How (and why) I came to Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024

Комментарии • 233

  • @K__a__M__I
    @K__a__M__I Год назад +275

    Hey! I was actually, genuinely interested in hearing about Glastonbury! Not cool!

    • @rewboss
      @rewboss  Год назад +78

      I have an embarrassingly old video about Glastonbury: ruclips.net/video/Gq8ODk2kQLQ/видео.html -- uploaded in the days when 360p was all RUclips could manage.

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +14

      @@rewboss Nice throwback. Yeah, the image quality is very 2009 but we can already hear the kind of good narration you further developed in the following years.

    • @skippytheaustralian9438
      @skippytheaustralian9438 Год назад +19

      To make it short:
      Wo die Liebe hinfällt.

    • @jamesswindley9599
      @jamesswindley9599 Год назад

      Glastonbury is full of hippies and witches who all drink too much and smoke a lot of drugs, let’s all be honest 😅😂❤

  • @teh-maxh
    @teh-maxh Год назад +276

    Since this is RUclips, I thought you were going to give a detailed explanation of *how* you got to Germany, as in the specific trains you took.

    • @ricdotdev
      @ricdotdev Год назад +30

      Trains, ferries, taxis and if they're wheelchair accessible or not...

    • @abgekippt
      @abgekippt Год назад +19

      Reading aloud all 500 waypoints from Google Route Planner 😄

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +7

      He probably just flew there.

  • @Ross17033
    @Ross17033 Год назад +170

    Parts of your story sound very familiar, Andrew. I came to Germany in 1990 with the idea of spending a year here and here I still am, 32 years later.

    • @juergenseeholzer6802
      @juergenseeholzer6802 Год назад +11

      Sounds as if Germany is not that bad as British media's usually report.

    • @nur0din
      @nur0din Год назад +8

      Hi Ross. You are a great teacher! Greetings from a former student.

    • @rogink
      @rogink Год назад +10

      @@juergenseeholzer6802 Dunno what British media you're looking at - most of it is very positive to Germany. We're told everything works, runs on time, is efficient, and if you can afford it, buy a German car!
      It's only when you start talking to Germans you find out the reality!

    • @ohauss
      @ohauss Год назад +7

      @@rogink Well, if you listen to English football fans, you'd think it's 1943.

    • @juergenseeholzer6802
      @juergenseeholzer6802 Год назад

      @@rogink Hi, regarding political themes English media often work with stereotypes like Germans-no humor, Germans-wearing Wehrmacht helmets in English newspapers, Germans-still targeting dominance over Europe etc. Oh yes and the German cuisine only consists of sausages, sauerkraut and beer and German sounds awful. If English politicians in the house of parliament try to gain public agreement by pushing anti German emotions I don't have many doubts anymore. They wouldn't do that if there weren't many English loving to hear such quotes. English win WW2 over and over again even 77 years after which tells more about the English than the Germans.

  • @popogast
    @popogast Год назад +35

    Sehr angenehm erzählt.
    Ein ❤ für Andrew.

  • @Redhand1949
    @Redhand1949 Год назад +50

    I thought I might be be your oldest subscriber, being born in 1949, but the person who is 30 years your senior easily beat me. I lived in Munich 1967-69, and it was a fantastic experience. Have vacationed in Germany too, and still speak passable German.
    Thank you for sharing your story. I was curious and really enjoy your channel.

    • @michaelhawkins7389
      @michaelhawkins7389 8 месяцев назад

      Are you still alive? I hope you have a few more years ahead of you , crazy how time flys by , Life isn't fair

  • @annarock2965
    @annarock2965 Год назад +40

    Hallo, Andrew! Das mit Herrenberg hat mir sofort gefallen! Ich verbrachte meine ersten 4 Lebensjahre dort, bis ich 1967 nach Leonberg zog, wo ich heute noch lebe. Herrenberg hat sich an bestimmten Plätzen nicht verändert, was mich sehr froh macht. Übrigens: es wäre mal lustig, Dich auf Russisch zu hören. Kannst Du es noch?

    • @BarnOwl61
      @BarnOwl61 Год назад +1

      Eine Herausforderung Andrew, Großartig! Greetings from The Netherlands!

