Tag: australia in america

  • This Week in America — A Kentucky Weekend: Dance, Derby & the Moments You Don’t Plan

    This Week in America — A Kentucky Weekend: Dance, Derby & the Moments You Don’t Plan

    We travelled to Louisville this week for a dance competition.

    That was the plan, at least.

    But I’ve noticed something about these weekends.

    They rarely stay as simple as the reason you go.


    The Drive In — When a City Takes Over

    We arrived just before the lead-up to the Kentucky Derby.

    And the city already felt like it was gearing up.

    Traffic backed up everywhere.
    Police on the roads.
    That quiet sense that something big was about to happen.

    We were still twenty minutes out and:

    • the GPS kept changing
    • the girls were asking how much longer every six minutes
    • Nikki had moved into that calm voice that means she’s not calm
    • and I was confidently choosing alternate routes despite having no idea where I was going

    Which, as a husband and father, is one of the more pointless confidence moves available.



    When a Place Has Its Own Identity

    We were there for dance.

    Louisville was there for Louisville.

    And I liked that.

    America does this well.

    When something matters locally, it doesn’t stay contained.
    It spills into the streets.

    You feel it—even if you’re not part of it.


    The Fort Knox Moment

    Driving through, we saw signs for Fort Knox.

    For most people here, that’s just another exit.

    For me growing up in Australia, it was one of those names that felt almost mythical—
    like Hollywood or Wall Street.

    Seeing it casually written on a highway sign made me laugh.

    Only in America does a dance weekend casually involve Fort Knox.



    A City with Weight

    Then there were the bridges over the Ohio River.

    I’ve always liked bridges.

    They make a place feel like it matters.

    Louisville has that solid feel to it—
    river, steel, history.

    It feels like a place shaped by doing things, not just talking about them.



    Owning Greatness

    The Muhammad Ali murals stood out straight away.

    Louisville doesn’t hide who came from there.

    It claims him.

    And I respect that.

    Australia can be a bit different—we admire people, but we also like bringing them back down to earth.

    America seems more comfortable simply saying:

    “This person was great.”

    There’s something refreshing in that.



    A Side Trip with Brianna

    While Georgia was tied up with competition, Brianna and I explored downtown.

    Those little side moments with your kids matter more as you get older.

    Less about where you are.
    More about being there together.


    Turning Culture Into Experience

    We stopped at the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory.

    And it’s a very American idea.

    Take something simple—like a baseball bat—
    and turn it into something you can walk through.

    Even without growing up with baseball, I enjoyed it.



    College Sport — Still Hard to Process

    The scale of college sport still surprises me.

    Massive stadiums.
    Serious infrastructure.

    Back home, it exists.

    Here, in some places, it feels like something much bigger.


    Bourbon and Unexpected Conversations

    That night, I ended up at the hotel bar with another dance dad.

    And got an unexpected introduction to Kentucky bourbon.

    Not casually.

    Properly.

    I nodded through most of it, adding expert commentary like:

    “Yeah… that’s smooth.”

    Completely useless.

    Still appreciated.


    What I Noticed About People

    People here are generous with what they love.

    No gatekeeping.

    Just:

    “Here, try this.”
    “Let me tell you why this one matters.”

    That stays with you.


    The Moment That Actually Mattered

    But the real highlight was Georgia.

    She danced her best solo of the year.

    And placed seventh out of twenty.


    Parents see what sits behind a performance.

    The practice.
    The frustration.
    The doubt.

    And then one day, it clicks.

    Fifteen seconds in, I knew.

    She looked calm.
    Settled.
    Like herself.

    That’s the moment.


    Dance Competitions in America


    Not Trying to Be Someone Else

    Georgia dances lyrical.

    Slower. More controlled. More expressive.

    Often up against louder, faster routines.

    So placing felt even better.

    She wasn’t trying to be someone else.


    Cracker Barrel and a Strange Thought

    On the way home, we stopped at Cracker Barrel.

    Sitting on the porch, something crossed my mind.

    This feels like home.



    Which is a strange thought for someone born in Australia.

    But maybe home changes.

    Maybe it grows.


    Of Course We Stopped at Buc-ee’s

    And naturally, we stopped at Buc-ee’s.

    Because no road trip here feels complete without it.


    You can fuel the car, buy snacks, grab merchandise…

    …and somehow leave with more than you planned.

    Every time.


    Closing Reflection

    We went for dance.

    But we came home with more.

    That’s something I keep noticing about life here.

    You head somewhere for one reason…

    …and the place adds its own chapters.

    A conversation.
    A moment.
    A feeling you didn’t expect.

    That’s usually how the best weekends happen.

    Not through grand plans.

    Just ordinary things unfolding well.


    For more reflections like this, tune in to the weekly podcast.


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  • Representing Australia in Tennessee Felt Like Home

    Representing Australia in Tennessee Felt Like Home

    Some weeks don’t arrive with one big headline.

    They come as a collection of smaller moments. Things that seem ordinary while they’re happening, then linger afterward. A conversation here. A surprise there. Something familiar appearing in an unexpected place.

    That was this week for me.

    Not dramatic. Not life-changing.

    Just quietly revealing what it actually feels like to live in America as an Australian.


