Friday, September 20, 2013

Guest Post: Erin the TCK

Erin and I reuniting for the second time ever in Hong Kong!

She fully embraced life in India, stray puppy and celebrating Holi included ;)
This is a guest post by the wonderful Erin Vignali. I missed her by a year when I moved to the Philippines my senior year. We ended up meeting because she knew a family that I knew when I lived in New Delhi and, after sitting across from one another at a reunion dinner, we hit it off immediately. Enjoy!  

And, if you are not already familiar with TCKs, here is a list of my Top Ten TCK Quirks

Before the age of 14, I had little to no awareness of how white I really was and how that lack of melanin would determine people's impressions of me for the rest of my life. I was born in my parent's childhood home of Queens, New York, but by the age of six, before I could form any lasting attachment to the culture there, my family had already moved to our first overseas home, The Netherlands. My school was extremely international and despite our diversity in culture, language, and appearance, our age coupled with our international setting made us blind to our differences. Our next two moves, Singapore and Japan, put me in American schools which led to a difficult adjustment period culturally but did allow me to physically blend in. However, for my sophomore year of high school, we moved to the Philippines and I ended up in a school which was comprised of a predominantly Filipino demographic.

My whiteness was constantly pointed out; how I didn't tan very well and how red my face got when I was hot, sunburned, embarrassed, or any number of other actions that my sensitive skin decided to display. They had fun pointing out my differences, poking fun at the white girl, telling me I blended into the white walls of our lunch room. One friend eloquently defended me by explaining that I was far too red and splotchy to blend in. Yes, thank you teenage acne. If I did something dumb or goofy, it was because I was white. Often times I felt like some animal on display, a side show freak at the circus for entertainment. I remember going to the mall one time with one of the three white girls in my year and how we sat in the food court for over an hour complaining about how hard it was being white in our school. We knew we couldn't talk to anyone else about it. Try telling a non-white person how difficult it is to be white... Think Chris Rock in "The Longest Yard", "Hey! You're white! Smile!"

Eventually, I figured out how to blend (not into the walls). I joked with them, "Haha I know. I glow!!" A line I still use here in India with my local boyfriend and friends. Thumbs up for self deprecation as a survival technique.

But regardless of how much I dealt with because of my skin colour I still had a lot of friends outside of my race, something that changed dramatically when I moved to Massachusetts for university.

Having grown up overseas since the age of 6, with most of my life spent in Asia, I was most comfortable around what I considered my "fellow" Asians. I was uncomfortable with how white my school was, I was confused by racism and the separation of students by skin colour. And to make matters worst, I was ostracised even by my white peers whom found me difficult to relate to on account of my upbringing. During orientation, an African American guest speaker encouraged students not to judge their minority peers in thinking that their race was the deciding factor in their acceptance. I look around the room, deeply confused, "That's a real thing?!"

Different student clubs were introduced to us during orientation and none caught my eye quite like the Filipino student club. I wanted nothing more than to join and I even spoke to one of the members who encouraged me to join but even his kind words couldn't get me over the fear of being judged. Throughout my time there, I tried desperately, to no avail, to befriend other Asians students. I had lived in their ancestors homes longer than they had but I still wasn't right. My Chinese American roommate took me out with her Asian friends one night for ice cream, somewhere over the course of the conversation, I found an opportunity to bring up my Asian upbringing. I imagined that my words would melt their hearts, that I too would be seen as Asian American and that they would take me into their arms with a big hug, "Come here, you honorary Asian you!!" Instead, I got an odd glare and awkward silence. Oops.

While there, one of my closest friends was a devout Christian, African American girl from the South, that had lived her entire life in the US. As a lapsed catholic, whiter-than-snow girl from Asia, you may not think we had much to talk about but the one thing that brought us close was that we were both uncomfortable around large populations of white people. Now, I wouldn't say I'm a self-hating white person but I am definitely uncomfortable around my own kind. I came from a graduating class with four white people out of a 150 something. Where I came from, I was the minority and that's how I was comfortable.

I eventually left Massachusetts, despite the few close friends I had made. I couldn't fit into a place where the non-white people wanted nothing to do with me and the white people constantly told me that I looked normal but I wasn't.

