'The truth about living in Germany' American Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to The truth about living in Germany
    Original video: • The truth about living...
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 Год назад +406

    We in Germany don't open the presents early, you open them late.

    • @leutnant_lama4290
      @leutnant_lama4290 Год назад +18

      Definitely true... Jesus Christ was born on 24th of December so you open your presents on that evening... Not one day off

    • @zlatkakardaleva5738
      @zlatkakardaleva5738 Год назад +3

      @@leutnant_lama4290 Wasn't he born the night of the 24th after midnight (technically the 25th) ? That's how we view it in the orthodox.

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Год назад +22

      Poland here. I'm sure it's all of Europe that opens presents on the 24th.
      Only England opens them on 25 or 26th, and they exported that habit abroad.

    • @SBHLL
      @SBHLL Год назад +4

      I think traditionally it was also more the 25th and you go to Church at midnight. Because that is so late it go´s a little bit earlier. And especially for Children it´s to late, so there is Christmas mass for Children earlier, and then after that they open the Gifts.
      So it goes from the 25th to the 24th I think.

    • @SBHLL
      @SBHLL Год назад +1

      Hä, Where are the other Answers? When I write my first there where 4 others and yet they are all gone.

  • @ConnieIsMijnNaam
    @ConnieIsMijnNaam Год назад +793

    On “celebrating the day before”: a lot of feasts and traditional holidays used to be celebrated at night. So Christmas eve was the highlight of the Christmas celebration. From that perspective, christmas day feels more like “the day after”. Visiting friends and family and having a good time. But Christmas eve (especially at night!) was the main event.

    • @lithlily5651
      @lithlily5651 Год назад +101

      Totally! Everyone I know (including myself) sees it more like Christmas Eve is the real Christmas and the 25. & 26. are more add-ons and for more family, friends or relaxing.

    • @n3ptuchan848
      @n3ptuchan848 Год назад +64

      i want to add on to that what i learned when i lived in Germany is pretty simple. Historically it is always told Jesus Christ was Born on the 24th not the 25th or 26th, so Christmas eve is the actual celebration of his Birth and receiving the gift of life. So after hearing this as background story to it it makes so much more sense to do all the stuff on "Heilig Abend" (Christmas Eve) then the morning after.

    • @NochEinKamel
      @NochEinKamel Год назад +13

      Factually it's total BS that he was born in the winter though :D

    • @henrikhaas6980
      @henrikhaas6980 Год назад +23

      Celebration the day before is a custom long long before... even not christian, but jewish or much older: Today a full day starts at 00:00 h in the middle of the night and goes until 23:58 h. In ancient times the full day started with the moment the sun had went down and night started and lasted until the next night started. Christianity still performes all feasts in that way: "All hallows eve" (Halloween) is the evenig (starting when night begins) of the feast "all saints day". And christmas eve is Christmas day's beginning at the moment night sets in. Or think of easter: many christians go to a service in the middle of the night of easter-sunday. You can do it, because easterday already begun with the start of the night before

    • @leoniemiller3320
      @leoniemiller3320 Год назад +14

      Well, thats not correct. Its not historically, its religious. Historically christmas was just another created day on the date of the viking julfest to make it easier to convert them to christianity.

  • @markwaypoint
    @markwaypoint Год назад +1377

    On washing machines in the kitchen: Most apartments don‘t have a laundry room because of restricted space. Thus your washing machine goes where the utilities are. Kitchens an bathrooms have water and drainage, so that’s where the appliances go.

    • @Nikita_Akashya
      @Nikita_Akashya Год назад +30

      Yeah, exactly. My dads washer is actually in the basement, because that's where the laundry room is. We did used to have dryer in dads bderoom when I was smaller. Now we hang the clothes to dry them, because dryers are expensive and we don't have the space. The place where I live has th washing machine in the bathroom of my roommates, because that's the only place it would fit in. And we also don't have a dryer. But we do have Wäsche Recks. And he had a weird hangup about Christmas. Like, why is it so important for Americans to open the presents on the first holiday after christmas? Christmas is on Christmas eve. At least that's how it's always been for me and my family and literally everywhere else I've been to. I hope he learns more to not just believe the one place he sees is joe it's everywhere else. I'm still learning that too, but at least I know not every house in the US is exactly the same. At least i hope it's not.

    • @elfriedesommer938
      @elfriedesommer938 Год назад +42

      In normal houses you do have a separate room called Wirtschaftsraum. There you wash and dry your cloth. Only in small Apartments you might see what he descrobes

    • @mkud1984
      @mkud1984 Год назад +25

      my Grandma used to call the room in which she did her laundry "Waschküche"/cleaning kitchen. So I like his comparison of the kitchen as the place where the cleaning is done because I think it describes an older way of how things where done

    • @Al69BfR
      @Al69BfR Год назад +28

      @@mkud1984 In ancient days of the last century my grandma „cooked“ her laundry. So Waschküche seems appropriate. And often there was an oven for heating the water to do the laundry and it was also used to cook your marmalade or heat up the glasses with fruits and sugar to make them durable.

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 Год назад +11

      @@elfriedesommer938 Only in older or larger houses and often in the basement which is not so common anymore. My older house has two parts with the washing machine outlets in the bathrooms and no Wirtschaftsraum. My apartment before had a very small room with outlets which had place for the washing machine but nothing else.

  • @gregclark5084
    @gregclark5084 Год назад +361

    I have been in Germany since 1983 and love the way they celebrate Christmas they open gifts on Christmas eve and then have Christmas day one and Christmas day two so you have more time to celebrate with family and friends .

    • @deinemudda6104
      @deinemudda6104 Год назад +12

      German here: Yeah, some ppl. do that, like visiting in-laws or friends....the vast majority of us? Just stuffing our faces and watching tv.

    • @AlexandraVioletta
      @AlexandraVioletta Год назад +17

      And the kids have more time to play with their new toys... So the adults can talk (and drink a bit). ☝🏻😁

    • @deinemudda6104
      @deinemudda6104 Год назад +3

      @@AlexandraVioletta as well yes....I don´t drink but...yes I guess XD

    • @thrakiamaria
      @thrakiamaria Год назад +2

      In whole Europe we have 2 days not one, this is the European system

    • @iciclevie8213
      @iciclevie8213 Год назад +1

      @@thrakiamaria yes, but not all Europeans open their presents on christmas eve.. for instance in France they also open it on the 25th like in the US or in Albania the main celebrations are also on the 25th (and the UK obviously also do that)...in Middle Europe and Scandinavia people open it on Christmas Eve

  • @alinadornieden8411
    @alinadornieden8411 Год назад +244

    we dont celebrate christmas "the day before". if you ask any german (and tons of other countries) when Christmas is, they say the 24th. and the 25th and 26th is just extra free days to celebrate and visit family and eat even more.

    • @nclsDesign
      @nclsDesign Год назад +4

      Not imo. 25th and 26th are christmas. 24th is just christmas eve (Heiligabend) it's kinda part of christmas but I don't consider it to BE christmas.

    • @pascalkempa8005
      @pascalkempa8005 Год назад +9

      @@nclsDesign But it's Christmas in the sense of "it's Jesus´ birthday". That's also why we celebrate the mass and open the presents on that day. So it's congruent with the whole birthday thing Ryan mentioned. ;)

    • @nclsDesign
      @nclsDesign Год назад

      @@pascalkempa8005 But the birth of Jesus is dated on 25th. ;)

    • @MrLiesegang
      @MrLiesegang Год назад +8

      @@nclsDesignThey didn’t even get the Year right, so I highly doubt, that Jesus was born on the 25.12.

    • @nclsDesign
      @nclsDesign Год назад +2

      @@MrLiesegang I never said he was born there. But it's dated there and that's what we celbrate on christmas.

  • @Attirbful
    @Attirbful Год назад +175

    Ryan, with a little one now, I strongly recommend for you to pick up the tradition of giving Christmas gifts on Christmas Eve, as it ensures that the kids will play with the new toys on the morning of the 25th and leave you parents to sleep in for another hour or two and actually enjoy the quiet holiday…

    • @davdav3945
      @davdav3945 Год назад +21

      I absolutely agree, when our son was small I developed strong feelings against the Easter bunny and Nikolaus, as our son used to wake us up at 5 o‘clock. It changed when he became older knowing that we were Easter bunny and co. So now he knows the office hours of all these don‘t start before 7 🤭

    • @KayDSmith
      @KayDSmith Год назад +21

      Well...i bought my nephew a drum... 😄

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Год назад +11

      @@KayDSmith You monster!
      ;)=

    • @rainghostly
      @rainghostly Год назад +13

      The morning after opening the gifts was amazing. Getting up early, sneaking through the house quietly to get some time alone with toys, cookies and the christmas tree.

