One of the beautiful things about traveling is going to a place and realizing that life doesn't have to be the way you grew up to believe. By exposing yourself to different customs, you get the chance to reflect on and reevaluate yours.
So in an attempt to see which European 'lessons' stuck with Americans the most, Reddit user AppleberryJames asked them what culture shocks were the biggest they had in the Old Continent. From the prevalence of tourist scammers to hike-in restaurants, here are the answers.
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Was in Sweden a few years back when a kid in my charge broke his collarbone. Medics drove him to the hospital. Like two hours later, after X-rays, an exam, and getting set up in a fancy sling, he walked out of the hospital. Total cost: $0.
The colorful, cartoonish gravestones in north western Romania that depict how the person [passed away]
To learn more about going abroad, we contacted Lee Abbamonte, the youngest person to visit every country in the world plus the North & South Poles.
Abbamonte said that whether or not you should research the place you're traveling to depends on the country in terms of familiarity of culture. "If it's a similar culture then [simple] common sense and decency usually work," he told Bored Panda.
"If it's something totally different or if you're unfamiliar, then I think i'’s imperative to do some research to not offend or embarrass anyone including yourself without realizing it. A little research goes a long way and it shows. People appreciate the effort."
WTF in an awesome way are the stands and restaurants in Germany where you basically have to hike in. There's no casual foot traffic and it's not a simple drive. You are hiking and come to a beautiful view and there's a little restaurant or stand where you can get wine or beer and wurst and fries or whatever. Then you sit and enjoy the view you hiked to while enjoying your delicious food and excellent beverage. It's fantastic.
One of my favorite UK pubs is like this. Easy by canoe or foot or bike.
In Paris I saw a gang(10+) of police officers patrolling on rollerblades.. I heard them before I saw them. vrrrrrrr vrrrr vrrrrr
People that work 32 hours a week get over 30 days paid off every year no matter who they work for or more.
ehh this depends. The trend is to work 32-35 hours in our new hires, old contracts have 40 hours. I've 26 payed days off +overtime, my sister would not sign less than 30 days.
"Often times I see tourists on vacation in foreign countries blatantly taking photos of local people without their consent. This is so rude," Abbamonte said. "They’re not animals or tourist attractions-they’re people. Just ask, people will usually say yes and if it’s a no-then it’s good you asked!"
Of course, European culture can differ depending on the country you're visiting. "Most of Europe, even Eastern Europe is pretty liberal these days," the traveler explained. "But as you go around different European countries, especially with older people, they can be more buttoned-up and private."
"As you move further east in Europe you’ll see the older generations still hardened by the Cold War. So just be respectful to their privacy and potentially appearing rude or cold to you. You’ll also find less English spoken the further east you go in Europe so keep that in mind as well."
Not being harassed by police.
I did some dumb s**t on a scooter in Paris and instead of spending 20 minutes going through all the bull s**t and puffering cops usually do, he just wagged his french finger at me and message was recieved.
How it should be
Drinking a beer and noticed that the brewery was established in 1489, 3 years before “Columbus sailed the ocean blue”
there are breweries in Bavaria which were founded three hundred years before Columbus went on his journey...
I fell in love with Sweden. But every time I go and visit, I’m still shocked at how many people just lay out and tan. On the sidewalk. Next to this Fika shop. Next to a museum.
Literally, people lay out and tan ANYWHERE and EVERYWHERE in this country.
I’d be walking through Gamla Stan or Djurgården, then BAM out of nowhere, I nearly trip over a lady trying to tan. åh! jag är väldigt ledsen!
No gaps in the bathroom stalls. Felt like I was pooping in an exclusive club and it was nice not having to make eye contact with m**********r trying to go next
Whoever comes up that that idea, I hope your cookies fall into the milk
The two medications that are keeping me alive cost a whopping $300 a month per prescription, so $600/month or $7,200/year.
I moved to the UK and the same medications cost £9 apiece for a three month supply. Grand total is £72 a year.
I know the conversion rate isn't a perfect 1:1 but the fact my medicine here is literally a hundred times cheaper blew my mind.
yeah USA healthcare system is s**t. You're the only ones paying company prices, the rest of the world pays based on cost prices.
I lived in Holland for five years. I could say something about the bikes or beer, but the only thing that stopped me in my tracks was a Sesame Street sign. It turns out Big Bird is *blue* in the Netherlands!
I mean I know they say he’s Pino, Big Bird’s cousin, but I’m not fooled. You know Big Bird just moved over there to seek an alternative lifestyle.