I wound up moving back to Japan, my childhood home, for a one year study abroad. I soon learned that my TCK upbringing and my international friends as a child were a far cry from real life in Japan. The first year there, I stayed with a host family and befriended some more study abroads from the main campus in Philadelphia, three of whom were African American. Thinking I had blurred the lines of separation that kept our races apart in the US, I was truly enjoying my new life in my old home. Then one afternoon, as we were hanging out in the cafeteria, the three girls spotted some African American guys they wanted to chat with. One girl turned to the others and said, "Should we take snow bunny with us?" Gestured at me and laughed. Ironically, this girl's mother was white. I remained friends with one of the girls but separated from the rest and searched for new friends. I finally found a good group, almost all of whom came from mixed ethnicity backgrounds and had gone to international schools their whole life. A semester later, I decided to matriculate as a full time student and began apartment hunting.

When I finally found an apartment that would accept a foreign tenant, my agent scheduled a meeting with my landlord. Before going, I put on a conservative outfit, took the cross off my neck and bought thick foundation to cover the tattoo on my foot. I desperately tried to eliminate anything that he could possibly judge me by. While in the lift, my agent turned to me and said, with no more hesitation than you would say your own name, "Please say this to your landlord [Japanese phrase]. It means, "I am a good foreigner."" When we arrived at my landlord's apartment, his wife answered the door. Before letting us in some chatter went back and forth between her and my agent. They were discussing, of all things, whether or not a foreigner like me would be able to understand the extremely complicated garbage system in Japan (despite the highly detailed, colour coded, English translation they give you prior to moving in). To make matters worse, when we were finally allowed into the apartment, my landlord gave me a long lecture concerning his complex views of foreigners. By the time his speech was over, I learned that he was a proud racist who really liked Americans but hated Australians, New Zealanders, and a few others I can't remember. He never said why.

In the four years I lived there, I dealt with the many nuances of Japanese life that kept foreigners from being viewed as equal. There were protests and rallies for limiting our rights. More than once a complete stranger cursed me out for being a foreigner. My Japanese textbook featured a skit of a foreigner getting refused service by a real estate agent solely because of their nationality. Japan was such a big part of my childhood but as an adult, I felt more and more that I was unwanted. It was as if a part of my identity was being torn from me.

Showing multinational pride!
After graduating university and spending some time in Hong Kong with my parents, I moved to India to return to a children's home I had volunteered with in the summer of 2008 and 2009. India is where I'm writing you from today. The racism is slightly better here. I'm thankful that I'm not Irani, a population the Indians trust even less than the average foreigner. But the judgement is still there - I'm white and white women are lose. We live apart from our families so naturally, we are not at all close to them. My pleas for them to understand that I speak to my parents everyday and that my cousins are like my brothers and sisters are either met with shock or a polite nod, partnered with a half smile.

It's a bizarre twist of the TCK life that the racism experienced overseas will never make you feel quite as lonely as not fitting in in your supposed home country. For me, growing up as a white TCK, no matter how long I dealt with the discrimination, I always held out hope for people to see me like I see myself - no race, no accent, no nationality. In September, I'll be moving to London for my Master's. I'm not sure how I will handle being around that many white people, especially English speaking ones. But I still hold out hope; hope that one day, I'll meet someone who sees me for who I truly am: Not simply an American, or white, or foreign, but Dutch, Singaporean, Japanese, Hong Kong Chinese and Indian. A TCK.

Quite possibly the cutest picture of a person on a yak ever.
If you enjoyed this guest post, please show Erin some love by leaving comments! And if you want to read about another TCK, here is a link to a guest post by my lovely friend Tara who I know from Chennai: Tara in Thailand

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

A Farewell to Alanya and Turkey

See how hard it is to leave beautiful Alanya?
Moving never gets any easier. Losing yet another home is hard and no amount of excitement for the next stage quite masks the hollowness you feel as you pack up the house. The feeling is always the same. The oppressive heat (I always seem to move during summers and in tropical climates), and the intermingling smell of chemicals (cleaning and paint) and slight dustiness as I disturb the softly sleeping piles of stuff that I have not touched in a year.

