19 WEIRD THINGS Swedish people do ( that YOU SHOULD do too ) 🇸🇪

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 4,8 тыс.

  • @SagaJohanna
    @SagaJohanna  Год назад +240

    What are some things from your country that you think the world would be better off if we adopted them? ❤🌍

    • @Mattjensen652
      @Mattjensen652 Год назад +21

      Is my First time watching your content, I hope to meet someone like you in the near future,
      Love your video thank you!🇸🇪🇸🇪

    • @carlosr192
      @carlosr192 Год назад +36

      Here...we have a lot of holidays and one week or month in some places of party just to up a little our happy face.
      Whole food 2 times a day and two coffee breaks is a trend too.
      Just to complete...Brazil is not a dangerous country...we just have some dangerous places.

    • @julianpetkov8320
      @julianpetkov8320 Год назад +18

      Real fruit and vegetables. The green onions and the salads are usually reasonably fresh, but everything else taste like plastic.

    • @julianpetkov8320
      @julianpetkov8320 Год назад +54

      @@carlosr192 In Bulgaria we start "Friday night" usually in Wednesday and it is "Friday night" until Monday. Can you guys beat that? 😀

    • @aesthetix3398
      @aesthetix3398 Год назад +13

      My country sucks lol

  • @bobhamulak3646
    @bobhamulak3646 Год назад +717

    Back in the late seventies, I went to work for a father-and-son carpentry outfit. They were from Sweden, but had been living in America for a number of years. I was in my early twenties, and this was only my second carpentry job, so I had alot to learn. They showed great patience while I learned how to frame houses with them for several years. For those who don't know, framing houses is hard and physical work, and you also need to be intelligent and have good math skills. We worked throughout the year, in summer heat and frigid cold. Looking back, I am impressed by their honesty and tremendous work ethic! They always treated their employees with respect and patience, and I will always be grateful to them for inspiring me to develop a good work ethic. I really was quite fortunate to have met them and had them leave such a long-lasting impression on me! I don't know if either of them are still alive, but if they are, I'd like to say "Thank You" to Joel and Roger Sandholm. You were two of the most decent and respectable people that I worked for in my more than 40 years in carpentry!
    They certainly made a good impression of Swedish people on me!

    • @cynthiakeller5954
      @cynthiakeller5954 Год назад +46

      Back in the 90s my US husband worked for a Swedish Man, Olaf. He was a boat maker but had married an English woman, moved to the UK and started making timber cabins (different than log cabins). Beautiful buildings. He was expensive and mostly built for fellow expats. They worked year round too. Hard working pleasant man. My husband picked up drinking tea with butter not milk. My husband learnt alot of different construction techniques to add to what he knew from the US. Since they also had an English man working with them, they also picked up UK techniques.

    • @PhaaxGames
      @PhaaxGames Год назад +40

      I'd like to believe that we treat everyone as equals regardless of their position/rank in a workplace. Thanks to "jantelagen" there's no "I'm better than you (because of my rank)". Things are just so much easier if we all try to get along together. :)

    • @cbryce9243
      @cbryce9243 Год назад +21

      What a sweet person you are, gratitude is so important.

    • @vincemajestyk9497
      @vincemajestyk9497 Год назад +9

      @@cynthiakeller5954 Now that sounds interesting, butter in tea. I'd like to try it. Was it emulsified into the tea or just floating on top? Where I used to live (in the US) there was a big Swedish community and the local supermarket used to make Vort Limpa rye bread for the holidays and carry Glogg. I used to buy Swedish coffee and Lingenberry jams there. I also used to get O.P. Anderson Akvavit (Aquavit) there too at the package store. Sometimes I'd get the Linie if they were out. Hadn't had any of that stuff in years since I moved away. Brings back memories.

    • @juliadarling3404
      @juliadarling3404 Год назад +5

      ​@@vincemajestyk9497 it doesn't really emulsify, but of course if you keep stirring it'll mix better. Butter works great in coffee too. It kind of intensifies the aroma and gives a more silky mouthfeel.

  • @limitedtime5471
    @limitedtime5471 Год назад +758

    In my opinion, the kindness toward children is the real story here. Growing up with constant screaming and anger in home and at school left me with serious lifelong anxiety and psych problems

    • @JohnSmith-uy7sv
      @JohnSmith-uy7sv Год назад +6

      are you a cereal killer?? 🙂

    • @josephpadula2283
      @josephpadula2283 Год назад +42

      Cereal killer?
      Yes I killed Snap, Crackle and Pop.
      And Captain Crunch is on my list along with that Lucky Charms leprechaun!

    • @JohnSmith-uy7sv
      @JohnSmith-uy7sv Год назад +14

      @@josephpadula2283 Yes, I killed plenty of cheerios and lucky charms in my day. They screamed, but I did not care. also captain crunch too. 🤣

    • @dingusdingus2152
      @dingusdingus2152 Год назад

      Grownups bark orders at children like drill sergeants bark at marine recruits. People tend not to treat children like human beings. A statistic I once heard is that at least 45% of all babies are unplanned or unwanted. No wonder people are so messed up.

    • @WildlifeWarrior-cr1kk
      @WildlifeWarrior-cr1kk Год назад

      So you're a psycho

  • @Sarah_Eva
    @Sarah_Eva Год назад +186

    I totally believe in treating children as human beings that deserve respect. ❤ I agree with all of the points about children.

    • @mattias5157
      @mattias5157 Год назад

      Oh no. I´m a Swede too, and Swedish children nowadays are among the most egocentric, spoiled and badly behaved that I know. Not everyone of course, but as a general rule. And opinionated! Of course kids must be listened to, but far too many Swedish kids are small dictators.

  • @sebastianwapniarski2077
    @sebastianwapniarski2077 7 месяцев назад +40

    Polish here. Sleeping in fresh cotton duvet covers prepared for me by my grandmother when I slept over at her place was like a paradise experience when I was a kid. Ahhhh.... just heaven.

  • @kfourten4673
    @kfourten4673 Год назад +961

    I'm Canadian and a few years ago we went on a trip through Estonia, Finland and Sweden. There were lots of families in the areas we were in and yet we never heard any parents and children bickering. Several times we heard kids ask for things or ask questions but the parents calmly answered yes or no and explained what the children wanted to know. The kids might ask follow-up questions and time was made for that as well. And then the kids would accept whatever was said even if it wasn't what they had wanted. It was awesome! When we got back to Canada, we didn't make it out of the airport before hearing parents barking at kids who are whining trying to get their attention to ask a question. #7 is something that we absolutely should adopt here!

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +112

      Yes, thank you for confirming that! That was exactly my shock when moving to New Zealand! I was so confused, thinking, the kids are just being kids - and parents yelling at them for asking questions! So weird!

    • @kfourten4673
      @kfourten4673 Год назад +70

      @@SagaJohanna We raised our daughter more like you are describing. Believe it or not, we were equally praised in chastised for it. In the end she's become a young adult that I'm very proud to call my daughter and my friend. And she has moved to Finland!

    • @balikris
      @balikris Год назад +42

      Hejsan, Saga.
      I'd say that we Danes do if not all of these 'weird' thing, then most! Guess fika is genuin Swedish. But as a broder- søsterfolk that's not surprising.
      The one about no bad weather, just wrong clothes I actually thought was German, as they no matter the weather are walking up and down the westcoast, haha.
      So yes ... 19 good reasons to do as the Swedes & Danes! 😉👍 Tack & hej

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +27

      @@balikris Yes! I think so too. With the one addition that Danes dress better ;) At least we're all jelous and want to dress like you guys do :D

    • @conservative6759
      @conservative6759 Год назад

      @@SagaJohanna Now kids shoot their parents so things are changing

  • @rybot22
    @rybot22 Год назад +289

    I'm surprised you left out the hand towels in the bathroom! That was something I grew to respect very quickly and brought home to my family in Canada. Every family member having their OWN hand towel/towel hook AND and extra one labelled for guest. This just makes so much sense!

    • @gregoriomurtagian5347
      @gregoriomurtagian5347 Год назад +14

      so do you invite one guest at a time to your house or ask all of them to share the guest towel? :)

    • @CaptSpacegoat
      @CaptSpacegoat Год назад +7

      I'm not sure that many people do that, I've never had different hand towels for different family members and can't recall noticing it at other houses

    • @abderrahimbenmoussa4359
      @abderrahimbenmoussa4359 Год назад +18

      Don't really see how that is usefull. The very concept of community in biology is that you share the bacteria in your community which is not dirty or bad, bacteria are not an enemy. Besides, technically, you should have clean hands when you wash, so what is it good for ?

    • @danielpalmberg3371
      @danielpalmberg3371 Год назад +23

      @@abderrahimbenmoussa4359 It is extreamly useful because if someone in the family gets sick (throwing up and diahrrea) you dont infect the entire family.
      Separate towels is something I really can highly recommend.
      We also have our own toothbrushes, but that I hope is a nobrainer...?!

    • @SchlichteToven
      @SchlichteToven Год назад +8

      If I suggested that as a norm around here, I'd get sent to behavioural therapy for OCD.

  • @elwin1654
    @elwin1654 Год назад +291

    My spouse and I have used separate duvets for our entire 20 year marriage and it's one of the secrets of our success! We have very different temperature and texture needs. I run hot at night and usually only use one very cool cotton sheet even in winter, whereas he likes to be cosy with a heavier and warmer blanket. Even if you perfectly match your spouse in temperature needs, having separate duvets means you never fight over who gets more of it. Highly recommend for every married couple.

    • @annmcdaniel1092
      @annmcdaniel1092 Год назад +6

      Same for me and my better half !

    • @lisamcgeeney8972
      @lisamcgeeney8972 Год назад +6

      I introduced separate duvets recently and I am sleeping so much better - best idea!

    • @CartoType
      @CartoType Год назад +14

      Separate bedrooms is even better! That makes visiting each other for certain purposes even more special.

    • @HeathenDance
      @HeathenDance Год назад +3

      @@CartoType LOOOOL. To be honest, the whole monogamy/single spouse/fidelity thing is completely unnatural, and a complete scam.

    • @Ash.Crow.Goddess
      @Ash.Crow.Goddess Год назад

      My people. 25 years, and counting.

  • @ilaeoa
    @ilaeoa 10 месяцев назад +44

    Yes, "from scratch" thing is so confusing. I love cooking videos and use to get really upset about "Ah I mix this can with this jar and add some bag to this". In my country store-bought canned food are for students and camping(ers?), not for everyday adult life.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад +8

      haha yes!

    • @aandino1239
      @aandino1239 3 месяца назад +1

      All countries do and say things differently. Does not mean one has to adopt to others because they feel their way is better.

    • @ninaelsbethgustavsen2131
      @ninaelsbethgustavsen2131 3 месяца назад +2

      In the Nordic Countries you would traditionally conserve food for the winter.
      By tinning/canning, salting, drying, and smoking food.
      Baking dry flat breads for storing.
      Nowadays there's a lot of frozen vegetables as well.
      If making things like pea soup, you'll soak dried (yellow) split peas, rather than buying fresh green ones, as its less costly.
      And because fresh peas are seasonal.
      The fresh ones are reserved for a sunday's fricassé.
      Of lamb, (veal) meatballs, or chicken...
      Love from Norway 👩‍🦳🇳🇴

    • @ilaeoa
      @ilaeoa 3 месяца назад

      @@ninaelsbethgustavsen2131 you are right! But I was talking about different phenomen.

