Community > Posts By > deactivated
Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Learn the other persons language, customs, and culture. Simple no???
and it is thaaaat easy? learning about a culture? and how many cultures can you learn and keep your cultural identity safe? It's not about keeping yours safe. It's about respecting others. what would you do Sir? make your personality a mixture of cultures to please others? just asking I had the good fortune of growing up in a multicultural multilingual family and community. I've also traveled a bit of the world. So yes, my personality is a mixture of cultures. And I've learned to respect others however different they may be. that just made me question if you accepted and adopted some foreign culture thing that was somewhat or somehow offensive according to your own culture? or multiple cultures? I suppose they all were compatible with and uh supportive of what you already believed in? that's how you embraced those values easily? |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Can someone rephrase the question? I don't get it :/
let me try again the question is people from two different cultures interact and one of them finds that the other's cultural values are offensive to him/her. what would you do in such situation? Ah, thank you. Then you have a problem because you won't be compatible. That's the thing with different cultures, and most people underestimate the importance of it. If person X embraces his culture and its values while his partner Z finds them offensive, how can you live together? It means your incompatible. Irreconcilable differences. When in relationship with someone from another culture -even one close to yours- there's always stuff you will never truly get or cannot share because the other didn't grow up with it. Many brush that aside, then find out later that the little things are actually huge. everything goes well in start because they respect your culture as a civil person and later on, it becomes burden and intolerable over a certain period of time, right? so yeah eventually they get frustrated of each other I guess leading them to unhappiness I suppose it is possible that some culturally based differences only reveal their true impact after a while, but I wonder if people would even get together to begin with if there are such big differences? I guess it depends what we're talking about. I've had to seriously think about how much I valued my own culture and all that it entails and if I was willing -and able- to let go of that. Twice, first time when I was in love with an Aboriginal man, second time a Balinese man. I decided both times I couldn't and wouldn't give up on my roots. So it never really took off. The one time that tripped me up was with an Englishman, me thinking it would be the same as we both are from the same Western culture. Guess again. Now those differences could've been overcome and weren't the reason we broke up, but it wasn't always easy. And like I said before, there are certain things you won't ever understand -including fun things- about the other because it's based on their culture which is not native to you. I won't go there again. I want a great relationship and not with the extra issues that come with cultural differences. experience does make a person refined one. your response was such incredibly strong and comprehensive. |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Can someone rephrase the question? I don't get it :/
let me try again the question is people from two different cultures interact and one of them finds that the other's cultural values are offensive to him/her. what would you do in such situation? stay safe Larsson. it feels good to see you roaming around in forums sharing your fair share of wisdom. don't go to risky places man even if and when you're drunk ever planned on not getting drunk on first date but got drunk anyway? like it just happened and you couldn't stop knowing you should stop? |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Learn the other persons language, customs, and culture. Simple no???
and it is thaaaat easy? learning about a culture? and how many cultures can you learn and keep your cultural identity safe? It's not about keeping yours safe. It's about respecting others. what would you do Sir? make your personality a mixture of cultures to please others? just asking |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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people from two different cultures interact and one of them finds that the other's cultural values are offensive to him/her. what would you do in such situation?
Depends on too many things. I mean are we talking about coworkers? Are we talking about a foreigner traveling to a different country and getting lost? Are we talking about two people sitting on the bus for a 10 minute ride? Are we talking about 2 world/corporate/social leaders trying to set policy? Are we talking about protestors? Are we talking about 2 random people on the internet interacting via forums? Why are they interacting? What's the point of the interaction? What are realistic consequences of the interaction? You ask what I would do in such a situation. But which person am I in this situation? Am I the one that finds their cultural values offensive? Or do they find my cultural values offensive? What cultural values are we talking about? Am I offended because they smell bad because in their culture bathing is only done once a week? Am I offended because they're spouting that all of some sub group must die and they're showing me a bomb planning on doing something? What I would do depends on more situational information than "one of you feels offended to some unknown degree for some reason." uh well Sir I couldn't describe that much, because of rules and descriptions given for posting in forums. so I had to make it general. you can be either of the situation party either offender or offended. btw that was sure a versatile speculated answer |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Sadly, being in love can sometimes be overwhelmed by other factors. Culture, religious beliefs, circumstance, family, etc.
