Going native

I have a confession to make. A few days ago, I pushed a woman on the bus. Like the back of my forearm met the center of her back and I pushed. Hard. In my defense, pushing is a way of life here, particularly when it comes to public transportation. But I am ashamed at my overwhelming feeling that I have, in fact, gone native.

So, yes, there’s the pushing. But there’s also scowling. People scowl here for no reason other than the fact that it’s what you do. As a Midwesterner, who grew up learning to be kind to everyone, it’s quite off-putting. However, I learned quickly that if I tried to smile at someone, I was only going to get an even bigger scowl back. So now I scowl. I’m developing a wrinkly spot between my eyebrows.

And what’s the one positive thing that could come out of going native? I could improve my Russian speaking skills. Unfortunately, the pushing, scowling, and general unpleasantness of my daily encounters has led me to stop using Russian at all. Improving my speaking skills seems like so much work for almost no positive outcome. So I’ve been reduced to pointing and stuttering most of the time.

Well, at least I’m still leaving the house. That’s something, right?

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  1. mindthegap’s avatar

    Leaving the house IS an achievement - I just spent the afternoon talking to a friend about that very topic - we were happy with ourselves to have managed to make it to a cosy coffee shop. Concerning the shoving, I find it quite a good way to release some tension without actually throttling someone, and no one blinks an eye.

  2. TulipGirl’s avatar

    I had to learn how to smile in public again, after returning to the States from Kyiv.

  3. Little Miss Moi’s avatar

    Hey! I think that was me! No actually, I got kidney spiked on the metro, not the bus.

  4. madalyn’s avatar

    After being HIT by a five year old girl in the Hanoi airport last year (she and her mom were butting in front of me in line — fairly commonplace practice in Vietnam), I can understand how easy it seems to suddenly go native. (Don’t worry — I didn’t hit the five year old back!)