  • @downhilltwofour0082
    @downhilltwofour0082 Год назад +40

    Thank you so much for sharing this with us! I have found over the years (I'm 30 years your senior), that life is about unexpected opportunities and having the good fortune of making the right choice. I have been blessed in that way. Stay safe and stay healthy because we need your wisdom and knowledge for years to come (I hope)! Happy holidays to you, your family (yes including your cat) and your friends!

  • @hypatian9093
    @hypatian9093 Год назад +24

    I went to Berlin to study in 1994 and stayed for nearly 15 years - it was an exciting time, but now I'm back in my small hometown (15k inhabitants) and am so glad that I hear cows + chickens instead of cars and airplanes. But every now and then I try to remember all the things I could do and eat there, I try to remember how Vietnamese food tastes or Mongolian or Indian...

  • @anniestumpy9918
    @anniestumpy9918 Год назад +2

    Well we're glad to have you here :)

  •  Год назад +12

    "I had to get out of the habit of speaking German with a Swabian accent" I've been there. After living for some time near Stuttgart, I found myself coming back to UK speaking something that was technically German but not quite. People were mildly confused. 😅

    • @Eagle_Owl2
      @Eagle_Owl2 Год назад +1

      We had a Japanese exchange student when I was still at school and she was 'unfortunate' enough to come to Saarland. Only after several months she realized that quite a bit of her vocabulary was Saarländisch dialect. But then again, she loved it so much here that she regularly comes to visit, even 11 years later. Her husband (also Japanese) used to live in Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg and Berlin and she lived in Munich for a while. Both said that their favourite state to visit is still Saarland, although it's not really the most beautiful or exciting. That really warmed my heart and after having lived in Schleswig-Holstein and Baden-Württemberg now, I can say the same (tho Schleswig-Holstein was pretty cool too, but I'm not made for Swabia apparently).

  • @MausTheGerman
    @MausTheGerman Год назад +31

    Very interesting story especially your experiences in St. Peter during the late 90s 👍
    Would be interesting if you could make a video how it felt in Berlin during that times 😊

    • @gerdforster883
      @gerdforster883 Год назад +5

      Slightly less orderly than St. Peter, but with fewer trolley busses.

  • @chrissiesbuchcocktail
    @chrissiesbuchcocktail Год назад +11

    Don't feel old - not everybody watching your videos was born in the 90s and later.
    1967 here :)

  • @Jules_Diplopia
    @Jules_Diplopia Год назад +10

    Cool story.
    I was an economic migrant moving to the Netherlands for work in 2000. Then I met a Dutch woman, the work ended, so I started a business with my Dutch friend, learnt Dutch fast, being in a shop and talking to customers all day long will help.
    Now I have been here 22 years and am the proud owner of a Dutch passport. Still have the British one too, but will never use it.

  • @f.k.3762
    @f.k.3762 Год назад +16

    You’re the voice of reason. Glad to have you with us. Keep them coming

  • @SalihGoncu
    @SalihGoncu 4 месяца назад +1

    :) Similar story at my side: Went to Ukraine to study, met with a nice young lady and now we're in Germany. at the northernmost tip of Baden-Württemberg. :)

  • @rolandropnack4370
    @rolandropnack4370 Год назад +21

    Good job, joung lady from the utmost north-western corner of Bavaria, you secured one of Britannia's finest sons for ze Vaterland! 😉👍

  • @felixw19
    @felixw19 Год назад +4

    I'm honestly surprised you didn't have a video on this already

  • @WasOne2
    @WasOne2 Год назад +1

    I came from the US in 1986. Still live in a small town just outside of Stuttgart.

  • @Hypatia350
    @Hypatia350 9 месяцев назад +2

    I did go to St. Petersburg around this time to teach English. It was very hsrd: language schools kept collapsing financially and i was out of work for periods of time. It was lonely as i was trying to avoid ex-pat and English-speaking environments. I stayed there a couple of brutal but interesting years and i still csnt speak Russian very well 😂

  • @gustavmeyrink_2.0
    @gustavmeyrink_2.0 Год назад +5

    I'm almost the complete opposite!
    In '87 I moved from Berlin(West) to Birmingham planning on spending a year or two there and I'm still here with wife and children an' all.
    Funny how you can get stuck in the weirdest places. One difference is that I still have regular if rare contact with most of my German friends.

