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Heading home isn't always an easy return. Many who repatriate, or have gone through repatriation, feel different and utterly out of touch. This article sheds light on what happens when culture shock is reversed, what to expect, and how to cope with its effects.
abroad to the nature of your evolving personality.
A change in perspective is another good tool that helps cope with reverse culture shock -- just like it helps with culture shock when moving to another country. You can use this tool by yourself or -- and of course it works better -- if you use it during coaching. There is a demonstration on how this tool works on ExpatsRadio:
http://www.expatsradio.com/programmes/culture-shock-and-how-deal-it-expat
OK, are you going to post any new articles about leaving NL?
I mean this website is about living in NL, but you focus a lot on leaving NL.
It reminds me of the so many Dutch people that ask you:
Where are you from?
...
Nice, so when you go back?
For me a return to my birthplace made me aware of how l had become used to much more stimulating and challenging social and natural environments.
"Reverse Culture Shock??" This is hilarious. OMG, the shops are all open and I can buy things that aren't marked up 600%. They're all speaking my native language, too. How will I ever cope with it all?
I'm just kidding, I suppose if you're moving back to a place that is exceedingly boring it would be a shock, otherwise,... no.
I'm dealing with this now - left NL in August and I'm back in California. The weather's better, I'll admit, but I do miss my friends. And yes, jen, shopping is cheaper - but I had to buy a car last week because I don't have access to any viable public transit, and that means I'll spend more on gas/car payments/insurance/maintenance. So it definitely cuts both ways.
Finding this article was really eye opening, I have just moved back to the UK after being away for 4 years, and had no idea why I was feeling strange and isolated, at least now I understand other repats have felt the same, I'm in the bottom of the U at the moment :-(, wondering after 6 weeks if I should move back abroad, but I will stick it out a bit longer...
A change in perspective is another good tool that helps cope with reverse culture shock -- just like it helps with culture shock when moving to another country. You can use this tool by yourself or -- and of course it works better -- if you use it during coaching. There is a demonstration on how this tool works on ExpatsRadio:
http://www.expatsradio.com/programmes/culture-shock-and-how-deal-it-expat
OK, are you going to post any new articles about leaving NL?
I mean this website is about living in NL, but you focus a lot on leaving NL.
It reminds me of the so many Dutch people that ask you:
Where are you from?
...
Nice, so when you go back?
For me a return to my birthplace made me aware of how l had become used to much more stimulating and challenging social and natural environments.
"Reverse Culture Shock??" This is hilarious. OMG, the shops are all open and I can buy things that aren't marked up 600%. They're all speaking my native language, too. How will I ever cope with it all?
I'm just kidding, I suppose if you're moving back to a place that is exceedingly boring it would be a shock, otherwise,... no.
I'm dealing with this now - left NL in August and I'm back in California. The weather's better, I'll admit, but I do miss my friends. And yes, jen, shopping is cheaper - but I had to buy a car last week because I don't have access to any viable public transit, and that means I'll spend more on gas/car payments/insurance/maintenance. So it definitely cuts both ways.
Finding this article was really eye opening, I have just moved back to the UK after being away for 4 years, and had no idea why I was feeling strange and isolated, at least now I understand other repats have felt the same, I'm in the bottom of the U at the moment :-(, wondering after 6 weeks if I should move back abroad, but I will stick it out a bit longer...
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