“Do I belong here?”
You arrive in a new country with nothing but a suitcase, and an avalanche of such questions pops into your head.
Who will you meet? What will you learn? How will you connect with the people? A few days, weeks, or months later, you return carrying stories: late-night talks with friends from five different countries, unexpected sparks of romance, a community built around shared passions, maybe even a sense that “home” now spans across borders. For many young Europeans, mobility isn’t just studying abroad to get a degree, a project, or a volunteer placement. It becomes a doorway to entirely new lives, identities, and possibilities.
For many years now, mobility programmes like Erasmus+, DiscoverEU, volunteering, or other youth exchanges offer much more than a diploma or a holiday. They offer growth, connection, and self-discovery. And for some lucky ones who are willing to commit to having their whole studies in a new country, they offer a chance for a new homeland. European institutions often speak about mobility in terms of “skills,” “identity formation,” or “active citizenship.” These ideas only make sense when grounded in the lives of real people. In this article, you will explore stories of three Europeans (out of millions) who reflect on how mobility shaped their sense of self, their communities, and even their future careers, revealing why these programmes matter more than ever.
