• Sweden edition

Julie\'s Nordic Island

Space & Time for Your Wellbeing

Posts Tagged ‘space’

The Shifting of Swedish Space

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Space, the final frontier...

The birds are chirping and the snow on the ground is knee-deep.  The light has a softness in it that belongs more to the future than it does to the now when the earth is still hard and the branches bare.   These contrasts make the month of February an interesting and surprising time to be in Sweden and not at all the monotone freeze that this country has a reputation for being in until midsummer when the tourists begin to arrive.

Among the other contrasts that I notice this February are those that I see in the landscape of this country of supposedly charming rust-red houses trimmed with ‘carpenter’s delight’. A Sunday walk with my husband on the ice reveals a new and juxtaposing picture of architecture in Sweden and with this a shift in values taking place within a whole society. “This place is starting to look like America,” my husband comments as he notices the large waterfront houses that have shot up in no time.  My husband is old enough to remember Sweden in the 1950s so there is the possibility that he could be exaggerating. On the other hand, during the fourteen years that I have had the opportunity to observe Swedish coastlines from the ice, things have clearly changed.

The going gets tough as we hit a patch where the snow is so deep that it has insulated a layer of water between itself and the 40 cm-thick ice. We are forced to stop and look.  On the shore just up in front of us we behold three houses that tell a story of the rapid transformation of a cultural landscape that is happening without almost anyone commenting. To the right, at the bottom of a low hill nestled among the trees is a tiny house that looks like a DIY sports cabin.  It was obviously built to provide a simple base from which to enjoy the beautiful natural environment. To the left of this cabin is a slightly larger cabin with terrace and a small kitchen with running water. This place was also clearly built with life in the outdoors in mind. Even further to the left, perched up on the hill, is a great, grey house with no carpenter’s delight and a double garage.  It’s long row of front-facing windows demonstrates that it is clearly built for enjoying the outdoors from the indoors. Before us we have the story of late twentieth century and early twenty-first century Sweden. There is a shift happening from outdoors to indoors and from nature to convenience.

Sense tells me that it is important to resist a glorification of the past. In mid-winter indoor sanitary facilities are a great blessing. I know what it is like to weather a Swedish winter without running water (we’ll leave that story for my memoir of island life which is coming out later this year or another blog entry!). On the other hand, there is something about the rapid emergence of these big and rather unoriginal houses in a very short period of historical time that is disturbing. How do we actually create more space for ourselves in modern society? Bigger houses mean greater use of energy, more cleaning and less time in the greatest space we’ve got: nature.

There is of course another trend and one I have reported about at my e-magazine. That is, the rapidly increasing popularity of hermit huts and tree houses. People with the resources are today prepared to pay a premium for the opportunity to live in a designer ‘box’ for a night because it gives them an opportunity to taste a form of freedom that is available on a path that society is slowly relinquishing.

Two days later my husband and I walked past a recreation of Lådan, a 20 m square functional-style house built during the early 1940s, by the famous Swedish architect Ralph Erskine and his wife. We peered into the windows of this house which has become a charming historical relic in our area. The double bed hung from the ceiling and could be lowered to the floor by a well-designed pulley. One of our friends remembers that the Erskines “hung their infant daughter in a small hammock outside” on the terrace when they had guests who came to visit them during the summers. Today most people cannot imagine choosing such a life – even if only for the summers. Yet we glorify structures created by people who have made a determined effort to enjoy ’space’ in other ways by showing off their homes as examples of fine architecture. I am quite certain that the new instant giants along the coasts of Sweden’s inner islands will never be revered in this way.

Obviously, we are confused about what it is that truly gives us a feeling of space and freedom in our society. There is a gap between what we want and the choices we make. The next time you are out walking, skating or skiing on the ice observe and think about it, and please do get back to me. I’m still trying to work out the most lagom (meaning just about right in Swedish) solution for meeting my need for space.

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For links to places and designers working with hermit hut and tree house projects in Sweden visit http://www.nordicwellbeing.com/web/design/more_design/Hermitic_Design.php.

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Is there any space left?

Thursday, September 24th, 2009
The final frontier?

The final frontier?

The citizens of the island of Lovö on the fringes of western Stockholm are in mourning. Their peaceful space will soon be drastically reduced with the approval of Förbifart Stockholm, a road project intended to connect north and south reducing traffic through Stockholm city. Will people in Stockholm suddenly have more space then? It seems that the way of things is to fill a vacuum wherever it exists.  Sitting at the bus stop with my children on the road that leads past Lovö into the islands of Lake Mälar, I have the creeping feeling that space is being devoured. This two-lane highway will soon become four-lane and the barricades are already up. A public bus that passes honks at us and the driver signals that this bus stop is no longer in service due to the reconstruction. The motorists watch a crazed white dog, a woman and two children running frantically to the next bus stop which is not so nearby. Are these changes really in the service of people? Has anyone given any thought to the fact that all of these fossil fuel driven vehicles will have to be phased out and that we might be better off with one lane for a street-car?

