What I like about Denmark

What I like about Denmark

I got an email a couple of weeks ago at howtoliveindenmark.com from a Danish woman who now lives in Germany. She says that this podcast helps her keep in touch with life back home, but that she doesn't really like it. She writes: "I have to tell you, that almost every story has a negative ring to it when you portray your thoughts on Denmark and Danes. I cannot shake the feeling, that you really deep down, do not like Danes or Denmark. I find this sad, as you have been living there now over a decade."

Lady – I won't say your name on the air – but you're full of baloney. Of course I like Denmark. Otherwise I wouldn't be here. I do have a pretty nice country to go back to.

I like living in Denmark, for a lot of different reasons.

One of them is that people here have a lot of time to spend with their children. There's a cliché in the U.S. business world of the CEO who quits because 'I want to spend more time with my family'. That always means he's been fired. But in Denmark, people really do want to spend a lot of time with the people they care about. I think that's one reason why a lot of people here are not very ambitious – because getting ahead means working a lot of hours, and they want their free time.

The pace of life in Denmark is much slower than it is in the US, or the UK. There's much less competitiveness, which can be a good and a bad thing. There's never a feeling of fighting to get through the day. Before I lived in Copenhagen, I lived in Manhattan, and there, everybody wanted your job, everybody wanted your apartment, everybody wanted your boyfriend, everybody wanted your seat at the restaurant – everybody wanted everything you had, all the time. Denmark is much more relaxing. And people have much less stuff here. The taxes are so high that you can't buy a lot of stuff. People don't go shopping just for fun. So people have fewer things, but better things. That means less clutter, and less stuff to clean, which is always a positive in my book.

Other things I like about Denmark. I like the biking culture, and the mass transport culture. I do have a drivers' license, and I enjoy driving a car, but I also like the interaction with people you get on a bike or a train or a bus.

And the public transport system generally works well – not always, but generally. Things work well in Denmark, not as aggressively as they do in Germany, where I used to live, but generally well. I love Southern Europe, but I don't think I could live there. The disorganization would drive me crazy.

In general, I find Copenhagen quiet, but sophisticated. I'm happy living here. I have no plans to live anyplace else.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(150)

Brok: The Danish art of petty complaints

Brok: The Danish art of petty complaints

Brok rhymes with clock, and it is a Danish word that describes the petty complaints that are common in one of the happiest countries in the world, and one of the richest. It's complaining as a social ...

24 Juni 6min

Authenticity and the Danish Summer Light

Authenticity and the Danish Summer Light

These are the light times in Denmark. In May and June, it's light until 10 or 11 in the evening, and then the sun is back around 4am. It's a nice contrast to the dark times in winter, although all tha...

28 Maj 8min

My Awkward First Year in Denmark

My Awkward First Year in Denmark

One thing no one ever tells you about moving to a new country is the incredible awkwardness of it. As a newcomer, you are constantly doing or saying or planning the wrong thing, something that would b...

29 Apr 9min

The Scheduled Dane: Why Friendship Needs a Calendar

The Scheduled Dane: Why Friendship Needs a Calendar

Danes usually don't do spontaneous. They do calendars. This episode looks at why a country that can count 8,000 ballots in three hours still needs two weeks' notice for almost everything else. From pe...

30 Mars 6min

Danish dinner party customs & why it's OK to break your Royal Copenhagen cup

Danish dinner party customs & why it's OK to break your Royal Copenhagen cup

Some might say that the most Danish piece of furniture is the chair. The Swan Chair, the Egg Chair, the Wishbone chair. They're all international design classics. You can buy a poster with 100 of the ...

15 Feb 7min

Vintage TV and movies as a guide to Danish culture

Vintage TV and movies as a guide to Danish culture

Watching vintage TV and movies is a great way to survive the long Danish winter—and if you're learning Danish or trying to understand Danish culture, it's even better. Many classic Danish films and TV...

22 Jan 9min

December: Little Nisse, Big Money: The Danish Year Part 12

December: Little Nisse, Big Money: The Danish Year Part 12

The nisse is a centuries-old figure in Danish folklore, and every December these tiny, mischievous spirits take center stage. While Santa Claus makes one big appearance late in the month, the nisse ar...

3 Dec 20257min

November Rain and "daylighting" buried rivers: The Danish Year Part 11

November Rain and "daylighting" buried rivers: The Danish Year Part 11

November always seems like the rainiest of Danish months, but it isn't, actually. October is. But November feels rainier, because the sky is so grey, and it gets dark so early, and the rain sometimes ...

22 Nov 20258min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-borsens-finest
uppgang-och-fall
svd-tech-brief
avanzapodden
bathina-en-podcast
rss-svart-marknad
rss-dagen-med-di
24fragor
fill-or-kill
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
lastbilspodden
borsmorgon
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
rss-den-nya-ekonomin
dynastin
tabberaset