Read The Year of Living Danishly Online
Authors: Helen Russell
âSo, Denmark, it's cold there, right?'
âYes. It's Baltic.
Literally
.'
âSo, er, can you ski or snowboard?'
âI can, yes. But not in Denmark.'
Then I'd have to break it to them that the highest point in the whole country was only 171 m above sea level and that you'd have to travel to Sweden for skiing.
âOh well, it's all Scandinavia, isn't it?' was the typical response from those angling for a free chalet, to which I'd have to explain that, sadly, the closest resort was 250km away.
Many struggled to get their heads around precisely which of the Nordic countries we were moving to, with various leaving cards wishing us the âBest of luck in Finland!' and my mother telling everyone we were off to Norway. In many respects, it may as well have been. The downshift from London life to rural Scandinavia was always going to be a shock to the system.
Once the removal men had gone, all we had left was a suitcase of clothes and the entire contents of our drinks cabinet, which apparently we weren't allowed to export due to customs laws. We convened an ad hoc âdrink the flat dry' party in response to this, but it turns out that drinking three-year-old limoncello from a plastic cup in a cold, empty room on a school night isn't quite as jolly as it might sound. Everyone had to stand or sit on the floor and voices echoed around the furniture-less space. There was no sense of occasion and it wasn't anything like the epic, cinematic send-offs that you see in films. For most people, life was carrying on as normal. Us leaving the country wasn't much of a big deal to anyone other than a few close friends and family. Some made an effort. One friend brought over mini Battenbergs and a thermos of tea (we had no kettle, let alone tea bags by this point). I was so ridiculously grateful, I could have wept. Thinking back, I may have done. Another made a photo montage of our time together in the capital. A third lent us a lilo to sleep on for our final night.
A damp, Edwardian terraced flat with no furniture, in winter, in the dead of night, is a very sad place indeed. We lay uncomfortably on the not-quite-double lilo and tried to stay still lest we bounce the other person off onto the hard wooden floor. Eventually, Lego Man started to breathe more deeply so that I knew he was asleep. Unable to join him, I stared at the crack in the ceiling in the shape of a question mark that we'd planned to fill in ages ago. It felt as though we'd lost everything, or we were squatters, or had just gone through a divorce, despite the fact that we were lying next to each other. Just for that night, we had nothing. I stared at the plaster question mark for what felt like hours until the street lamp outside the window went off and we were finally plunged into total darkness.
The next day we had lunch with family and a couple of close friends in a café near our flat. There were chairs! And plates! It was heaven. There were also tears (mine, my mother's, and those of a school friend whose alcohol tolerance had been severely diminished by the recent arrival of twins), as well as beer, gin and gifts of several more Scandi box sets to get us in the mood. And then, a few hours later, the taxi arrived to take us to the airport. I suddenly wanted to linger longer in London, to take in every detail of the city as we drove through it by dusk, to memorise every twinkling light along the river so that I could keep hold of it until I next came back for a visit. I wanted to Have A Moment. But the driver wasn't the sentimental type. Instead he turned on some hard-core US rap and unwrapped a Magic Tree air freshener.
We sat in silence after this. I kept my mind occupied by going over and over my plan of action, âkeep busy, then you can't be sad!' being the mildly manic philosophy I'd adhered to for the past 33 years. My loosely thought-out plan was this: to integrate as far as possible in an attempt to understand Denmark and what made its inhabitants so happy. Up to this point, my typical New Year's Resolutions consisted of âdo more yoga', âread Stephen Hawking' and âlose half a stone'. But this year, there was to be just one: âlive Danishly'. Yes, I even invented a new Nordic adverb for the project. Over the next twelve months, I would investigate all aspects of living Danishly. I would consult experts in their fields and beg, bully or bribe them to share their secrets of the famed Danish contentment, and demonstrate how Danes do things differently.
I had been checking the weather in Denmark on an hourly basis during our last few days in London, prompting my first question â
how do Danes stay upbeat when it's minus ten every day?
Revelations about how much we'd both take home after taxes were also eye-opening.
Doesn't a 50 per cent tax rate really stick in everyone's craw?
Lego Man remained stoic in the face of possible penury and focussed instead on all the great examples of Scandinavian design that kept being featured in weekend living supplements.
Could the much-celebrated Danish aesthetic influence the nation's mood?
I wondered.
Or are they just high on dopamine from all those pastries?
