Ask anyone who’s lived overseas and they can confirm Australians have a reputation for being loud and relaxed despite living in a fairly scary environment. But life in Australia isn’t always like Home and AwaysSummer Bay or Neighbours’ Ramsay St, probably our two most famous cultural exports. Here is a breakdown of 11 common stereotypes about the way Australians live.

Everyone lives by the beach

It is true that around 80 per cent of Australians live within 50 kilometres of the coast line. But beachfront real estate is pretty expensive so tourists might be disappointed to find out we’re not all tanned, blond-haired surfers.

It’s hotter than the sun

OK, we do get snow sometimes but, yes, it is disgustingly hot here. Most primary school kids try to convince their teachers there’s a rule that if it is over 40 degrees you can go home, though I’ve never heard of this being successful. It gets hot enough to brand yourself with a seatbelt and every year people try and cook eggs on the cement.

Australian are all rowdy

It probably doesn’t help our international reputation when Australians keep getting arrested overseas for doing “shoeys” and stripping down to their speedos. In the last year alone, the number of Australians arrested overseas increased by 23 per cent and the number of Aussie larrikins hospitalised increased by 15 per cent. Maybe part of the reason Australians party so hard when they go overseas is because nights out are expensive here and we have lockouts in New South Wales and Queensland, so travellers take too much advantage of freedom overseas. Another reason people think we’re a nation of hard partyers is we sell wine in enormous plastic bags, known as goon sacks.

The Budgie Nine, arrested in Malaysia earlier this year for “international insult”. Photo: AP.

All Australians have pet kangaroos

We ride them to school. We also have dingoes as guard dogs and wombats as house pets. Not koalas though; those things may look cute but they won’t hesitate to rip you to shreds.

We’re surrounded by dangerous animals

I was going to say this isn’t true but there were two venomous spiders in my house this week. It’s not only enormous spiders that seem like they’re trying to kill us, there are sharks, stingrays, crocodiles, snakes, wasps and even killer birds, always waiting for unsuspecting victims.

We’re always eating brunch

Guilty – and if you agree with The Australian’s columnist Bernard Salt, our obsession with smashed avo is preventing us from buying houses. Sorry Salt but there are many other reasons why first-home buyers find it hard to break into the housing market and it’s unfair to lay the blame on the humble avocado.

Smashed avo should be our national dish. Photo: Kate Cox.

We always cook meat outside

We love doing it, but no Australian has ever said “put a shrimp on the barbie”. They’re prawns, mate.

We don’t wear shirts or shoes often enough

On any given day there is an Australian in a public place like an airport or shopping centre, wandering around barefoot without a care in the world. We don’t even get dressed properly when we vote.


Australians voting at Bondi. Photo: Edwina Pickles. 

We don’t heat our houses properly

Or any other buildings really. Australians would prefer to put on an extra three layers and whinge about the cold than turn the heater on. Architects seem to forget that it does actually get cold here for three months of the year when they design huge, improperly insulated houses.

We abbreviate too many words

Once you start shortening all words, it’s totes difficult to stop. Arvo, brekkie, avo (smashed or not), maccas, barbie, sanga, bickie, chuck a sickie, are all words that may not make sense outside the Great Southern Land.

We constantly change prime ministers

We do, it’s very exciting for political tragics but can also be confusing, and frustrating that we keep having unelected leaders. Traditionally, hospitals ask a patient who the current prime minister is after they’ve come to, but in Australia that test doesn’t help to prove there’s anything wrong with you – it’s too hard a question. We haven’t had a leadership spill for a year now so we may be due for another one…

http://www.domain.com.au/news/11-stereotypical-things-foreigners-think-about-the-way-australians-live-20161027-gs9z6i/