In 2017, I spent several months in Japan as part of my student exchange at the University of Rikkyo. In the past, I had studied for a semester in England. However, this particular experience in the land of the rising sun was truly a unique one from beginning to end. That’s why I decided to dedicate some posts about my exchange and life in the bustling city known as Tokyo.
The first days in Tokyo
After travelling for over 15 hours I was FINALLY in Tokyo! 🥳 That week the university provided buses to drive students from the airport to the dorms. But you know that I do nothing like the others. I landed late in the evening… the day before the beginning of the semester 🤡 which allowed me to enjoy public transports for my first night there 😭.
The next morning, at the University of Rikkyo, after attending a meeting, I met my two buddies and my academic advisor.
The first days were about doing back and forth between the university and the dorm: managing paper works (enroling courses, university club…) and attending meetings. I remember that once the topic was on how to behave in Japan. Nope, you didn’t misread it 😌. If you know Tokyo, Roppongi was on the black list of the places where we should be.
It went like this for about ten days. Most of the meetings were interesting like the seminar on “what to do in an earthquake?” 🤗. But some were just “useless”. There were days where we would go to the university to get one document then another one the day after. In my head I was thinking “why you just didn’t give both yesterday?” 😑. However, when I look back on it I’m not surprised anymore. That’s just how Japanese administrations operate. One thing at a time 😉.
How do you respond to an earthquake? The answer in the video 😬👉🏽
The University of Rikkyo
As I explained it in the previous post, getting this exchange had been really challenging 😂.
So a quick introduction to Rikkyo University ✨ The institution is divided in two places, one is located in Ikebukuro while the other one in Niiza. Rikkyo is a private christian university. That’s why the architecture of some buildings might look like a monastery.
Amongst the 600 international students that the university welcomes every year, the majority comes from the United-States, China, South Korea, Germany and Australia.
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