03/03/2017

BLOG NAME CHANGED!


Hi lovelies! Today I come to you with some pretty big news: my blog's name has changed. The URL stays the same old so no need for panic - or frankly anything from your side of the deal. So why did I change it?

If you want to do a little exercise, you can type in "Terra Incognita blog" to Google Search and see if you find me. I bet you don't. That's because there are so many blogs or travel agencies around the world with that exact name that I drown in this mess called Terra Incognitas. The domain name isn't free in any form, the blogspot URL isn't free, there's at least 5 Terra Incognita Twitter accounts... you get the drift. It wasn't original enough and seriously affected my SEO.

So we here at ex-Terra Incognita are now called The Strayling. What's that? It's a real word, believe me or not, combining the verb 'stray' with the suffix '-ling'. A strayling is someone who wanders, a drifter, the one that strays.

I have aggressively changed my social media account names today. Make sure to follow me all around internet so you won't miss the rest of my adventures! 
(If you're already following me on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest of Bloglovin', don't stress, you're still on board)

Twitter: @thestrayling
Facebook: @thestrayling
Pinterest: thestrayling
Bloglovin': The Strayling

But more importantly: I HAVE A NEW INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT! And I mean completely new. I wanted to separate my blog activities from my personal life, so go ahead and follow my new only blog-related Instagram account:

Instagram: the_strayling

I'm so excited. Are you? I hope you are! Tune in for new posts in the near future, including a fresh story in Melissa's Misadventures series - this time it's me causing public disturbance in a Hare Krishna mass....

Do you like the new name? How did you come up with your own blog name? Share your thoughts in the comments below!


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01/03/2017

A WEEK IN IRISH NEWS


None of us can miss out on news about large-scale international events, no matter where we live. But how about the smaller ones? What kind of national issues made it to Irish headlines this week? I kept an eye on Irish newspapers for a week and for each day picked an article specifically dealing with Irish issues that probably didn't make it outside of the island. And here we have it: a week in Irish news from 20th to 26th of February 2017!

MONDAY
A good start, right? A man in his 50s was found dead in an apartment on North Circular Road following a shooting incident on Sunday night. No one has been arrested yet, but gardaí are investigating the incident.

I picked this one for multiple reasons. Firstly, I had no idea the police are called gardaí in Ireland before I moved here, and wanted to show you a bit of that gaelic craic in action. Secondly, the amount of shooting incidents and people dying from gunshots or stabbing in Dublin was an absolute shock for me at first. Nowadays, sad to say, I'm pretty used to it. I don't think we can pass two weeks in here without the news telling yet another story of someone being shot dead. Usually it's about gang violence or drugs. Thirdly, we live only a few blocks away from the crime scene...

TUESDAY
I don't usually like to say this, but now I will: only in Ireland could a video of a baby drinking a pint of Guinness become viral - and so the hashtag #PintBaby was born. A reporter from RTÉ found a clip from a documentary filmed in 1997 where the camera cuts to a baby taking a gulp from a pint of Guinness, and the video soon started spreading all over social media. After intensive search, the Pint Baby was found, and apparently prefers to be called Stephen.

This hashtag was no. 1 on Trending on my Twitter feed last night. Not gonna comment on the question whether a baby should be allowed to take a sip of beer or not, but the response to the video here in Ireland has been surprisingly positive. The general attitude seems to be "Ahh for god's sake, we've all done it..." The Irish truly are a special folk!

WEDNESDAY
Well there's a title that grinds the gears of a Lit graduate. A man from Cork has been found guilty of IRA membership after 500kg of ammonium nitrate based fertiliser was found from the back of his van. The man stated he was going to Monaghan (a city by the border of the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland) for a drinking session and was apparently not aware of the fertiliser in his car...

Now, I picked this article to show you the haunting presence of the past still lingering in Ireland: this is the second case of someone associated with the IRA being arrested for the possession of explosives since I moved to Dublin. The other guy was arrested from a bus to Belfast (the capital of Northern Ireland) with TNT in his bag. There's no way the IRA still exists in the same form as during the Troubles in the 60s and 70s, but there are a couple of contemporary movements, such as RIRA (The Real Irish Republican Army) and NIRA (New Irish Republican Army) attempting to keep the legacy alive. Sinn Feín, the political party associated with the demobilised original IRA, has condemned the activity of these groups. However, I feel like the threat of a so-called "hard border" between Northern Ireland and the Republic due to Brexit keeps everyone on their toes nowadays, since there's this fear of the peace agreement falling into pieces and violence returning if a proper border control is installed in the north. You know how The Cranberries sing: It's the same old theme / since nineteen-sixteen / in your head, in your head / they're still fighting...

Wow, this got serious. Anyway, no one's building car bombs anymore, please mom don't be scared.

THURSDAY
Interesting times in the Irish politics: prime minister, in Ireland referred to as Taoiseach, Enda Kenny is about to resign due to a police scandal involving false accusations made about a whistleblower. Thus Fine Gael, the party of Mr. Kenny, needs a new leader, a new prime minister. We finally have news as to when the Taoiseach is about to step down from his throne: after his visit to see President Trump in the White House on St. Patrick's day.

