The Scandi Shift

Episode 12: What We Miss and Don't Miss Most After Moving to Denmark

31 min · Gisteren
aflevering Episode 12: What We Miss and Don't Miss Most After Moving to Denmark cover

Beschrijving

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2560863/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Scandi Shift, Meg and Selena unpack the surprising reality of missing home after moving abroad — including the things they expected to miss, the things that blindsided them completely, and the parts of their old lives they strangely don’t miss anymore. From Trader Joe’s peanut butter and Yorkshire Tea to Sunday roasts, spontaneous dinners with friends, beach walks in San Francisco, and the emotional shift that comes with raising kids far from family, this episode dives into the weirdly specific things that suddenly matter when you build a new life in another country. We talk about: *  The things we thought we’d desperately miss before moving abroad  *  Why some losses feel bigger after having kids  *  Missing old routines without wanting your old life back  *  The emotional difference between moving cities vs moving countries  *  Food, grocery stores, Amazon, and oddly specific comfort items  *  Why spontaneity changes so much in Denmark  *  The surprising upside of not understanding everyone around you  *  Summer energy, bike culture, and the things Denmark does better than expected  This episode is funny, nostalgic, honest, and deeply relatable for anyone who has ever moved abroad and realized that the things you miss most are rarely the things you expected. Because sometimes you don’t miss “home.”  You miss a version of yourself that existed there. Living abroad, expat life Denmark, moving to Denmark, culture shock Denmark, things expats miss, life in Copenhagen, living overseas, expat motherhood, starting over abroad. Meg announces "Across the Table", a new Copenhagen dinner series from The Scandi Shift created for Danes and internationals looking for real conversation, meaningful connection, beautiful spaces, good food, and wine shared around one table. The first gathering takes place June 11. Included in your ticket is a private art tour, dinner, and conversation. Learn more at t [https://www.thescandishift.com/across-the-table?utm_source=chatgpt.com]hescandishift.co  🎧 New episodes every other week — follow to stay updated!  📩 Email: TheScandiShift@gmail.com  📍 Instagram: @TheScandiShift ⭐️ Please rate + review — it helps other expats find the show!

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14 afleveringen

aflevering Episode 12: What We Miss and Don't Miss Most After Moving to Denmark artwork

Episode 12: What We Miss and Don't Miss Most After Moving to Denmark

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2560863/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Scandi Shift, Meg and Selena unpack the surprising reality of missing home after moving abroad — including the things they expected to miss, the things that blindsided them completely, and the parts of their old lives they strangely don’t miss anymore. From Trader Joe’s peanut butter and Yorkshire Tea to Sunday roasts, spontaneous dinners with friends, beach walks in San Francisco, and the emotional shift that comes with raising kids far from family, this episode dives into the weirdly specific things that suddenly matter when you build a new life in another country. We talk about: *  The things we thought we’d desperately miss before moving abroad  *  Why some losses feel bigger after having kids  *  Missing old routines without wanting your old life back  *  The emotional difference between moving cities vs moving countries  *  Food, grocery stores, Amazon, and oddly specific comfort items  *  Why spontaneity changes so much in Denmark  *  The surprising upside of not understanding everyone around you  *  Summer energy, bike culture, and the things Denmark does better than expected  This episode is funny, nostalgic, honest, and deeply relatable for anyone who has ever moved abroad and realized that the things you miss most are rarely the things you expected. Because sometimes you don’t miss “home.”  You miss a version of yourself that existed there. Living abroad, expat life Denmark, moving to Denmark, culture shock Denmark, things expats miss, life in Copenhagen, living overseas, expat motherhood, starting over abroad. Meg announces "Across the Table", a new Copenhagen dinner series from The Scandi Shift created for Danes and internationals looking for real conversation, meaningful connection, beautiful spaces, good food, and wine shared around one table. The first gathering takes place June 11. Included in your ticket is a private art tour, dinner, and conversation. Learn more at t [https://www.thescandishift.com/across-the-table?utm_source=chatgpt.com]hescandishift.co  🎧 New episodes every other week — follow to stay updated!  📩 Email: TheScandiShift@gmail.com  📍 Instagram: @TheScandiShift ⭐️ Please rate + review — it helps other expats find the show!

Gisteren31 min
aflevering Episode 11: What Nobody Tells You About Danish Birthday Parties artwork

Episode 11: What Nobody Tells You About Danish Birthday Parties

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2560863/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Scandi Shift, Meg and Selena unpack the surprisingly complicated world of birthdays in Denmark — and all the cultural rules no one explains to expat parents beforehand. Using Meg’s recent experience hosting a Danish children’s birthday party at her home, they walk through the traditions, expectations, and very Danish details that can catch newcomers completely off guard. We talk about: *  The Danish birthday party rule most expat parents miss  *  Why weekday parties are secretly genius  *  Danish birthday cakes, flags, and party traditions  *  Why adults also expect wish lists  *  Hosting a party when you don’t fully speak Danish  *  What we learned from doing it the hard way  This episode is part cultural guide, part parenting survival story, and part love letter to the wonderfully strange world of Danish birthday culture. Danish birthday parties, birthdays in Denmark, parenting in Denmark, expat life Denmark, Danish culture explained, living in Copenhagen with kids, raising children abroad. Meg announces "Across the Table", a new Copenhagen dinner series from The Scandi Shift created for Danes and internationals looking for real conversation, meaningful connection, beautiful spaces, good food, and wine shared around one table. The first gathering takes place June 11. Included in your ticket is a private art tour, dinner, and conversation. Learn more at t [https://www.thescandishift.com/across-the-table?utm_source=chatgpt.com]hescandishift.co  🎧 New episodes every other week — follow to stay updated!  📩 Email: TheScandiShift@gmail.com  📍 Instagram: @TheScandiShift ⭐️ Please rate + review — it helps other expats find the show!

13 mei 202628 min
aflevering Episode 10: The Hidden Cost of Fitting In: Identity, Burnout & Belonging in Denmark (Part 2) artwork

Episode 10: The Hidden Cost of Fitting In: Identity, Burnout & Belonging in Denmark (Part 2)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2560863/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Scandi Shift, Meg and Selena continue their conversation on belonging — moving beyond the surface and into what it actually feels like underneath. Because the cost of fitting in isn’t always obvious. It shows up slowly. In pressure. In self-doubt. In moments where you don’t quite feel like yourself — even when everything on the outside looks like it’s working. We talk about: *  The emotional toll of trying to fit in over time  *  When adapting starts to feel like losing parts of yourself  *  The quiet pressure of cultural expectations (and where it shows up)  *  Missing your people — and what that absence really feels like  *  How identity shifts in small, subtle ways  *  The moment you realize you might be “editing” yourself  *  Why not every space is meant for you — and why that’s okay  This episode goes deeper into the reality of building a life abroad — the part that’s harder to name, but often the most impactful. Because belonging isn’t just about learning how things work.  It’s about figuring out where you don’t have to change to fit. Expat life Denmark, belonging in Denmark, identity abroad, moving to Denmark, cultural adaptation, expat experience, living in Copenhagen. Meg announces "Across the Table", a new Copenhagen dinner series from The Scandi Shift created for Danes and internationals looking for real conversation, meaningful connection, beautiful spaces, good food, and wine shared around one table. The first gathering takes place June 11. Included in your ticket is a private art tour, dinner, and conversation. Learn more at t [https://www.thescandishift.com/across-the-table?utm_source=chatgpt.com]hescandishift.co  🎧 New episodes every other week — follow to stay updated!  📩 Email: TheScandiShift@gmail.com  📍 Instagram: @TheScandiShift ⭐️ Please rate + review — it helps other expats find the show!