    • @dandare1001
      @dandare1001 6 месяцев назад

      True friends always remain friends, even with great distances separating them.

  • @c4standard
    @c4standard Год назад +14

    Would you please post the gibberish part too? :)

  • @haramaschabrasir8662
    @haramaschabrasir8662 Год назад +2

    I was wondering what you were telling in the sped up part. Thanks for clarifying.

  • @JakobSeidl
    @JakobSeidl Год назад +4

    An age old question finally answered

  • @ArmandoBellagio
    @ArmandoBellagio Год назад +6

    That's interesting. Never knew you lived in Berlin so long, but that's explains the ponytail I guess haha. Very romantic you moved to that small Bavarian town for love. Well, at least it's near here to Frankfurt.

  • @Bandenscheisser
    @Bandenscheisser Год назад +7

    This is an interesting video.

  • @John_Weiss
    @John_Weiss Год назад +11

    I'm 1 year older than you, Andrew. Double-majored in German and physics, spent a semester at the Uni Mainz studying in Fachbereich Germanistik, and graduated in 1991. I finished a doctorate in physics in 1998, then moved cross-continent (I'm in the US) to finally be with my then-long-distance boyfriend of 5 years. We married in 2011, and are still going strong nearly 30 years later.

    • @idraote
      @idraote Год назад +1

      Reading your comment I kind of got an inferiority complex 😅

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss Год назад

      @@idraote Stop. That.
      Stop that right now! I actually have a complex where _I feel ashamed_ of my academic accomplishment because of people freaking out over them and acting with hostility towards me due to their own insecurities. (Not accusing you of doing that, BTW.)
      I double-majored for 3 reasons: (1) Physics was my passion since I was 13. I wanted to know how everything worked. (2) I wanted to study in Germany for a semester, which more or less required/caused me to convert a minor in German into a major; (3) Being a language major got me into a better dorm my sophomore and senior years. 😁
      I had motivation. A lot of it. And I discovered a passion for language & linguistics along the way.
      And, frankly, I'm just plain weird.

    • @idraote
      @idraote Год назад +1

      ​@@John_Weiss I am sorry, I had no idea you had faced such hostility. It's sad.
      I am indeed a little jealous of people who have focus because that's a quality I lack, but I have been working on that in the last few years and I now try to appreciate what I can do instead of regretting things 🙂
      P.S. I like weird. And I like linguistics. I kind of suspect the two go together. Correlation is not causation but... 😄

    • @John_Weiss
      @John_Weiss Год назад

      @@idraote Don't worry about my hangups. It's not your fault.
      I just need to find better people to be around, people who don't go after others because of their own insecurities. 😁😉
      And you're right that you need to look for things you're good at! In grad school, we learn _very fast_ that there is _always_ someone who's smarter than you, is better at research, is better at General Relativity, is better at …
      So you learn some humility _real fast._ _But:_ to also discover, from those people who you are better than you at, say, General Relativity, think that _you_ are better at giving papers at conferences, and admire you for that. So, we also end up having to unlearn "false humility," as well, to _not_ beat ourselves up for what we can't do and acknowledge what we can.
      Also? I'm *_53_* … I've had 25 years since I finished grad school to keep accruing knowledge and experience. So don't go comparing yourself to someone when it's an apples-to-oranges comparison. 😉

    • @idraote
      @idraote Год назад +1

      @@John_Weiss I am 53 too 😀
      I've been recently assigned to a new office at work and I have discovered exactly that: my new bosses appreciate things I kind of take for granted (because, of course, I can do them). They have also been nice enough to openly acknowledge them and praise me for them. When I struggle with other things, they say "don't worry, you'll learn in time".
      So yes, a reasonably positive attitude, devoid of arrogance, is probably the best way to go.

