Someone gets announced as the outreach head of the media club and the room erupts--"Congratulations! Proud of you!" That moment at NIAT Noida International University stuck with me because it felt real. Not performative. Not forced. Just people actually celebrating someone else's win. That is when I understood this place is different from what I imagined.
The Moment I Realized Community Here Is Genuine
I walked into campus my first week feeling exactly like a fresher is supposed to feel--lost, trying to figure out where the labs are, which mess line to join, whether anyone would actually talk to me. But I kept seeing these small moments. A student asks another, "Are you excited for today?" and the answer comes back quick and loud: "Yes! Too excited!" It sounds like nothing on paper. But when you are standing there alone on a new campus, tiny moments like that matter. They tell you something about the place. They tell you it is okay to be enthusiastic here. It is okay to be yourself.
Then came the announcement about Sanjana. She was introduced along with a few other students, and when her name came up for the media club outreach role, people did not just clap politely. They cheered. Someone shouted, "Congratulations!" Another: "Proud of you!" I watched her face and I could tell it was hitting her the same way it was hitting me. This was not performative. These were actual students celebrating someone they know getting an actual opportunity.
NIAT Noida International University is not just about classes. The clubs are real. The opportunities are real. And the people actually show up for each other.
Why Clubs Actually Matter Here (And I Was Skeptical)
Before coming to campus, I heard the usual college talk--"join clubs, build your resume, get experience." It all sounded like filler. But watching Sanjana get that media club position made me rethink it. This was not some ceremonial title. This was a real role. And the fact that students around her were genuinely excited about her taking it on? That means the club is active. That means opportunities here are not just on paper.
I have spent my first weeks trying to figure out which club fits me. I was not sure any would. But seeing what happened with the media club announcement, I realize the clubs here are not hobbies to list on LinkedIn. They are actual places where students lead, contribute, and get recognized by their peers for doing good work. That changes everything about whether I actually join.
What Scared Me About Being Here (And What Changed)
My honest fear when I first got to NIAT Noida International University was that it would feel closed off. That I would be the person standing alone in the mess, or showing up to a club event and feeling like the odd one out. That campus would be some hierarchy where freshers are basically invisible. I had been at orientation--I knew the campus existed. But knowing a place exists and feeling like you belong there are two completely different things.
What I have learned in these first weeks is that the friendliness here is not a mask. The approachability is real. People say hello like they mean it. They ask if you are excited not to make small talk but because they actually want to know. And when someone gets a win, the celebration is immediate and genuine. That does not happen at every college. I have talked to friends at other places. They don't describe their campus this way.
- The energy when students greet each other in passing--it is natural, not forced
- Club announcements feel like celebrating friends, not checking off a list
- People actually approach new students, not the other way around
- Leadership roles go to students who are recognized by their peers for good work
Why I Am Stepping Out of My Comfort Zone
Watching what happened with Sanjana made me think differently about my time here. I came to NIAT Noida International University thinking I would coast through classes and figure out the rest later. But seeing someone my age get recognized for taking on a real role, and seeing actual peers celebrate her doing it--that made me want to actually be part of something. Not just show up. Actually participate.
I am still figuring out which club is the right fit. But I am not scared anymore. I know that if I show up and put in effort, people here will notice. Not in a weird way. In the way humans naturally notice when someone is doing good work and contributing to something. That is not guaranteed at every college. It is guaranteed here.
"There is a place for you here. I am finding mine, and I know you can find yours too."
I also documented this entire experience on video - if you want to see how it actually felt in real time: