The initial hurdle
came when I realised that to live in the sort of apartments I’d been yearning
after, it would cost about half a million pounds and my first born son. And
that’s only for the first week. It was a sort of “I know I’ll be mostly living
off a student loan and Erasmus Grant, but can I justify spending four grand a
month to live three hours away in an Ikea catalogue apartment?” The answer, of
course, was no. So I did what any respectable and pragmatic adult would do—cried
for two weeks and started fleshing out this boyfriend daydream instead. It then
occurred to me that you can’t live in a city without having a place to stay,
even if you had a boyfriend who meets you after lectures with an iced soya
latte (that you didn’t have to ask for).
I turned my attention to shared houses, although I got rejected by every
potential roommate. I’m not sure if it was because I was vegan or Welsh, but I’m
pretty certain it might be one of those things. Or, maybe, because they could
see that my heart really wasn’t in it. All I truly wanted was to be in student accommodation
with my friends, although I wasn’t assigned any. The final straw was when I
finally got accepted into a shared place, but upon closer inspection of the
photographs provided of the interior, my mum apprehensively said “are those… handcuffs…
hanging from the ceiling?”
Luckily
enough for me, I was then granted student accommodation and placed with all my
friends. I’m not saying that it was the 30,000 emails I sent to my university,
explaining how my only potential living option was either with a man who
literally had a skeleton in the corner of his apartment, or to commute from
Wales. Whatever it was, everything was finally coming together. Cut to me
moving into my student room, of which I can only really describe as ‘beige’.
Beige curtains, a beige sort of floor, beige looking wooden desk, beige bed,
beige lamp and beige bookcase. The only object breaking up the beige, was a
bright green chair that looked like an antique family heirloom that nobody
wants, but equally feels too guilty to give away. “I love it, this can work” I
thought, as I slammed my bags down on the floor. My friend and I had just
transported all my bags up two flight of stairs, and I was genuinely considering
whether or not my arms were now longer than they were prior to lugging all my
prized belongings from one place to another.
“Can you
speak any Swedish?” people would ask me. “Yeah, I can” I’d say. By that I meant
I could speak about three words, all of which being ‘tack’, ‘så’ and ‘mycket’.
I can also say “I love dogs”, but I haven’t found a chance to use that in a
daily conversation yet. Which, and I’m not being sarcastic here, genuinely does
surprise me. I was under the false pretence that re-watching SKAM — which is
Norwegian — every two months, was sufficient. It didn’t take long to realise
that these two languages are in fact quite different, and it’s a bit rude to
move to Sweden and speak some broken Norwegian and then confidently say “I’d
say I can speak a bit of Swedish, yeah. Yeah, no, definitely a bit.” In fact, I
think I could speak more Swedish before I moved here than I can now. There’s
something about knowing that people can actually understand what you’re attempting
to say, that suddenly makes the whole act of "speaking Swedish" off-putting. It’s all well and good shouting “I
LOVE DOGS!” in Swedish to a room full of English people, but in the actual country
things become tricky.
I know what
you’re all wondering—how did the boyfriend daydream turn out? Well firstly,
BUGGER OFF. Secondly, turns out you don’t suddenly become more attractive to
boys when you move to a different country. Unless you’re my friend Em, who got chatted
up at a bus stop whilst carrying a bag of shopping. She claims she doesn’t get
this sort of attention at home, but who truly knows. All I know is that a man
once tried chatting me up by saying “well you’re not really my type, but your
friend Em is.” So it’s nice to see that at least one of us gets to live in my
fantasy. I’m alright pining after Hugh Grant in Notting Hill for a few more
years.
It turns out
that, as I so often tend to catch myself doing, I was pining after the wrong
type of love. When I was picturing romantic snowy walks with a partner, our
glove covered hands being intertwined, that this picturesque romance wasn’t
really what I wanted. Instead, I should have pictured staying up until the
early hours of the morning, laughing uncontrollably whilst tucked up in bed
with my closest friends, or dancing to unidentifiable music in the basement of a
damp club. The people I’ve met here make the even the mediocre fun—I feel my
stomach getting tight from laughing so much at the most insignificant things at
a crowded metro station with them, or as we make ourselves dinner, even as we sit in the library trying to start writing our 3,000 word essays two hours before the deadline. It's the friendships I’ve made that make this entire
decision worth it. It has taught me to dive right in and just love people, for
all they are, despite being constantly aware that you only have a little bubble
of time to spend together until you all head back to reality.
So what is my
advice about your Year Abroad? It’s simple. Remember that no matter what
country you move to, you remain the
same. This is not a bad thing. You don’t need to be a polyglot, live in a huge
fancy apartment or have some sort of gorgeous Viking boyfriend to be lovable.
You already are. Your year abroad will make you realise that the things to
daydream about, the things to cherish—they are what you already have, what you
hold close to your heart. It’s not the things you don’t have, it’s what has
always been there. I have never in my life been so in love with my friends, my
family, my pets, with my hometown, with myself—until now.