Up on the hill walking my dog after sending the children off to school, our favorite field has been sectioned off.  I used to stand next to the old manual water pump in the mornings imagining another woman from another time peacefully listening to the morning as she collected water for the household.  This peaceful moment is now sectioned off, out of reach, gone.

I ignore one of the less friendly gardeners in the Drottningholm Palace grounds who growls that even in the forest behind the palace where barely anyone ever walks that my dog must be on a leash. My dog has as much right to be here as the royals, I reflect. We’re all just living beings looking for space. As he hooks up a rope to section off another section of these grounds, I reply that we’re all calm and friendly, just doing our best to find the same things in life.

Even in this country of allemannsrätt (every man’s right to nature) where space is apparently everyone’s shared right, one begins to feel sectioned off. The inclusive feeling of Swedish society is in danger when too many people start to feel increasingly like they are being relegated to living on a postage stamp.

It is one of the great ironies of humanity that we long for space but are so singularly intent on filling it. I haven’t got any ready solutions but among all of the attitude changes that humans need to make, this one is most overlooked and perhaps most essential since it has so many spinoffs for our world. I start with “the Man in the Mirror” approach and relinquish all of my complaints about not being able to expand or significantly change the historical home that I live in.  I tend my space and hope that this attitude is contagious.

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Welcome to Wellbeing

Monday, April 6th, 2009

During the past decade I’ve been writing about wellbeing inspired by my natural and cultural surroundings on a small out-of-the-way island in Sweden. The truth is that I never expected that an island that is about 400 meters from one side to the other and built upon barren pebbles could give birth to all of the books, columns, blogs and other projects that I have produced during all of these years. However, inspiration crops up where you least expect it, and when I found that several of Stockholm’s historical buildings were constructed with sand brought in from this now-derelict sand-mining spot in Mälaren, I concluded that it seemed to be a place that gave rise to things (no pun intended).

What did I ask myself and discover amid the silence and the spruce? After a harried, high-speed career as a management consultant in no particular place, I stood on this small speck of earth and asked myself: What is a good life in the 21st century? What does wellbeing mean now and into the future? As I pulled out the weeds, chased the hares from my cabbage patch and listened to the woodpecker chinking away at my proud Swedish flagpole, I began to gain a perspective on what we’re missing in our highly practical technology-age schedules: space (mental, emotional and physical) and time. Not only that, I began to feel that the modern yet nature-oriented Scandinavian culture that I had come to live amidst during the mid-1990s offered its very own philosophical and practical solutions to our modern wellbeing dilemmas. I began to write about them and gave them the collective title, Nordic Wellbeing™.

So what am I doing here at The Local taking up more of your space and time? Today I divide my time between my rocky, stony hermitage and an island considerably closer to the center of things. I spend time in the Tunnelbana (subway), I rush to meetings and, several times a day, I am accosted by people trying to sell me things that I don’t want to buy. Suddenly, as a result of this change in my own life, I see the acute need for 21st century ‘islands’ where we can share thoughts and perspectives about what it means to live well in our times. This is perhaps less for our own sake than for future generations (can you tell that I am a mother of young twins?). Still, this isn’t an unselfish blog – it’s about our lives too.

A warm welcome to Julie’s Nordic Island at The Local. Let us create an island that we believe in right here.

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My other islands:

www.nordicwellbeing.com – the world’s first e-magazine for wellbeing with Nordic inspiration.

www.julielindahl.com – my personal pages

My book (of which there is an upcoming sequel): “On My Swedish Island: Discovering the Secrets of Scandinavian Wellbeing” (Tarcher Penguin, 2005), available at www.amazon.com and other online bookstores in Sweden and elsewhere.

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Highlights from Follow Sweden

20 things to know before moving to Sweden

As diverse as Sweden is, there are a few societal norms that are distinctly Swedish. Understanding a handful of them will hopefully prepare you culturally before you relocate. When you're invited home to a Swede, you better be on time and take your shoes off, writes expat Lola Akinmade-Åkerström. Read more »

How far can English take you in Sweden?

Sweden is a country where almost everyone can speak English. So why bother to learn Swedish? Edina Varnagy from Hungary managed with English for a whole year but then found that Swedish could open doors – to a job, a social life and greater understanding. Read more »

Blog Update: Julie's Nordic Island

12 February 21:30

The consciousness of one »

"The ice dripped in the winter sun. It was the first day when the light had been intense enough to cause dripping in the sunlight. To hear it was an extraordinary wakeup call. The cycle was happening again as it always does, always will (or so we think). I imagined that on my summer island, the bees..." READ »

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