Advanced English Conversation About Travel [The Fearless Fluency Club]

1,710,067 views ・ 2016-07-31

Speak English With Vanessa


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Vanessa: Hi, I'm Vanessa from the website, SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.
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Welcome to the sample conversation video lesson from the course The Fearless Fluency Club.
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In this video, you'll see myself and my sister Cherise having a conversation, a natural,
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real conversation about reverse culture shock.
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If you don't know what this term is, watch the video.
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If you'd like to hear natural conversations, I'm sure you'll enjoy it, and to analyze and
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learn about the vocabulary, the grammar, the pronunciation that we use in this video, make
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sure that you watch the other videos in this series.
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That way you can more completely and fully understand the conversation and use the English
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yourself.
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To join The Fearless Fluency Club, you can click the link here in the description or
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up here at the top, the little I in the corner.
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Thanks so much and let's get started.
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Hi everyone.
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I want to introduce you to my sister, Charisse.
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Charisse: Hi everyone.
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Vanessa: Today we're going to talk about a cool topic, reverse culture shock, but first
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I want to introduce my sister, because you probably don't know her.
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Can you tell us first a little bit about where you've lived or different countries you've
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lived in?
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Cherise: Yeah, sure.
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Well, I lived in France.
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I lived in Argentina, and I recently returned from South Korea.
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Vanessa: Cool, cool.
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What were you doing in France?
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Cherise: In France, I was an au pair.
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In Argentina, I had multiple jobs actually.
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First, I worked at a volunteer organization, then I taught English, every odd job.
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Then, I moved directly to South Korea, where I also taught English.
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Vanessa: Yeah, so you're also an English teacher or yo used to be an English teacher.
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That's really cool.
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We have something in common.
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Cherise: Yeah.
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Yeah, we do.
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Vanessa: The topic for today is reverse culture shock, and maybe some people know about what
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culture shock is, but how would you describe culture shock?
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Cherise: Reverse culture shock is when you go from the country you've been living in,
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a foreign country, let's say, South Korea, you come back to your home country, and then
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all of a sudden everything feels foreign, as if you're returning to a foreign country
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and not your home country.
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You don't connect with people.
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You feel very different from everything around you.
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Vanessa: Yeah, you feel kind of disconnected from what used to be really normal for you.
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Cherise: Exactly.
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Vanessa: Yeah, and that's a terrible feeling because you feel like, "Oh, I should be going
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home.
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I should be really comfortable," and then you feel really weird.
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Cherise: Exactly.
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You don't expect it.
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You hear of culture shock, but reverse culture shock is something you're not expecting.
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Because you don't prepare for it, it hits you harder.
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Vanessa: Yeah, that's a good point.
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I don't know.
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Have you ever felt culture shock, regular culture shock when you moved to Argentina
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or France or Korea?
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Did you feel like, "This is a new culture"?
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Cherise: I definitely did to an extent, because you're preparing for it.
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You know you're going to another country.
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You're going to feel discomfort of some sort, and you're expecting to feel it, so I think
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you prepare more for this culture shock, but reverse culture shock, you're not ready, you're
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not prepared, and it just hits you.
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Vanessa: Yeah, especially when you go to another country and you know you're going to live
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there for a while, you probably do a lot of preparation.
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I know when we moved to Korea, I was watching videos all the time about Korea and what's
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life like, some of the language, some culture different stuff, but when we came back to
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the US, I didn't think about that at all.
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It's just like, "Oh, it's just the US.
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It's my home country."
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Cherise: Exactly, right.
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It's definitely real.
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It's definitely there and it's something that you don't think about.
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Vanessa: Yeah, especially when you've been living away for a while.
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How long were you living away from the US before you came back?
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Cherise: Four years.
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Vanessa: So Argentina, and then- Cherise: First Argentina for a year, then
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South Korea for three years.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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That's a long time.
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Cherise: It had been a long time.
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I hadn't made any trips, just to visit friends or family.
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My friends weren't even American, I would say, so I wasn't even getting some culture
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from my American friends.
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Vanessa: Yeah, you're culturally disconnected.
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Cherise: Most of my friends were foreign or from the country I was living in.
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Vanessa: Yeah, so when you lived in Argentina and Korea, you didn't really have American
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friends so much.
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Maybe some.
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Cherise: There were a few, but they weren't the majority, or I wasn't even looking to
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make those connections with American people.
