Coming Home - Dealing with Reverse Culture Shock

Posted on Saturday, June 27th at 9:21pm

Hey peoples. I wanted to post this in anticipation of my return to the States in roughly 3 days from now. A lot of people don't know about reverse culture shock or that it can be more difficult for study abroad students to deal with returning home than it was dealing with the initial culture shock of living in a different country. I thought I would just post some research I've done on the subject and I want to ask for your guys' patience as I adjust to returning home after being abroad for 5 months.

I love this place. I love Australia. I love the people and the environment and the beauty and the spontaneous adventures and the friends that I've made... Part of my heart belongs in this country now and I'm going to miss it like crazy.

"Re-entry shock is when you feel like you are wearing contact lenses in the wrong eyes. Everything looks almost right." -Robin Pascoe

Stages of Culture Shock
Stage 1: Disengagement - this begins before you leave the country. You begin thinking about re-entry and making your final preparations for your return home. You also begin to realize that it's time to say good-bye to your friends in the country and to the place you've come to call home. The hustle and bustle of finals, good-bye parties, and packing can intensify your feelings of sadness and frustration. You already miss the friends you've made, and you are reluctant to leave.

Stage 2: Initial Euphoria - this usually begins shortly before departure, and it is characterized by feelings of excitement and anticipation - even euphoria - about returning home. You may be very happy to see your family and friends again, and they are also happy to see you. The length of this stage varies, and often ends with the realization that most people are not as interested in your experiences abroad as you had hoped. They will politely listen to your stories for a while, but you may find that soon they are ready to move on to the next topic of conversation.

Stage 3: Irritability and hostility - You may experience feelings of frustration, anger, alienation, loneliness, disorientation, and helplessness and not understand why. You might quickly become irritated or critical of others and of U.S. culture. Depression, feeling like a stranger at home, and the longing to go back abroad are also not uncommon reactions. You may also feel less independent than you were in the country of your choice.

Stage 4: Readjustment and adaptation - Things will start to seem a little more normal again, and you will probably fall back into some old routines, but things won't be exactly the same as how you left them. You have most likely developed new attitudes, beliefs, habits, as well as personal and professional goals, and you will see things differently now.

Thanks for reading. Later peoples.

Jourama and Wallaman Falls

Posted on Sunday, June 21st, 2015 at 3:01pm

Hey peoples, two posts in one day. Aren't you lucky! Haha anyways. The following weekend, May 16th, Jess, Peter and I went to Jourama Falls and Wallaman Falls.

When I went to Jourama Falls with my study abroad group we didn't get to see much more than the falls themselves. So we stopped there on our way to Wallaman Falls. We hiked up to the lookout and then went back down to the rock pools where we had a picnic lunch and explored a while. We met a lovely family from Germany and talked to them for a little while. We also found a blue-green colored snake. It looked really cool. Of course we didn't get too close.

Then we headed further north to Wallaman Falls. As we were driving through the mountains we saw a mama cassowary with her baby which was so incredible! There are only about a 1000 cassowaries left in the wild so seeing an adult is really uncommon but to see a baby? Almost unheard of. Wallaman Falls is the largest single drop waterfall in Australia. It's 268 meters tall. It was so hard to grasp the size of it until you looked down and saw how far away the tree tops were.

On the way back I introduced Jess and Peter to the Frosty Mango mentioned in my previous blog. We all agreed that it was probably a good thing that the Frosty Mango is an hour away from campus. Otherwise we would all be really fat by now lol

There we go. That's my main adventures all caught up with. Today is my last day in Townsville. I leave for Brisbane at 3:30am tomorrow. Pictures from this are also posted. Later peoples!

Arcadia Free Weekend

Posted on Sunday, June 21st, 2015 at 2:37pm

Hey peoples! On May 8th I left with my study abroad group for our free excursion weekend. Here's what we got up to.

We left campus around 1pm in our bright yellow van. We drove north to Ingham and stopped for about an hour at the Tyto wetlands and walked around. We saw a few wallabies here and there and many birds. No freshwater crocodiles though. It was really pretty there. The water lilies here are purple. The next stop we made was at Hinchinbrook Lookout which had one of the most stunning views I've ever seen. There were several rivers winding across the land into the ocean with mountains as their backdrop. So beautiful. After that we stopped at Five Mile Creek for a short swim. I wasn't really in the mood to go in the water so I spent my time taking pictures and watching the others play. We made a quick stop in Cardwell to refuel and we went down to the beach for a few mins to take some more pictures. Finally we reached Echo Creek Homestead which is a cattle station in the mountains of tropical north Queensland. It was breathtakingly beautiful there. I could have lived there. It was so peaceful. After dinner we spent some time star gazing. So far away from the major cities you could see everything. I think I mentioned this before but it's strange to look at the stars and not recognize them or to see a constellation you recognize but it's in the wrong place. We also heard dingoes howling which was really cool and very eerie.