This picture is not completely accurate: Pino has a bright orange beak instead of a blue one
Not an American, but a Bulgarian.
My family had a relative from America who came back with his child who all luve has been in America.
(Somewhere in Detroit, but I am not sure where.)
When we were walking around the streets he had a look of shock on his face when he saw the papers with people pictures put on trees, bus stops, street lambs etc.
He thought they were wanted posters of criminals and was impress with how many crime we had.
I explained to him that those things are called nechrologs and are essentially posters of [passed away] people that family members put around to spread the news and pay respect to the death.
He was even more shocked after that.
The sheer amount of scammers in tourist areas.
Like, American tourist areas have some, but it's no where near egregious as Europe.
Even at the Vatican it's unbearable. Fake petitions, friendship bracelets, guys wearing vests telling gullible visitors they bought the wrong tickets. It definitely put a damper the experience.
A positive WTF moment was realizing how awesome people generally were in Paris. I can't tell you how many times I heard the rude Parsian cliche, but every interaction I had was genuinely pleasant. What I picked up fast was that people in France in general expect some form of respect. It's amazing how a small amount of politeness can go a long way with strangers.
I'm from Norway, but moved to America.
My husband and I recently came back from a vacation visiting family in Norway. During the visit we went to a supermarket where you have to put a coin (roughly 1 dollar) into the shopping cart to loosen it from the rack. When your done you reattach the cart and your coin gets returned.
I had never thought twice about it but for him it was amazing.
In Spain, you have to sorta wave and call for service, especially for the final check.
They will literally leave you at a table with empty glasses for hours unless you ask. They consider it rude to intrude. and it makes Americans feel pushy to ask or wave our hand for attention.
It's pretty easy to do if you watch the locals...a little wave, a smile and a nod, etc and they come right over.
But if felt intrusive on our part at first for sure.
In Myanmar, the way to signal the waiter is to make a double "kiss" sound with your lips... Like "psssk psssk". Very awkward at first for a european... Calling them or waving at them may work if they happen to look right at you. But a simple "tsssk tsssk" and a waiter beelines to your table in a few seconds.
The absence of obese people was shocking.
Robust public transit systems (relative to the major city I live in in the US).
Yep, I’d get rid of my car in a heartbeat if we have as good public transportation. Here we have to wait 30+ minutes and sometimes hours for a bus. I was amazed to see buses every 8 minutes in London.
Studied in France and I was shocked to see the Cafés turn into bars at night.
They just switched out the menu and it went from selling hot cocoa to whiskey on the rocks!
Well why would you have a business which only operates for half a day, when you could be open from morning-ish until late at night? And as a patron I appreciate not having to wonder which nice place is open when - I just go and see what they are serving at this hour.
I wouldn't say this was a "WTF" moment so much as just a bit funny and embarrassing on my part.
I was visiting a friend in the Netherlands. I had just gotten back from a year abroad in Asia, so I was not accustomed to anyone being able to speak English.
I went to purchase a train ticket in.... Amsterdam, I think, though it may have been Utrecht. At any rate, I approached the counter and asked, "Excuse me, do you speak English?"
The bemused counter clerk laughed and said, "Of course. Do you?"
I turned beet red. It's very silly looking back on it.
Also, same trip, but in Brussels, I asked a local store clerk where to find a particular bar I was searching for. She gave remarkably detailed directions, and listed off many other recommendations for places. I was a little bit surprised at the level of detail, and I guess she noticed that because she laughed and said, "I like to drink. A LOT."
In America we work ourselves to the bones.
Hell, the fact I’m now working what’s called a “straight 8” shift is boggling to me.
But as back as I can remember, working 8-12 hour shifts with a 30 minute lunch is pretty much the norm.
So when my current boss was sent to France for a couple of weeks and the fact that in an 8 hour day, you got 90 minutes for lunch and a 20 minute break for cigarettes and coffee he couldn’t comprehend it.
That and wine while at lunch for work was mind blowing to him.
Seeing women walk into the men's room when the ladies' is full (Paris).
Paris is FILTHY. The architecture was gorgeous, the food was excellent, but the smell of cigarettes and urine is everywhere. I felt like I needed a shower every time I left the hotel.
Amsterdam on the other hand is the cleanest and most well organized city I've ever been to.
Amsterdam and Paris don't really compare, Paris is easily 10x the size...
Constantly having to remember to carry around change to use the bathroom in Germany.
That's a good point. I don't mind terribly that we have to pay for them, but they should all accept cards at this point, not just a bunch of select few at a train station.