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Vanessa: Yeah, you wanted to make friends that are from the country.
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Cherise: I wanted to, yeah, acclimate to the country and to the culture.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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I think a lot of people, at least a lot of my students, if they're living in an English-speaking
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country, that's a huge question, "How can I meet people who are from the local culture?"
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But you did it.
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What do you think helped you?
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That's kind of off topic, but what do you think helped you to make friends with people
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who weren't American?
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Was it your jobs or you just learned the language?
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Cherise: I think what helped was going to events that weren't for foreigners.
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I went to those types of things where you know you're going to meet locals who live
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there, and then just connecting with them and then a lot of times, they're very receptive.
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They want to be your friend, too, and then that brings you into their friend group.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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You mean dances or concerts, or what kind of events did you go to?
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Cherise: Yeah, concerts, a lot of concerts in Argentina mainly, and then in South Korea,
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I would say it was with my work because I was the only foreigner at the school I worked
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at.
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Everyone I worked with was a local, was Korean, and that's how I connected with them.
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Vanessa: Yeah, so if you wanted to learn more about the culture, they were already around
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you.
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That's really cool.
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I think it takes a lot of guts, though, because when you are the only person who's American
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or from your country in an area, maybe you would be more likely to seclude yourself or
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be like, "I feel really uncomfortable talking to them.
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Do they want to talk to me?"
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Cherise: Yeah, but they were very nice.
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I never felt that awkward situation where maybe they don't want me here.
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I felt very welcomed, and this is in South Korea.
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Vanessa: In Argentina, was it different?
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Cherise: No, it wasn't different.
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This is coming from the experience of working in South Korea.
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In Argentina, as well, but definitely in South Korea because I was the only foreign teacher,
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but luckily I was with my husband, Toddo.
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Vanessa: Yeah, so can you tell us a little bit about Toddo because Cherise's husband
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also plays an important role in I think this culture shock or acclimating to a new culture,
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so can you tell us about him?
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His name's Toddo, so if you hear Toddo, it's not an English word you don't know.
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It's just his name.
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Cherise: Sure.
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He's Colombian and we met in Argentina.
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We got married in Argentina and then together we moved to South Korea, so he's been with
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me through basically- Vanessa: A lot of changes.
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Cherise: ... everywhere, in Argentina, in Korea, and then back to the US right now.
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I think he's really helped me acclimate better just because I have somebody who's been with
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me through all these experiences, and if no one else connects with me, I know he will
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and I know he'll understand what I've been through because he's been through it, too,
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and we can kind of hash it out together.
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That has helped a lot.
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Vanessa: I think that makes a big difference too because I know when I've traveled alone
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somewhere and then I came back to the US, no one understood what I'd seen or the cool
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experiences, so I felt really lonely.
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There's no one I can talk to about this, and if I said, "Oh, I went here and I went there
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and this was really cool, and oh, in Germany, it's like this," they'd just be like, "Oh,
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that's really cool."
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Maybe they thought it was cool, but they just can't get it.
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Cherise: Right.
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Exactly.
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Either I feel like I'm talking too much about Korea and they're like, "Oh shut up, please
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stop."
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Vanessa: That's hard because it's part of your past.
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Cherise: I want someone to tell.
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Yeah, I want someone to be able to appreciate or just even listen.
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You've been somewhere and you want to be able to share what you've seen, what you've learned.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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We're like grandmas.
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We want to just tell our stories.
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Cherise: Exactly.
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It's really helped having Toddo around and being able to connect with him stronger just
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because we've been everywhere together.
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Vanessa: Yeah, you guys have a closer bond because you've been through a lot.
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Cherise: Right, right.
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Vanessa: I think there's something ... Oh, what was I going to say?
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There's something cool about, oh, you guys' relationship that we haven't mentioned yet,
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that part of that reverse culture shock that we'll talk about in just a second is a language
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thing, going from not being in an English speaking country to being in the US, where
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there's English everywhere.
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You speak Spanish, so can you tell us a little bit about your language experience with him?
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I think this is so cool.
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Cherise: Okay, sure.
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Well, before I was going to Argentina because I wanted to learn Spanish, and I met Toddo.
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Well, when we met, we didn't speak Spanish immediately together.
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We spoke English.
