My Immigrant Unpopular Opinions

I have been thinking for months about writing a “masterpost” compiling the good, the bad and the ugly (lol) parts of being an immigrant. After Bad Bunny‘s Super Bowl show, it seems the time has finally arrived.

For context, I was born, raised and settled for 27 years in the capital of Brazil (and I simply LOVE it when Irish people ask the city I’m from and they recognise it’s the capital). My experience “being Brazilian” cannot be compared to those living in other places, because guess what, it’s the fifth biggest country in the world. Sometimes, even Brazilians forget about that and try to make their experiences universal (if your DDD is 11 or 21, yes, I am talking to you).

In the past two years, I learned to love and hate my own country, but I also learned to love and hate the country I am currently living in. Sometimes I feel lonely amongst people because they expect me to perform the stereotypical role of the super loud, fun, and talkative Brazilian girl. You would probably expect this from Europeans or any other “gringos” in general, but the fun-not-so-fun part is… It actually happens amongst Brazilians as well! Which leads us to…

Reverse Cultural Shock

Tá passadah?

As I mentioned before, I’m from the capital of Brazil, Brasilia (which can be confusing for some languages that pronounce “Brasilia” as the name of the country lmao). We are usually seen by people from the other states as “cold” or “insensitive”. Well, it is true that brasilienses (don’t know how to translate demonyms) don’t do small talk (most of them loathe it, including me), have the terrible habit of not greeting people (I do like greeting people, but unfortunately stopped doing that after being ignored a lot of times), and sometimes they even pretend not to see you just that they don’t have to talk to you. Of course, we are still Brazilians, still Latinos, still warmer than 99% of Europeans (graças a Deus!!!!). But when I meet a ~stereotypical carioca~, for example, they usually expect the same warmth and openness that I unfortunately cannot reciprocate, and it ends up being frustrating for both parties. I have also noticed that the Brazilian community here is bound by a shared feeling of constant homesickness that I absolutely cannot relate to. Does it mean I hate my country? Absolutely not!!! I’m proud to have been born there. I love my language, I love how kind and empathetic we are (in general…), but I simply wasn’t happy there.

Neurodivergent struggles

Okay, now you already know that my city made me a weirdo who doesn’t do small talk and doesn’t say “good morning” to people. What could be worse? Being born autistic in this environment where everybody needs to be a social butterfly, where your neighbours party till it’s 5am, where loud motorcycles run everywhere, where saying no is absolutely banned, where setting boundaries to your own family is seen as being rude, where honest communication is not valued because you should always anticipate people’s problems (especially at work!!!), where you MUST hug and kiss people you have never seen before, where your peers will pressure you to engage in the hookup culture, and don’t even get me started on the consumerism culture that we imported from our unofficial colonisers the USA.

Again, that doesn’t mean I hate my country! I’m the broken one, I completely understand why everyone loves it so much. I also love it as a tourist. What I don’t really understand, though, is why some Brazilians move to Europe (I am referring to Europe as a continent because similar behaviour can be observed in other countries, even Portugal, which is obviously culturally similar) if they hate the weather, hate the food, hate the people, hate everything but themselves. They usually stick to the Brazilian bubble, where they only listen to Brazilian music, only eat Brazilian food, only go to Brazilian events, and every Brazilian who does not partake in their negativity cycle is frowned upon. Well, actually, I do. They live a miserable life where every penny must be spent on weekly Ryanair tickets to visit different countries and collect flags on their Instagram bios, even if they step on said country for only a couple of hours. Your first salary must be directed to purchasing the newest iPhone to brag about the “euro purchasing power”, even if you are sharing a flat with other fifteen people, no one needs to know about that. If you are a woman who happens to date a white European man, you must flash him to everyone as your life achievement. Oh, and don’t forget to visit your country every single year to say insensitive things like “I love it when the price of euro rises up, everything gets so cheap to me”, while most of the country lives in poverty, or “I honestly don’t understand why Brazilians spend 60 reais on Nutella biscuits, it’s only 3.50 where I live” (mind you, Nutella biscuits aren’t officially sold in the country and those inflated prices that you see in videos are literal people who bought them abroad to resell because dumb stupid people make sensationalist videos).

Is the grass really greener in the Emerald Isle?

Well, it literally is. Especially when you come from the driest place ever that gave you constant nosebleeds to move to a country that looks like a giant Windows XP landscape. But the romanticising part stops here.

I live in Dublin. I already know what you fuckers are going to say: “Dublin is a shithole!!!! It does not represent Ireland!!!!! People are hostile there but the Irish countryside is completely different!!!!!!!”. Bitch, guess what, the country’s whole population is not even two times bigger than my city’s, not everyone finds happiness being only surrounded by cows and sheep. Some of us actually enjoy getting Vietnamese takeaway on Monday, going to an indie film exhibit on Thursday, and then attending a concert on the weekends without taking a two-hour train. If your lovely tiny village where there is only Penneys and Dunnes Stores to hang out truly makes you happy, kudos to you! God forbid a woman who wants to live her life without being harassed in the streets and has to constantly deal with those “ironic” comments from people who think they are a better flavour of immigrants just because they chose the eremite lifestyle.

Having said that, I feel 100% on my right to complain about the city’s safety without listening to pretentious comments trying to blame the victim like “hurr durr that’s why I don’t go to the city centre”. Brazilian Deliveroo riders are constantly being beaten up by Irish teens. It’s not exclusive to Dublin, mind you; the same thing has happened in Cork and Limerick as well. A Brazilian black woman was insulted by an old lady, and that video went so viral that even my uncle sent me a message to check if I was okay because he was worried about them being racist to me. I won’t list the countless times my husband and I have been verbally or even physically attacked due to “teens with antisocial behaviour” that are basically normalised and seen as “part of the experience of growing up in Ireland”.

Hard to believe, I know, but I actually feel happier here. I feel free from the invasive habits of my Latino family. I feel free from the daily 30ºC (and higher!) temperatures that made me constantly sweaty, moody, and overstimulated. Yes, I do prefer 0ºC and the constant rains, thank you. I feel free from a judgmental society that sees my preppy-meets-dark-academia outfits as weird or my midi skirts as prudish. As you can imagine, the very same outfits here receive countless praises and approval. Those who have only moved abroad to earn more money will never understand me. I cannot feel nostalgic about a place that made me feel inadequate my whole life. Just because I’m an immigrant, that doesn’t mean that every single conversation starter has to be “oh, you must miss a lot about your country”, it actually makes me uncomfortable because then I have to pretend I do.

At this point, if you are Brazilian like me, you must think I’m a pick-me girl with a vira-lata complex, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. I love my country, love my people, but I also think we must have accountability for our own toxic behaviour. I started this post with Bad Bunny, and the reason for that is: for many years, Brazilians would not see themselves as Latinos. It was only here, after meeting some Chileans, Mexicans, Argentinians, and Bolivians, that I became aware of our ridiculous “main character syndrome” towards our brothers and sisters. I witnessed the most embarrassing moment when a Brazilian classmate said, in front of the whole Latino class, that “only Brazilian food is real food, because it has rice and beans”, even citing “Chinese food and Mexican food” as “not real food”. Chinese food has rice and Mexican food has rice and beans.

If that was not clear enough, I am not saying one country is better or worse than another. Actually, if you read this the right way, you have probably guessed that none of them feels “the right place” to me. I think that “right place” does not even exist, to be honest. Hate those people who list one hundred minorities to gather pity, but frankly speaking, as a POC neurodivergent overweight woman (won’t say bisexual because I’m in a hetero relationship that gives me a certain amount of privilege), in the ripe year of 2026… I would love to live in East Asia, but as a woman wearing the Western XL (it’s not even plus size, imagine if it were), seeing all those Western M women being treated as obese there makes me want to unalive myself.

After that brutally honest rant, I promise the next post will be more positive haha. It’s just that I have always had the habit of speaking my mind on the countless blogs I have had. This one has been different, though. I managed to get views and comments, which has never happened before, and this is great!!!!!! I love and appreciate every single one of you who take the time to read and comment on my silly stuff. But that also made me a bit self-conscious about the things I post… I don’t want to sound negative or unwelcoming to anyone. Part of that has to do with the younger audience I have attracted with my “cutesy aesthetics”. If that’s your first experience with the “indie web”, I don’t want to be the sad depressed bitch that kills your vibe. I promise I feel well, I am just a chronic overthinker haha.

Thank you again for everything. See you later!


Your first comment will be submitted to approval due to the influx of spam. Sorry!

9 thoughts on “My Immigrant Unpopular Opinions

  1. hi! really interesting and i relate a lot to what you write even though i’ve never been outside the country lol. and please don’t apologise for writing something “negative”, we can’t be positive all the time haha

    i relate as a brazilian who has always wished to go abroad. when i was younger, i felt the same way, i thought brazilian culture was hostile to autistic people like me and i needed to escape somewhere where people were “more like me”, like northern europe, i thought. and i hate the heat!

    nowadays, i feel a bit more aprehensive about it. i can’t paint cultures in such broad strokes, especially mine. brazil has plenty of annoyances of course, but i have learned to live here. maybe it’s not the finnish-level “stay away from me” paradise i made up in my head, but i have people who understand me. i can make myself understood. i can understand immigrant communities who cling on to their homes too, especially when they face such hostility.

    when i move abroad NO ONE will take my farofa away from me! if i have to pay 50000 euros for farofa I WILL! (ok maybe not)

    but yeah i still hate the heat, though. oh god i wanna move somewhere cold so cold i can wrap myself in 15 layers and become a burrito

    i don’t identify as “latino” either, to be honest. many of my friends don’t either. to me, the label “latino” is an american invention meant to lump all “hispanics” in a convenient little racial category, completely ignoring the differences between all these people or even if they’re hispanic at all. brazilian exceptionalism can be tiring and toxic, but i don’t think it’s exceptionalist to not want our basic linguistic reality to be erased. brazil being a latin-american nation is a fact of course, but i reject the term “latino”.