I hate to see my imprint leave a place. That mark I accidentally left on the wall has been painted over, as if it was never there in the first place. My clutter retreats as the forces of impersonality invade once again, immaculate and alien. My comfort is turning into a stranger before my eyes and I am powerless to stop it.  

With most relationships, both parties are hurting and reminiscing and putting on their nostalgia goggles. There is a sense of validation with the mourning process. Yes, this actually happened. Yes, you meant something to me even if we are going our separate ways. Moving is not like that. While I stare fondly at my butt indentation on the couch, the couch remains indifferent to my presence.

This is the nineteenth home that I have had (I'm counting moving dorm rooms and shifting as a vagabond). This is also the longest that I have lived in one place since I graduated from college three years ago. Alanya/Turkey and I have had our minor differences (usually over the exorbitant price of alcohol), but on the whole I have loved living here. This is a magnificent country that is filled with pretty much anything you could ever want. 

History? In spades. This is the nexus of so many empires that pretty much every stone is a historical artifact.

Thirteenth century ruins here in Alanya, Turkey.
Beaches? There is the gorgeous Mediterranean, Aegean, Bosporus, Black Sea, etc.

Optimal beaches for levitating in Alanya, Turkey. This is Cleopatra Beach.
Mountains? I watch the sunrise over the Taurus mountain ranges from my balcony whenever I stay up ridiculously late.

Gorgeous city surrounded by mountains!
Friendly folk? Yup, Turkish people are amazing.

Who doesn't love a good sense of humor in Turkish men?
Food? Kahvalti is to die for. 

Kahvalti (Turkish breakfast) is my favorite meal here.
An Occupy Movement? Just check the news.

Barriers set up around the Ataturk Statue in Taksim Square in Istanbul for the May Day protests.
In honor of my latest home, I have compiled a photo post of my year here. Twenty-one visitors, numerous trips to Istanbul, Antalya, Cappadocia, Side, and Perge (and yet still so much left to see!), plenty of sun burns, a lot of skin scraped off during Hamam (Turkish bath, and seriously, my dead skin all gathered up could make a mini-mountain), a dead hard drive, my fourth anniversary with the Boy, my twenty-fourth birthday, SOOOOO many statues of Ataturk, entertaining pirate ships, enough cay (tea) to bathe in, enough baklava to get a million cavities, daily calls to prayer to let me know the time, the gigantic sun that almost seems too big to be real, and a ton of kofte consumed: Thank you for being a wonderful home.

While I have written a guide for Istanbul as well as Cappadocia, I have yet to do one for Alanya. This is just my farewell, so stay tuned for an Alanya guide!

The castle walls and old shipyard in Alanya, Turkey by night.

Where else would I get to celebrate Christmas with Ataturk?

We have Turkish flags, cruise ships, diving ships, and pirate ships here in Alanya, what more could you want?

The Turkish men love to pose on the pirate ships here in Alanya

One of the many caves in Alanya. This is Damlatas Cave on Cleopatra side.

Why would I want to leave the land of enormous vegetables? This was taken at one of the daily markets.

Love the random leaping fauna here in Alanya.

I will miss the dramatic views of Alanya.

Daredevils on the castle walls in Alanya.

There are ridiculously gorgeous sunsets here in Alanya.

Yes, that is an actual rainbow around the sun as a halo here in Alanya.
Here is a double rainbow in Alanya.
Now onto the other areas that I have visited and loved in Turkey.

Antalya is the largest city near Alanya (about two hours away) and it is a fun place to visit.

I couldn't resist getting a photo of Ataturk holding the moon.

Glass guy making a nazar (an amulet which wards off evil) in Antalya, Turkey.

The moon with a mosque in Antalya, Turkey.

It's my pansiyon!

Holding the sun with some hot air balloons in Goreme, Cappadocia

Posing in front of the Blue Mosque in Istanbul.

The Blue Mosque and the Hagia Sophia from the water.

Light beams and mosques make a good combo in Istanbul.

Ruins all to ourselves in Perge, which is just fifteen kilometers outside of Antalya.

No crowds waiting for photo ops!

Greece doesn't have all claim to columns since these are in Perge, Turkey!