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He also speaks perfect English, but then as time grew on I was getting more like, "I really
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want to learn Spanish, and let's speak Spanish together," which is actually really hard,
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especially with a couple, with a pair to be like, "Okay, we're going to speak only"-
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Vanessa: And change languages in the middle of your relationship.
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Cherise: Exactly, yeah, but we somehow managed to do that somewhat successfully I would say.
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I would speak Spanish almost I would say 90% of the time.
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Vanessa: That's awesome.
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Cherise: Which is really good.
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It's helped me a lot.
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It's helped our relationship.
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I don't know why.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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That's part of his native language though, so maybe for him too, he can connect better.
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Cherise: I agree.
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I think it has to do something with that.
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All around, it's been great, so yeah.
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Vanessa: That's cool that you have that connection, but coming back to the US, if you didn't want
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to speak English, you could speak Spanish together.
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Cherise: Right.
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Oh yeah, I didn't mention that.
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When we came back to the US, I felt like everyone was listening to my conversations and it was
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just uncomfortable.
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I didn't want to speak out loud because I thought, "Everyone's listening to me."
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Vanessa: Yeah, that's a really weird feeling.
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Cherise: We would speak in Spanish everywhere, but then again also, there's a lot of people
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who speak Spanish, so it doesn't work all the time.
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Vanessa: Kind of an illusion.
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Cherise: You feel like you're speaking a secret language.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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I feel like that's a good segue to the next thing of when have you experienced reverse
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culture shock?
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Coming back from the Argentina Korea experience to the US, did you experience any of that?
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Cherise: Definitely.
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I felt a longing for the Argentinian lifestyle I had when I was in Korea for at least a few
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months, like, "Oh, we can just go out to all these restaurants and they have a lot more
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varieties of food," so that was hard.
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Maybe public transportation, although Korea also has fantastic public transportation.
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It just stops at a certain time so you have to know what your-
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Vanessa: Oh, Argentinian transportation went longer?
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Cherise: It's all night, all day, 24/7.
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Vanessa: Whoa.
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Cherise: You don't have to think, "Okay, I've got to go home now."
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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Cherise: There were some things that I missed about Argentinian life that-
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Vanessa: Weren't in Korea.
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Cherise: Yeah, that didn't exist in Korea, and also, at least in Argentina, I understood
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what people were saying and I could communicate.
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Even though it wasn't my first language, at least I could communicate with people.
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Vanessa: That makes a huge difference, though, connecting with the culture, if you can understand
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the language.
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Cherise: I know.
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It opened a lot of doors.
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When I went to Korea, I felt very closed.
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I couldn't communicate with anyone.
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I didn't really know what was going on.
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There was a lot of cultural differences, too.
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Eventually, you adapt to any circumstance.
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I was able to adapt to living in Korea, and then-
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Vanessa: You probably learned some of the language, enough to read or enough to minimally
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communicate.
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Cherise: Right, I could read, and also, yes, communicate with the students, communicate
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with my coworkers.
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Sometimes some of them spoke English.
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Anyway, when I went from Korea to the US, there was another level of culture shock just
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because America was my home country and then all of a sudden, I felt like a foreigner in
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my own country.
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Vanessa: That's a really weird feeling.
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Cherise: I still feel that way to an extent, not as strongly as when I first arrived.
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Vanessa: Yeah, and how long have you been back now?
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Sorry to interrupt you.
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Cherise: I think it's been four months.
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Vanessa: Four months.
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That's not long.
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Cherise: I came in March 1st of 2016.
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Vanessa: Yeah, March, April, May, June, yeah, about four months.
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It's still fresh.
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Cherise: Yeah, it's still fresh, but it was definitely hard the first month.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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What did you experience?
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Tell us about that first month, if you don't mind rehashing those deep days.
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Cherise: Sure.
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I'm trying to think of some very good examples.
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Well, when I first arrived, I arrived in Jackson Hartfield Airport, which is in Atlanta, which
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is one of the biggest airports.
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I just remember arriving there, and all of a sudden hearing everyone speaking English
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and just the interactions between the workers in the airport and the interactions with them
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with me and Toddo, and it just felt so strange.
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I don't know how to explain it.
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That's the thing about reverse culture shock.
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Vanessa: Yeah, it's just a strange feeling.
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Cherise: You can't explain it unless you've experienced it, and maybe you can prepare
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for it, but some other examples, I remember going to get a cell phone in the US.
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I wasn't prepared for so much social interaction.
