This article examines how prolonged immersion in a dominant culture can shape personality, language, self-presentation, and cultural belonging when public life rewards politeness but private life quietly pressures conformity. Drawing on scholarship in acculturation, bicultural identity integration, code-switching, and acculturative family distancing, the discussion argues that cultural mixing does not always produce mutual acceptance. In many settings, it produces conditional belonging, in which individuals are included only so long as they remain readable, restrained, and culturally manageable. The article also introduces “island syndrome” as a metaphor rather than a formal diagnosis, describing the inward retreat some individuals or communities develop when they use nostalgia, defensiveness, and selective memory to avoid confronting the reality of identity change. The central claim is that cultural mixing can enrich social intelligence and emotional range. Still, when acceptance remains shallow, it often creates guarded personalities, divided selves, and adaptation based more on performance than on genuine inclusion.
CASPER J.H. KELLER (Tue,) studied this question.
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