  • @pepearagoneses6908
    @pepearagoneses6908 7 месяцев назад

    Today is the 14th anniversary of my arriving in Brazil from Spain. It's been pretty good so far!

  • @BangOlafson
    @BangOlafson Год назад +8

    And then you blink and suddenly you are married, have kid(s) and mortgage :)
    Sounds very familiar ;) greetings from Ireland :)

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 8 месяцев назад +1

    2:14 When you said that, I was so surprized it made me forget Swedish for a moment, baffledly asking "Wiebittewas?!?" at the monitor XD

  • @Timeyy
    @Timeyy Год назад +4

    0:50 the accent thing is super funny, always reminds me of a story one of my old German teachers would tell about an exchange student from China who spent a year in Munich and then went to the Ruhrgebiet, people could barely understand them because the student's Bavarian accent was so thick lmao.

    • @michaelburggraf2822
      @michaelburggraf2822 Год назад

      However, I think it's difficult to acquire a strong Bavarian accent in Munich. This city is just too big and too international for that.
      BTW, the same is true about acquiring a Swabian accent in Stuttgart and its surroundings.

  • @Ralphieboy
    @Ralphieboy 2 месяца назад

    I studied German (anbd Russian) in High School and University and had an interest in visiting there, but the real reason was that we met two lovely forestry students from Göttingen while hiking in the Grand Canyon in 1987. They invited me and my buddy to come visit and we could not say no. We came over, my buddy left after five months but I stuck around.
    I found a job with a company who was expanding into Russia and they sent me there in 1992-93 and yeah, it was effing crazy. Massive inflation and rotting infrastructure. For that, I had a fully furnished two-room apartment in Tushino for $100 US per month.

  • @dl8cy
    @dl8cy Год назад +3

    There are also audience older than you ... I moved from Franconia to Berlin and married a girl not far from Herrenberg .... so greetings from Berlin

  • @Wilson-gz1ls
    @Wilson-gz1ls Год назад +2

    THIS is the most wholesome life-story i ever heard! :D Greetings from just southwest of Bremen

  • @corneliusludwig665
    @corneliusludwig665 8 месяцев назад

    I'm following your channel for years now, but (as a native of Baden-Württemberg) I have just been to Herrenberg last Saturday 😂 -- glad to have you here and three cheers to the lady who made you stay! Greetings from Wiesbaden 🎉

  • @lulledoom
    @lulledoom Год назад +1

    Das Leben erzählt die besten Geschichten.

  • @kapuzinergruft
    @kapuzinergruft 7 месяцев назад

    Myself being German almost stayed for good in the Liverpool area working in the medical field for fluffy house pets - that was back in the ninenties. But life flushed me back into the most northern capital of Italy at the river Isar 😂. So I retained beautiful memeories of the old days inn Britain back in the ninenties 😊

  • @MsPataca
    @MsPataca 8 месяцев назад

    Awesome. Germany (and Aschaffenburg) is lucky to have you. Keep making videos, they are very entertaining.

  • @strafrag1
    @strafrag1 Год назад +1

    Wunderbar, und viele Glueckwuensche an Dich.

  • @aresivrc1800
    @aresivrc1800 Год назад

    We are very fortunate and happy to have you here Andrew :-)

  • @elirome6978
    @elirome6978 Год назад +12

    Was it hard for you to leave Berlin? I assume you had to leave many friendships behind when you left for Aschaffenburg

  • @konstanzelocascio3416
    @konstanzelocascio3416 Год назад

    Aaaahhhhh ... Herrenberg !!! My hometown

  • @toranshaw4029
    @toranshaw4029 Год назад +3

    There's a saying relating to Glasto... "normal for Glastonbury". It also has it's own timezone... Glastonbury Maybe Time (GMT). 😂

  • @rainerwaansinn
    @rainerwaansinn Год назад +2

    At least for us older people (70+) it was clear from the beginning that you have landed in Aschaffenburg because of a woman. 🙂 Even if on winding paths ....

  • @LipoAkku
    @LipoAkku Год назад +1

    Glastonbury! I visited the very peculiar place a month ago. I think it’s great there!

