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Culture Shock: The Naked Truth
Abroad View
It was a hot day in Illinois. People sat inside
by their open windows, watching the children brave the heat. Suddenly their
eyes opened wide. A naked man was walking casually past their apartments.
Culture Shock: The Naked Truth
To John, our unfeathered friend, his behavior was
as normal as singing is for a bird. He is not from our country or our culture.
John left his apartment for the laundry room with a basket under his arm. As
he put his clothes into the washing machine, he realized that what he was wearing
needed washing too. Without a thought, he undressed and put his clothes into
the machine. Satisfied, he left for his apartment.
John was not aware of the effects of his behavior.
He experienced no culture shock. But the other residents of his apartment building
did. For whenever the values, beliefs and behaviors of a person from one culture
unsettle or upset a person from another culture, that is culture shock.
If you are thinking of taking a short-term missions
appointment, or studying abroad, or if you’ve seen some international students
around on campus, think about the causes of and cures for culture shock.
Colliding Cultures
We can face a new culture with either of two basic
attitudes. The first consists of understanding, empathy, acceptance and identification.
The second is rejection and culture shock.
Because of our ethnocentrism, culture shock is
the most common reaction. Doesn’t our culture have the best and the only way
of doing things? It seems so, because our culture is our only frame of reference.
In fact, very few people do not go through a period of rejection and culture
shock when they enter another culture.
Cultures are products of historical development.
You can’t understand them by looking at the physical or psychological characteristics
of their people. You have to understand them by studying where they’ve been
as well as where they are now.
All the beliefs and behaviors resulting from this
historical development represent values. Dr. Milton Rokteach calls to our attention
the complexity of those values because they continue to develop and because
“the average person holds dozens of values, thousands of attitudes and tens
of thousands of beliefs.”
Values are standards that guide our actions, attitudes,
comparisons, evaluations and the ways we justify ourselves to others. Those
values also influence our life goals. It is at the point where values collide
that culture shock hits the hardest. This is called the rejection stage, because
nothing in the new culture seems to fit our familiar values.
Yearn to Learn
To move beyond rejection requires a learning process
– learning to stand differently, talk, shop and wash differently. You may have
to learn to go to the bathroom differently, if indeed there is a bathroom to
go to. Or you may have to change your “personal space” of twenty-two inches
to the Latin American-style two inches. Picture a North American being backed
around a room by a Latin trying to have a normal conversation!
Culture covers everything in human life and is
its center. An individual is not born with a culture but only with the capacity
to learn it and use it. Saying this opens the way for a change, a learning
process. We must learn to appreciate the new culture where we live and accept
it. This does not mean that we lose our first culture, but that we become individuals
with two cultures.
Foreign Tongues
Unfamiliar language and communication patterns
also precipitate culture shock. Not knowing the idioms and figures of speech
of a new language can easily get us into trouble.
An American missionary went to a coal-mining area
in northern France. One day he preached on Christ as the water of life and
said that everyone needed this water of life. Some people laughed. Others
smiled and nodded. The missionary could not understand their reaction. He
didn’t know that in French “water of life” referred to the brandy these miners
drank in their coffee.
When we relate to another culture, we need to understand
the people and their language. If we don’t have a command of the language,
we mature adults become like dependent children. Someone has to show us what
to do and where to get things, and has to do the talking for us. We lose our
independence. We are frustrated.
When I came to the United States, I was not prepared
for culture shock. I had enough English to converse, but did not know the culture.
In France it is not polite to cut into a conversation between two people. If
you want to enter into the conversation, you wait for the appropriate moment.
In the United States, it is difficult, almost impossible to finish a conversation.
You are cut off any time, and usually the person who last entered the dialogue
changes the subject.
A communication problem developed because of cultural
barriers. This represented a threat to me and to my culture. My culture was
my security, my identity, my dignity. How could I relate without these?
Know the Symptoms
The degree of emotional culture shock depends upon
the individual. It is like a stress reaction that could happen in the United
States when you transfer from one school to another or your family moves to
another town.
In a lecture on culture shock, Dr. K. Oberg listed
some symptoms to help you recognize culture shock – excessive concern for cleanliness,
feeling that which is new and strange is dirty; fear of physical contact; feeling
helpless or dependent on long-term residents from your own nationality; irritation
at delays and other minor frustrations growing out of proportion to their causes;
excessive fear of being cheated, robbed or injured; terrible longing to be back
home.
Everyone won’t have the same symptoms. Some will
go to pieces or withdraw into their own worlds. Others will have guilt feelings.
The stresses of culture shock can bring physical
problems – lack of sleep, exhaustion, anxiety, nervousness, irritability. Some
people are not able to concentrate on their work. They may go through a mild
psychological depression. Intestinal problems and ulcers are also possible.
Shock Treatment
You can avoid some frustration and humiliation
by studying the culture where you are planning to go. But you need to remember
that there are cultural differences and that shock will occur sooner or later.
Your best help comes from your friends and your
doctor. Here is a helpful equation: Dave Linton of Wycliffe Bible Translators
says that culture shock is a function of involvement + value differences + unknown
factors divided by communication + language + acceptance + emotional security
+ spiritual resources.
Recognizing the problem is your best asset. Understanding
the situation is the key for you to enjoy the other culture and be able to find
fulfillment during your stay. Not only that, but you will also be able to understand
what students from other countries are going through when they spend a year
or more on your campus.
JEAN-MARC LEPILLEX, a native of France, experienced culture
shock firsthand as a graduate student in communications at Wheaton College in
Wheaton, Illinois.
Copyright Information:
Reprinted from HIS magazine, October 1982 issue.
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