100 Days In The Bay

Ashwini Gangal (she/her/hers)

Chronicling her emotional and practical struggles as an early-stage migrant, Ash’s story addresses migration-related depression, cultural adjustments, personal identity shifts, and the quest to rebuild her social and professional life in the United States.

Content notice
This story contains references to:
  • Depression
Ashwini Gangal in a car.

Story

The DSM should have a separate classification for migration-related depressive states. At some level, you’re grieving the life you left behind…

The South Mumbai Rajabai Clock Tower at Mumbai University.That was something I tweeted a few days ago. It might seem a touch hyperbolic, but I truly believe the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) ought to include nation-specific diagnostic criteria for the anxiety and self-doubt non-resident Indians (NRIs) go through when they land in their adopted countries. I have learnt more about mental health and its determinants in the last three months than I did over the two years I spent earning my master’s degree in Clinical Psychology at Mumbai University.

It’s been about 100 days since I landed in the Bay Area from Mumbai. In keeping with startup parlance, I am what I like to call an early-stage migrant, perfectly placed to document the psychological drama and disquieting shock of moving from India to the United States. That such a life-defining, stressful move, undertaken by so many, is not more storied is surprising. Thus, I decided to write about my experience of being an H4 spouse – bearer of the ‘dependent’ visa, nomenclature that has the power to do a number on your sense of self and world-view.

Feather by feather, I am growing new wings.

When I meet Indians who’ve been here for many years and tell them I’ve just moved, I get that knowing look, that sympathetic nod. “We know what it’s like…” they say with everything but words. If it’s a common reality shared by so many of us, why don’t we talk about it more openly? Let me try and change this by sharing my story.

Sure, I’m no Sridevi from ‘English Vinglish’, but nonetheless, I’d go so far as to liken my first few weeks in the Bay to having my wings clipped; overnight I lost all sense of agency over my immediate environment. Feather by feather, I am growing new wings.

Driving on a road during the day.The first problem I encountered is the absence of public transport, something Indians in general and Mumbaikars in particular take for granted. Back home, all I had to do was step onto the street and raise my arm – and a ‘kaali-peeli’ taxi would stop for me, to say nothing of the incredible BEST bus and local train service. Here, the prerequisite for simple things like going to the grocery store to pick up fruits or stopping by the beauty parlor to get my eyebrows done is knowing how to drive. In my first few weeks here, I spent a disproportionate amount of time learning how to do so. Those who’ve driven in India have to unlearn the basics (everything is on the opposite side here!) and those who’ve never driven in India have to learn a scary new skill from scratch. Either way, it’s an uphill battle. Passing my behind-the-wheel test and sticking my driver’s license in my wallet, cozily nestled between my new Costco shopping card and my husband’s credit card, was the first new feather.

The second shock was the lack of domestic help. Here, I gather, one needs to cross a certain threshold of affluence to hire a cook or a cleaner. Back home in India, it’s normal; I mean, even my house help has her own house help. I used to haughtily say, “Forget about knowing my way around the kitchen, I don’t even know my way to the kitchen!” Before I could swallow morsels of my below average aloo gobi, I had to swallow my words. This feather was aided by neighborhood food trucks, kitchen hacks shared by friends, YouTubers, and the occasional 30-dollars-a-meal pack sold by enterprising ‘aunties’ who see a business opportunity in people like me.

Of my own volition I put oceans between my friends and myself, and now I’m facing the consequences of my choice.

The third challenge is the absence of companions outside my romantic universe of two. Of my own volition I put oceans between my friends and myself, and now I’m facing the consequences of my choice. Making new friends is the only salve for the isolation a new migrant feels. And I don’t want my social circle to be limited to my husband’s friends; they’re already a close-knit unit with their own history, shared memories, and special bonds. It’s like the feeling you get when you see a group of friends playing cards, loud and animated, enjoying their inside jokes and jokes-of-the-moment birthed during the game, jokes that will be recounted and recalled whenever this group gets together in the future. The feeling is worse when you don’t know the game they’re playing; it makes the possibility of inclusion that much slimmer. I felt like I really needed my own group. To this end, I made it a point to hang around in the clubhouse area of my apartment complex and start conversations with my neighbors. Being an extrovert really helped me sprout this feather.

Though I moved to America for love, reinventing my professional identity has become my new mission.

Back in Mumbai, I worked as managing editor of a business daily that covers the Indian advertising and marketing space; I joined this publication as a rookie reporter and it’s here that I found my professional voice over 12 glorious years. Quitting my job to move to California seemed like a relief after all that pandemic burnout and work-from-home mania that drove most of us crazy between 2020 and 2022, but just a few days after landing I started missing the buzz of work, the pressure of deadlines, and the chatter of colleagues. I went from being a time-strapped journalist, recognised by every advertising executive in India, to a former media journalist in Silicon Valley, during an economic slowdown…from being a big fish in a small pond to a fish out of water. Though I moved to America for love, reinventing my professional identity has become my new mission. Like Salman Rushdie once said, “The only ground an immigrant has to stand on is the one he builds for himself.”

A silhouette of birds flying at sunset.At an ideological level, I struggle with the gender dynamics of my reality – I have unplugged my life of 36 years and moved to a new country to be with my husband here. Would he have uprooted his career and bid goodbye to his friends and family to join me in, say, France, if I were based there? Why don’t I see more men doing this sort of life-altering cross-continental trapeze? Why is the H4 visa the unofficial preserve of women? And why am I, a hardcore feminist, part of the problem?

Anyway, finding answers to these questions is for a later day. For now, I want to focus on finding my America.

This article, originally called ‘100 Days In The Bay Area Shocks A Newcomer From Mumbai!’, was first published on India Currents at https://indiacurrents.com/100-days-in-the-bay-area-shocks-a-newcomer-from-mumbai/.

About the contributor

Ashwini Gangal, originally from Mumbai, India, is a California-based journalist and is hopelessly in love with the written word. She is the author of four chapbooks, ‘Hormonal House’ (fiction), ‘Yersinia Pestis’ (poetry), ‘Lithium and other fairy tales’ (poetry and fiction), and ‘My Name Is Not Ghost and other things’ (poetry, fiction and creative non-fiction). For her, reading is like breathing.