I have little to NO context for Sweden. Ikea. Meatballs. The devil (Spotify). The Swedish Chef.
A nation the size of California but with a quarter the population. A kingdom? A sea kingdom? Vikings?
It’s a member of all the clubs (NATO and the EU and stuff) and sounds pretty inoffensive, and I read that it ranks highly in all the indexes and whatnots that you want to rank highly on (gender equality and Happiness and GDP) and provides universal healthcare and education and guarantees a Right to Nature and I think, possibly, people may ride unicorns, but I’m not sure about that last part.
Our first couple of nights here will be spent in prison, so I guess we’ll get to see the underbelly and then work our way up.
Now that my mother is done having a heart attack, I mean we’re staying at the Långholmen Hostel which was a prison from the time it was built in the 1870s till it closed in the 1970s. Home to Sweden’s last execution and first and only use of the guillotine, it’s been a hotel (the bigger rooms) and hostel (the smaller rooms) for the past 40 years and what time I’ve spent waiting for the shower or the WC or just being awake but unwilling to stay in my surprisingly-air but unsurprisingly-cramped room I’ve generally spent looking at all the little exhibits scattered around the wonderfully charming space.
It’s amazing what some paint will do. Plus locking the doors from the INSIDE.
Well. And a prison population forced to dredge mud onto the island so it can be a lush, verdant paradise compared to the rocky ones around it. THAT plus some paint has made for an incredible little island for us to base our wanderings out of for the next couple of days.
It’s interesting, in all of the reading about the freedoms of Sweden, that in reading Wikipedia’s list of most notable prisoners of Långholmen, other than the aforementioned executionee / murderer, they were ALL journalists.
Ahhh… Stockholm!
We’ve hooked up with my old friend Ana and her husband Alex here in Stockholm. They drove north from their home to pick us up from the airport and take us to prison. We’ll be spending the second half of the trip with them and I’ve kept myself purposely in the dark about what we’ll get up to. Ana and Kristen are both Planners and I’m confident that I’m in good hands if I just stay out of the way. I’ve never been more “just along for the ride” than I have been for this trip and I … I THINK I’m Loving it.
Right from the get-go, trying to fit into their little Kia, it’s clear that Ana has enthusiastically and excitedly overpacked (she has extra boots and coats for all of us, boardgames and what I THINK are badminton rackets?) but with some ingenuity and patience we manage to get ourselves, them, and everything into the car and down the road. We squeeze ourselves into our prison rooms and then stretch our legs all over the city.
The language is… not going to happen. Though written signage and instructions often have enough close-to-English bits that if you sound it out you can guess at their meaning, most of it is long, strange and lilting, and the spoken language, though musical, is spectacularly foreign to me. I’m still thinking in French half the time, something that was stubbornly NOT happening in Belgium where it would’ve been useful.
So very, very grateful for Ana’s patience and Alex’ chill.
Wandering the city for our last night, we take a longer-than-expected walk home and are kind of really walking with a PURPOSE… but I stop us for this jazz band outside of the “Half Way Inn” in Stockholm. Great quintet with a solid front woman, we stopped to catch them play Bobby Hebb’s tune “Sunny”. Good keys, good drums, guitar, but the star of the group was the bass player.Our last night in the hostel, massive party on the beach outside our window. This is about 10pm and the bass is audible from literally miles away. I didn’t recognize the significance of the Life preserve visible in this shot till a week later when I realized that almost every body of water is deemed swimmable in Sweden and has a little Life guard station! In any case, it was our last night in prison and now we’re off to find our Air B&B in Sala!