Welcome

Following the crowning of my NHS experience with a stint at a PCT and the resulting redundancy (traumatic, though much wanted and worked for), my husband and I are going back to my roots near a small village in Smaland, Sweden. These are our experiences.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Of Mice and Cats and Men.

Of Mice and Men.

Here, just as in London, you are never less than 2m from a rodent of some sort.  Well, perhaps not quite as infested as that, but there are plenty of mice in the farm and quite a lot of field mice generally lolling around living the life.  This would be especially true of the mice that found their way into my grandmother’s kitchen and had a fine time eating knäckerbröd and rice before she noticed that the bread had extra-frilly edges.  Out came the mouse trap and on went the cheese and oats, which they duly ate too, before becoming too fat to avoid the spring.  Two days after I’d cleaned up all the mouse droppings around the kitchen, my grandmother, being very fond of cats, presented me with an old flour bag and told me she had a present for my kitten.  Naively I thought how sweet it was and looked forward to Psychokitty playing with some of Grandmother’s old cat’s toys.  Then she said that she thought she’d left the trap in the bag and could I fish it out before I went.

......

You know all those good manners that your mother literally bangs into you as a child?  Parents – take note.  The glares, repetition, etc work!  Isn’t that nice?

Another lesson to learn is never to feed any cats you may find hanging around the place.  My father didn’t take any notice of this very good guidance and fed the black cat that was hanging around the veranda, even though they would only be there for 4 weeks.  As Evil S doesn’t believe in feeding cats (“it’s unnatural”), the mog hung around in the hope of nice food and kept the grounds mouse and pigeon free in the meanwhile.   In the ‘natural’ course of events, she had a kitten and then we turned up.  It is physically impossible to refuse to feed a kitten when it’s staring at you through the glass and winter is on the way.  Just. Totally. Impossible.  So, we have acquired a kitten in practice and, as ES doesn’t probably know it exists and for definite won’t have registered it, we now have it in actuality (this could be an American word, but is part of the evolution of the English language and it fits – so tough).

A cat mother will bring her kitten dead mice to give them a taste for it.  What my grandmother didn’t know was that Psycho had moved up from dead mice to live mice(such a nuisance cleaning the blood off the floor) and dead pigeons.  We’re trying to persuade Mog to skip the live pigeons and go onto dead deer, but are making little headway at the moment. 

Still, Psycho enjoyed her present from the house. Although I am a morning person, I confess that I can forget to examine the ground before I put my feet down at 6am, and I don’t always wear slippers.  Can I recommend stepping on a mouse’s rear end and squashing the liver for waking up thoroughly in the morning?  It is so effective and totally natural....

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Just a touch of politics

Politics

The big news here, apart from the extreme economic difficulties that Sweden is undergoing (???  What???  That’s where the drive for perfection takes you!) is the leadership of the Social Democrats.  The leader has just resigned after numerous problems, like his partner being convicted of fraud and he didn’t tell anyone when he stood for leader, a ‘misunderstanding ‘ on claiming expenses when staying in her flat in Stockholm.  Bless him, he didn’t know the rules of this, despite chairing a parliamentary committee on parliamentary expenses.  Although thinking back to various chairs of various committees I’ve known, this isn’t entirely unbelievable, but, nevertheless.... He’s only been in post about 10 months and the previous recumbents were not that much more fortunate.  It’s bringing up lots of interesting cultural attitudes. Now I live ‘on the other side’, it’s fascinating to watch the feeling towards Stockholm, which verges on hatred in some circles.  It could be what the rest of teh country think about London, although in the UK we do have truly national newspapers.  I say this, but thinking about it, there are also criticism that the nationals are too London-centric (I do not speak of the red-tops).  Here the biggest newspapers are based in the biggest cities and everyone here reads the local paper. 
Anyway, even now on the radio equivalent of Radio 4, they are talking about the distance of the Stockholm-based politicians from the rest of the country.  The old SD leader was not from Stockholm, but from the country and there are accusations that the press hounded him because of this, and this is from the press!

