12 Years Out: With Cole Puterbaugh

Who You Become When You Leave Home

18 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Who You Become When You Leave Home

Descripción

Who do you become when you leave your home country? In this episode of 12 Years Out with Cole Puterbaugh, I explore how living abroad reshapes identity over time. You don’t just relocate—you begin to evolve into something different. Some people become builders, creating a new life in a new place. Others become returners, eventually pulled back home. And some remain in a constant state of transition, never fully rooted anywhere. Drawing on personal experience and real stories, I break down how these paths develop, why they happen, and what it takes to build a stable identity while living abroad. This episode looks at the deeper psychological and cultural shifts that come with leaving home—and what it means for your long-term sense of self. Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO [https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO] Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275 [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout [https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout] X (Twitter): https://x.com/coleputerbaugh [https://x.com/coleputerbaugh]

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10 episodios

episode Leaving Your Home Country is Overrated artwork

Leaving Your Home Country is Overrated

The dream of moving abroad to escape a bad job or a bad boss often ends with a flight home in failure—or worse, a mess for someone else to clean up. Many aspiring expats imagine a new life in Thailand or China will solve their problems, but Dr. Cole Puterbaugh argues this is a flimsy premise for uprooting a life. The lived reality of being an outsider, navigating inconvenient isolation, and losing your familiar support systems is a trade-off many fail to properly weigh. Drawing on his own 12 years in China—a country he still doesn't love or hate more than the United States—Cole makes a distinction between the reasons for leaving and the reasons for staying. He contends that if you are running from loneliness, career frustration, or family drama, those problems will inevitably follow. You participate in your own problems, and they will replicate themselves in a new location. Leaving your country only works if you are intentionally transitioning to a new community, not just fleeing the old one. This is a sober argument for anyone who has ever looked at a plane ticket as a solution. — Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275 Follow Cole on X: https://x.com/coleputerbaugh

26 de may de 20269 min
episode How to Make it Through Your First Year Abroad artwork

How to Make it Through Your First Year Abroad

How do you survive your first year living abroad? In this episode of 12 Years Out with Cole Puterbaugh, I talk about what actually matters during your first year overseas. Living abroad is not just about opportunity or freedom. It is an emotional shift where everything becomes more intense. The highs feel higher and the difficult moments feel heavier. I break down the role of community, why learning the language changes your experience, and how to balance comfort with discomfort. I also talk about why you need something to move toward, not just something you are trying to leave behind. This episode is for anyone considering moving abroad or trying to make sense of their first year living in a new country. Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout X (Twitter): https://x.com/coleputerbaugh [https://x.com/coleputerbaugh]

19 de may de 202616 min
episode Who You Become When You Leave Home artwork

Who You Become When You Leave Home

Who do you become when you leave your home country? In this episode of 12 Years Out with Cole Puterbaugh, I explore how living abroad reshapes identity over time. You don’t just relocate—you begin to evolve into something different. Some people become builders, creating a new life in a new place. Others become returners, eventually pulled back home. And some remain in a constant state of transition, never fully rooted anywhere. Drawing on personal experience and real stories, I break down how these paths develop, why they happen, and what it takes to build a stable identity while living abroad. This episode looks at the deeper psychological and cultural shifts that come with leaving home—and what it means for your long-term sense of self. Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO [https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO] Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275 [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout [https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout] X (Twitter): https://x.com/coleputerbaugh [https://x.com/coleputerbaugh]

12 de may de 202618 min
episode What Culture Shock Actually Feels Like (After Year 1) artwork

What Culture Shock Actually Feels Like (After Year 1)

What does culture shock actually feel like after the first year abroad? In this episode of 12 Years Out with Cole Puterbaugh, I explore the deeper reality of cultural adaptation once the initial excitement fades. Culture shock isn’t just about confusion or discomfort—it’s about realizing that what you thought was “logical” is actually learned behavior shaped by your environment. Drawing on real experiences living abroad, I break down how small, everyday moments—like navigating a bank, crossing the street, or dealing with minor annoyances—reveal much larger differences in how people think and act. Over time, those small differences compound and begin to shape whether you can truly adapt to a new system. If you don’t develop new ways of interpreting the world around you, you won’t last. This episode looks at what it really takes to adjust, and why so many people struggle to do it. Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO [https://open.spotify.com/show/4b4FiiXIUDscBAVHIDO3lO] Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275 [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/12-years-out-with-cole-puterbaugh/id1891583275] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout [https://www.youtube.com/@12yearsout] X (Twitter): https://x.com/coleputerbaugh [https://x.com/coleputerbaugh]

5 de may de 202621 min
episode U.S. vs China Education Is the Wrong Question artwork

U.S. vs China Education Is the Wrong Question

Stop comparing education systems. Start analyzing incentives. In this deep-dive episode, Cole Puterbaugh argues that framing the discussion as U.S. vs China education is a fundamental mistake. Instead, we use a powerful organizing lens—Stakeholder Incentives leading to Educational Structure/Behavior, resulting in Student Outcomes—to explain why schools globally operate the way they do. Cole shares observations from living abroad—like third graders with two hours of homework and "open days" that prioritize performance over learning—to illustrate how systems shape behavior. The key takeaway? Different national pressures (pressure = performance in China, pressure = ideology/variability in the U.S.) lead to the same system behaviors: chasing metrics, avoiding risk, and ultimately creating disengaged students and misaligned priorities. This is the structured breakdown you need to understand the true design of modern schooling. The question isn't whether a system is good or bad, but who it is designed to serve. Keywords: Education comparison, US China schooling, Cole Puterbaugh, Leaving Home, educational reform, teaching to the test, stakeholder analysis, school administrators, parent pressures, student disengagement, global education systems.

28 de abr de 202620 min