Newsletter (2017-2018) January 2018 Newsletter | Page 11

Cultural Insights through My Exchange in Sweden By Qinxin Fan From January to June 2017, I was an exchange student in Sweden, a Nordic country that is sig- nificantly different from China. I encountered many cultural differences, but observing the distinctions was interesting and inspiring for me to reflect on how every culture is unique. When meeting people from other cultural back- grounds, I am willing to learn more about their culture, while taking it as an opportunity to be clearer about my own culture and feeling the re- sponsibility to share it. Slow-Paced Life Swedish people usually have a slow-paced life. As I observed, they would spend long periods of time, without any hurry, doing almost every- thing. People never rush on the streets. Even when tapping transportation cards on the bus, it takes a longer time for the machine to react com- pared to the one on Hong Kong buses. fika at 3 pm is similar to afternoon tea in Hong Kong, during which people may have milk tea, sandwiches, and toast, to appease hunger, the purpose of fika is not just to get full, but to take a deep breath, talk with people around you, and enjoy life with patience. Fika with someone as your “coffee date” offers a chance for people to relax and socialise. It is all about slowing down. After staying in Sweden, I got used to taking coffee breaks even after coming back to Hong Kong. Living in a modern metropolitan, Hong Kong people are always under great pressure of working or studying. The idea of fika suggests that even though we may always have one task after another, we should offer ourselves some time to relax and talk to people around us to maintain interpersonal relationship. Love for Nature Swedish people attach importance to nature as part of their identity. Even though snow, for- ests and other natural elements are common in Sweden, the Swedish cherish all their natu- ral resources and make good use of them. Pro- Fika has been a Swedish tradition since the nine- tecting nature is a common value for everyone teenth century. It can be both a verb and a noun, in Sweden, and the country’s success in nature meaning taking a coffee break. People usually preservation has been widely acknowledged. drink coffee, tea, or other non-alcoholic bever- For instance, I was told that national parks cov- ages and eat cinnamon rolls, biscuits, or other ered a tenth of the country’s land area. Swedish sweets. Fika usually takes place at around ten in lifestyle also emphasizes nature-human inter- the morning and three in the afternoon. While action. I observed that in the snowy mountain Cinammon rolls are a popular sweet for fika. Qinxin visited the mountains in northern Sweden. 11 JANUARY 2018