I was on a trip that went from Italy, Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. Every city we were in at least one bar played country road take me home by John Denver and the locals went crazy for it. Knew every word
Also
In a Oktoberfest tent in Munich Germany. Waiting in line for a stall(terrible choice but when nature calls) guy walks past the line and try to just cut everyone. Front man prolly 6-2” German man goes in after the guy who tried to sneakily take the stall. It was like a cartoon of fighting noises in the stall and everyone was so casual. It only made me love that county more lmao
How drinking out in public is no problem. Especially in balkans and Germany
I would not say no problem. It is legal in most places unless city goverment decides to ban it at special places. The drunken people trashing glass bottles on the street or fighting are an issue depending where you live.
In Europe, when you order orange juice, they take fresh oranges and squeeze them in to a glass. I've never seen that recipe in the states.
Not really WTF, just amusement, but when I went to Prague, there were a number of chocolate shops that had large, chocolate penises prominently on display. I remember one that had melted white chocolate drizzled down from the tip.
Switzerland. How safe it is to walk across the street. Probably has something to do with the whole "the vehicle is always at fault" thing that would probably never fly here. Cars would slow significantly if I was sort of within the vicinity of a zebra crossing. Made it sort of awkward for me even if I was actually intending to cross there.
Also Switzerland. Hearing all of the cars at a red light start up again when the light turns green.
Granted, this was Wil. I'm not sure if the size of the city has anything to do with it.
There was a day care or kindergarten located directly above the [call girl] display booths. Amsterdam, 2007.
So many pharmacies in Spain.
On a school trip we toured Germany, Italy and Switzerland. My friends and I were all around 16-17 and we're from Texas. We stayed in a village in Switzerland, Andermatt, for 2 nights. One night, we asked the chaperone to go to the store nearby to buy some snacks. We ended up going to a bar. Everyone inside was very invested in watching the tour de france, like actually cheering and screaming. We ordered drinks and shots and not once did they ask for ID. Afterwards we were so confused, like we were obviously teenagers but they didn't seem to care and served us anyways lol.
I am not sure about Germany, but here in Portugal it´s legal to drink from 16. Driving at 18.
In a good way, the fact that everyone minds their own business and I don't have to worry about people trying to talk to me on public transit or in a grocery store. Americans don't know how to mind their own business and just go about their day for themselves (this is a generalization but in general, there isn't the kind of invasive chatting on a day to day basis from Europeans like you get in the US and I find it very refreshing and very noticeable whenever I'm abroad.)
I'm Spanish and this is one thing I don't actually like about Europe. over here we are a little more open, but I've been to France for example and no one had small talk with me on a 3 hour train ride... I was like... come oooon someone taaalk to meee I'm boored xD but no one did, nor they did with others unless they knew each other. I dislike this, I'm super extroverted and every time I use public transport alone, I hope someone talks to me. a little small talk makes my day :)
I still can't get over the dog parks. This was in northern Italy and maybe London unless I'm mixing up the 2 trips.
But they have dog parks in the city where it's just a park and a sign post that says "dog area" and no fence! Dogs just run around in that area!
I was overall surprised how dog friendly they were there.
It's a great idea for dogs but more so (I think) to prevent them running around where children are playing, possibly to avoid the obvious.
I just got back from Berlin and there's a huge city park that runs through it. From the road driving passed it I saw that EVERYONE WAS NAKED...IN A CITY PARK...like EVERYONE...OF ALL LIKES AND AGES... legit old man dangus just flapping about like Julie Andrews in a field of Edeilweiss. Even then, didn't think too much of it, thought it might be a "park" thing. Later my wife and I went down to the hotel pool and again, there was both men and women alike just letting it all hang out. Bratwurst and pork knuckle, everywhere. My wife literally went into a panic and spun around on the spot as if she was not supposed to be there and started speaking gibberish, I proceeded to laugh hard enough to draw attention to our Canadian, clothed-and-out-of-place asses. 10/10 would totally go back (seriously, loved it).
Lots of places in Europe (but certainly not just anywhere) regard being naked or semi-naked as just that; being naked. Nothing erotic about a regular naked body.
A beligerant in a pub somewhere in Hamburg noted my extremely Texan "cowgirl" accent and proceeded to lecture me about how s**t Americans are because they never travel. He lectured me... In Germany... About how I need to get off my a*s and leave the US from time to time. Guess it just goes to show that drunks gonna drunk, no matter where you are.
Once visited my dad's friends in kaufbeuren as a kid. They apologized profusely that it was so hot.
It was only like 80 degrees F. That's a normal summer here in Memphis. I think they'd die here.
