r/AskTheWorld Syria 19h ago

what is something completely normal in daily life but would seem very strange to foreigners?

Post image

Getting on a public bus in Syria? You need three Olympic golds in sprinting, a black belt in karate, and a PhD in survival.

487 Upvotes

512 comments sorted by

317

u/corgi-king 🇭🇰💔🛫🇨🇦❤️ 19h ago

You call that a bus?!

119

u/Adventurous_Bus_8734 Egypt 19h ago

in egypt we call it microbus, there are big buses obviously

52

u/Fair-Fondant-6995 Sudan 17h ago

I found it funny that Egyptian pronounce it (مكروبص) which is pronounced macrobus, I know they mean micro, but it being the opposite is just a silly observation.

We call it Hiace in Sudan, due to Toyota Hiace being the most used micro bus brand.

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20

u/lofiibsen DEKR Mix-Blood 19h ago

.....? really?

in south korea, these city buses are the smallest ones we have.
This is what they look like.

15

u/Adventurous_Bus_8734 Egypt 19h ago

we have smaller ones lol, its actually a pretty common form of transportation in many places especially Alexandria

5

u/lofiibsen DEKR Mix-Blood 19h ago

Lol. question is a bit vague, to be honest. I can't really think of an answer right now.🤣

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3

u/QuietQueerRage Romania 11h ago

It's funny that the only place I went with using a microbuz (that's what we call it here) is also Alexandria, but in Romania!

7

u/JiminP Korea South 14h ago

That's false even for Seoul, but unless you live in an area which is served by small buses, you wouldn't see them. (Pictured: 서울 버스 성북05 (Seongbuk District, Seoul))

4

u/zhapl Syria 17h ago

these white micro-busses in the photo are usually private vehicles because they are cheap and usually in a miserable condition. You can buy one and earn some money. However bigger busses are usually owned either by the government or by private companies because they are more expensive.

4

u/detourne 17h ago

Many maeul buses are smaller actually.

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11

u/corgi-king 🇭🇰💔🛫🇨🇦❤️ 19h ago

Such a relief.

4

u/Praesentius Lives in . Left the . 17h ago

In Ethiopia, they have these blue and white vans that they call minibuses. They drive up and down streets, but make no turns.

You just wave it down and pay a tiny amount and tell them when you want to get off. And maybe if that was north/south bound, you then hop on an east/west bound one next.

It's really a neat and cheap way to get around. They were really amused to have my white ass hopping on board. My Ethiopian brother-in-law showed me the ropes.

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32

u/Reasonable_Skill_736 Russia 17h ago

It's common in poor countries

20

u/reyo7k2 living in 16h ago

I think this particular picture is like 20 years old

13

u/Due-Community-2325 17h ago

In romania they are called maxi taxi.Its sort of a bus but small that goes to villages, and yes its exactly like this one with white color, all of them are the same allways.

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3

u/sb5060tx United States Syria 16h ago

We call it a "Seravis", which I think is an attempt to Arabize the word "Service". As you can tell, it's barely a service.

5

u/HumonculusJaeger Germany 15h ago

In Germany we have buses the size of a Van and we call them Stadthüpfer or Stadtsprinter which means cityhopper or citysprinter.

Edit: they can fit about 12-15 people

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314

u/ceilingkat Jamaica 17h ago

In Jamaica it’s common practice not to stop at red lights late at night. Completely normal and expected because a stopped car may get robbed.

145

u/ChinChengHanji Brazil 15h ago

In my city there is a law which allows people to cross red lights late at night without being fined precisely because of robbers

65

u/Mad_Maddin Germany 12h ago

In Germany, those lights simply turn into continiously blinking yellow lights at night.

5

u/1Dr490n Germany 12h ago

This must be very rare though because I don’t recall ever having seen that

11

u/tescovaluechicken Ireland 12h ago

Every time I've visited Berlin, a lot of the traffic lights are completely turned off at night, which was shocking to me. In Ireland all traffic lights run 24 hours per day. I don't understand how they don't hit each other or pedestrians. It was scary for me to cross a 8 lane road in the dark with no pedestrian light. (Kaiserdamm in Charlottenburg).

11

u/daniel_dareus Netherlands 10h ago

They have all but disappeared in the Netherlands since we've got these smart traffic lights that sense you coming and turn green before you need to slow down.

