I originally wrote and published this article in Spanish.
As we brace ourselves to move abroad for the third time in a few years, I look back and I know that squeezing our lives into a suitcase and leaving our native Barcelona was the best decision that we could have possibly made. Because when you move away, when you turn your life into a journey filled with uncertainty, you grow up in unexpected ways.
You face new challenges, you get to know parts of you you didn’t know existed, you’re amazed at yourself and at the world. You learn, you broaden your horizons. You unlearn, and after coming down and embracing a few lessons, you start growing in humility. You evolve. You feel homesick… and you shape memories that will stay with you forever. If you’ve ever lived away from home or embarked on a long journey, I’m sure you too have felt these 17 things that change forever when you live abroad.
1. Adrenalin becomes part of your life.
From the moment you decide to move abroad, your life turns into a powerful mix of emotions – learning, improvising, dealing with the unexpected… All your senses sharpen up, and for a while the word “routine” is dismissed from your vocabulary to make space for an ever rising adrenalin thrill ride. New places, new habits, new challenges, new people. Starting anew should terrify you, but it’s unusually addictive.
2. But when you go back… everything looks the same.
That’s why, when you get a few days off and fly back home, it strikes you how little everything has changed. Your life’s been changing at a non-stop pace, and you’re on holidays and ready to share all those anecdotes you’ve been piling up. But, at home, life’s the same as ever. Everyone keeps struggling with their daily chores, and it suddenly strikes you: life won’t stop for you.
3. You lack the (and yet you have too many) words.
When someone asks you about your new life, you lack the right words to convey all you’re experiencing. Yet later, in the middle of a random conversation, something reminds you about ‘that time when’…, and you have to hold your tongue because you don’t want to overwhelm everyone with stories from your ‘other country’ and come across as pretentious.
4. You come to understand that courage is overrated.
Lots of people will tell you how brave you are – they too would move abroad if they weren’t so scared. And you, even though you’ve been scared, too, know that courage makes up about 10% of life-changing decisions. The other 90% is purely about wanting it with all your heart. Do you want to do it, do you really feel like doing it? Then do it. From the moment we decide to jump, we’re no longer cowards nor courageous – whatever comes our way, we deal with it.
«It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.»
5. And, suddenly, you’re free.
You’ve always been free, but freedom feels different now. Now that you’ve given up every comfort and made it work thousands of miles away from home… you feel like you’re capable of anything!
6. You no longer speak one particular language.
Sometimes you unintentionally let a word from another language slip. Other times you can only think of a way of saying something… with that perfect word which, by the way, is in the wrong language. When you interact with a foreign language on a daily basis, you learn and unlearn at the same time. All the while you’re soaking up cultural references and swear words in your second language, you find yourself reading in your mother tongue so it won’t get rusty. Like that time when Homer took a home winemaking course and forgot how to drive.
7. You learn to say goodbye… and to enjoy yourself.
You soon realize that now, most things and people in your life are just passing through, and you instinctively play down the importance of most situations. You perfect the right balance between bonding and letting go – a perpetual battle between nostalgia and pragmatism.
8. You have two of everything.
Two SIM cards (one of them packed with phone numbers from all over the world), two library cards, two bank accounts… And two types of coins, which always end up mysteriously mixing when you’re about to pay for something.
9. Normal? What’s normal?
Living abroad, like traveling, makes you realise that ‘normal’ only means socially or culturally accepted. When you plunge into a different culture and a different society, your notion of normality soon falls apart. You learn there are other ways of doing things, and after a while, you too take to that habit you never thought you’d embrace. You also get to know yourself a little better, because you discover that some things you really believe in, while others are just a cultural heritage of the society you grew up in.
10. You become a tourist in your own city.
That tourist trap you may not have visited in your country only adds up to the never-ending list of things to do in your new home, and you soon become quite the expert on your new city. But when someone comes over for a few days and asks for some suggestions, you find it really hard to recommend but a few things – if it were up to you, you’d recommend visiting everything!
11. You learn how to be patient… and how to ask for help.
When you live abroad, the simplest task can become a huge challenge. Processing paperwork, finding the right word, knowing which bus to take. There’s always moments of distress, but you’re soon filled with more patience than you ever knew you had in you, and accept that asking for help is not only inevitable, but also a very healthy habit.
12. Time is measured in tiny little moments.
It’s as if you were looking through the car window – everything moves really slowly at the back, in the distance, while in front of you life passes by at full speed. On the one hand, you receive news from home – birthdays you missed, people who left without you getting the chance to say goodbye one last time, celebrations you won’t be able to attend. On the other hand, in your new home life goes by at top speed. Time is so distorted now, that you learn how to measure it in tiny little moments, either a Skype call with your family and old friends or a pint with the new ones.
13. Nostalgia strikes when you least expect it.
A food, a song, a smell. The smallest trifle can overwhelm you with homesickness. You miss those little things you never thought you’d miss, and you’d give anything to go back to that place, even if it were just for an instant. Or to share that feeling with someone who’d understand you…
14. But you know it’s not where, but when and how.
Although deep down, you know you don’t miss a place, but a strange and magical conjunction of the right place, the right moment and the right people. That year when you traveled, when you shared your life with special ones, when you were so happy. There’s a tiny bit of who you were scattered among all the places you’ve lived in, but sometimes going back to that place is not enough to stop missing it.
15. You change.
I’m sure you’ve heard about life-changing trips. Well, they’re not a commonplace – living abroad is a trip that will profoundly change your life and who you are. It will shake up your roots, your certainties and your fears. Living in Edinburgh changed us forever in many ways, and if it weren’t for that experience, we probably wouldn’t be about to embark on our next life adventure right now. Maybe you won’t realise it, or even believe it, before you do it. But after some time, one day you’ll see it crystal clear. You’ve evolved, you’ve got scars, you’ve lived. You’ve changed.
