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Herbistry420 – Empowering Minds with Knowledge About Cannabis > Dear Ganja Diary > Foreigner in My Own Country: 5 Shocking Culture Contrasts
foreigner in my own country

Feeling like a foreigner in my own country is a strange, surreal experience — and that’s exactly where I find myself after 10 years of living in Barcelona, Spain. Heading back to Los Angeles to visit family, I realized I’m genuinely anxious about returning to a place that should feel like home. After a decade abroad, America feels different in ways I never anticipated. In this video, I break down 5 real culture shocks I’m bracing for before I even land.

Feeling Like a Foreigner in My Own Country

I was born and raised in Los Angeles, but after 10 years in Barcelona I’ve adapted to a completely different way of life. The public transport is reliable, the police leave you alone, and nobody blinks at tattoos. Now I’m headed back to Cali to visit a family member battling cancer — and I can’t shake the feeling that I’ll be a foreigner in my own country the moment I step off the plane.

This isn’t just nostalgia. It’s a real psychological shift that long-term expats know well: the place you left keeps changing, you keep changing, and eventually the gap between the two becomes undeniable. That’s the experience I’m documenting here — and I’ll also be doing product reviews while I’m in the States, so the cannabis content is coming.

5 Culture Shocks Every Expat Recognizes Going Home

These are the 5 things I’m most prepared to feel like a foreigner in my own country about when I hit L.A.

1. Transportation: Barcelona vs Los Angeles

In Barcelona I can get anywhere in the city in 30 minutes — by Metro, bus, city bike, or on foot. Trains come every 5 minutes. In L.A., everything requires a car, and nothing is close. Getting a coffee from my parents’ house? A 10-minute drive minimum. That shift in daily mobility is going to hit hard.

2. Tipping Culture

In Spain, tipping is optional and no one guilts you for skipping it — employees are paid a living wage by their employer. Back in the States, even takeout orders now come with a tip prompt on the tablet. The cultural expectation is completely different, and after a decade away it genuinely feels like a foreign system to me now.

3. Personal Space

When I first moved to Barcelona, the lack of personal space was jarring — people stand close, they touch you in conversation, they crowd at the checkout line. After 10 years I’ve completely adapted. Going back to American personal-space norms is going to be an adjustment in the opposite direction.

4. Tattoo Acceptance

In Barcelona, tattoos are completely normalized. In L.A., while more accepted than smaller American cities, I still get more stares than I do in Spain. I love tattoos and I’m covered in them — not because I’m a criminal, just because I love art. I’m already mentally prepared for a different vibe in public spaces.

5. Cannabis Culture in California

Here’s the one I’m actually excited about. I haven’t been back to the States since recreational cannabis became legal in California. The last time I was there, I had a medical card (my toe hurt, apparently). Now I can just walk into a dispensary like a normal human — I’m absolutely checking out the legal market while I’m there. The difference between cannabis culture in Spain and fully legal California is going to be fascinating.

What I’m Doing While I’m in LA

Besides soaking in the culture shock of being a foreigner in my own country, I’ll be filming content with my GoPro and phone (left the big Black Magic rig at home), doing product reviews including the DynaVap HyperDyn, and hopefully collaborating with anyone in the L.A. cannabis space. If you own a dispensary, magazine, or cannabis brand in the LA area — hit me up in the comments.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to feel like a foreigner in your own country?

It means returning to your home country after years abroad and experiencing culture shock in reverse. The customs, attitudes, and daily rhythms that once felt normal now feel unfamiliar — because you’ve adapted to a different way of life. This is sometimes called “reverse culture shock” and it’s extremely common among long-term expats.

How long does it take to readjust after living abroad for 10 years?

Readjustment timelines vary widely. Some people feel at home within weeks; others take months or never fully re-adapt if they’ve built a life elsewhere. The key factors are how deeply you integrated into your adopted country’s culture and how much your home country changed in your absence.

Is cannabis legal to buy in California dispensaries?

Yes — recreational cannabis has been legal in California since 2016 (Prop 64). Adults 21+ can purchase from licensed dispensaries without a medical card. California now has one of the most developed legal cannabis markets in the world.

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