I moved within the US in part due to this. I realized that we're just on the cutting edge of the rise of neo-fascism. Europeans have their own issues, Canada has theirs too. New Zealand was always super appealing, but my specialization isn't well represented there. Australia is like fucking impossible to immigrate to, as is anywhere in the UK, so Scotland is off the list. Ireland seems like they'll take you if you have 10 bucks and promise to work and pay taxes there, but also it's pretty culturally conservative.
I feel more at home in my new state than I may have ever in my old one.
Yeah I made the move at the end of 2022, though it wasn't because I was trying to get away from the US or anything dramatic like that. I miss the pacific northwest quite a lot. It just so happened that my partner is from the EU and wanted us to be here close to her friends and family. I figured I was still relatively young so why not give it a shot.
It's been alright. Definitely a case of trading some pros for cons and vise versa. Moving to Europe hasn't been some transformative experience. It was a bigger life change for me moving from the US Southeast to the Northwest about 10 years ago than moving from the US Northwest to the EU.
Sounds like you haven't yet naturalised to your new country based on the fact you said you moved to Europe rather than the country you moved to. Europe is pretty diverse.
What country did you move to? I would have thought the language alone would make the move a greater transition than moving from southeast to northwest in the US.