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You will finally understand the new culture is different, accept it as it is and start to adapt your values, personality and behaviour to the host culture.


The Resolution Phase “This is home guys!” You have developed your routine and the efforts you put in place in the previous stage are now imperceptible. You are stable emotionally and you feel comfortable.


Clarisse Mergen is currently studying a master’s degree in Canada. She arrived in Montreal three months ago and already feels like she’s in the resolution phase. “I’ve learned new behaviors that are now automatic reflexes, like waste recycling. I am also now more curious about the country’s politics and the way institutions work.”


Coping with Culture Shock First of all, congratulations! You’ve just passed the first step that leads to the resolution. Indeed, now you know more about culture shock, you will be able to identify it when it happens.


If you feel tired, if you are emotionally sensitive, if you are critical of the culture, if you want to go home then you will know it is a normal reaction and you should not give up. Just understand, accept and adapt. Easy to say, I know. So here are some more tips for you.


• Before you go, read some books about the place where you will be staying. This will help you develop more realistic expectations and will involve you even more in the project.


• Cover your basic needs and ensure your security is met. Choose a safe area to live in, ensure your budget is under control, bring any medication you may need with you, as well as your earplugs if you are sensitive to noise.


• You can also create a sense of safety and reassurance by bringing familiar items with you. Mergen admits: “I brought some pictures of my friends and family - as well as my teddy bear! It actually helped me feel at


home at the beginning of my stay.”


• Keep in touch with home by using MSN, Facebook, Skype, blogs, telephone and post - you are spoiled for choice! It may be difficult sometimes to keep a relationship going only by email, so do pick up your phone from time to time, it really makes the difference.


• In times of instability, a feeling for your own culture when abroad is always comforting - speaking your own language, eating typical food, reading a newspaper from home. But be careful not to overdo these tricks, as they can be a way of resisting the change. Sanaz recommends that foreigners don’t spend too much time with their own community. “Try to tackle the language barrier as early as possible. It might be difficult at the beginning, but it is rewarding,” he says.


• Maintain a network of people you love, you trust and who will give you confidence when you feel unsettled. If you are a fan of rugby or cinema, join a club. This is generally a good way to meet local people in a relaxed atmosphere. If you are not a fan of anything in particular then try something new and why not, something local: beach volley in Brazil, calligraphy in China, Bollywood dance in India. And don’t forget charities and volunteering opportunities, which can be a great way to feel part of a local community.


Now you should be more equipped to face culture shock if it happens. Indeed, some people don’t feel it at all, others feel it strongly. The intensity of culture shock depends on so many factors that you can’t really generalize. But at least you are aware of it, and you’ll know you’re not the only one feeling this way!


Finally, make the most of this experience and wherever you are in the world, have fun!


Find more great advice about studying abroad at: www.topuniversities.com/ undergraduate-studies


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