    The School Night That Brought Australia to Tennessee

    Recently, Georgia and I took part in her school’s very first international night.

    Around fifteen countries were represented. Booths from places like Uzbekistan, Samoa, Guatemala, India… and there we were for Australia.

    It felt a little surreal standing in a Tennessee school gym representing home.

    What We Brought to the Australian Booth

    We tried to keep it properly Australian:

    • Sausage rolls
    • Vegemite sandwiches
    • Fairy bread
    • Tim Tams
    • Violet Crumble

    Amazon has a great assortment of Aussie items these days in the US:

    Each child had a small passport and moved from country to country collecting stamps.

    It was a simple idea, but a brilliant one.

    They were learning about the world without it feeling like learning.

    That’s usually when education works best.


    Tim Tams Were the Stars of the Night

    The hall started off quiet.

    Then, almost without warning, it filled up.

    Families everywhere. Kids racing around with passports. Parents chatting. Music and movement in every direction.

    We ran out of food halfway through, which I took as a fairly strong sign we’d done alright.

    And yes — the Tim Tams disappeared at alarming speed.

    I may need to contact Arnott’s next year regarding sponsorship opportunities.


    Talking About Australia in the Middle of Tennessee

    What I enjoyed most wasn’t the food.

    It was simply standing there and talking about Australia.

    Some people had visited.
    Many wanted to go.
    Some wanted to discuss cricket.

    And that always catches me off guard a bit.

    You don’t expect to be having a cricket conversation in Tennessee.

    Yet there I was.

    That’s one of the lovely things about living overseas — home appears in strange places.


    The Unexpected Samoan Moment

    At one point I ended up speaking some Samoan with the neighbouring booth.

    That took me back instantly to the years I lived there.

    Funny how language works like that.

    You can go years without using something… then suddenly it returns as if it had only been waiting quietly in the corner.

    They were so excited they called their father over because there was “this guy here” who had lived there and could speak the language.

    For a moment, Tennessee disappeared.

    I was somewhere else entirely.


    Identity Carries Weight

    Our booth sat next to Belgium.

    The couple running it weren’t actually Belgian.

    She was from Belarus, but with everything happening in the world, she didn’t feel comfortable representing that nationality publicly right now.

    So they chose Belgium.

    That stayed with me.

    Because where you’re from can carry more emotional weight than people realise. Sometimes pride. Sometimes pain. Even complexity.

    Identity isn’t always simple.


    Bluey, Bingo and Vegemite Reactions

    Georgia disappeared quickly once her friends arrived, which felt extremely on-brand for a child whose father was left doing passport duties for hundreds of children.

    We also had Bluey and Bingo there.

    That may have been the most popular part of the entire booth.

    And surprisingly, plenty of people liked the Vegemite.

    Though not everyone.

    There were still a few faces that suggested immediate regret, followed by a quiet search for the nearest bin.


    What It Felt Like

    I walked away thinking how much I enjoyed representing Australia.

    Not just missing it.

    Not just talking about it.

    But sharing it.

    There’s something grounding about that when you live overseas.


    Georgia’s Sleepover and a New Normal

    Not long after that, Georgia had a sleepover.

    There was:

    • an American girl
    • a Polish girl
    • a Spanish girl
    • and our Aussie girl

    All just hanging out together as if it were the most normal thing in the world.

    Because to them, it is.

    No labels. No special meaning.

    Just friends.

    When I was growing up in Australia, you noticed where people were from more. Not negatively — it was simply more visible.

    For this generation, diversity often isn’t something they comment on.

    They’re just growing up inside it.

    And there’s something genuinely beautiful about that.


    Easter in America Still Feels Different

    Another reminder of cultural difference came through Easter.

    Back home in Australia, Easter often feels like the country collectively slows down.

    Good Friday. Easter Monday. Shops closed. A pause in rhythm.

    Here in America, much of life keeps moving.

    Banks open. Businesses open. Things rolling on.

    For a place where faith can be very visible publicly, that contrast still feels interesting to me.

    Sometimes what stands out most in another country is what doesn’t happen.


    The Ice-in-Drinks Theory

    A podcast listener messaged me after I mentioned how much ice Americans use in drinks.

    They said:

    “It’s basically a scam.”

    And once that idea enters your mind, it’s hard to ignore.

    You take a few sips. Look down.

    And realise you’re mostly holding frozen optimism.


    The America You See vs The America You Live

    People back home sometimes ask how we can live here.

    Because the America shown in the news can feel intense, loud and relentless.

    But day-to-day life is mostly school runs, groceries, dance classes, errands, dinner, routines.

    Normal life.

    That’s probably the hardest thing to explain from a distance.

    Not that difficult things never happen.

    Just that everyday life rarely looks like headlines.


    Final Thought

    Living overseas has taught me that countries are never fully understood through headlines, stereotypes, or internet arguments.

    They’re understood through ordinary moments.

    School nights. Snack tables. Children laughing. Unexpected conversations. Shared routines.

    Quiet things.

    And often, those quiet things mean the most.


    Related Reads

    Why Are Americans So Polite? An Australian Explains the Cultural Difference
    Why American Goodbyes Feel Faster Than Australian Goodbyes


    Thanks for reading. Hoo roo maties.