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Study Abroad - Blog

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Filtering by Category: Success Story

Kelly McCready - MBA Student From The USA

Yana Immis

“Thanks to Germany, I found out that an MBA gives you a competitive advantage, especially MBA from abroad.” Read Kelly’s story here!

   
Place of Birth Denver, USA
Nationality American
Where did you live? Colorado, Florida, Pennsylvania (USA)
Education Level Prior to Relocation Bachelor Degree
Reason of moving to Germany Adventures, MBA
When did you move? 2012
How old were you? 25
Are you still in Germany? No
What is your future goal? I will be CEO
Where would you like to live? Pittsburgh, my home!

Chapter 1: Bachelor

I was born in Denver, Colorado. My mother is originally from Pittsburgh hence when I was 3 years old we moved back to Pittsburgh. Up until now, I have nearly been everywhere in the USA! Our country is so big and rich in things to see that I could keep on discovering it all my life.

As a teenager, I was an above-average high school student and dreamt of going to Ivy League school. I was very active in sports: soccer, cross-country tracking & horseback riding. I did pretty well in college, but I was more focused on work and life and did not focus on grades. I did not make it to the Ivy League but anyway I wanted to leave Pittsburgh and experience something different, so I got admission at the University of Colorado which actually I loved at the end!

My first job was not what I wanted to do. I finished college in 2008 and it started to go into recession in the USA and I panicked last minute and tried to convince parents to stay longer in the college for 1 year. They persuaded me to graduate. All my friends had jobs and I did not focus on that. Luckily I got an internship with the university. I did not like the cold calling from the donations but some things I did enjoy.

I decided to take the job because it was the least amount of change. I could be on campus, instead of class I was going to work to the same comfort zone. This way I extended my stay in the college.

I left a year later to work in Florida. I did not enjoy living there but I got the job I enjoyed. The first job after university, I wouldn’t know what to apply for so I had to take what was available. I wanted to do events for non-profit companies I would love that. I was also working on the side of a restaurant job. Through connections, I got to know a medical device company and that’s how I landed in my dream job.

Unluckily, with the full recession in the USA, not many opportunities to find jobs were available and it felt like the right time to go out of the country and experience something new.

Chapter 2: MBA

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I am from the USA. Why did I decide to move? Because I never studied abroad when I did my undergrad and there is so much of the world I haven’t seen yet, I was 25 and I didn’t want to waste any more time and I thought I would move to Germany.

I wanted to learn and to speak another language. It was the best way. Luckily I learnt it in school so I would have the base.

My family and friends in the USA do not travel abroad much. I would advise future generations to do so.


I thought it was important to experience different cultures in business and in life to be successful in business and life consequently.


My first impression? I arrived a day before Oktoberfest. It was amazing. It felt like a relaxed culture, I made great friends quickly and it was a festival season so it was great.

After a couple of weeks I decided to take a GMAT, I studied for 1 month but unfortunately didn’t score well. I am not a good test taker. I applied to schools that do not require GMAT and I found a place at a private business school in Munich and I got in for my MBA. Interesting how the thought of doing an MBA never came across my mind back in the USA. That’s what happens when you travel – you get inspired!

I loved:

· That we had students from all parts of the world with the perspectives on the way the business is running in the different parts of the world and the way how our education is different.

· To have a thesis, which we did not have in the USA for my Bachelor's. I wrote my MBA thesis about the Ritz Carlton and the effects it has on the economy (where they decide to build hotels). Some sectors and income go up or not. In conclusion, I realized that real estate prices go up with the rest of the points remaining at constant. If you would like to read my thesis, hit me up!

· Sales class. I didn’t expect that. I haven’t worked directly in sales. I liked the professor I thought he was smart and his perspective was very interesting. I loved it! That course made total sense.

· The international marketing class.

· That my school was small with the people I could meet daily, recognize, know names of and become friends with.

· That the administration was accessible.

My MBA program was 1 year, I wasn’t really invested in a longer-term program, I wanted to come back for my career.

I travelled a lot! To Spain, to the Czech Republic and around Germany! I wanted to see the world and I got a lot of confidence doing MBA and paying for it myself. Every country has its own flavor and I found Germany to be very livable. But all good things come to an end and when my year in Germany was over I came back to the USA.