More columns in Side, Turkey.

Apollo's Temple in Side, Turkey.

My last pose in Side, Turkey.

I hope you enjoyed my tribute. If you haven't been to Turkey, I highly suggest you hop on the next plane over. If you have been, then I hope that you share my fond memories of this fantastic country.

Goodbye Alanya, I will see you again someday. 


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

From Raptor to Bearcat

“Don’t worry, we don’t drug test new students until three months into the school year.” This was the reassurance my new guidance counselor provided me when I moved to the International School of Manila. Dressed in a khaki uniform with a strange school’s logo emblazoned on my left shoulder, I questioned how he arrived at this judgment.

Was it my nose piercing that I had gotten in Florence at the age of fourteen? If so, he was wrong. That was in honor of living in India for eight years.

Was it the six piercings I had on my ears? Again, wrong. They were not meant to be subversive. Instead they were a visual representation of the different countries I had visited and the friends I made along the way.

Was it the fact that I had just come from the American International School of Chennai? Perhaps. India lives in stereotypes and is surrounded in a haze of hippy dreams.

Regardless of his snap judgment, I hastened to reassure him, “Snip off some hair! Give me a cup! Don’t you worry about me.” I beamed at him with my most artificially innocent smile. This was the man who would be responsible for getting me into college despite knowing me for a minute. Then again, as the guidance counselor for an international school I had faith in his ability to at least fake a convincing immediate connection. That is the hallmark staple of Third Culture Kids, diplomats, military folk, and all others who are required to move constantly. Form an intense emotional bond before your friends are snatched away.

I actually have this guidance counselor to thank for my acceptance into multiple colleges. The benefit of moving to a new city, a new school, and a new group of teachers is how clean your slate becomes. International school teachers tend to treat students differently than teachers in the US. They speak to us as equals and we form close bonds without even trying because of the extreme situations into which life has placed us. My biology instructor in Chennai guided us through seeing cadavers in Manipal, a city in the south of India. I touched a dead body at the age of fifteen and gagged over a blue bucket full of the remains of babies. I witnessed an open heart surgery taking place five feet away from me. In Manila, I saw my teachers out at the same clubs and bars that my friends and I frequented. I even saw a teacher at a local Filipino strip club in the red light district. Some of my teachers were as close to me as my best friends and I mourned them when I was displaced.

However, there are a few teachers who would treat us like wayward students that failed at life unless we behaved as perfectly motivated adults. I asked for a recommendation letter from one such teacher and was told by my new guidance counselor to ditch the recommendation. Instead, I got a letter from a teacher who only knew me for three months rather than three years. Sometimes being displaced has its benefits.

As a senior, I would not be graduating with the cohorts with whom I had spent my freshman, sophomore, and junior years. When I walked to class, I could only overhear inside jokes. I had to feign memories of people and adventures that took place before my dad even thought about his next assignment. I was grateful to those who reached out a hand to me and grew adept at ignoring all of the undercurrents of drama that swirled in their wake.

I also lost a toenail that fall. Joining a new soccer team without the benefit of my full shipment caused me to borrow cleats a size too small. By the time the overland boxes arrived three months later, I celebrated with bandages and a newfound appreciation for the valuable protection nails provide.

When it came to tournaments, I did not even have the benefit of competing against the same schools as Chennai in the SAISA (South Asian Inter-Scholastic Association) tournament. Separated into different regions, I had to learn about the dynamics that separated each school within IASAS (Interscholastic Association of Southeast Asian Schools). My rival was now the Singapore American School. I was expected to despise them for their haughty attitude. Jakarta International School had an unfortunate acronym, but their baseball team was to be admired. No longer could I be bitter about AISC’s defeat at the hands of the American International School of Dhaka or complain about their irritating habit of eerily calling out, “TTTTTIIIIIIGGGGGEEEERRRRRRSSSSSSS,” during basketball matches. I was a bearcat, not a raptor.
- See more at: http://www.expatsblog.com/contests/437/from-raptor-to-bearcat#sthash.5IB0yJuC.dpuf
Big fish in a small pond...
“Don’t worry, we don’t drug test new students until three months into the school year.” This was the reassurance my new guidance counselor provided me when I moved to the International School of Manila. Dressed in a khaki uniform with a strange school’s logo emblazoned on my left shoulder, I questioned how he arrived at this judgment.