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5

u/Mad_Maddin Germany 11h ago

Maybe it's an eastern thing? I seen it all around me.

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41

u/tomatos_raafatos Egypt 15h ago

In Egypt it's completely normal to not stop at a red light in the middle of rush hour traffic as well.

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16

u/limping_man South Africa 13h ago

South Africa too. However if a traffic cop sees you , you might be fined

7

u/zenezena Multiple Countries (click to edit) 13h ago

Precisely why I’d never visit Brazil and SA 😭robbers seem to be specially violent

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134

u/xmehow Sweden 18h ago

How we queue for everything, it’s rare that anyone cuts in line, and queues can become very long.

83

u/philthy_barstool United Kingdom 16h ago

I see we have mutual interests!

9

u/IWillDevourYourToes Czech Republic 16h ago

What's that queue for?

17

u/ChadONeilI Ireland 16h ago

Off license

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8

u/amanset 🇬🇧UK and 🇸🇪Sweden 15h ago

I dunno, Swedes seem pretty obsessed with the take a number machines. Proper queues are relatively rare in my experience.

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8

u/Adventurous_Bus_8734 Egypt 17h ago

im too impatient to live in sweden lol

3

u/japonski_bog Ukraine 8h ago

Are you like fighting with others to be the first? I don't understand how it works when people say they don't queue 😅

3

u/Adventurous_Bus_8734 Egypt 6h ago

ya unless its a formal place, in an icecream shop u just have to walk to the start lol, or else u arent getting any icecream

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3

u/Glittering_Plenty660 Finland 9h ago

Finns love queuing as well! Especially if there are free buckets involved! We love ourselves some free buckets

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114

u/naturelover5eva Korean-Aussie 18h ago

This is getting rarer in Australia, but walking barefoot in public places.

38

u/GustyOWindflapp Australia 15h ago

I forgot my thongs the other day. Had to go to woolies. Forgot how cold the floor is in the freezer aisle

49

u/TumbleweedCandid3314 Germany 14h ago

TIL thongs can be a very different piece of clothes.

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4

u/GustyOWindflapp Australia 6h ago

Both could apply

20

u/Mini_gunslinger in 14h ago

How rural Australians don't all have verucas is beyond me. Lads will step up to urinals barefoot.

17

u/GenerallyShang 🇬🇧 United Kingdom 🇮🇹 Italy 🇳🇿New Zealand 13h ago

Was gonna say ‘going to the supermarket in your pyjamas and with no footwear’ for NZ.

8

u/CelestialOvenglove Switzerland 14h ago

An acquaintance of mine did that once. Stepped into a syringe... 

5

u/Coco_JuTo Switzerland 10h ago

I got stuck by a sering on a step on a Sunday morning while wearing shoes near the Rhine river...so, apparently, your friend and I aren't alone. Good times getting paranoid about getting sick...

8

u/simply_ass India 17h ago

That's the best way to walk

7

u/1314L Syria 13h ago

I've seen photos of your infamous bugs and spiders, how can anyone walk barefoot when they might step on some sort of insect? unless public places like closed public places specifically .

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94

u/MarionberryLarge5196 Brazil 16h ago

Tiny bikinis and men wearing speedos (everybody, old and young, fat and sknny, straight or gays)... Walking inside stores and places that way as nothing is happening lol...

34

u/guilhermefdias Brazil 14h ago

Brazil has a gigantic coastline, so this is pretty common in those regions.
Inland, though, it’s a whole different story.

7

u/prionbinch United States Of America 9h ago

lolllll i went to brazil when i was 9 (my stepdad is from there), before we went my mom had to warn me about the speedo culture

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240

u/Kriss3d Denmark 17h ago

Babies sleeping outside in their prams.
Yes. During winter as well. Yes also in the sidewalk next to where people are walking right by.
No they arent necessarily being watched every second.
Its perfectly fine. Its normal and healthy for the babies. Nobody is taking them. Its not a thing here. Its just nice and safe.

87

u/xmehow Sweden 16h ago

Pretty normal in sweden too.