    • @Attirbful
      @Attirbful Год назад +7

      @@KayDSmith smart move to give to your nephew, not your son! However, I can see how this is counterproductive…

  • @flauschiger_keks
    @flauschiger_keks Год назад +228

    Some of the traditions before christmas include:
    - 1., 2., 3., 4. Advent (the four Sundays before christmas)
    - Adventskranz (a wreath with four candles and each sunday you light up one more candle until all candles are burning on the fourth sunday)
    - Weihnachtsmarkt (a christmas market you can visit with your friends or family to have a nice time there drinking Glühwein or hot chocolate)
    - Adventskalender (A calendar with 24 pieces of chocolate in it. Every day you get one of those until you reach christmas.)
    - And the time before christmas (the „Weihnachtszeit“) is the cookie season in Germany. Everyone is baking and a lot of sweets are only eaten in that christmas time, like Lebkuchen, Baumkuchen, Spekulatius or Zimtsterne.

    • @vomm
      @vomm Год назад +31

      Another important tradition are Christmas trees and fairy lights that shine in December until January 6 (Epiphany).
      And December 6 is celebrated St. Nicholas, where many put their shoes outside the door and parents put chocolate in at night.

    • @hk-4886
      @hk-4886 Год назад +6

      Only thing to nitpick: it’s Christkindlmarkt not Weihnachtsmarkt 😜

    • @dorisschneider-coutandin9965
      @dorisschneider-coutandin9965 Год назад +31

      @@hk-4886 Depends on where in Germany you live.

    • @scelestion
      @scelestion Год назад +7

      Just an FIY: In English, indicating ordinal numerals with dots isn't a thing. In fact, I don't know of any other language that writes "erster" as "1.", "zweiter" as "2." and so on, than German. English only has "1st", "2nd", an so on, so writing "1., 2., 3., 4. Advent" is very confusing for non-German speakers.

    • @monikaj2889
      @monikaj2889 Год назад +4

      @ Flauschiger_Keks We have/do exactly the same in Czech Republic

  • @ingevonschneider5100
    @ingevonschneider5100 Год назад +367

    In Germany we hardly any more use the phrases "communist" or "socialist" when adressing a living person. We just call them "links" (left) or they vote for "Die Linke" (the leftist party). And it is most of the time not labelled as something negative.

    • @Rick2010100
      @Rick2010100 Год назад

      Die SPD hat aber neuerdings Sozialismus als Staatsziel im Parteiprogram stehen agiert auch so, also sind es Sozialisten, da gibt es nicht blumig zu kaschieren.

    • @Zazu1337
      @Zazu1337 Год назад

      Depends on who you ask ^^ Some call them "Links grün versiffte Zecke" (translation for Ryan: "Left green filthy tick", Explanation of the term: Left obviously for the political left, green because most left leaning people are typically also interested in green policies and vice versa, and some people really like to put everyone they hate in a single category, and filthy tick because they (according to the right wing) are sucking the life blood out of the state, because green and labor policies are typically expensive for the state)

    • @geraldbalzer2429
      @geraldbalzer2429 Год назад

      At least most people in Germany and Europe in general know what communism and socialism really are. When someone calls a mainstream member of the democrat party left, I must lough. Democrats are just a little less right that the members of the GOP. Compared with the European parties, both of them are on the political right side.

    • @THATSmE4EVA2u
      @THATSmE4EVA2u Год назад +32

      Depends on whom you're talking to. 🙈

    • @biggsdarklighter0473
      @biggsdarklighter0473 Год назад +26

      The only negative term for more left-leaning ideology is "links-grün-versifft" and that is most often heard in an ironic context. Often heard together with "Öko-Faschisten".

  • @frisco-2.0
    @frisco-2.0 Год назад +91

    Ryan, the american concept is not the traditional one.
    The original christmas tradition is based on the "Jul Fest", when people celebrate rebirth of light. This on 21st of december (Wintersonnenwende), when the longest night occurs.
    This was a typical germanic tradition.
    In times when political and religious usage changed the catholic church mixed germanic traditions with christian tradition.
    Jesus was born in june but to make the new religion attractive to the people they put the birth of Jesus and the Jul Fest together in winter. So ist ended up that Christmas gets celebrated on 24th of december and we do celebrate Jesus' birth. Gifts are delivered by Jesus child or Christ child in Christmas Eve.
    The modern tradition of Santa Claus is a mixup of St. Nikolaus (celebrated on 6th of december) and Christmas....and got also manifested through Coca-Cola as a advertisement for their brand.
    So Santa Claus is an artificial impersonation of Christmas.

    • @Keksdich
      @Keksdich Год назад +3

      Yes. ExACTly

    • @kretzschi5000
      @kretzschi5000 Год назад +1

      you know christmas is a roman invention if you will. there were a lot of celebrating traditions within the roman empire and they wanted to create something that included all traditions somehow. you know the christmas tree is from the jule fest. the nordic folks would bring in trees in winter cause it reminded them of warmer days. the wreath is a roman symbol. and Santa is a mixture of a lot of figures from different cultures. so there was st nikolaus, julu pukki, the holy three kings, christkindl, father christmas, father frost. and Santa clause or "der Weihnachtsman" is just a mixture of all these figures. yulu pukki had reindeers. st nikolaus had a red robe, father christmas had the costume santa has now but in green and so on. so basicly the romans increased their empire and they wanted ONE celebration and thats how christmas was born and since the christian religion was rising they made it a christian celebration.

  • @jessicajonkman3161
    @jessicajonkman3161 Год назад +109

    About christmas: Christmas eve is called the Holy Evening in Germany, this is the actual day in their view as being the day Christ was born. So on that evening, after church, to celebrate the birth of Christ, Germans open up their presents. Now, this next bit is a bit different in each family, so I can only speak about mine, but: Christmas eve is for your own household, so mom, dad + kids, then first christmas day is with one set of grandparents and the second christmas day is for the other set of grandparents. (We usually swap who goes first every year).
    I hope this is a bit more clarifying for you, if you have any questions, please don't hesitate to ask.

    • @PeterAuto1
      @PeterAuto1 Год назад +10

      I can confirm. We did also celebrate 24 with close family, 25 with one set of grandparents and 26 with the other, but we didn't swap around

    • @vomm
      @vomm Год назад +8

      Yes, that's how it is for most. It's always hard for grandparents when the kids celebrate with their own family on the 24th and the celebration with them is moved to the 25th :D

    • @firefly3196
      @firefly3196 Год назад +5

      Nein, Jesus wurde am 25.12. geboren (Wir nehmen das Datum jetzt einfach mal so hin), Jedoch beginnt nach antiker Vorstellung der neue Tag nachdem die Sonne untergegangen ist. Deshalb gibt es in der Kirche auch eine "Vesper", z.B. Samstag Abends (für den Sonntag) oder die Osternacht (an Karsamstag) für den Ostersonntag.

    • @blitzfuria4623
      @blitzfuria4623 Год назад +1

      In my family my parents and about two to four of my fathers/ family friends and my uncle who are single and would celebrate alone otherwise, celebrate with us on the 24th
      The swaping is also new to me
      For us, it is allways the family of my mother on the 25th and the family of my father on the 26th
      Because my father has so many brothers, it is easier this way because while we are at the home of my mothers parents, my uncles are at the home of their wifes parents
      It was this way since over 25 years while all the kids lived at home

    • @jessicajonkman3161
      @jessicajonkman3161 Год назад +3

      @@blitzfuria4623 for my family we swap, because we don't want one set of grandparents to feel like we prefer the other one 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @Nikuthebigboss
    @Nikuthebigboss Год назад +210

    I'm German, and a child once asked me how Santa was able to bring all the presents in one night and I went into a whole explanation to how that might be possible (Yes, I explained that the sun goes around the earth which makes one night into 24 hours and he has his sleigh so...) and he fully understood and even asked: That's why we open them at Christmas eve, because we get them first? And I just said yes 🤣

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Год назад +13

      So you taught him geocentrism? Shame on you.

    • @Nikuthebigboss
      @Nikuthebigboss Год назад +12

      @@silkwesir1444 Yeah... in my defense: I AM German and only now saw what you meant 💀 But I did, in fact, say the earth goes around the sun 🤣🤣🤣 You're still right tho xD

    • @Sammy_The_Umbreon
      @Sammy_The_Umbreon Год назад +2

      Does Santa bring gifts in germany? I thought it was the Christkind?

    • @Nikuthebigboss
      @Nikuthebigboss Год назад +5

      @@Sammy_The_Umbreon Depends on your religion. Protestants (I think it's called that in English, that what Martin Luther kicked lose) like me, have the Christkind and the Santa. It's more like a little helper like the elves of Santa but much more important. I always imagined it to be Santa's Daughter or smth like that. I guess theres people in Germany who only have the Christkind for that, but in my area it was mixed 😅

    • @nosomusk864
      @nosomusk864 Год назад +2

      Is Santa really a long time thing in Germany. For me it was always for the Americanized family’s that also put up Halloween decoration and the Catholics. Growing up I was told Jesus would come as an angelic toddler or angel woman with golden hair and bring my presents.

  • @hikariyumi9441
    @hikariyumi9441 Год назад +36

    the most shocking thing for me was to realise that adventskalener arent really a thing in many countries? theyre one of my favourite things in december.. and for impatient children its so nice to have a countdown to christmas.
    i was brought up to never wish someone a merry christmas before christmas mass was over, but thats not really widespread anymore i think, since everyone always wishes me merry christmas while im still at mass, haha. oh and some people i know keep holding on to the superstition that youre not supposed to do laundry between christmas and new year cause itll bring death or something? (honestly its a great excuse to chill during the days after christmas), but im not sure where that tradition comes from
    its so interesting to watch this videos and realise that some things you took for granted aren't a thing elsewhere

    • @haberschnack
      @haberschnack Год назад +2

      True! Eventhough I wont go to Mass any more, I still can't and wont wish any one a Merry Christmas before it gets dark or after 7pm. : )
      Never heard about the bad luck one with laundry between the years but every region has their own traditions!