  • @alisonpatton7154
    @alisonpatton7154 Год назад +379

    One thing you didn’t mention: no small talk! We hosted a Swedish exchange student for 2 years, and he was most surprised by the amount of casual/short and even cheap conversations. He was always happy to talk, but he would patiently talk at length. Sweden sounds like a wonderful country to live, especially the Fika! ❤

    • @robertakerman
      @robertakerman Год назад +22

      I love Sweden, I was born in Brazil but my mother is Swedish and my brother also but still came very young to Brazil, this idea of leaving Sweden was totally my father because my mother never wanted to leave Sweden, I remember when I vacationed at my grandparents' house in 2013 in Mälmo, it was an amazing and unique experience, Sweden won my hearts in a way I will never forget

    • @GS-cg3yn
      @GS-cg3yn Год назад +50

      I wish there was no small talk expectation in the USA. It is tedious and makes me wish to be elsewhere.

    • @amybagnall6097
      @amybagnall6097 Год назад +14

      I don’t even know how not to have small talk… wouldn’t that seem rude not to ask someone how things are going or what have they been up to when they enter a room and you haven’t seen them in awhile? I really don’t get it wouldn’t be rude not to talk to someone.

    • @cynthiakeller5954
      @cynthiakeller5954 Год назад +12

      @@amybagnall6097 I agree. I'm a Texan living in the MidWest. I'm doomed to small talk hell, lol!

    • @beckyg9831
      @beckyg9831 Год назад +22

      I loathe small talk. I wish it wasn't expected here in the USA.

  • @honestlyyours1069
    @honestlyyours1069 Год назад +236

    My Swedish father was indeed quite humble and never complained about anyone or anything. He was quiet, but was a very nice person to be around.🇸🇪

    • @JS-tr6oq
      @JS-tr6oq Год назад +3

      Mine too

    • @dluuc
      @dluuc Год назад +2

      Do you all who write comments like this, remember what Parent Flow has led to? Maybe your father was just indifferent to what the child has in life. That is why he is so kind. I am originally from Russia, but I live in America. We are the same people. But our attitude towards children is very demanding. I want my child not to be a novice, but to be a person. It is impossible without this. It is necessary to give everything that is possible to the child, and if necessary, kick it. (everyone around me thinks the same.) Think twice.

    • @jillfaraday685
      @jillfaraday685 Год назад +4

      @@dluuc Kick It,, are you insane

    • @dluuc
      @dluuc Год назад +5

      @@jillfaraday685 By these words- "Kick it", I mean, give a hard lesson. Without sweet promises of a cloudless and easy life. 🙂

    • @anneswisher9207
      @anneswisher9207 8 месяцев назад +1

      My Swedish grandpa was the same, quiet and always smiling.

  • @nemiatarot497
    @nemiatarot497 Год назад +234

    German here - it seems we have a lot in common! Separate duvets, duvet covers, respect for children, loving the outdoors, never having to fill in forms about race.... there are some differences but a lot of things sound really familiar to me.

    • @HeathenDance
      @HeathenDance Год назад +6

      And an obsession with Veganism.

    • @nerakt162
      @nerakt162 Год назад +9

      @@HeathenDance Nonsens. You have no idea ^^

    • @thesdfable
      @thesdfable Год назад +18

      yeah no race questions in forms but still racists on the streets

    • @TheHammerwar
      @TheHammerwar Год назад

      @@thesdfable idiots are everywhere (every Country)...

    • @alexandermalinowski4277
      @alexandermalinowski4277 Год назад

      Reversed racism in Germany is product of post WW2 denazification campaigns. It was applied only to blacks and Turks. Racism against Slavs and Poles is reality of Germany almost until today.

  • @shine1-s3q
    @shine1-s3q 10 месяцев назад +8

    I am from Latin America, Argentina. We use sets of sheets and wash them weekly :) and here we don’t ask about ethnicity or race neither. The same goes with the cake, we make it from scratch. We also cook a lot and eat at home.
    I love the part of being ready to be outside no matter what the weather is ❤

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад

      So wonderful to hear it

  • @ProsciuttinoXL
    @ProsciuttinoXL Год назад +158

    I live in the Netherlands and we are not that different from our Scandinavian cousins, but I still heard several tips that would make life better, especially with regard to raising and respecting children as valuable co-humans.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +14

      Thank you! I've visited the Netherlands once and really liked how friendly everyone was :)

    • @Metalmassacre07
      @Metalmassacre07 Год назад +1

      The Cuckerlands is garbage with garbage people and a meme language

    • @augiemusky
      @augiemusky Год назад +12

      I am a Canadian who practiced co sleeping with my children. In Canada and the US this is considered laziness at best and at worst, dangerous! supposed reasons being: ruin your marriage through lack of privacy for sex; spoil the child, they’ll never leave your bed,make the child too dependent on you; with a baby/ child kicking your ribs you will never get proper sleep, and fear you will smother the baby. None of which is true.
      Regarding clothing: I lived in the US for a few years. Americans would talk about how cold it must be in Canada, as if they have never heard of coats,sweaters, or boots

    • @marissashantez6051
      @marissashantez6051 Год назад

      Your suicide rate isnt particularly good either. However, your students do rank really well. Not as well as Japan, China. Estonia, and many countries where they are very strict with how they raise kids.

    • @ProsciuttinoXL
      @ProsciuttinoXL Год назад

      @@Metalmassacre07 thank you for your kind and well reasoned comment.

  • @susanbeckham7236
    @susanbeckham7236 Год назад +85

    My mom was a Swedish immigrant to the USA in 1924. I wish she and my grandparents would have spoken to me in Swedish so I could have learned the language. They spoke it in the home only, and English outside the home. I was raised on lots of Swedish foods. I am happy to have run across your channel.

    • @dorothybennington475
      @dorothybennington475 Год назад +4

      Same here though occasionally my grandmother would run into someone Swedish in a store and talk away.
      It's a shame she didn't teach her children Swedish. She said she regretted that later on. She began to forget words she had grown up with.

    • @bonniebailey9574
      @bonniebailey9574 Год назад +2

      My family has many similarities with yours. I asked my grandmother to teach me Swedish and she flatly refused. She insisted that I “didn’t need it because you are an American”. My great aunt and cousins were very involved with the Swedish American Museum and Heritage Society in Swedesburg, Iowa.

    • @patfrench8046
      @patfrench8046 Год назад +2

      Tack sa mycket from third generation Sweden.

    • @zone6789
      @zone6789 2 месяца назад

      Swedes like my grandparents did not teach their children Swedish because they assumed it would make it harder for them to assimilate into American culture. Their assumption was plausible but not correct.

  • @elizabethnicoll
    @elizabethnicoll Год назад +48

    I love how proud you are of Sweden and the fact you should be.

  • @sarahgilbert8036
    @sarahgilbert8036 10 месяцев назад +32

    Norwegian here - grew up with duvets, and "hate" the top sheet & blanket thing. Such a messy bed by morning, because I can't sleep in the tight cocoon of the sheet thing.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  9 месяцев назад +1

      Yes right!!

    • @vaska1999
      @vaska1999 8 месяцев назад +3

      I'm Canadian and find duvets far too hot for me!

    • @Diane-Pippin
      @Diane-Pippin 6 месяцев назад

      By top sheet or blanket do you mean the sheet thay goes in between the duvet and the mattress?

  • @emmaohr3821
    @emmaohr3821 Год назад +79

    ”Whole and clean” dont mean ”always represent yourself at your best”. It means that clothing are optional as long as you are washed and don’t show up in clothes that is broken or really in bad shape.
    It’s a old saying but something we can still use if someone asks if there is a dress code. For a party or even a funeral. That gives the person the freedom to choose whatever clothes they want to wear.

    • @aprillen
      @aprillen 9 месяцев назад +26

      THIS. It basically means that it doesn't matter if your clothes are new or fancy or expensive, or if they are plain and cheap, or simple hand-me-downs, as long as they are clean and not in tatters. Whatever your social or economic status, the important thing is to show that you look after yourself and your family as best you can according to your ability. It's about respectability being worth more than money or status.

    • @JoRiver11
      @JoRiver11 9 месяцев назад +5

      Thank you both, that helped me to understand it.

    • @Kartoffelsuppe_m_Wursteinlage
      @Kartoffelsuppe_m_Wursteinlage 9 месяцев назад +3

      Now the swedish explain other swedes what "whole and clean" means. ;) VIsit your next H&M warehouse and you know how to dress in sweden.

    • @existential.psychopath8053
      @existential.psychopath8053 7 месяцев назад

      ONLY RECONQUISTA!

    • @DJarry394
      @DJarry394 5 месяцев назад

      That means I can’t wear my old worn in graphic tees?

  • @kiwiblue8374
    @kiwiblue8374 Год назад +27

    I’m from New Zealand and it is common to use both a duvet cover and top sheet here. We wash the sheets AND the duvet cover 😊. I also air the duvet inner outside whenever possible. And there is no such thing as bad weather just bad clothing choices!

  • @Caprifool
    @Caprifool Год назад +245

    I'm half Swedish, half American and brought up in London, UK. One thing we should learn from other countries is talking to your neighbours and strangers. You might have seen the memes "Waiting for the bus like a Swede." that kind of scepsis towards other people is real. While when I'm abroad people actually talk to eachother on the train, they invite you to their table in pubs, say good morning on the street etc. It's very easy to feel unseen or lonely in Sweden.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +69

      Yeah completely agree! My Swedish friends call me American lol, because I talk a lot and love talking to strangers! I think it’s great to connect with people we might not otherwise ❤️

    • @gnarbeljo8980
      @gnarbeljo8980 Год назад +38

      As an American in Sweden my entire adult life and some of my childhood I couldn't agree more. Swedes are in general socially awkward tbh. For all the "lagom" they use daily, they rarely get it right when it comes to social situations. They'll either pretend you aren't there which comes off very rude, or get WAY to personal and tell you their private problems.
      It's one of the reasons I have to travel so much. It's kindof tragic. I think it's very much the flipside of not learning to speak up early, very little emphasis put on being polite and learning to chat with people without bending their ear, and understanding personal space in crowded sitiations. That's where Swedes fail miserably, with consequences for any outsider coming to Sweden for longer than a visit. Lack of spontaneity is part of it. People are socially anxious unawares.

    • @anthea6669
      @anthea6669 Год назад +13

      It seems I should have been born in Sweden 😂

    • @Marcusianery
      @Marcusianery Год назад +21

      Thats a bit of a lie, mainly for big cities only. In the country side its like big families. Everyone knows each others and help each others.

    • @Menghua-wc6dk
      @Menghua-wc6dk Год назад +10

      Swedes show concern about other people's comfort and mood by not randomly approaching each other. But if you go to a smaller setting and non-public area people tend to say hello to each other, e.g. along a walkway in a nature reserve in a Stockholm suburb. If you need to ask a fellow commuter something you just say "Ursäkta, får jag bara fråga dig?" (Excuse me, can I just ask) When you and they are done they will move away discreetly and then you have to shut up and leave them alone.
      Getting friends is for social settings/gatherings, school, work or through mutual acquaintances.

