Here There and Everywhere

Expat wanderer

Opposite World

I need to write this post while I am freshly back home, because it wears off, you forget the sharpness of the differences . . .

You have to think about how you will manage your bags when you get here, because there will be no willing men with carts to do it for you.

Getting on the highway . . . people are so polite. People drive exactly at the speed limit, or maybe up to 4 miles over. If you put on your turn signal, they slow down and allow you to enter their lane. No one weaves back and forth, no one gets on your tail and insists you get out of their way. Traffic flows smoothly, predictably. People are wearing seat belts; their babies are in baby seats and their children are buckled in the back seat. It’s five lanes, and it’s all very tame. Our testosterone drivers in Kuwait would find it very very dull. I didn’t see a single accident, or single wrecked car all the way home, about twenty miles.

At the grocery stores, there are places for inviduals to put their grocery carts back – and they really do. There are also enough parking places. The cashiers also put the groceries in a bag for you, but there is no one who carries them out to your car.

The streets are immaculate – not because we have hoards of people to pick them up, but because people here have a horror of littering – and huge fines that discourage the rare few who would toss a kleenex out a window.

Service providers are more helpful, and less servile. There is a sense of interchangeable rolls – the guy behind the counter at Starbucks might also be a full time IT student at the local university, just piling up a few barista bucks to pay his way through school. (There is always a tip jar in every Starbucks – Have you ever noticed there are no tip jars at the Starbucks in Kuwait?) The gal behind the counter at the grocery store might live just up the street from you. The guy at the Half Price book store has kids at the same school where your child goes to school. It’s different when all the workers are part of the same community.

The health care worker living with my parents to take care of my father is treated like family. He’s from Ghana. I watch him watch us as we gather. I imagine some of it is very familiar to him – the way women communicate when family gathers, laughter, tears, family business, making plans and arrangements. And I imagine some of it is very . . . foreign. I would love to read HIS blog!

There are seasons here. You need to have socks with you to keep your feet warm, and closed-toed shoes. There are trees that were green two months ago, and are now a flaming red, or orange, or yellow. I need a sweater outside, over a shirt. It’s cool, but not yet really cold.

Part of the transportation system here is ferry boats. People take them to get to work. My home town is, like Kuwait City, on the beach, but the water is not jade green, but a deeper, colder blue.

e-beach.JPG

October 9, 2006 - Posted by | Cross Cultural, ExPat Life, Family Issues, Kuwait, Middle East, Social Issues, Travel, Uncategorized

6 Comments »

  1. No offense or anything but it seems that this was your first time out of Kuwait!

    The Stallion's avatar Comment by The Stallion | October 9, 2006 | Reply

  2. Wow it sounds like you really missed being home πŸ™‚ I dont blame you. You gotta miss Kuwaiti food though. I think thats the one thing that we beat you guys with you by leaps and bounds πŸ˜›

    1001 Nights's avatar Comment by 1001 Nights | October 9, 2006 | Reply

  3. saba7o ya khalti,

    my sister, who honed her driving skills in Hartford and then DC, cannot stand the traffic at home. she says: the drivers treat each day of traffic as if they have never seen city traffic before. they brake pre-emptively, fifty feet too soon, and they leave far too much space between cars, causing massive – and unnecessary – traffic slow-downs. she prefers the efficiency created by aggressive driving :-).

    I’m glad you’re home. what a mess this whole situation has become. in Arabic, one of the words for old, 3ajouz, literally means incapable. (Its also a useful word when fending off taxi-driver marriage proposals, as in: no, you don’t want to marry me. I’m old!) the sad thing for Grandpa is how unwilling his mind is to admit how incapable his body has become.

    bisous b7hibbik from petite a.

    adiamondinsunlight's avatar Comment by adiamondinsunlight | October 9, 2006 | Reply

  4. Stallion – no offense taken.This was my fifth trip back this year. Part of this blog is so I document – for myself – what I see. My part of the world puts a huge value on cleanliness and lawful behavior. We adjust so quickly; we stop noticing. Just wanted to jot some of it down for the record.

    1001 – You are right, Kuwaiti food is awesome.

    Little Diamond – wish you were here. I’m surprised at your sister’s comment, only in that where she learned to drive was even more conservative than here!

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | October 9, 2006 | Reply

  5. Fall leaves and ferries – I’m guessing Martha’s Vineyard or Nantucket? πŸ™‚

    -Stinni, whose parents live on Cape Cod.

    Stinni's avatar Comment by Stinni | October 9, 2006 | Reply

  6. Stinni – nope! πŸ™‚

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | October 10, 2006 | Reply


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