Home Sweet Weird: Surprising Domestic Habits from My Time Abroad
A look at the strange household habits and domestic traditions that make living in another country a wild adventure in domesticity.
The Shock of the First Key Turn
Moving to a new country is usually described as a series of big moments: the airport arrival, the first local meal, or the struggle with a new language. But the real cultural collision happens in the quiet, private spaces of the home. When I first started living abroad, I expected the obvious differences like architecture, food, and laws. I did not expect the odd household habits that actually define domestic life.
Domestic traditions are not just about what people do; they are about how they see space, cleanliness, and privacy. For the first few months, I felt like a clumsy intruder in my own apartment. I would flip switches that did nothing, open windows that would not budge, and accidentally offend my neighbors by putting a plastic bottle in the wrong bin. These home rules are the invisible scripts we all follow without thinking, until we are suddenly in a situation where we do not know the lines. This feeling is a core part of culture shock and navigating weird social rules.
The Architecture of Daily Routines
One of the first shocks of home life abroad is the physical layout of the living space. In the US, we are used to a specific flow: a large living room, a separate kitchen, and bathrooms that feel like small sanctuaries. In many European and Asian cities, the differences are stark. I remember my first apartment in a dense urban center where the "kitchen" was basically a hallway with a hot plate and a sink.
This lack of space forces a change in daily routines. You learn to cook in shifts. You learn that the living room is also the dining room, the office, and sometimes the laundry room. The concept of "private space" changes. In some cultures, the home is a fortress of solitude. In others, it is a porous place where neighbors drop in without a text and the door is rarely locked during the day.
The Mystery of the Window and the Door
I spent three weeks in a flat where the windows did not slide or swing. Instead, they pivoted on a center axis. It sounded simple, but it changed how I interacted with the outside world. I had to physically lean out of the house to close the latch. Then there were the doors. In some regions, the door handles are designed to be pushed down to lock and pulled up to unlock, which is the opposite of what I had known for thirty years.
These small, strange rules create a constant state of low-level cognitive load. You cannot simply "be" at home; you have to negotiate with the building. This is where the real lifestyle change begins. You stop assuming there is a "correct" way to build a house and realize that every design choice reflects a cultural priority, such as maximizing heat retention or optimizing for small footprints.
The Rituals of Waste and Water
If you want to understand domestic traditions abroad, look at the trash. Waste management is often the most stressful part of living in another country. In my experience, moving from a "throw everything in one bag" system to a hyper-stratified recycling regime was a trial by fire.
In some cities, I found a system where paper, plastic, glass, and organic waste were separated into specific colors of bags purchased from designated shops. If you used the wrong bag, your trash was left on the curb with a bright orange "shame sticker." This is more than just ecology; it is a social contract. These habits are a way for a community to signal its collective discipline.
The Battle of the Bathroom
Water usage is another area where strange rules appear. I remember the first time I encountered a "wet room," which is a bathroom where the shower is not enclosed in a stall but simply occupies a corner of the room. The result is that the entire bathroom floor becomes a swimming pool every time you wash.
Then there is the bidet. For a newcomer, the bidet is an intimidating piece of plumbing. It represents a fundamental difference in the definition of cleanliness. Moving from a culture of paper to a culture of water requires a mental shift. You realize that your previous habits were not the universal standard, but just one option. These bathroom routines are where the most intimate cultural habits are reinforced.
The Unspoken Rules of the Living Room
Beyond the plumbing and the walls, there are behavioral expectations. In many cultures, entering a home is a choreographed sequence. Removing shoes is a common tradition, but the nuances vary. In some places, you leave your shoes at the door. In others, you get specific "indoor slippers" that are different from "bathroom slippers."
I once visited a home where the host had a set of slippers for guests that were slightly less plush than the ones the family used. It was a subtle marker of status and hospitality. These are the kinds of rules you cannot find in a guidebook. You only learn them by making mistakes and watching how the locals react.
The Concept of the "Good Room"
In certain traditional households, I found the "good room," a parlor that is impeccably decorated but never actually used. It exists only for the arrival of important guests. This creates a duality in the home: the lived-in space where real domesticity happens, and the performative space where the family presents its best self.
This distinction highlights a cultural habit regarding the boundary between public and private. In the West, we often strive for a "casual" aesthetic, even when guests are over. In other cultures, the formality of the home is a sign of respect for the visitor. Learning to navigate these spaces without accidentally sitting on a "forbidden" sofa is a key part of living in another country.
Kitchen Chaos and Culinary Customs
The kitchen is the heart of any home, but the habits found there are often the most jarring. I have lived in places where the stove was a single burner integrated into a table, and others where the oven was a separate appliance that looked like a small refrigerator.
