Polish woman shocked by what she says after living in Bengaluru for 10 months
What happens when someone swaps the cool streets of Warsaw for the warmth, chaos, traffic, and comfort food of Bengaluru? Apparently, they begin saying things they never imagined they would.
That is exactly what happened to Poland-born Magdalena Ochnio-Tyszecka, who goes by @magsindiastories on Instagram. Now living in India, Magdalena recently shared a light-hearted reel listing the phrases she started saying after spending 10 months in Bengaluru, and can’t help but instantly relate.
Among the biggest changes? Temperature tolerance. In her video, Magdalena jokes that she now says, “I’m cold. It’s only 24 degrees Celsius outside,” something she would never have imagined saying while living in Warsaw. She recalled being surprised when she first arrived in Bengaluru and saw locals wearing puffer jackets during evenings she considered warm. Months later, she admits her body has adapted to India’s climate, and she finally understands the feeling.
Food has also transformed her routine in unexpected ways. She humorously says she now prefers rajma over sandwiches for lunch, adding that her “childhood self is shocked” while her “taste buds have filed for Indian citizenship.” The line resonated with many viewers, especially Indians who know how comforting a plate of rajma-chawal can feel compared to a quick sandwich meal.
But perhaps the most relatable observation in her post is about Bengaluru’s traffic and distances. Magdalena says that a “45-minute drive to a park” no longer feels unreasonable to her. In fact, it feels normal. She points out that back in Warsaw, such a drive would likely mean leaving the city altogether. In Bengaluru, however, long commutes have become such a routine part of urban life that residents often casually measure outings in travel time rather than distance.
Her observations may come across as funny, but they also reflect a deeper reality of adapting to life in another country. Long-term travellers and expats often talk about the quiet ways a place changes them over time — from shifts in eating habits and tolerance to weather to entirely new ideas about time, routines, and distance. Instead of focusing on dramatic culture shock, Magdalena’s post captures the subtle transformation that happens when an unfamiliar country gradually begins to feel ordinary, familiar, and eventually, like home.
The reel has struck a chord online because it mirrors the experience of countless people who move cities or countries and gradually absorb local habits without even realising it. For many Indians in the comments section, her observations also felt oddly validating, proof that things they consider completely normal can seem amusingly extraordinary to outsiders.
In the end, Magdalena’s story is not just about adapting to Bengaluru. It is about how travel and relocation gently reshape people, one rajma lunch and one 45-minute drive at a time.
Among the biggest changes? Temperature tolerance. In her video, Magdalena jokes that she now says, “I’m cold. It’s only 24 degrees Celsius outside,” something she would never have imagined saying while living in Warsaw. She recalled being surprised when she first arrived in Bengaluru and saw locals wearing puffer jackets during evenings she considered warm. Months later, she admits her body has adapted to India’s climate, and she finally understands the feeling.
Food has also transformed her routine in unexpected ways. She humorously says she now prefers rajma over sandwiches for lunch, adding that her “childhood self is shocked” while her “taste buds have filed for Indian citizenship.” The line resonated with many viewers, especially Indians who know how comforting a plate of rajma-chawal can feel compared to a quick sandwich meal.
Busy street in Bengaluru
But perhaps the most relatable observation in her post is about Bengaluru’s traffic and distances. Magdalena says that a “45-minute drive to a park” no longer feels unreasonable to her. In fact, it feels normal. She points out that back in Warsaw, such a drive would likely mean leaving the city altogether. In Bengaluru, however, long commutes have become such a routine part of urban life that residents often casually measure outings in travel time rather than distance.
The reel has struck a chord online because it mirrors the experience of countless people who move cities or countries and gradually absorb local habits without even realising it. For many Indians in the comments section, her observations also felt oddly validating, proof that things they consider completely normal can seem amusingly extraordinary to outsiders.
In the end, Magdalena’s story is not just about adapting to Bengaluru. It is about how travel and relocation gently reshape people, one rajma lunch and one 45-minute drive at a time.
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Sharath ChandraMost Interacted
8 days ago
More easy for an European or American to adopt to life in India than for an Indian to adopt to life in America or Europe. Main iss...Read More
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