Our Reaction to Being There: The Ups and Downs of a New Job
It wasn’t a war zone. It wasn’t a hardship post. The power stayed on, the food was delicious. Beyond unpredictable drivers and the occasional underpaid cop there was nothing to complain about. And I was longing, quietly, for home.
Well, okay. It wasn’t perfect. The language was different. The weather was hot. Perhaps if I’d been in London I would have been happier. And perhaps not. I’ve read that Canadians on long term assignments find it hardest to adapt to the foreign cities of Washington, Paris … and London.
No place is like home. I have heard many tales from folk befuddled by stores, subway systems, social norms and unexpected loneliness in places that otherwise look and sound like where they grew up. In missions with more challenges, our reactions are less surprising, yet similar.
What happens to us?
There are predictable stages in adjusting to living and working in a new place.
The chaos before leaving.
There is the excitement of being chosen, of reading about the new destination, of buying the things we imagine we will need. There is the panic of packing up the house, finishing old work, farming out the pets and saying ‘farewell’ to everyone. Emotional whiplash strikes us in cycles of hours, not days. Strategy: Know that when you get on the airplane, all of the chaos will disappear. Someone else will pick up the leftover pieces. Meanwhile, be nice to yourself. Eat treats. Ask your friends to help. They will be grateful for the chance. Get them to pay for the treats.
The honeymoon on arriving.
I’m here. After all that imagining and hassle, I’ve arrived! I smell the air. My skin is alive to new sensations. My feet walk on different earth. Someone get a photo, quick! Enjoy it. Life will become normal soon enough.
Denial and decline.
Our head keeps telling us we’re loving it. Our gut is collecting a list: Crazy drivers, noisy night streets, no peanut butter, people at work weren’t informed about how good I am and don’t seem to recognize my worth, lonely suppers and long evenings, messages from home that they are having a grand time without me – or perhaps worse, are having a crisis that we fear is our fault because we aren’t there. Strategy: Make two lists. On one write down your “Victories and Rewards.” Recognize and capture the problems solved and the lovely new experiences. Find the threads of joy and satisfaction in this new place and follow them. On the other list, articulate the challenges and seek strategies to manage them.
The Crisis.
We feel like we hate this place, this job, the organization that sent us and are beginning to question just how much we like ourselves. Our sense of humour abandons us and grumpiness blossoms to fill up the space. We fantasize about being anyplace else – the cottage or the Congo, it doesn’t matter. It would have to be better than here. We see the world in stark terms of “us” and “them”. THEY are … fill in the blank. You now see clearly that these millions of people are all deficient in a list of ways and that you are the only sane and normal one. Strategy: Know that you are on schedule. Everybody feels this way at this point, whether they admit it or not. Depending on the circumstances and our personalities we may feel it a little sooner or a little later, but most of us achieve a climax of these reactions about a third of the way through our intended time there. Say to yourself “Eureka! THIS is culture shock! I’m not nuts. They aren’t evil. It is culture shock!” The next day things should start to improve.
Getting past the crisis.
Three things can happen when we are in a state of adaptation or culture shock. Two of them are risky.
We can leave.
This isn’t recommended. We will carry around regret and a feeling of failure for a long time. And besides, things are about to get better.
We can hide.
There are ‘cocoons’, places where everything is familiar. We can join the ex-pat clubs. People will look, sound, joke and play like us. We can stay home and watch movies. We can pretend that we aren’t really here. This also isn’t recommended. If we are in a lonely outpost it is important to find a cocoon and visit it regularly to reassure ourselves that we’re still okay. But if we’re in a big city with lots of other folk who are indeed like us, the cocoon can become a trap. It can prevent us from learning language, discovering the new, receiving the gifts of experience and insight that this place has to offer. There is the potential for us to return home disappointed with the opportunities we missed. Beware the “virtual” cocoon of the internet, email and social media. If you know what all of your friends are doing next weekend, you haven’t actually left home.
We can seize life.
Make time and space to fully be where you are, without clinging to where you left. Follow the strategies of Stress Management 101:
- Take good care of yourself. Eat well, sleep well and perhaps most importantly, find some way to exercise. Sing, do yoga, play soccer with the local kids … whatever you can do. It is important for your emotional state as well as your physical state, to keep moving.
- Keep communicating. Talk to friends or write daily in your journal.
- Take care of the problems. This comes last because if you aren’t talking or writing to reflect on your situation and you aren’t staying healthy, solving problems becomes much harder.
Smoother waters.
As we move through and past the crisis this place and its ways start to feel like home. We belong. We have normal lives, mixed with work that we have figured out how to do in this new environment, and the pleasure of new friends and activities.
Profiting from our investment.
In the last half of our time we continue to accumulate knowledge, skills and attitudes that both make us more effective professionally and more comfortable personally. Newcomers look at us with awe. Enjoy. Live and work to the fullest, because it will come to an end too soon and we will regret what was left undone.
Prepare for what comes next.
Once we’ve become comfortable, it can be hard to contemplate heading home. That is the topic for a later Note.
Strategy:
Write a daily journal, from before you leave home until after you get back. This is a private journal, not one to be shared with your biographer. Some days you will write several pages and it will help in the way that a conversation with a good friend helps. Some days you will only note what you did and where. Whatever you write will help to move through the present and be a great resource in the future.
More resources:
Robin Pascoe is a Canadian with decades of experience in adjusting to living abroad – as a worker, an accompanying spouse and as a mother. Her website, www.expatexpert.com , has useful perspectives and advice, whether you are going alone or with your family. Look for the “Reading Room” on her site.