I haven't followed Irish politics as much as I probably should, but there seem to be changes in the air: in addition to Enda Kenny resigning, Sinn Feín also got a new leader just a few weeks back (that was some serious political shit storm right there for a while). The only issue I'm actively checking up on is the question of the 8th amendment - better known as the abortion ban for anyone outside Ireland. Having my say in local politics would also be pretty much the only reason why I'd eventually be interested in getting an Irish citizenship in case we actually (probably by accident) end up staying in Éire.

FRIDAY
Yes. There's nothing the Catholic church can do to surprise me anymore. Glenamady church in Galway has decided to install a drive-thru service on their grounds so people can quickly and conveniently get their ashes on Ash Wednesday.

I grew up in a 99% Protestant country and have only gotten my fair taste of Catholicism after first living in Québec and now in Ireland. In case you're like me, completely oblivious about religious dates: on Ash Wednesday the ashes of previous year's palm leaves from Palm Sunday are placed on the heads of the congregation for the start of Lent. Is Ireland religious, you ask? Well, let's just say I've never seen this many Jesus shrines on roundabouts before... It's been a weird experience for someone whose country doesn't have such a visible relationship with Christianity. Thanks to Ireland, I also had a chance to write my very first email starting with "Dear Father _____....."

SATURDAY
Since we've already covered politics, crime, religion and viral phenomena, I've spared the Saturday slot for pure entertainment and Irish celebrity gossip.

Remember Jedward, that overly energetic teenage duo with hair defying the laws of physics representing Ireland in the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest? THESE GUYS? Well, as I've found out by now, these guys weren't just a one hit wonder - they're actually pretty big celebrities in Ireland to this day. Pretty sure you can't walk 100 meters in Dublin without finding their face from a lamp post.

Anyway, Jedward was apparently refused entry to Warner Music Ciroc bash at Freemasons Hall in London's Covent Garden on Wednesday night. Some A-list celebrities like Ed Sheeran and Doutzen Kroes were on the list to this VIP after-party, as supposedly was Jedward, but upon arrival the duo found out their names were not on the VIP-list after all. Jedward now claims that it was all set up, as there was a frenzy of paparazzis ready to photograph them being thrown out by the door. Oh my.

SUNDAY
Our week will finish with a weather warning - we're in Ireland, after all. Met Eireann (the Irish weather forecast service) issued an orange warning today as the wind reached a whopping 120km/h. Fallen trees and flooding have kept the whole country indoors today, including yours truly.

If there's one aspect of Ireland that really, really puts me off, it's the weather. You've been to UK? Think it's bad in there? WELCOME TO IRELAND. Honestly I thought I'd be prepared to face the Atlantic winds and 24/7 misty rain after living in Britain, but no. Ireland takes the game a step further. It's a hell on earth in here on most days - I even invested in my first-ever truly waterproof mascara a while back just so I could stop looking like a beaten up panda after 15 minutes outside.

Do you actively follow what's going on in your new home country? Or do you care more about what's going on in your old home? Share your thoughts in the comments below!


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31/01/2017

MY INTERVIEW IN LIFE IN DUBLIN


"I never felt like I left Finland because I didn’t like it – it just wasn’t enough, and spontaneously leaving everything behind to run away with a foreign guy might just have been the kick in the butt I needed.... "

Hi Lovelies! Today I come to you with more external material from the depths of the internet. Life in Dublin blog's wonderful writer Ana-Maria Hota interviewed me to give her readers more insight to the many lives of immigrants from different nationalities in Dublin.

The interview discusses my observed similarities and differences between Finland and Ireland, the craic of the Irish and even experiences of discrimination. How's the life of a Finnish emigrant in Ireland? You can read my interview here:

MY INTERVIEW IN 'LIFE IN DUBLIN'

Do you have similar thoughts about Ireland? Or did I get it all wrong? Let me know what you think in the comments below! 

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10/10/2016

GPSmyCity: The Best Travel Article App for GPS-guided Citywalks


Do you ever stumble upon a great travel blog with a bunch of awesome posts virtually guiding you through your dream destinations? Yeah, me too. I always end up hoping I could take these articles with me to my adventures and re-read them while walking around the city.

Wait, yes. I could do that. I could just bookmark the article on my phone's browser and read it offline. But anyone who has even a bit of experience in travelling knows what happens next: you just left your hotel, realise you forgot to bookmark that one post about top 10 best restaurants in Paris, and you're stranded in a middle of an unfamiliar city, without a map, it's probably raining - and like always, you're without a wifi. We all know the pain of running between Starbucks and McDonalds to take that short moment of free wireless connection to update our changing travel plans.

Well guess what folks: now you don't have to. Let us forget those desperate times you tried to sneak old receipts lying on the floor of a cafe to get access to their wifi password. How about you use GPS-guided travel article apps instead?

GPSmyCity app introduces a whole new concept of GPS-guided travel articles on iOS devices. The app contains articles of over 600 cities all over the world, and they all have GPS coordinates embedded to these articles. The app has thousands of posts to choose from. The app is free, and doesn't need wifi or mobile data to work. No roaming, no data plan. No, honestly: good bye receipts lying on the floor. You can basically read these travel articles wherever and whenever you choose: on your 9-hour flight to Tokyo, while lying on the beach, while waiting for your dessert in a restaurant you spotted from that top 10 restaurants post I mentioned earlier - you choose.