    • @hikariyumi9441
      @hikariyumi9441 Год назад +1

      @@haberschnack i know some people who don't go to mass (im not judging, i only do it for traditionand cause im invovled in the music there) who just.. start christmas eve in the afternoon whcih is so weird to me. its like mass holds the line before gifts for me xDD
      i think the bad luck laundry one could be a northern/eastern thing? the only people i asked who knew or practised that came from there but its not representative im afreaid

    • @thomashintz8609
      @thomashintz8609 Год назад +5

      I think the superstition to not do laundry at that time comes from the fear of the 'Wilde Jagd' which is out hunting during the 'Rauhnächte' and could get entangled in the clothes lines.

    • @hikariyumi9441
      @hikariyumi9441 Год назад

      @@thomashintz8609 oh i never heard of that! will be looking that up, thanks!

    • @sleepynightowl1550
      @sleepynightowl1550 Год назад

      @@thomashintz8609 Yes, that's exactly the reason

  • @dieteroffermann3880
    @dieteroffermann3880 Год назад +241

    Sozialist and Kommunist are not bad words in Germany! It´s only a political direction.

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 Год назад +25

      In Austria the mayor of the second biggest city is communist. There surely are not that much "real" communists there. But the party got votes because in contrast to other parties they engaged for poorer people and had no scandals. But there are discussions about their political standpoints regarding some controversial themes which are more in the dark communist past and would need adaptions today.

    • @julielehner9154
      @julielehner9154 Год назад

      @@reinhard8053 In

    • @locke9425
      @locke9425 Год назад +16

      I'm from Germany and for me they are bad words. These people destroied our country

    • @christophmichel9496
      @christophmichel9496 Год назад +3

      Jo ...right wing is a bad word but it's also just a political direction, in my opinion unjustified.

    • @buurmeisje
      @buurmeisje Год назад +9

      @@locke9425 You have the legal right to hold that wrong opinion.

  • @learun123
    @learun123 Год назад +59

    About that birthday thing (that I hear sooo often about Germany): The reason why we dont congratulate the day before is usually not because of bad luck, but because it just makes no sense to congratulate on something, that hasnt happend yet 😄 You also wouldnt congratulate before a baby ist born, before an exam is passed etc.. You do it, after it happend.
    The reason why you say "Happy Birthday" on the birthday is usually because you like that person and want to let him/her know that you think about him/her on that special day. If a person did it one day or some days before, it would seem like that person would think: If I do it now, its done and than on the day itself I dont have to think about it anymore.
    Like it would be an annoying thing to do.
    If you congratulate after the Birthday, then its usually because you forgot the birthday and want to say you're sorry. Or you're not that close with a person and you know, its ok to do it, when you see the person the next time, e.g. a colleague.
    "Happy Christmas" we usually say only on Christmas (and Christmas Eve, because thats the actual christmas for us, thats just our tradition). "Happy new year" you also say only AFTER the new year has startet. But there is always that debate on how long after January 1 you can say "Happy new year". There is actually no rule for that ;)
    If you want to say something before January 1, you say "Guten Rutsch", which means something Like "Have a nice slide into the new year".
    You can also say "Have a nice Christmas" or "Have a nice birthday" in advance, you can simply not say "Happy" something 😂

    • @LisaZoe86
      @LisaZoe86 Год назад +3

      Yes, absolutely this.

    •  Год назад +2

      Some years I wished a happy new year around easter - depending on when I first meet a person irl that year

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +2

      @ It can be too early to wish a new year, but it can never be too late.

  • @DaxRaider
    @DaxRaider Год назад +67

    its not opening the presents the "day before" on christmas day it would be considered "strange" or "Late" its always opened at christmas eve most often at like 8pm

    • @Grovinchen
      @Grovinchen Год назад +1

      The 24th is not Christmas

    • @Simple_Lina
      @Simple_Lina Год назад

      Tatsächlich ist das auch in Deutschland verbreitet, allerdings bei den evangelischen (da macht es bestimmt auch nicht jeder so). Ich glaube das hat eine religiöse Aufteilung. Es sind ja auch hauptsächlich Protestanten in die USA damals ausgewandert.

    • @Sashimi1408
      @Sashimi1408 Год назад +15

      @@Grovinchen No, it's Christmas Eve like he said. And that's when Germans hand out and open their presents. Always has been like that.

    • @Grovinchen
      @Grovinchen Год назад

      @@Sashimi1408 Christmas Eve is not Christmas. The 25th is the first day of Christmas and therefore Germans open the presents before Christmas.

    • @Surtr174
      @Surtr174 Год назад +16

      @@Grovinchen Its part of Christmas. Christian liturgical day stats at sunset. Which is when Germans start to celebrate it as the Bescherung happens in the evening

  • @DangeHD
    @DangeHD Год назад +36

    Regarding Christmas and the "Adventszeit": The 24th is basically the main Christmas day where you go to church, eat/prepare traditional food and open presents with your close family (Mom, Dad, Siblings). The 25th is called first Christmas day and the 26th the second, on these you go to your other family members like Aunts and Uncles or Grandparents where you get to open the presents they give you/you give them.
    The four Sundays before Christmas are only marginally celebrated, religious people go to church for a kinda special church service and you light one of four candles at home. That´s it. Celebrating isn´t really the right word for it.

    • @xyfg692
      @xyfg692 Год назад +2

      It is with Christmas markets and Adventcalendars

    • @alexandrastock1548
      @alexandrastock1548 Год назад +5

      But some families , especially with smaller children come together on Adventssonntag afternoon, light the candles on the Adventskranz, eat homemade Plätzchen (christmas cookies), sing Christmas songs or read a christmas book for children. So it is a little bit of celebration.

    • @silviaschumacher1853
      @silviaschumacher1853 Год назад

      You are right. Thats the way we celebrate Christmas in Germany.

  • @Englandfan91
    @Englandfan91 Год назад +161

    Rouladen is thin rolled up meat filled with bacon, gherkins and mustard. It comes with gravy. We've got square and rectangle pillows, depending on your preference. I've got both.
    Washing machines in the kitchen or bathroom are common in an apartment. In a house you would have a laundry room on the ground floor or in the basement. In a big apartment block you might have washing and drying facilities in the basement.

    • @BinneReitsma
      @BinneReitsma Год назад +5

      Depends on the area,
      Our 'rollade' is mix fat pork and beef, garlic, union's, but also mustard indeed.

    • @eedoo2
      @eedoo2 Год назад

      Our classic regional recipe for Rouladen is this: ruclips.net/video/8Dw-mfeuTvY/видео.html Unfortunately, there are no English subitles, but you'll get the basic idea.

    • @Englandfan91
      @Englandfan91 Год назад +1

      @Scrap Metal Fryslân true, I forgot the onions.

    • @derpapito1391
      @derpapito1391 Год назад +1

      A gherkin would be a pickle in the US

    • @vsmash2
      @vsmash2 Год назад

      @@BinneReitsma a Rolladen is a window shutter tho. Roulade, independent what in it is always spelled that way.

  • @Llortnerof
    @Llortnerof Год назад +44

    German light switches work pretty much the same, they're just bigger. Makes them easy to hit in the dark or when you're not looking, when you've got your hands full etc..
    If there's a lot of seperate circuits in a room, you may also encounter ones split in the middle that control two circuits. Typically, the main light has a single switch if one is present.
    The size is likely due to the SchuKo plug (the entire plug is inserted, not just the contacts, requiring the socket to be larger and deeper, but also preventing accidental dislodging... and occassionally intentional dislodging). This size allows for both switches and sockets to be fitted into the same frame.

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 Год назад +14

      You can manipulate these switches with nearly everything you are carrying or the elbow, nose or whatever. Must be much easier for disabled or injured persons.

    • @Ph34rNoB33r
      @Ph34rNoB33r Год назад +8

      In old houses, you'd sometimes find those bakelite rotary switches instead, but only in places like attic or basement where nobody thought of renewing the wiring for at least half a century (those probably lack protective earth and might use aluminum instead of copper). They are really hard to operate, about as inconvenient as door knobs that are meant to be turned.

    • @Kristjan0209
      @Kristjan0209 Год назад +2

      Well calling them German light switches can be misleading since according to wikipedia "In Europe, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, and India this type is near-universal, and toggle style switches would be considered old-fashioned"

    • @Searover749
      @Searover749 2 дня назад

      @@Kristjan0209 when USA discover the electric switch that the whole world uses since 20 yrs...🤣😂😂
      They are so backwards at everything. Maybe in 50 years, they'll discover respect, culture, freedom...
      and all the things that humans have known for thousands of years...