Ho hum, you frown, why the problem?  A political party? Who cares?  Well, yes, in the UK there is an increasing lack of difference between the parties and in Sweden here there are at least 5 in the ruling alliance, so what’s the fuss?   The Social Democrats made Sweden what it is today, they were the ones who build the ultimate Social State, the one that comes nearest to perfection that one can achieve in this imperfect world.  They have formed modern Sweden and now the Right is in, some of the things they put in place are being dismantled.  And people are talking about what if basic principles are abandoned such as the essential equality of everyone.  I’ve noticed that the cabinet are now all wearing suits and ties, which they never used to do. People aren’t sloping around in jeans anymore in the bank head offices and, if you ask me, it’s a sign the country is going to the dogs.  If the Social Democrats can’t form a credible opposition, who will?  At the moment, it’s looking like the Communists and Greens, which means that ‘lagom’ is also going out of the window and then the world will end.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Make a Joyful Noise

Make a joyful noise

It’s actually not suprising that Sweden is taking the music world by storm.  There’s not just ABBA, but everything from Swedish House Mafia and E Type to Lykke Li  and First Aid Kit, not to mention Frantic Amber and other assorted heavy rock.  Swedish folk music is quite tuneful, when you get past the accordions and beards, and has influenced a lot of American music because of the Emigration in the late 18th Century and early 19th.  It is also ultra-weird to see very Swedish blonde people doing hip hop really quite well.  Singing and playing is a hugely popular, almost every old house has a foot pump organ somewhere.   Personally,  I’ve always liked singing and one of the great things about church is that you can belt stuff out without worrying too much; Until your Swedish mother turns to you and says thoughtfully, “it’s a pity you can’t sing.....oh dear (once more with feeling and sigh effect)”.  Then I fortify myself with the bit where the psalm says “make a joyful noise to the Lord” with emphasis on ‘noise’ – cool!  God doesn’t care what I sound like as long as it’s got heart and He trumps everyone on the relevance of opinion board really, what with godness and stuff, so Ha! Mother.

Accordingly (?? What cos I can’t sing????), in my efforts to integrate into Swedishness, I said that I’d come to a choir day at church, with a concert thing in the evening.   For these sorts of things, they get choir masters in! Professionals!!! Oh well, I can mumble at the back.  ‘What part do you sing Karin?’ ‘Errh, technically speaking, alto, but..’, ‘right, sit over there then’, ‘erh, OK’.  Poor Maria, (PM) who had to sit next to me.  She was very kind and some notes were hit in the right kind of way.  The tenor sitting in front of me did turn around and grin, which widened when he saw it was me (dark, dark threaty thoughts about tenors ...).   We learnt 6 songs, 2 in English (yeah, only one thing to concentrate on!) in an afternoon.  I was absolutely dead, and PM kept laughing. I couldn’t half have done with a drink, possibly a quadruple gin, though thinking about it, it was just as well that I didn’t.

After a break with sarnies, cake and lots of coffee, hurray, we had a dress rehearsal.  People were very good and very kind... and stuck me in the middle near the front.

When we came to the actual service, we trooped in and I found to my horror that there was a microphone directly in front of me.  After fixing the sound man with a piercing stare, to which he returned a smirk and V sign (yes it was, I checked for cultural difference), I tilted it in the direction of my neighbour, who was good enough to do a solo and smirked back.  I did manage to hit a few more correct notes, I think, and blessed my ability to lip sync, which, even though I say it myself, is phenomenal.   

There were threats of a duet next concert, but I think PM was joking.......

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

The Way Here

I was going to write about our first Swedish Christmas, but the muse dictates that that will have to wait a while and I’m going to write about where we live.  You can, of course, Google Map it and even travel down the frightfully busy main road that runs just a hundred metres as the woodpecker flies from our little house.  When I say busy, G looks at me in a funny way, but I mean that there are cars passing at least once every few minutes at rush hour and about three per 15 min in the rest of the day.  The lorries (about 2x the tonnage of the largest UK trucks) are the loudest and are what we hear from the house even during the summer, when the green screens most of the noise.  The road had gotten to be so busy that it had to be widened by 1.5m each side last year, which did cause a bit of a fuss, but it is easier to walk and cycle along it now and, and and we have cycle path all the way to Nyhem. Of course, there is not that constant hum that is the background noise of London, and it’s definitely not the A40, which was about the same distance as the pigeon flies.  The road has become so much busier than in the golden days of my youth because it is a good cut through to the motorway from Stockholm to Göteborg (Gothenburg) and has the added attraction of general scenicness.  There is the added weight of the building explosion (oooh, I can feel G’s look from here).