  • @sunnyflower1979
    @sunnyflower1979 Год назад +1

    GenX born '78. My son is doing an exchange in Germany from America. I think he'll wanna stay

  • @soundscape26
    @soundscape26 Год назад +1

    Hummm... maybe you should do a Q&A video one of these days. I'm sure your audience would be able to throw you some really nice questions.

  • @sewerynk.6513
    @sewerynk.6513 Год назад +1

    love it :DD

  • @hesspet
    @hesspet Год назад +1

    Same part here, but no so a long yourney, but going from a big city into a small "cow" town in the Vogelsberg (where people speaking a strange language far away from german my dialect), sounds in a special way, the same. Just love 💘

  • @kyokobradbury7264
    @kyokobradbury7264 Год назад +3

    Hi Andrew, I have moved from Tokyo to Melbourne. Please tell me more of your story in the future!

    • @TOBAPNW_
      @TOBAPNW_ Год назад

      You must also have an interesting story! Melbourne is pretty small, as far as regional capitals go in developed nations, and definitely in comparison to Tokyo

  • @keyem4504
    @keyem4504 Год назад +1

    Hi, nice to learn about your whereabouts. We are of the same age, so we can feel old together. 🤓

  • @mossi408
    @mossi408 7 месяцев назад

    That is funny. I am British. I've got both passports since 2020 and Scottish roots. At least on my Mom's site. But I am born in Herrenberg, Germany in 1972. My dad is German. He used to be a soldier and was based in Nagold back then. No joke. I did visit this particular town in 2016 for the first time. And also live in Germany since 2010.

  • @blueredbrick
    @blueredbrick Год назад +1

    It's a sweet story.

  • @antimatter_nvf
    @antimatter_nvf Год назад +3

    Вы учили русский в университете, неожиданно! :)

    • @rewboss
      @rewboss  Год назад +5

      Учил... 30 лет назад. Я практичеси всё забыл.

    • @Andreas-du7eg
      @Andreas-du7eg Год назад

      учитывая текущие политические события, я думаю, что русский язык станет неважным языком. людям лучше учить украинский

  • @NicolaW72
    @NicolaW72 Год назад

    Thank you very much for this insight!🙂👍

  • @abgekippt
    @abgekippt Год назад +4

    "...which makes me feel incredibly old"
    Tröste dich, vielleicht stimmt ja auch was mit deinem Gefühl nicht!? 😜

  • @holger_p
    @holger_p Год назад +1

    That's kind of the expected story. Coming here for some reason, fall in love, and stay. Now I just learned what "some reason" was. Maybe in the next personal story video, you tell us something about your occupation. What das a linguist live from ?

  • @endlichdrin
    @endlichdrin Год назад

    Very interesting indeed. Thank your for sharing.

  • @macforme
    @macforme Год назад

    This was my question and now I have the answer. You read my mind. Glad you found The One..... may you both have MANY healthy, happy years together ( and no cuckoo clocks 🤣 )

  • @MiKenning
    @MiKenning Год назад

    Woah, you're in Aschaffenburg. I had no idea! I wonder if RUclips recommended me to you because that's the nearest city to me. 🤔

  • @jkb2016
    @jkb2016 Год назад +1

    Glastonbury! The one with the festival!

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад

      Yep, that's my main reference of Glastonbury as well.

  • @carmenfinn7521
    @carmenfinn7521 Год назад

    Fabulous story! Made my day!!

  • @Belfigora1102
    @Belfigora1102 Год назад

    "Extreme north-west corner of Bavaria" - I right away knew what you meant - nice region by the way. Greetings from Middle Frankonia to Lower Frankonia!

  • @andreymaslov1641
    @andreymaslov1641 9 месяцев назад

    kudos for pronouncing Nevsky totally correct)
    actually, remembering 93, you would be just fine, reasonably safe and with enough of money, with steadily improving economical situation. But of course right now it would be rather unpleasant to say the least. And for sure Berlin is such a fantastic city, one of the very few which can really compete with the atmosphere of Saint Petersburg, so it was a choice between diamonds and gold, whatever you chose you won.
    As a side note, a know a lady from London who spent a few years in ru from the year 95 studying, and it was in Voronezh. while it's by far not half as good as the northern capital, she told me that this was just the best time of her life.

