My First Day in America: That Feeling They Don’t Tell You About đșđžđ«
âWhen she saidâDonât turn back with tears on your face, I knew this journey was going to change me.â
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Friends, dreaming about America and actually landing there⊠the feeling is completely different. Everyoneâs first-day story is unique. I went through social media, group platforms, and Quora to collect real experiences from real people. Some are funny, some will touch your heart, some are a little emotional.
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But all of them are real.
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And thatâs what I want to share with you today.
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âïž The Landing: âWait, this is real?â
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Let me start with what most people donât tell you.
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The moment you step out of the airportâespecially if youâre coming from Indiaâthe first thing that hits you is⊠the silence.
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No honking. No crowds yelling. No chai wala shouting. Just⊠quiet. Almost too quiet.
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A friend of mine from Hyderabad told me:
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âBhai, main airport se cab mein baitha. Driver ne belt pehna di. Speed limit follow kar raha tha. Mujhe lagaâyeh sapna hai kya? Itna discipline?â
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Another person shared on a Facebook group:
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âI landed in Chicago in December. Never saw snow in my life. When I stepped out, my nose started hurting within 30 seconds. I literally ran back inside. Thatâs when I realizedâyeh India nahi hai.â
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đ The First Night: Empty Room, Full Heart
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This is the part nobody prepares you for.
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Youâll likely spend your first few days in a temporary Airbnb or a friendâs couch. But that first night in your own small studio or shared apartment? It stays with you forever.
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A Reddit user shared this (and hundreds agreed):
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âI bought a $20 blanket from Walmart. No mattress. No table. Just a blanket on the floor. I sat there eating instant noodles from a plastic cup. And I thoughtââWhat have I done?â But then I also thoughtââI made it. I actually made it.'â
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Thereâs a beautiful Quora answer I came across. Someone wrote:
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âThat empty room wasnât empty. It was full of possibility. Every wall was a blank page. And I was the writer.â
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Iâm not crying. Youâre crying.
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đ The Phone Call Home (This One Hits Hard)
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Almost everyone I spoke to mentioned this.
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You land. Youâre busy with immigration, luggage, finding the cab, reaching your place. But then⊠night comes. Everything settles down. And you realizeâyouâre alone.
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A young woman from Pune shared in a WhatsApp group:
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âI called my mother at 2 AM her time. She picked up in one ring. She was waiting. I heard her voice and I just broke down. Couldnât speak for two minutes. She didnât say much. Just kept sayingââTu strong hai, bete. Tu strong hai.'â
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Another person wrote on Twitter (now X):
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âMy fatherâs last words at the airport wereââDonât turn back with tears on your face.â I didnât cry at the airport. But that night, lying on an empty floor⊠I cried like a baby. And somehow, that cry made me lighter.â
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This is not weakness, friends. This is courage showing its real face.
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đ The First Walmart Trip: A Cultural Lesson
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If youâve been to America, you know. If you havenât, let me tell you.
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Your first trip to Walmart (or Target) is an experience.
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Everything is huge. The aisles, the carts, the packaging. Youâll stare at peanut butter for five minutes wondering which one to buy. Youâll get confused by the tax not being on the price tag.
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One person shared on a student group:
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âI wanted to buy a pillow. There were 40 types. FORTY. I stood there like an idiot for 15 minutes. Finally an old American lady smiled and saidââFirst time, honey?â I just nodded. She picked one and saidââThis one. Trust me.â I still have that pillow. 4 years now.â
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And the price tags? Your brain will do the dollar-to-rupee conversion for everything. A $3 coffee will feel like 250 rupees. A $10 meal will feel like 850 rupees.
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It takes time. Be patient with yourself.
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đ¶ââïž The First Walk Outside: Strangers Who Smile
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This is something almost every Indian notices.
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Youâll walk down the street. A stranger will make eye contact and sayââHi, how are you?â
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And your first instinct? âDo I know them? Did I do something wrong?â
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No, friend. Thatâs just⊠America.
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A Quora user wrote beautifully:
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âIn India, if a stranger smiles at you, you check your pocket. In America, a stranger smiles because⊠thatâs just how it is. It felt fake to me at first. Then I realizedâmaybe itâs not fake. Maybe itâs just a different way of being kind.â
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Another person shared in a Telegram group:
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âMy first morning, I was standing at a bus stop looking completely lost. A lady probably in her 50s came up to me and askedââAre you okay, dear? Do you need help?â I almost cried. Not because I was lost. Because a stranger cared enough to ask.â
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đ The First Meal: Comfort in Unfamiliar Places
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Letâs be honest. American food hits different. And not always in a good way.