I realized pretty quickly as much as I was enjoying the experience I missed America.


Refrigerators being big enough, having a car and driving everywhere, peanut butter! My mom was sending me rice crispies and mac’n’cheese.

It wasn’t so much that, one of the things in the USA that I really value is that our world in the USA is big. We are still American 2000 miles away. In Europe, everything is so close. You cross Germany within 20 hours drive. In the USA in 20 hours you get not that far. If you calculate where I have been in the USA it is so much bigger than all of Europe. In one country we have all cultures and nationalities.

Thanks to Germany, I found out that an MBA gives you a competitive advantage, especially MBA from abroad. I did not know how my MBA would influence my applications but I realized it was easier to get a job with it.


As a female too, but my MBA contributed to me getting more call backs and a higher salary (by a lot).


In the Interviews I was curiously asked about Germany, Europe, MBA abroad, my interviewers were very curious. In a way a competitive advantage. People want to ask questions. It is good to stand out. I think education from Europe helped my CV stand out and arouse curiosity

Now I am in Pittsburgh now I am home. I feel good here. Would I move? Probably not. But everything still has a price, if the CEO position is offered at any part of the world with a big wage gap to my current standing, I’d move.

Chapter 3: CEO

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Work never seemed to be a burden to me. I like to work, I like the satisfaction I get from working.

My career is very important to me.

Yes, there are hard days but then it doesn’t usually seem so hard to me.

I started working early and the reason for that was my passion.

To be able to afford horseback riding you have to spend a ton of money and time.

My parents asked me to pay at least half of my expenses for keeping a horse.


This is my way to becoming a CEO. What is yours?

I got my first job when I was 14

As soon as I could drive I got a job at a mall.

When I was in middle school I had business as a clown

I would go to churches and do tricks with animals and balloons.

I did university jobs, fundraising jobs for non-for-profit organizations and I worked on a side in the restaurant until I secured my first dream job in Florida

My first full-time job was there I was doing medical device sales. It is then when I started developing my passion for a certain job type and industry. I travelled a lot between 6 labs in the country. I was looking into the markets where we could develop. It was rather marketing than a sales job.

I felt like doing an MBA was the right thing at that moment

After MBA the first job you get will be influenced by your MBA. Any job after or any employer after will no longer look at your MBA but rather at your recent work experience.

MBA sometimes is a minimum requirement for the big corporations to filter out people when screening. Well, it is not the kind of company I want to work for anyway. I like small to mid-size enterprises because you as a personality and as a team member you have more contribution and decision making. I like to be able to participate. Your job and role are bigger.

I applied for technology companies project/coordination management jobs in Washington and I successfully got in.

In the same company, I moved up the ladder from product to sales management and then pure sales.

Buying my own horse was an achievement

I have been striving for it for my whole life. My first horse I bought before I turned 30.

Afterwards I did sales consulting for 6 months (freelancing) and product management consulting for education and technology firms

I got very lucky because I had this job offer due to my network.

The company I currently work for is Danish (Area9), I work fully remotely (from home) and I do sales, well I am very shy but I am VP of sales to be precise 😊

I absolutely love my job and how much we contribute to the future of people.

We sell education software to corporations that focus mostly on military and healthcare sectors (adaptive learning). I travel so much. I have almost 100.000 miles a year (160.000 km). I have a lot of benefits – free bags, first-class, miles to use for my personal trips, lounges and many others.

Working from home is the same as going to the office but the main difference: I can wear my pajamas (haha). I do the same routine, I do my coffee, I work from 8 to 5. I believe people working from home can be more productive due to fewer distractions. It is helpful to be in an office sometimes as well to come over and ask questions at the desk.

The majority of salespeople are in Europe, mainly Denmark, we are handling the sales team in the USA here remotely. I attend a lot of conferences, fairs and client meetings hence the travel. We have weekly Monday morning cross-country meetings with the whole team to see where we stand.


Next step: CEO

Dear recruiters, I am accepting the CEO offers from the education space. I found my passion for this industry. Companies are the ones who benefit the most from all of us investing in education. It is time they start investing in all of us. In 30 years many jobs won’t exist anymore, jobs change all the time, technology is changing we need new skills and we should educate people. Companies should participate in upskilling people.