  • @AlecS-p4b
    @AlecS-p4b 2 дня назад +1

    I'm quite fond of the casual dating, not having to take a loan and get a whole makeover just to see someone and see if you're compatible as a potential partner... I've been to quite a few dates at cafés as the first date.
    It's safe, out in public, no alcohol involved abd you can leave whenever you want to.
    Either it turns into a 4 hour convo about all the interesting things and possibly end up in a relationship, or you can hurry up and drink up your tea or whatever and leave within 30 minutes if you feel no chemistry/interest/compatibility/don't feel safe.
    It's a good first date that I recommend for safety reasons.

  • @honeybeejourney
    @honeybeejourney Год назад +26

    Yes, I grew up in a snowy climate- BUT, we always had the proper clothing for it. You don't dismay the weather- you simply buy nice warm clothing that you love. Then you look forward to wearing your pretty winter clothing.

  • @rowdysgirlalways
    @rowdysgirlalways Год назад +44

    Well, you have given me some insight into my Swedish heritage. My grandparents came to the US before 1913. My dad was born here, but I have noticed little behaviors in my family that speaks strongly of our heritage. Things like being reserved, not putting ourselves forward, hospitality where guests are catered to, generosity. There are other things, but my dad was an open-handed, big-hearted man who gave to everyone. I can now understand why he was the way he was.

    • @OriginalFallofMind
      @OriginalFallofMind Год назад

      My great grandfather came from sweeden in the late eighteen hundreds. Very reserved, strong yet kind man. Nobody else in my family is like that besides me. 😂

  • @cristinalivi-harris3267
    @cristinalivi-harris3267 Год назад +122

    I live in Scotland and many of those things are normal here as well. As an Italian, I can assure you that we use scissors to cut pizza at home, but never in a restaurant 😊

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +4

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @beckyd888
      @beckyd888 Год назад +2

      I have noticed that many pizza places in my area use huge scissors to cut pizza especially sheet pizza - large rectangle pizzas not round - I have never used a pizza cutter -

    • @M.C.P.
      @M.C.P. Год назад +5

      I'm Italian, from the region where pizza was invented and we DON'T use scissors because it's impossible with neapolitan pizza. I know that in Caserta scissors are used for "pizza a canotto" and stop.
      Which region are you from?

    • @agnezickaite
      @agnezickaite Год назад +2

      ​@@M.C.P.I think she is reffering to the home made rectangular pizza that is firm and easy to cut, not pizzeria pizza 😊

    • @ElAnciano767
      @ElAnciano767 6 месяцев назад

      Just a tip about kitchen scissors: I looked at them in a kitchen specialty store and didn't like either the price of the lightweight construction. Instead, I bought a pair of pruning scissors (not secateurs) from the hardware store for a fraction of the price, but they are sturdy enough to cut through the backbone of a hen, no problem.

  • @nwrth
    @nwrth 9 месяцев назад +5

    Czech here. The more I know about Sweden the more I like it. We already share a lot of the things you mentioned. And some of the others we definitely should.

  • @eliastheawesome
    @eliastheawesome Год назад +88

    One aspect of sweden i love is that dating is a lot more equal. Its not taboo/weird for a woman to initiate, and the man is not expected to pay all the time. You either split or take turns. I've also noticed we are a lot more equal in splitting housework, childcare etc than many other countries.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +18

      Yes I agree. It’s very nice and I’ve always shocked to see people date abroad. Once a girlfriend asked me to go up to a guy and ask him to pay for our drinks, and I said absolutely not haha! Also, I was the one asking my husband out the first time :)

    • @neahrayne2377
      @neahrayne2377 Год назад +14

      Ngl, I prefer the swedish way of dating. Doing the dating period things always stresses me out way too much. I prefer just getting to know each other casually and if it becomes something, it becomes something. Much more natural and I don't feel forced.

    • @Scampergirl
      @Scampergirl 11 месяцев назад +5

      If you don't go on dates....how do you know if someone is interested in you?

    • @alexandrevaliquette3883
      @alexandrevaliquette3883 11 месяцев назад

      @@Scampergirl It's simple: they got arranged wedding when they are 6 years old.
      Oh, I'm sorry, this more a trend in Islamic country... They are so alikes, I use to get confuse all the time!

    • @lizclegg7556
      @lizclegg7556 9 месяцев назад

      @@alexandrevaliquette3883 Thank you for lowering the tone. It was all quite wholesome until you decided to turn up and act like a c**t.

  • @user-rc7ld1db8v
    @user-rc7ld1db8v Год назад +21

    I have Swedish ancestry. Watching this video explained a lot of things about my family that I didn't realize. Now I see where my behaviors came from. I grew up in a multicultural neighborhood in California and each family was so different from each other. Most proudest of sharing your beliefs on raising children.

  • @drenamurphy9193
    @drenamurphy9193 Год назад +61

    I am from Ireland and have been using a duvet since the 70s . I always put the duvet inside a cover plus use a fitted bottom sheet and a flat top sheet.

    • @andyf4292
      @andyf4292 9 месяцев назад +2

      we visited friends in Canada,,, they have little ties inside the duvet cover- that connect with the cover, very clever, and its not here , sadly

    • @heatherives8646
      @heatherives8646 9 месяцев назад +1

      That's what I do

    • @doogleticker5183
      @doogleticker5183 9 месяцев назад +1

      As do we in Canada…and France (maybe it’s because I am not a thirty something slob).

  • @brandontylerburt
    @brandontylerburt 10 месяцев назад +11

    Please do keep sharing things like this. We could learn a lot from Sweden.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад

      That’s great to hear! I will 😊

  • @jerrihadding2534
    @jerrihadding2534 Год назад +89

    I am a 73 year old American woman living in Sweden and I have a “best”, American, friend from the time we were eight. She was a Montessori pre-school teacher in her own home for children from infancy to three years old. I used to spend my vacations visiting with her, staying in her home and experiencing her days with the children. In over twenty years I never once heard her raise her voice or respond with anything less than the utmost respect. Partly this was her Montessori training, but mostly it was her nature. She and her husband raised their son the same way. This past summer their son (now in his forties) paid for my husband and I to travel from Sweden to Greece to join them on a vacation he had dreamed of for years. They have two sons, nine and eleven, and I experienced the same level of respect for their children as he had experienced from his parents. The boys were delightful! The vacation was unforgettable!

    • @silla-je9od
      @silla-je9od Год назад +2

      Beautiful story.

    • @air-run3984
      @air-run3984 Год назад +1

      I like your list except for one thing. Kids should not be allowed to make mistakes.

    • @Coole-ee1vg
      @Coole-ee1vg Месяц назад

      @@air-run3984 Every one makes mistakes. You just made one, a major big mistake, showing how uneducated you are....

    • @progperljungman8218
      @progperljungman8218 29 дней назад

      😂​@@air-run3984

    • @tubervine1259
      @tubervine1259 8 дней назад

      ​@@air-run3984We all make mistakes. In Sweden, children are allowed to learn from their mistakes, over and over until they are truly old enough to "know better".

  • @polimeter
    @polimeter Год назад +58

    Wow, I live in Germany and haven't realised HOW similar both cultures are! Thank you for the video ❤️

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +6

      I feel as though I need to visit Germany now!!! ❤️

    • @polimeter
      @polimeter Год назад

      @@SagaJohanna If you wanna see both modern cities and beautiful landscapes - definitely go to the southern regions! If you wanna see crazy nightlife - go to Berlin or Hamburg (the second has beautiful culture too)! Most cities are a little boring though 🥲 but the big once have great contemporary art museums, these are usually worth a visit 🥰

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +1

      @@polimeter Oh thank you! :)

    • @Suomatti
      @Suomatti 10 месяцев назад +1

      I thought the same. The swedes seem to be our better looking cousins :D

    • @ravenfin1916
      @ravenfin1916 9 месяцев назад

      I think this is due to the Lutheran traditions and way of thinking, which are strong in all of our countries.

  • @mhallsmith1
    @mhallsmith1 Год назад +23

    I love this discussion! I was a child when we moved to Sweden back in 1961. We first lived in the countryside outside Gorteborg, then we moved right into the heart of the city. My sister and I attended Swedish schools for 3 years and learned the language from scratch- no textbooks needed! The Swedes as a community held their children as precious, and were oriented toward what was best for their children and the future that those kids represented. They also expected respect back, and got it. One way this showed up was with the curtsy- girls would stop to curtsy if they saw an older person in the street, and boys nodded their heads in respect. Introductions included a friendly handshake with bow or curtsy. Also- speak a "goddag" to greet someone. Of course, kids always offered their seat on the bus/train to their elders. When American friends would come to visit us, and we kids gave them a warm Swedish welcome, they were absolutely amazed and delighted. We in turn were uplifted by their response to us- and grew to like and trust and respect adults. I felt well equipped to be introduced to broader society with this simple start in life.

    • @vaska1999
      @vaska1999 8 месяцев назад

      It's exactly, in every detail, how I was raised to behave as a child in 1960s Yugoslavia (the part that's today's Serbia).

  • @jordansmith1b
    @jordansmith1b 9 месяцев назад +15

    Back in the early 2000s I spent 6 summers (and a short winter stay) mostly in central Sweden: Dalarna, Härjedalen, and Jämtland, preparing for and participating in Uppdansningen för polskdansmärke (known in the U.S. as “medal testing”) and hanging out with fellow folk dancers and musicians. Those of us from the U.S. generally stayed with local dancers or in cabins here and there, and the hospitality was truly heart-warming. One “weird” Swedish practice that I thought characteristic and well-intentioned (though prone to being taken rapacious advantage of by various European visitors) was allemansrätten-the right of free access anywhere in the countryside, even on private property, for camping and even picking berries, with proper respect for ownership (some wild stories there about violations of respect-and their consequences). It’s not just Swedish-the same can be found in Norway (with similar tales and outcomes). That might merit further explanation, Johanna. And another, minor bit: the ubiquity of the brightly colored dalahästar or “Dalarna horses” in many people’s homes.

    • @dod2304
      @dod2304 9 месяцев назад +2

      I love the horses (I'm American but dated a Swedish man a couple years ago and learned a lot about the country) but the Christmas goats? I don't quite get that one. lol

  • @zeeeena
    @zeeeena Год назад +59

    What a beautiful country. I've lived in the US my entire life, but my father's grandmother came to the US from Sweden a little over a hundred years ago. But my mother's side came over from Leiden in 1620. I've always wanted to visit this country, but when I went to college and learned more about it, I wanted to move there. From your description, it seems like such a wholesome country. The culture seems especially nurturing for children, and I love the fact they understand how healthy it is to be and play outside, and to allow kids to be kids. I love the idea of 2 separate duvet's. It makes so much sense! Thank you for this video.

    • @AnemoonS
      @AnemoonS Год назад +3

      Hi, Leiden is in the Netherlands, Sweden is a different country. Many similarities to Sweden though or other Northern European countries. We have 'gezellig', where we can really be grateful for being cosy together. We bike a lot, because our country is so flat. Many houses have big windows and no curtains for it, so you can look inside, nothing to hide. I enjoy that. We have relatively little school hours indeed. What I would love for us to adopt is that kids (and adults) would go outside even more. In Sweden there is more nature though. The Netherlands is such a dense country that it makes it difficult to go out and explore for kids.