  • @AndreaFettweis
    @AndreaFettweis Год назад +153

    Cushions for the bed were 80 x 80 cm in former times, but nowadays, we have all sorts of cushions. There are a lot of rectangular ones, for example, 40 x 80 cm or 60 x80 cm.
    Washing machines are only in the kitchen when the flat is too small to put them elsewhere. Usually, they are in the bathroom or in a separate household room or in the cellar.
    When it comes to Advent, we don't celebrate Christmas, we celebrate the waiting time. Advent comes from the Latin word "advenire" which means "coming". It's supposed to be a special time to calm down and think of the most important things in life, particularly love and care. So you meet your family and/or friends and colleagues for all sorts of little Advent parties. 🤗❤️

    • @dern_ikos
      @dern_ikos Год назад +12

      I love my 80x80 pillow and wouldn't go to anything smaller

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface Год назад +8

      Germans open their Christmas gifts during the night, that means, opening of the gifts does not start before sunset (which is around 4 p.m. in Germany on Christmas Eve). Martin Luther, who introduced the idea of Christmas as a season for making and getting gifts argued that the Birth of Jesus was the greatest gift to humankind, and thus it should be celebrated by small gifts. As the birth happened during the night according to the Bible, the night is also the time for getting the Christmas gifts.

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Год назад +1

      @@SiqueScarface Eh, that's hardly a closely observed rule. Besides, the sun sets somewhen around 4 PM on that day, so it's not like it matters much anyway.

    • @eedoo2
      @eedoo2 Год назад +5

      Well yes, it's supposed to be a special time to calm down, but in reality people are going crazy over buying Christmas presents, and going into any kind of shop (at least in larger cities) is a special version of hell.

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface Год назад +1

      @@Llortnerof It is so closely observed that it was mentioned in the radio News on Christmas Eve. I was driving on Dec 24th, and I had the car radio playing. On each hour, there was a different German tradition mentioned that is happening right now.

  • @dorisschneider-coutandin9965
    @dorisschneider-coutandin9965 Год назад +20

    We have a so called "Bescherung" on Christmas Eve. That basically means gift giving and receiving. But that is after nightfall, not during the day. You light up your Christmas tree, maybe your fireplace, and some more candles in your house, then you might ring a little bell (specifically when there are children in the house) and then they can come, see the tree in all its glory, and have their gifts (which come from the Christkind or the Weihnachtsmann, depending on the region where you live). After that families often sit down for the first Christmas dinner. What is served also depends on region, and/or family traditions. On Christmas Day often families gather (perhaps you get to visit relatives living further away, or get visited by them), some more presents are exchanged and more traditional food like roasted turkey, roasted duck or roasted goose is served. Same goes on on Second Christmas Day (Boxing Day, which happens to be a public holiday still). In the end, you have gained a lot of weight and you might feel a little sick as well. Too much greasy food, too much drink (alcohol).

  • @markwaypoint
    @markwaypoint Год назад +154

    I totally agree on enabling yourself to ask for words and explanations in German is key to learning the language.

    • @vomm
      @vomm Год назад +10

      The real key is to want to learn the language. Then you automatically ask. Many think they want to learn a language but actually they don't.

    • @markwaypoint
      @markwaypoint Год назад +6

      Immersion helps. I haven’t had a choice while spending 10 month in the US.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

      @@markwaypoint Absolutely. Speaking and using the language is what gives proficiency. I learned more about speaking english since I left school than I did in school.

  • @kuldan5853
    @kuldan5853 Год назад +8

    Others have said it as well how we do it with presents on the 24th, but "Christmas" really is a three day event - it's Christmas Eve ("Heiliger Abend" / Holy Evening) (24th), which is considered a half working day and everything usually closes at the latest at 2pm, and then there's the 1st and 2nd "day of christmas" (1. und 2. Weihnachtstag) on the 25th and 26th, both are public holidays.

  • @schiggi1988
    @schiggi1988 Год назад +39

    The advent time ist the time leading to the "arrival of the lord" or adventus Domini. Every advent sunday Germans light a candle on their "Adventskranz". When the fourth candle is lit you know Christmas only one week away :) We have whole songs about that tradition and also special advent songs like "Maria durch den Dornwald ging".
    The tradition to get your presents on Christmas eve is called "Bescherung". Back in the days that happend only for children and at midnight from 24th to 25th after church. Later it became common to give adults presents too and because children shouldn't be awake that long, the tradition evolved into having the "Bescherung" late in the afternoon or in the early evening hours.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

      Ahm the classic rhyme "Advent, Advent, ein Lichtlein brennt. Erst eins, dann zwei, dann drei, dann vier, dann steht das Christkind vor der Tür"

  • @esthermuller9226
    @esthermuller9226 Год назад +7

    As a German I can say that the 24th of December is Christmas to me (and as far as I know to every other German too). Like if you would ask me “What are your plans for Christmas“ I would just tell you what I‘m doing on the 24th. This is the main day we celebrate here and to hear that Christmas should be on the 25th just sounds weird.😂

  • @hannessteffenhagen61
    @hannessteffenhagen61 Год назад +74

    Note on wide roads: interestingly enough, especially for highways having a large number of parallel lanes doesn't increase throughput as much as you'd think - in fact, frequent lane switching can cause other cars to slow down or even cause accidents, leading to more congestion than you'd have on a smaller road.
    Although he might have been talking about within cities, most cities that weren't razed in ww2 still have medieval city cores whose roads are barely wide enough for one way traffick, since they were originally built for foot traffick mostly (and with any luck we'll eventually be able to ban cars from city centers, but this is a car lover nation so that may take a while).
    Fwiw: actual communists are rare in Germany, including former East Germany. He's probably not actually talking about "real" communists. Maybe people who are somewhat nostalgic for _aspects_ of the old communist rule, maybe modern socialists... I mean of course full on communists do still exist, but I just don't think it's likely that's actually what he meant.

    • @bastik.3011
      @bastik.3011 Год назад +6

      Munic is a example for a city with a good road network, you have one Central Ring Street kind of like an Highway tho it's majority 2lanes each direction. This keeps cars from the smaller streets in the city center as you can just drive around it which is usually faster. Munic also has the most Traffic heavy bridge in Europe and the bridge is struggling under the load as it was not build for it

    • @salac1337
      @salac1337 Год назад +3

      you would be surprised how many communists anarchist and socialists there are in germany. a lot of them just dont talk about it because of social stigma

    • @Eddneton94
      @Eddneton94 Год назад +2

      any 4 lane autobahn that permits truckers to overtake, sooner or later clogs up thanks too truckers driving parrallel for about 1-10 km

    • @bastik.3011
      @bastik.3011 Год назад +4

      @@Eddneton94 Truckers will be Truckers they do this here on Germany to despite the standard Autobahn having 3lanes and it being illegal of it takes longer then a certain amount of time

    • @trauma._
      @trauma._ Год назад +6

      @@salac1337 you have to add tho that there was never any real communist state and they were a rather socialist with dictators which just happened to treat every subject under them equally shitty... true communism is like a utopia so I don't get why americans look down on it so much, they should just change it to hating Soviets, not their political system (they're treating it like a religion)
      there are so many good points to communism and communism can just be a part of a democracy, most just don't have any idea what they're talking about

  • @RakkiOfficial
    @RakkiOfficial Год назад +18

    the big difference is: we don't let a man break into our house, we allow him in after he rang the doorbell and the children actually talk with him as well (usually played by a parent or more likely grandparent, up until the children are old enough to know there is no santa)
    and this has nothing to do with bad luck/ wanting to be earlier, we don't consider the 25th morning as the main christmas tradition time at all, thats just the time you visit your family, but christmas eve, they come to you, you eat together and then the children/all can unpack their presents.
    I guess it's rooted in the fact that jesus was born according to the nativity story at night and not in the morning, so when he gets his presents in the evening/night, why should children get pushed back a day for no reason?

    • @logolol7223
      @logolol7223 Год назад +2

      But that is St.Nikolaus and not christmas.
      Christmas it is the little Jesus that brings the presents an when he finishes he rings a bell.

  • @m.h.6470
    @m.h.6470 Год назад +45

    In a lot of older apartments, there is only 1 water pipe access - usually in the kitchen, so the washer has to be in the kitchen as well. In most modern apartments, you have them in the bathroom or in the cellar/basement in a shared room (because of the noise and moisture).

    • @vomm
      @vomm Год назад

      Sometimes they are on the balcony, often the case in 70s high rise buildings.

    • @dorissachmann6027
      @dorissachmann6027 Год назад

      And what helps against moisture? Lüften! 😁😁😁

  • @X33dbv
    @X33dbv Год назад +32

    Fun thing: We have the term “Waschküche” which means “cleaning kitchen” or more accurate “washing kitchen”.
    It’s the room in old houses where the laundry stuff was. The reason is, that you had to boil water in big vessels to do the laundry in old days. It’s like cooking. This explains the term “Kochwäsche” (it means something like “cooked laundry”) for laundry which should be washed at high temperature.