We woke early the next morning and headed to Tully to meet with our Aboriginal guide who would be taking us kayaking that day. We drove up to Tully Creek and got all of our gear ready. We spent most of the day kayaking down the creek. We had to go through I think it was more than 10 mini rapids which was interesting to say the least. It was really fun though. Our guide told us about how the different plants along the creek were used by the Aboriginal people. She also showed us the different clays they use to decorate their skin and what the different symbols mean. We stopped for morning tea on the banks of where the creek widened into a small pool. Our guide made and brought damper for us to try which is a traditional Australian soda bread that consists of a wheat flour based bread and is traditionally baked on the coals of a campfire. You usually eat it with golden syrup. It was so amazingly delicious. After grabbing some ice cream back in Tully, we headed to the Jackaroo Hostel where we would be spending the night. We cleaned up and then headed to Mission Beach to hang out for a few hours. I went off and did my own thing. I took a lot of pictures and am actually really proud with how they turned out. We had dinner as a group and then headed back to the hostel. I turned in for the night pretty early because I was super tired.

The next morning was another early start. We went for a morning walk at Lacey Creek and then headed to Alligator's Nest to meet with another Aboriginal guide who taught us one of their stories and how to pain boomerangs. We spent the rest of the morning painting. We had lunch and then a swim at the waterhole before heading back south. About an hour and a half from campus we stopped at Jourama Falls for a short hike. A half hour later we stopped at the Frosty Mango which makes THE BEST ice cream. It's all freshly made on site from the fruit in their orchards. Another hour and we were back on campus.

As always, pics are posted. Later peoples!

Trying Vegemite

Posted on Monday, June 8th, 2015 at 7:12pm

Vegemite: a dark brown Australian food paste made from leftover brewers' yeast extract with various vegetable and spice additives (Wikipedia)

Of course I had to try the famous (or infamous) Vegemite while I'm here. And of course Peter insisted it be recorded and posted


Orpheus Island Round 2

Posted Thursday, June 4th, 2015 at 10:35pm

Hey peoples! How is everyone? It's been a while hasn't it? I've just been studying my ass off the past four days for finals. I'm actually writing this blog as a way to review what we did on our Orpheus Island trip so there you go.

The trip to Orpheus took place the day after I got back from Wambiana. I was back on campus for only about 12 hours or so. We left at 4:30am on April 28th. We arrived at the island around 8am or so and after getting settled into our accommodation we got our gear on and headed out into the bay. The biggest difference between this trip and the previous corals trip was that we got to use the boats and go to several locations around the bay. During the corals trip we only got to walk out to the point and snorkel from there. Another big difference was that there was no assessment for this trip. That took a large amount of stress off my shoulders and allowed me to enjoy learning for the sake of learning rather than worrying about getting perfect data that I could use on a report several weeks later.

The first exercise that we did was one of the same ones that we did at Reef HQ. My partner and I got into the water, scoped out a 5m x 5m area and started recording all the species of fish in the different families that we saw. We did this in 5 min increments. In the following 5 min increments we only recorded new species that we saw. This continued until we saw very few to no new species. Then we repeated the exercise in the shallow water.

The second exercise they had us do included a series of line transects where we had to count the number of herbivorous fish we saw. More specifically we were looking for parrot fish, butterfly fish and rabbit fish. We chose a point to anchor our 30m tape measure. Then, as I was swimming to the left laying down the tape I counted how many fish of each species in each family I saw. Then my partner followed the line I had just made doing the same thing. Then I swam along the line a third time doing the same thing until I reached the start while my partner coiled up the tape behind me. This was done 4 more times, once to the right, once straight up at a 90 degree angle from the first two, and two more at 45 degree angles on either side. Think of a fan shape.

After that we had time for lunch and time to use the books to identify the species that we had been seeing. After lunch we headed back out on the boat. That is, after we walked across the reef flat for a while. The tide was way too low for the boat. I know at this point we must have done another exercise but I cannot for the life of me think of what it was nor can I tell from the notes I took. I know we started following specific fish and counted how many times they bit a certain type of substrate but that was later in the afternoon because I stopped in the middle of it because I was getting too tired. Maybe we did the 5 line transects after lunch instead of beforehand. We must have. Anyways, we went in for dinner and more fish identification and then we had a short briefing on what we would be doing the following day.

