Focus On: Expat Life Blogs

Each day, we discover bloggers on WordPress.com exploring different passions and interests, immersed in unique industries, fields, and worlds. At The Daily Post, we’ll highlight more of these niche blogs and the various communities within WordPress.com. We hope these spotlights introduce you to new communities and ideas, and inspire you to find—and create—your own cozy corner in the blogging world.

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From Peace Corps volunteers in Asia to English teachers in Latin America, we have a varied expatriate blogging community on WordPress.com documenting life and work overseas. Blogs on expat life are distinct from blogs about travel—expat bloggers are immersed in a place, which they adopt as their home. They explore the benefits, challenges, and sensations of living in a foreign culture; the elusive meaning of home; and, ultimately, what it means to be human in this big world.

Here’s a sampling of expat blogs on WordPress.com:

Photo by Steven Dorgelo.

Dutchinaman’s Blog: Fascinated by the rapid changes transforming China, Steven muses beautifully on his overseas experience with his wife and children. He documents quiet moments, interactions, and conversations, and is a patient and keen observer. His photographs complement his words—check out his photo story of Chengdu, where he lives, and the stunning black-and-white portraits of people he has encountered in China.

Here is Havana: Conner, an American journalist, has lived and worked in Havana for more than nine years. She calls her blog a place for “navel-gazing” and “cathartic venting at its best and worst,” and writes about the idiosyncrasies, perturbations, and ironies of Cuba. From baseball to Cuban machismo to daily life, Conner’s posts are intriguing and entertaining.

Lonely Girl Travels: An Oakland girl in the world, writer and solo traveler Lauren lives in Hanoi, Vietnam. She has a knack for crafting scenes and dialogue, and her writing always has an edge, whether it’s about travel and culture, music, relationships, or finding her place in the world. Her posts on her time in Cambodia are particularly honest and raw.

Comic by Jen Brown.

Expat Lingo: Jen, a “serial expat,” is currently based in Hong Kong. (She has also lived in China and the United Kingdom.) Originally from Utah, she experiences the “cultural collisions” and juxtapositions of living in a different society and enjoys the absurdities and inspirations of expat life. One quirky feature is her use of comics, which she creates with Strip Generator.

Twice Deported: Zoe, an Australian and perpetual nomad, lived in the US for six years before being deported. Now in Asia, she uses her blog to air her frustrations at being denied a visa and to share the lessons she’s learned from moving and living overseas. In Hoi An, Vietnam, she works at an organization that assists disadvantaged youth.

Miss Expatria: An author and editor focused on Italy and France, Christine mixes posts about her jet-setting life in these regions with practical content on travel, from food to day trips to transportation. Her blog is a delicious, glamorous glimpse of life as an expat and working travel writer.

Photo by Saara Raappana and Eric Doise.

HorseHorseTigerTigerThis Peace Corps journal of Saara and Eric documents their volunteer, teaching, and travel experiences in and around Anshun, a town in Guizhou, China. Saara notes that married Peace Corps volunteers serve together (as long as they’ve been married for a year before the start of their service), and China is a country that likes to host married volunteers. Both Saara and Eric take turns writing posts, which helps give us a fuller picture of their shared daily life there.

El Salvador From the Inside: Jenny, an American in El Salvador, posts her insights, frustrations, and news, primarily about living with and among the poor. The writing is informative and doesn’t sugarcoat the overseas experience. A notable regular feature is Spanish Friday—an end-of-week post written in both Spanish and English.

Un’americana a Roma: Shelley, an American expat in Rome, has an engaging voice: as you read her posts, you’re not only entertained, but feel like you’re chatting with her over a cup of coffee. Conversational and fun, she offers a candid, often funny look into life in Italy.

Made in Accra: This blog offers a slightly different take on the expat experience: Mike returned to his home country of Ghana after living in the US for half of his life and chronicles his observations as a returnee. While he is not an expat in the traditional sense, he writes intimately about reconnecting to the place of his childhood:

Home for the longest time had been “New Jersey” to every inquiring mind. At other moments, especially when that nostalgia bugs hits me, it’s Accra. It’s Ghana. It’s the experiences, the memories, the foods, the languages, and the culture. It’s even those idiosyncrasies most of us could never seem to shake even after fully immersing ourselves in our western societies.

These bloggers (and their stories) are all different from one another. But each has his or her own unique perspective about the world, and a sense of curiosity and empathy. They’re worth checking out!

Do you follow an expat blog not on this list? Let us know in the comments. For more, check the expat topic page in the WordPress.com reader.

