Madiha Qureshi July 4, 2008
Tags: immigrants , transition , change , home
I arrived in the US about eight months ago, to get married in Houston and move to Maryland, where I live now. My last visit had been less than a year ago, during which I met my husband. The one before that was when I was seven years old. My memories of that visit constitute mainly of Disney Land, Disney
World and New York snow outside the small apartment that belonged to my dad's friend and where we stayed for a week.
I didn't have to go through the usual hassles of visa because about 17 years ago, I had become a US Citizen courtesy of my father, who has been an American citizen since the eighties but chooses to live in Karachi. So it's ironic that among all the 'real' American citizens who've either lived here all or at least a greater part of their lives, here I am, with my American passport but Pakistani National ID. My 22 years of Karachi-based education, my proudly displayed IBA degree and occasional (selective) use of the expression 'Kia Scene hai' are in stark contrast to…well, everybody else I know here.
So anyway, as I think of what to write about my transition from Technically American-but-Really-Just-Pakistani to plain old Pakistani-American, so many things rush to mind that my mind is rapidly going blank (a predicament I’m commonly inflicted with). Let me just pick at random.
I still refer to that neat row house in Askari 4 that I left in October when I say the word Home and Missing in the same sentence - but 'gher' now is our Maryland condo which I can’t wait to reach every evening when standing outside the Metro Station, waiting to cross the road. For all the jokes my boss, Travis, makes to me about my being too suspiciously well-adjusted in the American society for him to believe that I didn’t just land here less than a year ago, I still might pronounce words like Thirty like...well, like a Pakistani would pronounce. And having lived in the dusty, smoky desert of Karachi has given me what can only be called a perverse sensitivity to trees, cleaner air and prolonged air-conditioning. Henceforth, I am wheezing and sneezing as I write and have been for the past several months.
Of course, there are more thought provoking consequences to migration. It’s surprising how little effort it really takes for a person to readjust, make daily compromises and adapt to new situations if the person isn’t change-averse and just lets nature take its course. It definitely makes the transition much easier if the person has been brought up in an environment more connected to the rest of the world. Being city-educated and media savvy helps undeniably. But still, here’s my theory: Post-migration happiness is directly proportional to pre-migration dissatisfaction with your previous environment in one way or another. Factors of influence this equation include one’s perception of personal growth and success in previous environment, personal relationships, and in some cases, the highly significant phenomenon of Domestic Help. You have no idea how large a factor that is in determining Pakistani post-migration happiness for members of my gender *grin*.
But forget philosophizing. The reason for mentioning the adaptability of the human nature is to counter the myth that for someone born and bred in a wildly different and restrictive culture like Pakistan’s, it is hard to adapt well to the freedom-loving American culture. It’s actually a little uncomfortable to see how fast the un-learning process is for cultural notions and traditions that took years and years of instilling and breeding. Unless you live in desi paradises like Edison (NJ) or Sugarland (Houston), holding on to what are now seemingly-archaic notions such as shunning anyone who drinks alcohol or half-naked women (and men depending on your location) seem so, so very hard.
And yet some people do hold on. For all those who succumb to the temptation of non-halal beef and chicken, there are still those who don’t. How do they do it? Perhaps because I am no longer surrounded by parents who would serve as stern reminders, and have too much resting on my own free will, I feel it harder to not succumb to what I consider lesser vices. I don’t drink, for instance, but I wouldn’t avoid someone drinking anymore. I always cook Halal meat in my own home, but every now and then I’d eat chicken or beef outside. I still pray as regularly as I used to and try to do good in all the ways I tried to back in Pakistan, but occasionally, I would wear the sleeves shorter than I would ever have worn just a year ago (because I feel nobody seems to notice/care/remotely get turned on by my arms here).
And it’s happened so fast, my un-learning, that it bothers me. On the other hand, I feel more responsible for my actions and can’t blame my parents or environment anymore for the person I am. I believe we all grow as individuals all our lives – not just in ‘those formative years’. We reinvent ourselves again and again based on our experiences so I don’t think this person I am today, is the person I am going to be for the rest of my life. But I do think that being in a less restrictive society is a good start for the person that I’m going to be. Why? Because I can finally challenge myself, with this lack of cultural and traditional restrictions and act on my free will. And this I can do while taking into account the values that have been instilled into me, weighing them, analyzing them as I have never had to before for lack of stimulus or need, and then embrace them as I grow. Perhaps it may mean discarding some of them along the way, but it will also mean maintaining the rest not because I have to, but because I want to.