After downloading the app from iTunes Store for free, you gain access to all of these thousands of travel posts, and you can read them offline. If you'd like to have the GPS-guided tour embedded to the article and let the machine do the work for you, you can upgrade any article you choose with a small fee of $1.99. Easy, cheap - and definitely a more convenient (and cheaper!) option than buying your fifth black coffee of the day to have yet another wifi-password, right?


I want to let you try this thing. That's why I'm hosting a limited-time GIVEAWAY of one of my most popular travel posts, which you can upgrade to a GPS-guided personal tour guide for free through GPSmyCity travel app. The giveaway is available 10th of Oct - 16th of Oct.

There are two ways to access my GPS-guided posts in the app:
  1. Click on a link below for the article you are interested in (if you haven’t already downloaded the free GPSmyCity app, you will see a prompt to do so). After downloading the app, you will be directed to the article, where you can choose UPGRADE to get the GPS-guided version.
  2. You can browse by city in the GPSmyCity app to see all available articles.

FREE GIVEAWAY:
(expires 16th Oct)
My Québec: 3x3 Places to See, Eat and Enjoy

Interested in my other articles available in GPSmyCity app? Click here:


My new travel-oriented posts will be available through the app in the future.

P.S. If you decide to upgrade my articles to a GPS-guided tour guide, I receive a few cents. As they say here in Ireland, it'd be grand, love! Tis be helpin' me fund my recreational blogging hobby alright. Thanks a million!


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22/09/2016

10,000 Visitors - THANK YOU! + Newsplash


Hi guys!
Today is a special day for my blog: we just hit 10,000 visitors! Ten thousand clicks on my blog posts. That's a lot of people! I know I haven't always been the most active and consistent blogger, but seeing such a number in my blog statistics makes me immensely happy.

At first I was planning on doing something special to celebrate this tiny milestone of mine, but a few failed attempts and many abandoned ideas later I came to the solution of keeping this post brief. I tried to film a little video of myself saying thank you for all of you guys in person, but no one, I mean no one has ever bothered to tell me how hideous I sound on film. In other words, you just missed your chance to witness a real documentation of my Finnish-British-Canadian-French English accent blabbering away.

So no videos this time. Instead, I wanted to take this occasion to make a few exciting announcements. As a huge SEO and blog traffic nerd I'm highly aware of the main sources of traffic on my blog, and on the top sits who else but FACEBOOK. Realizing this, I gathered all of my courage and created a Facebook page for Terra Incognita. Shoosh! Go and like it HERE!


I'm still working on it, but in the future I'd really like it if I could stop flooding my personal facebook profile with my blog updates. I would like this page created specially for my blog to be the main platform to advertise new posts to my audience. A girl can dream, right?

Speaking of traffic: I've had a chance to do some amazing collaboration with multiple expat community websites during my time as a blogger. These websites have been a huge source of traffic to my humble little blog project here, which is why I'm now ruthlessly taking this space to thank EXPAT.COM for featuring me on their website on multiple occasions.

The support of others is of top-tier importance for any immigrant, which is why communities like these can turn out to be incredibly helpful when you're sad and alone in a new country, feeling helpless, sitting in your new apartment and eating pot noodles for a week straight since you were too scared to buy anything else from the grocery store.

The community on Expat.com Canada was fairly active, but the folk on the Ireland community still seem to be lost in the winds of the Emerald Isle. So all my fellow expats in Ireland, go and make friends there! Forum discussions, job boards and blog directories are waiting to be discovered. I regularly get messages from people asking for advice on things like immigration processes, housing and job search in Canada and Ireland, and I find it incredibly exciting to be able to help others battling with those same piles of forms and documents as I have in the past.

I actually have much bigger and more exciting news to share with you in the near future, but let's keep a bit of mystery for a little while longer. In the meantime I promise to have a more consistent and regular posting schedule - I have a million drafts in Work In Progress state at this very moment! Stay tuned for city guides for Toronto and Ottawa, my ultimate guide for a successful Long Distance Relationship and a lovely tour around my ancient, world-renown university, Trinity College Dublin....

What kind of posts would you like to read in the future? Suggestions, ideas, feedback warmly welcome! Let me know what you think in the comments below! 


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08/08/2016

First Impression of Dublin


Here I sit, finding myself as a newly arrived immigrant in yet another strange country. French has switched to English, poutine to stews of all sorts and all the beer - well, to more beer. A month has passed since I moved from Canada to Ireland, and it has surely taken some struggle getting used to my new hometown, Dublin.

I miss Québec. There, I said it. I miss Québec tremendously, and as I walk around the (unpleasantly often, unlabeled) streets of Dublin I act like a broken-hearted teenager who longs after her ex while leaning on the shoulder of her unsuspecting rebound. Sorry Dublin - just like Québec, I think you have to win me over, because I'm in the midst of a culture shock.

Now I hear a little voice on the back of my head asking "But what about Finland?!" I say Finland, no. You stay out of this. I'm over you and I only see you as a friend with whom I've had some good moments that have turned into memories by now. I just had one hell of a rollercoaster ride of passion, drama and a year full of really weird stuff with Québec, and I don't forget that so easily.

