• Chocks Away
  • Cultivate Your Business
  • Opportunity to Learn Spanish in Spain
  • Distressed Sales
  • Rules of Expat Life
  • Why Expats Struggle
  • Zero deposits and 100% mortgages
  • Spanish Cafezine
  • If you read ONE book
  • Bank Sales
  • Aloe Vera
  • Spanish Lotteries
  • Bargains, discounts and more
  • Learn Spanish in Spain – A country with enriched beauty
  • Legal Weddings
  • Vacancies
  • 4 Ways to Maximise Learning Spanish Outside the Classroom
  • An Intensive Spanish Course
  • Telecom Services
  • Making Friends
  • Mortgage Service Group
  • EXPAT FINANCIAL PLANNING
  • How To Vote
  • Friendly Spanish
  • The Solution To Spain’s Economic Crisis
  • The Spanish Advantage
  • Learn Spanish in London
  • Virtual Exhibition
  • Going Native
  • Spain Made Easy
  • Utility Companies
  • Books 4 Spain
  • Are You Driving Legally?
  • Free eBook on Buying a Property and Living in Spain
  • Health service in Spain
  • Residencia
  • Education
  • Banking
  • Taxes and money matters
  • Books to Read
  • You and the car
  • Rose & Clavel
  • Help and Support
  • The telephone
  • TACKLING CRIME TOGETHER
  • The Media
  • Dealing with Bureaucracy
  • Starting a Business
  • Consuls
  • Education in Spain – a Parent’s Personal Experience
  • Snagging horror stories
  • InspectaHomeSpain Survey of New Build Properties
  • Completing a new property purchase
  • The Spanish language
  • Ten Reasons For Studying Spanish in Spain
  • Top tips for language learning – by a ‘mature’ expat
  • Spanishexperto
  • Spanishexperto – A guide to learning Spanish – Part 1
  • Lost in Translation?
  • First Steps
  • On Being Bilingual
  • Sink or Swim – natural second language acquisition
  • Learning Spanish on DVD
  • Learning Spanish – Mental Preparation (A Guide to Learning Spanish)
  • Learning Spanish – Different Approaches
  • Learning Spanish – What’s The Best Way to Learn Spanish Verb Formations?
  • Learning Spanish – Learning The Basics
  • First Encounters in Mexico
  • Essential Elements of Spanish Grammar and Verb Tables
  • Learning Spanish Through Cultural Immersion
  • The Benefits of Attending Spanish Classes Instead of Self Study
  • Spanish Grammar with a Personal Tutor
  • Self Employment
  • Who Is REALLY looking after your interests in Spain?
  • The ‘Homestay’ Experience – Living with a Local Family
  • Learning Spanish
  • Anti-Tobacco Law
  • Getting Married in Spain
  • www.interhigh.co.uk
  • Selling a Property in Spain
  • A GUIDE TO BUYING PROPERTY IN SPAIN
  • Completing a Property Purchase
  • Some Basic Advice
  • The Russians
  • Divorce Options for Expats in Spain
  • A Guide to Investing Offshore
  • Spanish Food and Drink
  • The Basics of Spanish Cookery
  • Handing Back the Keys
  • Sublime Lifestyle
  • When ICE and AA could save your life
  • Reduce your Mortgage
  • Free legal Advice
  • English and Spanish Television on the Costa Blanca
  • Improve your health and your bank balance!
  • Spain and Gibraltar Weddings
  • Local Faces - people in your area
    Currency Direct
    PQI
    UK Television in Spain
    This is Spain Exhibition
    Weight Loss
    Free satellite television in Spain
    Automviles Crespo, S.A.
    Cronin Languages
    Local Faces - people in your area
    Stop Smoking

    Rules of Expat Life

    (With apologies to /acknowledgements to a certain Mr W Gates)

    I recently gave a speech about 11 things they did not and will not teach would-be expats. I talked about how feel-good, commission-hungry estate agents created a generation of expats with no concept of reality and how this “dream” set them up for failure in the real Spain. I guess for Spain I could say most countries where expats dream to live.

