Re-entry Shock

Re-entry Shock

entry by Julie M. Marx, Global Family Expert at Expat Valley

The disorientation experienced upon returning to one’s passport culture after a period abroad, arising from the mismatch between the returnee’s changed perceptions and expectations and the reality of the home environment. Functionally equivalent to reverse culture shock but preferred in counseling and education contexts for its neutral framing.

Comparable terms

Reverse culture shock (see Transitions & Mobility — same phenomenon, more common in general use) · Repatriation shock (HR/mobility — framing emphasizes organizational context) · Reentry adjustment difficulty (clinical — functional, non-experiential) · Coming home stress (informal — contested; “coming home” implies uncomplicated return)

Why this matters

Re‑entry shock is why coming home can feel harder than the original move. It affects identity, friendships, and career decisions for ATCKs and parents. Naming it helps families prepare rituals and support for return, not just departure.

Cross-references

W-Curve (Cultural Adaptation); Repatriation (Transitions & Mobility); Reintegration (Transitions & Mobility); Hidden Immigrant (Identity & Belonging); ATCK (Identity & Belonging). The W-curve provides the structural model normalizing re-entry shock as predictable and temporary. Repatriation describes the formal process during which re-entry shock most commonly occurs; reintegration describes the longer-term arc that follows it. The hidden immigrant entry documents why re-entry shock is often more intense than culture shock: being misread as culturally native in one’s passport country compounds the disorientation of not feeling at home there.

Sources

Gullahorn and Gullahorn (1963) extended Lysgaard’s U-curve model of cross-cultural adjustment into a W-curve to account for reentry, noting that returnees typically expected an unchanged home environment, which made reentry shock unexpected and harder to navigate. ScienceDirect Gullahorn, J.T. & Gullahorn, J.E. (1963). An extension of the U-curve hypothesis. Journal of Social Issues, 19(3), 33–47.
Gaw, K.F. (2000). Reverse culture shock in students returning from overseas. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 24(1), 83–104.



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