[theqoo] SWEDEN GATE DUMP

  • [theqoo] SWEDEN GATE DUMP
    We translate Pann articles about Korean news, music, drama and lifestyle
    www.pannchoa.com

    [theqoo] SWEDEN GATE DUMP

    bypannchoaMay 31, 2022
    CONTEXT: https://www.newsweek.com/dinne…ook-over-internet-1711640



    [theqoo] SWEDEN'S MEAL TREATING GATE NEWEST INFORMATION



    AVvXsEhx5eMJgLPU3fw0se5wWSc7b2NUX85g27Qq9T3LNWeX0DuvOTs8JShzNpWtGq_gq_6w3iANVMp88DUEF0E5QgdUvsa1Lpmjei_DFO2i12vWNeEIQ4mR9ya0cXUxrzQSEijTD6cgWciAjCCy7F3Ec_tPpbTlO__zVJs7_3jVchRSYHVug8U7XSl2VCmc=s16000



    "me and college roommate were invited to swedish friend's wedding in spain. we took day off, bought flight+hotel, attended the church ceremony. then we were told to go "walk around the city" while the family had the wedding dinner, and to come back after a couple hours!"


    original post: here


    1. Why did they come up with such culture??? Seriously I'm asking innocently.. If there's an explanation, I want to see


    2. I was reading a thread on Twitter and everyone said that it was weird, however every Swedish person said that it was reasonable until the endㅋ I felt like I was losing my mind when reading it.


    3. Seriously? That's the way they treat people after inviting them to a wedding? Is this something they do only in Northern Europe's weddings?


    4. I can't believe the 'poor' excuse. No matter how poor you are, you can't be treating your guests like that


    5. What a turn off for Sweden


    6. At this rate, Swedish people need to come out to clarify whether this is real or not


    7. What a weird country


    8. ??? Why would they do that???


    9. F*cking selfish


    10. What a selfish cultureㅋㅋㅋㅋF*ck are they human?ㅋㅋ




    [theqoo] SWEDEN TREATS THE SAME NORTH EUROPEAN, NORWAY, THE SAME [DISCRIMINATORY] WAY EVEN TO A 7 Y'O



    AVvXsEiMqRcf6Pt2iDC2JAAbYtGyau-SpoHjX7L5LsgHFicTCsRCCD_OQo_1sOlvBhDiEgG1_Ki515GYPDNP7YILLTvCIY2ylDggDy2baXoy6VGcLILHBp2O_Usg5mbZeQ9MLw10mFmNe-eOvj8zAsQ-_gdqLIh-35zCO4ydfvyxe6LV8hSxzARmD32hC9iy=s16000


    original post: here


    1. ??????? This is shocking


    2. No but they can't even snack together? Even for snacks, they need to tell you to go away?


    3. They're seriously crazy


    4. Then why would you invite people over???????


    5. Wow... If the reason is that the child is not aware of the food allergy or that the child's parents may be feeding the food that the child's parents do not want to feed, it would be understandable, but this is f*cking shocking


    6. Is it that hard to even have ne meal together?


    7. No way I'm coming back after 1 hourㅋㅋ


    8. They could've just bought them a lunch box, why ask them to go away?


    9. Ah seriously I wonder what made them come up with a culture like that


    10. Against a 7y'o, that's literally a baby




    [theqoo] SWEDEN GATE NEW - EVEN IF THE OTHER PARTY IS A CHILD, THEY'RE NO EXCEPTION



    AVvXsEii0RZQ5IfS4s8d9ljTL4LpObqq684-7-MuCewNtZcRpN32FVhZ8cbigzWAT8fHw1evoXp9ewasLaSko9HudQNKpEAPekK6jDBdhhAUkOmJuAVKrKHzZNjdfxt_9u9ALL5x_UiHvShrz1OPXJlVwvX2KZTXfU53ElhVLH7zoTlyiRqMFEwAqhqLxqLh=s16000

    original post: here


    1. Just why do they do this????


    2. What is thisㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ


    3. Things like that really exist..??????? this is shocking


    4. Even if you tell me this is their culture, I can't understandㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ The friend was the one who invited him over to eat, couldn't he just keep his mouth shut?


