Check out this great guest post!
How many travel and expat bloggers out there have wonderfully successful international relationships that they are more than happy to share with the world? As much as I love reading those stories, from my own years spent in Spain I have learned that dating abroad is not all sunshine and fairytales, and it has been idealized online far too often. From her own experiences, our contributor breaks it down for all of those starry-eyed youngsters hoping to fall in love while abroad.
Have you ever dated, had a fling or fallen in love abroad? Tell us about it! How did it end?

It seems like a dream…you move to a mysterious new land, meet a handsome stranger and fall hopelessly, passionately in love. Soon enough, you’re riding on the back of his Vespa through winding roads to watch the sunset from a spot that only locals know about thinking, is this real life??
That’s exactly what happened to me when I studied abroad in Granada, Spain last spring and, BOY, do I wish I had someone warn me that such a romance isn’t all rainbows and butterflies. I wouldn’t trade in my experience for the world, but I want to share some of the darker sides of falling in love abroad that no one talks about.
First, some upsides to international love. I met a fantastic guy, I became fluent in Spanish from constantly conversing with my novio and his friends and family in their language. I learned colloquial terms and sayings I never would have known and got an insiders look into lesser-known spots in the city.
Oh, and I got to fall deeply in love in one of the most romantic cities in the world…I guess that’s pretty cool too.
But, just like any relationship, there are some aspects that are extremely difficult and painful. The difficult parts are often exacerbated in a foreign land as you are introduced to new cultural practices, beliefs and values. A language barrier doesn’t help things. So, I’ve put together a list of things that either hindered my relationship directly or have happened to my friends.
This should serve as a caution to starry-eyed girls who go abroad looking for a fairy tale…like a certain 20 year old I once knew.

1.This isn’t his first time at the rodeo
If you met at a disco/bar where study abroad students tend to flock; Rico Suave came with one thing in mind. Use your head, chica. Each year, thousands of Americans and international students move to these hotspot cities looking for an adventure, and men absolutely take advantage of this. Most women let loose, and rightly so, it’s a time for fun and few obligations. But, unfortunately for many women, this means doing things they normally wouldn’t back home. If a man picks you up in one of these situations, be wary. Oftentimes, the men that frequent these places are just looking for a fling, banking on the fact that a ton of girls are hoping to fall in love. We go in thinking it’s love, a story to tell our grandchildren, while we’re more than likely just going through a revolving door of American girls.
{If he pursues you outside of the nightlife atmosphere, doesn’t try to sleep with you immediately, and especially if he involves you in his life with his family and friends, however, he could very well be an exception}

2. You may not be in love with him
Moving away from home to a foreign land presents a multitude of new experiences that could influence your feelings during this time. When choosing where to move abroad, most women choose charming and romanticized places whether it be Rome, Barcelona, Buenos Aires or New Zealand. With the history, natural beauty and exciting culture, it’s easy to fall in love with the place you’re in and the life you live there. Between the yummy food, flowing drinks and new adventures, your pleasure center is constantly stimulated. Mix in a relationship with all these feelings and emotions and it becomes hard to distinguish how you feel about the person versus how you feel towards life in general at this time. Would you be in love with this guy if you were back in your home town? Would you want him to meet your parents? These are things worth thinking about if you’re interested in more than a fling.

3. You’ll never 100% understand each other
This one pertains solely to relationships where there is a language barrier. You could be as fluent as a non-native can be, but it is nearly impossible to truly understand humor or complicated emotion in a language that is not your mother tongue. Things like dry humor, sarcasm, and goofy jokes are extremely difficult to accurately translate. Combine that with the difficulty of conveying exactly why you’re mad/hurt/upset in a new language, and a lot of important things get lost in translation. This makes for a lot of frustration and, more than likely, many unnecessary fights.
{Upside: with all the passion and excitement surrounding you, makin’ up ain’t haaaalf bad}
4. You’ll miss out on experiences
If you’re only living abroad for a limited amount of time, having a man in your home base can and will distract you in some way. This isn’t some feminist “sister, a man will only hold you back from becoming the woman you should be” speal. It’s a fact. If you’re in love with someone and know your time together is limited by your visa, you will want to spend as much time with him as possible. This means turning down weekend jaunts to Ibiza to stay with him and nixing girls’ nights out of shameless bar-top dancing with your friends for quiet nights with your man. Many people only get the chance to live abroad once, and though you don’t think so in the moment, turning down exciting opportunities could be something you may regret when you look back on your life.

