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No one warns you about the guilt of moving abroad. They warn you about logistics. Paperwork. Culture shock. Language barriers. Homesickness. But they don't tell you about the specific guilt that comes from being safe while people you love aren't. You're watching American news from abroad. Watching school shootings, medical bankruptcies, political chaos. And your first thought isn't "glad I left." It's "my family is still there." And there's nothing you can do about it. Because they're adults making their own choices. They know leaving is possible - you're literally living proof. But they're not ready, not willing, not able. So you carry this guilt. Like you abandoned them. Like you should have tried harder to convince them. Like your safety came at the cost of leaving them behind. Maybe that's why I do this work. Helping other families leave feels like making up for the ones I couldn't save. If my own family won't choose this, at least I can help someone else's family choose it. The guilt of moving abroad is loving people who are choosing to stay in danger. And knowing you can't save them from their own choices. Link in bio when you're ready to leave even if they won't. ๐Ÿ†˜๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ #TikTokCreatorSearchInsightsIncentive

@nomadveronica
443 views34 likes1:56ENMay 26, 2026
317 words1645 characters14 sentencesReadability: High School

Transcript

The hardest part about moving abroad was not what I expected. It was not the figuring out which country would take us and the bureaucratic paperwork for the visa applications. It wasn't gathering documents or getting the aposteeals. It wasn't figuring out what to do with all of our stuff or creating the income in order to make the move abroad process even happen in the first place. The hardest part about moving abroad is the guilt that you feel for leaving all the people behind that choose not to move abroad. After all these years I've been gone now five years. The hardest not just in the beginning but ongoing part of the process has been the feelings that I feel about my loved ones back home. My friends and family have chosen to stay in the United States have been a constant source of anxiety for me because every time I see negative news from the United States it makes me worry about them. It makes me stress about what's happening back there when I would love to be totally disconnected and cut off from the chaos of what's happening. But I still feel so guilty about being able to get out. It's like survivors guilt. I feel like I got out and got safe and I worry so hard about all the people that have not had the opportunity to get out. In a lot of ways I think my business helping Americans to get out of the United States is a way to make myself feel better about the fact that I have so many of my own personal loved ones that have chosen not to leave. So the more people that I can help get out at least I've done my part to get other people out of the United States even when the people closest to me have chosen to stay.

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