    5. Are they unable to share any food? It's freaking overboard. Of course, there are cultural differences but they're the ones who called him to treat him for food but don't want to pay even though they offer to treat youㅋㅋㅋ then they blame it on cultural differences. Then just don't invite and treat people so he doesn't have to repay them the money? If they want to eat for free, why are they calling this 'treating people'


    6. Seriously don't do that for food...ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ The baby must've been so shockedㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ They need to eatㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ


    7. Why would you do this to a babyㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ


    8. I'm so upset ugh


    9. Wow... I can't believe they can't even cover the cost for Burger King. The fact that the mom got mad and phoned the kid's mom about it is just insane.. What is Sweden doing??????? They're not just individualistic, they're literally unmannerly. Wow... This is beyond my imagination


    10. Wow acting like that as a human is just disgusting

    LAFBL0s.gif

    let us gather around for the lord’s prayer:

    Nævis we love you. You are the one who protected me when i was in trouble. MY victory, one SYNK DIVE. I know your sacrifices. Let’s meet surely after the resurrection.

    Æmen

    :pepe-pray:

  • now I want to see how Koreans would react to Polish two day weddings when you can drink and eat whatever you want and even when you throw up on 1st day they would say on 2nd: "no worries, you will recover after eating and drinking more" lol

    External Content www.youtube.com
    Content embedded from external sources will not be displayed without your consent.
    Through the activation of external content, you agree that personal data may be transferred to third party platforms. We have provided more information on this in our privacy policy.

  • It definitely is considered weird and disrespectful in my culture to not even offer anything to guests when they come over especially if its a kid on top of that, then they are definitely getting a plate irrespective of our financial condition but then again its their culture their customs.

  • Right, this can't be real. Can you straighten this out?

    Well


    Im Danish but here when we normally have playdates we get food - maybe not dinner bc we only stay a few hours but we get something: fruit, bread, cake or whatever.


    This wedding - you can either be invited to a reception, the wedding in the church and the dinner party. Or all three.


    Never heard about anyone not getting food. Yes if you are invited to church only u get nothing but u also dont have to give a present.


    If you fly in for a wedding you will most likely have an invite to the dinner where u will have food. And drinks.

  • So... like the rest of the world. Man, sounds like it was a slow news week. They got tired of trying to spot matching jewelry on Taennie after the earring debaucle?

    :pepe-shame:

  • I'm from Scandinavia and I've never seen anything like this. If I were at a friends house growing up they'd always feed us dinner. Same if I had a friend over. And the idea of making a child pay for their dinner sounds bizarre to me, like who would do that??


    And if you invite a guest over ofc you make sure there's food and snacks/dessert.


    If you're over at a friends house as a teenager you and friend/s are sometimes expected to make food for yourself, without their parents checking on you. Like order pizza or cook your own dinner (the parents would still pay for the pizza). But one, the friend you're visiting would be the one in charge of that, they wouldn't leave to have dinner with their family. And two, most teenagers prefer it to eating with the whole family. It's about giving teenagers space. So you and the friend living there would cook or order food and then bring it back to watch infront of a movie or something. But that's the only example I can think of that is in any way similar to what they're describing.

  • I'm from Scandinavia and I've never seen anything like this. If I were at a friends house growing up they'd always feed us dinner. Same if I had a friend over. And the idea of making a child pay for their dinner sounds bizarre to me, like who would do that??


    And if you invite a guest over ofc you make sure there's food and snacks/dessert.


    If you're over at a friends house as a teenager you and friend/s are sometimes expected to make food for yourself, without their parents checking on you. Like order pizza or cook your own dinner (the parents would still pay for the pizza). But one, the friend you're visiting would be the one in charge of that, they wouldn't leave to have dinner with their family. And two, most teenagers prefer it to eating with the whole family. It's about giving teenagers space. So you and the friend living there would cook or order food and then bring it back to watch infront of a movie or something. But that's the only example I can think of that is in any way similar to what they're describing.

    Confirmed, slow news week and people are just throwing stories around like darts to see if they stick.

  • This is so weird to me. Here even if you hypothetically don’t want to feed your guest, you still offer it as a courtesy. A lot of people actually decline especially if they’re not staying for long. But leaving a guest hungry is just… :eyes:

  • I'm from Scandinavia and I've never seen anything like this. If I were at a friends house growing up they'd always feed us dinner. Same if I had a friend over. And the idea of making a child pay for their dinner sounds bizarre to me, like who would do that??


