Culture and Migration: Visiting a Curandera
[2023-10-01 12:01:02]
Culture and immigration: If it is never experienced by visitors to the Clandera, it may be strange, but through stories and personal experiences the environment is familiar and attractive. Curanderas is nearly equivalent to Latinos' marketed medicine, it is not genuine, it is close. If you have symptoms, it is easier to visit the local Clandera, than to consult a doctor, sooner and more comfortable. Doctors need to test until they are sick and their cure is Tylenol.
People immigrate every day and become immigrants. This took place through the history of mankind. By immigration, our world and culture are constantly changing, and where people leave and where they go is affected. Changes in global immigration culture have influenced the community including languages, religious practices, traditions, architectural styles, local food, arts, music, clothing. To know the area is to understand the story of that immigration. When people move from one place to another, they often want to find a better life. Many families immigrate to want to join their families again. Others are seeking opportunities for employment, freedom of religion, or learning new things at university. There are also extreme causes of personnel movements such as war, natural disasters, political turmoil. For example, because of political turmoil for many years, countless people from Ethiopia fled.
The immigration process had a certain influence on the aspects of human life and local health, society, economy, culture, religion, and politics. People have studied the influence of immigrants on various aspects of human life. Immigrant 's mental health impact is an important area for attracting people. When an individual moves from one place to another, the process involves preparing and completing all procedures, reaching the destination, adapting to new cultures and societies, compromising their beliefs and practices, adapting, assimilating There are various factors including. This process may not be good for everyone. There are special groups that are prone to specific mental health problems during migration, such as women, children, elderly people, lesbians, homosexuals, bisexuals, and transgender people.