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What I like about Denmark: More time for kids and less stuff to clean

What I like about Denmark

I got an email a couple of weeks ago 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’m not a refugee.

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

‘Time with family’ doesn’t mean you’ve been fired
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.

In New York, everybody wanted everything you had, all the time
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.
 

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Kay Xander Mellish books

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Image mashup copyright Kay Xander Mellish [current_year]

Read also:
Danes and Privacy

  1. Henning Erik Andersen
    Henning Erik Andersen says:

    That is certainly an old photograph. Is feeding the pigeons still permitted? I I thought they had been re-located from Rådhuspladsen.
    That streetcar was old when I departed Denmark in 1949.