    And if you invite a guest over ofc you make sure there's food and snacks/dessert.


    If you're over at a friends house as a teenager you and friend/s are sometimes expected to make food for yourself, without their parents checking on you. Like order pizza or cook your own dinner (the parents would still pay for the pizza). But one, the friend you're visiting would be the one in charge of that, they wouldn't leave to have dinner with their family. And two, most teenagers prefer it to eating with the whole family. It's about giving teenagers space. So you and the friend living there would cook or order food and then bring it back to watch infront of a movie or something. But that's the only example I can think of that is in any way similar to what they're describing.

    now im confused because some tweets from swedish people have them defending this lol

    LAFBL0s.gif

    let us gather around for the lord’s prayer:

    Nævis we love you. You are the one who protected me when i was in trouble. MY victory, one SYNK DIVE. I know your sacrifices. Let’s meet surely after the resurrection.

    Æmen

    :pepe-pray:

  • Nah not really, this discussion has been on fire for the past few days in twt.

    Like twt hasn't been known to start rumors and run with them, lol. Just saying, I'd rather believe actual people from Scandinavia over twt! I've heard of strange customs, but you'd think this one, seemingly commonplace in a well known Western society, would have been unearthed way before this if it was really a thing.

  • Like twt hasn't been known to start rumors and run with them, lol. Just saying, I'd rather believe actual people from Scandinavia over twt! I've heard of strange customs, but you'd think this one, seemingly commonplace in a well known Western society, would have been unearthed way before this if it was really a thing.

    Except there were many Swedes themselves justifying these practices in twt lol. it’s not all untrue just cos it’s from twt

  • now im confused because some tweets from swedish people have them defending this lol

    Odd. Personally all of these sound weird to me.


    I can think of scenarios where most of them would make sense but they'd all need a lot of context.


    Like the one with the 7 year old having to walk home for dinner, I can see that being a thing if they live really close by and over at each others houses all the time. The parents might have decided on the dinner arrangement to still have some family quality time, but I feel like that's a very specific scenario.

  • Except there were many Swedes themselves justifying these practices in twt lol. it’s not all untrue just cos it’s from twt

    I don't think everything from twt is untrue just because, but I'm also not hearing confirmation from our AKP users who are from Scandinavia, so I'd rather believe them. I approach most things like this with skepticism though, so maybe it's just me.

  • Except there were many Swedes themselves justifying these practices in twt lol. it’s not all untrue just cos it’s from twt

    Usually kids have homework and dinner is with family bc some kids are so weird with food and so picky.

    Also everyone is tired.


    Now when we are bigger kids we just buy food ourselves with the host kid bc both parents have to work to pay for all the welfare.


    So it must have been a fake Swede saying shite

  • I'm swedish and as a child the original scenario (waiting while a friend eats dinner) happened several times by my family towards a friend or to me by other families when i was a kid and i never thought it was weird. I was actually personally kind of happy about this culture because unless you know the parents too it's really awkward to eat with someone elses family and i would rather not as a kid and would usually decline any offer to do so (unless they were my best friend)...... And yes there usually was an offer along the lines of "Do you need to eat here?" etc, but like i said, you decline because you have food waiting at home.


    Anyways, the reason this is common is because usually you live and play with people that live max 10 minutes away (walking distance) so it's natural for you to eat separately. Your friend eats with her family and when it's time for you to eat you just walk home to eat (people generally eat between 4.30 pm and like 7.30 pm, so at different times) and that's that. Waiting isn't a problem because you're going home to eat in a bit anyways (which is expected , your own family cooked for you and eating elsewhere when that's the case is also seen as kind of rude towards whoever cooked at home), and it's not like you haven't eaten since lunch, you usually have a snack in the afternoon after school at your friends place. It's just dinner that is usually separate when you're kids (it's different when you're adults, though coming over uninvited or without notice and expecting to be fed as an adult is also weird (but in a different way), especially if you're not very close..... Though you can always expect a fika of course). Sleepovers are different though, of course a kid was always fed and well taken care of then, but that's because it's a planned activity and the expectation of it is included. There should be an explicit invitation to eat dinner, it should be agreed upon beforehand, otherwise you shouldn't expect it. If people don't say there's gonna be food then there most likely isn't and you just get a fika.


