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You’re approved to participate in Erasmus+ project – good job! So, what to bring? What to put into your suitcase?

“Of course – everything!” – At least that is what I told myself before my first project and deeply regreted it after.


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Let’s start from the fact that this is not a vacation and you’re spending most of your time at one place, a conference hall, for example. What clothes to bring? I suggest you to have with you one set of clothes per day, comfortable ones and clothes that you can combine so to wear them not only once – e.g. leggings, a skirt and jeans with more T-shirts and blouses. You should keep in mind that activities often include different energizers, games, sports, dancing or acting theatrical scenes, often sitting on the floor – so you need to feel comfortable first. And the best thing is that nobody watches and comments your style or appearance; everybody is interested in what personality you have and how you can have a lot of fun together!

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Overcoat is a necessity! Because when we’re setting off for a Southern and warm place, we usually tend to think the weather is going to be hot and not rainy at all but surprisingly this always occur to be a huge mistake – and getting sick is the last think you want, right? Also, more than two pairs of shoes (but convenient and not high-heeled) it’s just not needed.

Of course, bring a fancy dress for the intercultural night and the free afternoon to explore the city, and shine with all of your brightness!

And now – the serious part. Read carefully the project’s info-pack and if you’ve never been engaged with its topic, get informed. For some projects it’s required to prepare in advance:

  • A presentation for your home country

  • Information or statistics regarding the problem which is the project’s topic

  • Advice: If you have time, get informed about the situation in the other countries; speak up your own opinion or ask other participants questions; Yet it is the goal – intercultural learning

  • Preparing a presentation for your sending organization – don’t hesitate to ask ICDET for info and materials, they won’t refuse

  • Ideas for dissemination, follow-up activities – usually you have to write an article, to record an audio or video about the project once after it finishes.

  • Advice: Take a lot of photos and videos in order to have materials (and nice memories).

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Not forget to mention, the most important things that you should bring and keep safe:

  • An ID card or passport

  • An insurance or EHIC (European Health Insurance Card)

  • All of your physical or PDF tickets (and sometimes some signed agreements and stuff) to pass them to your group leader or to give them directly to the people from the host organization dealing with logistics – If you don’t keep the tickets you can’t get your reimbursement afterwards.

Intercultural night struggles


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One always wanders what exactly to bring and this actually depends a lot on the baggage allowance – e.g. you can’t take a bottle of alcohol or some foods in your carry-on.

A good advice is to compare your traveling and luggage options, for example sometimes to buy you ticket and after this to add checked suitcase separately, with a low-cost airline is cheaper than to buy ticket with big luggage or even only with hand luggage but with an expensive company. Don’t neglect that for each country there’s a certain budget fixed but organisators do prefer you to choose the cheapest travel option possible. Here’s a sample list of things that I never omit to take:

  • Food: lutenitsa, lukanka, white cow cheese, traditional spices; homemade jam or honey, lokum -> because it’s traditional and others truly love it

  • Beverages: homemade Rakia and wine -> foreigners actually like it a lot.

  • (Don’t feel desperate when you find out that participants from other Balkan countries present almost the same cuisine – yet our cultures are quite similar)

  • Vials with rose oil or perfume and Martenitsas -> because it is already really traditional and characteristic only of us

  • The national flag

  • Idea: You can bring few small souvenirs, cards or magnets and to prepare a Quiz with questions about Bulgaria and to give away the souvenirs to the winners.


And last but not least – the reason I’m always giving the advice for “one third or half empty suitcase”

Even if you don’t intend at first, you’ll always want to bring something for a keepsake from the country you visit. Either gifts and souvenirs for your relatives, or some traditional food and drinks that you liked during your stay there and want to share them with your homies and family. Don’t set off with a full suitcase without any free space because you may always need some.

by Silvia Arsova

What does it mean to be perspective for the young generation? Many children believe that their dream will make them happy, so they probably want to become astronauts, singers, supermodels or doctors. As they are growing up, they start realizing that happiness is hiding in a stable profession and making a lovely family.


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Money is in the base of the dream work for teenagers. People now believe that the more money they earn, the better life they will live. So, while searching for the highest paid professions nowadays, I came across to a huge problem: jobs that can offer you higher salaries take a huge part of your lifetime, so they reduce your chance of being happy and to have some free time to do the things you like. And maybe that can prove you that money is not the most important thing.


