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I left my university in Milan to study in a much smaller town. I loved the lower cost of living and slower pace.

December 25, 2025
in News
I left my university in Milan to study in a much smaller town. I loved the lower cost of living and slower pace.
Via Donato Bramante with Palazzo Albani which houses the headquarters of the University of Urbino, the Institute of Art History, the Institute of Archaeology and the Presidencies of Political Sciences and Education Sciences. Urbino (Italy), April 4th, 2024
The author left the busy streets of Milan for a slower pace at the University of Urbino. Marta Carenzi/Archivio Marta Carenzi/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images
  • High costs and a hectic lifestyle in Milan led to stress and dissatisfaction with city life.
  • At the end of my first year, I decided to transfer to a public university in a nearby smaller town.
  • Transferring to the University of Urbino improved my experience and well-being.

I crossed the street near where I was living in Milan on the verge of tears. I had had enough of feeling sad, lonely, and hopeless.

That surely wasn’t how I expected to feel in my first year of university.

The previous spring, I had thought about which undergraduate degree I wanted to pursue for months, reading about courses, tuition, and life in a new place. Since I loved writing and dreamed of becoming a journalist, studying communication seemed like the best bet. I chose to pursue a degree at a private university in Milan because the classes seemed fascinating and useful, and the idea of living in Milan was thrilling.

Unfortunately, I soon realized I had made the wrong choice.

My first year of undergrad in Milan was challenging

The majority of the courses I was taking were engaging, but we occasionally experienced last-minute schedule changes and disorganized lecturers, and that didn’t sit right with me.

More importantly, I began to feel guilty about the expenses my parents were covering for me. They assured me they could afford it and that my education was worthwhile to them; nonetheless, the tuition and rent were expensive. And, if I wasn’t loving it, should they be spending so much?

Living in Milan was way more exciting in my dreams than it was in reality. While this metropolis had a lot to offer, like cultural exhibitions, sports events, and a lively nightlife, it was also chaotic and hectic. I often felt agitated and restless.

In my first months there, my sleep was severely affected. It was extremely challenging to find accommodation near the university, and I ended up in a small apartment with a shared bedroom. I struggled to adapt to that living situation and to the noisy neighborhood we lived in.

By October, I was crying almost every day, telling my mom that I was miserable and that I felt that I wasn’t on the right path. Then, I realized there was something I could do.

The author poses after her graduation ceremony.
The author poses while wearing the customary laurel wreath after her graduation ceremony. Courtesy of Nicole Benedettini

Transferring to a school in a smaller town was a game changer

The following summer, I applied to the University of Urbino. The living costs and slower rhythms of Urbino, a 15,000-inhabitant town located a short distance from where I grew up in San Marino, were way more appealing to me.

There, I could attend classes just three days a week, so finding an accommodation wasn’t an urgent matter anymore. It was manageable to go back and forth by car from my family home in the first month.

After that period, I rented a single room with a stunning view, at a walkable distance from my lecture halls. The morning walk in Urbino’s historical center to class became a pleasurable part of my day.

I felt relieved because the public university tuition and accommodation in Urbino were much cheaper than what I was paying in Milan. Given the flexibility of my new arrangement and the saved money, I signed up for a fitness course with training branches in Urbino and San Marino, as well as a mindfulness program in Rimini. I was brighter and more serene.

Unfortunately, this period in Urbino didn’t last long, because COVID-19 hit and universities implemented online lessons, and I eventually ended up moving back home.

Looking back, those few months in Urbino were the best period of my early 20s, and I’m glad I was courageous enough to know that something wasn’t right and that I could do something about it, and that’s a lesson that still sticks with me today.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post I left my university in Milan to study in a much smaller town. I loved the lower cost of living and slower pace. appeared first on Business Insider.

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