1.
Hong
Kong makes other European cities seem absolutely sterile
Those first days were dizzying. I was abuzz with the
thrill of being in a new country and dove straight in, hard and deep. I
wandered the streets, overwhelmed by the sheer activity: there were people
everywhere, buying, selling, eating and drinking. This is especially true with regard to the markets. There was a
traditional street market across from my apartment building, and I went there
every chance I could get to get down, to take marvel at the sights, breathe in
the smells, and get down with all of that crazy food.
2. You’ll have to
figure out most things on your own:
Like
most first real jobs, you’re mostly responsible for your own skill development.
Your bosses will tell you to begin or complete projects that you have no idea
how to do, and they won’t have time to instruct you. You’ll have to figure out
which colleagues can point you in the right direction or give you examples, and
which colleagues or higher-ups don’t have the time or inclination. You’ll also
need a little ingenuity and find ways to figure it out on your own, because
sometimes people just won’t want to tell the newbie how to do something.
Especially working in a typical Hong Kong Chinese company, a language barrier
on top of that does not help the situation much either.
3.
A
good command of English is still a highly regarded tool
The Eurozone’s recession and the
expansion of the Chinese economy, has made everyone look towards the Far East
for business direction and economic prosperity. While this very much true, that
doesn't mean that the universal language of English is becoming insignificant.
While falling behind in business terms, people with a strong command of written
and spoken English and an international background are still a company asset.
Speak another European language too? All the better. Chinese companies are
seeking to enhance their global profile and reach to Western investors.
4.
Individualism
is not a virtue. Loyalty is:
Many of the West’s concepts of
“Personal individualism” here is shunned. Being a loner is not a virtue. Loyalty is, and once you show it, you
have built connections that are very hard to break. There are companies here
that will not fire an employee. If a person doesn’t perform, or an entire team
fails, management finds another place for them. In the West, if you don’t
perform well enough people usually think it’s an internal problem, that the
failing employee simply isn’t trying hard enough. That person’s usually fired.
5.
You’ll be Too Busy to Get Homesick
My To Do Lists almost always start with
“Call”: Your sister, your mother, your father etc. I cross those off a lot less than I’d like. A graphic would show
spikes of contact around birthdays and holidays and then the line would flatten
out. Two-line Facebook
messages, likes and comments on the infrequent photo, the pretense of keeping
up with people by checking their walls once every few weeks — it’s never
enough.
6.
Stop pining:
It’s
obviously normal to miss your family, friends, and the familiar but in order to
have a good life as an expat you have to commit to it. A lot of people come
overseas, living
in a cocoon of “gweilodom” – “gweilo” slang meaning ‘white male’ in Cantonese -
and do not give themselves
all the way, pining for their home country: for its food, its government, its
pedestrian customs and they live a kind of half life.. I too am ‘guilty’ in that
respect: most of my friends being expats, barely picking up any Cantonese, and
I have also frequently complained about Hong Kong’s shortcomings – the
thin-on-the-ground arts scene, the pollution, the obsession with money and
materialism – without doing much to address those issues myself. It’s a mental shift, that
happens without you really noticing and it's those who stop wishing for home that make their lives work abroad.
7.
Work hard, play hard
This
is definitely the epitome of the Asian, let alone Hong Kong work ethic. Well the
first part at least. [if you’re local.] 9-5 jobs simply do not exist here.
Neither does Overtime Pay. Working consecutively for 18 hours straight? I’ve
seen it. Working 7 days consecutively for 15 hours straight? I’ve lived it.
Working overtime is as much a given here, just like the fact that the streets
will always smell either of jasmine or of dried octopus. Even if you’ve done
all your work, you are expected to stay longer to show your boss you’re
‘hardworking’. It seems even the housing here was built this way: Flats might be small
comparative to the UK and you certainly pay the price for living on Hong Kong
Island, so the reality is that you’re
hardly in your flat but to sleep.
8. You’ll make new friends sooner than you thought
Getting involved with the expat community is comfortable and
easy as there are plenty of people to scoop you up and firm friends are quickly
made in Hong Kong - they end up being part of your Asian family. Expats know
what it’s like to arrive in this vibrant city, which makes for an immediate
natural understanding. What
is unique about Hong Kong is the international influence: it’s a young city
full of fascinating people. Due to its speedy development and entrepreneurial
spirit, it attracts an eclectic mix of individuals and that’s what makes it
exciting - here, anything and everything seems possible.
9. Hong Kongers stick to their own
Having said that about Hong Kong’s international influence, that question of sticking to
your own is especially pertinent to Hong Kong, where the divide between the
local population and the expat population is especially sharp. On the one hand, you may say
that it is reasonably global and international... but at the same time, you
don’t really see a lot of mixing [between locals and expats] in everyday life. Some
will associate foreigners with Lan Kwai Fong, casual sex and alcoholism. Others will say Westerners are stand-offish or arrogant. But you also hear
things like friendly, nice, affluent, well-mannered, even interested in Chinese
culture or Chinese people.
10. You can be anyone you want to be: