An American woman living in Brighton has revealed the ‘frustrating’ difference between the UK and the US that has cost her more than £1,000.
Kristen Howell-Brear, 27, moved to the Sussex city to do her masters degree in archaeology in 2020 and ended up falling in love with the UK and staying and working as a social media manager.
After five years in the country she classes herself as an ‘honorary Brit’, but claims the differences between the two countries ‘take a lot of getting use to’.
Kristen’s most expensive mistake has come from buying a few bits for her wardrobe.
She explained: ‘I keep making the same mistake at least three or four times a year.
‘It’s probably cost me at least £1,000 at this point.
‘I end up ordering clothes that are way too small for me because I order my US size, not my UK size.
‘I [have] a bunch of clothes that aren’t my size. I give them to my friends or try to sell them. It’s the most frustrating thing ever.’
American woman Kristen Howell-Brear, who is living in the UK, has revealed the ‘frustrating’ difference in Britain that has cost her £1,000
Kristen Howell-Brear moved to Brighton to do her masters degree in archaeology and ended up staying, after five years in the country she classes herself as an ‘honorary Brit’
Kristen has also said she’s ‘struggled with the language barrier’ despite speaking the same language as Brits.
Kristen was actually caught out by this not too long ago when a girl in her university study group asked for a rubber’ – which means condom in the UK.
‘Y’all why do British terminology have to be so confusing,’ Kristen told said.
‘In the UK, they call a backyard a garden – but what do they actually call a garden?
‘In America, we have backyards and you can have a garden in your backyard where you plant […] carrots or mint.
‘But here, they just call it a garden even there’s not – what I would consider – a garden in it.
‘The Brits always get really annoyed when I talk about terminology differences.’
Kirsten also questions the terms ‘sidewalk’ and ‘pavement’ and says that Americans have got it right.
What seems like a small difference between UK and US clothing sizes has turned into a pricey and persistent problem for the student
What seems like a small difference between UK and US clothing sizes has turned into a pricey and persistent problem for the student
She said: ‘There’s pavement everywhere. You’re not supposed to be walking where the cars drive on, that’s dangerous.
‘But you should be walking on the pavement on the side – the sidewalk – that makes the most logical sense.
‘I also learned the hard way that when a British person asks: ‘Are you alright?’ that’s more of a passing hello and they don’t actually want you to be like: ‘Oh, I’m having a good day.’
‘But when do you know if they actually want to know if you’re alright?’
Kristen says this is one of the biggest things she struggled with when moving here.
She said: ‘It does make more logical sense if you think about it. But having to adjust and use it and understand [military time] is really difficult.
‘I’ve booked things at the wrong time and got the timing wrong when making plans.’
Kristen also can’t understand the format of how Brits write the date, month and year.
She added: ‘I have struggled to adapt to that so much. When it comes to filling out paperwork, I have to go back and redo it because I’ve written the date wrong.’
She urges people to ‘really pay attention’ when travelling here to save any ‘heartbreak, confusion and disappointment’ – as noted in her own experience.
Kristen said: ‘The next British person that tells me that biscuits are the same thing as scones – I’m going to scream.
‘While scones and biscuits look the same, they’re completely different.
‘Biscuits are really fluffy and have a lot of layers, whereas scones are like a pastry.
‘It’s like a dinner roll and scones are more hard. And not as good.’
She said: ‘I don’t know why I assumed that Chinese food in the UK would taste almost exactly the same as it does in America.
‘But it tastes completely different. They just don’t compare at all.’