  • @resilientjourneys8117
    @resilientjourneys8117 Год назад +49

    I practice several of these, & I'm a southern American, but have felt different from other Americans. No Swedish background, just logical😊

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +17

      I think it's really cool when we can transcend national identity and just do what makes sense 😂 🙌

  • @Lea-rb9nc
    @Lea-rb9nc Год назад +25

    My father was Swedish. I love learning more about Sweden. Thank you.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +1

      Thank you 😃♥️

    • @joejoe7212
      @joejoe7212 Год назад

      @@SagaJohanna the Swedish people are sooo self absorbed 😉

  • @cathyscantlan4826
    @cathyscantlan4826 10 месяцев назад +5

    One Week in Sweden, what did I notice? yes the seprate duvets, I do that now at my house. I learned to use more candles- they were everywhere. The way the high school graduates celebrate, like a long lasting parade like hay rides, in safe trailers that are pulled by parents. We were in Trolhatton? (Spelling) and our hotel had 2nd floor balcony's it was very entertaining for them to come by. (think spring break with chaparones on wheels?). Also, even in that cold of a climi\ate, bike lanes were awesome, double striped, two ways, their own red lights, lots of bike racks.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад

      So fun, thanks for sharing!

  • @valeriayi
    @valeriayi Год назад +62

    Many of the mentioned points are common in Eastern Europe too, but for ex. if you're having guests over, not only the house needs to be polished to shine but also a tooon of food will be prepared so that you not only don't leave your guests go hungry out of your home but basically roll back to theirs😂

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +8

      Haha yes!! You guys are for sure better at feeding guests 🤣 I know from experience haha!

    • @valeriayi
      @valeriayi Год назад +1

      @@SagaJohanna😂😂 so you experienced it 🤣

    • @mistrzimagorzata6853
      @mistrzimagorzata6853 Год назад +2

      So true

    • @wendigo1919
      @wendigo1919 Год назад +2

      My best friend growing up, her family was Ukrainian, and I spent a great deal of time at her house. I even called her parents Mama and Tato. Her Parents and Grandmother always wanted to feed me and I was in heaven because it was also food that I wasn't accustomed to getting. At home it was customary for us to eat relatively small meals. This was the 80's and plates were also much smaller back then compared to today. At home we were served what was on our plate and nothing more, but we were full and content. At my friend's house, there were seconds and more, if I wanted.. They would beg me to keep eating. lol I was in shock at the amount of food prepared. The hospitality from Eastern Europeans is so different!

    • @DJarry394
      @DJarry394 5 месяцев назад

      I lived in Prague and as an American, and in the US we were required to “clean our plates” meaning eat everything on your plate. It was a compliment to the cook. But in Prague, you don’t clean your plate, because if you do, your Czech host will keep feeding you. You need to leave a bit on the plate,because it honors the host, meaning you were completely satiated. You also need to put your flatware in a diagonal position on the plate, indicating that you’re finished eating. I wish I knew that unspoken bit of etiquette. Nobody told me. I also had friends from Russia, and they had the same custom. “Eat, eat!” Whenever you clean your plate, lol
      Czechs are great hosts, and somebody always brings out a guitar, and we have sing alongs. That was so fun! They love music and love to sing

  • @lindabruns6020
    @lindabruns6020 Год назад +56

    I loved this! I am an American 🇸🇪 Swede and have always wanted to visit Sweden but funds don’t allow me to 😢. My grandparents felt that once they came to America they were Americans and did not carry the Swedish traditions over except our large family Christmas Eve gatherings. I grew up with potato sausage, rotmos and rice pudding and so wish we had celebrated St. Lucia, Midsommer, etc. I am proud to be Swedish and thank you for your info in this video! 💖🇸🇪💖

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +2

      Oh how cool! 🇸🇪❤️

    • @EdgarKohl
      @EdgarKohl Год назад +1

      Proud to see you keeping up the heritage alive and shame on your parents for turning their back on mother sweden🐮

    • @retireorbust
      @retireorbust Год назад +1

      A couple of travel hacks. Are you familiar with Workaway?
      As far as air fare check out air fares to various cities in Northern Europe from the biggest airport in your part of the country.
      I do what I call book-end travel. For instance to Sweden I would check to see first what direction flights to Stockholm cost, then check major cities. I will book a round trip ticket to say London, then buy tickets from London to Stockholm round trip. Also try Amsterdam, Berlin, Copenhagen... Once you get to Europe the connecting flights are cheap. We flew round trip from London to Rome for 120 dollars. It saved us over 500 each doing it that way.

    • @lindabruns6020
      @lindabruns6020 Год назад +4

      @@EdgarKohl it was my Grampa who decided that. He left Sweden around the turn of the century because his brother took his girlfriend. He found Gramma, who also came from Sweden, once he got to the USA.

    • @EdgarKohl
      @EdgarKohl Год назад +4

      @@lindabruns6020 too bad i wasn't born back then i would've paid him my respects he deserve for not rasing a hand to his brother, he did the right thing at moving away from his ordeal, bless you dear.

  • @AnthonyZullo-vh4cf
    @AnthonyZullo-vh4cf Год назад +16

    I worked for a Swedish organization in the USA and your description of the Swedish people is so true. A very enjoyable environment to work in. Fond memories.

  • @popply2
    @popply2 10 месяцев назад +5

    As a Swedish person.. I have two children, have never slept in the same bed as my children, they got their own bedroom when they were 4-9 months old. They were never afraid to sleep alone, they knew we were coming as soon as they called us.
    Also, you are not automatically enrolled in the Swedish Church at birth, only if your parents chose to baptize you in the Swedish Church. Every Swede has to pay funeral tax, but if you are not a member of the Swedish Church, you do not have to pay church tax. You can still have the funeral in the church even if you are not a member there, but then you have to pay for the venue and priest.

  • @Peel123
    @Peel123 2 года назад +292

    As a Swedish American living in Seattle, this video warms my heart. So many common sense things we could use in American society.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +7

      That makes me so happy to hear, thank you for your comment ❤️

    • @brickan2
      @brickan2 Год назад +6

      What is a Swedish American to you? The term it self is never used in Sweden and wouldn't mean anything. What does it entail? Thanks.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +10

      @@brickan2 I think we Swedes think this is very funny, but Americans tend to often present themselves with their ancestry (same here in NZ). Someone with Swedish great grandparents might say "I'm Swedish American", and often times it can be their great, great, great grandparents. Or many of my friends will say things like "I'm an eight Polish". Where as I, as a Swedish person, only say "I'm Swedish", although my mother was very much Norweigan. :D

    • @Peel123
      @Peel123 Год назад +13

      @@brickan2 I guess it can mean Swedish ancestry to a lot of Americans. For me, personally, it means something a bit different... having an American father but a fully Swedish mother, Swedish being my first language, and being a dual citizen. I also lived in Dalarna for a few years but grew up in America.

    • @brickan2
      @brickan2 Год назад +1

      So..... DNA and genetics.

  • @jakollee
    @jakollee Год назад +32

    A rolling pizza cutter can also be used to cut quesadillas; I'm sure there are other uses as well.

    • @ninagoodwill8019
      @ninagoodwill8019 Год назад +4

      & a rolling tool is one faster, two easier. I'm all for minimalist in many things in life but doing a job with a tool for easy and speed in anything in life, for sure. Maybe they use them in pizzerias?

    • @johnoneal1234
      @johnoneal1234 Год назад +9

      @@ninagoodwill8019 Ever tried to clean mozzarella melted onto tomato sauce from a pair of scissors?
      I can't believe she thinks it's a good solution.
      Pizza cutters are relatively tiny as kitchen gadgets go, and take up little room in a drawer.

    • @Diamond_Skies
      @Diamond_Skies Год назад +2

      The rusty-looking kitchen scissors took me out! 💀

    • @emilykloth5944
      @emilykloth5944 Год назад +2

      we also use them to cut pancakes or waffles for children

    • @rosemary20001
      @rosemary20001 Год назад +3

      I use mine for cutting home made pasta and cracker and cookie dough. I use mine a lot!

  • @ErikaMahoney
    @ErikaMahoney Год назад +9

    I was in Stockholm and loved their culture; I was in a few European countries, and I rank Sweeden number one in Friendly, Honesty, best customer service, best first impression, and welcoming tourists 🎉.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад

      Wow, I've only been to Stockholm once. I should go again! :)

  • @trumansparks2338
    @trumansparks2338 Год назад +13

    American here. If you don't collect race and other demographic data then you can't identify discrimination. That is a great way to hide discrimination, though.

  • @Metricate
    @Metricate Год назад +12

    This is awesome! Been learning Swedish for 2 months now, and keep getting recommended videos like this. It's like fate wants me to move to Sweden!

  • @PhilKelley
    @PhilKelley Год назад +88

    When I was very young (ca 1960), I lived in a suburban working class neighborhood outside of Detroit, Michigan, USA. We were taught these community rules about when you can and cannot make loud noises, knock on people's doors, or call them on the telephone. The basic rule is, it is rude to disturb people at certain times; this is what it means to be considerate of others.
    Do not disturb people before 8 o'clock in the morning on weekdays. After that time, children can go to their friends' houses and, in a sing-songy voice, call for them (children do not knock on doors). We would sing something like, "Can Bobby come out and pla-ay?"
    On Saturday and Sunday the same rule applies, but you don't disturb people before 9 o'clock. That is because people may be sleeping in on those days.
    Do not call a business before 9 o'clock in the morning during business hours. Businesses do not call customers before that time, either.
    Do not disturb people 30 minutes before (while mothers were preparing the meal) or during meal start times, which were pretty much the same for everyone. Breakfast before 8:00 AM. Lunch at noon. Dinner at 5:30 PM. In general, when children were done eating, they could ride their bikes or roller skate up and down the street waiting for heir friends to come out and play. However, in the summer, when a baseball game that had been interrupted by a meal (mothers called us in to eat with a sing-songy voice; when you heard it, you better drop everything and run home), we were eager to get back to playing the game, so some children might press their noses to the screen door of their friend's house to see if they were done eating. My mother thought this was rude and did not encourage it.
    Come home when the street lights come on and do not disturb people after that time.
    Between meals and before the street lights came on, you make as much noise as you wanted outside. You could play quietly inside with a few friends. However, if friends or relatives came to visit and brought their children, and you had to play inside, you could make lots of noise so long as it didn't sound like you were squabbling.
    These were the days before chainsaws and gasoline-powered lawn mowers were in common use. People used hand saws to cut tree limbs and mowed the lawn with a push-mower. During the day, the fathers were all at work and the mothers were busy with house work. Neighborhoods were pretty quiet most of the time.
    These rules about how you show consideration for others by giving them some quiet times would be good for everyone to follow. The times could differ from community-to-community, but the basic idea is a good one. Where I live now (suburb of Atlanta, Georria, USA), there are no such rules. I call it "the endless whining sound".
    "

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +10

      The common sense times huh! Here in NZ I often feel as though I live in “the endless whining sound” and there seems to be no escape. I think we need to reintroduce the common sense!
      I’m currently reading “an American tragedy” and it’s giving me an idea of what America was like a while back !