Maybe in the company where I work now, maybe I will start my own. Up until now, I was gathering experience in technology, implementation, customer services, sales. I want to learn more skills and combine it all together to be the Chief Executive officer.


In my free time when I do not focus on becoming a CEO, I travel and I ride my horse a few times a week and participate in fox hunting. I cook and do my own stylish interior design. Once or twice a year I do adventurous trips to Bali, Holland, Ireland, Germany, Russia.

Go abroad! But only if you will get something out of it. Don’t just go abroad. I wish I had a little bit more of a plan. Just try.

There are no wrong decisions. There are only the choices you didn’t make.


Maria Bader - German Language Student From Russia

Yana Immis

Meet Maria from Russia! She lived in Munich and Berlin and she studied the language, but frankly speaking, LOVE brought her to Germany. Read more here...

   
Place of Birth Perm, Russia
Nationality Russian, but I identify myself as a citizen of the world!
Where did you live? Perm (Russia), Berlin (Germany)
Education Level Prior to Relocation Specialist Degree
Reason of moving to Germany Love
When did you move? 2013
How old were you? 23
Are you still in Germany? Yes
What is your future goal? Self Realization and Family
Would you like to stay in Germany? Yes for now

Chapter 1: My monolingual childhood

I grew up in an absolutely monolingual environment where I only heard the Russian language. My relatives come from Belarus and St. Petersburg and I grew up in a city called Perm.

Integration, moving, relocating, changing a country – terms which were not new for my family.

Now it is easy for me, I moved a few times already. But I know how it felt: all the stories I heard in childhood. It is not easy. Moving abroad you have to do what it takes. And to better prepare your children you need to start early enough.

I always had a feeling I do not belong in Russia. I was craving more languages, more knowledge, more travels, and completely new experiences! I felt like I should discover the world and, thankfully my parents took me to trips around Russia and Europe from back then when I was a toddler!

I experienced all of that when I was a child, when people first face it at 20-30 years old they have an opinion already about many things, and it is much more different.

Parents would give me challenges. They didn’t speak the language so they made me translate everywhere through resistance. That’s why I was forced to learn English on my own.

- “Maria go check this shirt and ask them if they have a different color and size and different collar type”

- “How do I do that when I don’t speak English that well?”


Challenge accepted…


These challenges I hated so much back then but thanks to that I learnt the language.


I knew what I liked since then. I was never bored and I knew I would connect my life with languages. I always followed my dreams and since my intuition never fails me… the only question was: where do I move? Trial and error!

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  • At 12 years old I had my first cultural shock. Like when we were around Scandinavia: people from other nationalities, people wearing funky clothes, open-minded people.

I started thinking that I could belong there perhaps? Could I live abroad and could I live with the Europeans? When I was 12-14 years old I was totally in love with Denmark and Sweden and I was sure my future would be connected with the Nordics.

  • But then I also loved Spanish language and I did professional Latin American dancing and I also would imagine myself somewhere in Latin America?!

I was actively attending the Latin American dancing all my life and I also listened to Spanish music - my soul spoke Spanish!

I planned that when I would finish my 5 Year Specialist Degree (Russian system back then) I would do the 2-3 months backpacking trip across Latin America. I was slowly reaching my goal: earning money, finishing studies, learning the language & working.

  • What I also did: I travelled every summer for the language & volunteering camps in Portugal, Italy, and Spain.

I earned enough money to travel 1 month to Italy and lived with an Italian family, where no one spoke any other language than Italian. I lived in Liguria in the North next to the sea. I started speaking in 1 week!!! It was an amazing experience.

I also did 2 volunteer projects 1 month each: Portugal (Evora, sports clubs & swimming pools promoting sports for children in rural areas) and Spain (Catalonian farm, Barcelona and I flew to Ibiza to have a look). What a cool experience!

I monitored the flights and bought the cheapest ones, earned money as much as I could and since volunteering organization gets your visa, I didn’t have to organize this. I met so many people from around the globe and practiced languages thanks to my volunteering trips!

I knew I would have to work with children and I wouldn’t allow myself to go to these countries without any language. I always made sure to make pen friends with the tandem app or website prior to my trips: this way I got a couch surfing host for Lisbon, got language practice and friends in that particular country before moving there.