5. There’s an expiration date on your relationship
This has been a theme in each of the previous points. You have a visa, and visas expire. This means one of two things. You have to either accept your romance as nothing more than a fling, or, you have to commit. Commit to making a bi-continental relationship work, commit to a permanent move at some point, or commit to staying together with no plan at all. To know that you’re in love and these things have a way of working out. This is, of course, up to you.
My point is that in order to protect yourself from heartbreak and disappointment, there is a lot to consider before entering into a love affair abroad. My friends like to refer to what I had with my love as “the fairytale,” and, in many ways, it was. When I look back on my time with him in Granada, I remember the most intense feelings I’ve ever experienced in my life; passion, pain, confusion, excitement, desperation and intense disappointment. I think I could have avoided some of the darker bits had someone made me conscious of the facts I’ve listed above. So, I hope that I can help at least one person to make the most of their time abroad. To immerse yourself, to love, and to explore, but to be aware, conscious, and smart.

My two biggest pieces of advice:
Don’t go looking for love, go looking for yourself and if love finds you, then love. You may find the man of your dreams. And if it’s a fling, go for it, girl.
I don’t think anyone ever regretted a tryst with a mysterious stranger.
{Disclaimer: I know people who have successful international relationships, so there are absolutely exceptions to this list}
I met a great man in my country and he is working here for 6 months. He leaves in 2 months from now and it’s heartbreaking just thinking about it. I have fallen in love with him and I desperately want to be with him. I will never fall in love again with somebody I know I will never be able to see again unwillingly. I cry every night and my stomach is always turning with the thought. Never again!!
Thanks for this post! I am in the midst of figuring this kind of situation out right now. I met an amazing guy while studying in Seville, went up to Barcelona, worked for a while, went back to Seville to spend a week with him with the intent of moving back there in part to be with him, and now find myself back in Barcelona (long story) not sure where I stand or what to do. The worst thing is the truth that it distracts you from experiences you may not get to have again. I think about him and what’s happening all the time instead of being immersed in this experience I will only get once. I’ve been trying to be ‘sensible’ and not get involved for fear of getting hurt, but on the other hand am worried that he is a great opportunity and I should just dive into it or I might regret missing out on him. So dam confused!!!
I moved from the US to the Czech Republic back in August to teach English, and after a few months met an English girl. We really hit it off well… I’m not gonna bother writing out the story, but she and I decided to start a relationship last month. It’s been about a month now.
I plan to be in the CZ until at least the summertime. She’s in a similar boat as myself — we both don’t exactly know where we’re going or what we want to do in life. We’re winging it. The good news is that we’re both on the same page, and I am interested in studying in the UK, so I might head her way. Or maybe we’ll travel a bit more in another country doing the same thing as here.
Either way, I want to be with her.
Hopefully I’ll come back to this blog, maybe a year from now, with some good news. Until then, wish us luck. I want this to work.
After a year of not taking any vacations by older brother convinced me to go with him and his wife to London for 10 days during the last week of August 2013. I had been looking to travel and manage to get the time off so I was really happy to go and enjoy London.
On the last weekend of our trip we attended a music festival where I met a lovely 26 year old Argentine girl (I’m 32). My Spanish was rusty but her English was good enough for us to fully understand each other. She was traveling alone and attending the festival by herself so I invited her to hang out with us. At the end of the night she ask if she we could keep in contact and if she could add me to her facebook. Not seeing anything harmful in doing so, I agreed.
The next day my brother and his wife got really sick with gastro and had to stay in. So I decided to go and see if the Argentine girl had sent me a friends request on facebook and ask her if she wanted to go sightseeing with me for the day. Well that little message turn into 3 full days of sightseeing and much more with her. We just hit off. The worst is I tried to keep my composer as I knew being in London and on vacation only added fuel to this fire. When it was time to part ways and for me to go back to Canada and her to Argentina we couldn’t comprehend what this all meant. Surely we taught it was just a fling. As the days when by after that trip we kept in contact talking daily via text, email and Skype. I was really drawn to her and couldn’t stop wanting to know more about her life in Buenos Aires.
Two months after the trip I could sense that we were defiantly drawn to each other and I couldn’t bare being away from her. So I went out on a whim and flew to Buenos Aires to visit her for a week to see where this could lead. We visited the city, I met her family and had a great time. Looking back at this now I don’t know if it was the best idea because that week ended up being such an incredible week for me it left me wanting more. Now we’re in January and she coming to visit me in Canada in less then a month. We’re deeply in love but we’re also full of doubts to what this all means. We try to take this step by step but I’m having a really difficult time dealing with this. I know I would be whiling to move to be with her but at the same time it’s been just a few months and I know we need more time to see this through. I’ve never felt like this for someone and knowing that she is on the other side of the world just makes things more intense. Without wanting a relationship before going on vacation I’m now faced with having this long distance relationship with no clear goal in mind. I tell myself that it will past and that things will come back to “normal” but I’ve never fallen so hard for someone else like this before it makes me think want if….
To all the travelling heart out there good luck. We never know where our heart will lead us.