    • @billf7062
      @billf7062 Год назад +14

      You have a good memory and described that time period well. I was a boy in the sixties and I remember the same generally accepted practices too.

    • @bunnybgood411
      @bunnybgood411 Год назад +12

      You're making me nostalgic. I was born in 1955 and raised in Colorado Springs, Colorado, which was much smaller then, about 30-60 thousand people. We did everything you describe, although I think dinner was served at about 6:00 p.m. Dad had to rest a bit after getting home from the Air Force base. Halcyon times, for sure!

    • @aniveed8005
      @aniveed8005 Год назад +14

      I grew up in the green, leafy suburbs of New York City in the 1950's and it was just like that! My mother had a cowbell that she would ring to tell us to come home for dinner. Sweet memories.

    • @ashbythedog
      @ashbythedog Год назад +12

      I added a more restrictive 'Sunday rule' to my household (in the US). Not allowing anyone outside the family in or out before noon! Family time, church, brunch, or just hanging out in PJ's is what Sunday mornings are for. I didn't allow my kids to go knocking at the neighbors looking for friends to play with, and I sure didn't want the neighbor kids in my house disturbing the vibe. It's still a good rule.

  • @richard4hair
    @richard4hair Год назад +15

    I learned (a little late in life) it's arrogant for me to think I know what anyone else SHOULD do. However, I enjoyed hearing about other countries' customs

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад

      Well, I think there are better and worse ways of doing things :) depending on the goal that will change for people ofc!

    • @cordelia7313
      @cordelia7313 Год назад +5

      Exactly!! For someone with such a sweet disposition to fine iff as so completely judgmental is quite sad. At first I thought what a lovely girl that was until she basically said if you don’t do the same as this you’re just plain stupid. Really off putting when it could have been such a nice video in learning different ways people live around the world.

  • @luisnobrelucas150
    @luisnobrelucas150 6 месяцев назад +117

    "We are very humble" and "Everyone should be as us" is hilarious.

    • @Styggson
      @Styggson 5 месяцев назад +6

      Not being humble and not being inclusive is laughable?

    • @Greksallad
      @Greksallad 5 месяцев назад +6

      There are certain aspects of Swedish culture and values that I definitely think the entire world should emulate. Just because you think that doesn't mean you can't be humble.

    • @NicoleBe
      @NicoleBe 2 месяца назад +2

      Classic Scandinavian

    • @Hood.Housekeeping
      @Hood.Housekeeping 2 месяца назад +1

      This is a funny European joke that they tell and whoever laughs at it gets laughed at by the rest of the room because the statement “everyone should be more humble” should be a common sense no brainer but it’s not.

    • @aanler
      @aanler Месяц назад

      Swedish people are not humble, they want to be, they think they are, but deep down they KNOW they are better than you.

  • @MrSillySkits
    @MrSillySkits Год назад +21

    I was a Rotary exchange student after high school 1978-79 and it is still the best year of my life! I LOVE the Swedes, the food, the country and the friendly lifestyle lived there!!!!!❤❤❤❤

    • @ana419
      @ana419 Год назад

      Wow! Did you get yo meet ABBA?! 😊😍💓💕💛🕊

    • @ana419
      @ana419 Год назад

      Fellow alum here! 👍

    • @MrSillySkits
      @MrSillySkits Год назад +1

      @@ana419 unfortunately not. I think they were spending most of their time in the US during those years. I did get to attend the Nobel Awards Ceremony though

    • @ana419
      @ana419 Год назад

      @@MrSillySkits Very cool. What was that like? Who won that year?

  • @silmuffin86
    @silmuffin86 Год назад +20

    Cosleeping is not bad, the issue is bed-sharing (that is often confused with cosleeping). The solution you talked about is very popular in many countries, you can buy those sort of cribs to attach to your bed, and very safe. If you put an infant between 2 adults, with pillows and blankets, it's not safe

    • @cynthiawilkins3149
      @cynthiawilkins3149 10 месяцев назад +1

      Right! A big part of the issue many places have with co-sleeping is that the term is used in many places to refer to something different than what is described in the video.

  • @hannahoneil1956
    @hannahoneil1956 Год назад +20

    Thank you for this very informative video! Even though I am from the USA, I was raised with a few of these customs/traditions because mother was Swedish. Her grandparents immigrated to the USA in the early 1900s so I never got a chance to learn Swedish. My grandmother was fluent, and mom’s family still kept up many Swedish traditions, especially around the holidays. My mom passed away unexpectedly last year, so we visited Sweden for the first time and I felt very connected to her. I even saw a woman who looked so much like her! I will definitely continue these traditions, especially since I have been staying in Iceland for 4 months and feel so at home in Nordic and Scandinavian countries because of my heritage

    • @lisaowen1320
      @lisaowen1320 9 месяцев назад +1

      Liked your video. Loved learning about sweden. Lovely country.

    • @kari1884
      @kari1884 5 месяцев назад

      Amazing. Just keep honor ur Mother. Seeden is a beautiful country

  • @lindahoch9541
    @lindahoch9541 9 месяцев назад +1

    So interesting to learn more about Sweden and its culture. My Grandfather was born and grew up in Sweden. However he came to America in 1899 and was naturalized as an American citizen in 1904. Sadly he died 10 years before I was born, so I'm always glad to know more about his native country. Thank you are sharing.

  • @ruthemanuel9206
    @ruthemanuel9206 Год назад +18

    I have to agree with other Germans here in the chat that there is quite some similarities between Sweden and Germany. I found the point about the kids worth considering - I think we are treating teenagers in a more „adult“ way than in other countries (a thing that our Japanese exchange daughter pointed out) but I think it would do us good to also adopt the more respectful approach for younger kids (by the way, being respectful does not mean that you don’t parent!). - A thing about Germany I am loving more the more I experience other countries is our body positivity. Of course there is still pressure on young people from social media to look „instagramable“ but overall there is a very free and relaxed atmosphere for example about nudity at beaches, in the sauna etc. People before and beyond puberty are overall very relaxed about the way they look. For me that is a big part of feeling comfortable in Germany.

  • @martinam9989
    @martinam9989 2 года назад +26

    Love this video! I studied in Sweden for 1 semester as an Erasmus student and I absolutely loved it there. Especially the idea of never being "over the top" or too loud etc., just having this more moderate approach to life. And the fact that everyone spoke perfect English was amazing, although it also meant that I did not learn to speak Swedish at all.
    I am absolutely with you on the duvet topic - we do the same with the duvet inner & outer here in Austria and I think it's the only reasonable approach to bedding, touching the "uncovered" blanket freaks me out whenever I'm abroad 😀

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +2

      Thank you Martina! Oh how exciting, yes it is so nice with the moderate approach. :) Yes, I know. Learning Swedish is so hard because we all want to PRACTICE English lol!
      Hahah oh my gosh, same. It happens every time we go to stay somewhere here in New Zealand - even in hotels. And it always make me feel funny...

    • @thesender6321
      @thesender6321 Год назад +5

      As an American, I’m used to a top sheet and a blanket. I vacationed in Germany, and my room had a duvet and no top sheet. I got so hot I would take the duvet apart and just use the cover as a double top sheet whereas in the US I could have just taken the blanket off the bed. Every day the maid would put the duvet innard back in the cover, and I would have to take it back out every night. Why do they think we need so many covers at night? It wasn’t even winter.

    • @lilipotgieter6263
      @lilipotgieter6263 Год назад +2

      I live in South Africa and we also do the duvet with no extra sheets or blankets

    • @lililoladzinergrl5255
      @lililoladzinergrl5255 Год назад

      You can just sleep on top of the duvet like a feather bed if you get too hot. That’s what we did in Switzerland when visiting family there. I believe everywhere we traveled in Switzerland, Austria, Yugoslavia ( back when it was named that!) and Germany and Italy. All of those places used the single duvet and when too hot sleep on top of the duvet- like sleeping on a cloud!😊

  • @harleenataloni4469
    @harleenataloni4469 Год назад +20

    Ahahha i’m glad you clarified in Italian 😂😂😂 “fica” definitely means something else!!! Thanks for sharing this video, I enjoyed learning these Swedish practices!❤

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +2

      😂😂😂 So important, right! Haha! Thank you

    • @bunnybgood411
      @bunnybgood411 Год назад

      What does it mean? Is it related to fecal?

    • @bunnybgood411
      @bunnybgood411 Год назад

      "Fica": 💩?

    • @harleenataloni4469
      @harleenataloni4469 Год назад +3

      @@bunnybgood411 it can mean like a very attractive female but also a word for the female genitalia. Both are used in a more vulgar sense so not something you just wanna throw around in public lol

  • @turawolfe2841
    @turawolfe2841 11 месяцев назад +2

    Very nice for you that you are so happy with Sweden. Sounds like you will be there with your traditions for your whole life.

  • @ilikeyoutube836
    @ilikeyoutube836 Год назад +174

    American here. I did cosleeping with both of my children. I didn't even know I would do this until the night my first child was born. Then an instinct kicked in that told me there was no way I was putting my son in a bassinet next to my bed. I LOVED sleeping with my kids, and I really don't understand why some people believe it to be harmful. I've since learned that cosleeping regulates the baby's heartbeat, breathing, and temperature, and that the majority of babies who die from SIDS die cold and alone in their cribs. It just makes sense to sleep with our young. Every other animal in nature does it, and for good reason. It also helps with bonding, babies sleeping through the night sooner, parents getting more sleep, and it makes breastfeeding so much easier. Funny to me that only the western world believes it to be a problem, when the rest of the world knows better, and does it with no problems
    Edit: to those of you who disagree, you're free to disagree, and you can present all the "facts" you wish, but the FACT that we among countless others all over the world have safely and successfully bed shared with our children isn't going to change. Yes, rarely some people accidentally suffocate their babies in bed. There are usually other factors involved besides just sleeping with the baby, and the number of people who sleep with their babies and DON'T suffocate them, as compared to the ones who do, should be an obvious indicator of how safe it IS. Unless you're a very heavy sleeper, you use drugs or alchohol, you're a very overweight person, etc, sleeping with your baby shouldn't present any danger. Simple common sense measures should obviously be taken, such as not over dressing the baby, and placing the baby more at the top of the bed, while the parents scoot down more toward the foot, so that when they pull up their covers the baby isn't covered. People really crack me up when they insist that bed sharing can not possibly be safe, when parents have been doing this since the dawn of humanity, and will continue to do so, carefully and safely. Beyond this I won't bother to argue the subject.
    I said what I said.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +18

      Yes, thank you so much for sharing. Such such important knowledge and we are failing to take care of our babies in the western world!!! ❤️

    • @keithfavreau
      @keithfavreau Год назад +12

      Many Americans are big& could be a hazard to their baby through suffocation. Also, many parents snore or have sleep disorders which could effect the baby, or having the baby there could make it more difficult for the parent.

    • @Secular-Serenity
      @Secular-Serenity Год назад +8

      @@keithfavreau yes, overeating trumps kids’ needs in America🤪

    • @lydiawhitting5406
      @lydiawhitting5406 Год назад +16

      Cot right next to bed is great. Husband rolled on our baby once, and he's not a heavy man.. but she let out a squeak. I'm for it except rolling, or smothering. Baby can also get very hot from adults bodies as well. So yes next to the bed as in this video is way better. When they learn to walk.. they find their own way to your bed. 🤣Same problem.. n u get punched or kicked if they too hot then whilst sleeping.