But the real surprise comes from the tools. I remember the first time I saw a specialized tool for peeling a specific type of root vegetable that does not exist in my home country. Or the habit of keeping a massive stock of fermented foods in a dedicated corner of the kitchen that smelled like a chemistry experiment to me, but tasted like home to my host.
The Rhythm of the Meal
Daily routines around eating are tied to domestic traditions. In some cultures, the meal is a rigid event with a set start time and a specific order of courses. In others, the kitchen is a revolving door of snacks and small plates that last for hours.
I learned that in some households, it is considered rude to finish every grain of rice on your plate, as it suggests the host did not provide enough food. In other places, leaving food behind is a sign of wastefulness. These contradictory rules mean that you can be polite in one city and accidentally offensive in the next, all while doing the exact same thing.
The Psychology of Lifestyle Change
Adapting to these habits is not just about learning where the trash goes or how to use a bidet. It is a psychological process of shedding your own assumptions. When you first move, you tend to compare everything to "how we do it back home." This is a defensive mechanism that makes the unfamiliar feel manageable by categorizing it as "wrong" or "weird."
As you spend more time living in another country, the comparison stops. You stop thinking, "Why do they do it this way?" and start thinking, "This is how it is done here." This is the moment where the lifestyle change becomes permanent. You begin to appreciate the logic. You realize that the "wet room" is easier to clean, that the stratified waste system works, and that the indoor slippers keep the home warmer in the winter.
The Comfort of the Familiar Weird
Eventually, the strange rules become your own. You find yourself correcting visitors who try to put a plastic bottle in the paper bin. You instinctively reach for the bidet. You start to miss the specific pivot-action of your old windows.
This transition is the essence of domesticity. Home is not just a place; it is a set of habits. When you adopt these traditions, you are not just mimicking a culture; you are integrating into it. The weirdness disappears, replaced by a new kind of normalcy. You realize that every culture has its own version of "weird" and that the feeling of being an outsider is the first step toward belonging.
Managing the Mental Load of New Traditions
For those currently navigating home life abroad, the mental load can be exhausting. The constant vigilance required to avoid breaking an unspoken rule can lead to cultural fatigue. The best way to manage this is to embrace the errors.
I spent my first year in a state of perpetual apology. I apologized for the trash, for the shoes, and for the way I held my chopsticks. But I found that most locals actually enjoy explaining their habits. It is an opportunity for them to share their culture and for you to show a genuine interest in their way of life.
Practical Tips for Domestic Integration
If you are moving to a new country, do not rely on the internet for your domestic guide. The best information comes from your neighbors. Ask them the "dumb" questions: - Which day is the glass recycling collected? - Is there a specific way to ventilate the apartment to avoid mold? - What is the unspoken rule about noise after 10 PM?
These questions do more than just solve a logistical problem; they build a bridge between you and the people living next door. By acknowledging that you do not know the rules, you invite others to teach you, which is the fastest way to turn a foreign apartment into a home. For more on this, read about my first 24 hours living with locals.
The Impact of Globalized Living
In the modern era, we see a blending of these traditions. You might find a high-tech Japanese toilet in a London flat, or a Scandinavian minimalist living room in Bangkok. This globalization makes the transition easier, but it also makes the remaining local habits stand out more.
When you encounter a tradition that has survived globalization, it is usually because that habit serves a deep, functional, or emotional purpose. Whether it is the specific way a doorway is oriented for luck or the ritual of a midday nap that shuts down a neighborhood, these habits are the anchors of a culture.
The Value of the Uncomfortable
There is a specific kind of growth that only happens when you are uncomfortable in your own home. When your daily routines are disrupted, you are forced to be mindful. You cannot operate on autopilot. You have to think about every action, from how you lock the door to how you brew your tea.
This mindfulness is the hidden gift of living in another country. It strips away the invisibility of your own culture. You realize that your "normal" is just as strange as someone else's "weird." This realization is the foundation of empathy. It starts in the kitchen and the bathroom, and it extends to how you view the world. This process is similar to the art of observing local daily routines.
Summary of Domestic Adaptation
Living abroad transforms the home from a place of passive comfort into a site of active learning. From the architectural differences that reshape your movement to the waste management systems that test your patience, every odd habit is a lesson in perspective.
To navigate these transitions, remember these points:
- Observe first, act second. Watch how your neighbors interact with their space before assuming your way is the only way.
- Ask for help. Local knowledge is the only way to master the invisible scripts of domestic traditions.
- Embrace the mistakes. The "shame sticker" on your trash is a rite of passage.
- Document the weirdness. Keeping a journal of the rules you encounter helps you track your own growth.
The goal of home life abroad is not to perfectly mimic the locals, but to create a hybrid space that respects the local culture while maintaining your own identity. When you can finally relax in a space that once felt alien, you have truly found your home sweet weird.