From education to the environment, genetics to gynaecological chairs (really), and family to food (seriously, have you
tried
a freshly baked pastry from Denmark? They're delicious. Why wouldn't Danes be delighted with life?), I decided I would set out to discover the key to getting happy in every area of modern life. I would learn something new each month and make changes to my own life accordingly. I was embarking on a personal and professional quest to discover what made Danes feel so great. The result would, I hoped, be a blueprint for a lifetime of contentment. The happiness project had begun.
To ensure that each of my teachers walked the talk, I would ask every expert to rank themselves on a happiness scale between one and ten, with ten being delirious, zero being miserable, and the middling numbers being a bit âmeh'. As someone who'd typically have placed herself at a perfectly respectable six before my year of living Danishly, this proved an interesting exercise. Despite having been commended for Julie Andrews-style upbeat cheerfulness in every work-leaving card I'd ever had, I soon learned that there's a difference between eager-to-please nice-girl syndrome and feeling genuinely good about yourself. I'd asked Christian for his score during our preliminary phone call, and he admitted that âEven being Danish can't make everything absolutely perfect,' but then followed up with, âI'd give myself an eight'. Not bad. So what would have made the professor of happiness even happier? âGetting a girlfriend,' he told me, without hesitation. Anyone interested in a date with Denmark's most eligible professor can contact the publisher for more details. For everyone else, here's how to get happy, Danish-style.
1. January
Hygge & Home
Something cold and soft is falling on us as we stand in darkness on a silent runway, wondering what happens next. Before we'd boarded the flight it had been muggy, bright and noisy. We'd been pushed and barged by other passengers, ushered onto buses and shuffled around by ground staff. Mid-air, we'd been looked after by stewards in smart navy uniforms, plying us with miniatures and tiny cans of Schweppes. But here we are on our own, left standing on the frosty tarmac in the middle of nowhere. There are a few people around, of course, but we don't know any of them and they're all speaking a language we don't understand. The whole place glistens like it's made from soda crystals, and the air is so cold and thin that it catches in the back of my throat when I attempt to fill my lungs.
âWhat now?' I start, but the sound is muffled by snow. My ears already hurt from the chill so I cover them with my hair in lieu of a hat. This is surprisingly effective, though now I can hear even less. Lego Man's lips are moving but I can't quite make out what he's saying, so we resort to hand signals.
âThis way?' he mouths, pointing to the white building up ahead. I give him an 80s high school movie-style thumbs up: âOK.'
A woman with a wheelie bag appears from behind us and moves decisively towards a small rectangle of light up ahead, so we follow, crunching compacted snow as we go. There's no shuttle bus or covered walkway here â Vikings, it seems, make their own way.
My husband squeezes my near-frozen hand and I try to smile, but because my teeth are chattering so much now, it comes out as more of a grimace. I knew it would be cold here, but this is something else. We've been exposed to the Baltic air for all of 90 seconds and the chill is gnawing at my very bones. My nose threatens to drip but then the tickling sensation stops and I lose all feeling in the tip.
Oh God, does even snot freeze in Denmark?
I wonder. I'm relieved to get inside to passport control and my toes and fingers burn with relief at the relative warmth.
We pass a giant sign advertising the country's most famous beer that reads:
âWelcome to the world's happiest nation!'
Huh,
I think,
we'll see.
We know no one, we don't speak Danish, and we have nowhere to live. The whole take-a-punt, ânew year, new you' euphoria has now been replaced by a sense of: âOh shit, this is real'. The two-day hangover from extended farewell celebrations and our boozy leaving lunch probably isn't helping either.
We emerge from arrivals into a frozen, pitch-black nothingness and go in search of our hire car. This isn't as easy as it might be since all the number plates have been fuzzed-out by frost, like in a police reconstruction. Once the correct combination of letters and numbers has been located, we drive, on the wrong side of the road, to Legoland. After several wrong turns due to unfamiliar road signs, partially whited-out by snow, we reach the place we're to call home for the next few nights.
âWelcome to the Legoland Hotel!' the tall, broad, blond-haired receptionist beams as we check in. His English is perfect and I'm relieved. Christian had assured me that most Danes were proficient linguists, but I'd been warned not to expect too much in rural areas, i.e. where we are. But so far, so good.
âWe've put you in The Princess Suite,' the receptionist goes on.
â“The Princess Suite”?' Lego Man echoes.
âIs that at all like the presidential suite?' I ask, hopefully.
