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i didn't read back through the entire thread again (already read it once).
but, do you two have plans of ever being together for real?
if so, what are they?
Thanks dude! Nice to know that my material is memorable.
I think you mean to be together again, face to face, without segmentation like sharing our lives? That would be awesome!
There is a human drive to reduce uncertainty, to explain the world, and to render it predictable ( the need for cognitive closure). In relationships people cultivate feelings of stability by intentionally creating certainty by achieving short term goals. If short term goals go unaccomplished and create instability, would a relationship partner continue to stick it out for the long haul?
At this stage we know that in one month we will be face to face for three weeks (certainty). The dynamic of her group will change with my presence during and maybe even after I leave again. I think it really depends on how we handle aversive and supportive members of her new social circle. I’m sure they share a strong bond with each other given that they do live as neighbours and share work and novel experiences together (uncertainty).
Even though people in the place where she’s living at the moment speak English, its still a different cultural context form where we are from. In the acculturation process when the euphoria of the honeymoon period wears off, the disenchantment starts setting in and she will experience a lot of conflict (her jokes, words, perceptions will fall flat or have to be exhaustively explained). The next stage is “beginning resolution” and she will have to form a way of operating in the environment by employing one of five strategies
-Assimilation: accepting the host culture and becoming one of them
-Separation: being true to her original culture (usually only hanging around members from her home country)
-Marginalisation: denouncing both and doing her own thing (Nigel)
-Bicultural: assimilate when she’s around them and reverts back to her home culture around expatriates from home.
-Fusion: combination of assimilation and separation (probably with people from her home country that remix the culture also).
If she is at the stage of effective functioning wheni visit and is “assimilated” then my time there will be difficult and I might even find myself ostracised by her group because I won’t be able to keep up.
That leaves four strategies that I will have the competitive advantage in. I feel the odds are in my favour when I notice on the phone she still shares my accent, tone, words and perceptions. I don’t know if I would be with her if she is "marginalised" though that’s a bit loserish even for me lol. So make that Three out of Five.
At the moment her plans are to return home after her visa expires in about a year and a half or so providing she doesn’t assimilate- (which I don’t think she will, but you never know there might be some master pua’s out there like the ones on this forum that could convert her?)