Was it my nose piercing that I had gotten in Florence at the age of fourteen? If so, he was wrong. That was in honor of living in India for eight years.

Was it the six piercings I had on my ears? Again, wrong. They were not meant to be subversive. Instead they were a visual representation of the different countries I had visited and the friends I made along the way.

Was it the fact that I had just come from the American International School of Chennai? Perhaps. India lives in stereotypes and is surrounded in a haze of hippy dreams.

Regardless of his snap judgment, I hastened to reassure him, “Snip off some hair! Give me a cup! Don’t you worry about me.” I beamed at him with my most artificially innocent smile. This was the man who would be responsible for getting me into college despite knowing me for a minute. Then again, as the guidance counselor for an international school I had faith in his ability to at least fake a convincing immediate connection. That is the hallmark staple of Third Culture Kids, diplomats, military folk, and all others who are required to move constantly. Form an intense emotional bond before your friends are snatched away.

I actually have this guidance counselor to thank for my acceptance into multiple colleges. The benefit of moving to a new city, a new school, and a new group of teachers is how clean your slate becomes. International school teachers tend to treat students differently than teachers in the US. They speak to us as equals and we form close bonds without even trying because of the extreme situations into which life has placed us. My biology instructor in Chennai guided us through seeing cadavers in Manipal, a city in the south of India. I touched a dead body at the age of fifteen and gagged over a blue bucket full of the remains of babies. I witnessed an open heart surgery taking place five feet away from me. In Manila, I saw my teachers out at the same clubs and bars that my friends and I frequented. I even saw a teacher at a local Filipino strip club in the red light district. Some of my teachers were as close to me as my best friends and I mourned them when I was displaced.

However, there are a few teachers who would treat us like wayward students that failed at life unless we behaved as perfectly motivated adults. I asked for a recommendation letter from one such teacher and was told by my new guidance counselor to ditch the recommendation. Instead, I got a letter from a teacher who only knew me for three months rather than three years. Sometimes being displaced has its benefits.     

As a senior, I would not be graduating with the cohorts with whom I had spent my freshman, sophomore, and junior years. When I walked to class, I could only overhear inside jokes. I had to feign memories of people and adventures that took place before my dad even thought about his next assignment. I was grateful to those who reached out a hand to me and grew adept at ignoring all of the undercurrents of drama that swirled in their wake.

I also lost a toenail that fall. Joining a new soccer team without the benefit of my full shipment caused me to borrow cleats a size too small. By the time the overland boxes arrived three months later, I celebrated with bandages and a newfound appreciation for the valuable protection nails provide.

When it came to tournaments, I did not even have the benefit of competing against the same schools as Chennai in the SAISA (South Asian Inter-Scholastic Association) tournament. Separated into different regions, I had to learn about the dynamics that separated each school within IASAS (Interscholastic Association of Southeast Asian Schools). My rival was now the Singapore American School. I was expected to despise them for their haughty attitude. Jakarta International School had an unfortunate acronym, but their baseball team was to be admired. No longer could I be bitter about AISC’s defeat at the hands of the American International School of Dhaka or complain about their irritating habit of eerily calling out, “TTTTTIIIIIIGGGGGEEEERRRRRRSSSSSSS,” during basketball matches. I was a bearcat, not a raptor.

Manila was one of my roughest transitions because it reminded me of the US. It was one of those unique international schools that had a relatively stable student body. Locals who could afford the hefty tuition prices grew up in those halls. Expats with embedded careers allowed their children to have a facsimile of a steady upbringing. I went from a pool of twenty students to a sea of one hundred and fifty; small by American standards but overwhelming for me. I returned to being a number.  

I built myself on the laurels of those who had lived in my house before me. The parties that were hosted in my home were legend. Students would walk up to me after Economics class and reminisce about throwing up in the bathroom downstairs. Countless others had danced on my pool table, downed shots on my couches, and trashed the upstairs rooms. The fact that I had known the family when I lived in New Delhi during my elementary school years cemented my displacement of them.