We will get 30-40°C this weekend in south Germany. We hardly scratched 28°C in August when I was a kid. I hate climate change.
Went to London. The entire atmosphere is different. People are more relaxed, there's a real appreciation for things around them. The Tube puts my hometown of NYC's subways to absolute shame, but I nearly toppled a couple of times. Wicked fast.
1. Biggest WTF to me was how cheap the wine was. To get a halfway decent bottle of wine at a restaurant in my city is $30+, but it so much less to get a great bottle at a restaurant in Europe, even in Paris. I found amazing bottles in Portugal for ~$10 and I found awesome single glasses in Bordeaux for ~$4.
2. It was a 50/50 chance that a toilet outside of a hotel would have a seat. Also, I'd like to add that I enjoy the idea of having to pay $.50 to use the restroom. It seems like it is a lot less likely that someone [poops] all over the seats.
3. Public transportation was so convenient compared to home.
4. Is the selfie stick business a multi billion dollar industry?
5. Lack of decent air conditioning
When I was at Maidan/Independence Square in Kyiv, Ukraine two people came up to me and placed 4 live monkeys on me without my permission.. then they expected me to pay them each $100 because they took pictures... Yes, this is probably not commonplace but I was like "Wtf?! A monkey scam in Ukraine of all places?!"
Eating a real gyro in Greece and being forever jealous that we can't get that here
Apparently being ethnically Filipino, well dressed, and walking with 3 white women makes me look like a pimp. Still both weirds me out and makes me laugh that some dudes in Paris wanted to "rent" the friends I was with
Cold meds and Kleenex being behind the counter in pharmacies. I mean, I had fun using my French, but my poor boyfriend just needed cold meds and Kleenex and I don’t want to have the pharmacists bringing me different cold med brands one by one because we don’t know the European brands when I could easily compare them by myself. We’re also hitting the limits of my French vocabulary when it comes to describing symptoms.
In Budapest, at the airport, there's a service where you pay to have them shrink-wrap your luggage, because the baggage handlers can't be trusted not to steal your stuff.
I was surprised when I saw a lot of east european wearing T-shirts with a single random english word on them.
A lot of the roads in Ireland are barely large enough to fit 2 small cars. Usually one car has to pull off for another to pass. Despite this, there are often bikers and walkers on these narrow roads, with blinds corners, and a speed limit of 80kph. Strangely, I've yet to see any road kill despite the abundance of dogs and livestock.
About 25 years ago, teenage me was in Europe on a basically unsupervised school trip. We had been there for a while but the biggest culture shock I received was when I went to a McDonald's. Yeah, yeah, going to McDonald's but I was looking for something familiar and comforting at the moment.
I had my burger served in a styrofoam container and the fries were completely different.
I know it seems odd, but over the course of that entire trip, getting a meal from McDonald's that was "different" was the biggest shock to young teenage me.
I love going to McDonald’s in different countries because of how different and unique each are! I went to a McDonald’s in Singapore which had seaweed and completely different fries. It was amazing and they gave me a cool magnetic toy too (this was when I was small). I still have that toy sitting on my piano
My mom fell and sprained her knee in Spain. Free ambulance ride, x-ray, consultation, medication, and ice pack. All despite the fact that we are foreigners. This would have cost more than the plane tickets in America. Edit: typo
Well, technically it's not "free", you had others pay for it. We pay high taxes for our "free" services - a good system, of course, but it's something many foreigners forget, they'll want "free" health care but not finance other peoples health care, kindergarden place, school etc. too (via taxes).
In Paris, everything seemed too small: elevator in our hotel fit two people, or one with a suitcase. Rooms had probably 7' ceilings. Sidewalks felt like they were 3' wide. Glasses of water were maybe 4 ounces (with a 1L bottle to fill them with). Even doorways and hallways seemed 80% the size I am used to.
I've always heard that things are bigger in the US, but I never really understood until I went to Europe.
The complete lack of window screens. Does everybody just accept bugs overrunning their homes whenever they open the windows?
Paying money to use a public bathroom. Granted, it was the most pristine bathroom I’ve ever used, but I just don’t have a problem with using a grimy public restroom in America for free. I guess it’s nice if you have a problem with those.
Also asking for ice in your drink and your waiter looking at you like you asked them to loan you $1000.
"but I just don’t have a problem with using a grimy public restroom in America for free." You must be a guy :')
Just visited Zurich. WTF Switzerland, why is you so beautiful?
Dublin – Subways on every freakin' corner. Not the underground public-transport kind, either.
London – Hey, there's people that aren't white here – feels like home. (Feels like home in a good way, it was nice to see some diverse faces again.) London felt the most American to me of all of the places I went.
