I have been living in Australia for less than three months… But I have noticed a problem that has already attracted a striking problem in this country.

A British woman living in Gold Coast launched an intense debate after accusing the Australians of being ‘immature’ and ’emotionally left’.
Eloise Juliet asked her followers whether they were called ‘an Australian problem’ in a Tiktok video on Sunday.
“Since I have observed since I was here, Australians have a very strange and complex relationship with emotions,” he said.
She is attributed to her hostility, and she connects women with men who treat women very strangely; Aka doesn’t know how to deal with them, or acts like objects.
‘Much worse here.’
Juliet said that there is a symptom of a ‘deeper -rooted’ problem among Australians.
‘There is this strange oppressive strange feeling that you can feel in the air,’ I had to share something really authentic about how I felt, ” he continued.
‘If you do this, you are not safe and will not be well met because the people here don’t know how to get it’.
Eloise Juliet addressed the ‘very heated’ comments in response to the first video the next day
Juliet said that the problem was almost evident in England, where he lived until he moved to Queensland three months ago.
Dual citizens, really the Australians ‘how are you?’ Considering the tendency to ask, the problem was particularly interesting, he said.
“If you say,“ You know, I don’t actually do it very well ”, they take it like a panic behind your eyes.”
“ They do not want the real answer, they do not want to know, and this only creates the culture of people who are emotionally left.
‘So everyone here is much more mature than anyone I have encountered in the rest of the world.’
The provocative appearance of foreigners brought mixed reactions.
‘In Australia, “How are you going?” Or, “How are you?” Just mean hello. Actually, we don’t ask how you are, ” he said.
‘So someone says “hello” and you just shed your feelings. “

Ms. Juliet said that her experience in Gold Coast (in the picture) was ‘different’ to her time in Sydney
Another audience said that there is unrest around harsh emotions in England.
`As an British Australian, Australians are much more compatible with their feelings than the British. Emotions are not taboo here ‘they said.
“I just think you’re hanging around the wrong crowd,” the second accepted.
Third, he wrote, “This sounds like a perception problem,” he wrote.
‘Imagine that 26 million people have a population, instead of thinking that this may be only you.’
But Mrs. Juliet returned to this commentator: ‘If it were me, why were there so many people in the comments?’
Also, at some point, realize how people living in another country can see and feel.
‘If you don’t know anything else, you can’t really see it.’ ‘
However, others acknowledged that the reluctance of opening and sharing emotions in Australia was pronounced in Australia, especially because men took the culture of ‘worry’ very far.
He lived here for 18 years. Girl, nailed. Not tall poppy syndrome (they blame everything on this subject). Only a pathological shallowness for all relationships and a sharp division between gender, ‘he wrote.
Another said: ‘Australian men, after spending time elsewhere, they are in such a sensible way with the ordinary vulnerability.’

Ms. Juliet acknowledged that her experience was limited, but as a student at Gold Coast (in the picture, university students) people met people ‘a wide range of’ people.
Ms. Juliet, the next day the Australians ‘very hot’ response to the Australians released a follow -up video.
In the video, Eloise admitted that his experience was limited to Gold Coast, but he added that he recognized a very wide range of people.
He added that his experience was ‘slightly different’, but in Sydney, where he spent the first seven years of his life, ‘not completely different’.
Although he has not yet found the ‘core group’, he added that his comments were directed to a wider cultural issue and ‘Australian sense of not being discussed’.
Some of them accepted the characterization of Gold Coast, while the tracking video was quickly full of negative comments.
Aussies friendly. This oddity, which has an emotional connection, is that they don’t actually like you, but they’ll be very good to make you rejected, ” a user said.
“ Emotional proximity is gained, not automatic, ” he said.
`For example, I can say that I am very emotionally sincere with my friends and even my acquaintances, but not immediately.
‘I never put my feelings on foreigners or someone who does not clearly state that they are willing to take a place for it.’