I never actually hosted any wild nights in Manila. Having witnessed the destruction wrought by my fellow students during the Freshman/Senior Party, I worried about my dad’s antiques. I did not want raw egg covering my marble entrance. I did not want the residue of questionable substances peppering my walls, toilets, and showers. I did not want a group that I barely knew, let alone trusted, violating a house with which I was barely acquainted.

I traded my spot as Valedictorian in Chennai for an Advanced Placement cord and a seat in alphabetical order. My best friend in Chennai mentioned me in her speech. She affirmed my time in AISC while I watched my tasseled hat disappear in a cloud of green and gold as the whole class celebrated over a decade of work and friendship. 

Being a Bearcat in Bangkok
“Don’t worry, we don’t drug test new students until three months into the school year.” This was the reassurance my new guidance counselor provided me when I moved to the International School of Manila. Dressed in a khaki uniform with a strange school’s logo emblazoned on my left shoulder, I questioned how he arrived at this judgment.

Was it my nose piercing that I had gotten in Florence at the age of fourteen? If so, he was wrong. That was in honor of living in India for eight years.

Was it the six piercings I had on my ears? Again, wrong. They were not meant to be subversive. Instead they were a visual representation of the different countries I had visited and the friends I made along the way.

Was it the fact that I had just come from the American International School of Chennai? Perhaps. India lives in stereotypes and is surrounded in a haze of hippy dreams.

Regardless of his snap judgment, I hastened to reassure him, “Snip off some hair! Give me a cup! Don’t you worry about me.” I beamed at him with my most artificially innocent smile. This was the man who would be responsible for getting me into college despite knowing me for a minute. Then again, as the guidance counselor for an international school I had faith in his ability to at least fake a convincing immediate connection. That is the hallmark staple of Third Culture Kids, diplomats, military folk, and all others who are required to move constantly. Form an intense emotional bond before your friends are snatched away.

I actually have this guidance counselor to thank for my acceptance into multiple colleges. The benefit of moving to a new city, a new school, and a new group of teachers is how clean your slate becomes. International school teachers tend to treat students differently than teachers in the US. They speak to us as equals and we form close bonds without even trying because of the extreme situations into which life has placed us. My biology instructor in Chennai guided us through seeing cadavers in Manipal, a city in the south of India. I touched a dead body at the age of fifteen and gagged over a blue bucket full of the remains of babies. I witnessed an open heart surgery taking place five feet away from me. In Manila, I saw my teachers out at the same clubs and bars that my friends and I frequented. I even saw a teacher at a local Filipino strip club in the red light district. Some of my teachers were as close to me as my best friends and I mourned them when I was displaced.

However, there are a few teachers who would treat us like wayward students that failed at life unless we behaved as perfectly motivated adults. I asked for a recommendation letter from one such teacher and was told by my new guidance counselor to ditch the recommendation. Instead, I got a letter from a teacher who only knew me for three months rather than three years. Sometimes being displaced has its benefits.

As a senior, I would not be graduating with the cohorts with whom I had spent my freshman, sophomore, and junior years. When I walked to class, I could only overhear inside jokes. I had to feign memories of people and adventures that took place before my dad even thought about his next assignment. I was grateful to those who reached out a hand to me and grew adept at ignoring all of the undercurrents of drama that swirled in their wake.

I also lost a toenail that fall. Joining a new soccer team without the benefit of my full shipment caused me to borrow cleats a size too small. By the time the overland boxes arrived three months later, I celebrated with bandages and a newfound appreciation for the valuable protection nails provide.

When it came to tournaments, I did not even have the benefit of competing against the same schools as Chennai in the SAISA (South Asian Inter-Scholastic Association) tournament. Separated into different regions, I had to learn about the dynamics that separated each school within IASAS (Interscholastic Association of Southeast Asian Schools). My rival was now the Singapore American School. I was expected to despise them for their haughty attitude. Jakarta International School had an unfortunate acronym, but their baseball team was to be admired. No longer could I be bitter about AISC’s defeat at the hands of the American International School of Dhaka or complain about their irritating habit of eerily calling out, “TTTTTIIIIIIGGGGGEEEERRRRRRSSSSSSS,” during basketball matches. I was a bearcat, not a raptor.
- See more at: http://www.expatsblog.com/contests/437/from-raptor-to-bearcat#sthash.5IB0yJuC.dpuf

Welcome to the International School of Manila, home of the Bearcats!