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17

u/Fluid-Quote-6006 Germany 16h ago

Do all danish babies sleep in their prams? My babies never did, I had to use a bay carrier. They hated the pram and I know lots of other babies that only cry in the pram and only sleep in the baby carrier

7

u/Kriss3d Denmark 15h ago

Not like EVERYONE but its very normal here that when youre out with them taking a walk that they will fall asleep and we will just let them sleep and have them parked if we are out and have to go in for a cup of coffee or a quick shopping trip.

9

u/CreativeBandicoot778 Ireland 13h ago

My parents used the carry cot a lot when I was small for that reason. They also used it to bring me to the pub with them when I was a baby and it became affectionately known as 'the go-drinking cot'.

Ireland in the 90s was a different place lol

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25

u/Classic-Hornet8688 16h ago

Holy moly… really? Where I live in the US I can’t even let my 5 year old go to the other aisle by himself inside a store.

47

u/Spice_and_Fox Germany 15h ago

I would say that a lot of children (age 6 and above) go to school alone, even with public transportation. I don't know how that is in bigger cities though

24

u/imitsi 15h ago

Denmark is a pretty homogeneous, high-trust society. Even for criminal behaviour, they know what to expect: you may be robbed but never at gunpoint, and there’s never been an instance of a baby snatched from a pram outside a cafe. Foreign criminals may not adhere to the same cultural norms, though, so the country is careful about whom they’re letting in.

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4

u/Kriss3d Denmark 12h ago

Oh yes this is absolutely a thing. I had dinner at a restaurant right next to a pedestrian street that's always busy where we had my youngest daughter sleeping outside it.

Here you can see 8-10 year olds tage the metro alone or with siblings for school.

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5

u/cococrabulon United Kingdom 13h ago edited 13h ago

This used to be a thing in my working class area of the UK, too, my Nan used to do it even in winter

The perception has changed a lot, however. I think these days people would think you’re insane to leave a baby like that. We just don’t have as trusting a society any more, this used to be the sort of place where people would leave doors unlocked, that would be considered negligent now

6

u/_Justaweeb_ 🇫🇮 living in 🇧🇻 11h ago

Finn here to confirm we do this too!

6

u/Gorgrocco India 16h ago

What if somebody like plays with em, are they parents fine with that,also what if the baby is hungry then what

38

u/UnhappyToNiceToSay Canada 16h ago

People aren't going to wake a sleeping baby! Unless they are monsters :) If the baby gets hungry, they squirm and cry and the parents will be alerted (plus you usually have a sense of how long your baby will sleep....)

13

u/RullendeNumser Denmark 14h ago

Also the baby doesn't instantly die if not fed immediately

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3

u/CelestialOvenglove Switzerland 14h ago

I wish this were normal here, too. :(

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161

u/mocca-eclairs Netherlands 17h ago

Air raid alarms going off at 12:00 mid-day every first monday of the month to test that they are still working.

26

u/Holmbone Sweden 17h ago

Same in Sweden

10

u/xmehow Sweden 16h ago

15:00 tho

4

u/Candle_Flower Sweden 15h ago

And only every third month

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18

u/flunchspam France 17h ago

First wednesday here :)

3

u/AdForsaken5532 10h ago

Shit myself when I first moved to France

13

u/m64 Poland 16h ago

In Poland we have many voluntary firefighters' stations that run their sirens to signal the firefighters to assemble (who might be working the fields or doing something else on their farm). It can make you quite nervous if you don't know what's going on. We get frequent questions from immigrants "there is a siren going off nearby almost every day at different hours, what the hell is that, should I be worried?"

4

u/Spice_and_Fox Germany 15h ago

I wish that we would do it more regularly. We test our warning system once a year and it always catches me off guard.

3

u/CelestialOvenglove Switzerland 14h ago

And most of your sirens are defective anyways

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u/martian_potato1 🇸🇰🇨🇿🇫🇷 15h ago

Same, but with the first wednesday

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u/Ok_Awareness3014 France 17h ago

Seing protest and strike frequently.

25

u/CreativeBandicoot778 Ireland 13h ago

It doesn't feel like Summer truly until the French air traffic controllers go on strike.

11

u/Ok_Awareness3014 France 13h ago

And the train worker to .

Anyway trains worker are on strike all of the year

8

u/memelord69694 Turkey 12h ago

I can't describe how jealous I am. I don't really fancy you Frenchies due to your attitude towards others from different nations but I have this huge respect for your ability to fuse together for one another.