I miss my friends and family from Finland, but let's face it: I haven't lived there for over a year - heck, I didn't even know any of the new shops and hot spots in my old hometown anymore, and I felt like a complete stranger. I had to let my local friends guide me through a jungle of new cafes and renovated shopping centres, because I didn't know where I was. I will surely write a whole separate blog post about this traumatizing experience as an expat Finn, but there's still one place in this world where I know every corner and every stone: Québec City.

I keep comparing Dublin to Québec, and I keep repeating the exact same mistakes and following the exact same patterns of shock and adaptation as I did when I first moved to Canada. So just like I compared Finland and Québec back in the days IN THIS POST, let's see how Dublin has been able to impress, astonish and annoy me so far.

1. THE IRISH BOW TO NO ONE
This is a tough one, because Canada has turned me into one of those spoiled brats who now naively live in the false impression that everyone is as sweet as a sugar pie, gives you a seat in the bus and stops you on the street just to tell you how beautiful your hair is. Quebecers make apologising an art form. They bump into you and before you even know, you've unwillingly engaged yourself into this weird apology dance where the shocked and tearful quebecer is fondling your shoulders while chanting "pardon, excusez-moi, pardon, pardon", and you just kind of stand there and keep saying things like "Pas d'problème", "Pas d'stress" or "Ya pas de quoi" to calm them down. (This apology dance has also occurred to me in St. Petersburg, but went something like "Простите девушка, простите!")

The Irish take none of that shit.
Anne Street South, Dublin

Dublin is like a zombie apocalypse. You walk on Dame Street on a hot summer day and your only strategy of survival is to choose any spot from a distance and then keep your eyes on it while walking straight, no matter what. Just keep looking at the spot. If you make the mistake of looking passers-by in the eyes or letting your gaze wander from one side of the road to another, the zombies will spot your weaknesses and mercilessly walk straight over you. (I quote my friend in here: "It's like they're actually aiming for you. Aiming!") Dublin is a busy city with busy people, and gives me this newyorkish hunch with a European twist.

The same happens in grocery stores. Half of the time there I spend looking for garlic and broccoli, and the other half I dodge other customers. Life is a constant battle.

2. THE IRISH PLAY THE WAITING GAME
Well this is something that Ireland definitely shares with Canada, and grinds the gears of an impatient Finn who's used to things getting done when they're promised to be done. That being said, just last week I finally received a security code for my account for Canada Revenue Agency website BY MAIL. Oh, my dearest Canada. Just when I thought you couldn't be more old-fashioned with your cheques and landline phones, you truly surprise me every time.

Ireland, on the other hand, makes me look back in times when I was living in the United Kingdom, where things often happen with a short (or slightly longer) delay decorated with apologetic courtesy phrases like "We truly apologise for the delay" and "We will look into your matter already this afternoon". Only that the Irish don't do the courtesy part. They just let you wait. At this very moment, on Monday night, I'm still waiting for a phone call that was scheduled for Friday afternoon. I don't have a bank account. I don't have a social security number. I'm not even a student of my university yet. I'm just waiting for someone to push the buttons.

3. THE ACCENT IS MAGIC
Let's be honest, it's good to be back in an English-speaking country. My heart will always have a soft spot for l'accent québécois, but I also happen to truly enjoy the feeling of being able to communicate with other people without having to stop after every other word to blurt out the safety pause "euhh...". The uncomfortable feeling of being a second-class citizen is gone, and I can almost feel like a normal, fully functioning adult who's able to buy her coffees to-go without starting over the phrase "pour emporter" at least three times. Occasionally I still feel self-conscious about my English. Well, I did before last Friday, when in a job interview I was told "Your English is perfect." That smile probably got me the job.


I love the Irish accent. Sometimes I act like a complete creep and just sit in the bus listening to other people's conversations, trying to suck in whatever tiny nuances of pronunciation from their dialect. In Québec I was constantly mistaken as British (to be fair, for quebecers anyone who pronounces the letter T in "water" is British), and hopefully, maybe if I work on my R's and O's enough, next summer those lovely francophone p'tits bébés of Québec will pass me as an Irish. Sláinte, right?

The end of this post will be spared for a reminder for anyone who missed it in the previous post: I NOW HAVE AN INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT! Find me @melliais and stay tuned for weird pictures and weirder hashtags.



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05/07/2016

Next Stop Dublin: Plans for the Future


My adventures in Canada are over, but my emigrant life is about to continue in 1,5 weeks. What's up next?

I'm moving to Dublin, Ireland, on the 14th of July. Unlike in Canada, my stay in Ireland will remain permanent until stated otherwise, since being a EU citizen grants me the right to stay and work in the country for as long as I want. Hooray! Good bye endless piles of forms and phone calls, I'm ready to sit back, relax and immigrate like never before.