Ediburgh – Damn there are actually like, early-70's style hippies here, and damn, this place is like living in a Harry Potter book, and damn, this place needs to be cleaned up a little bit. I loved this city maybe the most out of my visits but i was surprised at the amount of homeless and just general grime I saw.
Amsterdam – how is there this many beautiful women in one place at one time? And, how could there be this many bicycles in existence?
Apparently we Dutch own on average 1.3 bicycles per person. It's tricky riding that .3 though
A lot of places I've visited there are no shower curtains. I felt like a blue jay in a bird bath just lightly splashing water on myself as to not get the floors all wet.
Kermit the Frog, in Spain, is called Gustavo. WTF.
Was in Italy last month for the first time. Was intrigued by how common it was for people to just take a nap nearly anywhere in public.
Also the little vending machine "stores" that had 3-4 vending machines in them and one sold alcohol and cigarettes, another sold condoms, lube and *toys*. Wasn't shocked, more so applauded the simple ingenuity of it. :)
I'm Italian and I've never seen peopole sleeeping in the street. Maybe homeless people!
Day drinking and smoking. We have breweries all over Kansas City, but we usually don't partake until after work hours.
Ireland was a lovely place, you're all very pleasant and music was everywhere. And your barbers are top notch
The toilet in my apartment in Germany had a shelf so that everything dropped above the water line. Confusing as f**k, but I guess it is for inspecting your stuff for parasites. I hated it, s**t in the open air smells like you expect.
There was like a little sink right next to the toilet. Super convenient to wash my hands while sitting down
Germans stare. Like blatantly stare, and if you nod to acknowledge them they look at you like you're crazy.
(TO BE CLEAR this island is f*****g tiny. there are about 80 people living there and its mostly farms and berry bushes. back when it was still Yugoslavia, my grandma left to America while her brother went to Italy. Some people say the squatting is just a stereotype, but it's just exclusive to this one island bc its very rural. in all the other islands in Croatia we've visited, nobody else was squatting. Just to clear things up bc people were calling my story fake.)
On with the story then,
So, my grandma is Croatian. We went to "the island" as we call it (it's a small island in the Adriatic) we can't go there very often, as it's about $5,000 per person (FOR THE FLIGHT AND BOAT RIDES), but when we do, it's beautiful. there are palm trees and turquoise waters, full of colourful fish. the cuisine is enchanting and delicious. But, the culture is strange. It's a Slavic country, and on the rural island, everyone just squats shirtless. it's pretty much specific to this one island bc we went to Losinj and Zagreb and they didn't squat. and Goats and chickens literally wander the streets. But, the "WTF" moment came when we went over the hill with my baba (grandma) to check out her old abandoned school. Then, out of nowhere, a wild goat just rammed me in the stomach and ran away. thank you for listening.
You cannot buy physical tickets at a soccer game (at least at Wembley stadium) in England. They literally have ticket windows where they will print them off, but will not sell them to you. I went to a game in 2018 at Wembley (tottenham vs CP) and unknowingly had fake tickets. When i went to the ticket box to buy real ones they said i can't. I had to go online, create an account, buy through their website and then go back to the window to have them print them out. Security told me this is how all EPL games operate but i can't back that up.
In Paris near every single tourist attraction there is a flock of people trying to sell you garbage.
The WTF part for me is that we saw hundreds of these guys during our trip and whether no matter what attraction we were at every single one was selling the EXACT same shitty Eiffel Tower souvenirs.
Why wouldn't any of them branch out even slightly to set themselves apart from the countless other people hocking the exact same c**p?
I feel like these guys selling the exact same thing are not really so much salesmen as they are basically beggars that give you something symbolic in return. I know this from the middle east and I see it in "middle eastern" parts of Paris too: guys selling things like single packets of paper tissues, single heads of garlic which you are supposed to buy more out of charity than need for the actual product. And I believe the guys with "3 ugly eiffel towers for 1€" are part of the same phenomenon. They are almost exclusively fresh immigrants and non-white btw.
Giant, irregular shaped roundabouts with like a dozen exits.
Was this in France? Their roundabouts are often next level and they put them everywhere.
I live in Iceland and whenever people say they don't have insurance, personal or business wise, I feel uneasy. Also, people don't sue eachother.
The waiter absolutely refused to bring my espresso - My dinner companions and I had ordered dessert after having dinner and I wanted to have my espresso with the dessert. He didn't bring it out until after the dessert.
