 What was my first big lesson was that I learned how to learn. It might sound very funny but I think the system is in the way in Romania that you're more used to learn by heart what you're doing there and not really learn to think about it and how you can actually apply it in real life. It's not memory, memorizing the knowledge but also to apply it and to like argue for it. There's one very different thing like in China there's right and wrongs. The teacher can say this is wrong, not right, but here everything can be right as long as you can argue for it. What I really like here is this kind of study environment. When I say I go through the library and my bachelor was what you going through the library or you're not cool. This is a nerd, but here it's really yeah nice. We are also there and then we exchange ideas. So this is kind of the environment makes a big difference. If you come as international students to us in the first place, I think it's no problem to make social context. I think it's the same whether you live in China or whether you live in UK or whether you live in Denmark. It's the same thing. You need to understand the local customs and local traditions and this I think constitutes a big part of your social life. Some of my Danish friends are very like encouraging and they are quite nice to someone foreign or like newly come here.