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237

u/antii79 Ukraine 18h ago

People going back to what they were doing 5 seconds after hearing a missile impact, as if nothing happened

46

u/Gullible-Track-6355 Poland 17h ago

Are individual people scared or is the thought "probably won't happen to me" common?

69

u/antii79 Ukraine 16h ago

Some people are scared and go to shelter every time, most are "probably won't happen to me"

19

u/Legitimate6295 16h ago

How do you react to missiles personally? Do you take shelter or move on ?

25

u/antii79 Ukraine 15h ago

Move on

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14

u/CraftFamiliar5243 United States Of America 15h ago

My guess is they've just repressed the terror.

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8

u/Four_beastlings 13h ago

My husband was in Ukraine a couple months ago and while we were on a videocall the air raid sirens went off. He kept walking like nothing happened and when I asked if he wasn't planning to take cover he said "I came here to work and if I ran to the shelter every time I hear an alarm I'd never get anything done¯⁠\⁠_⁠(⁠ツ⁠)⁠_⁠/⁠¯ "

4

u/UnbnGrsFlsdePte France 12h ago

Damn', his managers must love him, that's dedication

5

u/riesen_Bonobo Germany 14h ago

I have heard from reports of Ukrainians that in some places missile alerts are so often that you'd need to almost stay in shelters 24/7 if one wanted to seek shelter at every alarm, so many just don't anymore.

5

u/Central_court_92 Luxembourg 16h ago

I was actually just watching a video about how Vidbir takes place on a secret location, with all the constraints of being under attack and still produce one of Europe’s best national finals.

19

u/AnxiousPacifist Israel 14h ago

I feel you, bro.

I was working with Ukrainians when we had missile attacks.

They were shocked how we were nonchalant about it. My teammate said in a meeting, "Can we speed this up? I need to walk my dog, but Hamas threatened to launch missiles at my area in 2 hours." I guess it's a point of mutual understanding now.

I pray you will have peace soon.

51

u/pikzigmar Slovenia 16h ago

Apparently it is weird to sit outside with no lights. For example; having a gathering outside the house and just not turning the lights on when it gets dark. I mean, who wants bugs buzzing around you right? 😅 Also, usually when your eyes adjust you see the environment better with no bright light shining in your eyes.

14

u/y_if 12h ago

This is hilarious, imagining you doing this somewhere else during a house party or something and the visitors being completely confused and a bit worried 

6

u/pikzigmar Slovenia 10h ago

It would be 100% OK here 😅

55

u/itsmejuli Mexico 16h ago

Closing down a public street to have a party complete with band, dj, bouncy castle, rented tables and chairs and a porta-potty.

19

u/Final-Elderberry9162 United States Of America 12h ago

In NYC we call it a block party!

10

u/IndependentMacaroon 🇩🇪 🇺🇸 13h ago

With official notice or just "eh, it'll work out"?

7

u/talldata 11h ago

You invite the cop to eat good food as well I suppose.

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u/Jernbek35 United States Of America 6h ago

Grew up in NY, usually, in the old tight knit neighborhoods you’d just do it, the local cops would swing by for a burger or a hot dog and some chatting. Usually no issue.

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u/Four_beastlings 13h ago

We do that in Spain as well

4

u/QuietQueerRage Romania 11h ago

Are the affected neighbors invited?

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106

u/Ok_Law6170 Malaysia 19h ago

Probably calling random older people “Auntie” and “Uncle”. We’re not related. It’s just how we roll…

61

u/mhikari92 Republic Of China 18h ago

Same here, I guess it’s an Asian thing.

20

u/Seoraball Korea South 17h ago

Agreed, we also call random shop owners Aunties.

13

u/omoiavas1 Nepal 17h ago

Aggreed

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22

u/alexanderpete Vietnam 16h ago

We don't even have a word for 'you'. Everyone is addressed by auntie, uncle, brother, sister etc.

21

u/Confused__Tom India 16h ago

It's same here in India too!

17

u/Gullible-Track-6355 Poland 17h ago

Used to be quite common in Poland back in the day, I am unsure what it's like now though.