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But thereâs something about that first pizza slice, that first burger, that first cup of coffee that stays in your memory.
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A student from Kerala shared:
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âI was so tired and hungry. I walked into a small pizza shop. The guy behind the counter was from Mexico. He saw my confusion. He saidââFirst day?â I said yes. He gave me a slice for free. Told meââMy first day was hard too. Youâll be okay.â I never forgot his face.â
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Another person wrote on a blog comment:
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âI tried mac and cheese for the first time. I didnât like it. Still donât. But that night, eating something warm, sitting on my suitcase⊠it felt like home. A strange, new, unfamiliar home.â
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đ The First Uber Ride: âWhere are you from?â
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This is a classic.
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Youâll book an Uber. The driver will likely be an immigrant too. From Ethiopia, Pakistan, Mexico, Nigeria, or maybe India.
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And within two minutes, theyâll askââWhere are you from?â
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And then something magical happens. Youâll share stories. Theyâll tell you about their journey. Theyâll give you advice. Theyâll sayââItâs hard in the beginning. But it gets better.â
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A Quora user wrote:
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âMy Uber driver from Ethiopia told meââI drove a taxi for 7 years before I opened my own restaurant. Youâre not stuck. Youâre just starting.â I was 22. I never forgot that.â
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These small moments. These strangers. They become part of your story.
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đ€ The First Sleep: Exhausted, Scared, Hopeful
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After everythingâthe flight, the immigration line, the luggage, the Walmart trip, the phone call home, the strange food, the kind strangersâŠ
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Youâll finally lie down.
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And your mind will race.
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· âCan I really do this?â
· âDid I make a mistake?â
· âWhat if I fail?â
· âWhat if I succeed?â
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One person shared on a Reddit thread (r/immigration):
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âI didnât sleep my first night. I just stared at the ceiling. I was terrified. But somewhere beneath the fear, there was a small voice sayingââYouâre here. You actually did it. Now the real work begins.â That voice kept me going.â
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Another wrote:
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âI prayed that night. Longer than I had prayed in years. Not for success or money. Just for strength. Just for one more day. One more step.â
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đ The First Sunrise: A New Beginning
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And then⊠morning comes.
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The sun rises. The same sun that rises in your hometown. But somehow, here, it feels different.
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A beautiful post from an Instagram story (now saved in my heart):
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âMy first American sunrise. I sat by the window. The room was still empty. But I wasnât. I had hope. And for now, that was enough.â
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Another person on a Facebook group wrote:
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âI stepped outside. Took a deep breath. The air was cold. But my heart was warm. I said to myselfââLetâs begin.'â
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đ What I Learned From All These Stories
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After reading hundreds of experiencesâfrom Quora, Reddit, Facebook groups, Telegram channels, Twitter threads, and personal blogsâI realized something.
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Your first day in America is not about the place.
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Itâs about you.
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· Itâs about the courage it took to leave everything familiar.
· Itâs about the tears you cried when nobody was watching.
· Itâs about the strangers who became angels for a moment.
· Itâs about the empty room that slowly becomes your home.
· Itâs about the fear and the hope, sitting side by side.
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One Quora answer summed it up perfectly. Someone askedââWhatâs the one thing you wish you knew before your first day in the US?â
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The answer:
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âThat itâs okay to be scared. That itâs okay to cry. That you donât have to be strong every second. And that this feelingâthis messy, overwhelming, beautiful feelingâis exactly what growth feels like.â
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đ A Small Request to You
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If youâre reading this and youâre planning to go to AmericaâŠ
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Save this.
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Read it again before you leave.
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And when you have your first dayâwhen youâre sitting on that empty floor, eating those instant noodles, feeling lost and hopeful at the same timeâ
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Remember.
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Youâre not alone.
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Millions have walked this path before you. Millions will walk after you.
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And every single one of them will tell you the same thing:
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âThe first day is hard. But itâs worth it. Every single tear. Every single fear. Itâs worth it.â
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đ Your Turn, Friend
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Now I want to hear from you.
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If youâve already had your first day in Americaâshare your story in the comments. What do you remember most? What made you cry? What made you smile?
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If youâre planning to goâwhat are you most scared of? What are you most excited about?
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Letâs build a community of real stories. Real experiences. Real humans.
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Because at the end of the day, thatâs all we have.
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Each other.
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With respect and good wishes for every dreamer out there.
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Jai Hind. đźđłđșđž
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P.S. â If this touched your heart, share it with someone who needs to hear it today. Sometimes, a few words are all the courage someone needs. đ«