The reason for my relocation is slightly different to Canada too, as I'm about to start my Postgraduate Degree in Trinity College Dublin. Not only is my country of residence changing, but my subject of study too - which actually makes me much more nervous than moving to a new country! Ireland surely won't be too different from England, where I've previously lived for 8 months, but taking on the challenge of studying sociology as a former literature student feels a little scary. My MPhil program is called Race, Ethnicity and Conflict, so more ponder and research about cultural questions are on their way. I couldn't possibly be more excited to start my studies in TCD! (and not only because of their ABSOLUTELY STUNNING LIBRARY) My postgrad degree will only last for a year, but if it turns out I'll fall in love with Ireland like I did with Canada, my plan is to stay there and seek employment in Dublin. I have no plans of returning to Finland. I often find myself explaining this decision, either to myself or other people, but all in all the core reason for emigrating from my home country is a very fundamental need and will to simply live somewhere else.

I chose Dublin for my Postgraduate studies because of multiple reasons:

1. The language -  I want to study in English in an English-speaking country. I often joke about being too old for mastering new languages, but it's partly true: I speak six languages, but studying in any of the countries where these languages are spoken (excluding English) didn't appeal to me. My second option after Ireland was the Netherlands, but realizing I would feel guilty for not learning any Dutch while living there made me quit the plan.

2. The cost - studying in Ireland is much cheaper than In the UK, for example. Well, it would have been if I had chosen any other school than Trinity College... 8000€/year better be worth it.

3. The culture - I love the Irish. I've visited Dublin once, and fell in love in an instant. To my experience, they're like the English without the unnecessary sea of courtesy and politeness, which often made my life a little difficult while living in Leicester. (in other words, I will never forget that one bus I missed because the confirmation email for my ticket didn't say anything about the means of redeeming my e-ticket, but instead was filled with courtesy phrases of different lengths about how important my satisfaction was for their company)

I expect the challenges of living in Ireland to be quite different to the ones in Canada. Instead of struggling with the language, I think I might get in trouble for not remembering to be friendly enough - I'm seriously bad with the please and how are you. Taking on the challenge of studying after working full-time for a year troubles me a little too. Onwards to new adventures!

Other news: I'm featured in expatsblog.com in the form of an interview about my expat life in Canada. You can read the interview HERE. If you're interested in learning more about the struggles of this potato face in Canada, I recommend you read it! Questions about language, transitions and favourite spots in Canada have been answered.

Other news no. 2: Remember that shitty flippy thing I called a phone in my post about MY EVERYDAY LIFE? Well, our ways have parted and I now have an actual phone. This means I now have an access to a camera on my phone, and apps, and stuff like that. So in other words, I now have an Instagram account. I'll use it to record little adventures in my immigrantish life, when things are fun but not worth a blog post. Stay tuned @melliais!


As a conclusion I'll answer a few questions addressed to me during the past 1,5 weeks in Finland: No, I don't have an apartment in Dublin. I'm staying in AirBnB for 2 weeks and hope to find a flat by then. No, I don't have a job in Dublin. I will apply for work when I get there. No, I can't use my Finnish phone number in Ireland. I have nothing in Ireland, and that's the best part. That's immigration - you have nothing, you start from scratch, and managing to build a fully functioning life out of nothing is the best reward there is.
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16/06/2016

A Day in the Life


Many people live in the illusion that living a life abroad is somehow different to normal - and sometimes it definitely can be. However, for the most part, us immigrants struggle with the same daily tasks and errands as our home team back in the Old Continent. But what is different, and what is the same? How does a normal day in the life of a Finn in French-speaking Canada look like? How is it to work in a major video game company abroad?

I tried to choose as normal day as I possibly could, and ended up switching the date multiple times due to changing plans. However, after picking this particular Wednesday two weeks in advance and then realising that during that time it had become a very untypical Wednesday, I decided to give up. None of my days seemed to be typical enough for this post, which in the end made me realise that there doesn't seem to be such thing. In all its chaotic running after small errands, my Wednesday the 25th of May turned out to summarize my life as an employed immigrant in Canada quite successfully.

This very untypical Wednesday started at 07.00, 15 minutes later than my normal weekday. My task of the morning is to go visit the nearby tax office to make a query about the state of my tax returns. I had to take 2 hours off from work because of this, since the Service Canada office is open only Mon-Fri 8.30 - 16.00. My working hours are Monday to Friday 8.30 to 17.00 in normal conditions, so there's no chance I have the time to visit governmental offices without skipping work. Needless to say, I wasn't really excited about the upcoming task.

07.15 I'm in a coma on the sofa, eating my cereals and browsing Facebook. I often take the time to answer Facebook messages I've received during the night from my Finnish entourage while eating breakfast, since the time difference makes it a little difficult to keep in touch in real time.

07.15

07.30
I'm fixing my face in the bathroom. I rarely put much effort on my looks on normal weekdays, since I work in a closed office with a large male majority. However, as there is about to be a lot of running to do and the day is about to be long, I decide to tie my hair. Other than that, I only rely on foundation and eyebrow pencil:



08.00
I'm off. Alex has promised to drive me to Service Canada, since I only have 2 hours off and the public transportation of Québec City is nothing but efficient. We didn't write down the address, which turns out to be a mistake: after almost an hour of aimless driving back and forth Chemin Sainte-Foy and vigorous arguing, we take a turn to Chemin des Quatre-Bourgeois and end up right in front of the building.