    • @wendylynn7605
      @wendylynn7605 Год назад

      American here. We co-slept with our child and to this day my mother still says we're lucky we didn't kill her doing it.

  • @briw1555
    @briw1555 Год назад +7

    I just wash all the sheets, pillowcases, and the duvet cover once a week. Having two sets of sheets/pillowcases can make this less of a chore, since you can do them on separate days🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @jeanbloom7513
    @jeanbloom7513 Год назад +9

    My paternal grandfather's family immigrated from Sweden to the US near the end of the 19th century. As he was the youngest of 12 children, he was more American than Swedish, although he still spoke some Swedish. My other 3 grandparents were Irish. My paternal grandmother did her best to provide Swedish foods my grandfather liked such as Skorpra (sp?), similar to a biscotti with cinnamon on top with very strong coffee and, especially on Easter, that wonderful sausage we just called korv. We were lucky to have a Swedish bakery that delivered pastries and such to your door up until the 1970's. We have his birth certificate written in Swedish which looks like a page out of a manuscript; all colorfully inked and scrolled.

  • @ingersteere6414
    @ingersteere6414 9 месяцев назад +2

    I love you comments. I return to Sweden frequently and have never been approached by Svensplaining Swedes. Swedish ideas and customs are far better than in most countries I have been to. Great video!!

  • @vickidavis8927
    @vickidavis8927 Год назад +10

    (1) Scissors are the only way to cut pizza!!! (2) Separate beds are even better than separate duvets! (3) Totally with you about duvets needing to have a cover! (4) Yes! Cold weather is not a deterrent when one is dressed warmly!! (5) Love everything you said about kids! (6) Agree about co-sleeping!! (7) So interesting about the dating issue!! (8) Your English is spectacular.
    THANK YOU - This is all so interesting!

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +2

      Thank you!

    • @hk-1290
      @hk-1290 Год назад +1

      It worked on an episode of Breaking Bad!

  • @EnGammalAmazon
    @EnGammalAmazon Год назад +9

    Thanks for a great video. I recognize so much of what you shared. To start with, I think that the one thing that almost every Swedish emigrant left in Sweden when they came to North America was jantelagen. Long before I had ever heard of the principles of jantelagen, I remember my dad telling us, "You're no better than anyone else, but you are no less than anyone else either. You just worry about doing your best and that is all you need to do."
    I grew up in Washington State just north of the city of Seattle. My dad's family were all Swedish and I had no idea just how 'Swedish' Dad was until 2011 when I was making my second trip to Sweden. My first trip to Sweden was in 1971 when I was 20. It took me 40 years to get back to Sweden and that was when I realized how absolutely Swedish Dad was. It also explained why I do so many things that felt different that most Americans. I finally began going back to Sweden more often and eventually worked in Sweden for a year in the lumber industry. All this time I was doing more and more research into my family heritage. I also did two DNA tests and found that I am 78% Nordic; most of which is Swedish with a little Norwegian and Finnish.
    I have been designing and building handcrafted log homes for over 50 years. I do not know how this came to be. It felt more like the career chose me than me choosing to be a log builder. About 20 years ago I discovered that min farmors far vär också en timmerman. The deeper I dug into the family history, I found that min farmors farfar, utan min farmors farfar också var en timmerbyggare. Sedan upptäckte jag att min farfar och han frufar var timmerbyggare. I was now beginning to understand that genetics may be playing a big role in why my life has turned out the way it has. All this lead to the point where I wanted to spend more and more time in Sweden. I finally gave up. I surrendered to the fact that I AM Swedish. Two weeks ago, I finished a two and a half year process of finding and buying a farm in Sweden located three hours north of Stockholm. I'm in the process of sorting out my entire life to decide what I want to bring to Sweden. I am bringing my business to Sweden. I now know why I have felt more at home in Sweden than I ever have in the US. I just had to come home.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +1

      Oh my goodness, what a beautiful stories! Our ancestors affect us more than we think. I’m so so happy for you and I wish to hear more of how your life in Sweden unfolds. A timber house also sounds amazing!

    • @kari1884
      @kari1884 5 месяцев назад +1

      Ur story made made me cry!!! I love Sweden and Us bit om movible ro Sweden soon . Im from Perú, maube i have some ancestros too bc o never felt completely identified as pwruvian idkw!!

  • @carolynlarke1340
    @carolynlarke1340 Год назад +18

    Sweden is another reason to love humanity. Every culture has quirks and customs. It's why I always travelled in my work and now as a retiree. My few months of experience in Sweden didn't show me all of these things but some other things are understood now. You have good screen presence and were clever and funny in your presentation. Thank you.

  • @libbywish7123
    @libbywish7123 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you so much for sharing all about Sweden with the world. 🙏💜

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for watching 💜

  • @amydfu
    @amydfu Год назад +5

    Interesting video! Probably worth mentioning that places in the US ask for your race to comply with anti discrimination laws. It's not great that things are inequal enough that we need to do this, but "not talking about it" also won't help the problem go away.

  • @sipto45
    @sipto45 Год назад +74

    I'm Swede and would say I agree on most things! :) True there is very little visible abuse, but there is a kind of an hidden oppression leading to high conformity, like does not Jamtelagen basically mean "don't think you are special/keep you head down" or something? And "whole and clean" comes from systematically singling out poor people in older generations in school to shame them, maybe it made us cleaner and less sick.. But again there is a side that alot of people moving to sweden might find rough as well

    • @auberjean6873
      @auberjean6873 Год назад +18

      Sipto
      Your honesty is refreshing. I am first generation American from very strict, somewhat obsessive, Austrian parents. Most of the customs in Europe have a great rational, especially over there. Good to keep the sensible and discard the senseless/harmful. By only showing the good and normal side she was doing what Swedes and Austrians do!

    • @katherinespencer2073
      @katherinespencer2073 Год назад +3

      Poverty never makes people dirty....water & soap are cheap. Yes washing clothing often fades them, & that shows. But we see filthy people who are not really poor (coloured hair, painted nails and faces & filthy but name brand shoes & houses full of junky stuff). Truly poor people do not spend on non essentials since most are saving for important things that will improve their lives. And often tend to care very much for their homes, themselves. Simple but clean.

    • @alfredopampanga9356
      @alfredopampanga9356 Год назад +5

      All that charm is a little cloying

    • @billbottsurfing
      @billbottsurfing Год назад +4

      I think a lot of mothers sleep with their babies but won't admit to it because they are told it's dangerous.

    • @mirjam3553
      @mirjam3553 Год назад

      I always translated it as "healthy and clean"... Am I actually wrong (my local 'terve ja puhas' can also work both ways) or is that just a matter of taste/opinion?

  • @aldaron1021
    @aldaron1021 Год назад +140

    I think many of these things apply to all Europeans especially the idea that you should always dress up nicely when you go out no matter on what occasion. This was absolutely clear when I went on a Summer Work and Travel Program in the US - you could see all young people from Europe ( we were mostly from Central and Eastern Europe) were always dressed well when outside compared to Americans and this made an impression on the Americans. I talked to a general store owner when I was purchasing some things and he told me that this was his store and he has been open for more than 20 years and each year he sees hundreds of young students that come from Europe to work ( mostly from countries that are considered Eastern Europe even though many prefer Central ) and they are always well groomed, clean, tidy and well dressed when outside walking around compared to Americans and actually I very much like this tradition that we have in Europe because this way when outside you are surrounded by a nice crowd of people and feel better. I think we in Europe are brought to think that when you cross the border somehow the people that live there will be completely different in any way but the truth is that we have lived on the same continent for Thousands of years and we have so much more in common in our everyday lives than we know.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +12

      That's very interesting. I think people in the US used to dress up just like people in Europe, but capitalism and modern day consumption/fashion has a greater influence in the US. Also obesity and culture.
      Like you say, I think we have much more in common than we think :)

    • @jadyswift
      @jadyswift Год назад +18

      When I was studying abroad (I'm from Brazil) all Americans were in awe of the clothes of our Danish and Swedish classmates. They dressed in a classy and elegant way every day. Even though Brazilian youth has tried mimicking the US, especially in urban areas, it was shocking to me how untidy a lot of my US classmates were in their appearance. However, no one was more shocked than the Scandinavians haha I remember my Danish friend saying it looked like people in the US went to class wearing pajamas.

    • @valsblueforrest2961
      @valsblueforrest2961 Год назад +4

      ​@Jady Sampaio Once when I was in the States in a supermarket I saw a woman shopping in her pyjamas.

    • @avagosiewski2018
      @avagosiewski2018 Год назад +17

      @@valsblueforrest2961, This is normal here in the US. When I moved to the US, it was a culture shock for me - showing up in public in pajamas and slippers. In my country, even to a store close to home, I would wear makeup and be nicely dressed. Now I like that I don't have to worry about my appearance and no one judges me.

    • @valsblueforrest2961
      @valsblueforrest2961 Год назад +7

      @Ava Gosiewski I try to find a middle ground that is comfortable for me. I do find that the need for outward appearances is very strong in Europe. It can be uncomfortable to be starred at from top to bottom with a judgemental look.

  • @FelicityBaby-jz8wx
    @FelicityBaby-jz8wx 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love this! Although I will say, in terms of sheet’s it’s so you don’t have to wash the duvet cover as this is a lot of faffing with putting it on. You just change the sheet. You still have a duvet cover incase you need to wash both. We don’t actually do this, we only have a duvet too. But traditionally it’s to help hygiene as it’s easier to clean so you can do it more often

  • @susana5052
    @susana5052 2 года назад +33

    I really appreciate your videos!❤
    My mother is Japanese and when I visited Europe in the 80s I discovered a lot of similar things that the Swedish in Japanese both do.
    Second to not wearing shoes in the house, that I love, is the duvet/duvet covers. Duvets makes making beds easier, keeps bedding & body cleaner than blankets, washing covers vs blankets takes less water, takes up less space in the linen closet, is easier to fold & carry vs the American bedding.
    The Japanese have a similar version of the duvet & the duvet cover. It’s like a fitted sheet but goes on the duvet where the body touches the duvet & apx 30-45 cm that wraps around & over the duvet edges. The Japanese store all their bedding out of sight in the day and take it out at bedtime.
    Unfortunately the American home usually doesn’t have a place to store away the Japanese bedding which would include the “mattress” part.
    Since my first visit to Europe I started using the European duvet & covers. It looks so much tidier with all the bedding in sight all the time.
    The way children are raised is the same as Swedish raise their children. In Japan they have special days to celebrate their children. It’s 😮a way to make the children feel special and loved.
    Dating is also something that don’t see even today. People usually go out in groups and “dating” is basically when a couple has decided to marry. It’s a blurry line so it’s hard to “date”. Maybe that’s from the days of “arrangement marriage”..?
    Also Japanese people that don’t live in the city usually don’t eat processed foods. If they pickle some thing they do it themselves. Even making their own noodles is very common. Unfortunately the Japanese are becoming more westernized and it showing in their health. For instance there’s no word for menopause in Japanese because women didn’t have any symptoms while going through that change. I’m not a doctor but I would attribute that to the diet of fresh and unprocessed foods. The more processed foods they eat the more cancer and other diseases are showing up, sadly.😢
    Also the Japanese culture, as most people know l, don’t wear shoes inside the home. I grew up with pure white wool carpet in the main living room and it stayed white. Of course my mother would steam clean the carpet A LOT.
    There’s a list of “manners” when it comes to shoes, where to take them off, who helps who and the order of who takes their shoes off first, how to take them off and who flips them around so putting shoes back on is easier, etc. The only time my mother got VERY upset with my father was when he tried to tip toe his way into the bathroom having just put on his boots and she caught him doing it! Needless to say he didn’t do that again.😂

