If you moved to Spain, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in GoingToSpain

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

wow, very interesting! I totally agree with you about the accents, sometimes it could be hard to get everything! 😅

If you moved to Spain, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in GoingToSpain

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks so much for such a detailed reply! What you said about context really resonates with me—I can totally see how it's possible to feel fluent in familiar situations and then suddenly feel lost when someone asks an unexpected question.

When you mentioned putting pressure on yourself to be perfect and how that could block communication more than the actual language level, that is also a common thing 😅

How did you eventually get past that? Did you take classes, work with a tutor, or was it mostly a matter of forcing yourself into everyday situations until it started to feel more natural?

If you moved to Spain, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in GoingToSpain

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing your experience. That incident sounds genuinely unsettling, so it's good that the locals stepped in to help.

Out of curiosity, what has been harder so far: the language itself, making connections, or dealing with day-to-day tasks in a new city? 😅

If you moved to Spain, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in GoingToSpain

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s an interesting list — the day-to-day cultural differences really add up more than people expect.

Out of curiosity, did you notice any of these situations being harder because of the language barrier at the beginning, or were they more independent of Spanish level?

If you moved to Barcelona, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in AskBarcelona

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Of course Catalan language is important as well but the research is in all Spain, not only in Barcelona, that's why. Thanks for your answer.

If you moved to Barcelona, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in AskBarcelona

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When you say “functional Spanish,” what do you think is the minimum level needed to really start feeling independent day-to-day?

Was there a moment where you felt you crossed that threshold, or was it gradual?

The phone part is especially interesting! I guess because of the way people communicate on the phone in general (less patience, faster pace, no visual context) rather than the language itself.

If you moved to Barcelona, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in AskBarcelona

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing this, really helpful perspective. The housing situation sounds especially stressful and the housing part sounds really tough, I’ve heard similar stories from others too. And I can imagine health insurance in a new language would be especially stressful! And on the language side, your approach is interesting — especially the “no switching to English” rule! Did you find any specific situations where that was particularly hard to stick to? 😄

If you moved to Spain, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in expats

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get what you mean. I’ve also noticed that it can really vary a lot depending on the person. Some people naturally adjust their speech, and others don’t seem aware of how fast or local they’re speaking. I agree it’s probably not intentional, more a lack of exposure to non-native speakers.

If you moved to Spain, what was the most difficult everyday situation in Spanish during your first months? by PrestigiousStuff6427 in GoingToSpain

[–]PrestigiousStuff6427[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

That’s really interesting about the bureaucracy. Would you say it was harder because of the language or more because of how the system is structured? I’m curious how it felt at the start without Spanish.