How Every Erasmus+ Group Chat Starts vs. Ends

How Every Erasmus+ Group Chat Starts vs. Ends
How Every Erasmus+ Group Chat Starts vs. Ends — We’ve All Been There | Youth Works Hub
Find Erasmus+ & ESC opportunities → youthworkshub.org
😂 Erasmus+ Relatable

How Every Erasmus+ Group Chat Starts vs. Ends — We’ve All Been There

The rise… and fall… of the iconic WhatsApp group chat. If you’ve done a youth exchange, you already know exactly how this story goes.

By Youth Works Hub · Erasmus+ Youth Exchange · 100% relatable
There is a very specific emotional journey that happens inside every Erasmus+ WhatsApp group chat. It starts with absolute chaos and peak enthusiasm. It ends with a single flame emoji as the group icon and a “Happy New Year!” message sent in July with zero replies. This is that story.

It doesn’t matter which country you went to, which organisation hosted you, or what your project topic was. The Erasmus+ group chat follows the same arc every single time. It is practically a law of nature at this point.

If you haven’t experienced it yet — good news, you have something incredible to look forward to. If you have — welcome. This one’s for you.

📱 Phase 1 — HELLOOO EVERYONEEE

It starts the moment the group is created. Someone adds everyone. One person types first. Then suddenly, everyone is typing at the same time.

Opening chaos
Maria 🇵🇱: “Hiiii!! Can’t wait to meet you alllll 🥹🥹”
Fatih 🇹🇷: “Let’s connect before we arrive! 🙌🙌”
Jana 🇨🇿: “Here’s my Insta @janaworldtraveller 🌍”
Someone: “Where is everyone from?? 😍”
37 people: typing…
Vibe: Ultra-hyper strangers. Everyone typing. No one knows each other. Pure electricity.

This phase is beautiful and chaotic in equal measure. Everyone is using way too many exclamation marks. Instagram handles are being exchanged at a rate that will never be matched again. Someone has already made a separate group for “room logistics.” It is glorious.

🧳 Phase 2 — Pre-Arrival Logistics Hell

A few days before departure, the group chat transforms into a Q&A session that nobody is fully qualified to answer. The group leader is doing their best. Everyone else is spiralling.

Packing panic
Group Leader: “Don’t forget to bring traditional food for the cultural night! 🍽️”
Me internally: *Googling ‘traditional snacks that travel well’*
Someone: “Do we need to bring towels?? 🛁”
Someone else: “What’s the weather like??”
Third person: “Should I bring euros or can I pay by card everywhere?”
Vibe: Controlled panic. Nobody actually knows what to pack. Everyone packs too much anyway.

The cultural night food question deserves its own paragraph. Every single person in every single Erasmus+ group chat googles the same thing: “easy traditional food to bring abroad.” The answers are always the same. You bring something. It survives the trip or it doesn’t. Either way, it gets eaten.

Universal truth: The person who asks “do we need towels?” every single time turns out to be the most organised person at the actual event. Never underestimate the towel asker.

✈️ Phase 3 — Airport Coordination Mayhem

Arrival day. The group chat reaches its absolute peak activity. Messages are coming in every three seconds. Someone’s flight is delayed. Someone else is in the wrong terminal. Someone wants to split an Uber with strangers they’ve never met but feel like they’ve known for years.

Arrival chaos
“My flight lands at 14:03!! Who’s also landing in Warsaw?? 🛬”
“Wait, I’m in the other terminal 😭”
“Anyone want to split an Uber??? 🚗”
“I’m at baggage claim!! Where is everyone?!”
“I SEE SOMEONE WITH A NAME TAG”
Vibe: Chaos. Airport hugs with people you’ve never met. Instant bonding over shared confusion.

The airport phase is genuinely one of the best parts. You see someone holding a piece of paper with the project name on it and you feel an overwhelming sense of relief and belonging that is completely disproportionate to the situation. These people are strangers. In 48 hours they will be your closest friends.

😬 Phase 4 — First Night in the Room

You’ve arrived. You’ve been assigned a room. You’ve met your roommate. The group chat immediately becomes a complaint channel — but in the most affectionate way possible.

Reality check
“There’s only 1 pillow?? 😭”
“Is this really vegetarian? 🤔”
“My roommate SNORES LIKE A TRACTOR.” 😂
“The Wi-Fi password doesn’t work for me??”
“Anyone else’s shower only cold water??”
Vibe: Mild chaos. Everyone is tired. Nobody cares. Everyone is smiling anyway.

