2
The place where Expats, Danes & their families come together. Meet over 50 local clubs and organizations, and enjoy a day of fun, play and connection in co-operation with Expats in Denmark and CPH post THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013 JOIN US IN JUNE AT VALBYPARKEN FOR Sign up at The Copenhagen Post website! SUNDAY, 9 JUNE FROM 14:00 - 17:00 T H E C H I L D R E N S F A I R 2 0 1 3 T H E CO P E N H A G E N P O S T BRING YOUR OWN PICNINC BASKET PICNIC AREA ARRANGED BY EXPAT IN DENMARK Denmark’s only English-language newspaper 24 - 30 May 2013 | Vol 16 Issue 21 Denmark’s only English-language newspaper | cphpost.dk SCANPIX / BETINA GARCIA S UPPORT for easing citizen- ship rules for both Danes liv- ing abroad and expats living in Denmark is growing. Opposi- tion party Venstre, which has long been divided on the issue, now looks poised to allow dual citizenship. “It is a journey we have been on,” Venstre’s citizenship spokesperson, Jan E Jørgensen, told DR News. Venstre’s earlier lack of support for dual citizenship came into sharp focus when the party’s former leader, and Denmark’s former PM, Anders Fogh Rasmussen’s son Henrik had to give up his Danish citizenship in 2010 in order to become an American citizen. Although the government is not ready to introduce a change to the law, Venstre joins government coalition par- ties Socialdemokraterne (S), Radikale and Socialistisk Folkeparti in supporting dual nationality. Venstre’s support creates a consensus, virtually guaranteeing that dual nationality legislation will be passed when it comes up for a vote, possibly as early as this coming autumn. A working group is currently examining the legal ramifications of changing the law. “Citizenship is regulated by the Danish constitution, so it is necessary to clarify how a law change will impact on both those conditions and Den- mark’s international obligations,” the justice minister, Morten Bødskov (S), With Venstre on board, dual citizenship looks likely Worldwide, told DR News, adding that dual citizenship was about more than just an extra passport. “Citizenship is such an important part of one’s identity that forcing some- one to choose is the same as forcing a child to choose between their mother or father or a mother to choose between her children,” she said. Dalgaard said that allowing Danes to come back home as citizens with the knowledge and networks they have de- veloped abroad would benefit Danish businesses and the country as a whole, but that it was equally important to make those who wished to acquire Dan- ish nationality feel welcome. “It is important to accept newcom- ers and welcome them in the same way we allow our nationals to integrate in other countries,” Dalgaard said. Door opened for Afghan interpreters’ asylum School reform receives serious setback 4 3 Beer Festival special section inside! Nation’s largest political party says both Danes and expats should no longer have to choose between countries told DR News. Currently, 20 out of the 27 EU countries allow either full or partial dual citizenship. Margrethe Vestager, the economy minister and the leader of Radikale, which has been one of parliament’s strongest voices in favour of dual citi- zenship, has called it “a gift” that for- eigners would be allowed to retain their original citizenship and be afforded “full access to the country [Denmark] they will contribute to and where their chil- dren would grow up”. Danes living outside of the country welcomed the prospect of being able to get dual citizenship. “It is incredibly important for Danes living abroad to be able to in- tegrate where they live,” Anne Marie Dalgaard, the spokesperson for Danes CBS EXECUTIVE MBA AIM FOR EXCELLENCE Info meeting in Copenhagen on 11 June - sign up on www.cbs.dk/emba NEWS Danes say they are the least stressed workers in Europe, but recent surveys cast doubt on those claims 10 NEWS A dagpenge solution has been found that will result in the restructuring of Danish courses for foreigners 3 No more smoking 5 In a move to be a smoke-free workplace, DSB bans smoking on train platforms as of next summer And the winner is ... 13 Our Text Factor competition comes to an end; find out who came out on top and will join the CPH Post staff 9 771398 100009 Price: 25 DKK NEWS COMMUNITY With Eurovision title secured, attention turns to which Danish city will host next year’s contest – and how much it will cost Now what? 1415 RAY WEAVER

Downloading the happiness app

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Not all of us are blessed with happy genes or live in an environment that is conducive to being content and at peace with ourselves. What about individual effort and action?

