The “Amul Baby” Migration Myth: Why Comfort-Built Lives Collapse Abroad

There’s a pattern nobody talks about openly.

A lot of people who grow up in ultra-comfort environments—food ready, house cleaned, clothes washed, zero real-life responsibility—decide to move to the US chasing a “better life.”

What they don’t realize?

They’re not just changing countries.
They’re moving from dependency to survival mode overnight.

And that gap? It exposes everything.


The Great Illusion: Same Life, Better Country

Many assume:

  • Same comfort
  • Same convenience
  • Just higher salary

Reality says: Welcome to do-it-yourself adulthood.


Reality Check #1: Your Life Becomes a Full-Time Job

Back home, life is supported.

Abroad, life is self-operated.

You are now:

  • The cook
  • The cleaner
  • The driver
  • The planner
  • The repair person
  • The emotional support system

There is no backup.

Miss one task, and things start falling apart fast.


Reality Check #2: Food Is Not Just Food—It’s Stability

You don’t just miss food. You miss routine, comfort, and care.

  • No daily fresh meals unless you cook
  • Eating out is expensive
  • Cooking after work feels like a second job

So what happens?

People:

  • Eat junk
  • Skip meals
  • Lose health
  • Gain frustration

And slowly… lose control.


Reality Check #3: Money Feels Big—Until It Doesn’t

Yes, salaries look attractive.

Then reality hits:

  • Rent takes a huge share
  • Insurance drains silently
  • Taxes are heavy
  • Daily expenses stack up

You earn in dollars… but you spend with pressure.

Savings don’t match the dream you imagined.


Reality Check #4: Loneliness Is Not Silence—It’s Weight

In India:

  • Noise, people, family, chaos

In the US:

  • Quiet apartments
  • Everyone busy
  • Social life requires effort

Weekends become:

  • Screens
  • Overthinking
  • Missing home

And no one to casually talk to.


Reality Check #5: Independence Is Not Optional

No quick fixes. No shortcuts.

You must:

  • Drive
  • Plan groceries
  • Manage schedules
  • Handle emergencies

There’s no “someone else will handle it.”


Reality Check #6: Mental Load Will Break the Unprepared

You are responsible for everything:

  • Bills
  • Taxes
  • Cooking
  • Cleaning
  • Work
  • Health
  • Life decisions

All at once.

If you’ve never handled your own life before, this becomes overwhelming very quickly.


Reality Check #7: Healthcare Becomes a Fear Factor

You don’t go to the doctor casually.

You think:

  • “Is this worth the cost?”
  • “Will insurance cover it?”

People delay treatment—not because they want to, but because they have to think twice.


Reality Check #8: Your Identity Gets Reset

In India:

  • You had identity
  • You had recognition

Abroad:

  • You start from zero

No one cares about your past comfort.

Only your present capability matters.


⚠️ Reality Check #9: The Uncomfortable Truth About Racism

Let’s not sugar-coat it.

Racism still exists—sometimes subtle, sometimes direct.

You may feel it:

  • In how people interact with you
  • In how you are judged
  • In where you’re expected to “fit”

Statements like those made by Donald Trump—where countries like India have been spoken about in derogatory ways—don’t come out of nowhere. They reflect a mindset that still exists in sections of society.

And here’s the harsh reality:

Even if you:

  • Earn well
  • Settle down
  • Become a citizen

You may still be seen as:
👉 An outsider
👉 Someone who doesn’t fully belong

Indians—regardless of skin tone, success, or status—often face stereotypes.

Money can buy comfort.
But it cannot buy belonging.


Now Let’s Get Specific

Because different groups face different levels of reality shock.


👨‍💻 IT Employees: The Golden Cage

On paper, they have it all.

  • Good salary
  • Stable job
  • Decent lifestyle

But here’s what people don’t see:

What hits them:

  • Long work hours + full household responsibilities
  • Visa pressure (job loss = life instability)
  • High performance expectations
  • No “adjustment culture”

The trap:

They earn well… but:

  • Have little time
  • Live under constant pressure
  • See lifestyle expenses eat into savings

Many don’t leave—not because they love it, but because they’re stuck between comfort and pressure.


🎓 Students Going for MS: The Hardest Hit

This group faces the most brutal transition.

From:

  • Fully dependent life
    ➡️ To
  • Complete survival mode

What hits them:

  • Cooking, cleaning, studying—all new
  • Part-time jobs to survive
  • Academic pressure
  • Loneliness and cultural shock

The harsh truth:

Some students:

  • Struggle mentally
  • Fall behind academically
  • Feel lost within months

Because no one prepared them for real life.


👨‍👩‍👧 Families Moving with Kids: The Silent Pressure Cooker

Looks like stability from the outside.

Inside, it’s intense.

What hits them:

  • Both partners juggling work and home
  • No domestic help
  • Childcare challenges
  • Kids adjusting to a new culture

Hidden stress:

  • Parenting without family support
  • Emotional burnout
  • Increased strain on relationships

And unlike India, there’s no easy backup system.


Why Many Eventually Come Back

Not because the US is bad.

But because expectations were wrong.

People return because:

  • Emotional support matters more than money
  • Comfort and familiarity feel stronger than pressure and isolation
  • Parents are aging back home
  • Life feels more “human” in India

And most importantly:

They realize they were never prepared for independence.


The Hard Truth Nobody Wants to Admit

This is not about the US.

This is about you.

People who succeed abroad:

  • Adapt quickly
  • Learn life skills
  • Drop ego
  • Accept discomfort

People who struggle:

  • Expect comfort without effort
  • Resist change
  • Compare constantly
  • Stay mentally dependent on the past

Final Reality Line

If your life works smoothly only because others are managing it for you, changing countries won’t upgrade your life…

It will expose it.


Before asking:

👉 “Is the US a better place?”

Ask yourself:

👉 “Can I run my life alone without falling apart?”

That answer will decide everything.

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Hi, I’m Nishanth Muraleedharan (also known as Nishani)—an IT engineer turned internet entrepreneur with 25+ years in the textile industry. As the Founder & CEO of "DMZ International Imports & Exports" and President & Chairperson of the "Save Handloom Foundation", I’m committed to reviving India’s handloom heritage by empowering artisans through sustainable practices and advanced technologies like Blockchain, AI, AR & VR. I write what I love to read—thought-provoking, purposeful, and rooted in impact. nishani.in is not just a blog — it's a mark, a sign, a symbol, an impression of the naked truth. Like what you read? Buy me a chai and keep the ideas brewing. ☕💭   For advertising on any of our platforms, WhatsApp me on : +91-91-0950-0950 or email me @ support@dmzinternational.com