Monday, 23 July 2012

Migration ≠ Vacation

People at home sometimes mistakenly romanticize my life.  I've recently moved to Sweden with my Italian husband; until two months ago we lived in Italy.  For some of my peeps back home in California, these destinations fuel their dreams.

But make no mistake: living in Italy or Sweden is by no means a really really long version of a vacation in Europe.  And marriage to an Italian is not the plot of a steamy foreign film.  My husband is a very human man (though his Italian accent and small mistakes in spoken English do often make me smile), and Sweden and Italy are countries rather like America - different in their own ways, of course, but life here still involves those familiar life-elements of struggle, frustration, boredom, and disappointment.

Recently a friend wrote to me, Oh, wow, you've moved to Sweden? You're so lucky! I've always wanted to go there!  Maybe what she meant is that she herself is lucky that I have moved to Sweden, because now she knows a person in Sweden who can host her if she should find the opportunity and means to travel to her long-desired destination.  But I am in the midst of (1) a confusing but requisite interaction in a foreign language with a new bureaucratic system, (2) a job search despite an economic crisis in a country where I don't sufficiently speak the language and where my professional certifications from home are nearly meaningless, and (3) a struggle to create a social life from nothing amongst a society of introverts.  So I must admit I scoff a bit at being told I'm lucky. 

Now this is almost sounding negative, and that's not my intention.  I try to keep my cup half full, whether the cup holds coca-cola, espresso, or fläderblomssaft.  I'm sure that once I find my feet here it'll be easier for me to acquiesce to these accusations of luck.  But for now I feel the need to set the record straight: migration ain't no vacation.

2 comments:

  1. I thought that marriage to an Italian would be a wacky sitcom costarring a wacky neighbor, but that's just me.

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  2. In some moments it's a wacky sitcom. In others it's a docudrama. Stay tuned ... hilarity ensues.

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