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SOCIAL LIFE

Why I can’t embrace Sweden’s obsession with hugging

From The Local's archive: Oliver Gee simply can't come to grips with Swedes and their fascination with hugging. And he's not alone.

Why I can't embrace Sweden's obsession with hugging
Swedish artists Måns Zelmerlöw and Danny Saucedo sharing a hug. Photo: Leif R Jansson/Scanpix

In France, they kiss you on the cheek. In Maori tribes of New Zealand, they nuzzle noses. And in Sweden, they hug. A lot. 

And it’s all a bit confusing for me, especially as Swedes usually enjoy their privacy. In fact, besides the liberal attitude to nudity (yeah, that’s a real thing here), the hug is probably the biggest eyebrow-raiser among weird Swedish habits.

But first, in case you’re unaware, here is how The Hug works in Sweden.

1. Meet a person in Sweden in an informal social context. Housewarming parties are a good and commonly recurring example. 

2. Say your name once and allow them to say theirs. Repeat process with every single person in the group, even though everyone heard your name the first time. Optional hand shake, single pump. Men and women shake hands too, by the way. 

3. Enjoy social occasion (also optional).

4. When you leave, hug any person you talked to for more than five minutes. They are now a Hugging Friend Forever (HFF). Wait while everyone else hugs everyone else too. This may take a while if several people are leaving the party at once.

5. Hug your Hugging Friend every single time you see them again in any vaguely social context. In fact, pretty much in any context.

6. And then hug them goodbye each time too. 

Note: Never go for the cheek kiss. It’s not even an option. People will panic.

This list might sound like an exaggeration but this is exactly how it works. 

I recently went to a colleague’s house for dinner and we hugged when I entered his house. We hugged! It was only a few hours earlier that we’d been chatting about Zlatan Ibrahimovic in the office and now we were cuddling in his corridor.

Swedes even send virtual hugs via text message, signing off their texts with a kram (the Swedish word for hug).

But me, I just can’t get used to the hugging, especially with other men. I still go for the handshake every time and people recoil. It’s become so bad that I have a reputation among my friends as a non-hugger.

“Will it be a hug this time Oliver?” they say as menacingly as a Swedish accent allows.  

In Australia, where I’m from, we prefer the handshake. Strong grip, eye contact, two to three pumps. But it’s always a hug in Sweden – men on men, women on women, men on women and so on. 

And I’m not the only foreigner in Sweden who has noticed. A French woman I know also finds it hard to get used to.

“But it’s not that they hug that I find strange… it’s the way they do it,” she told me recently. “It looks like they hate it, as proper Swedes they don’t like human contact. There is always this awkward panic moment in their eyes: ‘Warning! I’m about to enter in collision with another human being’,” she said. 

Let’s not forget, in France they kiss as a greeting. So who knows whether we can trust the French woman to judge strange greetings. 

“You start with a different cheek depending on the region you come from, and the number of kiss varies from two to four,” she explained. “It’s a real art.”

A real art indeed. Like embracing the hug, perhaps?

Article written by Oliver Gee in 2014. 

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QUALITY OF LIFE

How happy are people in Sweden compared to the rest of the world?

Sweden climbed two notches in the annual World Happiness Report, but is still behind its Danish and Finnish neighbours.

How happy are people in Sweden compared to the rest of the world?

The UN’s latest World Happiness Report puts Sweden fourth on its national happiness ranking.

Finland takes the title of world’s happiest nation, for the seventh year in a row.

Sweden has consistently ended up high on this kind of list for decades, thanks to relatively strong social support, affluence, and comparatively honest and accountable governments. Its fourth place is an improvement on last year, when it came in sixth.

The United States fell out of the top 20 for the first time since the report began in 2012, getting a ranking of 23. For context, Australia was 10th, Ireland 17th, the United Kingdom 20th, Germany 24th, France 27th, China 60th and India 126th, with Afghanistan in last place.

Nordic neighbours Denmark and Norway were 2nd and 7th respectively.

The findings are drawn from Gallup World Poll data and analysed by leading wellbeing scientists, according to the World Happiness Report website.

Experts use responses from people in 143 nations to rank the world’s “happiest” countries.

Rankings are based on a three-year average of each population’s average assessment of their quality of life.

The UN report then uses experts from a range of fields including economics, psychology and sociology to attempt to explain the variations across countries and over time.

Factors such as GDP, life expectancy, having someone to count on, a sense of freedom, generosity and perceptions of corruption are among those considered in the final report.

“We found some pretty striking results. There is a great variety among countries in the relative happiness of the younger, older, and in-between populations. Hence the global happiness rankings are quite different for the young and the old, to an extent that has changed a lot over the last dozen years,” Professor John F. Helliwell, a founding editor of the World Happiness Report, said on the report’s website.

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