08.10 on Chemin Sainte-Foy

09.15 I exit the office, not any wiser than before. The lady at the counter gave me a number in Revenu Québec that I could call, so let the horror begin. I'm not one of those people who are terrified of making phone calls, but when you have to make a phone call to an automated service number where everything happens only in French, it gets a little scary. After pressing a few 1s and #s, I finally reach a real person who turns out to speak perfect Canadian English - because no, after living a year in a French-speaking city I'm still not able to talk about my tax forms in French.

09.15 In a car making a phone call to Revenu Québec

I know what most of you must be thinking right now: what is that phone? It's my LG flip phone, or "That F*cking Crap" as I often call it. Now this holy union is yet another story of my Immigrant Adventures from the beginning of my year in Canada. I brought my Samsung Galaxy Trend with me from Finland, hoping to find a compatible SIM card of a local teleoperator. Turns out there is no such thing, and my European smart phone is unable to read Canadian SIM cards. As I was about to ask for a refund for my newly purchased Koodo Mobile prepaid bundle, the service clerk panics and throws this flippy thing at me. "It's for free". We have been together ever since. No internet, no apps, no QuickType. Only a 50-minute talk boost and unlimited texting with a French keypad that requires you to press number 3 seven times to get the letter F. My Canadian friends know to keep texting with me to a minimum, as it's a hazard to my mental stability.

09.45 I arrive to work
09.45 I have more answers to my infinite questions about my Canadian taxes, and Alex drives me to the office. Now, this is where reporting about my day get tricky, since my job is extremely confidential. Working for a multimillion video game company like Activision Blizzard means a lot of work and a lot of silence - or as it was put in my orientation PowerPoint: "The first rule of working in the QA is that you don't talk about working in the QA". So what do I actually do?

I work as a Quality Assurance Analyst on Mobile department of Activision. My job is to break the game. I write bug reports, fill checklists, verify issues, create excels, calculate probabilities, give suggestions, proofread a lot of texts and work my way around the IT on mobile. 11 months ago I couldn't tell the difference between Samsung and Apple tablets, but nowadays I'm able to differentiate iPhone 4S from iPhone 5 just by giving it a glimpse. This is why my beloved flip phone is a known celebrity around the office, as the Mobile Expert has a neanderthal phone herself.

So I'm not allowed to talk about my job, but there surely is a lot of completely un-work-related stuff happening in between! This stuff often consists of appropriate, inappropriate, ridiculous, funny and not-so-funny conversations and email chains exchanged inside my team. Underneath is a collection of some of the email art me (and my team mates) have created to fill the void of my pre-lunch break hours:

    


12.30 It's lunch break! I rarely feel like having enough hold of my life to cook lunch the previous day, so I head to Thaï Express with Sébastien. The food is a slight disappointment each time, but it's close. This particular restaurant also brings back a funny memory about that one time I had a bilingual discussion with the cashier. Unlike expected, I was the one who insisted on speaking French, but the cashier just would not switch from English to French because he had heard me speak English with my colleagues in the queue, so I ordered my food and answered to his English questions in French. Sometimes it's not easy to force people to serve you in their native language, right?

13.00 The lunch break is over. Working in the QA requires you to be fluent both in written and spoken English, so as mentioned, I communicate with my team in English. However, I have definitely taken these 11 months to practice my French on the side, as my team mainly speaks to each other in French. The difference to my language skills in September surely is huge, as one would expect after spending 40 hours a week for a year in French immersion - but there is a BUT.

The French I have learnt during the past year is the kind of French you learn by throwing yourself out there, not by systematic studying. In other words, I'm completely unable to write many of the things I'm able to say with a seemingly fluent l'accent quebecois. 100% of work-related emails I receive are written in French, which is not a problem at all as long as I read them out loud in my mind. My grammar is also more or less painful for the sensitive ear: like most native speakers, I ruthlessly skip the double-structure of the negative, ne-pas, and just go with pas. The same goes with questions: instead of asking properly Qu'est-ce que c'est? I prefer to go with the faster variant, C'est quoi ça? and so on. But all in all, I owe all my French, no matter how slangish and unproper, to my lovely colleagues at work, who tirelessly repeat, repeat and repeat until I understand what I'm supposed to be doing. (my boss only gives instructions to me in French, so there was the motivation I had been looking for....)

17.00 I leave the office. I have plans with my friend Jay, so we head to his place, make a huge pot of coffee, mix it with Bailey's and devour the whole thing while talking about the universe. All of my friends in Québec are more or less my colleagues from the office, and Jay has been in my team since February. His company is as delightful as it is disturbing at times: Jay is the most intellectual person in my quebecois entourage otherwise filled with wild and reckless twenty-something men, but he also happens to be the one with the darkest sense of humour.

21.09 I leave the building and text Seb. I had forgotten my jacket to his place the day before, and since he lives just on the other side of the river in Limoilou, I might as well walk there and fetch it.



21.20 I blast through Sébastien's front door. I'm that honoured individual with a spare key to his apartment, and often not afraid to use it to my advantage - I mostly just hope that he's dressed when I storm in.

