
Originally Posted by
billl
I am an American (U.S. citizen). I grew up in a military family and my best friends were often minorities when I was young (although our military-kid culture was distinct from any "ethnic" or minority culture). After leaving home, I was a typical suburban american young person, living in an area that was predominately Black (I am White), but with friends that were mostly White (although some among my closest friends were not White). There was plenty of healthy interaction between cultures and races of course (especially in the workplace, where I worked for and made friends with people from various different backgrounds), but I remember that friendships were not always so well-mixed--not so much out of animosity, as out of shared experience/cultural comfort, or something like that.
Eventually, I found work that had me involved with people from a very wide range of countries, cultures, races, religions, etc. I have taken part in discussion with people from many cultures, and as a result, I find that I am often in a different cultural mindset from people around me. But really, I am not so outgoing at all (outside of the workplace), so I think that the cultural issues usually end up meaning less to me than they would to a person that was more focussed on activities in their broader community.
I spent 5 years living in Japan, in a culture that was, to begin with, entirely unfamiliar to me, and I made some friends there, but basically learned little more than how to play the role of an outsider (gaijin) in that culture. My Japanese never progressed beyond functional (e.g. in shopping contexts), or just suitable for basic chatting with friends that had become familiar with my quirks and limitations.
Now, I live in Texas, in a majority Hispanic neighborhood, and Spanish is spoken with about the same frequency as English here. My Spanish is MUCH better than my Japanese, but I am still thrown a bit off-balance when I am suddenly immersed in Spanish conversation (not even a monthly occurrence, since I am usually recognized as non-Mexican). It can be uncomfortable when it happens, but thrilling too!
To specifically address pop-cultural contexts, I should finally admit that I love music from many different countries, and some foreign films, but--on the whole--my appreciation for the arts, TV, etc. is pretty much just English language stuff (with some Spanish-language and Japanese music, TV etc., too).