âNo, it's
themed
.' The receptionist swivels around his monitor to show us a pastel-coloured room complete with a pink bed and a headboard made from plastic moulded castle turrets. âSee?'
âWow. Yes, I seeâ¦'
The receptionist goes on: âThe suite is built with 11,960 Lego bricksâ'
ââRight, yes. The thing isâ'
ââand it's got
bunk beds
,' he adds, proudly.
âThat's great. It's just, the thing is, we haven't got any kidsâ¦'
The receptionist looks confused, as though this doesn't quite compute: âThe walls are decorated with butterflies?'
I fully expect him to offer us a goblet of unicorn tears next and so try to dissuade him gently: âReally, it sounds lovely, but we just don't need anything quite so ⦠fancy. Isn't there anything else available?'
He frowns and taps away at his keyboard for a few moments before looking up and resuming a wide smile: âI can offer you The Pirate Suite?'
We spend the first night in our new homeland sleeping beneath a giant Jolly Roger. There is a dressing-up box and all manner of parrot and pieces-of-eight paraphernalia. In the morning, Lego Man emerges from the bathroom wearing an eye patch. But things seem better by daylight. They always do. We draw the curtains to reveal a bright, white new world and blink several times to take it all in. Fortified by an impressive breakfast buffet, which includes our first encounter with the country's famed pickled herring, we feel ready to begin ticking off the various items of âlife admin' necessary for starting over in a new country. And then we step outside.
The snow has shifted up a gear, from gentle, Richard Curtis film-style flakes into snow-globe-being-shaken-vigorously-by-angry-toddler territory. The sky empties fast, dumping its load with urgency from all directions now. So we go back inside, put on every item of clothing we have, then emerge an hour later, looking like Michelin Men but better prepared to start the day.
In the hire car, I try to remember that the gear stick isn't on my left and that I need to drive on the right, while Lego Man reads from the to-do list that his new HR manager has thoughtfully emailed over. This comprehensive document extends to an alarming ten pages and is, we are informed, only âphase one'.
âFirst off,' Lego Man announces, âwe need identity cards â otherwise we don't
technically
exist here.'
It turns out that the ID card scheme that Brits railed against for years before it was scrapped in 2010 has long been integral to Danish life. Since 1968, everyone has been recorded in a Central Population Register (CPR) and given a unique number, made up of their date of birth followed by four digits that end in an even number if you're female and an odd number if you're male. The number is printed on a yellow plastic card, which is âTO BE CARRIED AT ALL TIMES' (the HR man has emailed in shouty capitals). Our unique numbers are needed for everything, from opening a bank account and healthcare to renting a property and even borrowing books from a library. (If only we could read books in Danish. Or knew where the library was. Or the word for âlibrary' in Danish.) I will even have a barcode that can be scanned to reveal my entire medical history. It all sounds very efficient. And I'm sure it would be relatively straightforward, too, if only we knew what we were doing, or how to get to the bureau where we're supposed to register. As it is, this task takes all morning. Even so, we count ourselves lucky â new arrivals from outside the EU have to wait months for their residency cards and these need renewing every couple of years. Being an immigrant is not for the admin-phobic.
Next, we need a bank account. A smart-looking man with closely cropped hair and distinctly Scandinavian-looking square glasses in the local (and only) bank greets us warmly and says that his name is âAlan', before pointing to a name badge to reiterate this. I notice that it's âAllan' with two âl's, Danish-style. Allan with two âl's tells us that he will be managing our account. Then he pours us coffee and offers us our pick from a box of chocolates. I'm just thinking how civilised and friendly this is in comparison with my dealings with banks back home when he says:
âSo, it looks like you have no money in Denmark?'
âNo, we only arrived yesterday,' Lego Man explains. âWe haven't started work yet, but here's my contract, my salary agreement and details of when I'll get paid, see?' He hands over our documents and Allan studies them closely.
âWell,' he concedes eventually, âI will give you a
Dankort
.'
âGreat, thanks! What is that?' I ask.
âIt's the national debit card of Denmark, for when you have some money. But of course it will only work in Denmark. And there can be no overdraft. And no credit card.'
âNo
credit card
?'
I've been batting off credit card offers in the UK since leaving school without a penny to my name. Global financial crisis or otherwise, credit cards have been akin to a basic human right for my generation. Putting it on plastic is a way of life. And now we're being made to go cold-hard-credit-card-turkey?
âNo credit card,' Allan restates, simply. âBut you can withdraw cash, when you have it,' he adds generously, âwith this!' He brandishes a rudimentary-looking savings account card.