This is when you realise that none of the logistics matter. The pillow situation resolves itself. The snoring roommate becomes one of your favourite people by day three. The Wi-Fi was fine all along, you just typed the password wrong.

Phase 5 — Day 1 Schedule Trauma

The facilitator sends the programme. You read it. You process it. You send a single message to the group chat.

Programme shock
Facilitator: “Good morning everyone! Wake-up energizer starts at 8:15! 🌞”
Everyone in the group chat: 😶
Me at 7:45: Regret. Exhaustion. Croissant.
“Is the energizer optional”
“Asking for a friend”
Vibe: Nobody is ready. Everyone shows up anyway. The energizer is actually fun. You hate that it’s fun.
“The 8:15 wake-up energizer is the most universally dreaded and secretly beloved part of every Erasmus+ programme.”

📸 Phase 6 — The Insta Dump Begins

By day two, the content machine is fully operational. Forty-three people are photographing the same sunset from different angles. The group chat has become a tagging coordination centre.

Content mode activated
“Guys let’s take a selfieee!! 📸”
“Tag me please!!”
“Wait can you send the one from earlier?? My eyes were closed in mine 😭”
“43 people posting the same sunset from different angles”
#NoFilterButActuallyYesFilter
Vibe: Everyone is a photographer. Nobody’s phone has storage left by day three.

This phase is peak Erasmus+ and there is nothing wrong with it. The photos are good. The memories are real. Forty-three different angles of the same sunset is forty-three different perspectives on the same beautiful moment. That’s basically what a youth exchange is, philosophically speaking.

😤 Phase 7 — Workshop Chatter Chaos

There is a workshop. Your group has a task. You have collectively forgotten what you were supposed to do. The group chat for the subgroup is somehow more chaotic than the main group chat.

Five minutes before presenting
“What’s our group name again??”
“Are we presenting first???”
“Guys we literally have 5 minutes!!” 😭
“Who has the marker”
“I thought YOU had the marker”
Vibe: Complete chaos. Somehow the presentation is actually great. Nobody can explain why.
There is something about the five-minute Erasmus+ presentation scramble that brings out genuine creativity. The best ideas always come in the last three minutes before anyone has to stand up and speak.

🌍 Phase 8 — Cultural Night Diplomacy

The cultural night. The moment every country simultaneously presents their identity through food, dance, and extremely strong opinions about what counts as traditional.

Cultural exchange, unfiltered
“Wait you brought WINE? We brought hummus.” 😂
“Why are the Turkish snacks spicyy??”
“The Polish folk dance goes HARD.” 🔥
“Someone please explain how this is a traditional dessert”
“I have eaten 11 different things in 20 minutes and I have no regrets”
Vibe: Maximum intercultural understanding. Also maximum food coma.

The cultural night is genuinely one of the best inventions in the history of international youth programmes. Forty people from eight different countries sharing food, music, and bad dance moves in a community centre somewhere in Europe. It sounds like it shouldn’t work. It always works.

🕐 Phase 9 — Nightlife Overload

Someone proposes a chill night. The group chat confirms: yes, chill night tonight. Two hours later, everyone is dancing in the hostel kitchen to Balkan beats at 2AM.

The chill night that wasn’t
“Let’s just chill tonight guys 😌”
10pm: “Anyone up?” ✅✅✅✅✅
11pm: Someone found a speaker
2AM: Dancing in the hostel kitchen to Balkan beats
2:30AM: “We should probably sleep. Tomorrow starts at 8:15.” 😭
Vibe: Nobody sleeps. Everyone is at the 8:15 energizer anyway. On pure adrenaline.

🍝 Phase 10 — Food Crisis Chronicles

Somewhere around day five, the food situation becomes a recurring topic in the group chat. Nobody is complaining exactly. But the pasta count is being tracked.

Day 5 food report
“We had pasta for lunch… and dinner… and breakfast?” 🍝
“I NEED. A. VEGETABLE.”
“I miss my mom’s food 😭”
“Anyone else sneaking out to find a supermarket”
“The supermarket trip was the most bonding experience of the whole exchange”
Vibe: Mild pasta fatigue. Deep appreciation for home cooking. Even deeper appreciation for each other.
Real talk: The late-night supermarket run — usually happening around day 4 or 5 — is one of the most bonding moments of any Erasmus+ exchange. Something about wandering foreign supermarket aisles at 9pm with people you met a week ago is genuinely formative.