Sébastien is my best friend. I was seated next to him on my first day at the QA, and a year later he's still able to stare at my face almost every day. Seb also happens to be, funny enough, the friend who's the least skilled in English, which is why our conversations are often more or less bilingual (mostly because switching from one language register to another is really difficult for him, so he just accidentally ends up speaking to me in French). This has worked for the advantage of us both. We have a wide range of weird inside jokes and nicknames for each other, often originating from Seb's failed attempt to say something in English. (There is still a running gag going around from that one time he tried to google images of râpe, cheese grate, but well, needless to say, ended up googling images of rape)

21.30 Seb wants chips, so we head to the nearby convenience store, or dépanneur, like locals call it. Our quest is conducted in the dark of the night:









Limoilou is to Québec what Kallio is to Helsinki. Can be hip, can be trendy, but is also covered in poverty and suspicious folk. Thanks to this guy, Limoilou also happens to be one of the districts of Québec that I know best. And since parallels to Finland have now been drawn, the photos above highlight one of the features of Québec that has taken me quite by surprise: the darkness of nights this late in the spring. My Finnish mind associates warm temperatures with light, but after a few uncomfortable nights out spent in a jacket I'm finally able to dress appropriately for the weather.

22.30 We have watched an episode of Planet Earth, a nature documentary series narrated by David Attenborough, and I feel it's time to head home. Seb takes me to the bus stop, like he does every time.
Limoilou can be beautiful too!

The bus trip is 25 minutes. I have a monthly bus pass, the OPUS card, which takes me wherever and whenever I want with 84 dollars a month. A single ticket would be 3,25 dollars, so it pays itself back fast.


23.07 I'm finally at home, and at my limits. I exchange news with Alex, who has just successfully graduated from his university and is taking a small holiday before moving to Granby. I set my alarm to 06.45 and hope to have a shorter day tomorrow.
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06/11/2015

Featured Interview and Other Little-Big News


Hi everyone!

It has been a busy few weeks for me: working full-time while simultaneously applying to multiple universities in another country has turned out to be quite time-consuming.

Recently I had a chance to share my expat experiences in an interview for expat-blog.com, an exchange network and blog directory dedicated to life abroad. It provides free information and advice to those living or wishing to live overseas. I answered questions regarding my life as a Finnish expat, my experience about Canada, and all things in between. You can read the interview HERE!

Apart from that, applying for Master's programs in another European country while living in North America has really stressed me out big time lately. It's officially my Reason #1 to stress. Reason #2 is the unbearably unstable life of an immigrant with a temporary employment contract: I don't speak the language, I don't have contacts or local work experience. I got hired for a 2-month temporary contract in August, and since then I have dreaded the final day of my employment in the most amazing job I have ever had.

Well, good news: my contract was renewed!

I now officially have a job at least until Christmas, and I could not be happier. My colleagues are incredibly helpful with my French struggles, and even if I'm still absolutely terrified of speaking the language, my understanding has improved tremendously. It all really depends on the accent now: at times I'm able to understand the whole sentence word by word, while sometimes there might be only one phrase I'm able to recognize. Learning to say "Nowadays I'm fed up with...." must be one of my favourite recent lessons.

Longer posts will follow!
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13/09/2015

What's up?

I'm an immigrant. I live the life of an immigrant, which is, for obvious reasons, rather different to the one I led in my dear old Finland.

Or is it really?

I've reached a point where I feel like my integration to the local society has come to a pretty comfortable state: I have a job, a bank account, a phone number, a bus card, a fidelity card for my nearby grocery store, I even do volunteer work for the local cultural centre every other weekend. I take the same bus 800 to work every day at the same time, at 7:33 from St-C.-Garnier to Univ. du Québec, work 8-16.30 from Monday to Friday, life has gotten really ordinary. There's a certain kind of excitement in living an ordinary life in an unfamiliar place, where your every ordinary day still feels like yet another adventure to the unknown. I step into the bus 800 at 07:33 and say "Bonjour!" to the driver, and everytime I open my mouth I'm afraid of how it will sound this time. Is my pronounciation of my nemesis, the letter "R", even slightly in place? What if my bus card has ran out of trips and I don't have 3,25 dollars to pay for my journey? What if today, when I'm going to the pharmacy to buy myself a new bus card, I forget how to speak French, or what if the cashier tries to small-talk with me again and I'll just look and feel stupid like I do everytime I don't understand the immensely difficult quebecois accent?

But outside of all these questions of my everyday life's little struggles, the life is really ordinary. I've gotten a few frequently repeated questions from people on the other side of the Atlantic, and instead of always answering something short and general to everyone, I'll do my best in answering these questions with a great attention to detail.

1. How's your French? Do you even speak it? I thought you studied Russian.

Now that you brought it up, yes, I miss Russian. Every muscle in my mouth wants me to speak Russian when I go on autopilot on the streets and someone suddenly starts to talk to me (because like said, that's what quebeckers do). Many times I've accidentally answered "Да", as many times as I've wanted to avoid the Rrrr-ed word "Bonjour" by going with the surprisingly more comfortable "Здравствуйте". To me, Russian is my The Foreign Language. It's the language I speak more or less, with occasional struggles though, the language in which I still have to stop and think a little of what I'm saying, but while listening to Putin's annual speech, I'm able to catch the drift. It's not like English, which I use comfortably enough to love in this language, or which I use to talk in my sleep nowadays. (these two aspects became poetically combined in a situation where I tried to stop Alex from going to work in the morning by grabbing his hand in my sleep and saying "Please don't go. I love you".) I'd still love to go and do an exchange semester or an internship in Russia to make sure I'll one day master the language I enjoy the most.