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Vanessa: In English, or just- Cherise: In English.
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I think that's what it was.
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There's so many people and I kept feeling like people were listening to me or watching
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me strangely because in Korea, people would look at me at least, at least notice, "There's
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a foreigner."
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Vanessa: Because you're not Korean.
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Cherise: Right, and so I guess I assumed that people were still doing that, although now
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I'm not standing out as a foreigner, but I still felt like these eyes were watching me.
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It just was a strange moment of life.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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You realize you do look like other people here.
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Cherise: Right.
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I realized I'm not actually standing out like I was in Korea.
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Vanessa: You're not special anymore.
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Cherise: Not special.
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That's okay.
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Vanessa: Even though that's something negative, I think reverse culture shock in general is
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something negative, for me, it's nit-picking small things about American culture because
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that's our home culture that I didn't nit-pick about before.
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A big thing that got me, I don't know why this was a big deal, but for some reason when
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I came back from France, living in France for a year, for some reason it really bothered
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me that people mowed their lawns.
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When I saw people mowing their lawns, it's such a waste.
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Why don't you just grow something else or why don't we have something else here?
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Why are you mowing a lawn, or why are you using 100 grocery bags?
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Just bring your own bag.
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Don't use these plastic bags.
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Cherise: That's something I don't understand, either.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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It's just such a small thing that shouldn't bother me and I feel like I'm generally easygoing
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or little things don't bother me like that, but I think it was reverse culture shock,
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that comparing it to good things from the culture that I came from and being like, "Why
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is my culture like this?
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Ugh," so pissed off about it.
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Cherise: Right, and you realize, well, they don't know that maybe it's better to bring
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your own bag, bring a little cart.
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It just isn't part of the American culture at this point.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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Cherise: Another thing about grocery stores is there are so many options.
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I realized, "This is why we have a problem with obesity maybe."
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It could be the fact that you have 100 different types of cereal to choose from, or I don't
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know how many types of cereal there are.
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Vanessa: Hundreds.
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Cherise: Too many.
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I want to buy milk.
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Why do I have to choose from 20 different types of milk?
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Why are there so many options?
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There shouldn't ... I don't know.
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Vanessa: It's overwhelming.
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Today we went to the store to look at coconut oil, and it's a small grocery store and there's
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what, like 30 choices, 20 choices?
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Cherise: Americans have a lot of options.
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A lot of countries don't have that many options to choose from.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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In a way, it's neither here nor there, but it's one of those things that when you come
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back to your own culture and see that, you can feel overwhelmed.
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I think that's a sign of reverse culture shock is being overwhelmed by something you thought
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would be normal, like going to the grocery store, something really normal.
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Cherise: Something you do all the time, and all of a sudden, it's something that is a
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small struggle.
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Vanessa: Yeah, yeah.
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Cherise: Choosing what you want to eat.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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Do you think that reverse culture shock is avoidable?
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Is it possible to make it any better than it is?
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This could apply to culture shock, too, but like we already said, I think we kind of prepare
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for culture shock.
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When you go to a foreign country, you prepare more, so reverse culture shock-
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Cherise: Right, you're saying, "I don't need to prepare.
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I'm going back to my home country."
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I think there are certain things you can do to prepare for it.
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I don't think you can completely avoid it, but at least know that these things are going
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to be issues for me, so what can I do to ease the difficulty?
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For example, public transportation in Korea is fantastic.
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I never drove a car.
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I biked, I took the bus or I took the subway.
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I thought for me, it's going to be very important to live somewhere and be able to either walk,
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bike, or drive a car minimally.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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Oh, that sounds a lot like me.
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Cherise: Buying a car, you have to get a car if you're in the US.
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It's unavoidable.
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Vanessa: Unless you live downtown New York, but that's not going to be many people.
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Cherise: Right.
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Vanessa: Unless you're a millionaire.
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Cherise: I need to realize that this is going to be a problem for me and prepare for it
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as best I can, although I'm still going to have to drive, I'm still going to have to
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face this difficulty, you could say.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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You're still going to have to do something you don't want to do.
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Cherise: Right, that I'm not comfortable or used to doing, but it is the only way.
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I guess you can prepare for it, but you can't avoid it.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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I think for me coming back to the US, I had a lot of fears.
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I don't think if they were irrational or not, but I knew that I had a great time living
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abroad and in France and in Europe and in Korea.
