Category Archives: Immigration

I’m Becoming American

Okay for all you Americans getting excited out there, this Brit isn’t actually becoming American officially, but your ways have influenced me in a significant way that things I swore I’d never do I am now doing. So here is a list of things I now do since I have lived in the United States:

  • My rubbish has become trash
  • My garden has become a yard
  • I find the nearest parking space to the building
  • I feel more comfortable driving on the right hand side of the road instead of the left!
  • My 40 hour work week has become a 50, 60 and sometimes 70 hour week
  • My 5 weeks holiday has turned into 2 weeks vacation
  • I use Z’s instead of S’s, take out the U and finish with ER instead of RE. Confused? We spell things differently in the UK (Organise, Honour, Centre to name a few!)
  • I complain about my food in restaurants
  • My car gives less than 20 MPG
  • I complained when gas went over $3 a gallon. I use to paid $8 a gallon in the UK
  • I no longer say water like “wortar”
  • I wear shorts now not 3 quarter lengths
  • If I can’t wear blue jeans I don’t want to go!
  • My pants are no longer my underwear
  • I have ice with every drink, even tea and coffee!

There is a bunch of other things as well, but I can’t remember them all. Here is a list of things I’ll never do, even if I become an American Citizen (I hope I don’t offend anyone):

  • Wear a white shirt under every thing I wear
  • Wear white socks no matter what the outfit
  • Wear a phone holder on my belt
  • Say tomatoes like an American
  • Prefer iced over hot tea
  • Tell anyone “I love your accent”
  • Stop viewing the BBC website

So joking aside, what living in America has taught me is that even though you may try your hardest to never change, you eventually become like your surroundings. I have become a lot more Americanized over the last four years because I am immersed in the culture.

You will become what you hear, read and see. How ever much you try, your friends, church, employment, the TV, the Internet, the books you read and your culture will change you. Look at all the people you associate yourself with, the places you go and the things you read; do you want to become like these people? They are shaping you and there is nothing you can do about it.

What things have shaped you? Are you someone you never thought you would be? What can you do today to become more like the people you want to be?


I’m from England not London!

I have lived in the USA for almost four years and I’m somewhat impressed with the education level of most Americans. A lot of people like to use long words I have never heard of (especially ones in college or those just graduated), and they love to check grammar and spelling. However, there is one subject that is lacking in every way within American schools, and knowledge throughout the public; this is the subject of Geography!

The majority of people I meet think that because I am from England and have a British accent I was born and lived in London. I am not from London and have probably visited London about 10-15 times in my life. However, how much I try to tell people London is just one city within England it falls on deaf ears. When people think England they think London. Even some of my close friends say I’m from London. This would be the same as me thinking someone from Western Kansas is from New York!

There are a select few though who do notice a difference and realize I am not from London. These are ones with knowledge about how the UK works and those who have visited the UK and visited places outside of London. These people aren’t so naive because they have experienced it.

This made me think about how people outside of the ‘church’ culture view church and the people in the church. Most people have a picture in their head and as much as you try to tell them this isn’t true it will be impossible to get that picture out of their mind.

The only way to change to perception of someones view of church is for them to experience it first hand (not just at Easter or Christmas, but when the church shows what their real DNA is), or for the church to teach their community what the church really is. This isn’t by tracts and sandwich boards, but by being the church and being the hands and feet of Jesus Christ to a hurting world that needs something authentic to smile about!

Most people don’t want to go to church, so how can our communities experience Jesus Christ if they only place they can experience church is in a building on a Sunday morning?

So what are you doing in your community to change the culture of peoples perspectives?


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