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +4

      Oh my gosh I LOVE your stories 😂❤️ I lived in Japan for a year and a half so I can relate to so many things, unfortunately also the western diet creeping in.
      I love the menopause story. I will use that all the time now 😂 I always reference the prostate cancer stats in Japan, so now I have another one!
      And oh my goodness the shoes… 😂 I had my husband’s friend come visit here in NZ and I told my husband in advance that no matter what happens the friend can’t wear shoes. So it all went fine and he took his shoes off outside. BUT, when he is about to leave he went outside, picked the shoes up, sat down in our living room and put them on, then took the five steps to the front door. Oh my goodness, I had to stop myself from screaming 😂
      It hasn’t happened here since either 😂❤️❤️❤️

    • @johnbelville4566
      @johnbelville4566 Год назад +9

      When i grew up in Germany, people had "house shoes" which meant that the minute you got home you took off your "street shoes" and put on your inside slippers which in winter were cosy knitted or sheepskin booties. Also people had slippers for visitors so nobody ever brought in mud and dirt from outside into the home. It just makes sense

    • @annettefournier9655
      @annettefournier9655 Год назад

      It's the soybean use that eases menopause. Soy is estrogen rich. Only down side is that it also feeds breast cancer tumors.

  • @TheBcvg2002
    @TheBcvg2002 Год назад +351

    I lived in Sweden, near Växjö for 7 and a half years. There are many good things about Sweden but one of the most common complaints that I heard among other immigrants was what we referred to as "Svensplaining." Unfortunately, it's very common for Swedish people to think that their way is the right way but also the only way. I have been stopped by strangers and told how to: 1. Walk my dog 2. How to dress my children 3. How to dispose of the trash 4. What color to paint my home. 5. How to walk in the mall (not kidding). I could go on, the list is endless. What you feel after a while is that no matter how hard you try, Swedish people by and large will tolerate you but never accept you as you are not "correct," or rather plainly, Swedish.

    • @TheBcvg2002
      @TheBcvg2002 Год назад +1

      They even have a term for it in Sweden among the Swedes- "ankdamman sverige," "duck pond Sweden." They think that they are so advanced but in my profession they pay half of what you earn in the US and are about 30 years behind the profession here. But... they are a bit backwards and don't know it, so they think that they are the best in everything. Ignorantly.

    • @joannaoakley6731
      @joannaoakley6731 Год назад +12

      So true

    • @KatG-vw4db
      @KatG-vw4db Год назад +25

      Could be that they want to teach everyone their ways which is perhaps a culture of uniformity. I've never lived abroad but my ancestry is half german half swediah and I tend to be a perfectionist so maybe my DNA is a bit geared this way and so is theirs

    • @TheBcvg2002
      @TheBcvg2002 Год назад

      Conformity is definitely a huge part of the culture. It can be endearing but after a few years it becomes unpleasant. @@KatG-vw4db

    • @stoogethree4438
      @stoogethree4438 Год назад +17

      There are as many perfectionist anywhere else.The Germans never talk about their imperfections.There is great silence & great judgement for every damn thing."Get off my lawn!", privacy, and secrets.

  • @trisld
    @trisld Год назад +11

    Though I haven't heard it called co-sleeping, I instinctively did that with my babies, then later let them sleep together or with me. It is absolutely a deep comfort to their souls, their sense of well being. It is not an American custom, but perhaps should be.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +2

      That is so amazing ❤ Yes, according to science it's the best thing for babies health!

    • @susanwilliams2149
      @susanwilliams2149 9 месяцев назад +2

      Brit living in Japan here😊It’s aJapanese custom to which I readily adopted.
      How the heck does anybody breastfeed a child if you’re not co-sleeping😂?

    • @sgtigereye
      @sgtigereye 9 месяцев назад

      I currently cosleep with my 18 month old, at what age did your kids feel comfortable sleeping on their own? When did you start to transition them? I want to eventually have my little one transition to their own bed but I don’t even know where to begin lol

    • @susanwilliams2149
      @susanwilliams2149 9 месяцев назад +3

      They moved out on their own.😂 but it was a while. Breast feeding stopped when the next one came along and the bed got a bit crowded. I think the older child felt like as a big brother he was ready to get his own bed. Four or five years old? As this is Japan and it was many years ago it was not beds but sleeping mats on the tatami so it was just a question of rolling over a bit.
      A natural graduation?

  • @19Celia57
    @19Celia57 10 месяцев назад +3

    I am a US citizen living in the USA. Both my grandfathers were Swedish and both my grandmothers were Norwegian. I had a large and close-knit family. My deceased husband was German from a very patriarchal family. THAT was a shock to assimilate into that kind of family. LOL My #2 husband is Swedish. Ahhh, the calm again. LOL Many years ago I lived in Houston, TX in the USA. I lost track of how many people asked me where I was from! Apparently not only my extremely fair skin and hair were an anomaly but my mannerisms, ideas and my general lifestyle as well. I learned a lot living there and I hope I passed on some good things to others.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад

      That is so interesting to hear! And how fun :) My mom was Norweigan and dad Swedish! Haha, I can imagine!
      I would love to visit Texas one day!

    • @19Celia57
      @19Celia57 10 месяцев назад

      @@SagaJohanna Maybe hold off visiting Texas until they get a few things sorted out. LOL. Of course that might be a long while. 🙂

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад

      Haha yes! I know, it's such a shame. I have a few friends from there and they're amazing! @@19Celia57

  • @carolynskelly4763
    @carolynskelly4763 Год назад +12

    I am Canadian and I agree most of what you describe. Because we are such a diverse culture I do discuss Race as something that is important to understand differences.

    • @amykeast7789
      @amykeast7789 Год назад +4

      I agree, in the US I think the reason why for officially tracking race is to identify and address systemic racism.

    • @kathycourtney2
      @kathycourtney2 Год назад

      I'm hispanic and wish people would NOT talk about it...we are equal and don't need anyone tracking anything.@@amykeast7789

    • @raymondkyruana118
      @raymondkyruana118 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah her calling it "ridiculous" was pretty shocking cause I didn't think people were still that ignorant let a lone a whole country of ~95% whites @@amykeast7789

  • @judim5379
    @judim5379 Год назад +5

    I find your mannerisms voice and communication style just absolutely delightful. Thank you for sharing your culture with us!!! I hope to experience it firsthand someday.

  • @andruspuusta4230
    @andruspuusta4230 Год назад +15

    For me as Estonian are very easy to be around people from nordic countries. I do think very similar way. Have lived and worked one year in the family in Denmark in the end of 1990-s. Also worked in Ireland for a year and in Norway in a year. With my work have been in Sweden 10 -s of times for short period. Always enjoined. No stress and nice people to communicate with. My babies have always co-slept with me. Children have to get there parents closeness and love as long as it is possible.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад

      That is very interesting. I had a friend from Estonia and she was very lovely, quiet and kind :) That is great to hear about the children!

  • @tiffviens2932
    @tiffviens2932 11 месяцев назад +2

    Some of these things I do as an American. Cool to see some shared culture. Ive always wanted to live in the Netherlands.

  • @annies2143
    @annies2143 Год назад +25

    Hey @sagajohanna,
    We definitely have Duvets in the USA. We also have comforters. In between the fitted sheet is a normal bed sheet. Our bodies usually don’t touch the duvet or comforter, just the fitted sheet and bed sheet. Also, it’s common practice to dry clean your comforter or wash your duvet. It’s not like we don’t clean it. Just clearing that up! :)
    -Annie from NYC

    • @lseward21
      @lseward21 Год назад

      I believe her point was that we don’t wash or dry clean them every week.

    • @lindajane8962
      @lindajane8962 Год назад +3

      @@lseward21 I don't know why she thinks that. Sheets get washed every week. I hate duvets and duvet covers; the covers are a big pain in the tush to deal with. Give me a top sheet and blanket any day, lol!

  • @16-BitGuy
    @16-BitGuy Год назад +4

    About the bad weather - bad clothing thing: we germans have the exact same saying. Also we do often ask others what they could eat before you host a party.

    • @Kartoffelsuppe_m_Wursteinlage
      @Kartoffelsuppe_m_Wursteinlage 9 месяцев назад +1

      Right. In Germany it also means, that there's no excuse to stay at home, because of the weather.

  • @BananaGrace
    @BananaGrace Год назад +26

    I’m in America. These values and customs sound wonderful. I’d love to visit someday and explore your culture and learn about it. Thank you for sharing this

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +1

      I love visiting America and have close friends there! But has not seen enough of your large country! Hope you get to visit Sweden one day!

    • @DNA350ppm
      @DNA350ppm Год назад +1

      Yes, Anna, do come.

  • @kasha703
    @kasha703 9 месяцев назад +1

    Finn here. Obviously, the entire world would benefit from adopting our sauna culture. Also, bidet showers, aka. "bum guns", for washing your behind after doing a 'number two' are a fantastic and highly practical invention: no skid marks, no itching, significant reduction in thrush infections... These handheld little showers also make washing the the toilet and sink easier, and make prerinsing of very messy laundry a lot easier (something parents of small children can appreciate).
    As for duvet covers, YES, preferably the Finnish style, with holes in the corner for the hands - makes it so much easier to put the duvet cover on! I avoid buying IKEA duvet covers because they don't have them.

  • @janunderwood4033
    @janunderwood4033 Год назад +91

    There is much to appreciate in Swedish culture! I will clarify one thing that comes up in many multicultural societies: the reason institutions ask about race is not out of some weird curiosity or desire to classify people, but to gather data so they can make sure they are treating all clients fairly. For example, a bank could look at its records and see that it tends to deny loans to clients of color but grant them to white people in the same income bracket or with the same credit score. That kind of discrimination definitely happens, but it’s hard to see and to change without collecting statistics.

    • @alexlashman4279
      @alexlashman4279 Год назад

      By taking race out of the equation, the bank is only making the decision based on financial situation.

    • @BajkonurBobby
      @BajkonurBobby Год назад +13

      Was gonna say that too. Its to counter discrimination, not the other way around. Different national methods dealing with the same issue. 👍🙂

    • @cathylindeboo.9598
      @cathylindeboo.9598 Год назад +3

      I was thinking how institutions routinely gather basic data, which can be useful yielding information in the form of statistics.

    • @MaryannCn
      @MaryannCn Год назад +22

      Exactly this! Homogenous societies arguably don’t need to ask. But it is a very important tool to prevent illegal discrimination in many countries.