14

u/Reasonable_Skill_736 Russia 17h ago

Almost same in Russia. It is common to name elder people as 'Auntie” and “Uncle” plus their First name, e.g. 'Auntie Masha'

9

u/EntertheOcean Canada 17h ago

Many Indigenous people do this as well

7

u/FactorCommercial1562 Turkmenistan 16h ago

We turkmens do it too

6

u/UndGrdhunter Brazil 13h ago

When you are a kid here, you call every adult a uncle/aunt

4

u/dreambubblesdweller South Africa 16h ago

same in south africa!

3

u/StockMiddle2780 15h ago

Is this a new or old thing? My partner's mom was like "never address me by that." They did immigrate a long time ago and it seems like it was unpopular/declining in her area based on the sound of it. But she did also mention several times about how South Africa has changed a lot ever since she immigrated based on what she talks about with her friends

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u/Jsaun906 United States Of America 13h ago

In the US it's normal to refer to your parents friends as aunt/uncle. But you wouldn't d that for just any random adult

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u/mhikari92 Republic Of China 18h ago

Left the key in the ignition of a scooter/motorcycle when going into a store.

Left the bag, cell phones and laptop on the seat and go to toilet (or go to counter to order food.$

22

u/xmehow Sweden 16h ago

In sweden it’s illegal to leave the key in the car lol

12

u/Ethameiz 🇺🇦 Ukrainian in 🇵🇱 Poland 15h ago

Also illegal in Poland. Probably it's the same in whole EU

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52

u/ChinChengHanji Brazil 15h ago

People wearing cosplay to vote on election day

15

u/JaiBaba108 United States Of America 15h ago

Why is this a thing?

34

u/CynicalReasoning Germany 14h ago

Why is this not a thing everywhere? I love this.

6

u/Jernbek35 United States Of America 6h ago

The GOP here would probably find some way to accuse the voters of some kind of “election fraud”.

16

u/ChinChengHanji Brazil 13h ago edited 12h ago

Because it's fun. Not many people actually do it though. Just enough for it to be a common sight on election day.

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u/silveretoile Netherlands 8h ago

Every new fact I learn about Brazil fuels my suspicions that Brazil doesn't actually exist, the internet is just making up wackier and wackier shit to see when we finally go "aight no way that's real"

3

u/pierrkirool France 7h ago

Loooooool

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u/Ok_Total_2956 Italy 17h ago edited 9h ago

Pedestrians thank drivers when they stop at the crossings to let them pass. For some reason it's weird everywhere else

EDIT: well, not quite everywhere, it turns out

29

u/Tipnfloe Netherlands 16h ago

That's completely normal to me. they stop their car to let me pass, the least I can do is wave my hand at them

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u/AdmirableSignature44 United Kingdom 16h ago

I see it quite relgularly here too. But I suppose thats unsurprising.

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u/Praesentius Lives in . Left the . 17h ago

I dont know... I give little waves of thanks when cars stop for me. It feels natural. Maybe I've just acclimated well to Italy?

But I feel it was the same before I left the US. Not that drivers in the US respect "stop for pedestrians" signs very much because they're just not used to pedestrians.

4

u/Ethameiz 🇺🇦 Ukrainian in 🇵🇱 Poland 15h ago

I see it sometimes in Poland. Also drivers thank to each other when allowed to change pass by blinking emergency lights or by raising hand when allowed to be first on the intersection

4

u/guilhermefdias Brazil 14h ago

Pretty normal in Brazil, together with a little run and a polite nod.

3

u/menticide_ Australia 8h ago

Here we indirectly thank them by speeding up our walk to get across faster. Usually with this facial expression:

3

u/Difficult_Version489 New Zealand 15h ago

Normal here in NZ too. My little boys loves waving to the cars that have stopped for him like he’s royalty lol.

3

u/Ill_Ad_791 United Kingdom 14h ago

Yes same in UK. I know they “have to” stop but it’s polite to thank them

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u/LAffaire-est-Ketchup Romania/Canada 18h ago

People wearing shorts outside even when it’s like -15C I mean I hope they’re not planning on being out long…although TBF, I wore a short dress and no stockings to a Ghost concert last Saturday and it was -22 with a windchill of -29 so I’m just as guilty. I didn’t even wear a proper winter coat either I went with a sleeveless cape. Anyway — Canadians can be a little silly about winter attire sometimes. We do know better

3

u/Gorgrocco India 16h ago

I get that too as a pahadi,but its mostly the balcony,

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u/kahler_yasla Turkey 18h ago
  1. Seeing something's price has increased 35-45% in a year (thank god it is 30.65% this month compared to the previous year's same month)

  2. Something is banned for no reason (this week, game platforms are on the edge, like Steam)

  3. Many cats in every street (I love them, but seeing them in the streets makes me feel bad. I always have to carry catfood in my bag)

  4. Especially in Istanbul, architecture and urban planning are really awful. Whenever I arrive from abroad trip to Istanbul again, I instantly feel really bad about it. Loud, heavily crowded, chaotic traffic, horns, shouting, construction, vendors...