    •  Год назад +2

      My grandma actually did cook laundry on her stove (she also had an old wood/coal stove in her kitchen… in addition to a modern electric one). In a pot that was used *exclusively* for that purpose. :D She didn't have a washing machine. And she had an outhouse toilet for ages…

  • @DaxRaider
    @DaxRaider Год назад +14

    i dont think the guy in the video really understand whats a communist xD basicly no german even at that time was communist, we are a socialist democracy, but i feel americans doesnt understand the difference of communism and socialism xD
    honestly hand on hart in 36 years i never met a communist in germany xD thats not a thing. and i am far left socialist xD

    • @eugenvonderkipe6031
      @eugenvonderkipe6031 Год назад

      I live in the east german city of Dresden and I only know exactly one communist. he's an old man thats always in the citycenter and that tries to lecture people about it, whilest swinging a gient communist flag.

    • @atstrollz6875
      @atstrollz6875 Год назад

      You've never seen election posters of the DKP? Or flags of the DKP at left demonstrations?

    • @mucxlx
      @mucxlx Год назад

      Isnt communism and socialism the same thing?

    • @AysKuz
      @AysKuz Год назад

      @@mucxlx Not really but similar. Both ideologies arose as anti capitalist protest.
      Under communism, the people are compensated or provided for based on their needs. In a pure communist society, the government provides most or all food, clothing, housing and other necessities based on what it considers to be the needs of the people.
      Socialism is based on the premise the people will be compensated based on their level of individual contribution to the economy. Effort and innovation are thus rewarded under socialism.

    • @mucxlx
      @mucxlx Год назад +1

      @@AysKuz So socialism is communism with a social credit system like in china? Doesnt each person know what he needs himself? Why violently force something on them someone else thinks he needs? Anyway both things failed everytime they tried it with millions of dead people in the end.

  • @Ray_Vun
    @Ray_Vun Год назад +11

    it's pretty common all over europe to open the presents on the 24th. we have christmas dinner on the 24th, then open the presents. some people wait until midnight to open the presents, thus technically making it the 25th. and then on the 25th we have christmas lunch, sometimes it's at a different relative's house, and we also visit other relatives that we didn't spend christmas with, and sometimes someone that might be a really close family friend

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

      A somewhat traditional dinner on the 24th is bockwurst and potato salad. Not everywhere and not in every family, but it's not uncommon to do the 24th smaller.
      We for example always met with everyone at grandma's on the 25th.

  • @dieludolfverschwoerung
    @dieludolfverschwoerung Год назад +6

    The Pillows really are squares, the washing machines are mostly in the bathroom, but it's quite common in small apartments that they are in the kitchen. "Rinderrouladen" are like really flat beef rolled up and in the middle are little pickles, bacon and mustard, really tasty!

  • @annkathrinhanamond2982
    @annkathrinhanamond2982 Год назад +4

    For Germans, december 24th is NOT "the day before Christmas", december 24th IS Christmas. Christmas Eve (Heiligabend) is the most important Christmas day for many families, with church visits, everyone dressed up etc., the two Christmas days after (1. + 2. Weihnachtstag) are mostly just visiting extended family. When I ask someone "What do you planning for christmas?" almost everyone (at least in my region) will tell me their plans for the 24th.
    I think the 24th is the "christmas presents day" in many European countries - in some I think it is the 25th like in the US, and in some it is the january 6th (like it is in Russia).
    I was a little bit shocked you have never been on a train - I guess I never met an adult person who hasn't. I think in Germany trains are much more common than subways, as subways only exist in a few of the biggest cities and trains also connect the smaller cities and more rural regions.

  • @AoCMogwai04
    @AoCMogwai04 Год назад +5

    As a german I genuinely enjoy your videos about Germany and the people there

  • @elcazzzador
    @elcazzzador Год назад +7

    I imagine it would be a lot of fun talking through in person all these things you discover in the videos you watch 😁 I'm also very interested in the differences between Germany and the US and watch a lot of your videos to learn about them. Grettings from Aachen, Germany

  • @joelfrom08
    @joelfrom08 Год назад +9

    "I didn't know it gets hot in Germany"
    If you want to experience 100F and 0F just stay in Germany for a year, don't even have to move around!

    • @tobyk.4911
      @tobyk.4911 Год назад

      0F ... rather rarely in many places... In the last few winters, 0 Celsius was reached, at least for a few days, probably almost everywhere in Germany... but 0 Fahrenheit? Maybe high up on the mountains in the south... but probably not in most of Germany

    • @joelfrom08
      @joelfrom08 Год назад

      @@tobyk.4911 in northern Germany we did go to 0F and below. I admit that is rare in many places in Germany, though much of Germany does only slightly hover above 10-20F in winter.

  • @udornyc
    @udornyc Год назад +7

    Besides fashion, I am also a real estate photographer in NYC, having shot thousands of apartments, I can say that even in this city, washer/dryer combinations in the kitchen area are not unusual. Matter of fact, just shot this in a high end building on the Upper East Side near Central Park.
    Might be not as common in other parts of the US.

  • @TheNeroplayer
    @TheNeroplayer Год назад +3

    Yea in summer it gets pretty hot here in Germany, especially where I live. Normally there is like 30 to 35°C in summer (86 to 95°F) but for days, maybe a week long the temperatures sometimes spike up to 42°C (108°F). In the past years it happens more often that the temperatures spike above 40°C (104°F). The coldest winter I ever witnessed here where I live in Germany was like -25°C (-13°F)

  • @twinmama42
    @twinmama42 Год назад +2

    The society and economy of Germany is called "Soziale Marktwirtschaft" (social capitalism or Rhine economy). It combines capitalism with government intervention (when needed). When markets are unbalanced the state (Federal Republic) intervenes on behalf of the less powerful side. The doctrine is "As much intervention as needed and as less intervention as possible".
    E.g. as employers have more market powers than employees German law provides employees (and trade unions) with certain protective rights to balance the labor market - protection against being fired at will, protection of pregnant women against being fired, and against working conditions that could be detrimental for the unborn child, maternity leave, minimum wage, minimum days of vacation, "unlimited" sick leave (not counting against your vacation days).
    Other areas of government intervention are the housing (rental) market with laws protecting tenants, anti-trust laws, or the medical market protecting patients from high costs by big pharma.
    Our society is "social" not socialist.

  • @SatyreIkon
    @SatyreIkon Год назад +3

    Rouladen refers to rolled-up and stuffed pieces of meat or fish of any kind, but the most well-known ones are beef (Rinderrouladen), filled with mustard, onion, thinly-sliced pickles and bacon, and then cooked in gravy. My mom got a recipe that's absolutely delicious and mostly prepares them for the whole family for new year's or does a large batch that's then frozen in ones and twos with some gravy and stored for later.

  • @geist41334
    @geist41334 Год назад +1

    My grandpa, who was very religious, allways got realy grumpy when we wished him "Fröhliche Weihnachten" ("Merry christmas") on christmas eve.
    Schnitzel with Rotkohl and Kloesse is a weird combination. Rotkohl and Kloesse fit best with braised roasts, turkey, goose or Sauerbraten for example. We most commonly eat Schnitzel either with fries, potatoe salad or fried potatoes.
    The "rolled up meat" he talked about were "Rouladen", which traditionally is thinly sliced beef, filled with bacon, mustard, onion slices and pickles, rolled up and braised in red wine sauce.

  • @hermanubis7046
    @hermanubis7046 Год назад +4

    Happy New Year´! "Rouladen" are basically steaks that are rolled around smoked bacon, oignons, mustard... They're tied before cooking to stay in shape (they would unroll otherwise but once they're cooked they stay rolled and you can remove the yarn).

  • @angengeng
    @angengeng Год назад +1

    My dad told me that when he was young, he celebrated Christmas on Dezember 25. The normal family had to work on Christmas eve. So my grandma was a hairdresser and she went into the rich householdes to make their hair for Christmas. Whe she finishes their hair they started celebrating Christmas while my grandma had to go to the next rich family. Rich people started celebrating Christmas on Christmas eve because they had enough money so they could afford not to work on Christmas eve. It was like a Status Symbol. Rich people celebrated on Christmas eve while the workers had to work and weren't able to celebrate.

  • @endersoul72
    @endersoul72 Год назад +10

    Hey Ryan, I watched this video from "RobWords" "How anyone (including you) can read german". I found it really interessting, he basically gives rules for Letterswapping to get german texts more to their english equivalent. Even as a person, who speaks both languages, most of his rules were unknown by me too.

    • @MrSeedi76
      @MrSeedi76 Год назад +3

      Oh, yes, I saw that video. Highly recommended!

    • @Anika6.91
      @Anika6.91 Год назад +3

      I think he already has reacted to that

    • @endersoul72
      @endersoul72 Год назад

      @@Anika6.91 RobWords Video is only uploaded 1 month ago, so i searched Ryans reaction and didn't found it. If he has no second channel it seems like he hasn't seen it yet

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Год назад

      He already reacted to that, only a few days after it came out.

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Год назад +1

      @@endersoul72 Ryan has several other channels, but this is the only one about Germany (as far as I know). Other channels are about other countries.

  • @MugiwaraRuffy
    @MugiwaraRuffy Год назад +5

    The thing about dishwashers and/or washing machines is that you need an actual water outlet for those. In German apartments those are usually found in the kitchen (at least one) OR in a bathroom. In big, mutli tenant apartment blocks, washing machine outlets can also be in the basement. Same for single-family houses.