    Honestly it never crossed my mind that it was weird lol, and i absolutely didn't mind as a kid. It's actually the way i preferred it since i found it very awkward to eat dinner at someone elses place. It feels like imposing, and going as far as assuming (like you are entitled) to eat dinner feels rude to me.

  • Why even bother to invite anyone?

    That's the thing, in this scenario it's not an explicit invitation. It's just kids hanging out at each others places after school. When that's the case then you are expected to go home and eat dinner, not eat at whoever's place you're hanging out at (unless it's been otherwise agreed upon beforehand)


    Other rules apply during sleepovers though, it's really weird to not be fed then.

    e the one with the 7 year old having to walk home for dinner, I can see that being a thing if they live really close by and over at each others houses all the time. The parents might have decided on the dinner arrangement to still have some family quality time, but I feel like that's a very specific scenario.

    This is what all of these are referring to. It's about kids living in the same neighborhood, you're expected to go home for dinner since you live max 10 minutes away (walking distance).


    It was very common in my village.

  • I‘m from Germany (not an ethnic German though) and I’ve heard soo many stories of people being told to wait in their friend‘s room while the family has lunch.


    I guess it’s a central and Northern European thing

  • okay this is weird agree, but I've seen so many foreigners on yt vidos saying that no matter what you do Koreans will not take you to their 'circle'. it's even hard to say smth on the street, foreigners aren't even allowed to go to the clubs with Koreans. so why are they acting like it's not normal for them when they treat foreigners the same

  • Other rules apply during sleepovers though, it's really weird to not be fed then.

    This is what all of these are referring to. It's about kids living in the same neighborhood, you're expected to go home for dinner since you live max 10 minutes away (walking distance).


    It was very common in my village.

    Welp in that case, I suppose we're evil and don't serve dinner. Living in a smaller village or a neighborhood where everyone lives close by it can definitely be a thing to run home for dinner

  • I‘m from Germany (not an ethnic German though) and I’ve heard soo many stories of people being told to wait in their friend‘s room while the family has lunch.


    I guess it’s a central and Northern European thing

    Never heard of it and would always ask if this was the case

  • Welp in that case, I suppose we're evil and don't serve dinner. Living in a smaller village or a neighborhood where everyone lives close by it can definitely be a thing to run home for dinner

    If you are in at your friends house they ask u and u ask what they are having for dinner. If its pizza u stay😎


    But mostly its during the afternoon or day for the smaller kids and as teenagers we ate everything in the house lol.

  • In my culture we bully our guests to overeat


    Like in a very aggressive way

    External Content www.youtube.com
    Content embedded from external sources will not be displayed without your consent.
    Through the activation of external content, you agree that personal data may be transferred to third party platforms. We have provided more information on this in our privacy policy.

  • Lol

    So you have to lie and say you’re allergic?

    No they have to physically hold their plates away from us to stop us from putting more food in it


    Dinner could get very bizarre


    I honestly don't like it, when i was a kid I cried bc my aunt tried to stuff me

    Literally stuff me

    External Content www.youtube.com
    Content embedded from external sources will not be displayed without your consent.
    Through the activation of external content, you agree that personal data may be transferred to third party platforms. We have provided more information on this in our privacy policy.

  • If you are in at your friends house they ask u and u ask what they are having for dinner. If its pizza u stay😎


    But mostly its during the afternoon or day for the smaller kids and as teenagers we ate everything in the house lol.

    True. It's not like you were kicked out. Usually they asked if you wanted dinner or not. It was only if the parents knew your parents were gonna cook dinner you were "forcefully" sent home

  • In my culture we bully our guests to overeat


    Like in a very aggressive way

    in my culture too ^^


    my cousin was born in germany and his wife and in-laws are german. once he visited us with his mother in law and we prepared a lot of stuff to eat, as usual. none of us speak german btw. she refused everything we offered, she said she wasn't hungry, she ate at home. it was clear that we were so upset ^^ she ended up taking a bite because the situation was really uncomfortable ^^ literally a bite, one would never notice somebody touched it ^^


    if you didn't go home full on the verge that you cannot breathe we failed as hosts lol

  • This thread contains 19 more posts that have been hidden for guests, please register yourself or login to continue reading.

Participate now!

Don’t have an account yet? Register yourself now and be a part of our community!