Saying Hi and Requesting Help

Posted: 24th October 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

Hi TCKs and Adult TCKs,

I grew up in many places just as you did or are doing right now. The longest I lived in one place while growing up was in Yokohama, Japan. After Japan we moved to Alaska, which is part of the US but still far away from the lower ’48. The rest of my story is too long for this particular blog post.

I have just recently discovered the phenomena of TCKs and love it because I always knew in my heart there was something special and unique about my growing up experience others without the same experience could not  relate to or comprehend. This discovery led me to study the potential of adult TCKs as leaders with global mindset, which has become the focus of my doctoral studies.

If you are interested in finding out more about what I am doing and/or interested in taking a survey about your experiences please contact me pastokke@comcast.net.

I look forward to being a part of this TCK group because it gives me a place that feels a little bit like I am coming home. It’s a place where I can find people who share similar experiences and stories.

Cheers,

Patricia Stokke

 

The Most Racist Joke that I had Ever Heard

Posted: 23rd October 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

How do you say someone who speaks 3 languages?

“Trilingual.”

How do you say someone who speaks 2 languages?

“Bilingual”

How do you say someone who speak 1 language?


“……..” You decide.

TCKs and Repatriating

Posted: 16th October 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

I came across a really interesting article that has to do with the good and bad of re-entering into your home country, which I touch on in this blog.  I would love to hear about your own experiences with this.  My next blog will be about coping strategies with repatriation.

 

http://megzysmoods.blogspot.com/2012/10/tcks-and-repatriating.html

Should I Quit?

Posted: 3rd October 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

http://wp.me/pFwyw-dM

Any opinion would be appreciated.

We value your part in this community!

Posted: 26th September 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

Dear friends,

Thank you for being a vital and active part of our community! We hope you are enjoying conversations with kindred spirits, making new friends, and learning more about yourself. We are only happy to be a part of your journey.

TCKid is a non-profit organization dedicated to connecting and helping cross-cultural people around the world. We do not benefit from any of our activities, which means that TCKid is supported by awesome people who volunteer their time and resources to make TCKid the great community it is today. However, this is not always sustainable.

If you care about and have benefited from the TCKid community, we ask that you consider sharing a modest contribution of US$20 to support our operational costs. This includes all of our website costs, including hosting, domains, and maintenance. We also hope to be able to support full-time staff in the future, so that your experience with TCKid is better for you and our community.

Please click on the Donate button on the right sidebar of the home page at http://My.TCKid.com if you believe in our community. Your help will go a long way in supporting this great community and helping more TCKs and CCKs just like yourself in the future.

Thank you,
The TCKid Team

On September 20th, 1932,

(precisely 80 years ago) this famous black and white photograph was taken. The 11 men, who are supposedly Irish immigrants, are on top of the then-construction Rockefeller building, enjoying a skyline view of New York City during lunch time. No one truly knows who they are or the photographer’s name, or even if this is real! It seems like a daring spot to eat a sandwich but because this is pre-Photoshop days, not much editing was probably done.

Honestly, I don’t know too much about this photo, but I stumbled upon an article in FastCompany today that talked about a new documentary that explores its backstory. I’m not sure if it’s fictional, but it caught my attention.

I’ve always really liked this photograph. In fact, this was the first piece of artwork that I bought at some poster store in my freshman year in college. I couldn’t exactly figure out what I found appealing about this image other than the incredible setting for such a mundane, ordinary activity. But after watching the short trailer of the documentary and the more I thought about it, I came to the realization that I felt drawn to this photo because of the extreme sense of bravery and fearlessness of these 11 immigrant men who came to America start their new lives. And to me, that is what symbolizes America.

If we really break the population of America down to its history, I’m sure we can all agree that most of us, if not all, are from another descent. Sure, people would refer to themselves as “American” but it usually follows with “but my father’s side is Irish and my mother is German with a mutt of Spanish” etc etc. You get my point. About 60-80 years ago (which honestly isn’t that long ago), it was so much simpler compared to today to migrate into the US and start a new life.

