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FAMILY

How to visit your Swedish in-laws and get invited back

Meeting your in-laws for the first time is nerve-wracking in any country, but just so you're not taken by surprise: here's an informal set of rules and habits you may encounter if they're Swedish.

How to visit your Swedish in-laws and get invited back
A family in Sweden. Photo: Susanne Walström/imagebank.sweden.se

The first time I met my wife’s parents we had known each other less than a year, and she was already pregnant with our first child, which in some countries would guarantee an awkward introduction.

That it was the funeral of her much-loved grandmother made me even more fearful. 

But I was greeted with a hearty hug by her mother, and a gentle smile from her father, and then – without even a hint of the feared interrogation, I was immediately enlisted into helping lay out the tables where the many relatives and friends coming after the service were to be fed coffee and smörgåstårta

I imagine that most other foreigners who have come to Sweden for love have experienced something similar. Here’s what I’ve learned from my own experiences (with some help from my wife). 

1. Be informal 

New arrivals from some countries sometimes wonder how to refer to the parents of their beloved, as in some countries you might use some honorific, or the polite form of the word “you”.

Not in Sweden. Call them by their first names, and just say du. While some young Swedes are apparently increasingly using the plural version of “you” – ni – to address grand old ladies or gentlemen, you shouldn’t, and certainly not to your partner’s parents. 

Don’t call them Sir, Madam, or Mr and Mrs Svensson either.

You should of course be polite, though.

In Sweden this means sitting at the table for a long time before starting eating – longer, I feel, than would be the case in the UK. Just wait until the parents start eating themselves. 

And of course, it’s best to avoid controversial conversation topics, meaning it’s probably best not to talk politics to start off with, particularly the politics of religion or immigration. 

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2. Don’t expect a grilling 

In many countries – such as in the UK –  the first meeting with the parents of the object of your adoration is a sort of informal interview, where your suitability as a future son or daughter-in-law comes under scrutiny.

This is rarely the case in less hierarchical Sweden, where parents tend not to see themselves as having much say over who their children decide to pair off with.  

So if you are braced for a grilling, the meeting might come as a bit of an anti-climax, with your partner’s parents showing a bewildering lack of curiosity over your career, your educational achievements, or your parents’ social standing back home. 

This doesn’t mean they don’t care about you, it just means that they see it as up to their son or daughter to assess whether or not you meet the grade.

From the parent’s point of view, if you end up being a permanent fixture, they will have ample time to get to know your life story anyway. And if not, why waste time discovering it now?

In general, you should expect them to show slightly more curiosity in your background than the parents of a normal, ordinary friend would… but not much more.

3. Don’t try to sell yourself too much

Because of this same less hierarchical parent-child relationship, the parents of your boyfriend or girlfriend may feel as much under scrutiny as you do. 

So before you launch into an appraisal of your prospects at the law firm where you work, or detail your ground-breaking biochemical research, think for a little of how this reflects on them. 

If they, themselves, have never been big earners or achieved any academic glory, they might take your subtle boasts about your own achievements as an implicit criticism. 

Also, remember to ask them about themselves – in Sweden it’s less of an interview and more of a two-way get-to-know-you.

It’s also worth bearing in mind that Jantelagen, the Swedish version of tall poppy syndrome, is alive and well. So the level of self-promotion that would be acceptable in countries such as the US, will be way over the mark.

By all means tell them what you do if they ask. But don’t ram it down their throat.

If there’s some overlap between your own career and theirs, it might be a topic to talk about, but if there’s none, it wouldn’t be an issue if you went through the whole meeting without mentioning what you do at all. 

In general, don’t try too hard to sell yourself. 

4. Don’t try to be the life and soul of the party 

In some countries, you might want to show your boyfriend’s or girlfriend’s parents what a good laugh you are. 

The mark of success on your first visit home might be that you end up bonding in the pub until closing time with their father, or giggling over bottles of prosecco with the mother. 

Swedes, though, tend to take a bit longer than this to open up, and it’s fairly unlikely that they’ll let their hair down to this extent on a first visit. And you shouldn’t either!

While, obviously, you should try to be as charming and interesting a conversationalist as you are able, you might find the chit-chat on the first meeting a bit flat by the standards of some other countries, and feel that you didn’t really hit it off. There might even be awkward silences.  