    • @reinhard8053
      @reinhard8053 Год назад +1

      It's not only the water outlet but you need something for the waste water. That is more difficult in some places. My last apartment needed a pump in the basement to get the wastewater back on a level for the main sewage.

  • @uvatter
    @uvatter Год назад +5

    About presents 1 day before Christmas:
    Well, that is Christmas Eve, and to my understanding, also Americans agree that this is the actual day of Jesus birth (ok, I know the real, real birthday probably was in September) while Christmas is the festival commemorating his birth - following this birth.
    Kinda makes sense to receive presents on the actual birthday, not one day later😊
    Long story:
    originally, German Christmas tradition look at bit different and had no “Weihnachtsmann” (Santa Claus), but a Christmas child…. But I’ll start at the beginning…
    So, first, long before Christmas,
    on 6th of December to be precise, the “Nicolaus” comes to town, and brings smaller presents to children (eg sweets and a small toy). This happens on the 6th because this is the catholic name day of the Saint Nicolas. There are clear similarities to Santa Claus, but also some difference. E.g. while both wear red with white cloths, the Nikolaus wears a Bishop’s Robe (as Saint Nicolas actually was a Bishop), while Santa Claus wears a coat and trousers.
    Then, on the Christmas Eve (24th), the Christkind (essentially Baby Jesus with wings) arrives and brings the big presents. He is very shy, so everybody must leave the room, only grandma stays, as she knew him for a long time. So the Christkind quickly places the presents under the tree, and leaves ringing its bell, so the kids know they can enter now. The window ist still open (the Christkind had to enter and leave somehow, after all), so it’s somewhat chilly now. But all presents have arrived, and the party can start (and the disappointment about having missed the Christkind yet again fades quickly)
    So yeah, I think it makes a lot of sense to receive your presents on the day Jesus was born, esp if the baby itself brings the presents.
    A day later? From a man who wears a Coca Cola truck drivers outfit? (This is true, look it up). Now, that is somewhat weird 😂

  • @gwendolynsnyder463
    @gwendolynsnyder463 Год назад +1

    I live in Germany, and luckily, our bathroom is big enough to fit the washing machine in it. And it's practical to have the washing machine in the bathroom. You get undressed, and throw the dirty clothes into the laundry basket before showering. Then when the laundry basket is full, you don't have to carry the dirty laundry anywhere, you just yeet it into the washing machine when it's full.

  • @vanlour_
    @vanlour_ Год назад +3

    Greetings from Germany! At first, we do not only celebrate the Christmas eve, we also celebrate the 1. and 2. Christmas Day. Mostly we do the close family eve at the 24. and the children can open the presents under the Christmas tree and on the other 2 days mostly we enjoy the time with the whole family so like visiting the mother in law or the grandparents.
    To your question ; Where is the toilette - - Wo ist die Toilette\ Wo ist das WC
    And the the food he called dumplings, these are Klöße, a mixture of potatoes smashed and mixed with starch to a jam, after that forming a little bit smaller than tennis ball size and simmer it for an short time.
    Have a nice day ^^

    • @nicevinci_dear
      @nicevinci_dear Год назад

      We in Bavaria say Knödl and they are often as big as tennis balls😉

  • @Itsjustme-Justme
    @Itsjustme-Justme Год назад +1

    Me googling American light switch: WHAT??? We had that design too. In the ancient past. My grandparents had a few of them left, that were not exchanged for newer types yet. The house is from the 17th century, but I guess the switches were more like from the 1950s 😂
    You can search YT for Rinderrouladen. There are a few nice videos about making them. There are variations regarding what is rolled up inside, but the basic recipe is always the same.
    Our family Christmas tradition when I was a child was, my parents prepared the tree on the evening of 23th, when me and my sister were sleeping. On 24th, the living room with the tree and gifts inside was locked. We were eating in the kitchen. After evening dinner on 24th, we were sent to our bedrooms for a short time and when my mom ringed our Christmas bell (a small pottery bell) we went to the living room. There we saw the tree for the first time (decoration was a bit different every year), got our gifts, unpacked them and spent the evening with our parents. On 25th and 26th, we visited grandparents and uncles and aunts.

  • @extazy9944
    @extazy9944 Год назад +4

    we dont celebrate christmas one day too early, to us 24th is just christmas

  • @nskadi244
    @nskadi244 Год назад +1

    I n my first apartment, the washing machine and dryer were in the bathroom. We had a shared laundry room, but the public washing machine was really disgusting. In the other apartments, the connection for the washing machine was in the kitchen and there was no other possibility in the house. In my husband's first apartment there was no possibility to connect a washing machine, he has to go to the laundry center some streets further.

  • @iwilltubeyouall
    @iwilltubeyouall Год назад +3

    "What does xyz mean" is a sentence that I learn more or less first in almost all languages because it helps so much to keep a conversation going in a foreign language without the need to change for let's say English.

  • @vorlock7149
    @vorlock7149 Год назад +1

    Christmas day for me (a german) is the 24th of december. The 25th and 26th are just extendes Christmas days to visit the rest of your family.

  • @volkerp.2262
    @volkerp.2262 Год назад +4

    For the der/die/das question
    The German language uses 3 different definite articles instead of the one article in English. The nouns are assigned to one gender. The best example of this is:
    Der Mann / the man
    Die Frau / the woman
    Das Kind / the child
    The child isn't gender specific so you use the "das" as article.
    The difficulty in the german language is to know what noun use which article. And if you have the plural form of a noun.
    For example:
    Der Baum / the tree - use the male article
    Die Bäume / the trees - use the female article for the plural form.
    That is only a small portion but I hope that make it a bit more clearer.

  • @Eisenhammer78
    @Eisenhammer78 Год назад +1

    As a german, Christmas is on dec 24. The 25 and 26 are public Holidays (24 is not), but the Christmas Eve on 24 is Christmas for me and I guess for all germans.

  • @hannessteffenhagen61
    @hannessteffenhagen61 Год назад +5

    The washing machine goes where you have access to water. In many older houses that's just the kitchen.

    • @tobyk.4911
      @tobyk.4911 Год назад

      ... and the bathroom (should also have access to water)

    • @Sashimi1408
      @Sashimi1408 Год назад +1

      What about the bathroom? That's more common than the kitchen. In fact, I don't know any German household where the washing machine is in the kitchen.

    • @hannessteffenhagen61
      @hannessteffenhagen61 Год назад

      @@Sashimi1408 I said "older" houses. I maybe should have specified I mean actually old ones. Old houses didn't always _have_ bathrooms, it's pretty recent (on a historical scale) that these are ubiquituous, whereas houses pretty much always had kitchens (or at least kitchen areas if not a dedicated room). It used to be pretty common that if you had indoor bathing at all, it'd basically just be in a large bowl you filled with hot water or just wiping yourself down with wet towels. Similarly, indoor toilets are also pretty new, latrines/outhouses (private/public depending on exact time period, location and such) were more common in the past.
      Now of course even old houses nowadays _almost_ always have bathrooms retrofitted (because otherwise you can't legally rent out these places as living spaces), but again we're talking about a relatively modern development, these weren't all that common historically.
      (Note that this is describing the situation in germany, and only relatively "recent" history, and further mostly pertaining to "common" people; Various bathing and shitting solutions have existed, fallen out of favour and been rediscovered throughout the world and throughout history)
      (Keep in mind that even in places where the general mechanics of toilets/flushing were understood, there wasn't necessarily always a convenient location to flush _to_; Sewage systems have been built for milllennia but require a lot of initial investment and upkeep, wherever population wasn't so dense to absolutely necessitate it simpler solutions were usually sought; Even as of the 19th and 20th century in a lot of big cities it was still common that the "sewage system" was based on gathering excrements in tanks, to be regularly exchanged or pumped out and dumped outside the city with wagons and later cars).

    • @Sashimi1408
      @Sashimi1408 Год назад

      @@hannessteffenhagen61 Well, that's WAY before my time. In my family home there's been a bathroom with running water since the 1950s and the house was built pre-WW1. Anything dating back to the 19th century is certainly not what's been talked about in this video, the guy is very likely talking about flats for rent.

  • @Connor_Conntroller
    @Connor_Conntroller Год назад +1

    The Point is that in Germany christmas is the 24th, Christmas Eve, or „Heiligabend“ in German. Christmas Morning or the 25th is the first Christmas holiday, and the 26th the second Christmas holiday

  • @scelestion
    @scelestion Год назад +3

    It's so funny to me that you couldn't believe we Germans have square pillows. I hated rectangular pillows when I was in places that had them, and I love my square pillow. You usually fold them in the middle, so actually you sleep on a rectangular, but having it folded is just nice. I like putting one of my hands in the fold, for example.

    • @rainghostly
      @rainghostly Год назад +1

      I fold and turn mine (square) a lot, but not neatly. I more or less scrunch it up into the perfect messy shape to be comfortable 😊

    • @scelestion
      @scelestion Год назад +1

      @@rainghostly Haha, yeah, that is also common. :) It's great to have options.

  • @aragornkonigvongondor2917
    @aragornkonigvongondor2917 Год назад +1

    I am a german and i live in munich. In german City there is a ÖPNV (Subway, Bus, Tram, S-Bahn)

  • @ShoreVietam
    @ShoreVietam Год назад +5

    My grandparents had a so called "washin kitchen" in their farm house, right next to the living room, which contained the actual (cooking) kitchen. The washing kitchen contained cloth washing and dish washing machines, had a tiled floor with a drain etc.