When I managed small talk in each language I considered myself ready to go. The rest you can learn very quickly while being in the country with native speakers.

  • I also worked in a start-up acquiring my journalism skills in Russia. Our aim was to connect students from all universities, we were publishing a newspaper and a magazine with all the current events for students. I was in charge of cooperation with student newspapers abroad.


Every time I had an opportunity to go abroad I took it! Carpe diem!

Looking back to my past now: all of that contributed to where I am today and I am very happy.


Chapter 2: Life will not happen as you have planned

I finished my studies in Russia and I was ready to go on my next adventure (relocating to Latin America, preferably Argentina or Chile).

But the universe had other plans. And in particular: a job offer! French company in Russia offered me a position using English/French/Russian languages. Since I had a translation and linguistic degree, it was perfect for me: to join a corporate world through my translation work experience. A good opportunity as well to earn enough money for my trip.

I notified them that I would take a sabbatical to travel for 2-3 months and I would let them know in advance when.

I saw a plane ticket Perm-Frankfurt-Rio de Janeiro a while after for less than 500 Euro and I booked it. Off I go, I thought! I was so sure I would go alone but little did I know…

In the meantime, two backpackers from Europe were travelling through Russia with the Trans Siberian train and asked a friend of mine for couch surfing booking. I was staying at my friend's house that day and without any plan, I ended up talking with this one German guy. 


That sounds like the beginning of a great romantic movie and it was!

Was it the love from first sight? I think so!



He would then come back to Russia afterwards again to get to know our culture better and to meet me again as well as my family. I was invited to move to Berlin right after but since my trip to Brazil was already booked, it wouldn’t work out. And he decided to follow me to Latin America! For 3 Months!


Some people say that you need to live together with someone to know their real selves. I tell you to travel for 3 months together to know their real selves.


Slums, crazy bus rides, heat, cold, stress, hostels, safe and unsafe surroundings, lack of money, food, no buses within 2 days – that is the best relationship check and we have been through everything together.

Sadly, all good things come to an end and so did our trip, when both of us moved back home after: to Russia and to Germany. We couldn’t imagine separating after and we started searching for German language lessons for me in Berlin. I wanted to speak the language of the person I love. I did attend them and learnt the language very fast in Germany after all because all my surroundings were German…

…but I moved to Germany for a different reason: David proposed to me over Skype! Call us crazy or call us a very modern family 😉



Did I say yes?

No

I said

“Ja, aber Hallo! Natürlich!”


To get a family reunion visa you need to pass A1 German and I learnt the language in 3 weeks.

Yay! 98/100! How? I was listening to the German radio and did German tests. Every day tried to talk to my fiance in German showing my skills over Skype.

I attended A2 language lessons in Berlin and after that, I realized it was sufficient. Only practice makes perfect now.

When you speak Russian, English, Spanish, French and you understand Italian and Portuguese… you learn languages at extreme speed and nothing is a challenge anymore. I dropped the course after and learnt by listening to my husband’s friends and family.

3 Months into living in Germany we decided that the language of our family will be German. We will talk German with each other so that our children understand that this is the language of the parents and this is where we are from. That’s when I started thinking about my children’s language acquisition and my business idea came up to my mind.

Chapter 3: My children’s multilingual future

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We have been living in Berlin for 5 years but then my husband’s work took him to Munich.

I adore both cities they are incredibly different. I am very happy in Munich.

But then we are a very mobile and flexible family.

A good offer from Dubai or Armenia? We would move.

We were traveling in Australia and Asia for several weeks with a baby and road-tripping a lot in Europe.

I am happy to be surrounded by 5 languages because languages are alive when you are having daily practice.


First I wanted to fulfil my parents’ dreams but then

they became my own.


My grandfather and grandmother spoke Belarussian and Russian. My mother was very sad that she wouldn’t speak Belarussian.

Everything your parents give you in your childhood will highly contribute to your future. Dedicate learning languages and travelling to your child from start!

Multilingual life is my goal and my children will speak multiple languages to understand the world better. My children speak strictly Russian with me. They speak German to the father. They attend a French Kindergarten.

Many people ask me why not English? It is such an easy language, they will pick it up in school. I want them to think, dream, express themselves, read lyrics in both German and Russian as first priority. English will follow!

