#11 TCK Blind Spot

by | Dec 9, 2016 | Life, TCK | 0 comments

There are a good number of advantages to being a TCK. Open-mindedness, wide experience of other cultures, etc. But I realized something the other day as I was listening to an interview on a “As told by Nomads” podcast [Tayo Rockson]. It really hit me. I have a serious blind spot as a TCK. And I think I’ve had it my whole life, and it has unwittingly gotten me into trouble many times.

Having grown up and worked around so many different cultures in so many countries, I am prepared to be patient or understanding, and hopefully at the least, nonjudgmental, about almost anything that I see or run into. Of course, I am not talking about egregiously bad behavior like being bigoted, or violence towards women, or something equally insane like that. But a good deal of cultural behavior around the world is just varied. Not necessarily bad, not necessarily good, just different.

So, as I have worked and lived in many different countries, realizing that I am always the one who is the foreigner, I have always been, or tried to be, patient, understanding, and tolerant. I am stunned by my own blindness that I did not realize this until now, but most of my life I always projected that other people would feel the same. And of course, I was generally wrong. I was very optimistically projecting that these people (I’m talking about white-collar professionals for the most part), were educated and had a wide enough worldview that they too would be open-minded, patient, and understanding. And unfortunately, I think nothing could have been further from the truth. And looking back I realize that time and time again, I got myself in trouble from not realizing that the TCK viewpoint is by no means a common one. I must say that one needs to be careful about this. I find that most people are still distinctly tribal in their outlook.

There are a good number of advantages to being a TCK. Open-mindedness, wide experience of other cultures, etc. But I realized something the other day as I was listening to an interview on a “As told by Nomads” podcast [Tayo Rockson]. It really hit me. I have a serious blind spot as a TCK. And I think I’ve had it my whole life, and it has unwittingly gotten me into trouble many times.

Having grown up and worked around so many different cultures in so many countries, I am prepared to be patient or understanding, and hopefully at the least, nonjudgmental, about almost anything that I see or run into. Of course, I am not talking about egregiously bad behavior like being bigoted, or violence towards women, or something equally insane like that. But a good deal of cultural behavior around the world is just varied. Not necessarily bad, not necessarily good, just different.

So, as I have worked and lived in many different countries, realizing that I am always the one who is the foreigner, I have always been, or tried to be, patient, understanding, and tolerant. I am stunned by my own blindness that I did not realize this until now, but most of my life I always projected that other people would feel the same. And of course, I was generally wrong. I was very optimistically projecting that these people (I’m talking about white-collar professionals for the most part), were educated and had a wide enough worldview that they too would be open-minded, patient, and understanding. And unfortunately, I think nothing could have been further from the truth. And looking back I realize that time and time again, I got myself in trouble from not realizing that the TCK viewpoint is by no means a common one. I must say that one needs to be careful about this. I find that most people are still distinctly tribal in their outlook.

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