  • @user-xb9yv2ci4c
    @user-xb9yv2ci4c Год назад +4

    Hi Andrew, thank you. What exactly do/did you do for a living? Aside from RUclips, of course.

  • @egafx
    @egafx Год назад +2

    it's always love story eventually

  • @disobedientdolphin
    @disobedientdolphin Год назад

    Thank you for sharing your story! :)

  • @Shadowguy456234
    @Shadowguy456234 Год назад +1

    Imagine how curious people are about me, a California kid living in Switzerland, about how that happened.

  • @divaloulou
    @divaloulou Год назад +1

    Achja... Für die Liebe. Die schönstest Grunde für alle Dinge :)

  • @nox5555
    @nox5555 Год назад +5

    so how did you get to germany? by boat? with the train? a breif swim? the aeroplane? we need information!

  • @BillyLeeGoodman
    @BillyLeeGoodman Год назад +2

    Aaaawww that's wonderful! Can we see more of your wife in a video sometime?

    • @soundscape26
      @soundscape26 Год назад +2

      More? I don't think she has ever made an appearance... but then again I missed the first 6/7 years of the channel.

  • @jovanweismiller7114
    @jovanweismiller7114 Год назад +1

    Hopefully, to make you feel a bit younger, I was 46 years old when you graduated from university.

  • @Durhandoni80
    @Durhandoni80 Год назад

    Yay, i went to glastonbury once.

  • @everettdalton8941
    @everettdalton8941 Год назад +1

    My mom also wanted (and did) to study in Russia, but her parents refused to pay for it , so she got a scholarship and ended up staying there and it was chaos, this was the mid 90’s

  • @orcajorca7215
    @orcajorca7215 Год назад +1

    Without seeing the video, I assume: Love.

  • @kieferngruen
    @kieferngruen Год назад

    Such a surprise that you used to live in Herrenberg. I grew up in Holzgerlingen, only a fe kilometers from there. You might wanna visit the new Schönbuchturm if you wanna visit Herrenberg again. It's quite the sight. Viele Grüße aus Tübingen.

  • @keithteschner2398
    @keithteschner2398 Год назад +1

    You and I have a similar experience.
    I originally served a three year military term in Berlin after which I spent 6 months in the United states. After returning to Berlin as a civilian I was thinking of staying in Germany approximately 18 months and then move back to the U S with my daughter and future wife who I met in the last months of my military service.
    That was in 1977 and I am still living here and enjoying my retirement.

  • @Potoarx
    @Potoarx Год назад

    Gutes Videos 👍🏻

  • @JurassicRaptor1993
    @JurassicRaptor1993 Год назад +3

    Now, tell us what you do for a living, please.

  • @uncinarynin
    @uncinarynin Год назад +1

    I tried to play the fast forward part at slow motion but still couldn't understand anything.
    If it's any consolation I was also born in 1970. Good vintage.

  • @eltfell
    @eltfell Год назад +4

    1:18 a German expression I know for it is: "Da habt Ihr nicht mal als Quark im Schaufenster gestanden."

    • @f.k.3762
      @f.k.3762 Год назад +1

      ‘Da hast Du nicht mal als Magerquark hinter der Theke gelegen”

    • @schmoemi3386
      @schmoemi3386 Год назад +1

      "Da wart ihr alle noch in Abrahams Wurstkessel!"

  • @jordandenning7367
    @jordandenning7367 3 месяца назад

    Interesting video. Didn't know you had spent some time in the Black Country. 👏

    • @rewboss
      @rewboss  3 месяца назад

      Wolverhampton isn't usually considered a part of the Black Country. It's generally thought of as the area around Dudley and Walsall.

  • @betewater8977
    @betewater8977 Год назад +3

    So when's the Rewboss biopic coming out?

  • @iamTheSnark
    @iamTheSnark 5 месяцев назад

    Watch till end!

  • @MarcGrafZahl
    @MarcGrafZahl Год назад +2

    I feel that, so often we men will die where our wives were born.