My children have 2 passports: German and Russian. We travel a lot around the world. We have just done a Portugal road trip with both of them, we flew to Singapore as well. There are no challenges for ambitious people!


Life doesn’t stop when you have children!


I combined self-integration into the country, children education, and language passion for my business.

I do language coaching for those parents who would like to raise children bilingual or multilingual. I am organizing seminars, workshops and private counselling locally and online. Because globalization is the future, there are a lot of mixed families, who often raise children in another country.

I started to build my community from the Russian newspaper in Berlin where I was a columnist writing on multilingual matters. I am in touch with journalists and bloggers in Europe, Russia and Asia to promote bilingual education for children.



I realized that the literature I read in English, German, French and Spanish  is very helpful for parents, but is not available for Russian – speakers hence I started translating articles and preparing Pinterest checklists, helpful books to raise children and started teaching Business Russian to professionals.

Which languages will your children speak depends only on you! On the parents. Children copy your behavior that’s why you need to promote languages on your own. Don’t wait for kindergarten or school, from an early age you can already contribute to their language development.

I am bringing parents locally together so they can exchange experience and speak of their children because there is no single language and there is no right approach. It is very unique and I love to hear the language stories.

Pay a visit to my website and tell me the language story of your family. I am happy to help!


Mayada Khaled Fahmy Ghoneim - Bachelor Student From Egypt

Yana Immis

How did Mayada feel moving to Germany? She was only 18 years old and she had to take care of everything herself. “Do mistakes! And learn from them”, - she says. Agree? Learn her story here!

   
Place of Birth Cairo, Egypt
Nationality Egyptian
Where did you live? Cairo (Egypt)
Education Level Prior to Relocation Secondary School
Reason of moving to Germany Bachelor Program
When did you move? 2015
How old were you? 18
Are you still in Germany? Yes
What is your future goal? Master Degree or full-time job
Would you like to stay in Germany? Not sure, time will show

Chapter 1: The Good Old Mayada In The Past

Here is how it all started: one lovely sunny day (typical in Egypt), my parents by luck found information about a German university fair in an Egyptian newspaper.

I was in my IGCSE exams and I decided to visit this event.

I started considering education abroad, especially in Europe because private education in Egypt is not much less expensive, sometimes even more expensive if we talk about education in British Pounds terms.

I was accepted in Croatia and Hungary already and I considered Latvia. I love the United Kingdom, I adore travelling there, but I followed my sister to Germany to be next to her.


I was born in Cairo, I had no responsibilities all my life and I loved it. The change came with the location change when I moved to Germany.

Why did I do that? Still trying to figure out and it has been 4 years now?!

My life in Egypt consisted of me waking up and going to the sports club and hanging out with friends. I played handball sometimes, I started tennis & swimming. What did I do in Egypt? I would go out with my friends because I knew I can get home at any time and my family and my sister were always there for me. You go out with friends most of the time without caring how you get home because HELLO your transportation is always taken care of. In Egypt, I did not use public transportation.

Here is what changed:

  1. Before I moved abroad I was more emotional in my decision making

  2. Parents were taking care of everything in Egypt for us, that changed upside down

  3. I started having routines and my best friends were no longer around

  4. Oh miss the good old times having no responsibilities

  5. I miss and I need people around me of the same background and history

Chapter 2: The Changes & My Future

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Moving to Germany I was just a child. Living alone here I became an adult – it was a big change.

Sometimes you need to leave your comfort zone to figure out

  • who you are

  • who your friends are

  • how important your siblings and your parents are

You start appreciating it when you leave your comfort zone.

So this is how my story developed:

1. Now I approach my decisions strategically

If I would be still in Egypt I would have been a different person and I probably would have grown up much later.

2. Here we are on our own. Living alone is hard

Housekeeping? Washing dishes? Never heard about that before. To go to KVR (Kreisverwaltungsreferat) and to deal with bureaucracy on my own? To go WHERE? To do WHAT? Where AM I? Take me HOME! That’s when I realized what is a bureauCRAZY.

To wake up on time, to clean, to clean up after myself (to DO WHAT?), I learnt cooking (can you BELIEVE THIS?) - at home in Egypt, my mother or servants do that.

3. I can understand German now

I know I am slow, but it is a good start.