When you accept a person, you must also accept many other things which neither of you can always control or work around. You have to be on the same general path in life -or things will become difficult to impossible. Then you have to be realistic about things standing in the way of your happiness and peace -see if a relationship will lead to unhappiness or misfortune -see what can be done about things -make a plan and go for it -or make the best choice for the well-being of both. true that. things actually became difficult to impossible and eventually we had to end the contact. it was not a very good experience indeed. |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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You can lead a horse to water but you can't have it do advanced calculus with a lobster bib and a Little Richard's Greatest Hits CD but you can't make it drink the water. that's absolutely right Sir |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Never, ever, date the easily offended.
lol I felt it so much related, I made a screenshot and sent it to a fellow lawyer thanks for the wisdom |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Can someone rephrase the question? I don't get it :/
let me try again the question is people from two different cultures interact and one of them finds that the other's cultural values are offensive to him/her. what would you do in such situation? Ah, thank you. Then you have a problem because you won't be compatible. That's the thing with different cultures, and most people underestimate the importance of it. If person X embraces his culture and its values while his partner Z finds them offensive, how can you live together? It means your incompatible. Irreconcilable differences. When in relationship with someone from another culture -even one close to yours- there's always stuff you will never truly get or cannot share because the other didn't grow up with it. Many brush that aside, then find out later that the little things are actually huge. everything goes well in start because they respect your culture as a civil person and later on, it becomes burden and intolerable over a certain period of time, right? so yeah eventually they get frustrated of each other I guess leading them to unhappiness |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Can someone rephrase the question? I don't get it :/
let me try again the question is people from two different cultures interact and one of them finds that the other's cultural values are offensive to him/her. what would you do in such situation? stay safe Larsson. it feels good to see you roaming around in forums sharing your fair share of wisdom. don't go to risky places man even if and when you're drunk |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Can someone rephrase the question? I don't get it :/ let me try again the question is people from two different cultures interact and one of them finds that the other's cultural values are offensive to him/her. what would you do in such situation? |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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Learn the other persons language, customs, and culture. Simple no??? and it is thaaaat easy? learning about a culture? and how many cultures can you learn and keep your cultural identity safe? |
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Topic:
the reluctant fundamentalist
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Spoilers cost extra.
damn. this spot let does look costly. actually I watched it completely but I didn't understand it fully. so I'm here for the final idea it delivered |
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Topic:
clash of two cultures
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do you think a compliment of a person based on his own cultural knowledge can be a taboo, curse, social stigma or bad concept in another culture?
how can one overcome this overcomplicated situation? |
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Topic:
the reluctant fundamentalist
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A young Pakistani man is chasing corporate success on Wall Street. He finds himself embroiled in a conflict between his American Dream, a hostage crisis, and the enduring call of his family's homeland. and how is it concluded? which way he went? |
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Topic:
the reluctant fundamentalist
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if you have watched the movie, can you tell me the theme of it? and what the movie is trying to convey to the audience?
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Topic:
being called Boomer
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so in my country, calling someone a Boomer is offensive to elderly people but it is a hot meme word too. how do you respond to someone younger, more like teenager, when he/she calls you a Boomer? Larsson is always here to give me a unique opinion yet tough time |
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Topic:
being called Boomer
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Silly, what is offensive about being labeled by the generation in which you were born? Baby-Boomers isn't what kids are using "boomer" as nowadays. It also isn't the old "Nickname" for a crane operator that some guys would get because they had a name that was hard to pronounce. Kids use it to call those who mess up things that they find easy like using a computer. "You're old and dumb." They're dipsticks. I was bored one day, about 2001 in Palm Springs, so I had an old friend tell a few people I would hold a free class on how to use a computer..80 people showed up. So we moved it to a conference room at one of their golf courses, word of mouth only made the next meeting 300 people strong! The next, 500 people, who had no idea how to use email. You never saw such a group of learners, mostly over 70, so anxious to be able to communicate with their families who were starting to only use email. By 3 meetings, most were able to write a web page. Yes, I am good ;-) I turned it all over to the first guy, far as I know they still meet hahahaha Point being, those who want to learn are all ages and desire to learn is accentuated in the ones with less time in which to do it. So, if 'Boomer' is now derogatory, I'll wear it proudly ;-) MASSIVE RESPECT MA'AM |
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Topic:
Relationship
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Hye bubble? |
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Topic:
being called Boomer
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I laugh. a super man young at heart 🦸♂️ |
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