World Yi Case: Returning Home or Staying Abroad Was Really a Stage Decision
The user looked like they were choosing between countries, but the deeper question was whether this was a consolidation stage or an expansion stage.
Why geography was not enough
The user was torn between returning home and staying abroad, but the real difficulty was not the map itself. It was that family pressure, career uncertainty, and identity fatigue were all arriving at the same time.
World Yi therefore treated the case as a stage-and-environment question. The decision could not be reduced to which country was “better.” It had to include timing, current load, and the cost of collapsing too many variables at once.
What the judgment order changed
Once the case was reframed, the advice became clearer: preserve two-sided possibility first, avoid identity panic, and do not force a final migration narrative before the user had restored a more stable base.
In other words, the judgment did not remove uncertainty, but it reduced obvious misordering. That is exactly what World Yi aims to do.