What happens to a person when they leave everything familiar and step into a world that operates by different rules How to Live as a Foreigner is the honest, practical, and deeply personal guide that answers that question — written by Ibrahim Mbotoni, a Tanzanian author, hospitality professional, and founder who has lived the experience he writes about.Born and raised in Dar es Salaam, Ibrahim left Tanzania at twenty-four to take part in an international youth programme in Kristiansand, Norway. What followed was not a highlight reel. It was culture shock, economic pressure, a Norwegian winter that made the sun a celebrity, loneliness that arrived without warning, and the slow, demanding work of figuring out who you are when everything familiar has been taken away.This book is built from that experience — and from everything before and after it. From a childhood in a twenty-four-room house in Kurasini, raised by a mother and aunts who gave him faith before they gave him religion. From building a hospitality career from the ground up, starting from nothing with four teammates in an unfinished building in Chalinze. From the Mikumi bush, where a difficult season taught him more about his own values than any classroom could. From January 2020, when the job he believed was coming did not come, and he had to rebuild his life from a mattress, a gas stove, and a borrowed ten thousand kroner from a friend in Norway.Across fifteen chapters, Ibrahim explores the full inner landscape of the foreigner's life: cultural adaptation, language and identity, loneliness and mental health, professional culture across countries, faith in unfamiliar places, facing discrimination with dignity, and what it actually takes to build a life that is fully yours without losing who you are in the process.This is not a book of abstract advice. Every chapter is grounded in real stories, real mistakes, and real lessons earned through experience. It is written for anyone who has ever stood at the edge of an unfamiliar world and needed to hear that someone else stood there too — and that the road, despite everything, is worth it.You already have what you need. The journey will show you where it lives.