29 apr 202621 min
aflevering Episode 9: The Cost of Fitting In: What It Really Takes to Belong in Denmark (Part 1) artwork

Episode 9: The Cost of Fitting In: What It Really Takes to Belong in Denmark (Part 1)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2560863/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Scandi Shift, Meg and Selena continue their mini-series on belonging — and take on a topic that feels a little more uncomfortable: the cost of fitting in. Because belonging isn’t always effortless. And it’s not always visible. When you move to a new country, fitting in often starts as something practical — learning the systems, observing social cues, adjusting your behavior. But over time, that subtle adjustment can turn into something deeper: editing yourself, second-guessing how you show up, and constantly asking, “Is this too much?” We talk about: *  The difference between adapting vs. changing yourself  *  The subtle ways you start “editing” your personality  *  Feeling slightly “on” all the time — and why it’s exhausting  *  Navigating language barriers and identity at the same time  *  The pressure to integrate while still being yourself  *  The emotional impact of trying to belong in a new culture  *  Why expat forums can sometimes make things worse instead of better  This episode explores the quieter, less talked-about side of relocation — the part that doesn’t show up in logistics or checklists, but builds slowly over time. This is Part 1 of a deeper conversation. In the next episode, we’ll unpack what this ongoing adjustment can really cost — emotionally, mentally, and over time. Expat life Denmark, belonging in Denmark, fitting in abroad, moving to Denmark, cultural adaptation, expat identity, living in Copenhagen. Meg announces "Across the Table", a new Copenhagen dinner series from The Scandi Shift created for Danes and internationals looking for real conversation, meaningful connection, beautiful spaces, good food, and wine shared around one table. The first gathering takes place June 11. Included in your ticket is a private art tour, dinner, and conversation. Learn more at t [https://www.thescandishift.com/across-the-table?utm_source=chatgpt.com]hescandishift.co  🎧 New episodes every other week — follow to stay updated!  📩 Email: TheScandiShift@gmail.com  📍 Instagram: @TheScandiShift ⭐️ Please rate + review — it helps other expats find the show!

15 apr 202621 min
aflevering Episode 8: Danes Say WHAT?! Funny Danish Sayings That Make No Sense artwork

Episode 8: Danes Say WHAT?! Funny Danish Sayings That Make No Sense

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2560863/fan_mail/new] In this episode of The Scandi Shift, Meg and Selena take a lighter turn and dive into one of the most surprising (and confusing) parts of learning a new language: idioms. Because once you start translating things literally, nothing makes sense. From “shooting the parrot” to “the sausage of death” to “playing king carrot,” Danish expressions quickly become a crash course in both language and culture — and a reminder that understanding a country goes far beyond vocabulary. We talk about: *  What idioms are and why they rarely translate  *  The Danish expressions that completely confused us  *  Trying (and struggling) to pronounce Danish out loud  *  How idioms reveal cultural nuance you don’t learn in textbooks  *  The moments where you realize you understand the words… but not the meaning  This episode is part language lesson, part cultural decoding, and part chaos — and a perfect reminder that sometimes the best way to understand a place is to laugh at how little sense it makes at first. Danish language, funny Danish idioms, learning Danish, expat life Denmark, living in Copenhagen, Danish culture explained, language and culture Denmark. Meg announces "Across the Table", a new Copenhagen dinner series from The Scandi Shift created for Danes and internationals looking for real conversation, meaningful connection, beautiful spaces, good food, and wine shared around one table. The first gathering takes place June 11. Included in your ticket is a private art tour, dinner, and conversation. Learn more at t [https://www.thescandishift.com/across-the-table?utm_source=chatgpt.com]hescandishift.co  🎧 New episodes every other week — follow to stay updated!  📩 Email: TheScandiShift@gmail.com  📍 Instagram: @TheScandiShift ⭐️ Please rate + review — it helps other expats find the show!

1 apr 202631 min