Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. My husband is married to an immigrant who prefers (understatement) her home country of Scotland. I would move back in a heartbeat.
+1. There is nothing about this country that’s better than Scotland in my opinion. I’m American and I’d move there if I could too.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. My husband is married to an immigrant who prefers (understatement) her home country of Scotland. I would move back in a heartbeat.
Anonymous wrote:Prefers the home country? PREFERS?
It is not preference. It is a deep ache of missing something that is a part of your history, culture and human connection. This is common to people who go to any other country. You miss the culture and connections of the old country even when you are making connections and soaking in the culture of the new country. A person cannot compartmentalize this. You are human. You feel.
Every country is different. I love a lot of material conveniences and personal freedom in US and would miss it when I go back to my home country. I miss the social, family connections and contact of my home country and it is frightening to me to grow old or poor in this country because no one gives a damn.
I live in a whole lot of comfort in this country. I am also a lot more lonely and anxious in this country.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I are from Europe and Asia, and we love ALL our countries, including the USA. Of course we miss things from our home countries. Of course each country has pros and cons.
When you’re international, you understand that there is no perfect country - you yearn for the healthcare of one, the food of the other, the job opportunities of the third… if only all the good things could be present in just one country!
Anonymous wrote:Thomas Wolfe was right — you can’t go home again.
My entire childhood, my Mother yearned for the town she grew up in. We heard all about what a wonderful, magical place it was. Finally, after I went away to college, my parents moved back there. She hated it. I don’t know if the place had changed, or she had changed and the town hadn’t, but they left after a few years.
If what your husband wants is to return to his childhood, that place isn’t likely to exist anymore. Even if his family is still there, visiting is very different from living with them every day.
However, sometimes it does work out — my DH and I moved to the town he grew up in, and we’ve really enjoyed it, so far. However, we moved here because it happens to be a really nice place that met all our criteria for retirement, and he had zero nostalgia or expectations related to his childhood or family. It’s a fresh start; it just happens to be in a familiar place.
Anonymous wrote:I’m married to someone who is homesick for the country he grew up in. Being a different race than white just compounds it for him. It’s a sad situation and there’s no fix, really. There is no way we could move there as a family. I feel very bad for him, especially since I believe that if he knew then what he knows now, he would never have emigrated here and would have stayed there. But with kids, marriage, career, family back home dead, home changed from how it used to be: it all makes it impossible.