I'm from the US, but .... not in the US. Part of what I struggle with is that I am not 100% fluent in the local language, plus the cultural codes are different, so this, combined with the isolation of my job, makes for a very lonely Rainbow.
Commenting on this to bump it back up the queue as I'm still looking for advice .... Feeling really lonely these days and trying to increase my human contact. I've added in-person group gym classes and a yoga class, too. But I work very solitary and I don't interact with people outside these groups. I've tried to convert some people into my friends, but it hasn't happened yet (I think friendships move much slower in this culture than what I am accustomed to). So in the meantime, I think I need more stuff to go to where I interact with people.
Any ideas? I'm struggling to find stuff because I'm on a very limited budget so I can't spend much (or any) money. I also notice that many of the groups I find are dating groups in disguise, or geared towards much younger folk (I'm middle-aged) or revolve around drinking, which I'd rather avoid.
So glad you bumped it!
Off the top of my head:
- One of the best ways I know of to reduce the language barrier is to tutor English. Depending on the country, a great many people often just need a conversation partner… as they’re nearly fluent, but not quite, and want to get truly fluent before gap years, studying abroad, applying for jobs in English speaking countries, etc. …or… are quite fluent but want to work on their accent, idioms, slang, contractions, etc. <<< These are typically meeting up in a cafe, once or twice a week for an hour. So it does double duty on “people time” & getting better in your own new language. As you improve your own fluency? You can start to tutor people who are less and less fluent.
- If you happen to live in a city with English speaking embassies or consulates? There is often a lot of expat support (weekly meet ups, community service, touristy trips, even just a “little America/UK/South Africa/Oz/Canada” collection of bars/cafes/etc. favoured by expats (not tourists, they tend to be the holes in the wall that only locals know about). If you live in a city with an American embassy or consulate ^^^that^^^ times a whole lot more… as there are civilian jobs, volunteering, & other resources.
- If you DONT live near an Embassy/Consulate? Backpackers hostels, tour/travel companies, & NGOs are both ways to find people who speak your language (as well as attempting to better learn the local lingo / far more forgiving about stumbling through 2-3 languages in the same sentence, plus charades); as well as often have part time gigs available, volunteer opportunities, social hours, etc.