That invisible feeling

Page 1

4/7/13

The Balancing Act | That invisible feeling | The Copenhagen Post | The Danish News in English

Adv ertise

Subscribe

Where to buy

About

Contact Us

SU N D AY

Hi: 6°C / Lo: -2°C MON: Front page

News

Business

Sport

Culture

Commentary

InOut

7º/-3º TUE:

Classifieds

Search

4º/-3º

Special publications

The Balancing Act | That invisible feeling

Latest CPH Post voices

You're Still Here? | The truth about the lockout

Sarita Rajiv January 4, 2013 - 12:15

To Be Perfectly Frank | No-Hopery Here?

Nine months ago, I moved from

The words of Öz | Don’t let the dust gather on them

Mumbai to Copenhagen. Life has just not been the same since.

The Lynch Report | How to bait a Jehova’s Witness

As a child, I often fantasised about what it would mean to be invisible.

Still Adjusting | An open letter to the Copenhagen Police

My childhood fantasy came true, it seems, albeit in an altogether different way.

Christian Values | We survived another winter … I think

Whether in the parks, the shops or

The Balancing Act | Danes are frontrunners in gender equality

the streets, people in Copenhagen did not seem to notice me or sense my presence. I may as well have been a ghost. There were no smiles, no friendly conversations, not even a glance. The always dependable and effective conversation-starter of having my mischievous and curious

Sarita Rajiv recently moved from sun-kissed India to snow-topped Denmark. Having hopped from east to west, she finds herself performing a balancing act between her old and new lives. A communications specialist in the past, she is now a gifting specialist. For more, visit ilovegifting.me

three-year-old daughter with me seemed to generate no interest among the other parents at the parks and playgrounds. As I found out, it is rather tricky to initiate a conversation with a person who is not looking at you … not even out of the corner of their eye. Was I invisible? The same scenario would have played out like this in India: complete strangers would be very interested in an udlænding (is it a coincidence that the Danish word for ‘foreigner’ has such a hard and cold ring to it?). You would get asked all sorts of questions, ranging from your name, nationality, marital status, salary, the reason for being in India, whether you liked India and how long you intended to stay in the country. You would be offered help with settling in, you would get invited to lunch, tea or dinner, and you would be given a crash course in Indian culture and traditions … most of it unsolicited. Indians are a rather curious and friendly lot (or maybe intrusive, depending on how you look at it). The Indian way is not necessarily better or worse, just very different. Perhaps that is why, when in situations in which I was in the company of strangers, the contrast caught

Popular Threads

Dating the Danes | What's looks got to do with it? 3 comments · 4 hours ago You're Still Here? | The truth about the lockout 5 comments · 1 hour ago

me by surprise. Fortunately or unfortunately, in the past nine months I have discovered that I am not alone and that it is not personal. A good number of foreigners seem to have had similar experiences. Though thankful that most Danes speak good English, most of the foreigners I spoke to wondered over their distant behaviour. Over time, after a lot of observation and pondering, I realised that is just how the Danes are. They tend to be reserved, do not like initiating conversations with strangers and are wary of intruding on a person’s privacy. While there is no intent or effort to be friendly to foreigners, there is rarely a deliberate intention to

EU ruling on SU to cost millions 48 comments · 8 minutes ago Injection room saves 30 lives 31 comments · 14 hours ago Oliver’s father fails to show up in Austria 18 comments · 19 hours ago

be rude. And perhaps their reserved behaviour is meant to signal politeness. The saving grace for me has been the friendly and helpful staff at my daughter’s børnehave (kindergarten), the polite smiles from the other parents and children there and the friendly demeanour of some of my friends’ Danish partners. They

More CPH Post voices

The Balancing Act | Danes are frontrunners in gender equality

convinced me there was no sinister plan by the Danes to ignore me after all. While I was busy unravelling typical Danish behaviour, I figured some more pearls of wisdom could be

Mar 17 2013 - 08:14

gained if I knew their language. And having begun to learn Danish at a language school, on the occasions a Dane has spoken to me (at the k ommune, supermarkets or cafe), I knew I wasn’t being reprimanded for

Grain of Sand | Rules for riding the bus

doing something wrong. Danish simply tends to sound rather harsh to a person who doesn’t know the language. Just like several other languages, I presume.

Mar 10 2013 - 17:00

Unlike in my childhood fantasies, I was not having much fun being invisible. So I decided that sometimes the best defence is a good offence. So now, every time I manage to trick a Dane into looking at me, I flash my most brilliant, friendly smile. My complex calculations reveal that for every 13 smiles I send out,

The Lynch Report | The CPR safety net Feb 24 2013 - 09:00

there is one coming back my way. That is a success rate of close to eight percent – not bad for a start.

cphpost.dk/commentary/cph-post-voices/balancing-act-invisible-feeling

1/5


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.