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| Expat Lingo |
Expat blogger Expat Lingo
shared this lovely cartoon with Expat Explorer earlier this week to demonstrate
one little girl’s misconception of moving to Hong Kong. This is a very cute
example of a child’s misconception of another place; however it is not just
children who miscalculate where they are moving to. Other great examples from
Expat Lingo about misconceptions most people have made about places they have
never been, such as Australia is like “Crocodile Dundee” and Europe is like a
muesli commercial.
A quick search on Google shows that expats from every corner
of the earth are having the misconceptions and stereotypes of nations blown out
of the water by their own experiences.
Clogs
and Tulips posed a question to her guest bloggers:
Before you moved to the country you are in now, what
expectations, ideas, (things you thought happened, things people did, etc) did
you have then, that proved to be not true at all?
The following answer came from: Tales from Windmill Fields:
That she would hate cycling and that she would be the only
foreigner! Both myths were quickly busted after moving to Holland.
The Ex-Expat
explains in great detail the importance of appropriate expectation before
embarking on an expat journey, and just how much they can affect your happiness
and the success with which you make your life there, in her aptly named post: Expectations.
French Expat in Vancouver, Emmanuelle, and writer of Winning Away blog, writes that often
when French people want to move to North America, they end up choosing Quebec,
because it’ll be more like home. However, she writes
that:
“they expect Montreal to be full of French people who happen to live in North America. What they find instead are North Americans who happen to speak French. That’s a big difference in terms of culture!”
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| Creative Commons: Flickr |
When you moved abroad, what were your perceptions? Were they
true, or misconceptions? Let us know in the comments box below!



Glad you enjoyed the comic. Thanks for sharing it with others!
ReplyDeleteThis is such a great question...do you mind if I re-ask it over on my blog (giving you credit and a link, of course!)
ReplyDeleteI think I expected to live next to my pool. I didn't think I realized that expat life is largely just living your life in another country--I do pre-k drop off/pick up, the laundry, grocery runs, etc. There's very little reading by the pool.
I have category called culture shock full of "wait, what....?" moments.