Don’t worry about this. As long as no actual social catastrophe has taken place, your hosts will feel the meeting has been a success.  

Do you know how to use one of these? Photo: TT
 
5. Pitch in!

Swedish families are like bands of little gnomes. They bond around doing chores. This might be laying the tables for a wedding or funeral, making the food at Easter or Christmas, chopping wood, fixing a boat, car or caravan, painting something, or collecting berries or mushrooms. 

The parents, your boyfriend or girlfriend, or another relative, will probably invite you to get involved in some task or other. But if they don’t, it’s a good idea to look for jobs that need doing and offer to do them. 

Swedes prize thoughtfulness and consideration, so if you can show the ability to anticipate tasks that are needed and the initiative to get going, you will definitely win points. 

The worst impression you could give would be stay sitting at a table as everyone busies themselves around you – particularly if you’ve just spent half an hour lecturing everyone on what needs to happen for your share options to vest. 

Tasks are less gendered in Sweden than in most countries. But in my experience, boyfriends of Swedes are more likely to end up in a shed helping the father mend a chainsaw, while girlfriends of Swedes more likely to end up icing cakes. 

6. Don’t worry if you are useless at chores

Doing chores is not another, more practical, kind of interview for a prospective family member. You don’t need to already know how to use a chainsaw or make a prinsesstårta. But you do need to show an interest and a willingness to learn.  

Indeed, coming to Sweden ignorant of the sort of practical things Swedes love, but interested in learning about them is probably the single best way to make your way into the affections of your future in-laws. 

I know one international man whose relationship with his Swedish father-in-law seems entirely based around the sawing, chopping, storage, and burning of wood. 

You may know nothing, but if you’re in Sweden for the long haul, you have decades to learn. 

Good luck! 

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EASTER

How to dress your child up as a Swedish Easter Witch

Help! I've received a note from our Swedish school telling me to dress my child up for their Easter party. What should they wear?

How to dress your child up as a Swedish Easter Witch

Anything vaguely Easter-related will do, such as bunny ears, a sweater with a bunny print, a chicken costume, or wearing all yellow will do – but the classic outfit, at least for girls, is to dress up as an Easter witch (known as påskhäxa, påskkärring or påskgumma in Swedish).

Folklore alleges that witches flew off on broomsticks to dance with the devil at a meadow known as Blåkulla (“blue hill”), which Swedish parents are seemingly unfazed about their kids re-enacting.

In most of Sweden, Maundy Thursday (skärtorsdag) is the traditional day on which to dress up as an Easter Witch (it’s Easter Saturday in western Sweden) but in practice you often spot children with painted faces, headscarves and broomsticks throughout the holiday.

So what do you need to dress up as an Easter Witch?

In our experience, parents’ efforts range without abandon from the ambitious to the half-hearted, so you shouldn’t have to feel that you have to go further than what you and your child think is fun and manageable.

For a minimum viable product, all you need is a kerchief, scarf or shawl to wear on the head.

Tie it under their chin and they will be immediately recognisable as an Easter Witch.

This use of the headscarf in Sweden can be traced back to the late 18th century, when it was worn by farmers’ wives.

Another relatively easy item to include is an apron. Similarly, this harks back to the notion of what a rural woman usually looked like, which is also associated with witch trials in Sweden in the 1600s (which tended to be held in the countryside).

Thirdly, for a basic Easter Witch outfit, makeup in the form of freckles and rosy cheeks.

If you want to step up your level of ambition, you can also include accessories. These include first and foremost a broomstick, but also an old-fashioned coffee pot (not even dancing with the devil can make Swedes forsake their coffee) and a soft cat toy, ideally black.

Can boys be Easter Witches? Of course they can, and in any case it would hardly stand out as the most peculiar thing about this tradition.

That said, in practice you’ll see few boys, if any, in the full Easter Witch outfit. The more modern equivalent for boys instead often includes a shirt, braces/suspenders, freckles with a moustache (instead of or in addition to rosy cheeks), and some kind of hat.

Hear Jonas Engberg from the Nordic Museum in Stockholm discuss Easter traditions in Sweden, including witches, in The Local’s Sweden in Focus Extra podcast

 
 
 
 
 
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