果冻视频

Sarah Schilling

Cross-Cultural Interactions in My Everyday Life

A busy four-way intersection in an urban downtown

I accidentally bought an expensive leather jacket three weeks after moving to Paris. I could understand if you would think this was because of a language barrier, but I was fluent by the time I moved abroad. No, my friends, this wasn鈥檛 about language--this was about crossing cultures.

On my way back to my temporary apartment, groggy from looking for a place to live, I passed a store window with a leather jacket I liked. I decided to go in, see how much it cost, and maybe try it on. Shocked by the price tag, I knew it was out of my budget. But the owner of the store saw me fiddling with the tag and, because I鈥檇 brought my Midwestern niceness to France, I acquiesced when she held it out for me to insert my arms in the holes. It was too small, and I was relieved.

Alas, my Wisconsin roots and exhaustion didn鈥檛 help me put up a fight when the owner said she could have it in my size as soon as the next day. I assume my mild protest came off more as politesse to her, because she was soon on the phone with a sister store to have it sent over.

Then, the coup de gr芒ce: she asked for my credit card. I thought this was odd, but perhaps it was just how it was when you put something on hold in France. Still, I clarified, if I decided I didn鈥檛 want the jacket tomorrow, I would get back what I鈥檇 assumed was a down payment. She confirmed.

24 hours later, I was back in the shop with a different clerk handing me the phone where her boss, who鈥檇 been so sweet the day before, was screaming. I鈥檇 tried on the new jacket and it was still too snug in the elbows, so I didn鈥檛 want it. When I told the clerk, she looked shocked and said I had to take it. She pointed at a tattered and semi-hidden piece of paper below the register that said in chicken-scratch French, 鈥淣o returns. No refunds.鈥 

To make a long and heated phone conversation short, I endured some shrieking from the owner, pleaded my case, and ended up with store credit, which I鈥檝e never used in the three years since because I can only use it on Tuesdays when the clerk who hand wrote it on a torn corner of notebook paper is on duty. Guess who is never there every Tuesday I鈥檝e made the trek back?

This experience has thankfully been the worst (and most expensive) cross-cultural misunderstanding I鈥檝e had to date in France. While I may have handled this Parisian encounter with cross-cultural aplomb, it was back on American soil--my cultural home turf--where I biffed it.

Cross-Cultural Interactions Back Home

While back in Wisconsin visiting family, I went to the mall to stock up on jeans designed for midwestern thighs as opposed to those of petite chain-smoking parisiennes. Upon entering a store, I was sidelined: 鈥淗i, I鈥檓 Kim! We鈥檙e having a buy-one-get-one-free sale today. Are you looking for anything in particular? What鈥檚 your name?鈥

My name?!?鈥 I thought, 鈥Why do you need to know my name?

In France, you rarely exchange first names with your neighbors, let alone store clerks. At first, I lamented the lack of sociable employees, but now that I swim daily in French cultural water, this warm greeting back in my hometown felt flaming hot.

Once locked in a stall, I texted my cousin: 鈥淚鈥檝e just escaped the clutches of an 眉ber-friendly mall employee. I鈥檓 taking refuge in a dressing room. Have American store clerks always tried to be your bestie after half a second?鈥

I鈥檒l give myself some credit for not saying anything mean to the clerk鈥檚 face, but I鈥檝e got to admit my heart was in a judgy place in that moment. I鈥檓 less Midwestern-nice after battling the grit of not-for-tourists Paris for this long. Every time she knocked to check on me, I wanted to tell her to back off, I鈥檇 let her know if I needed her help, merci beaucoup. Instead, I gritted out a 鈥淣o, thank you鈥 and texted, 鈥淪he just checked on me a third time!鈥

If I ever move back to the US, stores won鈥檛 be the only place I鈥檒l struggle with routine cross-cultural encounters. And, it鈥檚 not just because I鈥檇 be enduring reverse culture shock for a long while.

The Green Line

We all interact cross-culturally on a regular basis. You might be dating someone of a different ethnicity. Or you work with someone who鈥檚 a generation or two older than you. For crying out loud, even trying to communicate across genders is a cross-cultural endeavor.

I once combined all three: I dated a Gen-X, Mexican-American male for four years. We had different views on family, education, work, and money. In my pride, I often saw his perspective as wrong. But when performing an autopsy on our relationship, I realized if I鈥檇 been aware and respectful of the cultural dynamics at play, we might have been able to make it work.

In 果冻视频 lingo, making it work cross-culturally means 鈥渟taying on the green line,鈥 a phrase based on our . Although the diagram is primarily to prepare you to step into a different country鈥檚 culture, it鈥檚 equally applicable to daily life on American soil.

Whether with store clerks, significant others, or another demographic, there are three additional lessons I鈥檝e learned to get back on the green line:

1. Apologize

In a few of my cross-cultural mishaps, I鈥檝e been fortunate enough to have the chance to apologize. Sometimes the misunderstanding is a hit-and-run encounter, but when it鈥檚 not, I try to acknowledge and apologize for my role in any miscommunication or hurt feelings. As someone who hates to show an ounce of imperfection, it鈥檚 very humbling to do so, but it paves the way for better interactions.

2. Thank

Likewise, I鈥檝e recently added thanking the other person for the life lesson. I went with two houseguests to help them get into a museum after they鈥檇 forgotten their e-tickets, and was surprised to find myself in a clash with a security guard. Once my guests were all set inside, I came out and thanked him. My feelings and ego still stung from our confrontation, but he had, as I told him, been patient enough to talk through both sides of our miscommunication. I promised him I鈥檇 learned from the experience.

3. Learn and Try Again 

And that鈥檚 my final encouragement: Use both positive and negative interactions in the future. Rather than painting broad strokes across all French store owners, or American mall employees, or exes, or security guards, cross-cultural interactions are insight for how to behave and react in the future. Sure, there will be some losses to accept along the way, but there鈥檚 more to be gained as we keep learning, on one side of an ocean or the other.

Sarah is on staff with . Based in Paris since 2016, she enjoys connecting study abroaders to the movements in their host countries, mentoring student interns, and collaborating with her teammates to create resources that help students thrive abroad.

 
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