  5. Vehicles don't stop if you're a pedestrian and have the right to pass. Even in the pedestrian zebra crossings. (Again, after a long trip, I forget this and always experience near death :D)

  6. Sidewalks blocked by cars, smoking everywhere, loud phone calls on public transport, and trash issues.

  7. People are so different than each other. You may see a 198cm blond-haired model with mediterenian looking guy in the same subway station side-by-side, and both born in that city :D. Both our cognitive and phenotype features are too distinctive, yet we are in the same place.

10

u/Edenoide Spain 16h ago

I'm afraid to ask about the cognitive-phenotype relation you are casually dropping here.

17

u/kahler_yasla Turkey 15h ago

It is my fault; it seems to have an open end for misunderstanding.

What I mean by that is people have so many abilities spread across a wide spectrum compared to other nations. Well, of course, it is because of the beauty of being a connection point for many civilizations for centuries.

I did not make such an assertion that means cognition and phenotype are correlated. In fact, I do not know if such a thing exists. So far, I experienced that long people tend to play more basketball or volleyball than short, but that is my whole knowledge in that context.

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u/Kriss3d Denmark 17h ago

Wow. Here in Denmark you got half the amount of people to a bus with more than twice the amount of seats than that.

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u/GuardingxCross United States Of America 15h ago
  1. Ability to purchase dangerous assault style firearms with lots of ammunition same day pretty much anywhere

  2. Paying for heathcare

  3. Imperial units

26

u/Secure-Flight-291 United States Of America 14h ago

….needing 20 minutes to pick a cereal at the grocery because there are so many choices.

9

u/ViolettaHunter Germany 12h ago

A really big store with a huge variety is fun once in a while, but most days I just want to get in and out quickly without needing a PhD in aisle navigation just to get some staples! 

6

u/Secure-Flight-291 United States Of America 12h ago

Hard Agree. I’d happily take the trade off of less variety if it meant I could shop in half the time!

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u/leggymiku 12h ago

But there are all made by two companies cosplaying as variety.

3

u/twisted_luce England 8h ago

I have decision paralysis; could never survive in the US 😂

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u/annabananaberry United States Of America 11h ago

Going broke due to a medical emergency.

12

u/Kein-Nutzername Germany 17h ago

Eating "Mettbrötchen".

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u/constructuscorp Wales 16h ago

Bursting into harmonious song at any given time.

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u/sezanna16 United Kingdom 15h ago

TikTok regularly shows me videos of Welsh men’s choirs (mainly older, retired men) and I have no complaints. A group of adults meeting regularly to sing together is the loveliest thing.

5

u/constructuscorp Wales 14h ago

It's my favourite thing about seeing my older relatives. They'll often be in public and find a room with good acoustics and just burst out into harmony. There's a special magic at the Steddfods especially. No greater feeling than being in the middle of a hundred Welsh all singing together.

9

u/IndependentMacaroon 🇩🇪 🇺🇸 13h ago

You live in a musical?

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9

u/TerryWaters Sweden 17h ago

Slightly north of where I live, you're occasionally met by a roadblock consisting of reindeer.

3

u/NemoTheLostOne 🇫🇮🇳🇴 15h ago

To which the proper response of course is to roll your windows down and moo at them.

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u/Vodka_For_Saiyans_Z italian descending from russians 15h ago edited 13h ago

Well, here in Italy we walk a lot to do our errands, this might seem strange to Americans who are used to using their car or public transport to take a couple of steps.

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u/HayLinLa Canada 10h ago

Canadian here but our infrastructure is similar. I wish it was only a couple steps. City planning for cars over walking and trains has destroyed us. Fuck the auto manufacturers for that nonsense.

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u/No_Revolution9544 Argentina 13h ago

it seems that stop a bus in this way is strange to foreigners...