Citation preview

The place where Expats, Danes & their families come together. Meet over 50 local clubs and organizations, and enjoy a day of fun, play and connection

in co-operation with Expats in Denmark and CPH post

THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013

THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013

JOIN US IN JUNE AT VALBYPARKEN FOR

Sign up at The Copenhagen Post website!

Sign up at The Copenhagen Post website!

Sign up at The Copenhagen Post website!

SUNDAY, 9 JUNE FROM 14:00 - 17:00

The place where Expats, Danes & their families come together. Meet over 50 local clubs and organizations, and enjoy a day of fun, play and connection Meet over 50 local clubs and organizations, and enjoy a day of fun, play and connection THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013THE CHILDREN’S FAIR 2013

N’

THE

CHI

LDRE

N’S

FAIR 2013

THE COPENHAGEN

POS

T BRING YOUR OWN PICNINC BASKET

PICNIC AREA ARRANGED BY EXPAT IN DENMARK

Denmark’s only English-language newspaper

24 - 30 May 2013 | Vol 16 Issue 21 Denmark’s only English-language newspaper | cphpost.dk

SCA

NP

IX / B

ET

INA

GA

RC

IA

S UPPORT for easing citizen-ship rules for both Danes liv-ing abroad and expats living in Denmark is growing. Opposi-

tion party Venstre, which has long been divided on the issue, now looks poised to allow dual citizenship.

“It is a journey we have been on,” Venstre’s citizenship spokesperson, Jan E Jørgensen, told DR News.

Venstre’s earlier lack of support for dual citizenship came into sharp focus when the party’s former leader, and Denmark’s former PM, Anders Fogh

Rasmussen’s son Henrik had to give up his Danish citizenship in 2010 in order to become an American citizen.

Although the government is not ready to introduce a change to the law, Venstre joins government coalition par-ties Socialdemokraterne (S), Radikale and Socialistisk Folkeparti in supporting dual nationality. Venstre’s support creates a consensus, virtually guaranteeing that dual nationality legislation will be passed when it comes up for a vote, possibly as early as this coming autumn. A working group is currently examining the legal rami� cations of changing the law.

“Citizenship is regulated by the Danish constitution, so it is necessary to clarify how a law change will impact on both those conditions and Den-mark’s international obligations,” the justice minister, Morten Bødskov (S),

With Venstre on board, dual citizenship looks likelyWorldwide, told DR News, adding that dual citizenship was about more than just an extra passport.

“Citizenship is such an important part of one’s identity that forcing some-one to choose is the same as forcing a child to choose between their mother or father or a mother to choose between her children,” she said.

Dalgaard said that allowing Danes to come back home as citizens with the knowledge and networks they have de-veloped abroad would bene� t Danish businesses and the country as a whole, but that it was equally important to make those who wished to acquire Dan-ish nationality feel welcome.

“It is important to accept newcom-ers and welcome them in the same way we allow our nationals to integrate in other countries,” Dalgaard said.

Door opened for Afghan interpreters’ asylum

School reform receives serious setback

43

Beer Festival special section inside!

Nation’s largest political party says both Danes and expats should no longer have to choose between countries

told DR News.Currently, 20 out of the 27 EU

countries allow either full or partial dual citizenship.

Margrethe Vestager, the economy minister and the leader of Radikale, which has been one of parliament’s strongest voices in favour of dual citi-zenship, has called it “a gift” that for-eigners would be allowed to retain their original citizenship and be a� orded “full access to the country [Denmark] they will contribute to and where their chil-dren would grow up”.

Danes living outside of the country welcomed the prospect of being able to get dual citizenship.

“It is incredibly important for Danes living abroad to be able to in-tegrate where they live,” Anne Marie Dalgaard, the spokesperson for Danes

CBS EXECUTIVE MBA

AIM FOR EXCELLENCEInfo meeting in Copenhagen on 11 June - sign up on www.cbs.dk/emba

NEWS

Danes say they are the least stressed workers in Europe, but recent surveys cast doubt on those claims

10

NEWS

A dagpenge solution has been found that will result in the restructuring of Danish courses for foreigners

3

No more smoking

5

In a move to be a smoke-free workplace, DSB bans smoking on train platforms as of next summer

And the winner is ...

