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Outside/In

If You Wanna Get Kosileg, You Gotta Get a Little Friluftsliv

Outside/In

NHPR

Society & Culture, Documentary, Natural Sciences, Nature, Science

4.71.5K Ratings

🗓️ 31 December 2020

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For many of us during the pandemic, the dark and cold of winter brings a special sense of dread. But it’s not just this year: the seasonal darkness often collectively takes us by surprise. Like clockwork, we forget how dark and cold it gets - and it turns out, there are reasons for that. But our perception of the seasonal darkness can also be influenced by our attitudes about it. In Norway, cultural ideas around winter help shape attitudes and experiences of the cold. The Outside/In winter fund drive is nearly over, and we’re almost to our goal of 100 donors! Visit outsideinradio.org/donate to support the show - and vote on the topic of a potential bonus episode if we reach our goal. First, there’s the idea of getting cozy, or kosileg. Think candles, slippers, the glow of a fire in the window on a snowy night, eating wood-fired pizza under the stars, or “the smell of baked goods and the Christmas tree,” said Anders Folleras, college friend of Sam Evans-Brown and honorary Outside/In Norwegian cultural attaché. Koselig is the Norwegian analogue of the Danish idea of hygge. But there’s another concept that goes hand-in-hand with koselig: friluftsliv. “Being outdoorsy, I’d say,” said Folleras. “Outdoor lifestyle.” Embracing friluftsliv means open-air living, or getting outside every day, and outdoor adventures for all ages. So, we think if you really want to get koselig, you’ve gotta get a little friluftsliv too. For a full list of the suggestions we mentioned in this episode, visit the episode post on outsideinradio.org. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, hello, friends.

0:05.0

Hello.

0:06.0

Hello.

0:07.0

Hello.

0:08.0

We've really changed in these several months of isolation. This is outside in a show about the

0:16.6

natural world and how we use it. I am the host who carves the holiday roast Sam

0:21.1

Evans Brown. Here with me is Justine Paradise.

0:24.0

Hello! Taylor Quimby.

0:27.0

Hi.

0:28.0

And Erica Jettic.

0:29.0

And we have congregated here digitally in part because Erica of an article that you shared on our

0:34.4

Slack channel about how you know about the darkness that is now.

0:41.8

And by the darkness you don't mean the emotional and metaphysical

0:44.8

darkness. I'm talking about the darkness, the literal the fact that it's that night

0:48.3

is it's 342 right now and night is falling as we speak. Yeah so as we record this together it is right around the

0:55.6

winter solstice and in Concord where we are we're getting a little less than nine

1:00.3

hours of sunlight right now and so the article I shared was written by Shayla Love from Vice.

1:05.8

It's basically asking, how is it that even though this happens literally every year,

1:11.1

it always seems sort of surprising just how dark it is.

1:15.0

Yeah, it always feels like sudden.

1:17.7

And I think for many of us, this pandemic year

1:19.9

has brought this unique sense of dread.

...

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