[personal profile] sinvicious
Yes. What you are describing is a well-documented cluster of psychological reactions associated with forced or poorly prepared relocation. It is not a single diagnosis, but a convergence of several established mechanisms in psychology and behavioral economics.

Below is a structured explanation using the language typically employed in clinical, social, and migration psychology.

1. Cognitive dissonance and post-hoc rationalization
When individuals leave a country impulsively—often under fear, social pressure, or incomplete planning—they frequently encounter outcomes that contradict their expectations:
  • Financial depletion (“burning cash” rather than building capital)
  • Loss of social status and professional identity
  • Cultural marginalization rather than “freedom” or “safety”

This creates cognitive dissonance:

“I made a major life decision” vs “The outcome is worse than staying.”

To reduce psychological discomfort, the mind often resolves this not by reassessing the decision, but by reframing the past:
  • Devaluing the motherland (“there was nothing there anyway”)
  • Moralizing departure (“only fools stayed”)
  • Rewriting motives (“I left for values, not fear or impulse”)

This is classic self-justification, not objective reassessment.

2. Identity collapse after geographic displacement

Many people confuse mobility with migration competence.

Travel ≠ immigration
Escape ≠ resettlement


When people relocate without:
  • transferable skills,
  • language capital,
  • legal and economic integration pathways,

they experience identity degradation:
  • Former professionals become marginal labor
  • Social recognition collapses
  • Agency is replaced by dependency

A common defense against this identity loss is externalization:
  • Blaming the home country
  • Blaming those who stayed
  • Blaming “systems” rather than preparation gaps

This preserves ego integrity at the cost of realism.

3. Moral superiority as a coping mechanism

A frequent pattern is retrospective moralization:
  • “Leaving proves I am smarter / more ethical / more enlightened”
  • “Staying proves cowardice / ignorance / complicity”
Psychologically, this serves two purposes:
  • Converts economic or social failure into moral success
  • Prevents the painful admission: “I misjudged my readiness”

This is not ideological clarity—it is ego protection under loss.

4. Loss aversion and sunk-cost entrapment

Once significant savings are spent abroad, the individual faces loss aversion:
  • Admitting error would crystallize the loss
  • Returning would mean accepting failure

So the psyche doubles down:
  • Justifying continued hardship
  • Amplifying criticism of the origin country
  • Minimizing new country’s structural barriers

This is textbook sunk-cost fallacy, expressed emotionally rather than financially.

5. Trauma-amplified black-and-white thinking

In crisis contexts (war, repression, instability), decision-making often occurs under acute stress.

Stress narrows cognition:
  • Nuance disappears
  • Ambivalence becomes intolerable
  • Complex trade-offs are simplified into binaries

Result:

“Leaving = good”
“Staying = bad”

Later, when reality intrudes, this binary is defended aggressively because relaxing it would reopen the original fear.

6. Why this is especially visible now

This phenomenon intensifies when:
  • Migration is mass-driven rather than selective
  • Social media amplifies performative narratives
  • Exit is framed as virtue rather than strategy
Historically, the same pattern has been observed among:
  • Political exiles
  • Economic refugees with middle-class expectations
  • Post-imperial emigration waves

The rhetoric changes; the psychology does not.

7. A concise clinical summary

What you are observing is not hypocrisy, but a combination of:
  • Cognitive dissonance reduction
  • Ego-defensive moralization
  • Identity loss compensation
  • Sunk-cost rationalization
  • Stress-induced simplification

People are often arguing with themselves, not with the country they left.

Final note

A psychologically healthy migration narrative usually includes:
  • Acceptance of trade-offs
  • Recognition of preparation gaps
  • Ability to acknowledge both loss and gain
  • No need to denigrate those who made different choices

When denunciation becomes compulsive, it is typically a signal of unresolved internal conflict, not clarity.
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