Young people should find a work that match their interests and give them opportunity to communicate with others. And in the modern world that is not so difficult. You just have to find what you like combined with earning money and you can become a perspective young person. Here are some of the best professions for this in the 21th century:


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Computer programmer


Programming is a career that is a lot more interesting than a lot of alternatives out there and also is a very high paying career. So if you are doing well with computers and they are a huge part of your life that is the best decision you can take.

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Head of a construction company


If you have the opportunity to become a leader, being a “Boss” will be the perfect “profession” for you because nowadays the construction business is very demanded in the whole world, therefore starting a company in this sector could be very rewarding.

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Lawyer


Lawyers are and always have been a mark of prestige and being among the highest-paid professionals in today's world which makes being one a great career choice. Not only that, but being able to help others and serve justice is what it is all about at the end of the day.

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Engineer


When you possess ingenuity, you will be perfect at making some new materials, structures and systems. You have to study hard and invest in education, but if you do it - a good salary and great career options are waiting for you.



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Flight manager or Pilot


The traffic in the sky is steadily increasing so there is a great necessity for people to handle it. This is the perfect job if you like traveling and being in the sky.


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Athlete


For those who love doing sport, if you become very good in some sport, you can be paid for living a healthy and interesting life. If you love winning, this is how you are supposed to live. Nowadays a large number of the richest people in the world are in fact athletes like footballers, basketball players, car racers and others

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Film and video editors


Film editors are the people who assemble footage into a sequence. If you watch TV or movies, you have already benefited from the work of a film of video editor. So if you are a person who enjoys the effects and flow of movies you should try doing it yourself.

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Mechanic


Mechanics in the big and successful brands are with normal work time and a lunch break but their salarier are so high, you even won’t believe it. The service may become your favorite place if you see how you can benefit from hard work.

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Surgeon


If you are not afraid of blood and want to help people in need then being a surgeon is the job for you. Not only you will be very highly-paid but you will help others, save lifes even, and there is really nothing better than that.

by Vladislav Todorov


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I love drawing. I’m not really any good but I do enjoy it immensely. I started drawing ever since I watched my first anime and haven’t stopped since. That led me to develop a particular style - one which many of my school teachers frowned upon but I never let that discourage me. At the time I didn’t really know how bad my drawings really were, yet once I entered high school I met many people who not only were better than me, but also planned to become professional artists and create art for a living. Now that I look back on it, I never really felt jealous of them and their drawing prowess actually motivated me to try harder and become better. While I still have a lot to learn and still make numerous mistakes in my drawings, I now have a goal and am slowly but surely reaching it.


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What drew me to Japanese animation were my childhood friends and the breath of fresh air said cartoons were from the annual Disney-Pixar cash-grab of a movie. Rewatching old Disney classics now makes me appreciate them more and see them in a new light, yet for eight-year-old me they held little to no appeal. What’s more, I certainly had no interest in the history of classical European art - something I’ve only recently gotten into - and the simplicity of manga easily drew me - an inexperienced child - in. As most kids, I had a vivid imagination and felt the urge to put in on paper and since my limited vocabulary held me back from writing the many thing going through my head down, I decided that simple stick figures would suffice. As I grew older my fictional worlds and characters grew more complex and detailed. That pushed me to try and better myself in order to express it as closest as possible to how I saw it in my mind’s eye. These days my drawing style- influenced by many manga artists- “mirrors” theirs and I can’t get myself to draw anything resembling realism. I’m currently trying a different approach to drawing- a more realistic one- which proves to be very difficult and sometimes irritatingly futile, but once in a while a drawing comes out alright and I’m reminded that all the effort is worth it. This keeps me motivated during the hardest of times.


My favourite European painter is Vincent van Gogh. I really like his “Self-portrait”. Another favourite of mine would be Botticelli’s “Spring”. A Bulgarian artist I admire is Vladimir Dimitrov and Horikoshi Kouhei’s drawing style I really like and find myself occasionally trying to replicate.

Although I never attended any competition and don’t ever plan to do so, I think drawing will stay a part of my life in the foreseeable future, even if just as a hobby.

by Yoana Nedelcheva

Participant in

YE “Save our money” in Hungary

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