    • @vHindenburg
      @vHindenburg Год назад +1

      There is also the reason that the only place to get hot water used to be the kitchen.

    • @swanpride
      @swanpride Год назад +2

      We have one in the cellar of the house we life in, which was built in the 1950s. It is a pretty common feature in my area, along with the so called "Kartoffelkeller" and/or "Kohlenkeller".

  • @videomailYT
    @videomailYT Год назад +1

    Sometimes some bathrooms are really compact and it is nearly cramped with the things that're inside...like bath tub, toilet sink and there's no room for an washing machine or an dryer... 🤷
    And in Germany we also had an other type of switches, but they're still pretty old and rare to find nowadays...just search for "Drehschalter Bakelit"

  • @klauss.4638
    @klauss.4638 Год назад +8

    If you are interested in german christmas traditions look into this video from the channel "My Merry Messy Life" "7 deutsche Traditionen, die wir zu unserem Weihnachten hinzugefügt haben 🇩🇪 Adventszeit". There are some traditions broken down e.g. Adventszeit

  • @berndhoffmann7703
    @berndhoffmann7703 Год назад +1

    2:44 nope, it is quite unusual, but in my last apartment the bath was so small, I did not want to fit the washing machine in there, neither did I want it to place it in the communal area, therefore I have placed it in the kitchen, behind a cover door.

  • @sessyfan791
    @sessyfan791 Год назад +4

    I have to say the weather is pretty different in Germany per region, even if we're actually a small country. In the middle and south it can get pretty hot in summer.
    I live in northern Germany. We had pretty hot summers the last years too, but mostly not for long and the heat feels a little bit different cuz it's often pretty windy here.
    I'm living in the north of northern Germany :D We're right between the North and Baltic sea. That's why it rains a lot here and like I said before we have to deal with a lot wind, storms etc.
    Never get over it that I once lived close to Berlin and I heard how people saying: "Damn it's pretty windy today!" And I thought: "Huh? That's normal day weather :D"
    We're saying here: "Es ist erst windig, wenn die Schafe keine Locken mehr haben" = ( It's only windy when the sheep have no more curls) :D

  • @vgrundt
    @vgrundt Год назад +1

    @Ryan Wass about "opening presents at christmas eve" at evening (7pm-8pm) someone of the family dress up as Santa for the little children and hand out the presents.

    • @vgrundt
      @vgrundt Год назад +1

      Sorry about my bad english, I'm german, maybe someone can clarefy what I'm saying.

  • @Cepterman
    @Cepterman Год назад +4

    Happy new year Ryan!

  • @alternativetierheilpraxisc7936
    @alternativetierheilpraxisc7936 Год назад +1

    On the topic of Christmas Eve, in Bavaria you don’t have Santa or the Weihnachtsmann as we call him bringing the presents. We got the Christkind coming around for that. 😅

  • @Takimon
    @Takimon Год назад +5

    Rouladen are not just rolled up meat, it's also filled with stuff. Depends on your grandma's secret recipe, its filled with cheese, pickles, pepperbells, bacon, and so on.
    Its marinated in whatever you like, our family recipe uses mustard-honey-marinade.

  • @TheMissileHappy
    @TheMissileHappy Год назад +1

    I have never ever seen a washing machine in the kitchen in Germany. All the houses and apartments I have been to had them in the bathroom or a utility room.

  • @smoker-san3634
    @smoker-san3634 Год назад +5

    Hey Ryan,
    I´m from Germany and I have noticed that you are very interested in Germany and would therefore like to make you the suggestion to take a look at Volker Pispers. You can learn much about Germany politics and also about America (USA)
    There are some videos of him with English subtitles. Take a look and if you like it make a video of it ;)

    • @salty4463
      @salty4463 Год назад

      Never trust a German with the coat of arms as their profile pic. Volker Pispers seems to be distancing himself from all kinds of extremists, yet the far right party AfD and conspiracy theorist have quoted him for their agenda. However, patriotism is not as broadly accepted here as in the US and national symbols are hardly ever used by people with moderate political standpoints. Therefore, if you stumble across someone who does that, take their advice with a grain of salt.

  • @Senceless87
    @Senceless87 Год назад

    Hi, I'm from Tyrol (Austria) and when I was younger my aunt had not only the washing machine in the kitchen but also the shower in there and the toilet was outside of her flat.

  • @Apfeljunge666
    @Apfeljunge666 Год назад +3

    Christmas eve is kinda more important in Germany than Christmas day itself.

  • @corinnaschmidt9735
    @corinnaschmidt9735 Год назад +1

    No, he's not lying: we Germans usually have square pillows measuring 80 x 80 cm (31.5 x 31.5 inches). Why? As a German, I don't really understand it either. I've had a rectangular one for years. Much more practical. Roulades are usually made from beef (but there are also turkey or pork roulades), filled with bacon and onions. Usually there is also a gherkin in it. Classic German dish, usually with red cabbage and potatoes or dumplings. What's funny is that he feels the streets are empty because everyone would use public transport. At least here in the big cities (Berlin, Munich, Nuremberg etc.) the streets are still full. You Americans have always learned that Communism is the big bad. Socialism is the somewhat weakened form. Karl Marx (a German philosopher) "thought up" communism along with Friedrich Engels (also a German). He wanted a world where everyone is equal. No privileges, no rich/poor. This philosophy was conceived at a time when, due to the industrial revolution in Europe, thousands of people were desperately poor, even though they had to work hard as children. This was also the time when these poor people emigrated to America in their thousands, full of hope. Unfortunately, the governments that championed communism or socialism took this philosophy to the point of absurdity, so that it could really be called "evil". However, the basic idea that all people are equal, that there must be a right to learning and decent living conditions, is still a reality in many countries today. This is reflected, for example, in free schools, health insurance, pensions, consumer protection, legally regulated working conditions (protection against dismissal, working time regulations, vacation rights, etc.) and also unemployment benefits or social assistance. Anyone who finds this "evil" can actually only be an egomaniac. Unable to live in society. Because a society can only function if I also think of others.

  • @Jigsaw407
    @Jigsaw407 Год назад +3

    I'm German and I've never seen a washing machine or a dryer in the kitchen anywhere. If the washing machine (dryers are rare over here) was in the apartment it usually was in the bathroom or a separate storage room.

    • @scelestion
      @scelestion Год назад +1

      Could be a regional thing, then. Up in the north, it's very normal to have the washing machine in the kitchen. I have both it and my dryer in the kitchen.

    • @trauma._
      @trauma._ Год назад

      I've never seen it before because my family lives in a house so it's in the basement. Now that I am in a city to study it's in the kitchen under the counter for space reasons and cause there is the only watee supply for it

  • @georgiosntanis4353
    @georgiosntanis4353 Год назад

    Dude you're actually on the german RUclips Trends lmao! this video is #19 in the top 50 congrats!!

  • @Nero-dz5gr
    @Nero-dz5gr Год назад +3

    My mother was from East Germany 1964 and even was in the FDJ (Freie Deutsche Jugend) in her youth.
    For me who was born in 1998 in what was West germany it really is strange to see her way of thinking that has been tought to her in her childhood.
    She is VERY work-focused and an ABSOLUTE MACHINE when it comes to work. She doesnt like to call in sick because back in the DDR doctors can actually reject/deny "Sicknotes", which nowadays isnt a thing anymore to my knowledge. Back in the DDR EVERYTHING revolved around work basically.
    She still has a bit of older ways of thinking which she took over: She doesnt trust foreigners for example.
    In her school they had like pictures of Lenin on the wall etc. and she was tought that the russians were "our friends" since they freed germany in WWII and so on. She was pretty confused when the whole thing started in february let me tell you xD.

  • @midgard0
    @midgard0 Год назад +2

    "the kitchen in america is where the food is prepared". that means it´s where you open the convenient food
    and put it into the microwave. that´s pretty hard work so you better go out for dinner at mac or wendy´s or jack in the box.

  • @Praecantetia
    @Praecantetia Год назад +3

    One thing I have to say being German and having learned English being immersed in a language and essentially getting yourself spammed with translation cards is the way to go. The moment you know you're really breaking through is when you dream or start to think in the foreign language.

  • @fuzzyfrogs7362
    @fuzzyfrogs7362 Год назад +1

    As a german person, it’s amazing to see wth americans are confused about in germany, also not all people have the washing machines in kitchen (us and all our friends for example)

    • @fuzzyfrogs7362
      @fuzzyfrogs7362 Год назад

      Maybe that’s the side where ddr wasn’t . Also there’s still a big difference between east and west germany, even though we’re one country

  • @Thueringen1986
    @Thueringen1986 Год назад +1

    If you are in the public in Germany never asked for a bathroom 😅. Please ask for a toilet (WC). You have a bathroom at home, this incl. toilet, sink and bathtub or shower.

