Moving to a new country can feel exciting at first, new streets, new languages, new possibilities. But for many young people, especially Gen Z, living away from home also brings moments of loneliness, identity confusion, and emotional pressure that are not always easy to talk about.

Being an expat is more than a geographic move. It is an emotional transition. The distance from family, familiar culture, and long-standing friendships can create feelings of disconnection. At the same time, many young people feel pressure to appear strong or grateful for the opportunity, which can make it harder to acknowledge their emotional challenges.
Understanding this experience is the first step toward building emotional resilience and creating a sense of belonging wherever you are.
Key Points
- The Hidden Emotional Impact of Living Abroad
Many expats experience homesickness, loneliness, or a sense of cultural displacement. These emotions are normal responses to major life transitions.
- Identity and Cultural Navigation
Living between cultures can lead to questions about identity, belonging, and personal values. While challenging, it can also become a powerful opportunity for self-discovery.
- Creative Expression as Emotional Support
Art, journaling, and mindful creativity provide a safe way to process emotions that may be difficult to express with words.
- Understanding the Expat Emotional Experience
For many Gen Z individuals studying, working, or building a life abroad, the emotional experience can be complex. You may feel grateful for the opportunity, but also deeply miss the familiarity of home.
Research on migration and psychological adjustment shows that relocation often brings a mix of emotions including excitement, grief, anxiety, and personal growth (Berry, 2005). These emotional shifts are part of what psychologists call acculturation, the process of adapting to a new cultural environment while maintaining connection to one’s roots.
Some common emotional experiences for young expats include:
- Missing family traditions, food, and language
- Feeling misunderstood in a different cultural context
- Navigating new social norms and expectations
- Questioning personal identity and belonging
While these challenges are real, they also create space for growth. Living abroad often strengthens adaptability, empathy, and intercultural awareness, skills that are increasingly valuable in today’s global world.
Why Creativity Helps
Sometimes emotions are difficult to articulate, especially when they involve mixed feelings about home, identity, and belonging. This is where creative practices can play a powerful role. Creative expression, such as painting, collage, clay work, or journaling, activates emotional processing in the brain and helps individuals externalize internal experiences (Malchiodi, 2020). In mindful art practices, the focus is not on artistic skill but on self-expression and awareness. The process itself becomes a way to pause, breathe, and reconnect with your emotions.
Creative reflection can help expats:
- Process homesickness and nostalgia
- Explore identity between cultures
- Reduce stress and emotional overwhelm
- Build a deeper sense of self-understanding
- A Simple Reflective Exercise
Try this short mindful art practice:
- - Take a piece of paper and divide it into two sections.
- - On one side, draw or paint symbols, colors, or images that represent “home.”
- - On the other side, represent your current life and experiences abroad.
- - Take a moment to observe both sides and notice what emotions or thoughts arise.
This exercise can reveal how your identity is evolving, not leaving one world behind, but integrating multiple parts of your story.
Conclusion
Living abroad can be both inspiring and emotionally challenging. Feeling homesick, uncertain, or caught between cultures does not mean something is wrong, it means you are human and adapting to change.
By creating space for reflection, connection, and creativity, it becomes possible to transform the expat experience into a journey of self-discovery, resilience, and growth.
Sometimes the distance from home becomes the very path that helps you understand yourself more deeply.
Follow for more: https://www.instagram.com/fluidartwellness.pt/ Visit: https://fluidartwellness.com/online-mindful-creative-cohort/ References Berry, J. W. (2005). Acculturation: Living successfully in two cultures. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 29(6), 697–712. Malchiodi, C. A. (2020). Trauma and expressive arts therapy: Brain, body, and imagination in the healing process. Guilford Press.