Our drive starts with a gate, which Evil S put in and requires us to keep shut at all times, even when there are no cows in the field.  We know this, because it is wired shut if we leave it open. Fun, fun, fun!  The drive follows the ‘olde roade’, which was the main way to Mullsjö for about 3000 years and most of which E.S. has allowed to fall into disrepair and oblivion. The drive poodles along parallel to the road for about 100m and passes over 2 cattle grids, runs down the little valley and then wends its way up the hill, through the birch and pine trees to our little house for about 300m.  Near the house, it’s soft with pine needles and sandy mud that feels like silk on the feet.  Otherwise it’s mud and cow muck and stones.  It needs to be renewed quite often, cos Evil S keeps doing stupid things like putting the cow feeder at the bend in the valley, so the cows stop there and churn up the road.  He then complains that we are being unreasonable when we ask for it to be moved further away and can he now pay for the damage please... now, not next year!

The house is a little red ‘summer’ house, which stands on the top of a sandy hill (225m for those interested) overlooking the Stråken lake.  It’s next to the larger gray, round house of one of my aunts, contrasting the effects of architect vs kit rather effectively.  The houses are right up against the limit of building regs that say no new houses can be built nearer than 200m from lakes.  ES has planted firs on the (previously) protected environmentally significant sandy bank going down to the lake in an effort to stop us seeing the view, bless him...
 
Goodness, I do believe that my new obsession are roads!  Wonder how long that will last before I get beaten over the head by a kindly passer-by?  One can but hope.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

The First Snow

Fir trees, on the whole, aren’t good for much.  They are thick, dark green and, unless you are a small beetle or a survivalist, are boring, boring, boring. Until the first snow falls. They then get transformed into a clump of magic and from every single one you expect to find a singing dwarf or growling troll.  Fortunately, life is full of disappointment.  On one of my walks there is a stand of firs, surrounded by birch trees.  It’s normally on the boring bit of the walk, but when the sun was glistening on the lattice of the birch branches and the white edged firs were sparkling against the pale blue sky yesterday, it was so beautiful that one had to sit down and appreciate it.  Obviously, that would be stand for a few minutes, cos sitting in the snow is not really to be recommended, being somewhat cold and wet.

The first snow cheers everyone up.  It’s what people have been waiting for, the reason for the winter tyres and the other equipment and, of course, the opportunity to have more outdoor fun.  By this the Swedes mean winter sports, which, in my experience mean sitting in the snow a lot.  We all know that the first snow will melt before long, but the beauty and hope is still there.  They will also say that everything is so gray until the snow comes, but this is only in their heads.  It is certainly more sparkly, in the sun, but in the clouds, the landscape has just shades of white going through to black.  Although, looking out of the window now, the chestnut brown of the wet pine trunks glows against the pearl grey sky, so I guess everything depends on how you look at it.

The kitten certainly enjoys the snow and is out-doors more now in minus temperatures than when it was 3 degrees and rainy. I think I’ll have to train her to get the wood and stuff as it requires to my horror, a different type of dressing.  Trouser legs have to be tucked in and it will will have to be fur-lined wellies at the back door from now on. The snow goes over the top of the clogs – ghastly. I also have to dive out of the front door before Graham goes to the car.  This isn’t some sort of marriage survival technique, but the snow has to be swept off the steps before it’s trodden in and becomes bobbly ice (technical term).

Well, it’s minus one, 4 cm of snow on the ground and some more in the air. Do I go for a walk or do I put another log on the fire, dig out the cocoa and put the Wii Sport on?  Excuse me, whilst I hitch the cat to the wood sled and decide what to do next.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

The Charity Auction

On Saturday was the Handcraft (Handverk) Auction held by the Ryd Sewing Mafia (official title and yes, I belong, so be careful).  I was highly privileged, according to my grandmother, in being allowed to make two pies (paj) for this.  Ha, you may say, what’s the problem? Pies are different here, so I did an apple (no Bramleys!) and a black currant crumble. I have done Board papers, been on the end of official inspections, been a government advisor (bizarro) and I have never been so nerve-wracked.  I’m still awaiting the verdict, but people are still speaking to me, so it may be OK...

The Auction itself was great fun.  They are really, really old-fashioned now and this is one of the few still going. Yeah, we be in th’coun’ry.  It would be a shame if they did die out though.  The UK equivalent would be the Church Bazaar in that women run them, raise money for charity and have lots of handmade stuff.  There was a proper auctioneer, who told funny stories and was an ex-policemen, so I did wonder what was going on there then (groan...) and, of course, fika.  Fika is the totally and utterly amazing Swedish word for snack.  It tends to mean a roll and cake.   When I say cake, I mean multi-layered fruit, cream, jam and sponge confections that also can include meringue and crème de patisserie.  The joy...