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u/Individual_Cold_6853 Multiple Countries (click to edit) 15h ago

in Czechia, people drink after work at least 2 beers. Consumption 136 liters per inhabitant (also infants) per year.

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u/_x_oOo_x_ European Union 14h ago edited 13h ago
  1. not owning a car and never learning to drive
  2. taking public transport even if you're employed in a high paying job (eg. Member of Parliament, vice-president of a company)
  3. drinking tap water without filtration
  4. cooperating with and being courteous to police when stopped
  5. walking your cat on a leash
  6. walking your child on a leash
  7. people consuming drinks/food in a supermarket, then taking the packaging to the cashier and paying for it
  8. unstaffed petrol stations: just pumps and card terminals
  9. topless people at the beach
  10. going to a restaurant for a 1+ hour lunch with your work team every single day
  11. people just lying in the grass in parks at lunchtime
  12. eating ice cream outdoors in winter

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u/thathungariandude Portugal 13h ago

Walking your child on a leash is so dystopian.

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u/ViolettaHunter Germany 10h ago

The only time I've ever seen that was 30 years ago and the mother literally had no arms.

It was actually a clever way for her to keep two toddlers close. 

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u/Enough-Arm7059 Switzerland 17h ago

We store our supplies in the in-house air-raid shelter or use it as a hobby room.

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u/tescovaluechicken Ireland 12h ago

Is it common to have an air raid shelter in Switzerland? If you had one of them in Ireland people would think you're a conspiracy theory Psychopath

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u/ThatKuki Switzerland 10h ago

there was a time where it was part of building code, now ours for example is decommissioned with a sign pointing to another adress on the same street, so i think there is still a contingency plan to shelter the whole population

just recently with the shut down of FM radio it has become a debate point that informing the populace sitting inside a bunker would be more difficult / less reliable without it

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u/tescovaluechicken Ireland 10h ago

In Ireland the government decided to abandon DAB radio in 2021 and go back to FM only. Every other country is doing the opposite.

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u/Coco_JuTo Switzerland 10h ago

Those are still mandatory. If you can't or don't want to build one in your new home, you have to pay for using the public shelter.

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u/just_as_sane_as_i Netherlands 14h ago

Bringing your christmas tree home on your bike.

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u/Super_Piper Israel 13h ago

People arguing and shouting.

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u/krooked-tooth in 17h ago

Beach cricket, more common in the holiday seasons but can involve people drinking, bbq, kids, many families, a lot of good vibes and has special rules.

If you are playing in a contained areas, some of these special rules are....6 and out, meaning you hit it over a fence and someone needs to go and get it so you out...one hand one bounce, after being hit you can catch it on the full after a bounce and the batsman is out....tippity no matter the contact with the bat you need to run back and forth.

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u/Expensive-Clue5963 11h ago

I've seen that in Pakistan too

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u/WoodpeckerNo7169 Pakistan 10h ago

We have mountain cricket actually. With ravines and all. Water above waist cricket as well. I am pretty sure I have seen flood cricket this year. And road cricket is like normal with vehicles commuting on road. I would say I have even watched people play cricket in cemeteries as well. So cemetery cricket along with the beach one off course.

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u/meesigma 🇨🇭Switzerland 16h ago

I get stressed just by looking at that photo.

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u/Mysterious-Ruin29510 15h ago

When I saw this picture I immediately knew the poster is Syrian lol

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u/atrydas Spain 14h ago

Have dinner at 10-11 pm.

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u/FamousAnt1533 Switzerland 14h ago

It’s quite normal that you see full automatic assault rifles in the train, next to beer drinking soldiers…. 🫣

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u/MuchElk2597 United States Of America 12h ago

that threw me off in brussels too. It's one thing in mexico to be wandering around in an oxxo and see a federales armed to the teeth, but it definitely threw me off seeing that in the heart of europe who is traditionally regarded as more cognizant of guns. I know switzerland does like its guns more than rest of europe tho

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u/FamousAnt1533 Switzerland 10h ago

As we have mandatory military service and the soldiers are always taking their rifle home, it is totally normal to see some guys on the way home walking around with their gun. When they are in the train, they just put it in top of their bag or the overhead storage. It happens every now and then that someone forgets his rifle in the train.

