Cross-cultural loneliness
Speaking multiple languages is seen as an asset, a privilege, a form of richness. It is all of those things. It is also a form of internal division — a splitting of the self across different registers, different emotional vocabularies, different versions of who you are. For people who live significantly in more than one language, the loneliness of never being fully yourself in any of them is something most people around them do not understand.
The language you think in, dream in, experience emotion in — these are not purely practical matters. They are part of how identity is constituted. When you have grown up across languages or moved into a new language as an adult, the relationship between language and selfhood becomes complicated. There are things you can say in one language that you cannot translate into another — not just words, but entire ways of framing experience. Living between languages means living with that untranslatability.
The social dimension compounds it. In your first language, you may have nuance, humour, depth. In your second, you may present as simpler than you are. The version of you that other people encounter in your non-native language may be a diminished version, and that gap — between who you are and who you can be in the available language — produces its own specific loneliness.
Connection with people who share the experience of living across languages and cultures — who understand the particular texture of this kind of life without needing it explained. Anonymous voice conversation provides a space to be exactly where you are in your language, without having to perform competence. Mindfuse connects you with real people by voice, anonymously, at any hour. First conversation free.
Real strangers, anonymous voice. No performance, no profile, no algorithm.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android