each times new neighborhoods or even cities, which meant new friends, new schools for the kids etc. You get to realize the positive and negative aspects of each country and for me exactly that has it trap, I don’t know where “home” is for me. When family visits, I strongly miss Germany and it takes me several weeks to adjust again, when I’m in Germany I miss certain things about the US. It is difficult, especially thinking about moving back to Germany eventually, what is the right decision, which feels like home?

    1. Exactly! The privilege of having experienced different cultures triggers us to create our own:-) For most, the family itself is the most stable thing we have. Thank you very much for sharing your story!

  3. Thanks for the post. Many things resonate. But I never feel like I’m the centre of attention. In fact, mostly people don’t ask about my expat life in Paris. Usually, the conversation goes quickly to the new socks they bought on sale or how much a hardwood floor repair might cost 😐. I’d be happy to share my stories , but they’d rather not know about the great life abroad. UNLESS they also lived abroad, those people are always interested and ready to talk about the expat experience.

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5 Responses

  1. This blog post absolutely nails it. After living in Chicago for two years now, the definition of “home” has become way less clear to me. When flying to Germany for Christmas, this becomes even more clear.

  2. It does hit the nail on its head. I’ve been living in the US for 4 years now, and we lived in 3 different places moved a total of 4 times. Each times new neighborhoods or even cities, which meant new friends, new schools for the kids etc. You get to realize the positive and negative aspects of each country and for me exactly that has it trap, I don’t know where “home” is for me. When family visits, I strongly miss Germany and it takes me several weeks to adjust again, when I’m in Germany I miss certain things about the US. It is difficult, especially thinking about moving back to Germany eventually, what is the right decision, which feels like home?

    1. Exactly! The privilege of having experienced different cultures triggers us to create our own:-) For most, the family itself is the most stable thing we have. Thank you very much for sharing your story!

  3. Thanks for the post. Many things resonate. But I never feel like I’m the centre of attention. In fact, mostly people don’t ask about my expat life in Paris. Usually, the conversation goes quickly to the new socks they bought on sale or how much a hardwood floor repair might cost 😐. I’d be happy to share my stories , but they’d rather not know about the great life abroad. UNLESS they also lived abroad, those people are always interested and ready to talk about the expat experience.

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