I’ve
spent the past month living another life. After two prior week-long
visits to
Stockholm in less than two years, I decided to experiment with a
longer stay. Would the enchantment of this gorgeous city hold up or
would I get Stockholm out of my system, once and for all?
Just
as I feared, the conclusion is, Jag
vill bo i
Sverige
(I
want to live
in Sweden).
Yes,
this could be the place for me. My
mind is set
on moving...eventually
My
first night involved a final to-do as a tourist: I stayed at trendy
hotel co-owned
by one of the Bennys from ABBA. It
overlooked a favorite place here, the lovely fountain-adorned square
known as Mariatorget where I’d strolled through almost daily on
past visits to walk an extra block to my regular writing haunt, Drop
Coffee. After
one
night
of indulgence,
I
settled
in for a more
realistic
experience
in
the
same
area
in
an Airbnb apartment with two locals. As with other
Swedes
I’ve
met,
they
were
cordial
and obliging, but we
gave
each
other
our own space,
just
as I like
it.
Perhaps
it’s a missed
opportunity, but we
won’t
become
pen
pals or even
“friends”
on Facebook. It’s exactly
what I expected.
I never
wanted
to be
chummy
in the
place
where
I’d
crash at the
end
of each
busy day cramming in slices
of Stockholm life.
This is part of one of my favorite
running routes.
|
So
how did I spend
my time?
Typically,
I awoke
each
morning and set
out for a jog on a route
along
a waterway.
Water
makes
me
feel
at peace
and,
being
as this is a city of islands, I had plenty
of choice
in
planning various running journeys,
revisiting
favorites from previous
trips and discovering
several
new
routes.
None
disappointed.
After
showering
and some
internet
updates,
I spent
the
rest
of each
morning writing in cafes,
the
aforementioned
Drop Coffee
as
well
as Johan & Nyström,
both a short stroll from my Airbnb, before
trying
out others
farther
afield.
At Johan & Nyström,
a friendly
barista recalled
my order
from my first visit and that became
my
usual for the
rest
of my stay (although occasionally he’d
serve
me
something
different
as a personal
recommendation).
Strangely,
I sometimes
ran
into him
on the
street
in
different
parts of Södermalm
later
in the
day.
We’d
exchange
a
smile
and
a hello
in
passing.
I’ll
admit it
felt
good to be
recognized
in
a city where
I
otherwise
relished
being
anonymous.
The
rest
of each
day was spent
walking many, many kilometers. I’d head
out, sometimes
with a vague
direction
in mind, more
often
not, and turn here
or
there
in
the
direction
of anything that looked
beautiful.
Often
it was basically a coin toss—forward, to the
left,
to the
right,...it
all intrigued. For a guy with a notoriously poor sense
of
direction,
I’ve
developed
a decent
mental
map of Stockholm, only once
getting
lost when,
after
a seaside
stroll,
I found myself
surrounded
by towering
stacks of shipping containers
and a couple
of
signs for Finland—Finland?!—before
finally
spotting blue
signs
directing
me
back
to the
city
center.
That’s the
day
I became
especially
grateful
for the
frequent
park spaces
with welcoming
benches!
Before
coming
here,
I
joined
a few
Stockholm
Meetup
groups, two for vegans
and one
for
gay men.
My first event
was a
vegan
get-together
the
day
after
I arrived
and I fretted
about “crashing” a gathering
of locals, worrying that my complete
inability
to speak
Swedish
would be
considered
both an insult and an inconvenience. I prepared
for the
fact
that I might just order
my food to-go and then
disappear.
Hej
då!
As it turned
out, everyone
spoke
English
the
entire
lunch
and not on my account. The
“locals”
were
from
Romania, Tanzania, Japan, the
Netherlands,
Germany,
India, Belgium
and Poland. There
was
one
token
Swedish-born
attendee.
This
proved
to be
the
case
for
the
half
dozen
Meetup
events,
gay or vegan,
that I went
to. It seems
that the
notoriously
reserved
Swedes
don’t have
a
desire
to
join a group of strangers
for an occasion based
on a single
common
factor. I had interesting
discussions with people
who
moved
here
from
all over
the
world
but, alas, much of my sense
of
what it’s like
to
be
a
Swede
is
still based
on observations
from a (safe)
distance.
During
my stay, I became
femtiofem
(fifty-five)
and celebrated
my (unannounced)
birthday
bowling badly with the
gay
Meetup
group, the
event
organized by a guy who moved
here
from
China. I
declined
to join the
group
afterward
for
a late
lunch
at a French
restaurant
and instead
had a lovely
conversation
with a young fellow
who’d moved
here
a
few
years
ago from Germany
and was now fluent
in Swedish
and who kept
apologizing for his virtually perfect
English.
Oh, to be
European!