4. I still have to get used to the fact that nobody will take care of you or tell you if this is right or wrong


No parents - no supervision. When you are living abroad no people come to your life unless you want them to.


If we talk about Arab culture, we are totally different from Europeans by the way in case you didn’t know. The way your parents raised you up is 100% different from the European mentality.

You will experience culture shock and you will want to go back home to the safety blanket. The best thing your parents can do is to tell you: “No”.

In my country, people know you. I couldn’t do things like staying out late (until midnight) as my father would never accept that. Because it is not safe and the Arab mentality says females cannot stay late out of the home.

Here I am fully aware of my own schedule and when I need to be back home for my next day responsibilities.

5. I found out what it feels like to work every day. A bit about my internship:

 · I searched for an internship in Germany but I was not successful

I think I didn’t find an internship in Germany because of the German language. I am working on it. The plan is to attend the grammar course.

· In the beginning, my responsibilities were marketing & communication and I worked with the Corporate Social Responsibility of Nokia

We started to do activities for the employees of the company. My first task was to organize a Women Day – to make it special for them.

· Yes I did mistakes, but that is what life is about! Do mistakes just don’t repeat them

It was hard in the beginning to do my first internship, and you know why? Because some people were fired in front of me! Managers fired in front of me, that was harsh.

· My manager was Egyptian, who graduated from a German school.

She talked to me in German and she approached me like the Germans: very strict. I knew somewhere deep inside she was a nice person.


I was very shocked about the recommendation letter after my internship was over though. She rated me very high.


· My hobby is taking photos. I proposed to use it in the internship and suddenly I became in charge of video recording as well as the correspondence with the journalists from 15 countries in Africa & Middle East.

I worked with Moroccans, Tunisians, Egyptian journalists to keep them up-to-date with company events. Every country has data reports and magazines and I had to notify them on the launches and inquire if they are still in the industry. Frankly, it was so difficult in the beginning, as I couldn’t understand some accents.

Dear foreigners, this is important for you to understand: we do not have one Arabic accent! Now that I know Hajar (my friend from Morocco), thanks to her I can understand Moroccan Arabic.

People from Egypt understand Syrian, Jordanian, and Lebanese accents very well. Oman isn’t that bad if they talk slowly. Hey, I can understand Tunisian now, which is a real advantage as well! Very proud of myself.


Bottom line: speak out, show your talents, work hard – this is what internship is for!


· When I went back home to Egypt for my internship in Nokia, I was waking up at 6.00 to go to work, then went to sports club to meet my friends. But the difference was that they did nothing all day and I worked all day. So the conversations sometimes were not balanced.

When I come back home to Cairo, the majority of my friends talk about boys. But hey, there are other things to do: studying, working, hobbies, cleaning up dishes after yourself (*giggle*).

But I get it: they are living with their parents. You don’t need to worry about food, because people do groceries for you, they cook for you.

You have no idea about the laundry!!! This is what I am doing in Munich: Sunday laundry in Munich. And you have to pay for it yourself!!! In Egypt, your parents pay for you.

6. I started eating healthy. I became much healthier overall

I also learnt to walk a lot in Germany. Why should I take UBER?

I can walk?!

Yes, it will take more time but it is so much healthier.

I lost a lot of weight during my internship semester, because of healthy eating and joining a  CrossFit group called HiT in Egypt.

I highly recommend it.

Now I love travelling jogging and hiking and live a very active lifestyle.

I want to improve every day and to be come a better person inside and outside!


7. I learnt not to talk about politics

First of all, because I do not really want to talk about Egyptian politics. My country is not what you see in the media! But to prove that, you need to have a very strong political opinion, so I am avoiding this topic.

8. I became punctual

Ok, I try. Ok, not really. Sometimes my friends feel really mad at me because I schedule appointments: “Let’s meet from 17:00 to 19:00 because I have something else to do after”. I realized I’m scheduling appointments like to meet the doctor. Can we do it on Saturday 16:00?

Egyptians are really bad with time. Not all of them, but most of them. Not only because of the traffic. They are just like that. In Egypt you can hang out anywhere any time, everything is open 24/7. Either you take a ride with your friends or you go to a club.

But here in Germany you have to check the transportation, you have to check if the Ubahn (Underground) goes at 2.00 am, you have responsibilities the next day, even if you have no university. For example, on Saturday you have to go to the supermarket, because on Sunday it is closed. Well, I can go to the gas station, but it is expensive.