Lived in Finland for a bit. The quite that prevails everywhere is impressive and a little scary to me. I will say so does their kindness. A friend of mine dropped about 40$ worth of electronics when we left the apartment one morning. When we arrived that night he was distraught thinking it would be lost. Nope, it was sitting on a fence by the apartment complex right in downtown Kotka (smaller town but still). Eating out was also pricey. My wife and I eat out probably just as often as we cook at home but in Finland I could not find anywhere that was like cheap fast food or something, it was all expensive. Lastly, the number of public drunks. I have never seen so many drunks, they were harmless for the most part but they were constantly some place on the streets. Some of my favorite moments with drunks was one peeing in a trash can literally in front of the Helsinki train station and another who at about 2 am was walking in our apartment courtyard. This guy seemed to have some difficulty standing and walking and both seemed to scare him. He was shouting at the top of his lungs the whole way across the courtyard while holding onto anything he could. He was acting like he was walking a tightrope over a canyon.
Visited Finland a few years ago. Seems tipping in restaurants is not done. Logic is that the price you see on the menu is the price you pay, and anything else would be dishonest on the part of the restaurant. Guess they pay their staff properly.
When I was in Bulgaria about 5 years ago, there was a woman cop that heard me and came over and gave me a total serious face that I was in trouble for some crime and I needed to come with her.
Turns out she was flirting with me and just giving me some s**t like a normal person, not a cop.
It ended well...
In England everybody, and I mean EVERYBODY, was driving on the wrong side of the road and mipronouncing words like "tomato".
People stare at you if you wear athletic clothing when you're just walking around.
There is a wall in Munich (I think it was Germany at least) and it's like enclosed and stuff. But you just whip your d**k out and just pee on the wall. Which is honestly not that odd really. But the odd thing was, A. My teacher informed of us said wall several months before we saw said wall. And B. My tour guy, a European, made a point to take us to pee on said wall.
And a quick Google search is finding me nothing so I may have just pissed on someone's house.
Went shopping in Spain. Every time I found a decent looking shirt/sweatshirt it would have some weird quote on it or a random word +definition. I think I found this most notably at Pull + Bear.
I spent a week in Greece and Athens was infested with dudes selling Jamaican bracelets. They're set up near every major sight. It was easier to give them 2 Euro for the bracelet and just keep it on as a way to repel them the rest of the trip.
Canadian here. In the uk you have to be over 16 to buy an energy drink. I was dumbfounded over that one!
When you ask for ketchup in an America, you either get a million little packets or the whole bottle, in Europe whenever I asked I would only receive a measly 2 packets or less.
First time we went to England, we saw a bunch of signs that said "TO LET" and we couldn't figure it out. Are these a bunch of toilet signs that are misspelled? No way. There are too many. Turns out we're dumb and it's just their way of saying "available to lease"/"for rent".
Also we were very confused by Digestives. What a weird name for a snack.
In a Paris subway station, I had to step over a huge log of human s**t. Right on the platform where people stand and wait for the trains.
Yes, because some drunk and/or mentaly unwell person taking a s**t in public is something that can only ever happen in Europe/Paris. 🙄
White beans in my can of tuna fish. It was great and the food was bought in Switzerland.
When I was in Amsterdam (in the weed district or whatever it’s called), the whole area was like the same 6 types of shops/restaurants, over and over again(excluding the actual coffeehouses and bars).
There were cheap touristy trinket shops, cheap touristy head shops, Argentinian steakhouses, shwarma places, French fry/churrro/stroopwaffel bakeries, just over and over again. For whole city blocks. With the occasional bar or coffeehouse in between.
I mean, I get it, people are high AF and just wandering around, but you’d think there would be a little more diversity right?
It's catering to the munchies, but I know the exact street you mean lol
Not an American, but Canadian.
First time visiting London, England, I said WTF when I saw a sign for "Humped Pelican Crossing."
A total lack of top sheets on the beds. Also rarely any toilet seats in Italy. I joked my travel blog would be no top sheets or toilet seats
Strangers standing WAYYYYYYYYYY too close to me in lines
If you ask for flat water(because the default seemed to be sparkling) in a restaurant they bring you a plastic bottle of water. Why do they insist on wasting all these plastic bottles instead of giving me tap water in a glass? Why do I have to pay so much for this water? It frequently cost more than alcohol for some reason?
You cannot drink alcohol in your seat or anywhere in the standing during a football (aka soccer) match. You can drink it underneath the stands, but you cannot watch the match live with an alcoholic drink in your hand.
Also, having a legit bookie taking bets at those matches. Imagine how much money an NFL game would take in if they allowed betting at the stadium.