    Rule 1: Expat life is not fair – get used to it!

    Rule 2 : Expats and Spaniards alike will not care about your previous life. They will expect you to accomplish something in expatshire BEFORE you are respected. Able seamen become admirals, DIY enthusiasts become Master Builders. Shelf-stackers become supermarket magnates. Nobody cares – get used to it. They will expect you to pay your round.

    Rule 3 : You will NOT make 60,000 euros a year as you come straight off the plane. You won’t be employed and you won’t get a contract until you earn both.

    Rule 4 : If you think the UK is tough, wait till you try Spain.

    Rule 5 : Villa cleaning is not beneath your dignity. A previous generation of expats had a different word for villa cleaning; they called it opportunity.

    Rule 6: If you mess up, it’s not your neighbours’ fault, so don’t whine about your mistakes, learn from them.

    Rule 7: Before you arrived, the traffic police weren’t as tough as they are now. They got that way from dealing with expats with no paperwork, no insurance, no ITV and listening to you bang on about how you thought you were in the right. So before you abuse another officer to his face or on a forum, try getting your UK car registered here. Just because you have not done it for 7 years does not make it legal.

    Rule 8: The UK may have done away with winners and losers, but Spain HAS NOT. In the UK, they have a welfare state that supports people when they fall. They’ll give to you as MANY TIMES as you want to – housing benefit, disability allowances, single-parent allowances, job-seeker allowances, free dental care and a NHS service that has got itself on its knees with more administrators than surgeons. This doesn’t bear the slightest resemblance to ANYTHING in Spain.

    Rule 9: Expat life is not divided into seasons. You don’t get summers off from paying bills and very few landlords or mortgage lenders are interested in helping you “FIND YOURSELF IN SPAIN”.
    Do that on your own time. Do that with your own money.

    Rule 10: Television is NOT real life. In real life people actually have to leave the bar and go to look for work. The prices on “A Place in the Sun” are pre the introdcution of the euro ….and it rains!

    Rule 11: Be nice to Spaniards. Chances are you’ll end up needing one to help you. LEARN SPANISH……………………………………………you will not integrate and prosper with just English.

    5 Comments »

    1. Fantastic good advice the world over
      Love it.
      Live by it

      Comment by Drewe — August 31, 2011 @ 8:20 am

    2. Great list – On first thoughts I’d add these two

      i) Learn day-to-day etiquette, especially saying “Hola” when you enter a bar or shop. You’ll find you mysteriously start to get better service..

      ii) Keep up-to-date with public holidays and (especially) associated “puentes”. They can seriously hinder you from getting things done, and may affect your income for that week.

      Comment by DBMarcos — August 31, 2011 @ 7:35 pm

    3. Steve, the rules are so right. You put nothing in, you don’t deserve to gain … anything. But if you put effort in, you are rewarded in Spain. Respect is earned in Spain and the Spanish are a truly open cultured people. The UK can never hope to have what Spain has … respect is the large word that the UK can’t and won’t learn any more – Spain has it in bucket loads.
      I love Spain, I adore the Spanish way of life, their culture their people and their values. You are right – learn Spanish, the world opens up for you. Spanish people love a tryer. Try to use our language (that’s Spanish guys – we live here, so this is now “our” language.

      Comment by Sarah Hawes — September 1, 2011 @ 8:20 am

    4. You should never move to a place where you can’t walk to get a cup of coffee.

      Comment by Adrian — September 1, 2011 @ 8:04 pm

    5. That is the greatest truism of expat life! Spot on the button.

      Comment by admin — September 1, 2011 @ 8:42 pm

    RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

    Leave a comment

    Local Faces - people in your area
    Local Faces - people in your area
    Local Faces - people in your area
    Torrevieja.co.uk
    Serv2
    Local Faces - people in your area
    Simon Ellinas
    MadridMan
    PhotoVideo
    Club Torrevieja
    whats on in spain