    • @BajkonurBobby
      @BajkonurBobby Год назад

      @@wisedomandlearning I disagree on the “letting in” part. I really think its to do with an inability of the authorities to integrate new citizens. An official misguided respect where they don’t want to “force” Swedish culture upon them. When in fact that is the very thing you should do if you want to welcome people into your community. In my opinion.
      Swedes are generally very quick to be interested in people visiting their country and eager to explain and show newcomers how things work. But if you don’t feel like you’re part of society because you don’t speak the language properly, only live among other immigrants, don’t take part in Swedish cultural events/spend time with Swedes, of course that interaction will be much more difficult and up to the individual. Even more so for children who follow given examples. A grave disservice done to immigrants, and Swedes. And to Swedish society.
      BUT lets focus on all the happy things! There are many more of them! 😊👍❤️❤️❤️

  • @anubis2814
    @anubis2814 Год назад +7

    The duvet cover is apparently useful if you live in cold climate regions. If you are here in the US, top sheets are a godsend during the summer while duvet covers are useful in the winter..

    • @RosangelaHeuseler
      @RosangelaHeuseler 9 месяцев назад +1

      I missed a top sheet when I went to Germany. I dont like Duvet If The place is hot enough .

    • @Dee-x9f
      @Dee-x9f 6 месяцев назад +1

      I'm an American who switched to the duvet way 30 years ago (had a Swedish boyfriend). As she explained, you use the duvet cover in the summer alone. It's the perfect weight and temperature on hot nights because it's a light, double top sheet. It also can be used as a "sleep bag" if you camp or travel to hostels. Also, duvets come it a variety of weights. You don't buy an extra thick, warm one if you live in say, the mid-Atlantic states or San Francisco. I live in upstate NY, so have a puffy winter weight plus a lighter one for the shoulder seasons.

    • @anubis2814
      @anubis2814 6 месяцев назад

      @@Dee-x9f I just recently switched over, and that's mostly because the covers we got we this microfiber that just feels better than the sheets we have.

  • @ana419
    @ana419 Год назад +5

    You are so sweet and I love your culture! Please don't ever change, not even and especially not your education system! All Swedes are a light to this world! Wish the whole world were Sweden!

  • @NewportScorpio
    @NewportScorpio Месяц назад

    Came across this video because I'm writing a book where a Swedish woman is one of the characters. And I was trying to learn enough about the culture to make the character realistic. This video was pretty informative and I'm hoping you have more for me to learn from. Thank you.

  • @Noon_00Nz
    @Noon_00Nz 2 года назад +12

    Presenting yourself as best as I can is kinda one of the best values I carry. I’m from Thailand.
    Personally, I suppose I cannot look people into the eyes if I were to raise my voice.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +2

      That’s an amazing value❤️

  • @Jeffrey.Seelman
    @Jeffrey.Seelman 2 года назад +12

    Thank you for that most enlightening information on Sweden. It sounds like a very nice place. I am from the United States. I think I would have problems in Sweden because I am an extrovert. I'm used to talking to people including strangers, which is very common in the Midwest of the United States. I think that I would be lonely in Sweden. I always thought that the only way to get to know people is to talk to people that I do not know. Good people. Reasonable people. Not just anybody.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +8

      Thank you for your comment! Oh I think I'm too extroverted for Sweden as well haha. I love the attitude of the people from the Midwest because I too, love talking! I'd never EVER Had a person next to me on a flight speak to me until I flew through Texas to Utah. I had a lovely man from Texas next to me and we spoke about everything, keeping ourselves entertained throughout the long flight - and getting to know each other at the same time. I think the best way to learn about things, be it places, people or culture, is through connecting with people. So I feel the same way as you do! I often say that I'm very Swedish when I'm abroad, but when I'm home people think I'm more American than Scandinavian !

  • @dorotabarbowska2184
    @dorotabarbowska2184 Год назад +4

    Surprisingly, I was born in Poland and I've lived here most of my life and do almost all the "weird " things you 've listed and never thought they were weird. 😄"Almost" because not everything you mentioned is up to an individual.

  • @Es24688
    @Es24688 9 месяцев назад +2

    We co-slept with the exact same kind of half crib. It was wonderful, and made nursing and nighttime so much easier!

  • @Itsjustttomar
    @Itsjustttomar Год назад +7

    You make me wanna move to Sweden, I also adore the show called Melodifestivalen which very popular in Sweden and as a Eurovision fan it’s a pleasure for me to watch Melodifestivalen too and enjoy the amazing songs every year, you are so sweet, thank you for your videos and kindness, I can say from your eyes that you have a huge good heart 💛

  • @dianemitchell1161
    @dianemitchell1161 Год назад +33

    My husband and I were introduced to using separate duvets with no top sheets while travelling in Sweden five years ago. As soon as we got back we rushed to IKEA to buy the wider single sheets and covers and it is the best thing for sleeping comfortably and cleanly.

    • @rebeccacarter1914
      @rebeccacarter1914 Год назад +1

      Sounds great, but here in Florida, it won't work. I bought the lightest comforter Ikea had when I first moved here. After four years without using it, I gave it to my cousin in Kentucky.

    • @larahporter8123
      @larahporter8123 Год назад +8

      I prefer two separate full sized beds! Together but respecting each other’s space!

    • @dianemitchell1161
      @dianemitchell1161 Год назад +8

      @@rebeccacarter1914 We get very hot and humid weather here as well. During this time we do as was suggested in the video - discard the doona and just use the doona cover, like a sheet.

    • @Denise5719-x7n
      @Denise5719-x7n Год назад +9

      @@larahporter8123 yes! I’ve never understood why couples “have” to sleep in the same bed! Or even the same bedroom! I am so much more comfortable in my own bed and room

    • @larahporter8123
      @larahporter8123 Год назад +2

      @@Denise5719-x7n exactly right

  • @peopleofonefire9643
    @peopleofonefire9643 Год назад +12

    Right after graduation from architecture school, I traveled to Landskrona to work for its Stadsarkitektkontoret. My girlfriend was studying law at Lund University. I didn't find southern Swedes weird at all. There were absolutely no social conflicts. At least in Southern Sweden, young adults DID go on dates. My girlfriend and I preferred going out in nature for our dates, not going to discos or bars. We did go to big dances at Lund University. One time, the singers of the band were Agnetha and Ani-frid - before they were the A's in ABBA. Neither one of us drank anything stronger than beer or wine, We especially enjoyed picnics beside the Oresund Channel. I attended a Methodist church in Landskrona. RUclips videos make it seem that Swedes and Americans are very different and don't get along . . . but I found that a young man from Atlanta, GA got along exceedingly well with a flycka from Malmo, Skane and all of her friends. Maybe if I was from New York City, things would have been different.

  • @arellartur
    @arellartur 10 месяцев назад +3

    👌😌
    I've just discovered this channel and I already love it.
    I totally understand what Saga Johanna shares: several years ago, in my Erasmus year, I made some good swedish friends.
    And I can relate the "quirky" ideas she gave, rather logical, I'd say 👍

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  10 месяцев назад +1

      Oh thanks so much! That is so kind!

  • @ctafrance
    @ctafrance Год назад +9

    Hahaha. Fika. Yeah. Early on after I moved to Stockholm, I held my first workshop out of town, up in the town of Östersund, sort of north central Sweden. I was so excited. At the end of this two day workshop, late in the afternoon, I planned what the French would consider a lovely little spread. French cheese, cold meats (charcuterie in French) and a couple of bottles of really nice French wine, red and white. Imagine my surprise when, as we broke for the day, I presented all this to the participants, all Swedes from Östersund, and NOBODY wanted any of it. No cheese, no meats, no wine, no bread. You see, it was not FIKA, coffee and pastries. So, it was just not DOABLE: hahaha. Never made that mistake again!

  • @StefanieZoe
    @StefanieZoe Год назад +24

    I am from Czechia. My boyfriend and I lived in Göteborg for a few years. An other thing I found very surprising is a fact that swedish kids were aloud to play in cold water. Even though parents were standing on coast in thin jackets.

  • @Dana_Swan_711
    @Dana_Swan_711 2 года назад +4

    My name is Dana and I live in the USA and my family came from Sweden. Thank you for explaining your amazing culture. What is interesting is I find that I am very similar to you and your ways even though I live so far away. I can't understand why you only had 2 guys hit on you ? You are sweet and beautiful. Keep making your fun videos.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +1

      Hi Dana! Oh how lovely. That’s so funny, I often get told I’m more American than Swedish when in Sweden! So fun to hear there are more people like me. A little American culture, a little Swedish 😍 although I have no biological connection to the USA 😂

  • @bewtiflbalance2381
    @bewtiflbalance2381 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for all the research and work you do ..
    Truly appreciated 🙏

  • @alecb.7696
    @alecb.7696 2 года назад +8

    Saga,
    I had so many happy holidays in Stockholm and the island of Marstrand, north of Gothenburg. I appreciated the Swedish culture you describe: 'presenting at best; never showy'. Very different to the UK and especially the USA. Polite but not deferential. I remember asking someone in a shop in Swedish in Stockholm "I'm sorry but do you speak English?" And her reply, with wry amusement, was "Of course!" The standard of spoken English in Stockholm I found to be better than in London, if I can also be politically incorrect.
    The two duvet solution is an enduring gift from those holidays! Best solution ever!

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  2 года назад +2

      That sounds lovely. I have never been to the islands around Stockholm but hear they are magical!
      How funny! I think especially in Stockholm people are very good at English. Although my English isn't perfect, my native English speaking friends often say that my grammar is better than many people in their countries.
      And two duvet solution is a relationship saver for sure! :)

  • @kirkbrooks9447
    @kirkbrooks9447 Год назад +54

    Growing up in the southern United States learning proper respect for adults was super important. Saying "Yes sir/ma'am" was a given, and you always addressed other adults as Mr./Mrs./Ms. and their last name. And sometimes that meant you had to hug your less than pleasing aunt or let her grab your face and squeeze your cheeks, where that insanity came from is beyond me but it was the way of the world back then.

    • @SagaJohanna
      @SagaJohanna  Год назад +25

      Yes, that certainly sounds like a different world! We had a huge debate in Sweden after a fantastic childrens book raising the question on hugging your relatives and how forcing kids to accept physical attentions from adults could result in serious consequences!

    • @kirkbrooks9447
      @kirkbrooks9447 Год назад +9

      @@SagaJohanna I wish we'd had those books when my aunt and her 5 gallons of perfume wanted to give you a hug😷 LOL!!

    • @shawnjones4347
      @shawnjones4347 Год назад +5

      It was the same for me in the NW US. It seems to be an outdated way to live now though.

    • @JanCarol11
      @JanCarol11 Год назад +12

      I spent a year of high school in Tennessee, and picked up the "Yes sir/ma'am." I kept it, and "y'all" which is a warm, friendly inclusive word. Now that I am living in Australia, it reflects well on the "coarse American" for the Aussies to hear me say "Yes, ma'am!"

    • @JanCarol11
      @JanCarol11 Год назад +5

      @@SagaJohanna What book is this? I'd love to see it - I know that Scandanavian views on child rearing are different, and a few ex-pat Yanks have gotten into trouble for spanking (for example). I love the concept that a child's body is sacrosanct, and if a child doesn't want a cuddle - that's their right? Who are we as adults to decide that they must accept our affection?

  • @joylynne1343
    @joylynne1343 Год назад +4

    This is the first time I've seen you. Sweden sounds so lovely & civilized. It's a breath of fresh air to hear about it. 💖