I'm visiting "back home" (the states) now...Altho I'm enjoying the ethnic eatery options, cleanliness, and the freedom of not worrying if my purse or phone might get snatched, too much here is based on consumerism....too few sidewalks being used, too many huge cars, and people buying stuff because it's a form of recreation. And the drug commercials (along with the requisite warnings about all the different ways they might kill you) seem more advertised on TV than any other type of product...Consumption as recreation, medication to compensate for unhealthy (mental and physical) lifestyle, and hostile politicians..not a very appealing picture..And altho.it's not the same kind of "in your face" insecurity and grit that is BsAs, at least In Argentina interests go beyond what one can put in a shopping bag or on a charge card....
This is pretty much exactly how I feel when I go home. And then my fellow average Americans' lack of culture just drives it home for me. My Argentine husband and I were at the grocery store with my mom, and our daughter had fallen asleep in the stroller. We didn't want to put her in the car and risk waking her (heaven forbid!) and it was lunch time, so my husband suggested walking somewhere close to eat. Ha. You should have seen my mom's face. What? Stepping out of the grocery store parking lot on foot? In the end, my husband looked toward the horizon and said, "How about that place?" (fried chicken no less - but actually one of my favorites when I go home) Sounded good to everyone, so my mom and I hopped in the car and drove across the street while my husband walked to a busy stoplight with no sidewalks, no crosswalks, and somehow survived.
Oh, I could go on and on. Yesterday a friend back home posted a picture that said "Signs of a good playdate." There were so many toys thrown around the playroom that, I kid you not, you could not see the carpet. There were easily over 200. My first reaction was disgust.
I'm here forever, and of course there are things that drive me up the wall, but they haven't yet driven me back to the States.