13

Our Text Factor competition comes to an end; fi nd out who came out on top and will join the CPH Post staff

9 771398 100009

Price: 25 DKK

NEWS

COMMUNITY

With Eurovision title secured, attention turns to which Danish city will host next year’s contest – and how much it will cost

Now what?1415

RAY WEAVER

Beer Festival special

924 - 30 May 2013 THE COPENHAGEN POST CPHPOST.DK OPINION

NEXT WEEK IN 2 WEEKS IN 3 WEEKS IN 4 WEEKS

Özcan Arjulovski Stuart LynchTHE WORDS OF ÖZ THE LYNCH REPORT

CPH POST VOICES

Kelly Draper Frank TheakstonYOU’RE STILL HERE? TO BE PERFECTLY FRANK

Stephanie Brickman Tendai TagariraBRICK BY BRICK GRAIN OF SAND

Justin Cremer Vivienne McKeeSTILL ADJUSTING CRAZIER THAN CHRISTMAS

The Balancing ActBY SARITA RAJIV

Sarita Rajiv recently moved from sun-kissed India to snow-topped Denmark. Having hopped from east to west, she � nds herself performing a balancing act between her old and new lives. A communications specialist in the past, she is now a gifting specialist. For more, visit ilovegifting.me

Christian Wenande’s Danish/American background caters well to a city brimming with cultural diversity and strife. The CPH Post journalist loves life in Copenhagen but yearns for the indomitable mountains, rolling prairie and starry nights of his Wyoming sanctuary.

Christian ValuesBY CHRISTIAN WENANDE

I ’VE BEEN thinking about hap-piness a lot lately. Denmark does that to you. First, it serenades you with its impressive happiness

rankings and its near-perfect Scandina-vian lifestyle. And then, when you live here, it compels you to think about the hows and whys.

With research indicating that ge-netics plays a major role in determin-ing how happy we are, does Denmark’s consistently high rankings in the hap-piness ratings mean Danes are natural-ly blessed with happy genes? And what about the stellar supporting cast in the form of a welfare state that says: “I got your back” and the controversial but inescapable Jante Law? What exactly makes the Danes among the happiest people on earth?

I put my question to Sharmi Albre-chtsen, an American living in Denmark for the past 12 years, who is working on a book entitled ‘Happy Danes: In-vestigating Danish Happiness’.

She says the answer is yes to all of the above.

“I believe there is a winning com-bination of circumstances that makes

Denmark the happiest country in the world,” Albrechtsen said. “� e gener-ous welfare system here allows society to have a certain level of comfort. And though most Danes have an aversion to the Jante Law – a norm in Denmark that negatively portrays individual success while criticising ambition and excessive materialism – I believe Jante Law is the reason they are satis� ed with their lives, as it helps them manage their expectations. � is in turn a� ords Danes a sense of peace with them-selves and their place in society. It al-lows them to focus on other attributes like family, work-life balance, sports, nature and community – which every Dane, rich or not, values.”

While Denmark may have its winning combination, surely we non-Danes also have a shot at happiness? Not all of us are blessed with happy genes or live in an environment that is conducive to being content and at peace with ourselves. What about indi-vidual e� ort and action?

Tapping right into our eternal quest for happiness is Happify, a web-based app. Yes, you read that right: an app.

It works on the assumption that hap-piness is a skill one can hone through a set of activities. If happiness is a skill, then one can be born with it or acquire it through e� ort. I got an opportunity to beta test the app and be a ‘Happify Pioneer’. Intrigued, but armed with a heavy dose of scepticism, I decided to give it a try. � is was my chance to test the role of individual e� ort in happi-ness. And, for once, I wasn’t going to be merely following a new tech move-ment that was being used by everybody I knew and everybody they knew. So, I tried this app from the virtual world and applied it in the real world, do-ing activities aimed at working on � ve essential happiness elements: savour, thank, aspire, give and empathise.

In theory, it made sense. But, did it work for me? Not really. It meant hav-ing a weekly ‘to-do’ list and that made it seem like a chore that, ironically, took all the fun out of being happy. I also remain a sceptic because it is so easy to fake or arti� cially create posi-tive experiences online. Facebook is a case in point. Many share pictures and posts of every moment and event in

their lives – of anything even remotely remarkable, putting on a show and keeping up with the Joneses – in the hope that there will be someone who will ‘like’ it.

