The past year has seen a lot of coming and going amongst my friends here in Thailand. Roka left for Australia, Markus and Tam left for Germany, Stuart and Piyawat moved to Phuket, Todd has returned from Dallas after eighteen months away and other friends are arriving and departing regularly. The subject of making friends in a new country has been turning over in my mind for almost a year; a blog entry in the making, if you will.
This is a subject I’ve wanted to write about because the experience of making friends in a new country creates an opportunity for self-reflection: What are my interests and values? What are my expectations of friendship? What are the common denominators of my friends? Most importantly, how do you make friends where none existed before?
I’ll present this in a four-part series of entries. Sorry that there are no food pictures along the way; I hope you’ll bear with me.
Life in a Nest
For me, this is something of a first in a lifetime experience. I spent the first 23 years of my life living in the same house. During that time, I had many occasions to make new friends, but most of the time my friends came from a fairly consistent group of people, mostly classmates or members of my church.
Graduating to a new school meant meeting new people, but there was always a large group of people around me who spoke my language, attended my classes, and with whom I had a lot in common – even if they came from different countries or cultures than my own, which was often the case.
Even when I started working at age 16, I developed friendships with my coworkers readily. That is common in most jobs, but it was especially so in my workplace – a cinema – because our work schedule was primarily evenings and weekends, the same times when most other people would be out socializing.
Throughout university, things were much the same. The friends I made at school were classmates, leaders of other student organizations (I was the president of the gay and lesbian student group), or other disc jockeys at the campus radio station. Common interests and studies created fast and, in many cases, lasting friendships.
Leaving Home
After nearly a quarter century in the same nest, I moved from the Bay Area down to Los Angeles and then, a year later, to San Diego. In both cities I continued to work long hours at busy cinemas. Other than the occasional date here or there and a few university friends who lived nearby, most of my friends were coworkers. Again, there was not much effort needed to build a circle of friends as people with common interests, experiences and working schedules, were readily at hand.
My first experience having zero friends and having to start from scratch came as I turned 28 and moved overseas for the first time, accepting a three-month assignment in Hong Kong. Actually, I did have one friend of a friend there and he was very nice about including me in his social circle as my schedule allowed. Outside of that I did start making some friends but, like most expats who know their time in a place is limited, I didn’t worry about developing a robust circle of friends. Having a handful of acquaintances with which I could explore the city was enough.
Returning to the US, even as I made new friends, they were always an outgrowth of either existing, long-established friends or they were coworkers or other people I met through work. Because of the “friend of a friend” nature of this networking, most people I met and all of the friends I made were essentially “pre-screened”: their interests and values, while diverse, were generally compatible with mine.
interesting.just do not spoil us. Haha.
very interesting. Look forward to part 2,3, 4, ….. I did not know you spent 3 months in HK, that must be quite an experience. It is a good stepping-stone as a lot of HK people speak English. When I first came to US to study, that was a quite shock too. All my friends were classmates, and I was buried in my books and worked part-time.
Interesting topic. I wonder if you have a formula of how to make friends outside the “beaten paths”?
true.
I’m looking forward to the next part(s).
Can’t wait to read the sequel.
I wish I could write something similar about my experience in a different country too Chris. This is such a wonderful post, and as always, you have done very well.
this is interesting! It’s really such a trip to spend a lot of time overseas
I look forward to reading the sequel! Isn’t introspection nice?
@TheCheshireGrins – @Loonsounds – @ZSA_MD – @choyshinglin – @ElusiveWords – @yang1815 – @beowulf222 – @iso_whiteSnow – Thanks everyone for your comments. Parts 2 and 3 have been posted and Part 4 will arrive Friday morning Bangkok time.@stevew918 – Yes, I lived and worked in Kowloon Tong in 98-99.