#reverse-culture-shock

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London politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Londoners aren't unfriendly but don't compare us to New Yorkers | Letters

Returning home after years abroad can evoke feelings of alienation and nostalgia, revealing a new perspective on familiar places and people.
fromBusiness Insider
1 month ago

I had to leave the US because I couldn't get a work visa. The culture shock startled me.

At that point, I hadn't heard the term "reverse culture shock" - a sense of disorientation you feel when returning to your country after a long stay abroad - but I now know this is what I experienced when I got back to India. Busy work mornings in New York were replaced by dull ones in India for the first few weeks while I waited to start my new job.
US news
Travel
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago

I moved back to Australia after decades in the US. The culture shock stunned me

Returning home after many years abroad can cause unexpected culture shock, and releasing the expectation of immediate belonging allows gradual reconnection and belonging.
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago

I moved to Spain over a decade ago and visit the Bay Area yearly. After a few weeks in California, I remember why I stay abroad.

I've lived in Spain for over a decade. I'm always excited to go "home" to visit family and friends in the San Francisco Bay Area, and spend time in a place that is so familiar. I usually visit once a year. My first week back, I'm reminiscing, and my brain is buzzing thinking about how I can move back and what my life would look like. Yet, by the third or fourth week - if I stay that long - reality settles in.
San Francisco
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