Hard-working, motivated people with a dream is what made America the way it is today, and in the photograph’s case, it’s the mindset and determination of the 11 kind of men who built New York City. And with that kind of incredible history and mentality, it’s no wonder that the country is so proud!

But somewhere between then and now, America stopped welcoming hard-working people into their proud country. It’s as if the country thinks that they already have too many ambitious people, and they don’t want to get too many cooks in the kitchen. I understand that the pre-modern day immigrants started having families and growing the “American” population, but that’s not to say that they won’t migrate elsewhere. Making it so incredibly difficult for foreigners to come into their country is like disregarding America’s original roots and going against its history of how its ancestors initially came to the country. Did the open door only occur in a brief period in time and America is starting to re-brand itself? Did its ancestors and foreigners do so much damage to the country that it’s keeping its walls up? Did we completely miss the boat?

I’d be interested to see where this documentary takes us, and I’m curious to know what happened to these men!

I’m a Third Culture Kid

Posted: 20th September 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

Taken from my blog: www.ChasingHiromi.com

Who are Third Culture Kids?

A global nomad. International school alumni. A world traveler. A military kid.
TCKs are people who spent a majority of their childhood years in a culture different from their parents’. TCKs develop their identities while living in foreign countries, thus associating with the culture of the world rather than a “home” culture. Typically, TCKs experience a sense of not belonging to their passport country when they return to it.

So what’s my story?

I was born to a German father and a Japanese mother and spent a majority of my life in other countries. I was raised speaking both languages but never felt like I truly fit in with the other German or Japanese kids. I’ve never thought of Germany or Japan as “my home”. I’ve been in the US for about 7 years now – 3 years in Boston, 4 in Los Angeles – but I’m constantly reminded that I am not from this country. I have to deal with work visas and immigration, and hate checking the “non-resident alien” box in official forms. Yet, my life and everything I love is here. But I know that one day I’m going to be forced to leave.

This is how I know that I’m a TCK:

1) I struggle to answer the question “where are you from?”
2) I speak three languages but have trouble writing them (besides English, thankfully)
3) When asked, “Where are you from?” I give long explanations
4) I feel odd being in the ethnic majority
5) I look like everyone else around me but still don’t fit in
6) I have the urge to move to a new place every couple of years
7) I go into culture shock upon returning to my “home” country
8 ) I have two passports that I don’t feel connected to
9) I don’t know where home is (besides saying, “planet earth”, which is usually not accepted)
10) My life story uses the phrase “Then we moved to…” three (or four, or five…) times.
11) I think VISA is a document that’s stamped in my passport, not a plastic card I carry in my wallet.
12) I sort my friends by continent not color or religion.
13) I believe that football is played with a round, spotted ball.
14) I often speak of my “home” country in the third person as if it were not mine.
15) I have friends from more than 30 different countries.
16) I realize it really is a small world, after all.

TCK a colour/color comparison

Posted: 17th September 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

One way I think helps us picture where TCKs fit into the grand scheme of things is by using colour.

Imagine cultures as colours. Culture Y is yellow and culture Z is blue.

A child growing up in one culture will feel they are yellow and a child growing up in the other will feel they are blue. A child who mixes in different cultures will be neither fully yellow or fully blue but green. Yet even then, they may change the colour they are to blend in with being yellow or blue. But there will be aspects of them that are different enough that the opposite colour shows through.

The difficulty for some TCKs is that their nationality is blue but they grow up in a yellow culture. Then they are expected to move to the blue nation which can be very difficult. It takes a long time if you are mostly yellow to absorb enough blue to be accepted as blue or feel at home living in a blue culture.

A TCK will probably relate to the culture that they have the most colour of. Perhaps they only have a little blue, then they will relate more to yellow. But the majority of TCKS will relate well to others who have a mixture of colours. Whatever shade of green they are, they share similar experiences of absorbing colour. Often it is only those who are green who can relate to what it is like to be green.

