Юля и работа за границей

Юля и работа за границей

Юля и работа за границей is one of the top Lifestyle influencer in Russian Federation with 43377 audience and 0.19% engagement rate on Instagram. Check out the full profile and start to collaborate.

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Standout projects making waves around the web

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I landed from Japan, dropped my suitcase at hotel, and the next evening was already at our teacher meetup in Saigon. And It felt like walking straight into a movie. Some arrived alone, some with new friends they met because of our @up2u.go program. Someone confessed it’s their first time living alone and how proud they feel. Someone proudly showed me the phone they bought with their first salary. Someone whispered, “Please don’t film me, my parents don’t know I drink beer.” And somehow, all these people from different countries, cultures, stories, ended up in the same bar in Vietnam because of something we built.???????????? Tudor said later, «I think I finally understood tonight that we can grow this so much bigger.” Next year I dream we’ll need a bigger bar.

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was walking today a little bit by myself, and I found myself just stupidly smiling walking around. I’m like, «Oh, I think this feeling is like when you went for a date and the day to end well, and you’re just like all it was this pre-pre-falling-in-love, stupidly smiling, and just scrolling in your mind moments of the date.» I think this is I am with Japan right now.

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Ok, Google, how to move to Japan

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What I love about Japan Japan is the only place where even the smallest things feel designed to make sense. Old men walk around in soft textile tabi boots and somehow look cooler than anyone on Instagram. Stationery stores feel like therapy. You stand there for twenty minutes choosing a pen and it feels important. Even toilets are so smart it’s funny. Matcha and mochi are everywhere and both somehow taste like calm. Nothing here screams for attention, but everything feels cared for. That’s what I love most: how even simple things are made with full attention. Maybe that’s why Japan feels so peaceful. It’s not about doing more, just about doing it right.

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It’s strange standing inside something that will outlive you Corvin Castle, 15th century, Transylvania ???? Built from stone that has seen kingdoms rise and fall, crossed by a bridge that’s carried lovers, prisoners, and ghosts. Inside is the furniture that’s older than entire nations, and silence heavy enough to feel sacred. And I kept thinking, these walls will outlive us all. They already have. How many lives, dreams, heartbreaks have passed here - all gone, while the stones remain. I don’t remember ever seeing a castle like this, so cinematic it almost felt unreal. And yet, it makes everything else, our deadlines, our routines, our small modern anxieties.. feel so painfully temporary. Sometimes I think my biggest fear isn’t death itself, but the idea of not living fully enough before it comes.

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It’s been around 3–4 days since I arrived in Japan, and it still feels surreal. I never expected to like it this much, mostly because I came with zero expectations. I just had a short list of things from Japan that I already liked. Before this trip, we were choosing between Portugal, Tunisia, and Japan. I actually second-guessed the choice for a while, I thought maybe Portugal would be better, but now, looking back, I can only say: Japan was the perfect choice. If you’ve traveled a lot around Europe, you know how things start to blend together. It takes more to surprise you. But Japan is a different story. Everyone should visit at least once, just to see how a city can actually work - how everything can be clean, quiet, organized, and designed with care. It feels surreal and deeply comforting. There’s almost no visual noise here, no random chaos, no ugly details and that friction-free feeling is so liberating. You keep thinking: how did this planet have a place like this all along, and I didn’t even know? This kind of society, where attention to detail feels almost built into people’s DNA, is something I’ve never seen anywhere else. And maybe that’s why Japan stays quite closed. They’ve seen the world, they know what’s out there, and they just choose to protect what they’ve built - and I get that now. I’ve traveled to around 40 countries (maybe more, I’ve stopped counting), but Japan is truly one of a kind.

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Transylvanian trip.. the nature in Romania is breathtaking ✨ And the coming month is so full of travels. 6 flights and several counties and cities

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last night, i discovered berlin’s most open-minded address last night we went to kitkat – the infamous berlin nightclub with a sex-positive vibe. think 70–75% dance floor… and the rest, well, let’s just say there are mattresses around the dance floor. and people actually using them. i had no idea what to expect. and honestly i liked it. i probably walked in with my face basically wearing subtitles, “???” - because everything was so new. even just as a “costume party” experience, it was great. the strict dress code makes it feel special - and the variety of people was fascinating: different ages, bodies, styles, genders, orientations. the building itself is wild: multiple dance floors, themed rooms, a huge swimming pool in one, bars everywhere. you just wander around like it’s a labyrinth. one main dance floor had mattresses around the edges where… people were busy. the music is so good. i could totally see myself going there just with girlfriends and dancing in lingerie, not necessarily engaging in the “other” activities. i saw girls in matching sets, people in wheelchairs (everyone’s included), groups of strangers who clearly met that night and… didn’t waste time. elderly men in corsets and stockings with metal toys attached. grandpas getting frisky with each other. it’s shocking, surreal, but also oddly wholesome in its own no-judgment way. would i go again? yes. do i think everyone should experience it at least once in life? also yes. 20 euros for a night i will never, ever forget. here’s what i keep thinking about though… it wasn’t the shock factor that stayed with me. it wasn’t even the “wow, people actually do that” moments. it was something else entirely. the most beautiful thing about that night wasn’t the taboo stuff - it was watching people who had completely stopped caring about invisible judges. they weren’t rebelling against society. they just… forgot to ask for approval.

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