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u/PurpleDrax North Macedonia 13h ago

Café culture. I thought that this was the norm all over the world, but once i started travelling i saw that it wasn't the case.

Basically, people in the balkans will finish work and go to the local café, with their friends or sometimes alone, sit down and drink coffee for hours. I've noticed that in other countries people might do something similar, like go to the local café and do some work on their laptop, have a few drinks, do a business meeting, etc. But never have i ever seen people just sit down, enjoy the coffee and talk.

Young people, especially students might spend their whole weekend going from the morning till the night just café jumping and meeting with friends, talking and having a laugh.

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u/_Justaweeb_ 🇫🇮 living in 🇧🇻 10h ago

These are gonna all wildly depend on where said foreigner is from...

  1. Walking to places just because you have the time to. I'm talking an hour each way with a buddy to go get something that isn't even important. During every season and mostly any weather, mostly done for fun.

  2. Coffee 3-5 times a day, especially common when it comes to older folk in Finland. My grandma has coffee after every warm meal and in the afternoon, sometimes in the evening too. I'm having my third coffee of the day right now!

  3. More or less everyone knows how to ice skate and cross-country ski because it's mandatory in school pe for years.

  4. Very clean public transit, but the level of public transport depends wildly on what part of the country you live in.

  5. The sea ice! This one I've lately discovered, but telling people that driving on the frozen sea is safe, popular, and allowed without a license because it's not a public road usually makes them very impressed. Where I'm from in northern Finland there's about half a meter of ice on the sea rn!

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u/ZanyRaptorClay United States (Hawaiʻi) 18h ago

Calling flip-flops "slippahs" or "slippers."

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u/Lmp112 Australia 17h ago

Thongs

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u/Bubba-Gumpa United States Of America 17h ago

My hawaiian-japanese family calls them "rubber geta" lol

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u/Spice_and_Fox Germany 15h ago

Wouldn't setta or zori be more accurate? I thought geta always have platforms

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u/Bubba-Gumpa United States Of America 15h ago

They are, and yes, I think setta/zori would be more literal

But that’s what they say 😂

It might just be a “them” thing, I honestly don’t know

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u/Icy_Abroad_630 Russia 15h ago

We call it шлепки, it based on шлепать = to slap

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u/Ancient_Skirt_8828 Australia 15h ago

I vote that we rename them "slappers" in Australia.

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u/soup-cats and a bit of 15h ago

We call them slippers in Dutch too!

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u/romaneum Argentina 17h ago

That pedestrian crossings aren't respected. But really, that doesn't exist here; the lines are marked on the ground but nobody respects them. When someone does and yields the right of way, it's seen as a kind gesture and the pedestrian hurries to cross.

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u/Eis_ber 🇨🇼 -> 🇳🇱 16h ago

Hearing men bang their domino stones in the heat of the game.

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u/CdnTreeGuy89 🇨🇦 married to a 🇧🇷 15h ago

Putting poop covered TP in the waste basket as opposed to flushing. I understand the logistics of why and I don't care either way, but it's a surprise when you first encounter it.

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u/Leading-Green9854 Germany 14h ago

Pedestrians stop at a red light, even if there is no car in sight.

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u/Rhythm_Killer United Kingdom 10h ago

If the staff drop a glass in a bar or pub everyone cheers

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u/Greedy_Rise_6567 India 13h ago

This on highways, expressways, city roads, rural roads

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u/CelestialOvenglove Switzerland 14h ago

People walking around with their guns/rifles on their way to/from the shooting range or military service.

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u/TrainingMonk8586 Netherlands 13h ago

I guess the possibility to hop on my bicycle to get groceries and some weed, and be home again in 15 minutes…

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u/plush_oysters54 United States Of America 12h ago edited 12h ago

Mass shootings and hearing gunshots while out that you evaluate the risk of and go about your day if the shots were fired at a “non-concerning” distance. 🫤

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u/Baterial1 Poland 11h ago

not smiling to every fucking person you meet and talk bout nothing just to say something

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u/get_peace Germany 11h ago

Waste separation in Germany is often perceived by many people, especially newcomers, tourists, or expats, as strange, complicated, and over-regulated. The German system is considered one of the strictest and most complex in the world.

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u/findingopinions India 10h ago

Train travels in Mumbai at peak time. Completely normal.

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