 

But I think it is important to realise that TCKs vary between their shading. The nearer a person is to one cultural colour, the more they will feel they are of that culture and the harder I believe it will be for them to relate to a TCK who is equally yellow and blue (green). The more green a TCK is, the more they will relate to someone who has experience blending colours than they will to either yellow or blue.

When colour is mixed, i think it is rarely fully green as culture but only green from a distance. Closer up, it is just a swirl of yellow and blue, yet it is the experiences of holding both blue and yellow that produce the third green experiences of the TCK. It is not necessarily the cultures that make the TCK but rather the experience of intermingling,experimenting, processing and relating to both yellow and blue. They are both blue and yellow, not fully either and the third culture (green) is not itself a culture, but an expression of processing multiple cultures.

Your thoughts…

How Social Media Has Made Most TCKs Idiots

Posted: 16th September 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

Taken from my blog at https://heyitsjohnnyc.wordpress.com/2012/09/16/how-social-media-has-made-most-tcks-idiots/

The depth of experiences and the diversity of stories that those who travel and undergo great changes in life are sure to make for great conversation starters at a cocktail party. Unfortunately, there is a point where that bragging and exceptional uniqueness becomes a distasteful hubris that alienates people from one another, leaving them to sulk in the corner and meet like-minded folks who were similarly rejected. It is upon this moment they realize they are both not just travelers, but fellow Third Culture Kids, and they decide to talk about how everyone else is closed-minded or doesn’t get them, and generally caught in a bog of stagnant muck  unable to see what’s out there. The two of them enjoy a moment at the party, and everyone else lives their lives mingling: the two of them stand in their corner, martinis in hand, laughing at the bubble in front of them. That is openness and sense of adventure becomes lost in “civilian” settings and results in the so-called “worldly” people to merely replace one bubble for another instead of “venturing outside their comfort zone” and “exploring the world” or being “more open-minded” than “others”.

I won’t ever deny that I’m a TCK, but I’ve gone past the point where I have to force it down people’s throats. My reflections here aren’t meant to say how I and this community are better than others, but to comment on how there are times when my traumas and my travels have both made it difficult to relate to people whose biggest life shock was moving to college in another town from where they grew up. I do operate on a different wave length because my reference points are from multiple countries and cultures, but I don’t go out of my way to justify obnoxious behavior by using that as an explanation.

That’s all masturbation, really. Before social media, I had to deal with whatever I put out there, and I did think I had problems and something was wrong with me, but it did force me to adapt more. When TCKID launched and Facebook had its TCK groups, I watched myself and others become more comfortable with ourselves, then I saw the quick spiral into an abyss of pathological victimizing and self-marketing. We love the attention, and TCK or not, we are liars to say we don’t. TCKs are actually more interested in attention, both from a mix of wanting to catch up for being left out for years amongst civilians and from not wanting to be normal and civilian.

An example: bragging about eloquent answers to questions for personal statements in law school or grad school apps, describing an international upbringing but not answering the question asking why they want to be a lawyer or be in a particular program, then copying and pasting it for the community to see, give back a dozen likes and comments, and soaking it all in.

We get the attention we want, but that is the same kind that enables and encourages us to not integrate. But why should we care? There are others like us who understand and feel the same way too. This is the beginning of closing minds that were supposedly opened from being exposed to the world.

Revelation: the mind becomes more exposed when it takes in information, but exposure does not mean the mind is open. These experiences were forced onto us, more often than not. Shock and awe, fear and loathing: we adapted out of necessity. And it became an addiction so great we wanted more. But what is it to be a traveler who goes to leave her comfort zone only to live in an expat bar waiting to meet other denizens? What then, is the problem with a girl from Vietnam who works in Indonesia and Cambodia for several years, but never bothers to mingle or make friends with locals, yet a chance meeting one night with American backpackers in Bangkok are suddenly life-long friends, especially because they’re both TCKs?

Replacing one bubble for another: this is what Facebook and other social media sites have done. We are happy to reach out to those who share not only our experiences, but our hearts and minds. It’s only then that we find that this metaphysical space online is the comfort zone we go to when the world seems like a nasty place. Oh, that’s right: our egregious sanctimony has created divisions that weren’t there between us and non-TCKs. Travelers and settlers, vagabonds and civilians, globalists and parochials: a very dangerous dichotomy that has arisen from the greater “community” available.