    that being said, this is my perspective as a brazilian who has never left brazil. i’m not sure about the status of the term abroad. perhaps it’s used as some sort of group survival strategy, i think in the us particularly as the brazilian community is dwarfed by spanish-speaking immigrants so we might need to tag along.

    and yeah, east asia probably isn’t the best choice lol. beyond their insane beauty standards (to be fair korea is even worse in that department) just thinking about all the subtleties of japanese social life gives me a headache

    great blog post, made me think a lot as you can see lol. i am definitely gonna peruse through your writings some more for tonight. mwahaha

    1. Hey Kori!! Thanks for commenting on my post. <3

      Tbh, I have never wanted a "Finnish-level country", that extreme level of social distancing wouldn't work for me either. And you wouldn't have to pay that much for farofa, it's actually easy to find it on Brazilian grocery stores. But of course, you do have to keep in mind it's not going to cost you the same it costs in Brazil, you won't find it in regular supermarkets, and that's my biggest pet peeve with the community: most of them keep saying "the country is shit" because of small things like this farofa example. It's their absolute refusal to absorb ANY other cultures that pisses me off, not their preferrence for Brazilian stuff or hanging out with Brazilians. Dublin is such a multicultural place, I feel blessed to be in this environment where I can try new food or talk to new people from the six continents. This might not apply to ALL Brazilian communities in the world (and I sincerely hope it does not), but that's how it is in Ireland, unfortunately. (I heard from a friend that France is different, thank God lol)

      About the term "Latino", I am very much in favour of using it not as a racial category, because it is not, but as a geographic/cultural descriptor. Meeting other Latinos made me realise how culturally similar we are: most of us have the same educational background, the same TV references, the same family trauma (lol), and so on. And both languages are Latin-based; Haitians also don't speak Spanish, but they can be considered Latinos. Of course, it's not a consensus, just like Brazil.

      Thanks again for passing by, feel free to dig through the older entries :p

  2. I really like your honesty in this blog post and the raw, unfiltered way you describe your experiences and thoughts. It must take courage to write something this personal. And a post like this allows me to learn more about you. Wishing you all the best with everything ahead!

  3. Hello Sakkie!
    First, well, your website made me want to create my own. I want you to know that you moved from fear and laziness to make it something real, and I’m grateful for you!
    Second, hell yeah everything here. Fuck yes for all the “right and wrong” feelings about being a Brazilian living abroad. Eu vivo na Holanda, oi oi quase vizinha. <3
    I can relate so much to coming from hot as hell – I'm from Mato Grosso – to Europe, loving what Brazil represents to us, but also enjoying living far from there. I've had my fair share of very shitty stuff happen to me here. I found I had breast cancer while unemployed after "recovering" from a Burnout. Tu não leu errado. Devo ter tacado merda na cruz. auyeuhauheahue
    But I'm glad that living here gave me the structure, the possibility, the safety net to go through everything with decency, which I'm not fully convinced would happen if I were there.
    I'm happy I found you, and I'm relieved to share so many feelings with a fellow immigrant girly.

    1. Oi, Lari. Eu tinha escrito uma resposta pra você, mas infelizmente ela se perdeu quando o meu blog foi hackeado. 🙁 Eu queria te dizer que sinto muito pelo que te aconteceu, espero muito que você esteja melhor. Já tô super de olho no seu site, ansiosa pelas próximas atualizações! E realmente, quase vizinhas, podemos fazer esse encontrinho acontecer haha

  4. I had so many thoughts while reading your post, I can agree with some things too! I’m almost a decade in Berlin, Germany and I also come from Brazil, but from the northeast. You probably know the stereotype other Brazilians give us from the northeast. I guess I fit some of the expectations, but warmth and closeness aren’t my forte. I’ve met many Brazilians in my time here and some were as you described, some were special people in my life. I remember thinking how happy I was in Germany without nosy people and honestly I still am grateful for that haha but I miss having friends with a bit of a Brazilian touch, people who could talk easily about anything and are a bit more inviting. My gringo friends are more individualistic and in a big city people seem to just be passing by, not staying for long

    1. Hiii Michie! Obrigada pelo comentário <3 Tô muito feliz que a repercussão desse post foi boa e conseguimos um squad de imigrantes brasileiras introvertidas haha

      I can also relate to that, especially as a Masters student. Most of my colleagues are just passing by, building new relationships is extra hard in this context. I guess living in Ireland might be slightly better than Germany in this matter, though, because the Irish can be quite friendly without being intrusive.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About Me

Sakkie, Brazilian living in Ireland. Blogging since 2004. For an algorithm-free, decentralised internet.

Mood

The current mood of prismaticpink at www.imood.com

Status

Currently

  • time 10/05/2026 - 18:23 GMT +1
  • 13ºC, Sunny
  • listening to Nothing
  • drinking Super Bock Beer
  • eating Husband's homemade burger
  • watching Nothing
  • playing Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream
  • reading Nothing
  • browsing Shein lmao
  • texting Mum

Search

RSS

RSS feed

Calendar

February 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425262728  

Archive

Link this blog