Cash
! I haven't carried actual money since 2004. I'm like the Queen, only with a blue NatWest card and a penchant for impractical shoes. And now I'm going to have to operate in a cash-only world, with funny green, pink and purple notes that look like Monopoly money and strange silver coins that have holes in the middle? I don't even know the Danish numbers yet! But Allan with two âl's will not be moved.
âWith this card,' (he waggles the plastic rectangle in front of us as though we should be very grateful he's trusted us with anything at all) âyou can log on to internet banking and get access to government websites.' This sounds very high-powered. I wonder whether we're talking CIA-Snowden-style info before Allan clarifies: âYou know, to pay bills, things like that.'
Bank account in place (if empty) we can now officially begin looking for somewhere to rent. A relocation agent will be assisting us with our search but with a few hours to kill until we meet her, Lego Man suggests a recce around the nearest normal-sized town in case we decide that toy town isn't for us.
Driving through Billund's uninspiring streets of identikit bungalows, like some sort of play-inspired military base, I have already decided that toy town is not for us and so I'm hoping that the next place is an improvement. Things start encouragingly enough with attractive red-brick mansion blocks and municipal buildings, cobbled streets and interesting boutiques nestled between big high street stalwarts. The place looks a lot like a Scandi version of Guildford. But after a couple of laps of the âhigh street', we're left wondering whether perhaps there's been some sort of nuclear apocalypse that's only been communicated in Danish, meaning we've missed it.
âWe haven't seen a single soul forâ¦' I consult my watch, ââ¦
twenty minutes
.'
âIs that right?'
âYes,' I say. âIn fact, the only things resembling human forms we've encountered are the life-size sculptures of naked bodies with horses' and cats' heads on them in that weird water feature a few streets back.'
âThe sort of porny pony version of Anita Ekberg in the Trevi fountain in the “town centre”?' Lego Man makes a bunny ears gesture to indicate that he didn't think much of the thriving metropolis.
âYep. That's the one. The porny pony and the cats with boobs.'
âHuh.'
This particular statue, we later learn, was intended as a tribute to Franz Kafka.
He must be very proud
, I think. We pass more shops that are all either closed or empty and houses that look unoccupied save for the dim flicker of candlelight burning from within.
âThis isn't normal, right? I mean, where is everyone?' I ask.
âI ⦠don't knowâ¦'
I check the news on my phone: there have been no atomic incidents. World War III has not been declared, nor has any alarming viral outbreak been announced. The threat of imminent death having been ruled out, Lego Man suggests going for a drink to wait for the place to warm up. Only we can't find a pub. Or a bar. Or anywhere that looks a) open and b) isn't McDonalds or a kebab joint. Eventually, we locate a bakery that also sells coffee and I suggest to Lego Man that we order âone of everything', in the hope that carbohydrates might cheer us up.
The place is empty, so we stand expectantly, waiting to be served. But the woman behind the counter remains expressionless.
âHi!' I try, but she averts her eyes and busies herself rearranging a crate of buns. Lego Man tries pointing at various things with his eyebrows raised (the universal symbol for âplease may I have one of those?') until eventually the woman cracks and makes eye contact. We smile. She does not. Instead, she points to an LED display above her head that shows the number 137. Then she points at a deli-counter-style ticket dispenser behind us and says something we don't understand in Danish.
I'm not trying to buy ham from a butcher in the 1980s. I just want buns. From her. In an empty shop. Is she seriously telling me that I have to get a ticket? Or that 136 people have already passed through here today? Or that there even
are
136 people in this town?
Bakery woman has now folded her arms resolutely, as if to say: âPlay by the rules or no buttery pastry goodness for you.' Knowing when I'm beaten, I turn around, take three paces to my right, extract a small, white ticket with the number â137' on it from the machine, then walk back. The woman nods, takes my ticket, and uncrosses her arms to indicate that normal service can commence.
Once we've ordered, Lego Man gets a call from his overly keen HR liaison officer. He steps outside to talk, away from the racket of the milk frother, and I pick a table for us and our gluttonous selection of pastries. âDon't start without me,' he says sternly, hand over the mouthpiece.
His caution isn't unfounded. I have form in this area and can't be trusted within a hundred-metre radius of a cake. I can feel my stomach knotting with anticipation and don't know how I'm going to keep from taking a bite until Lego Man is back. To distract myself, I Google ânew country, Denmark, culture shock' on my phone and drink coffee furiously.