  • @ItsMaxxx
    @ItsMaxxx Год назад +1

    4:00 "I didnt know it got, like, particularly hot in germany[...]"
    well this summer there were major rivers that simply dried up in certain areas which was more severe than ever before, kind of like those 100°F heatwaves you had in america

  • @bookllama8158
    @bookllama8158 Год назад +1

    I would say it’s more common to have the washing machine in the bathroom or the basement in Germany. In the UK however, washing machines are usually in the kitchen.

    • @SELBLINK_in_your_area
      @SELBLINK_in_your_area Год назад

      My washing-machine is in the living- and bedroom. (because there is no space for it in the kitchen and I live in 3rd floor, so basement would be very unpractical) It is connected to the water tubes of the kitchen, so I shouldn't use washing-machine and dish-cleaner at the same time.

  • @TheNightstalker80
    @TheNightstalker80 Год назад

    Little fun fact about laundry in the kitchen, back in the days in germany and austria there was a dedicated room for washing cloths, basically what you call a laundry room. Well this room was called "Waschküche" which translates to "washing kitchen". It has nothing to do with the regular kitchen but it's funny how, somtimes, washing machines are still used in a kitchen ;-)

  • @liquidminds
    @liquidminds Год назад +1

    That washing-machine/dryer things comes from the fact that most cities and towns in Europe are much older than washing machines.
    To run a washing machine you need water and electricity. With bathrooms being traditionally small the only other place in a home where you have water and electricity at the same time is the kitchen.
    People with large bathrooms often have them in there while people who build new houses often have extra rooms for that, like the US would.
    But some people just know them as a part of their kitchen from when they were young, so they don't even think about where to put them.

  • @franky9974
    @franky9974 Год назад

    Ein frohes neues Jahr und einen guten Rutsch, like we say here in germany. Enjoy all of your great Videos. Thx.🍾🍀🥳❤️

  • @blenderpanzi
    @blenderpanzi Год назад +1

    These light switches are really easy to switch. Like if you carry something you can easily switch it with your elbow. Guess its also good for weak people with hurting fingers and such. Proper door handles are good for the same reason.

  • @adventure-phil8339
    @adventure-phil8339 Год назад +1

    We don't have smaller roads because people use more public transportation. We have smaller roads because the cities are older. Houses and roads have been built in a time where cars didn't exist.

  • @rhysodunloe2463
    @rhysodunloe2463 Год назад

    Germany has three days of Christmas with the first one, Heiligabend (lit. Holy Evening, Christmas Eve), being the most important of them. Although it is not a bank holiday like the other two. But most businesses close early to let the employees celebrate the "Bescherung" (the handing over of the presents) with their kids. And that's also the day when most go to church. Either the early children mess with the nativity play or at midnight. The other two days are either used to visit the relatives or just chill at home.
    There are four advent sundays before Christmas but when Christmas Eve falls on a sunday it counts as the fourth one. Many people have an Adventskranz. Often on their kitchen or dining room table. That's a wreath made from evergreens with four candles on top. Each Sunday you can light one more of those candles until on the fourth sunday all are lit. That's why on some advent wreaths the candles have four different sizes so they burn down more or less the same in the end.
    There's also a bunch of songs about this advent wreath.
    For example a very choral like one:
    Wir sagen Euch an den lieben Advent.
    (We announce to you the dear Advent.)
    Sehet die [erste, zweite, dritte, vierte] Kerze brennt.
    (See, the [first, second, third, fourth] candle burns.)
    Wir sagen Euch an eine heilige Zeit.
    (We announce to you a holy time.)
    Machet dem Herrn den Weg bereit.
    (Pave the way for the Lord.)
    Freut euch Ihr Christen.
    (Be happy, Christians.)
    Freuet euch sehr.
    (Be very happy.)
    Schon ist nahe der Herr.
    (Soon the Lord is near.)
    Or a little simpler one:
    Advent, Advent!
    Ein Lichtlein brennt.
    (A small light is burning.)
    Erst eins, dann zwei, dann drei, dann vier
    (First one, then two, then three, then four.)
    Dann steht das Christkind vor der Tür.
    (Then Baby Jesus is at your door.)
    We used to sing these with our parents each of those four sunday morning when lighting the advent wreath candles on the breakfast table.
    Also there's an advent calendar which is a box with 24 doors or a garland with 24 bags which you fill on your own (like the Christmas sock).
    The store bought boxes are mostly filled with chocolate but there are also some with small toys. And there are also some for adults with small bottles of liquor or with sex toys and so on. They were originally ment to make the waiting time for Christmas easier for the kids and stop them from constantly asking their parents how many nights they have to sleep until Christmas Eve.

  • @SouthernBelle888
    @SouthernBelle888 Год назад

    On washing machines in the kitchen, only people with very small appartments and limited spaces do that, most of the appartments either have shared laundry rooms where each tendant has keeps their washer and dryer, has a private laundry room, as for me I have my washer and dryer in my bathroom, like a tower on top of each other..... and as far as Rouladen goes, he left out most of the Details....
    Rouladen is a traditional German dish featuring long, thin strips of meat slathered with mustard and filled with bacon, onions, and pickles. The filling is enclosed by rolling up the meat strips and the roulades are then browned and slow-simmered in a rich gravy.

  • @timefliesaway999
    @timefliesaway999 Год назад +2

    4:45 because Christmas is on the 24th. At least here. Wouldn’t it be strange to celebrate your birthday on one day but only allowed to open presents the next day?
    The 25th and 26th isn’t really anything special here, except religious people go to church and it’s a national holiday, alas like Sunday.

  • @nathaliecuegomez6706
    @nathaliecuegomez6706 Год назад +1

    The christmas issu: traditionaly in Germany there is no Santa flying the skys on christmas eve to place the gifts to be found on chrismas morning. So as the "Christkind" (the crist child) brings the gifts and Christ is born at night, the celebrations oviously begins at christmas eve in Germany.

  • @landsmannderaltenschule9004
    @landsmannderaltenschule9004 Год назад

    We have washing machines almost every where like in the Wäschekeller (laundry room), bathroom, and in the kitchen too, except in the living room.
    Christmas is at December 24th over here and, we open our gifts in the evening.

  • @frankoptis
    @frankoptis Год назад

    Christmas Eve vs Christmas Morning: In the eve it is way more cozy. Imagine this: Christmas Eve begins with going to church in the evening (traditional Bavaria family from the country side). When you come home, it is Christmas dinner time. After the dinner, it goes like this: The firewood place is crackling, it is dark outside, only the Christmas lights are on. You have dimmed lights in the living room with the Christmas tree lights as highlights. The whole family is sitting together, in the background you can hear the Christmas music playing (not the TV!). Then it is gifting time. How can you match this with "Christmas morning"?

  • @janp5775
    @janp5775 Год назад +1

    Pillows in Germany:
    Yes, many pillows for the bed are rectangular in Germany. Square cushions are more likely to be found on sofas or armchairs. Of course there are exceptions.
    Roladen: I only know kohlroladen. Minced meat with onions, which is wrapped in cabbage leaves and cooked for a long time in brown soße (gravy). Due to the long cooking, the cabbage becomes soft and the taste of the cabbage is dominated by the meat and the sauce.
    Communist Germany:
    It was not propagated as an enemy as much as in the USA. Which is why it is probably not viewed in such an extremely negative way.
    From time to time you hear that there are still people who want the GDR back.
    But not on a political level rather nostalgi.
    Even though my whole family on the maternal side fled from there and were happy to have gotten out of there.
    (Isn't free health insurance already "communism"?)

  • @lisajohnson9124
    @lisajohnson9124 Год назад

    American kids start sneaking down 3:00 in the morning to open up the gift 🎁 and with the time difference of 6 hours we celebrate on
    24 December plus 25 & 26 December are legal holidays in Germany. Christmas celebration starts 4 weeks before Christmas Day and ents on 6 Januar the Feast of Epiphany.

  • @Doom1981
    @Doom1981 Год назад +1

    Ever since Queen Victoria the English Royal Family opens their Christmas presents on Christmas Eve, because the royal Family is actually German.

  • @ImInternetfalschabgebogen
    @ImInternetfalschabgebogen Год назад +1

    Well, in Germany it's not that common to have a washing machine in the kitchen. It's a question of space I guess. I only saw mashing machines in kitchen in shared apartments for students.

  • @lordraps
    @lordraps Год назад +1

    Ryan i‘m from Austria were we also speak German and when you would want anything almost every Austrian and German can speak englisch very well

  • @Strichlp
    @Strichlp Год назад +1

    I got marks from my hand on my wall which you can see with UV black light, because i just slap the light switch and sometimes miss it when I m going into my room faster

  • @stefan6412
    @stefan6412 Год назад

    Beef Rouladen are made from the round cut and a thinly slice cuts of beef filled with mustard, onions, pepper and
    sometimes pickles. Their are hold together by kitchen twine or trussing needles. They are delicious.

  • @TheAxel65
    @TheAxel65 Год назад +1

    3:25 Rouladen: The meat is spread with medium hot mustard, a slice of bacon is placed on top and a few thinly sliced pickles are added. Then the prepared meat is rolled up and tied with a little kitchen twine. After a short, vigorous roasting, the roulades then should simmer gently in a broth of beef stock, tomato paste and a bay leaf for about 1 1/2 - 2 hours. Goes well with red cabbage and dumplings 😋