At the Honeymoon stage, we find ourselves curious and smart, we try to understand with an open-mind and are full of optimism.
Everything is fascinating; we take tons of pictures and completely take over our friend’s newsfeeds on Facebook by commenting everydish we eat or place we visit. This stage is bliss and we are extremely vocal about it. Nothing prepares us for the second stage: THE CULTURAL SHOCK.
We start by being more realistic and quickly shift toward a cynic vision and mockeries and end up seeing only negative aspects of the culture. When I look back, I clearly went through as mall depression when hitting that stage. I was frustrated and confused. I felt anxious and helpless. I could not get over the language problem not matter how hard I studied, and I just did not get why they were reacting in such weird and unpredictable ways. “What is wrong with these people!!!! ”. That is also called the “morning after” stage.Probably the worst place to be if we professionally deal with important projects or assignments. The adjustment stage is like a warm sunrise after a long storm night.
We finally adjust. We have built a routine, feel settled and start acquiring a greater knowledge of the local culture and language. I am not sure if it is because it coincided with the arrival of spring and the start of a new job, but I finally opened up and found my good old self back. Around then, I regained motivation, sense of humor and happiness in general and accepted differences in thoughts and behaviors.I realized that I (and my culture) was not the center of this world and that other thinking systems existed out there. They might be different but they are not weird (in the negative way), wrong, or to be feared. That sounds obvious,but even the most open-minded of us can be reduced to such simplistic thoughts when these strong psychological mechanisms take over our reason. Ask anybody who has spent more than a couple of years abroad or who has been repetitively exposed to different cultures. This whole process leads us to the final stage of genuine enthusiasm and culture mastery.
I knew I was there when I realized I had developed a strong feeling of biculturalism. The host culture had taken a considerable place in how I define myself. I started acting like my local friends, sometimes without even noticing. At some point I could not help but bowing all the time like Japanese do, even to my French friends who were shocked about what I had become. I also turned into an apologetic person. “I am sorry” came out left and right(sometimes along with the bowing…I was clearly a nut case according to my friends back home). I realized how much this society has to offer and I was finally in peace with its negative aspects. Even if my compatriots might think the contrary, it is not as if we-French-were perfect anyway. I even started favoring certain aspects of Japanese culture over my own. Japanese are polite,clean and know how to live together and respect each other (even when terrible natural disasters, like the 11th march earthquake, wipe down thousands people). This foreign culture I am talking about is the Japanese culture. I was born and raised in France but I am half Japanese. I am not sure if this factor made my experience more complex or easier compare to other people without this pre-existent condition, but for sure that tells you that, really, we are never prepared enough to cultural shocks. However, being aware of this unavoidable roller-coaster ride, and accepting it as a natural process, might be determinant in the way we can handle cultural shocks. Share with us your cultural shock experiences, leave a comment !