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It was so fun and really enjoyable.
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Every day there's something different and new, and then coming back to the US, a big
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thing was, is every day just going to be a daily routine?
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Am I just going to feel like there's not new surprises around every corner?
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When you're abroad, even if you're just traveling or visiting, you find a new market around
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the corner or there's someone playing street music or just fun little things.
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Cherise: There's always something new, right.
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Vanessa: Yeah, so that was a big deal for us is finding somewhere where there is new
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stuff going on or there's maybe some diversity or some new cultures or something more than
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just a boxed lifestyle where you have franchises and suburban lifestyle.
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You've got some city life.
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Cherise: Right.
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I think that would be very difficult to go from living in Korea to going and living in
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suburbia, where you have to drive 20 minutes just to go to the supermarket and there's
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nothing really going on around where you're living.
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That would be really hard.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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I think that's something that was a priority for us, it seems like for you guys, too-
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Cherise: Right, definitely.
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Vanessa: Live close to the city.
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Cherise: Yes.
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I think I realized I like living in bigger cities and it's going to be really difficult
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to go and live in the countryside or live in a little neighborhood way far away from
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everything.
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Vanessa: Yeah.
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Maybe that's something that could happen in the future.
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I don't know.
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I would like to have a garden or like to live ... It's maybe more idealistic, but at the
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moment, it's not really something that I want, so maybe in the future, but I think that's
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an important point, knowing what you want.
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Cherise: Right.
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Everyone wants something different.
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They have their own ... What's important to you is different than what's important to
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me, than somebody else, to know what you want.
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Vanessa: And taking some time to analyze that, like, "Oh, what do I like about living where
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I'm living now?"
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In Korea, you really liked transportation, so how can I make that happen in my home country?
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For me, I liked having little surprises around every corner.
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It's not going to be exactly the same.
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It's not a foreign country, but how can I make that happen somehow or find the right
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place?
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Cherise: Yeah.
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Vanessa: At least for Americans, I don't know, maybe it's different for other countries,
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but for us, it's not a big deal if you don't go back and live in your hometown.
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Cherise: Yeah.
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You can go [crosstalk 00:21:22].
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Exactly.
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Vanessa: I know some people, at least some people I've talked to who aren't American,
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they're really surprised that maybe you've lived in California, like Dan, who's my husband.
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Maybe some of you have met him.
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Dan lived in California, then Colorado, then Pennsylvania, then he went to school in Tennessee.
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That's all over the US, east, west, middle, south, everywhere, and it's totally normal.
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Most people have lived in several places.
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Even for us, we lived in the north and then the south and we have roots in both places.
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Cherise: Yeah, so I feel like it's hard to come back and feel super connected immediately.
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That's not going to happen.
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Vanessa: Yeah, but that's okay.
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I think knowing about it, that's probably the biggest thing to avoid it is being knowledgeable
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that you might feel shocked about it and how to avoid that, or just have more patience
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with yourself.
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Cherise: Yeah.
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You know it's going to get better.
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You'll feel more connected and integrated as time goes on.
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Vanessa: Yeah, or be more patient with your partner.
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If I was upset at Dan about something, I'd be like, "Wait, this is probably just because
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I'm adjusting.
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I shouldn't get frustrated or snippy about little things because I'm adjusting, so sorry
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to put this on you."
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Cherise: At least you realize it.
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Vanessa: Yeah, and you're not perfect, but I think that's something that just being aware
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of it is a big deal.
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Thanks so much for talking about reverse culture shock.
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Cherise: Yeah.
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No problem.
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Vanessa: Thanks everyone for watching this conversation with Cherise, my sister.
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If you'd like to see any more conversations with her in the future, let us know.
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Bye.
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Cherise: Bye.
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Vanessa: Thanks so much for watching this sample conversation lesson for The Fearless
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Fluency Club.
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I hope you learned something new and if we were speaking too quickly, if there's some
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23:11
grammar you would like to learn about, some vocabulary or pronunciation you want to improve
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23:16
for yourself so that you can use it, I recommend watching the other videos in this series,
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the sample videos for the course, The Fearless Fluency Club.
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If this is a good fit for you, I recommend joining our club, where you can get lesson
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23:31
sets like this every month.
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23:34
You can click here to join the club.
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Click up here.
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There's a little I in the corner, or in the description below.
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I'm really glad that you're here with me and I'll see you later.
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Bye.
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