Friday, July 5
Because nothing much happened this day, it's time for
another exciting episode of Cultural Adventures!!
Part 5: PDA. (Or for those of you less abbreviation savvy: Public Displays of Affection)
Now, this is the type of thing that would get you a
detention visit in high school, or in extreme cases, a very intense slap on the
wrist from Professor Umbridge.
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| "Boys and girls are not permitted to be within 8 inches of each other." |
So, you all know what public displays of affection are like
in America: people hugging, couples kissing or holding hands, etc.
![]() |
| I guess this counts too...? |
But it's a bit different here. When platonic friends greet
each other, two men or two women, they oftentimes kiss each other on each
cheek. They do not, however, do this with members of the opposite sex. The only
PDA between men and women is between boyfriend or girlfriend, or husband and
wife, or family. There is none between a man and woman not in a relationship
together (whether romantic or familial). As you know, this does not reign true
in America. You can go anywhere and see young lads and ladies showing all the
"friendzone" affection for one another: dancing, playful shoving,
hugs, being stupid in general, etc.
![]() |
| "I don't even know you, lol!" |
Another interesting thing that I have seen here is the hand-holding.
It is quite normal to see pairs or groups of friends of the same sex holding
hands. Girls especially hold hands with their friends when they are out in
public. My conversation partner often grabbed my hand to direct me around the
market so that I wouldn't wander. And during my stay, (though it is less
common,) at least twice I have seen two pairs of elderly men holding hands
while they walked down the sidewalk together. It doesn't mean anything here.
It's not strange.
This simple gesture is so simple, and yet it carries so much
weight in a place as judgmental as America. We are so quick to assume that two
people are together if they are holding hands, but that same gesture
doesn't hold the same meaning here. It is simply a gesture of kindness and friendship.
Nothing more.
![]() |
| "What about Han-Holding?" |
So, onto my boring day.
I had that test in the morning. As it turns out, all I
really had to study was the vocabulary. And, if you can believe it, THEY GAVE
US A WORD BANK. Omfg. We haven't had a word bank the entire time we've been at
UT. It was like Christmas came early. (The teachers did that for the one
student in my class who wasn't from UT and who is used to word banks. The rest of
us didn't complain.)
After class, my
roommate and I went to the market all by ourselves! We were so proud. I bought
a couple things, things I had been looking for, and they were very cheap. (I
shan't say what. But I will say that the same thing in America would probably
have cost me around $100+ or so each, and I didn't even pay half that, and I
got two of them!)
After we got home, my roommate fell promptly asleep, so I
decided to do laundry, because it had been FAR, far too long. I washed about
60% in the washing machine (which was a bit risky to put anything together
because almost all of my clothes are new and were likely to bleed on each
other). The other things I feared for I washed by hand: i.e. anything that had
white, and then all my dark stuff.
Because I'm a privileged white kid, I had no idea what I was
doing.
![]() |
| Unlike this baby, here. |
Bewildered that I had never washed anything by hand, Noura
helped me. Once everything was done, I hung them out to dry. The heat and the
wind took care of them in a very short amount of time. They were done by
nightfall, and some of them were super wet when they were hung out
there. I even hung some of them on the lines outside of the balcony,
where they hang out over open air 4 stories above the ground, because I am a risk-taker. (I used liberal
amounts of clothes-pins on those. They dried the fastest.)
Then I lived on the internet for the rest of the night,
unwilling to even glance at any form of homework for the weekend.







When I was young any PDA was highly frowned upon. I remember my mother talking to me about it. She warned me that was a sure way for one to earn a bad reputation. How times have changed in America, huh?
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