roots


Top ten surprises for Irish arriving to New York City - eccentrics, portions and the luck of the Irish

The big changes those Irish immigrating and vacationing in the Big Apple notice


Just one of New York's million eccentrics - The Naked Cowboy in Time's Square
Just one of New York's million eccentrics - The Naked Cowboy in Time's Square
Photo by Google Images

Guinness PubFinder Ad

I have only come to realize this week that nothing shocks me anymore…absolutely nothing. I could encounter a two-headed talking dog and have a frank discussion about the weather rather than freaking out about what is in front of me. I have come to the conclusion that I have New York City to thank for this apathy.

In my four short months here, this crazy city has not held back on me and I have gotten to witness and experience so much that I never would have dreamed of in small-town Ireland.

Here are the top ten culture shocks that a young Irish person experiences in New York City.

1. Everyday crazy people

Eccentric (perhaps crazy) people who would normally be ostracized and sneered at in Ireland are fully functioning professional people over here.

I once had a guy in a bar tell me that Oscar winning actor Morgan Freeman drives him to work five days a week only to tell me 90 seconds later that he walks to work to keep fit. This man is adored by the regulars and apparently works at one of the swankiest restaurants in Midtown.

I also once overheard a 70-year-old woman telling a waitress that she knew Tom Cruise’s marriage to Katie Holmes would not last because he made a pass at her outside Central Park!

2. Fashion

No fashion statement is too big and no item of clothing is too small…for men and for women.

3. This city really never sleeps

Sleep is a luxury. Between working and partying, this city really never does sleep and I have discovered that 7am is now late at night rather than early in the morning.

4. Cinemas in New York mean audience interaction

At the movies, it can sometimes be more interesting to watch the audience rather than the film as some Americans shout, scream, howl and pretty much vocalize every reaction to events unfolding on screen.

5. Public displays of enthusiasm

Happiness and energy are apparently passed through High Fives. I have begun High Fiving and my stress levels have dropped considerably.

6. Being Irish means instant attraction of the opposite sex

There is no bigger fraud in New York than an Irish man. Cloaked with an apparently irresistible accent and a wit we know nothing about can turn an average Joe into a Backstreet Boy with the ladies. And we feel just awful about it.

7. Americans are more gullible than the Irish

Americans are very trusting people and this can be extremely exploited by the Irish who love to tell tall tales about their homeland. A friend of mine once told an American girl that there is no such thing as Tuesday’s in Ireland to which she replied that she hates Tuesday’s anyway.

8.  Never order the large portion in restaurants

You will come to regret ordering a large portion over here as portion sizes are colossal.

9. Bar tending can be very lucrative

Bar tending in Ireland is mostly a minimum wage job. Bar tending in New York may well be the most lucrative job in the city. 


Nster.com


4 Comments

See all comments

@metajag: That would be spelled "ENYTING," I tink.
I'd say what most surprises the young Irish--if they stayed sober long enough to think about it--would be the fact that even in New York people curse far less than do the Irish.
Im surprised to metajag, a visit to Dublin can be crazy at times, everything goes. As for fashion, anything goes in Dublin for men and women. Stylish city. Number 4 on the list above would do my nut in, i would never visit a cinema again. You can keep that one.
I'm a NYer but spent a few years in Co Longford and I'm a bit surprised at the surprise on several counts, just a few nitpicks in the spirit of fun of course. I'll use your numbers. 1. Crazies. I saw my share of them over there, but perhaps that's more the bigger towns. 2. Fashion. Are ya jokin'? You'd see ANYTHING (I'm tempted to write ENYTHING but my Irish wife would smack me) in the small towns of Ireland, and less clothes on the ladies than in Manhattan for sure. 7. Gullible? Well maybe I hang with the Irish too much, but most New Yorkers are more suspicious if anything, however naive young things are everywhere I suppose. 8. Portions. True enough, but regular platters have grown huge in the other country as well. Plus three styles of potato on your plate, which was always my surprise. 9. Bartending. Just an aside but I'd make friends over there for my hard-to-relinquish-up habit of tipping, and that's the difference.
 




Log into IrishCentral with your Facebook account


or sign-in directly

E-Mail:
Password:
 Remember me Forgot my password
Not a member? Register Now!
print this article Print
email this articleE-mail