16. You fit your home into a suitcase.
From the moment you squeeze your life into a suitcase (or, if you’re lucky with your airline, two), whatever you thought ‘home’ was doesn’t exist anymore. Almost anything you can touch can be replaced – wherever you travel, you’ll end up stockpiling new clothes, new books, new mugs. But there will come a day when you’ll suddenly feel at home in your new city. Home is the person traveling with you, the people you leave behind, the streets where your life takes place. Home is also the random stuff in your new flat, those things you’ll get rid of in the blink of an eye when the time to leave comes. Home is all those memories, all those long-distance calls with your family and friends, a bunch of pictures. Home is where the heart is.
17. And… there’s no turning back.
Now you know what it means to give up comfort, what starting from scratch and marveling at the world every day feels like. And it being such a huge, endless world… How could you choose not to keep traveling and discovering it?
Have you ever lived abroad? Is there anything you would add to this list? Drop us a comment and tell us about your experience!
I originally published this article in Spanish a few weeks ago. Lots of people asked for an English version, but please bear in mind English is not my native language and this is only a humble attempt at a translation. I apologise in advance for any mistakes – if there’s anything you’d like to point out, please drop me a comment below. Thank you! Angie
ORGANIZA TU VIAJE
ATRACCIONES
Ahorra en Edimburgo con el billete Royal Edinburgh
AEROPUERTO
Reserva el bus del aeropuerto al centro de Edimburgo
TOURS EN ESPAÑOL
- Disfruta de la visita guiada al Castillo de Edimburgo
- Reserva el Tour gratis por Edimburgo
- Reserva el Tour gratis de Harry Potter y Edimburgo
EXCURSIONES POR ESCOCIA
Reserva las más populares:
SEGURO DE VIAJE
Imprescindible. Usamos el de Heymondo con un 5 % de descuento.
Paga en £
Nuestra tarjeta favorita para viajar y ahorrar comisiones es Revolut, que ofrece 10 € de bienvenida aquí.
INTERNET UK
Compra una tarjeta con datos ilimitados y conéctate desde el primer minuto con un 5 % de descuento.
HOTELES
Consigue las mejores ofertas reservando hotel en Edimburgo con antelación.
Wonderfully well written and our story runs parallel . We have lived in the South Pacific islands then France when our children were young. Then back home to Australia. 12 years ago we moved to France again and now to another culture and language we are living in Greece. A new language, very difficult to learn but the experiences outweigh the disadvantages. Makes life a challenge and we only have one life, so live it to the full.
You learn to be grateful for the life you left behind (I”m Canadian and it’ s a good, safe country to live in). That you make many new friends and meet so many new people, especially if you travel alone.
What a great posting! It’s the first time I read something that reflected what my travels have meant to me. I left at the age of 25 and returned to Toronto 30 years later. I was scared and not courageous at all but my desire to live a life without regrets was great than my being scared.
Your words went straight to my heart.
Great article, I could relate to many points 🙂 Am English but have lived in Sweden for 12 years, and in Spain for 3 years prior to that. The only thing for me is, that I feel I need to see more of the world outside of Europe … luckily I had the chance to go to China for 3 weeks with work, which was great. Not really “living there” but better than just reading about it 🙂
i like so much about this article,now we are still on the way,we meet different challenges but we just can not stop it!It’s our life!best wishes to all of you
As others here have said, you’ve nicely expressed many of my own feelings over the past six years of living abroad (from the US to Taiwan). Thank you for writing this, especially translating into English.
I would add: feeling a stranger/alien in your own country/hometown when you go back to visit friends and family.
Yes I agree after living abroad for about 10 years once and two another and coming home after my husband and traveling partner died. It was easier to move to Japan with him than move back alone.
Indeed! In the end, you accomodate but never are truly home anywhere. You live in your memories and reality deceives you. You have different lives: there and then, here and now. People die and there is nobody left “over there”. There is no return.
That is where we are right now – just 10 days into being “back”. It stinks.
Beth, read up on “reverse culture shock”…. might help with what you are dealing with. 🙂 Good luck, re-entry can be rocky.
I live abroad for one year. And this one year is about to end in only 4weeks. This article brought tears into my eyes while I could stop smiling and smirking. It said everything I experienced and so many things I never found the words for. It is amazing.
Good article. Well written. Many have commented their experiences. But visit India and find all kinds of diversities rolled into one – within a distance of 150 kilometers from North to South – Kashmir to Kanyakumar or East to West – Assam to the Rann of Kutch the desert area in west. One can find different culture, cities of palaces, different languages, dress code, food habits, heritage and tourism centers, Pilgrim centers, impregnable forests, vast deserts, wild animals, different kinds of music, dance and drama, wonderful coastal areas with emerald beaches, the Himalayas, adventure sports…. the list is endless. We Indians have experienced what is written in the article by travelling within India. One India many diversities.
Being a foreigner in your home town and feeling the thrill of learning new places, new people, new buildings, new slang. ….or that feeling of never really being at home in either place…. or the excitement of returning “home” from home and viceversa. Sharing your mother tongue language and birth counrty with your children and enriching them with knowledge of a new language, new culture and watching them thrive knowing that we will always feel alive, take risks and knowing that saying “goodbye” is never forever. Missing family and friends but reconnecting gets better every time and more fulfilling.
Agreed! This feeling of reconnecting like no time has passed is the best feeling and truest sign of lasting friendships. These only get tested in times of longer separations. Teaches people to be emotionally independent, free and unburdened; as opposed to children and permanent adolescent-staged old people. An experience worth the investment 🙂