Where we live now (since 2005)
Where my dad grew up (in the early 60s)
house built by my granddad, here with my dad last Wednesday
Insulation? Pah. We're only in the Arctic, after all.
I've been talking with a lot of people about the differences between Norway and Nicaragua.
When I talk about handwashing of clothes, earning most of your living through farming and fishing , depending on the crop being good, but also making popsicles out of squash in plastic bags, most people in or around their 50s here in Tromsø say: "But that's like when I was little! I remember that!" My grandmother, who's 86, remembers every detail of a life that she lived fifty years ago, and I lived part of it only two or three months ago.
And I realise how much life in Norway has changed the past fifty to sixty years. How much wealth has changed where we live, how we live and what we live off.
I also see it every day in the charity shop I've been volunteering in, what ridiculous amounts of stuff we buy and throw away before it's hardly been used. The shop has recently expanded, but hasn't got enough room for everything people bring. And we're not seeing what goes to the other charity shops or what people throw away. What goes out - what people are willing to buy second hand - is a lot less than what comes in - what they're willing to get rid of. Completely new and unused clothes with the tag on. This bothered me three years ago as well, when I worked for another charity shop, but now I can see the difference. It's not just Norway fifty years ago and Norway now, it's Norway now and Nicaragua being now what Norway was fifty years ago.