And that realization, I think, is the best part about my transition; the moral of this story of immigration.
I didn't have to go through the usual hassles of visa because about 17 years ago, I had become a US Citizen courtesy of my father, who has been an American citizen since the eighties but chooses to live in Karachi. So it's ironic that among all the 'real' American citizens who've either lived here all or at least a greater part of their lives, here I am, with my American passport but Pakistani National ID. My 22 years of Karachi-based education, my proudly displayed IBA degree and occasional (selective) use of the expression 'Kia Scene hai' are in stark contrast to…well, everybody else I know here.
So anyway, as I think of what to write about my transition from Technically American-but-Really-Just-Pakistani to plain old Pakistani-American, so many things rush to mind that my mind is rapidly going blank (a predicament I’m commonly inflicted with). Let me just pick at random.
I still refer to that neat row house in Askari 4 that I left in October when I say the word Home and Missing in the same sentence - but 'gher' now is our Maryland condo which I can’t wait to reach every evening when standing outside the Metro Station, waiting to cross the road. For all the jokes my boss, Travis, makes to me about my being too suspiciously well-adjusted in the American society for him to believe that I didn’t just land here less than a year ago, I still might pronounce words like Thirty like...well, like a Pakistani would pronounce. And having lived in the dusty, smoky desert of Karachi has given me what can only be called a perverse sensitivity to trees, cleaner air and prolonged air-conditioning. Henceforth, I am wheezing and sneezing as I write and have been for the past several months.
Of course, there are more thought provoking consequences to migration. It’s surprising how little effort it really takes for a person to readjust, make daily compromises and adapt to new situations if the person isn’t change-averse and just lets nature take its course. It definitely makes the transition much easier if the person has been brought up in an environment more connected to the rest of the world. Being city-educated and media savvy helps undeniably. But still, here’s my theory: Post-migration happiness is directly proportional to pre-migration dissatisfaction with your previous environment in one way or another. Factors of influence this equation include one’s perception of personal growth and success in previous environment, personal relationships, and in some cases, the highly significant phenomenon of Domestic Help. You have no idea how large a factor that is in determining Pakistani post-migration happiness for members of my gender *grin*.
But forget philosophizing. The reason for mentioning the adaptability of the human nature is to counter the myth that for someone born and bred in a wildly different and restrictive culture like Pakistan’s, it is hard to adapt well to the freedom-loving American culture. It’s actually a little uncomfortable to see how fast the un-learning process is for cultural notions and traditions that took years and years of instilling and breeding. Unless you live in desi paradises like Edison (NJ) or Sugarland (Houston), holding on to what are now seemingly-archaic notions such as shunning anyone who drinks alcohol or half-naked women (and men depending on your location) seem so, so very hard.
And yet some people do hold on. For all those who succumb to the temptation of non-halal beef and chicken, there are still those who don’t. How do they do it? Perhaps because I am no longer surrounded by parents who would serve as stern reminders, and have too much resting on my own free will, I feel it harder to not succumb to what I consider lesser vices. I don’t drink, for instance, but I wouldn’t avoid someone drinking anymore. I always cook Halal meat in my own home, but every now and then I’d eat chicken or beef outside. I still pray as regularly as I used to and try to do good in all the ways I tried to back in Pakistan, but occasionally, I would wear the sleeves shorter than I would ever have worn just a year ago (because I feel nobody seems to notice/care/remotely get turned on by my arms here).
And it’s happened so fast, my un-learning, that it bothers me. On the other hand, I feel more responsible for my actions and can’t blame my parents or environment anymore for the person I am. I believe we all grow as individuals all our lives – not just in ‘those formative years’. We reinvent ourselves again and again based on our experiences so I don’t think this person I am today, is the person I am going to be for the rest of my life. But I do think that being in a less restrictive society is a good start for the person that I’m going to be. Why? Because I can finally challenge myself, with this lack of cultural and traditional restrictions and act on my free will. And this I can do while taking into account the values that have been instilled into me, weighing them, analyzing them as I have never had to before for lack of stimulus or need, and then embrace them as I grow. Perhaps it may mean discarding some of them along the way, but it will also mean maintaining the rest not because I have to, but because I want to.
And that realization, I think, is the best part about my transition; the moral of this story of immigration.
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