  • @BobatBG
    @BobatBG Год назад

    My mother was born and grew up in Aschaffenburg where she met my father, a soldier in the American army (my father is also a naturalized American whose family is German). Anyway, I visited the area in 1974 at the age of 15. What I remember is my mom and her family lived in an area called Schweinheim, and endless point of teasing my Mom endured from my father (and others). I didn't see any pigs in the area, but apparently there were farms there at one point. Do you live near Schweinheim?

  • @Rugged-Mongol
    @Rugged-Mongol Год назад +1

    I'm from New England.

  • @azzurro4205
    @azzurro4205 Год назад +2

    I was born in Ragusa/Sicilia/Italy
    With 8 my parents moved to germany but i stayed with my aunt in L‘aquila/Italy
    With 11 i came to cologne/germany
    With 15 i fell in love with an turkish girl and we lived in kayseri/turkey when i was 21-23 and with 23 we both moved to Yokohama/Japan
    Now i‘m 30
    At this point i‘m just open for everything 😂 although i really really love japan
    I do miss my direct/organized germans, my laid-back italians and my open-hearted turks tho

  • @peter_meyer
    @peter_meyer Год назад +3

    It's always a girl's fault......
    I can relate.

  • @degeneriert
    @degeneriert Год назад +3

    Mist. Ich hätte das Video erst zuende gucken sollen, bevor ich mit Audiosoftware den Gibberbabber-Teil langsamer rechne, um herauszufinden was du sagst...

  • @sadrequiem
    @sadrequiem 6 месяцев назад

    Cool story. All this video needed was some pictures of those periods to see the youth of those days

  • @michaelstramm2366
    @michaelstramm2366 Год назад

    I look up your Videos infrequently , but one thing keep me coming back all the time is the views of somebody from abroad and the way you present it. Absolutely correct and stunningly refreshening. British Humor at work i say. By the way , wish you a good NEW Year ,stay healthy and go on as only you can do. Greets by some swabian who has the good fortune to get around on this globe pretty regularly.

  • @miketurner7305
    @miketurner7305 Год назад +2

    What do you do for a living now?

  • @truckerallikatuk
    @truckerallikatuk Год назад +1

    As someone who lives near Glastonbury: Can confirm it's weird, very weird...

  • @robertjarman3703
    @robertjarman3703 Год назад +3

    Think about it, your Parents doing that meant that you met that fine woman in Bavaria you get to see every day and presumably do other things as well like make scrambled eggs.

  • @PanzerschrekCN
    @PanzerschrekCN Год назад +1

    1993-й год в Россий действительно был весьма жутким - с конституционным переворотом и танковой стрельбой в Москве.

  • @robert48719
    @robert48719 Год назад +1

    Funny thing is, I was born in 1993... Which probably makes me just belonging to the other half that was already born at that time

  • @videomailYT
    @videomailYT Год назад

    i was born in 1988 so i was still there, but to little to remember something important... 🤔
    Not like my mother, she was 4 years old and that was the first time she see grown up mens crying. It was in 1962 when Kennedy was shot...

  • @MikeGill87
    @MikeGill87 2 месяца назад

    So the sped-up part about Glastonbury was just gibberish? What the hell man?! :D :D

  • @Palatinate-o5d
    @Palatinate-o5d Год назад +1

    I would like to hear you speak German. Maybe you could make a video in German with English subtitles

    • @rewboss
      @rewboss  Год назад +1

      Your wish is my command: ruclips.net/video/0p6gTlUV5jA/видео.html

    • @Palatinate-o5d
      @Palatinate-o5d Год назад +1

      @@rewboss Oh, das gabs ja schon! Und ich bin mächtig beeindruckt!

  • @AlanJG178
    @AlanJG178 Год назад +1

    (I'm curious)
    Can you tell us why you chose to learn German in school?
    As the consequence of that initial decision led you eventually to live in a small village in Bavaria.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Год назад

      If you mean "school" in the American sense of "university", he already said so -- because he already spoke the langauge. If you mean it in the British sense of primary and secondary education, probably because most British schools at the time taught French from about age 12 and, if you wanted to learn a second foreign language, it would almost always be German.