Yeah, it's because we used to have a real hooligans issue in western Europe in the 80's ( check for Heisel tragedy and others in UK, several deaths including children😟)
The peeing boy motif in Brussels
Sometimes it changes clothes to commemorate certain holidays or celebrations :)
I took a trip years ago to Lake Maggiore on the Italian-Swiss border. First it was the people, both men and women, changing into their swimsuits right on the beach in front of everyone. Next it was visiting a McDonald's in Switzerland and having to pay for ketchup packets.
Non siamo pudici qui a Locarno, ci si cambia davanti a tutti, per quanto riguarda quella salsa inutile giusto che la facciano pagare
You can't buy a bus ticket at the bus stop. Or the bus station. Or online. The only place you can buy them is the tobacco shop.
At some stations, you can't buy a train ticket at the train station or on the train. You have to leave the train station with all your luggage, walk into town, find a tobacco shop, buy a train ticket, then walk all the way back to the station, and by the time you get back you missed the train.
How they automatically serve you sparkling water instead of normal tap water
Depends on the country. In France, the jug of tap water is free and standard - along the bread.
Seeing Confederate flags flown outside private residences in Sweden.
my husband ordered an old fashioned at a bar in Paris.
instead of bourbon garnished with an orange peel, they mixed bourbon and Tang.
I was in the heart of Rome with my wife, found a little place to eat and decided to get a pizza (Because Italy!). While just as the pizza arrived, the song on the radio changed, and started playing.... A Shania Twain country song.
A huge festival in The Netherlands that's held in the 'countryside' part in the east (Zwarte Cross) goes nuts every day at least once over Take Me Home Country Roads :)
The graffiti. GRAFITTI. EVERY. WHERE. It's really disappointing, TBH
study it like it's an art form, a whole world will open up for you. New perspective on the city inhabitants too.
I recently went to Engalnd and France, here are the highlights!
Every intersection was a rotary(Roundabout, cant shake being from MA) in rural France.
Some dude was going down on a girl in Versailles, in front of our school group
Paying for the f*****g bathroom.
3USD for a tiny diet coke, as well as the taste, christ.
How f*****g fast Parisians drive, like if you arent walking on a cross walk during green, you're dead. Coming from a jaywalking Bostonian, yikes.
Charles de Gaulle airport. Just why.
The first time I got on the London Underground, I stood because I thought "I've been on plenty of trains this should be fine." I almost fell over because apparently they go faster in Europe.
How much smoking there is, I walked out in Piccadilly Circus and need an advil because of how many cigarettes there were. I've been to NYC and my mom was a smoker for years, Londoners chill please.
edit: to add more wack stuff.
In the U.K., the chain of legal betting shops called Ladbrokes. I mean you literally leave the place a Broke Lad. The balls...
And in Ireland, the big gambling chain is Paddy Power. Not only is Paddy a generic and vaguely derogatory name for an Irishman, but losing your paycheck in one of these places is hardly empowering. Paddy Power! Giving Paddy the Power to become a Broke Lad!
As with any derogatory term for an oppressed group, it is not offensive to use it if you are a member of said group. And if you have never been taught the term, it has no emotional power anyway so is not offensive to you anyway.
It's quite funny how half of these posts do not mention which country they are talking about because I guess they think Europe is more or less a single cultural entity? If there is one thing my friends/colleagues from the US consistently state as a huge cultural shock in Europe, it is how diverse the cultures, customs, tastes and everyday life in general are across different european countries. There are distinct differences between nations as close as the French and Germans. Now imagine say Bosnia and Finland. :D
The overwhelming majority of BP comments about the US apparently believe the entirety of my gigantic country is exactly the same, and populated by 330 million people who are all alike. As someone from Massachusetts, I've experienced culture shock in my own country. Perhaps we all should refrain from believing ridiculous stereotypes.
Load More Replies...Ummm.... Wow. It's a different country. Of course things are... wait for it... *different*. The US isn't England or Germany or Romania or Italy or (fill in many many EU blanks). Canada isn't. Mexico isn't. Uruguay isn't. That said, many US citizens don't travel outside a country that is larger than the EU, so that does shape the perspective on these things. It's pretty similar over 4,000 km coast to coast *here*. (Pretty similar. Cajun country vs New England, don't even try. Those *are* different countries, LOL.)
I'm a New Englander, and I've experienced culture shock in my own country. Specifically, in the Deep South and in the Southwest. They might as well be different countries.
Load More Replies...a lot of tightminded visitors commented here. Why have expectations that things will be the same when you visit a whole other continent with millennia more worth of culture and history than the average white American experience?
