Very interesting seminar hosted by two very interesting people (shut up Leo).
The phrase stated in title might be rather controversial. Some may think itās correct as youāre in a new country, you should follow their habits and try and be one of them. However, others argue how itās not necessary and youāre only a visitor. Itās okay to be different and not follow some traditions.
Personally, I hate both sides . Whether to follow a locationās habits depends on its importance and significance to locals. For example, in Thailand many religious temples require people to wear long clothing and take off their shoes when entering temples. Being a visitor you should follow that as itās part of local beliefs and traditions. Youāre showing respect towards their belief and values, and thatās very important when wanting people to have a good impression of you or your countryās people. In contrast, in China people use chopsticks or in England people drink lots of tea. You donāt have to follow that as itās not as important as religious beliefs and people may not be used to drinking tea 24/7 or using chopsticks to eat everything.
So, I really think this phrase is rather controversial and thereās no straightforward answer of is it right or wrong.
Why do you like Tyrannosaurus Rex emojis so much?
āhateā is a strong word! As Yoda once said, āFear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering.ā
I think you might have a missing word in your title and some typo to check in your last line.