Back to the Auction.  The stuff that was auctioned was handmade and I managed to secure a hand woven table runner.  I missed out on the bags that were made out of coffee bags.  Yes, the bags that are used to package ground coffee were sewn together to make a really cool shopping bag.  I am now saving coffee bags and have asked my grandmother to do the same, though she thinks I’m mad and may not take any notice of me.  There were also things like ‘choose and cut your own Christmas tree’ and homemade crisp breads as well as the usual knitted tomte (Google it!), jams, socks, embroidered table clothes, etc. The thing that really took me by surprise is that there was so much ‘lotto’, much more than the auction itself, in fact.  There was the normal raffle stuff (American lotto – why, no idea!), but they also sold, say, bread or hand-dipped candles with a number on the packet and you could win a prize.  I thought that was an excellent idea, you get something for your money, even if you do not win.

It is a shame that less people are doing handcrafts even though here, too, there is a bit of a revival.  I suppose that we cannot fit everything in any more.  Why only yesterday, I spent all my time playing Zelda and barely had time to eat properly let along knock up a cross-stitch rug.  I think that is why it’s fashionable to knit etc, because it means that you have time and it is that that is the luxury today.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Things we like about Swedish media


Once upon a time, a long time ago, lived a little girl who went on holiday to a country far to the north.  Sometimes it was very rainy and she couldn’t play in the forests and fields, so she asked her daddy if she could watch the television set in the corner of the room.  She saw that Bonanza was on one day, but Daddy said that she couldn’t watch it as it was on too late.  “Why is it on at 11pm?” she asked her Mummy. “that’s because it has manly fisticuffs in most episodes, if not gun fire, and such violence is not for children. You may take your grandfather’s shot gun and shoot all the villagers in an orgy of sickening terribleness”.  “Oh” said the little girl, “but I will be far more damaged by watching bearded and socked accordion players wink at me!” “then watch the home-spun slapstick comedy on the other channel” came the reply. The little girl sighed to herself, watched the news for the 4th time that day and read some more Enid Blyton.

Nowadays how things have improved!

1)      Only 4 free channels – the restriction in choice is quite, quite restful and given that the other channels, apart from sport, merely run the same type of programmes, I don’t really feel deprived. Graham does, but he shouldn’t watch sport.
2)      The clothes of the presenters – The main news readers have become besuited clones of either doily bird seriousness or agéd gravitas, but the others are much more fun, especially the weather people.  My current favourite is one of the local news- readers, who is blonde, bearded and has the most comprehensive collection of loud, checked shirts that I have ever been privileged to see. No wonder the Vikings conquered Istanbul.
3)      There is 15 minutes of culture news every single day on the main channel, just before the local news and the main news, and a weekly book programme, which isn’t at 11.30pm, and a general cultural show. 
4)      The media assumes the audience has a brain each rather than one between the lot of them.  Example: Questions in quiz on trashy music radio programme, sort of like Capital, ‘who was the previous Finance Minister’ and a question on the rotation of the earth that involved serious maths.  There is an hour’s politics show at lunch-time on the equivalent of Radio 1 and a proper science programme on the telly for an hour each week at peak time.
5)      They don’t take themselves too seriously (apart from the critics of course).  There are coughs and splutters, wrong camera angles and delightfully timed “hummms”. My favourite quiz programme is DooBiDoo, which has a totally fab presenter who presides over singing anarchy quite, quite marvellously and makes the whole thing such a joy. 
6)      SG-1 is at lunchtime.
7)      They don’t censor lyrics.  I have learned such a lot about the hip-hop culture that I only knew in theory before.  The mad thing is that the sub titles can be a bit mealy mouthed in a rather random fashion.
8)       They import programmes from all over the world and sub-title them,  rather than dub, so on one day on one channel, there will be a David Attenborough documentary, an  Italian film, a Finnish short drama, an American comedy and some sort of Japanese programme (as yet to be determined as I don’t think the sub-titler knows either).
9)      The Swedish produced programmes have improved beyond all measure.  There are no longer wall-to- wall accordion players, though the comedy does tend to slap-stick.  All in all not bad at all.
10)   Everyone over the age of 35 complains that there is nothing on the telly.  Plus ça change!