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96 Comments

  1. I BET YOUR FAT AMERICAN FACE DIDNT REALIZE THAT 90% OF ETHNIC NORWEGIANS ARE BORN WITH BLOND HAIR..

    HUH YOU OBESE INBRED REDNECK.

    1. Three days after your first vile comment on another post and you’re still here? I’ve turned you into a loyal reader :P

      What you fail to acknowledge is that 1/5 of people living in Norway aren’t even Norwegian and many people beyond that aren’t ethnic Norwegians. But I suppose you don’t want them there anyway, now do ya?

      I’d normally delete such hateful comments, but I’m going to leave this here so that people realize that people like you do exist up there :) Fortunately, you are the vast minority :) Hope you’re enjoying the day trolling from behind the screen up in Hedmark. I suppose I’ll hear back from you in a few days with some more nonsense. Rumor has it that my Kazakhstan articles are realllllly good for some hate comments- you may want to stop by that arena next.

    2. Best reply ever! I hate that people are able to stay anonymous and posting stuff like this.

      Btw I love your blog, especially the posts about Norway. It is interesting to read about others perception of. Think you where spot on.
      I don’t smoke or use snus but I am wearing my converse as we speak. And I love to speak English but i studied in Leeds, UK for three years, so i have had some practice:)

      I will continue to read your blog for useful travel tips, and hopefully you will come back some day.

    3. Thanks so much for your sweet comment, Thea!!! I don’t understand why people troll on random stuff. I never will- but hey, keeps me entertained (I’ve just gotten used to it!) These posts are so outdated and were written right after I arrived in Norway, so the perceptions may be different now after living there four years and now being away from Norway for three years! But it is fun… people come to my country and gather different perceptions in their initial days there and it is fun to read… even if they are negative or unique to what I think really happens there. I really can’t wait to get back to Norway someday :) I am heading there in a month actually and am STOKED (but only in Oslo for a single day arghhhhh). Such a great country and you’re lucky to be from there <3

  2. Haha, so satisfying to read about my own people! You are spot on, with every aspect of your story. Specially the part about us being closed and cold. Recommend you all to visit Lillehammer one day (my town). PS! We really love americans!

    1. It is so funny to read back on that post from years ago as I ended up staying in Norway for four years and my opinion kind of stayed the same on the people throughout the entire time. I LOVED my time in Norway. Now that I am in Germany, I look back on it and try to plot my return. You’re lucky to be from such a great place filled with warm people :)

  3. I Have been to Norway last August for the first time. (And thanks to the internet, I did not expect Norwegians to be as open as the people I did actualy encounter). It might be partially thanks to the fact that I visited Norway primarily for a solo hiking trip (from Evjee via Knaben, Vest Agder to Flekkefjord). So it might be partially because a lot of tourists het into trouble and they had to check if I was prepared good enough or not. But I doubt this is the main reason. Of you ask me, Norwegians are by far the kindest, most open people I have met. Both man and women, Youngsters and the somewhat older (or more grown up).
    Never, including my Home country (the Netherlands), have I felt as welcome as in Norway.

  4. We can speak English, but it is very unusual and highly uncomfortable. I guess most people think that way. I hate speaking English, but I can write it with no problem. It is the pronouncion of the words that are the problem. English and Norwegian are highly different languages. It is easier for us to speak German, for example. For those who can speak German, of course.

    Myself, I can speak English, but at the same time can not. If I could speak like Russians speak English, sort of. It would have been easier. But we are trained at school to pronounce the words correct. So when I consentrate about pronouncion, I totally forget the words, and everything become a mess. Also the pronouncion. So I think English is natural for some people to speak, but most people here will find it like a challenge. English is a sort of “singing” language, with lots of strange sounds. Norwegian is a straight forward language without strange sounds. More like a “hammering” language, if you understand. Norwegian is the rapper, English is the singer. And it is very hard for a rapper to sing.

    Well, for me, that is the case why I don’t like to speak English. But, with a little help of alcohol, it is no problem with English at all :-D

    I am a guy, and I smoke cigarettes and used to bleach my hair :-D But I don’t have sneakers or crocs. We also in general wear brighter colors than other Europeans. Light colors. In France, everyone wears dark and depressive colors.

    1. Haha I definitely noticed the trend of English spoken big time when drinking was involved! So insightful to hear a native’s thoughts!!! Thanks so much for sharing!