9. I appreciate having peace and quiet

Sometimes I need it. I love travelling home but not more than for 2 weeks. I like my routine! In Egypt, you will be under the supervision of your parents because you are living in their place with their rules: “Dad can I go out?” - it is respect, you ask them for permission.

10. In my first year, I was depressed as I had no friends

I only talked with an old friend on the phone or over the WhatsApp calls, until I met new friends here from new places.

My friends here are from everywhere!!! Classmates from India & Germany & Dubai as an example. 


The people I appreciate having in my life

Ilham & Maha from Libya

Omar from Syria

Awos from Jordan

Hajar from Morocco

Svetlana from Serbia


So far I didn’t succeed at making many German friends, but I am working on it. I really want to improve my Deutsch and to have more German mates! Stay tuned!

11. I love Summer more than Winter and this will never change

I can’t stand cold and snow. Below 8 C degrees is a NO GO FOR ME. Every moment I can, I flee Munich for the sun and the beach. Actually, I have lied. Everything below 20 C degrees I already find rather cold.


I brought a lot of things to Germany from Egypt. But I brought much more back.


Chapter 3: My sister, Manar

Living alone is really hard. If I didn’t have my sister, it would have been much harder.

Manar and I got accepted to Germany simultaneously. Germany would be definitely better than Croatia and Hungary in terms of language difficulty. We thought more people would understand English here as well and we were right. Germany is like an IT Hub in the middle of Europe everyone speaks English so you should not worry. Croatian and Hungarian languages are very hard.

Manar, moved here when she was 24 - 25 I moved here when I was 18. Whatever she learnt at her age I learnt it earlier in terms of travelling alone and responsibilities on your shoulders. Yes I’m living with my sister here in Germany, but she would not let me slack and she gave me responsibilities.


In Egypt, we have separate rooms and lives.

Thanks to Germany we bonded and supported each other because we had to share the flat.


We have 6 years difference in age with my sister. It is not a small amount. Not only age but also in the way we think.

When we started living together, it helped us to narrow that gap and it was better for me and for her. We understand each other better now. We have our own ideas, our mind and our decisions we share with each other but we are also living our own lives.

In Germany I have to take care of everything myself 100%. My sister is not going to do it for me. I tried to persuade her but she wouldn’t give in.


 I learn a lot from Manar and I am very thankful.


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Chapter 4: Decisions, decisions

If I find the job I will stay in Germany now. My sister is satisfied with her studies in Germany and probably ready to go back to Egypt.

I am not done yet. I want to work, I want to do a Master degree, but I haven’t taken any step or a decision yet.

I would like to study Human Resources. Based on what I am hearing, HR professor in the school I want to study at is very strict, so I am not sure.

I took Marketing & Sales in my Bachelor and through some Human Resources lessons I realized that in reality, HR control the company. Forget about Finance. They are the only ones in charge to hire you or fire you.


My mother is an HR manager in a Petroleum industry. So now I finally know what she does. Hell of the responsibilities!


Ideally, in the future, I plan to work with my parents and take care of them. At the end, I have to come back home.

Because my private life is in Egypt. I don’t want my children to be confused about religion, beliefs, and culture. If my sister decides to go back, then it is fine. But if not, then I have to be back home.


P.S. Something you will not read in books but you have to know (for both Egyptians and foreigners)

- I would advise Egyptians to come to Germany for sure!

- We are the only country that has belly dancers from the Arab world

- We are not African, we are not Muslim, we are not Arabs, we are all of that and also different

- We have pyramids

- We have Muslims, but we also have Christians and we are sharing the culture with each other

- Do not believe stereotypes you hear on TV about the foreigners’ employment in Germany!

I have friends who found internships or jobs, who are from very different backgrounds, countries, nationalities, religions.

It is not about that. Bottom line. If your CV is good – they will take you. Business is business – it is not about the way you look from the outside! It is about how much value you can bring to the company.

Any company would like to hire someone who will bring advantage to them. Yes, it is harder than for EU citizens in terms of the visa but it is not impossible.


It is possible for everybody. Fix your CV and fix your LinkedIn – go ahead, practice and go through these interviews.