😢 Phase 11 — The Emotional Workshop Era

It happens at every exchange. A facilitator asks you to draw your emotions. Or write a letter to your past self. Or share something vulnerable with the circle. And somehow, you do it. In front of people you met six days ago.

Vulnerability unlocked
Facilitator: “Draw your emotions.”
Facilitator: “Now share with the circle.” 🙂
Me: Quietly sobbing in front of strangers I met 4 days ago
The group chat that night: “Today was a lot 🥹”
Everyone: “💙💙💙”
Vibe: Unexpectedly emotional. Completely safe. Something shifted and you can’t explain it.

This is one of the things that genuinely separates a youth exchange from a holiday. Non-formal learning creates space for real reflection. And somehow, in a circle of people from eight different countries who you barely knew a week ago, you say something true about yourself. And they receive it. And that’s the thing you remember long after you’ve forgotten the schedule.

📋 Phase 12 — Attendance Sheet Madness

Every Erasmus+ exchange has one person who forgot to sign the attendance sheet. Sometimes it’s the same person every day. Sometimes it’s everyone on rotation. The group chat is the official communication channel for attendance sheet emergencies.

Daily bureaucracy
“WHO FORGOT TO FILL THE FORM?” 😤
“I DID IT TWICE BY ACCIDENT 😭”
“WHERE IS THE LINKKKKK?!”
“I sent it 3 times already guys”
“Can someone just screenshot it”
Vibe: Organised chaos. The group leader is handling it. They always handle it. Respect.

🔔 Phase 13 — Media Overload Moment

By the final days, the group chat is handling the media situation. Photos, videos, the group recap reel that someone definitely volunteered to make and will send in three weeks. Maybe.

Content coordination
“Does anyone have the energizer video?? 😭”
“We should make a recap Reel!!!” 🎬
“Wait… whose phone was recording???”
🔔 99+
“I’ll send everything to a Drive folder” (never happens)
Vibe: 99+ notifications. Everyone has 2,000 photos. Nobody can find the specific one.

😭 Phase 14 — The Emotional Goodbye

Last day. Last dinner. Last night. The group chat takes on a new register: raw, sincere, slightly incoherent.

Final hours
“I’m gonna miss you all so much 😭😭😭”
“We HAVE to meet again. Like, for real!!”
“Can’t believe it’s over 💙”
“This was the best week of my life I’m not even joking”
“Airport tomorrow at 6am 😭 someone wake me up”
Vibe: Full emotional breakdown. Everyone means every single word. The hugs at the airport the next morning are very long.

This is the part that gets you. You arrived a week ago not knowing anyone. You are now standing in an airport saying goodbye to people who feel like they’ve been in your life forever. The exchange did that. That’s what it’s actually for.

👻 Phase 15 — One Week Later

You are home. Life has resumed. Someone sends a message into the void.

The silence begins
“Anyone here?” 👋
Seen by 37
Maria sends a meme 😂
Silence…
3 people react with ❤️
Silence…
Vibe: The group is still there. The people are still there. Life just got loud again.

🕯️ Phase 16 — Ghost Town Vibes

The final form. The group has been quiet for months. Someone changed the icon to a candle emoji at some point. Nobody remembers when.

End state
Group icon: 🕯️
Last message: “Happy new year!” (sent in July)
0 replies.
Chat muted for everyone.
The group will never be deleted.
Vibe: The chat is dead. The friendships are not. These are different things.

Here’s the thing about the ghost town phase: it looks like the end but it isn’t really. The people from that group are still in your life — just in different ways. Direct messages instead of group threads. Plans that get made and sometimes kept. A reunion that feels like no time has passed at all. The group chat going quiet doesn’t mean the experience went quiet.

💙 And Yet — Worth Every Message

Despite the chaos. Despite the confusion. Despite the bad Wi-Fi, the late nights, the attendance sheet that nobody could find, and the eight different variations of the same pasta dish served across seven days.

It was one of the best experiences of your life. And you know it.

Once Erasmus+, always Erasmus+. The group chat may go quiet. The memories don’t. The people don’t. And somewhere, right now, there is a brand new group chat being created for a project that hasn’t started yet — and someone is typing “HELLOOO EVERYONEEE” for the very first time.

If that person could be you — and it genuinely could — here’s where to start looking.

Ready to join your own group chat? 📱

Find open Erasmus+ Youth Exchange and ESC volunteering opportunities at Youth Works Hub — updated regularly.

Browse Opportunities →

© 2025 Youth Works Hub · Erasmus+ and ESC opportunities for young people across Europe