Day 2 we were up at 7am for breakfast and in the water by 8:30am. The morning was busy with three different exercises. The first one was relatively simple. Each group got two samples of live macroalgae and we measured the lengths of each. Then one was anchored in the reef flat and the other was anchored in the reef crest. The results of this to be discussed on day three.

The second exercise, known as the zig-zag, looked at the sizes and distribution of 9 species of herbivorous fish on the inner-reef flat, mid-reef flat, outer-reef flat, the reef crest and the reef slope. This was done by attempting to swim in a straight line between two buoys that were parallel to the shoreline (easier said than done I might add lol). As we went we recorded the species that we saw and sorted them into 5 different size classes: 10-15cm, 15-20cm, 20-25cm, 25-30cm and 30-35cm (also easier said than done). Once we reached the buoy we swam perpendicular to the shore to reach the next starting buoy, either closer to shore or further away.

The third exercise of the morning was affectionately called the super deluxe transect. In the first transect we laid a 30m tape and looked 2.5m to either side of it and counted the number of individual fish in each family that were greater than 10cm long. Then we went back along the line, looking only .5m to either side of it and counted the number of individual fish in each family that were less than 10cm long (there were a LOT). Lastly, because of my ears I can't duck dive, so my partner dove down to look under and all around the corals along the tape, .5m to either side and he counted the number of blennies and gobies he saw.

Lunch and identifying fish as usual. Then another walk over the reef flat and onto the boat for our afternoon session. We got to go to an entirely different area on the far side of the bay for this exercise. We spent the afternoon using clove oil mixed with other chemicals and a net to try and catch some fish. The clove oil makes the fish sleepy but too much could kill them. The fish we caught were going to be used for many things, some of which meant that they were going to be killed once we got back to shore. Honestly, I didn't feel too great about that so I just followed my partner around while he caught fish and I took some time to appreciate how beautiful the reef is. I was also in charge of swimming back to the boat with the fish he caught to turn it in. At one point while I was clearing out my mask he surfaced with a fish and yelled "look at this huge goby I caught!" to which I responded "That's not a goby, it's a blenny!". When I turned the fish into the staff on the boat they asked me "was that your partner who said this was a goby?" I said yes and also told them that I corrected him. My professor went on to say something along the lines of "Hit him across the head for calling it a goby and then give him a hug because the size of this one is quite impressive". I thought that was funny.

After we got to shore we spent a few hours identifying the (now dead) fish that we caught clove oiling. Then the rest of the day ended just like the day before: dinner, identification and a briefing on the next days' exercises.

Day three started with what was most definitely my favorite activity. We got to snorkel along the edges of the mangroves that lined the bay. We saw sting-rays and jellyfish (the relatively harmless ones) and so many different species of fish. It was really cool. Apparently there was a sea turtle as well that I just missed seeing. After that we went and retrieved our algae samples. The results were that the ones in the reef flat were unchanged whereas the ones on the reef crest, well, there was nothing left but the rocks they were anchored to.

Then we did two different behavioral studies which I really enjoyed. The first one was just like the one we did in Reef HQ where we followed cleaner wrasses and observed what fish they liked to clean, which fish liked to be cleaned and how many times they bit/cleaned different species of fish. After that we looked at large groups of several species of damselfish and tried to figure out the social hierarchy between the different species based on social interactions and how close they were to the substratum. I thoroughly enjoyed being able to spend a lot of time watching what they would do and how they would act.

Lunch was the same and then, since we worked so efficiently, we got to do some more clove oil catching for the rest of the day which meant that I just enjoyed the reef in all its beauty.

That night we prepared our data for a presentation. We had dinner and then our final presentation/discussion. It turned out that our professor didn't really care about the numbers and data. He wanted to show us the flaws in each of the exercises we did (and that people have been doing for years and years now) and to emphasize that the field needs new people to come up with new ways to conduct these studies.

The next morning we got packed up and headed back to campus. Overall I was so happy that we got to see so many different areas of the reef. I also got to see the huge colonies of my coral that I was studying in my other class that I didn't get to see when I was on the corals trip. Really I have no words to describe the beauty of the reef and it does make me sad to think that what I saw is only a fraction of what it used to be and it will only continue to decline if we as inhabitants of this world, not just this country, but the whole world, don't step up our game and take care of this beautiful gift that has been given to us. Even though it was an extremely busy three and a half days, I wouldn't have traded the experience for anything. It was by far the greatest experience that I've had here in Australia so far.

If you get a chance, even though I can't show you the reef, go check out my pictures of the sunsets there. I was finally able to get a few and they're stunning. Hope everyone is enjoying their summer break back home in the States. Wish me luck on my finals! Almost done! Later peoples!