Welcome to the American International School of Chennai, home of the Raptors!

Sorry for the tiny logo for the AISC Raptors. I couldn't find anything larger...
“Don’t worry, we don’t drug test new students until three months into the school year.” This was the reassurance my new guidance counselor provided me when I moved to the International School of Manila. Dressed in a khaki uniform with a strange school’s logo emblazoned on my left shoulder, I questioned how he arrived at this judgment.

Was it my nose piercing that I had gotten in Florence at the age of fourteen? If so, he was wrong. That was in honor of living in India for eight years.

Was it the six piercings I had on my ears? Again, wrong. They were not meant to be subversive. Instead they were a visual representation of the different countries I had visited and the friends I made along the way.

Was it the fact that I had just come from the American International School of Chennai? Perhaps. India lives in stereotypes and is surrounded in a haze of hippy dreams.

Regardless of his snap judgment, I hastened to reassure him, “Snip off some hair! Give me a cup! Don’t you worry about me.” I beamed at him with my most artificially innocent smile. This was the man who would be responsible for getting me into college despite knowing me for a minute. Then again, as the guidance counselor for an international school I had faith in his ability to at least fake a convincing immediate connection. That is the hallmark staple of Third Culture Kids, diplomats, military folk, and all others who are required to move constantly. Form an intense emotional bond before your friends are snatched away.

I actually have this guidance counselor to thank for my acceptance into multiple colleges. The benefit of moving to a new city, a new school, and a new group of teachers is how clean your slate becomes. International school teachers tend to treat students differently than teachers in the US. They speak to us as equals and we form close bonds without even trying because of the extreme situations into which life has placed us. My biology instructor in Chennai guided us through seeing cadavers in Manipal, a city in the south of India. I touched a dead body at the age of fifteen and gagged over a blue bucket full of the remains of babies. I witnessed an open heart surgery taking place five feet away from me. In Manila, I saw my teachers out at the same clubs and bars that my friends and I frequented. I even saw a teacher at a local Filipino strip club in the red light district. Some of my teachers were as close to me as my best friends and I mourned them when I was displaced.

However, there are a few teachers who would treat us like wayward students that failed at life unless we behaved as perfectly motivated adults. I asked for a recommendation letter from one such teacher and was told by my new guidance counselor to ditch the recommendation. Instead, I got a letter from a teacher who only knew me for three months rather than three years. Sometimes being displaced has its benefits.

As a senior, I would not be graduating with the cohorts with whom I had spent my freshman, sophomore, and junior years. When I walked to class, I could only overhear inside jokes. I had to feign memories of people and adventures that took place before my dad even thought about his next assignment. I was grateful to those who reached out a hand to me and grew adept at ignoring all of the undercurrents of drama that swirled in their wake.

I also lost a toenail that fall. Joining a new soccer team without the benefit of my full shipment caused me to borrow cleats a size too small. By the time the overland boxes arrived three months later, I celebrated with bandages and a newfound appreciation for the valuable protection nails provide.

When it came to tournaments, I did not even have the benefit of competing against the same schools as Chennai in the SAISA (South Asian Inter-Scholastic Association) tournament. Separated into different regions, I had to learn about the dynamics that separated each school within IASAS (Interscholastic Association of Southeast Asian Schools). My rival was now the Singapore American School. I was expected to despise them for their haughty attitude. Jakarta International School had an unfortunate acronym, but their baseball team was to be admired. No longer could I be bitter about AISC’s defeat at the hands of the American International School of Dhaka or complain about their irritating habit of eerily calling out, “TTTTTIIIIIIGGGGGEEEERRRRRRSSSSSSS,” during basketball matches. I was a bearcat, not a raptor.
- See more at: http://www.expatsblog.com/contests/437/from-raptor-to-bearcat#sthash.5IB0yJuC.dpuf