He’d
intended
to catch the
subway
a block away but we
spent
an hour enjoying
the
sunshine
on
a crisp fall day as we
walked
waterside
pathways
on two of the
city’s
islands. That evening
I forced
myself
to go to a gay bar just around the
corner
from where
I
was staying. I’d read
online
that
it was the
city’s
oldest
(and seemingly
only one
of
two or three
still
in existence)
and I nervously
descended
the
stairs
to a basement
space
that
felt
like
a
walk-in closet
crammed
with gay
men.
I made
myself
go there
twice
during
my stay,
each
time
inching
my way to the
bar,
ordering
a drink and quickly chugging it down and departing.
There
was
nothing distinctly Swedish
about the
experience.
As
with so many gay bars I’ve
been
to, it felt
like
a
place
where
people
talked
loudly in closed
circles,
trying to outdo one
another
in giving off the
impression
they
were
truly
having a good time.
(But
then
maybe
that
was just my mentality
back in the
day
when
I’d meet
up with friends
when
gay bars were
the
main
meeting
place.)
I’ve
always
had a love-hate relationship
with gay bars and it came
as
a great
relief
each
time
I
went
back up the
stairs
and found myself
back on the
street,
alone.
My
Swedish
boyfriend is still at large.
Alas, the pastry didn't last
long enough to be photographed.
|
After,
or sometimes
during, my long walks, I wound up participating in fika,
a core
component
of Swedish
culture.
I’ve
read
much about it online
and
Swedes
seem
to pride
themselves
in regarding
fika as uniquely
and ubiquitously Swedish.
I’ll describe
it
as a mid-afternoon coffee
break
with a pastry—most
notoriously kanelbulle
(cinnamon bun)—but Swedes
typically claim that something
essential
is missing when
the
occasion
is so simply defined.
Probably so. Still, I noshed
on plenty
of kanelbullar
and blueberry
buns and other
sweets
while
sipping
oat milk lattes
and attempting
to proximate
the
fika
experience.
Apparently
it’s okay to fika on one’s
own, thank goodness.
In
the
evenings,
I’d typically return
to my Airbnb early
and spend
a couple
of
hours proceeding
through Duolingo Swedish
lessons.
It’s
true
that
I could continue
to
do just fine
in
Stockholm,
sticking
with English.
The
Swedes
speak
it flawlessly,
much to my complete
awe.
Still,
I truly want to learn
Swedish.
Before
arriving,
I
learned
how to say the
oh
so practical En
älg
är
bakom restaurangen
(“A
moose
is
behind
the
restaurant”),
but
there
are
certain
common sounds in the
language
I’m not sure
I’ve
yet
figured
out how to make.
Last
night’s lesson
was on food and it included
many essentials,
Swedish
words for fermented
herring,
meatballs,
crispbread,
cream,
raspberries
and, of course,
cinnamon
buns. The
corresponding
online
discussions
were
both
amusing and insightful.
My
stay in Stockholm ends
tomorrow and I’m so
happy
I haven’t
gotten
the
city
out of my system.
I regularly
awaken
at three
in
the
morning
fretting
over
having forgotten how to say the
number
eight
or,
“They
watched
the
paint
dry” in Swedish.
I
still long to chat with native
Swedes
(seemingly
as elusive
as
that moose
behind
the
restaurant
and that future
boyfriend
of mine).
I see
a
future
here.
Why
else
would
I get
excited
over
the
possibility
that I can afford a four hundred
square
foot
apartment here?
I’ve
got
a thing for this place
that,
much like
fika
itself,
I can’t quite
explain.
It’s why I desperately
tried
to extend
my stay an extra
six weeks
(alas, I have
matters
to deal
with back home)
and why I’m consoling myself
over
my imminent departure
with
the
prospect
of a longer
visit in the
spring,
complete
with
an immersive
conversational
Swedish
course.
My
love
for
Sweden
began
with a childhood adoration of ABBA and a grade
four
construction board project
when
we
had
to research
a country. (I chose
Sweden
for the
simple
reason
that, as an art-challenged
student,
I could
draw the
flag
with a ruler
and, hey,
I liked
how the
blue
and
yellow
looked
together.)
I’m so pleased
my
connection
has
become
something
much deeper,
something
that will last beyond
the
sugar
rush that
will fade
when
I return
to life
in
Vancouver.
Until
next
time,
Stockholm!
2 comments:
You came to Sweden and you didn't even say anything beforehand! I live in Stockholm and everything!
Glad you had a good time and enjoy it here.
I'm so sorry. I checked your blog and couldn't get a sense of where you live in Sweden. I didn't want to make things awkward. Still, I'd be very happy to meet during my next visit to Stockholm. I'm hoping to return for six weeks in the spring so it would be great to meet you then.
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