1) Did you plan to try to keep up your american traditions and celebrate things like Thanksgiving? If so, did you continue to keep up the traditions once living there or is it something that has eventually just fizzled out over time? I got here on Nov 11th last year, so I was somewhat determined to keep up a Thanksgiving celebration. Hubby and I went to Hard Rock (if anyone is considering that, get there EARLY...when we were leaving the line was outrageous!) and while it was nice having pumpkin pie, it wasn't the same.
However, I had conveniently forgotten that it hadn't "been the same" for ages really. I guess when you have something taken away, it suddenly gains in importance...kind of like how much more patriotic I feel now that I no longer live in the US!
My Mom of course had to remind me that I really never even liked Thanksgiving after about the age of 15, when I unfortunately started developing a now decades-long battle with one eating disorder or another. Ugh. Plus, becoming a vegetarian meant I was always a pain to cook for and I always felt I was putting people out.
So for me, maybe no Thanksgiving will be a good thing. I'm not quite sure (and sorry for the TMI).
Christmas was VERY British, on the other hand, but I enjoyed it thoroughly...and I have the pics of me and my silly paper crown thingy to prove it!
2) How often did you plan to call and keep in contact with family and friends back home and how often do you actually do it now that you're there?I have found that:
1. If I didn't call them, I would NEVER talk to my friends or family. So I make an effort about once a month. Mom is somewhat better about it, but I would still say that I make the majority of the contact.
2. Thank god for e-mail.
3. I don't keep in touch nearly as much as I thought I would, and sometimes I worry about it, but that is silly. You also can't take it personally when you don't hear from people...work, kids, spouses and just life in general come into play and if they're busy, it's no slight on you. You do the best you can. Remember that you matter to them, and they matter to you, and you can pretty much pick up where you left off if they are true friends (and family).
3) When you were moving did any of your friends and family say they wanted to come visit you? If any did show interest, have they actually visited? A few have said they'd like to come out, but I don't know if I see it happening. My single friends are probably most likely to do so. Mom has already told me that she would rather just give me the money to come there and has NO desire whatsoever to come out here. It's very odd, since she was the one who started me on the path to being an Anglophile to begin with! But she hates flying and has already traveled through Europe, so I think she's pretty much set in her ways.
What IS funny, however, is the people I HAVE seen out here have been friends of friends who heard I lived in London and wanted a tour guide. I've put up plenty of strangers...but no one I knew from home!