Nobody is more open-minded just because of experience. It’s attitude, and usually, that can be derived from those experiences. People use the “I’m a TCK and I lived in the Philippines for so many years, blah blah blah, so I know more than you about cultural approximation and colonial mentality than you!” to win arguments by giving themselves authority. People use the same badge of “open-minded” to attack people whose opinions may deviate from the popular ones, and I’ve seen it when making a facetious comment that someone ASSUMED was me “not getting” what was being talked about in regards to how things are bigger in Texas. It’s like people thinking that the term “liberal” equals open-minded without realizing that it’s actually just a set of values and a perspective, or how “rationalism” is another form of subjectivity that pretends to be purely objective and the baseline for awareness and understanding.

In traveling the past year, I’ve had this grievance that has become a lot easier to define the more I am living in the world rather than in a bubble, and less time on Facebook or other forms of social media. I engage locals and TCKs out of necessity, and as I share this article to a TCK group, I know I’m kicking a hornet’s nest, but so what? I’m Johnny C before I’m anything else. I’m not a counselor, I’m not a sheep trying to be an alpha male of the lions because I was raised by ligers and tigons after being born on a boat and growing up in Pondicherry, India, and I’m definitely not a celebrity. I’m just a guy with an opinion, take it or leave it, and if I’m an idiot or a jerk in your eyes, the answer is yes, yes I am–so what? If I’m someone respected, loved, and admired, thanks, but you don’t know me. What I do and what I feel is me. There are plenty of ways I enact good will in the world, but I won’t list them here because that’s the public broadcasting of accomplishments, pride in nothing that is insincere, like someone bragging about how much she shared Kony 2012 on Facebook or how many loans she made on Kiva.

Simply put: go out and live. If you’re a TCK, that does not mean you are more open-minded and unlikely to be in a bubble. It gives you different frames of reference and can inspire you to do more things than the average person would, but don’t assume you’re more open-minded and worldly. That smugness is a badge people wear whether they are TCKs, PhD or JD holders, or just have a lot of zeroes in their bank account. That badge is the same as getting a Wonderbra and bragging to everyone how much bigger your breasts look, that you must therefore be sexier than everyone else because you look bigger than them, and if they don’t see how much bigger your bust was than before, you are more than happy to get in someone’s face and rub it in them to make sure they know, while expecting them to respond by saying “Wow, you’re great; that’s really great! I’m so inferior to you, I should be your friend and lavish you with attention and kiss your feet!”

Don’t wear a badge to flash it in public and brag to your friends how you bared your ass to everyone and didn’t care that they gave you the finger in response. That’s exactly what self-promotion in real life to civilians and bragging to fellow TCKs online is. We have a different experience and world view, but we don’t have to advertise it all the time. There’s a time and place for everything, that time is never and you can figure out the place yourself.

Travel resources :)

Posted: 15th September 2012 by admin in Uncategorized

http://www.vergemagazine.com/program-search.html (Work + Study + Volunteer Abroad Programs)
http://www.housecarers.com/, http://www.housecarers.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crowd_funding, http://www.gofundme.com/, http://crowdfunding.com/
http://www.erideshare.com/, http://www.carpooling.com/us/, http://www.carpool.ca/Etiquette.aspx
Working @ Hostels

wwoofing (www.wwoof.org)

volunteering (workaway.info)

couchsurfing (couchsurfing.org, hospitalityclub.org)

www.airtransat.com + http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_low-cost_airlines

voip for travel (Voip.ms + Skype) 

http://azuon.com/

worldnomads.com (Travel Insurance + Blogs and community)

airbnb.com + travbuddy.com + meetup.com + www.homeaway.com

http://www.vergemagazine.com/articles/budget-traveller/15-ways-to-travel-for-free-or-at-least-cheap.html

http://www.vergemagazine.com/

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