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Fourth Culture Humans
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Fourth Culture Humans

Author: Renee Rommeswinkel and Wanda Chin

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Fourth Culture Humans is a podcast for people who don’t neatly fit into one culture, one identity, or one story.

Hosted by Renée and Wanda, two women who grew up across multiple countries and cultures, this show explores what it means to navigate adulthood, relationships, friendships, and belonging when “home” has never been just one place.

If you’ve ever felt like you’re too much for one culture and not enough for another, this space is for you.

https://www.youtube.com/@Fourthculturehumans
https://www.instagram.com/Fourthculturehumans
5 Episodes
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In this episode of Fourth Culture Humans, Renée and Wanda dive into the chaos of modern dating. From cringe pitch-night “dating events” that flop, to what actually makes a good first date (hint: reciprocity matters more than the venue). They unpack the eternal debate: should the guy pay on the first date? And what your answer says about values, generosity, and gender roles.Then it gets messy (in the best way): soft-launch etiquette, repost anxiety, and the very real danger of stalking someone’s old Instagram photos and giving yourself the ick. They finish with standards vs expectations, non-negotiables, and why dating should feel mutual — not like you’re carrying the whole conversation.Chapters00:00 Welcome + Dating Episode Intro00:55 The Pitch-Night Dating Event Flop03:18 Should the Guy Pay on the First Date?07:50 What Makes a Good First Date (Reciprocity)11:45 Soft Launching Etiquette + “Can I Tag You?”18:30 Digging Up Exes + The Instagram Ick21:01 Meeting the Family + “Kardashians of China”29:53 Non-Negotiables + Standards vs Expectations35:14 Personality Tests + Compatibility Chats41:38 Final Hot Takes on Paying + Red Flags
What happens when your childhood “friends” literally hand you a group letter saying they don’t like you? In this episode of Fourth Culture Kids, Wanda and Renée take the friendship conversation deeper and more honest than before.This time, it’s all about the glow-up: from surviving school with situational friends you tolerated because you had no choice, to building an adult circle that actually lets you be your loud, opinionated, emotional, chaotic self.Inside this episode:• The savage letter Renée got from 20 girls in her class• Situational friendships vs real friendships built on choice• Growing up dimming your personality and the shock of being accepted as an adult• Learning that real friends don’t leave when you mess up• Using friendships as the practice round before you face the “big boss” of romantic relationships• Becoming emotionally vulnerable for the first time and actually letting people see it• How the people you surround yourself with set the baseline for everything else in your lifeThis is the episode for anyone who’s ever felt too much, not enough, misunderstood, or like their personality had to be edited down just to fit in.🎧 Subscribe, send it to your favourite friend, and celebrate your very own Fourth Culture Human Friendship Day.
In this episode of Fourth Culture Humans, Wanda and Renée get straight into the soft spot: friendships when you’ve grown up everywhere and nowhere at the same time.From being the kid who can’t remember anyone from primary school, to watching other people talk casually about “friends from preschool,” they unpack what it feels like to lack that one hometown friendship group and how that shapes trust and belonging.They dive into:Why friendship can feel so delicate when you’ve moved countries and cultures your whole lifeThe grief of friendships that don’t travel with you into new seasonsProximity, effort, and why reciprocity matters more than constant contactThe “three invite rule” Renée used to build a friendship circle from scratch in SydneyDifferent cultural styles of friendship (and why emotional expression can feel unsafe in some contexts)How friendships become a testing ground for emotional growth and a mirror for the kind of romantic relationships you wantIf you’ve ever felt like you have friends “everywhere and nowhere,” or you’re learning how to be more vulnerable in your friendships as an adult, this one will hit home.🎧 Hit follow, send this to your person.
In this episode of Fourth Culture Humans, we unpack what the holidays really feel like when growing up across countries, cultures, and identities. From believing (a little too hard) in Santa Claus, to celebrating Christmas in places where no one else does.We discuss evolving Christmas rituals, why “Friendmas” sometimes feels better than family gatherings, how food carries culture and memory, and why holidays can be both joyful and filled with mixed emotions. Whether you’re spending Christmas with friends, family, or somewhere far from home, this episode is for anyone who’s ever felt caught between cultures during the holidays.🎄✨ Merry Christmas from Fourth Culture Humans.
“Where are you from?” sounds like a simple question… unless your whole identity is a tangled web of passports, accents, and childhoods that don’t match your face.In this very first episode of Fourth Culture Humans, Wanda and Renée break down the term they invented for people like them: fourth culture humans. Not just third culture kids who grew up outside their parents’ cultures, but adults who have then gone on to live in completely different countries again – and had to rebuild their identity, community, and sense of “home” more than once.In this episode, they get into:• Why “third culture kid” never felt like the full story• Growing up white in Chinese local schools, racing cars, translating for your parents at 12, and being the “trophy friend”• The weird mix of extreme privilege and invisible hardship• How it feels to be followed by TV cameras and strangers’ phones as a kid• Losing and reclaiming cultural identity (Westernised but not Western, Asian but not Asian)• The cab-ride interrogation: “Where are you from?” on repeat, every day• How to build an elevator pitch answer that actually feels trueThis episode sets the table for the whole series: identity, belonging, childhood baggage, and what it really means to grow up between cultures.If you’ve ever stumbled on the “where are you from” question, this is your origin story episode. Hit follow and get ready for Episode 2, where they dive straight into friendship.
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