|
|
|
|
|
|
An Intercultural Perspective: Enriching and Facilitating Our Lives as Expatriates This article was originally published in the March 2003 issue of Relocation Today, a publication of BRAnchor.
Expatriate and repatriate lives are filled with the kinds of experiences that the intercultural field is passionate aboutinternational transitions, adjustment to new cultural contexts, cultural identity challenges and multicultural identity development, the complexities of communicating and negotiating, and living with ambiguity and uncertainty every day. So what would happen if we, as expatriates and repatriates, were to intentionally and purposefully assume an intercultural perspective toward our international lives? We might find that we enrich others’ lives and facilitate our own day-to-day experiences. Enriching Our Lives The more we cultivate such an intercultural perspective, the more we discover that challenges are profoundly reframed into opportunities for personal and professional development. We reorient from being a “victim of circumstance” to a “creator of experience.” The most simple of interactions and experiences become fodder for our learning. Facilitating Our Experiences As we encounter people different from ourselvesbe they host country nationals or members of the multicultural expatriate community in our overseas posting, or be they home country peers who sometimes seem the most foreign of all after we repatriate an intercultural perspective helps us bring a particular intention to the way we communicate. Instead of automatically assuming others’ differences to be wrong, our learning orientation allows us to engage the ambiguity of each particular encounter. It reminds us to take a breath, maybe even two, and from that place of mindful spaciousness find the best way forward. Living our Purpose At its core, taking an intercultural perspective means becoming an intentionally creative and generative force as we live and work among cultures. It begins with knowing ourselves. It encourages us to envision the life we want to live, and guides us in crafting a life in alignment with that vision. An intercultural perspective is a natural for expatriates and repatriates, living as we do at the interstices of culture.
Barbara F. Schaetti, Ph.D., Principal of Transition Dynamics and Senior Associate of The Crestone Institute, has consulted, taught, and coached in the intercultural field for more than twenty years.
Return to Articles and Publications
Home | Meet Barbara Schaetti | Coaching | Teams | Seminars | Personal Leadership This site maintained by Jeff Tolbert Web Design.
|