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A Homesick Student’s Guide to Spending the Holiday Season Abroad

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  5. A Homesick Student’s Guide to Spending the Holiday Season Abroad

For me, November is always a hard month. By November, I鈥檝e passed out of midterm hell and I wade through the month as a sort of holiday purgatory; it鈥檚 when I feel the most homesick. Normally, I don鈥檛 go home for Thanksgiving鈥攖he break is too short, the plane tickets too expensive鈥攂ut as the air gets chillier and I bundle into my hoodies, I start thinking of my family. Without midterms to worry about anymore, I actually have time to think about them. Even though I can feel the holiday season in the air as the leaves start raining down, I know it will still be nearly two months before I see my family. This time, it鈥檚 threatening to hit me even harder鈥擨 won鈥檛 see them until May.

Homesickness is a real threat when you鈥檙e studying abroad for an entire year. Make sure you consider that when you make your decision about where to go. I thought I鈥檇 be safe since, after all, Boston (where my home university is) isn鈥檛 exactly close to Chicago (where my family is). It鈥檚 not like I go home that often during a normal school year. Yet, when I pass the Christmas decorations that are聽already聽popping up in storefront windows (they don鈥檛 even have the聽鈥渘ot-before-Thanksgiving鈥 taboo to worry about in Scotland), I find myself thinking of my family鈥檚 holiday traditions. I imagine dinner with the cousins, visiting the聽颁丑谤颈蝉迟办颈苍诲濒尘补谤办别迟听in Chicago with my aunt, watching聽White Christmas聽with my mom鈥


But with that in mind,聽never聽let homesickness stop you.


It鈥檚 true that these memories are popping up and my stomach might wriggle uncomfortably when I think about what I won鈥檛 be doing this Christmas, but then I remember that I鈥檒l be making plenty of new memories.
Spending the holiday season abroad might seem lonely, but look around聽you鈥攜ou鈥檙e not the only one who can鈥檛 go聽home. You can make your own Friendsgiving; it might not be your grandma鈥檚 turkey, but at least the restaurants will still be open聽if your own cooking skills aren鈥檛 up to par.

When you鈥檙e studying abroad for months at a time, you make a home for yourself. You meet people you can call family, whether they鈥檙e from your host country, your home university, or from across the world.聽Make plans with them, so you have something to look forward to as much as you look forward to the day finals are over at your home university and your mom picks you up from campus in December. Along with my flatmate, a girl from Japan who鈥檒l also be around for the holidays, I鈥檝e made plans to travel over winter聽break鈥擨鈥檒l be missing the聽Christkindlmarket聽in Chicago for the real deal in Berlin. I鈥檒l be making new memories to keep alongside聽the ones I treasured growing up.


Making plans is a simple trick I learned over the past couple of Thanksgivings in Boston; instead of eating with my family, I鈥檝e made it my own tradition to find a new museum to visit. Classes and homework and work make it difficult during the semester to visit all the museums, so this way I can start checking off the list I made of the places I want to visit.


Most of the time, this anticipation of something new is enough to keep the homesickness at bay, but when I still feel it seeping through, it鈥檚 easy enough to find someone to talk to. Homesickness is something we all experience here, after all. I鈥檓 not alone in that. I have friends from my program, I have flatmates from all over the world, and the聽聽staff are always willing to help.


So, even though I can鈥檛 help but feel that little nugget of sadness in my belly when I think of home, I can admire the riot of colors in the trees, smile at the leaves crunching under my feet and bury myself in my hoodie, happy and excited for what鈥檚 to come.