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  1. Being an expat is an amazing, emotional, life changing experience! Reading their blogs on how they deal with such different lifestyles is amazing. I am currently an expat, a Canadian working as an ecologist at a mine in North East Russia. I face many challenges, including social ones I never thought I’d encounter! Check out my blog at : http://abovethearcticcircle.wordpress.com/

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  2. Fantastic list of expat blogs, some I already follow and some I just started to follow.

    I’m also a serial expat. Have lived and worked in Australia, England, Cayman Islands and now Sardinia, Italy.

    I currently write about my expat lives, culture and traditions at My Sardinian Life. I also write short stories on what it’s like to be a waitress in different parts of the world. http://laavventura.wordpress.com/

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  3. Quite inspiring to see so many ex-pats writing 🙂

    I am a new blogger, even though I have been in China for over a year.

    As a British born Chinese woman living and working in China, my ex-pat experience is slightly off centre because I look like one of the locals – now if only I could speak like one of the locals!

    My blog starts at the beginning of an exciting chapter for me: a new life with my Chinese born Chinese husband. I’m not sure which direction it’s heading… but I think it’ll be an interesting journey.

    http://writingmyselfthere.wordpress.com

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  4. I’m an Israeli-American who’d lived in Los Angeles for over 30 years. In 2011 I returned to Northern Israel (Galilee) with my wife and twin teen-age daughters. I am of two lands, of two cultures and I’m excited to explore and report from my new-old country. While I lived and worked in America, I wrote several novels and short-stories. Now I wish to write new stories from my experiences in Israel, particularly from Galilee where Jews and Arabs dwelled for centuries. Check out my stories at http://notesfromgalilee.wordpress.com

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  5. Sweet! It’s cool to see so many expats writing. Yay for us!!!

    I’m a girl originally from the SF Bay Area now living in Sydney. Two years ago, I took a job offer to work abroad not knowing this decision would lead me to Mr. Right. My new boss in Australia introduced me to her step-son, and well…we fell in love and got married 10 months later. Crazy right? The past two years have a been a whirlwind, and I find that I’m still learning how to adapt to life here. Come along and enjoy the journey with me! http://becomingaussie.wordpress.com/

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  6. I’m a Canadian doctor working in Western Australia and exploring our new backyard, as well as places (eg Singapore!) a bit further out, and learning to appreciate the similarities, and differences, between Vancouver Island and the Margaret River/ Aus. Southwest region…
    hmitenko.wordpress.com
    welcome and enjoy! as I will to many of the commenters here…

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  7. I’m a writer, photographer, and English teacher from California. My Blog shares my experiences in New Zealand, Russia, and Turkey (where I have been teaching English for the past year and a half). Come discover Istanbul, Ankara, Antalya, and Izmir!

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  8. From my adopted home in Andalucia I post both photos and articles on this beautiful corner of southwestern Spain. Many of my short stories also paint a picture of the area.

    Try popping by Señor Alvarez’s little store in Santa Catalina, the fictional fishing pueblo I use as a background for many tales. Taste his juicy red tomatoes from the story of the same name. But spit them out quick, as you might not know where they’ve been.

    http://bryanhemming.wordpress.com/juicy-red-tomatoes/

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  9. Sat Nav and Cider focuses primarily on life and travel destinations within the UK and Europe with a heavy emphasis on photos. (I do my best to make them lovely). Initially, I thought my blog would be more about the differences between my home country of America and my adopted home in England, but instead of comparisons I’m finding that I live much more in the here and now and I love it!

    http://satnavandcider.wordpress.com/

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  10. For us here, it’s an expat world, but it’s wonderful. Just posted about my bus-trip with bust-hosts serving food on board. Only in Abu Dhabi!

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  11. What a nice surprise! I’m honored to be featured along with these other wonderful expat bloggers.

    WordPress and the expat blog community have been a real lifeline for me during our latest international move.

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  12. Reblogged this on Anchors & Amor and commented:
    Slightly intimidating as someone brand new to blogging, but I’m heavily inspired and excited just by skimming these summaries. I can’t wait to move to Bahrain and obviously, I can’t wait for my guy to come home on leave. We’re FINALLY getting married, and…wait for it…we’ll be able to make actual eye contact. None of that Skype BS where we’re watching each other look down at a screen.

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  13. I’m an expat too. I’m an Indian teen living in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. But, my blog can’t actually be called an expat blog because I blog about everything. But, please do visit my blog because I’m kind of new to blogging.

    I blog at sunsandstarsanddreams.wordpress.com

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  14. So do I. Well, almost.
    I am getting ready.
    Me, my lover and our two little daughters, 0 and 2 years old.
    We’ll leave Switzerland for central america in two months.

    For a Volunteering work in an NGO in San José, Costa Rica.
    My blog’s currently about how we face the last weeks at home and how we prepare the adventure.
    It’s in french. I’ll post some stuff in english once and let wordpress know about it.

    henryjaquet.com

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