I have to admit, there is one thing Happify seems to be right about – you have to work at being happy. More im-portantly, what my little experiment con� rmed is something I’ve suspected all along: there are so many di� erent ways to happify ourselves.

What makes me happy can make another miserable. Some places, like Denmark, make it easier for you to pursue your happiness, while oth-ers make it tough, challenging you at every step. Still others do everything possible to make sure you � ounder in misery. But, because where we live isn’t the only thing that dictates how happy we are, we continue to pursue happi-ness, acknowledging the one pervasive truth that applies to everyone: hap-piness is hard work. You just need to � gure out the formula that works best for you. For Albert Einstein it was a ta-ble, a chair, a bowl of fruit and a violin. What’s yours?

W HEN international trans-parency watchdogs level criticism at someone in the European theatre, they usu-

ally do so in the general direction of eastern Europe.

But the watchdogs are on to a new stench now, and this time it’s emanating from Denmark.

About a month ago, Transparency International blasted the government’s new freedom of information act pro-posal (off entlighedslov), contending that it would compromise Denmark’s trans-parency reputation, and last week the International Press Institute (IPI) and the European Federation of Journalists (EFJ) asked the Danish government to drop the law in the name of democracy.

� e two central points of infamy in the new law are sections 24 and 27.2 – both of which reduce transparency within the central ministerial forum of policy making. In short, the public and the press will be left in the dark when it comes to looking into the foundation of governmental decisions and laws. � e fourth estate will be left crippled.

But most vexing in this farce is the

fact that not one minister or member of parliament has been able to describe a single instance in which the current law, which grants the public the right to access documents, has negatively in� u-enced the transpirations of government.

� is was exempli� ed by the ex-cruciating performance of the justice minister, Morten Bødskov of the So-cialdemokraterne (S), during a recent episode of the DR2 debate programme ‘Deadline 22.30’, during which Bød-skov was asked a staggering 14 times to provide a speci� c case that illustrated the need to change the law.

Bødskov looked like a deer in the headlights as he stumbled and stuttered his way through the uncompromising questioning by host Martin Krasnik. � e debate more resembled a Gestapo interrogation than a political contest. It speaks volumes when the justice min-ister suddenly morphs into ‘Rain Man’ – I was half expecting him to start rock-ing back and forth in his seat and start counting toothpicks. It was a pitiful dis-play, nothing less.

Opposition to the law, on the con-trary, is widespread and determined.

Over 80,000 people have signed the ‘Nej tak til den nye off entlighedslov’ petition, and a massive demonstration, supported by all the party youth groups, took place last week in front of Christiansborg.

Clearly, the government is aware of the overwhelming public sentiment. No-one wants to get within six feet of the off entlighedslov after Bødskov’s ap-palling performance. Coalition parties have been haemorrhaging members and every minister, including PM Helle � orning-Schmidt (S), defers to the jus-tice minister when asked about the law.

Despite a hollow pledge to see where the law is in three years’ time, Bødskov looks poised to be the latest politician to be tossed in front of the � orning-Schmidt bus – a bus loaded with hypocrisy.

Back in 2009, when Bødskov and S were part of the opposition, Bødskov was eager to point out the importance of transparency in the political space, maintaining “every time that there is doubt whether the public should have access to information, then it is trans-parency that should be prioritised.”

� is access recently led journalists to

Freedom of information act muzzles the watchdog

uncover the scandal involving the em-ployment minister, Mette Frederiksen (S), vastly understating the number of people who would fall out of the unem-ployment bene� t scheme, kontanthjælp.

It is quite obvious that this ‘free-dom’ of information act will solely bene� t the power-wielders who sit at the helm of power, while muzzling the opposition and public from gaining in-sight into any deviant undertakings. Do they not realise that the short-sighted move will back� re on them when they lose the next election and suddenly � nd themselves on the sidelines?

And surely, alarm bells must ring when the left-wing Enhedslisten and right-wing Dansk Folkeparti are able to set aside their monumental di� erences to concur that the law is unwarranted and unwanted.

According to international watchdog organisation, Freedom House, Denmark ranks sixth in the word when it comes to press freedom, a commendable ranking to be sure, but one that will undoubtedly su� er should � orning-Schmidt and her cohorts get their way and dim the halls of government to the public.

Downloading the happiness app