What America Gets Right, After Living Here for 8 Years

Australian expat in the United States looking thoughtful, representing reflections on American culture after eight years

I’ve lived in America for eight years now.
Long enough to stop reacting.
Long enough to stop constantly comparing.

And long enough to admit something Australians don’t always say out loud:

America does some things extremely well.

That might sound obvious. But if you’ve ever lived overseas, you’ll know it’s not always where your mind goes first.


Living Overseas Changes the Way You See Culture

When you first move to another country, everything feels different.

You compare constantly.
Everything gets measured against home.
You notice what’s missing.
What feels louder.
What doesn’t sit quite right.

And if you’re not careful, that becomes your whole lens.

Living overseas changes how you see things — not just the place you’re in, but where you came from as well. I wrote more about that shift here. -> An Aussie Expat’s Take on Culture Shock, Identity & Life in America

You become the person who only sees what’s wrong.

But over time, something shifts.

The comparison softens.
You stop reacting.
You start observing.

And when that happens, you begin to notice something else:

Strength.

Not surface-level clichés.
Not patriotic slogans.

But deeper, structural strengths—
the kinds of things you only recognise when you’ve lived inside a culture long enough to stop defending your own.

After eight years in the United States, here are four things I’ve come to genuinely respect.


1. Confidence and Self-Promotion

This is the one that stretched me the most personally.

Because I didn’t grow up in a culture that rewards self-declaration.

In Australia, humility is social currency.

  • If you do well, you downplay it
  • If someone compliments you, you deflect it
  • If you’re capable, you wait to be noticed

There’s a natural instinct toward understatement. Tall poppy syndrome is part of that wiring.

So when I arrived in America, the confidence felt… confronting.

People spoke clearly about what they were good at.
They outlined their experience without apology.
They applied for roles before they felt fully ready.

At first, I mistook that for ego.

But over time, I realised something important:

Confidence in America isn’t automatically seen as arrogance. It’s seen as clarity.

Take this coffee mug for instance, I had two employees with the same ones!

It’s a subtle shift, but once you notice it, you start seeing these differences everywhere — even in something as simple as how we hear each other. -> Why Living Overseas Changes How You Hear Accents

It’s not: “I’m better than you.”
But more like: “This is what I bring.”

And that difference matters.

Especially in a country of over 330 million people, where waiting quietly often means being overlooked.

In Australia, you often wait to be invited forward.
In America, you’re expected to step forward.

That expectation changes behaviour.

I’ve watched people create opportunities simply because they were willing to speak up—not because they had everything figured out, but because they didn’t assume they needed permission to try.

As an introvert, that’s still a stretch for me.

But I’ve come to respect a culture that doesn’t automatically punish visibility.

Because when visibility is normalised,
possibility expands.


2. Customer Service and Hospitality

This one didn’t fully hit me until I went back to Australia for a visit.

We walked into a café in Canberra for breakfast.

The service was fine.
Efficient. Professional. Straightforward.

But something felt… different.

No greeting at the door.
No eye contact on entry.
Proactive warmth was missing.

We ordered. Paid. Sat down.

And it hit me:

I’d gotten used to American hospitality.

I didn’t fully understand it at first, but over time I realised there’s a deeper cultural layer behind that kind of interaction. -> Why Are Americans So Polite? An Australian Explains the Cultural Difference

Especially living in Tennessee, there’s a consistent pattern:

  • You’re acknowledged when you walk in
  • There’s eye contact
  • There’s a greeting—often immediate
  • There’s an effort to make you feel welcome

“How y’all doing today?” isn’t just a phrase—it’s a social signal.

Now, Australians are friendly. No question.

But the timing is different.

  • In Australia, friendliness often unfolds after interaction begins
  • In America, friendliness often starts the interaction

That small difference changes the atmosphere of everyday life.

It lowers social barriers.
Creates ease between strangers.
It makes public spaces feel more open.

And when you live inside that long enough, you stop noticing it—until it’s gone.

Then you realise how much emotional energy proactive warmth actually saves.

It quietly says:

“You’re welcome here.”

And that matters more than we tend to admit.


3. Ambition and Scale Thinking

This is where America really separates itself.

If you’ve ever been to Buc-ee’s, you’ll know exactly what I mean.

The first time I pulled into one, I thought I’d accidentally arrived at an airport.

  • Dozens and dozens of fuel pumps
  • A store the size of a supermarket
  • Walls of snacks (the jerky is a must!)
  • Fresh food counters
  • Merchandise everywhere
  • A beaver mascot somehow tying it all together

It’s almost theatrical in scale.

But it works.

Because it reflects a broader mindset.

In Australia, we tend to build what’s needed:
functional, practical, proportional.

In America, there’s a tendency to ask:

“How far can this go?”

That difference shows up everywhere:

  • Business growth
  • Education systems
  • Sports structures
  • Infrastructure
  • Entrepreneurship

There’s an assumption of expansion.

An expectation that something good should multiply.

Sometimes that creates excess.
Sometimes it creates inefficiency.

But it also creates something powerful:

Momentum.

Australia’s strength is grounded practicality.
America’s strength is expansive ambition.

And when you live inside that mindset, you start to see how many doors it can open.

Because scale doesn’t just grow businesses—
it creates pathways.


4. Encouragement Culture

This might be the most underrated difference of all.

Encouragement in America is visible.

You see this play out most clearly in environments built around performance and participation. -> Dance Competitions in America: When the Show Becomes the Focus
It’s expressed.
It’s often loud.

You see it everywhere:

  • School assemblies
  • Local sports games
  • Dance competitions
  • Community events

Parents cheering.
Teachers praising publicly.
Strangers saying, “You’ve got this.”

At first, the volume surprised me.

It felt big. Almost over the top.

Because in Australia, encouragement exists—but it’s often quieter.

  • “Good on ya”
  • A nod
  • A private comment

In America, encouragement is often public and frequent.

And that has an impact.

When effort is acknowledged openly:

  • Trying becomes normal
  • Failing becomes survivable
  • Risk feels safer

There’s something powerful about growing up in an environment where people regularly say:

“We’re proud of you.”

That reinforcement builds confidence over time—almost by default.

And when you combine:

  • Confidence
  • Hospitality
  • Ambition
  • Encouragement

You get forward movement.

You get people willing to try.
Willing to step up.
Willing to back themselves.

Because culturally, they’ve been taught to.


What Living Between Australia and America Teaches You

Living overseas has taught me something I didn’t expect:

You don’t lose your identity by recognising someone else’s strengths.

You don’t become less Australian by respecting America.

It expands you.

Australia gave me:

  • Humility
  • Directness
  • Perspective

America has given me:

  • Confidence
  • Hospitality
  • Scale
  • Encouragement

And then there’s another layer again.

The time I spent in the Pacific—places like Samoa, Fiji, Tuvalu, and Tonga—that shaped me too.

Not as a comparison.
But as a foundation.

So when people ask me which place I prefer,
it’s not really a question I can answer.

Because both places are home.

And holding all of that at once…

that feels like maturity.

Not competition.
Just clarity.


Final Thought

If there’s one thing living in America has taught me, it’s this:

Every culture has strengths.
You just have to stay long enough to see them.

Hoo roo maties.


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