Fra Werden(til)bergen

Bergen on one of the 163 rainless days

Bergen on one of the 163 rainless days
Bergen on one of the 163 rainless days

Monday 30 May 2016

The Very Last One

It was early may. The cobblestone streets of Bergen’s old quarters were for once flushed with light and not with water. The tiny centre was packed with people who, in order to fill up their empty vitamin D supplies, had stormed out of their wooden houses into the warm sun. For once, they were holding ice cream instead of umbrellas, wore sunglasses instead of raincoats and the buzzing sound of the talking crowds sounded a little more cheerful than usually. A nearly perfect spring day.

I, too, had seized the opportunity to take a walk around the charming Nordnes peninsula to escape the loud cars, busses and herds of tourists who had now begun to swarm into Bergen every morning and were taking  pictures of Bryggen and the area around as if their life depended on it. If it’s not on Facebook, it hasn’t happened.

On my way back home I passed through the fish market, which had just reopened its doors for the summer season, where eager, English-with-an-accent-speaking salesmen and women were selling fresh salmon, reindeer sausages, lefser and other slightly overpriced delicacies. I was about to cross the street at the end of the market when an elderly, southern-European-looking couple approached me. The man had a large Bergen-city-centre-map in his hands, one of the kind one gets at the tourist office. Some spots were circled and a quick hand had made notes at certain places, indicating must-sees and sights. The man was establishing eye contact said “Excuse me” from a few meters away and then walked up to me. His female companion followed after and gave me a hearty smile. “Excuse me”, he repeated, “are you from Bergen?” Two expecting pairs of eyes were resting on me.
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When I arrived in June last year, I had this highly romanticised image of Bergen, Norway and the Norwegian people in my head. In my imagination it was all perfect - they were perfect. It took me quite a while to replace those images with true facts, experiences and knowledge. Some were positively surprising, some entirely shocking, some unexpected and hard to accustom to. The picture of the wood-chopping Norwegian with a thick wool pullover and a  beard just as thick was soon entirely wiped out. And I was left with the reality: Norwegians, yes, they, too, are just people. And I began to like them, in Mr Darcy’s words, just they way they are.

Of course, a year is a long time, and I would lie if I said that I never was homesick, that I never had the wish to just take the next plane to Zurich and buy the whole chocolate shelf of the Migros store at the airport, and yes, eat it, too.
Oh yes, I did have those moments. Especially in January, right after the long Christmas break, I was frequently asking myself, what I was doing here, way too high up north and so far away from everyone and everything I knew so well. A simple song was enough to make me sink into nostalgia, enough to open up the floodgates and make me spend the evening at home with only hot chocolate for company. Homesickness, level 3. It wasn’t a particular thing that I missed. It were familiar situations, moments and feelings that I longed for. And there was indeed a time when I wanted to count down the days until I could finally go home.

But time passed, the sun’s visits became longer and longer each day, and my calendar filled up with exciting things again. And it was not least due to some very great people that I sometimes forgot all about the delicious chocolate in the Migros at the Zurich airport (or at least contented myself with what little I had brought with me). I developed routines, made more plans, there were regularities in my calendar. I worked at the student café, went to the weekly quiz and took more walks than I ever had. I travelled to Ålesund and Trondheim. Which are in themselves very charming places. However, when the Flybus from the Flesland airport entered the city, drove past the Lille Lungegårdsvannet and stopped at Bryggen, I could not but smile and sigh at the familiar sight. Slowly and quietly, without making much of a fuzz, Bergen had become my home.

And that’s when time began to fly like an arrow. The to-do list became longer and the remaining days fewer. For the first time came the revelation that not everything on the list would still be possible. That my flight at the 31st was approaching all too fast. And that this year, this amazing, exciting and educational year, would be over soon. I began to discover new things that I wished I had seen earlier. That delicious bread from Rema 1000. This pair of benches at a very quiet spot overlooking the city and the sea. The cute guy working in Coop Prix. With the knowledge that this all soon would be gone, everything was becoming more appealing. And the prospect of leaving it seemed like a distant memory from a dream: You know there was something, you remember a faint impression, but you cannot describe it or accept it for real. But while the dream memory grows weaker with time passing, the day of departure becomes more real everyday. You look up the time table. Print your ticket. Set an alarm clock. Go to sleep, with knowing this is the last time you will go to bed in this place.
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It was early may. The cobblestone streets of Bergen’s old quarters were for once flushed with light and not with water. Two expecting pairs of eyes were resting on me. I didn’t have to think twice.


“Yes”, I said and smiled. “Yes, I am from Bergen.”



<3

Saturday 14 May 2016

The One With The Internet Blackout

It’s true what they say: You only realise how much you need something, when it’s taken from you. Ripped from you, suddenly, without you having had any time to prepare. Only then can you see how that particular something was such a big part of your life, how it practically WAS your life at some point. And you wish you had appreciated it more. Used it more wisely.
After the loss, you find yourself sitting on your bed, empty, staring wholes into the wall and simply not knowing what to do next. What does one do, generally speaking?

Eating breakfast, for example. Full Stop. Not simultaneously getting informed about the weather today, not scrolling through the newest pasta recipes while absent minded sipping on a (way too hot) hot cocoa. Enjoying, instead of multitasking. 
With this in mind I decided to use the at first sight unfortunate event of our Wifi-Router being responsible for a power failure, and the landlord’s advice not to use it anymore (ever!), to my advantage.

No Wifi – no stress. Simple as that, right? And maybe I could also counteract a certain laziness that had taken hold of me lately, mostly caused by internet access and chocolate.

I told myself that I wouldn’t despair. I sure don’t need internet 24/7. I can handle this.

The first stadium was denial. When you have not yet come to terms with the new situation and you are constantly repeating old habits. It’s funny, how your fingers make the cursor automatically click on that tiny symbol with an orange fox circling a blue globe. Click on it, only to close it again after half a second because, no, it still doesn’t work. And you quietly curse yourself for repeatedly opening your MailApp on your tablet, because all you see is the little symbol that indicates that there is no connection. None at all. The Internet has disappeared from here.

After that comes the recognitional phase, also known as the “oh my god, I certainly cannot handle this” stage, where you realise that you cancelled your Spotify Premium Account 10 days ago and the only music you can actually listen to at home is the one U2 album, which they made accessible on iTunes for free.  Not wise, Myriam, not wise at all.

On the other hand, I had also decided not to prolong my free Netflix Trial , which was certainly a lucky shot.  (If I think about it, I might have spent way too much time there anyway. 5 seasons of Friends in three weeks – could I BE any more addicted to that show?)

Next up, the reactionary phase, where you start doing new things that fill up the empty space. I began reading– and read 6 hours straight, until the clock showed 1 AM, my eyes were tiny and Norwegian police officer Harry Hole had solved the whole dark mystery of the creepy killer snowman (need a sleepless night? That’s the book to start with! Or wait until the movie’s out next year.)

Another plus of no internet access: Writing is so much easier. Because all the distraction that is normally there, all the Buzzfeed Quizzes that tell you which Weasley sibling you should be dating (Bill, right?) or where in Britain your accent is from (southern accent, baby!), all the group chats on Facebook which mainly consist of cat-stickers and smileys, the newspaper websites that you could browse for exciting news from home plus the live coverage of the Icehockey World Championship… Oii... Okay, you know what? There’s this Café around the corner that has Wifi.

What? I cannot sit here all day. That would be lazy.