
Whenever you make a new trip, you may notice some unique customs and traditions that feel a lot of differences at home. Redditor Buttplugform asked, “What’s something from another culture that I wish they could raise more?” Here are some traditions from abroad that people like to see in the United States.
1.
“From South Korea, the small buttons on the kitchen tables. When you want to put the point of the guarantee’s note. It refers to them to come to your table. They come to your table.
2.
“Spanish Sista’s culture honestly changed my life when I lived abroad. I made a right rest in the middle of the day.
3.
“I wish it was normal for children to learn a second language. The only bilingual person in our country is those who grow up in bilingual homes or have made a exchange program (and that only if the parents are even at the priority of their work).
—Cerre-Condition434
4.
“In Peru, everyone stays sitting when the plane lands, then the aviation servants return several rows at the same time and indicate the section to stop and take their bags and leave the plane.
5.
“Alymansratten, a Swedish principle and has been translated into freedom of departure. Take care of the environment, leave the way you find and go anywhere you like without worrying about the occupation of private property.
6.
“I love Mauri’s tradition, which takes two weeks after someone passes, so you actually devote time to processing your sorrow.
—Tinylittlepanda
7.
“The culture of hygiene in Japan is more than just hygiene at home. Students clean classes after classes, and Japanese sports fans clean the stadium after the games.
8.
“What I liked to spend time in France was the culture of an hour during lunch to go to the kitchen and actually eat a good meal and social time together.
9.
“Sunday’s German law is a quiet time. I’d like to have only Sundays that are not full of blueware leaves, drillings, or rotating engines.
—fun_anybody6745
10
“Feca. ((Fe-Kah). It’s the Scandinavian custom on a brown vacation with sweets at work.
11
“I visited Portugs while I was pregnant with my daughter, and I learned that there are many pregnancy privileges that do not exist in the United States.
12.
“In Sweden, parents receive 480 days of parental leave, which shares equally between parents. The only parents receive all. In addition to 90 days (for each parents) can be transferred between parents (or for someone else) as they are.
—VivaldiBot
13
“When I was in South Korea, sick people were always wearing masks. I remember thinking about how much this custom was considered.
14.
“I wish we had a more colorful wedding in India against all the terrible and white marriages I went there in North America. I tried to wear people, and it wasn’t just working.
15.
“In Australia, the concept of ‘long dinner’ is the place where people have a peaceful meal to communicate and enjoy each other’s society.
—Serenestarlet
16
“The widespread use of inscriptions. I can count the number of public toilets used in the United States with a handful of bids.
17.
“Four weeks of compulsory rest. As an American living in Germany, it is unbelievable.
18
“I went to Japan, and God, there are very small ease that I wish there was in the United States — Think: Semise toilet palace with the sound of running water so no one hears you that you use the bathroom, amazing general transit, selling devices everywhere.
19
“I am Mexico, and I believe that if we all celebrate the Day of the Dead, people will have a much healthier way to die, so life.
20.
“Stowed under infrastructure for cycling. Cycling in Amsterdam and Copenhagen is a completely different experience from cycling anywhere in the states. This is because it is scripted to create a bicycle transmission form. They have a bicycle, and the people are rent to visit the bicycles in the cities.
do you have something to add? A custom or norm that you have noticed when traveling in another country that improves American life? Tell us in the comments on this unnamed form.