It depends what's normal for you and which country you visit. Europe isn't a generic concept - More than 30 countries each with their own individual cultures and practises. And just because you see something happening doesn't mean it happens all the time or happens everywhere in Europe either..
When I read what surprises american people when they come to Europe, makes me feel more and more that life in USA is hell.
This is Sweden in a nutshell. I came back 2019 to my job as a public school teacher after I took a sabatical to study Japanese in Tokyo. I have yet to touch cash and havent had any need to. A friend came to visit could pay for a public toilet in the tourist district with her credit card. We even have a system where we can transfer small amounts of money to each other or pay for in a store that everyone uses. So splitting the bill is sooo easy to do now.
For all you Americans offended that we Europeans are offended that you don't mention which country you went to: Europe is not one country, just like Asia, or Africa! On the other hand, the USA ~IS~ one country!! You like to remind us of all the time: "one people under God" etc. And you all SPEAK THE SAME LANGUAGE, HAVE THE SAME PRESIDENT- I could go on. So for you doing that comparison might be a hint of why we have certain options about you.
I’ve lived in the Netherlands for about 4 years. I had a nasty cough that lasted a couple weeks, so we went to the doctor. They prescribed a specific brand of liquorice that was particularly bitter. It was nasty! I still think it was hilarious that liquorice was a legitimate cure (I did get better very quickly!). I love it here and I don’t intend to go back to the States anytime soon.
It’s common for Americans to think you would be speaking German in every country if it wasn’t for them. Oops they’re right!
OK, now explain and I'll explain why you're wrong in return.
Load More Replies...It's quite funny how half of these posts do not mention which country they are talking about because I guess they think Europe is more or less a single cultural entity? If there is one thing my friends/colleagues from the US consistently state as a huge cultural shock in Europe, it is how diverse the cultures, customs, tastes and everyday life in general are across different european countries. There are distinct differences between nations as close as the French and Germans. Now imagine say Bosnia and Finland. :D
The overwhelming majority of BP comments about the US apparently believe the entirety of my gigantic country is exactly the same, and populated by 330 million people who are all alike. As someone from Massachusetts, I've experienced culture shock in my own country. Perhaps we all should refrain from believing ridiculous stereotypes.
Load More Replies...Ummm.... Wow. It's a different country. Of course things are... wait for it... *different*. The US isn't England or Germany or Romania or Italy or (fill in many many EU blanks). Canada isn't. Mexico isn't. Uruguay isn't. That said, many US citizens don't travel outside a country that is larger than the EU, so that does shape the perspective on these things. It's pretty similar over 4,000 km coast to coast *here*. (Pretty similar. Cajun country vs New England, don't even try. Those *are* different countries, LOL.)
I'm a New Englander, and I've experienced culture shock in my own country. Specifically, in the Deep South and in the Southwest. They might as well be different countries.
Load More Replies...a lot of tightminded visitors commented here. Why have expectations that things will be the same when you visit a whole other continent with millennia more worth of culture and history than the average white American experience?
It depends what's normal for you and which country you visit. Europe isn't a generic concept - More than 30 countries each with their own individual cultures and practises. And just because you see something happening doesn't mean it happens all the time or happens everywhere in Europe either..
When I read what surprises american people when they come to Europe, makes me feel more and more that life in USA is hell.
This is Sweden in a nutshell. I came back 2019 to my job as a public school teacher after I took a sabatical to study Japanese in Tokyo. I have yet to touch cash and havent had any need to. A friend came to visit could pay for a public toilet in the tourist district with her credit card. We even have a system where we can transfer small amounts of money to each other or pay for in a store that everyone uses. So splitting the bill is sooo easy to do now.
For all you Americans offended that we Europeans are offended that you don't mention which country you went to: Europe is not one country, just like Asia, or Africa! On the other hand, the USA ~IS~ one country!! You like to remind us of all the time: "one people under God" etc. And you all SPEAK THE SAME LANGUAGE, HAVE THE SAME PRESIDENT- I could go on. So for you doing that comparison might be a hint of why we have certain options about you.
I’ve lived in the Netherlands for about 4 years. I had a nasty cough that lasted a couple weeks, so we went to the doctor. They prescribed a specific brand of liquorice that was particularly bitter. It was nasty! I still think it was hilarious that liquorice was a legitimate cure (I did get better very quickly!). I love it here and I don’t intend to go back to the States anytime soon.
It’s common for Americans to think you would be speaking German in every country if it wasn’t for them. Oops they’re right!
OK, now explain and I'll explain why you're wrong in return.
Load More Replies...