But when it comes to French, things get a little tricky. My love is not as sincere, it's even a little forced. I took 2 courses of French during my last year of uni and that's it - that was my level of French when I landed in Montréal. I've heard all these stories about people learning languages by immersion, and to be honest, I'd like someone to tell me how the fuck these people manage to do that.

I've come to terms with l'accent quebecois. I can handle the jaw that seems to be moving in ways that shouldn't be possible for the human physiology. I listen to them speak and I understand 50% of the things I hear if the said person speaks with a clear voice and loudly enough (i.e. mumbling to your stereotypically Canadian beard is not cool, guys). I'm able to make sentences if forced. I'm more afraid of speaking than actually not being able to speak, and it's impossible to say whether it's because of my own strive for perfection or my prejudice against French-speaking people being compassionate about foreigners trying to rape their language. At this very moment I'm still a little bit afraid to go to the pharmacy and tell the cashier "bonjour, je vais prendre une carte de bus, douze fois s'il te plaît". I often amuse people with my perfect pronounciation of the famous swear "tabarnak", while I still struggle with my favourite word, "aspirateur".

Dear French, I know you're not like Russian and you'll never be, but I want to get to know you. You sound nice but you're a shitty thing to pronounce. Give me some time.

2. Have you found work?

Photo from Activision.com
As a matter of fact, I have - for 2 months at least, since it's a temporary contract for now. I work for Beenox, a videogame company responsible for the development of products from Activision Blizzard. That's pretty much everything I'm allowed to say, since my obligation to confidentiality is close to the one of the FBI (which is also why there is no demonstrative picture). Most of my work happens in English, but my colleagues are native French-speakers (with an admirable level of English, merci my dear fellows). I really love it there. The days are long and at times I'm exhausted from all the concentration that comes with working in an environment with an advanced-level linguistic immersion, but I don't think I've ever enjoyed more being in a job where I have to face clear zero customers per day. Videogames are cool and Activision is cool.

Afterwards? No fucking idea, once again. Life is an adventure.

3. Are you still with Alex?
This is a funny question, and a bit on the private side too, but I'll answer it nevertheless. I understand your concern - I mean, we met on an exchange semester, spent 11 months in a hardcore long-distance relationship, and then I ended up moving halfway across the globe to be with him during the last year of his uni, so we could move together back to Europe next autumn. The odds are always a little against us, BUT. The odds don't overrun the fact that we still ended up being in a long-distance relationship for 11 months, during which the longest time spent apart was 4 solid months between January and May. It also doesn't overrun the fact that I have, after all, moved on the other side of the world.

I wrote a little love letter for him once at the end of our semester in Leicester. The last chapter of this little piece of poetry will serve as my answer to this question, despite the overly cheezy and possibly even a little embarrassing atmosphere I'm about to create by sharing it here. Brace yourselves:

   My life with you is a travel. You take me to an excursion to myself, you make me discover parts of me I didn’t know exist. I might have sat next to you on the rocky wall of that fort in Marseille, staring at the horizon of the Mediterranean Sea, the southern wind in my hair and salt on my skin, but of all the places I have seen with you, the things I find when I stare into your eyes are the most breathtaking of all.

 The answer to this question is Yes, Yes and his heart was going like mad and yes I said yes I will Yes like Molly on the last page of James Joyce's Ulysses. Yes, I am still with him.

4. Do you miss Finland?
The picture above would suggest that balancing in the nature is what Finland is to me. What Finland is to me, though, is a country that brought me up. I was raised in the Finnish cultural context, I've assimilated Finnish customs, I am a Finn. English might be the language that has been titled as my mother tongue more than once since I arrived to Québec, but I still, regardless of the situation, always count in Finnish in my head.

Before Leicester I thought Finland is boring. The culture is boring, the people are a bit boring too, the weather sucks and there's too much Iittala in every home. I wanted to get out really badly, swearing I'd never miss anything I left behind.

That was, of course, very naive of me. I enjoy the fact that I don't live there at this time, and I don't have any intentions in doing so in the near future. But moving abroad to broaden your own understanding of cultures, customs, people and life in general has never been the binary opposite of appreciating where you come from. I'll share a little concrete example here in the form of a discussion between two approx. 13-year old Finnish girls I once overheard in a tram in Helsinki (I assume they were students from the nearby international secondary school) after I had just returned to Finland from my 8 months in Leicester:

Girl A: So uhh, are you like completely a Finn or are you from somewhere else...?
Girl B: No, I'm not a Finn. I'm 1/16 Finnish-Swedish.
Girl A: Really? That's so cool! So like, do you speak any Swedish?
Girl B: Yeah, I can say "Jag heter...", it's like "My name is". and I can say "Hej!" and "Tack!"
Girl A: That's so awesome!
Girl B: How about you, are you a Finn?
Girl A: No, I'm also 1/16 Estonian.
Girl B: Oh wow! Hey, say something in Estonian!
Girl A: I don't know any Estonian....
My grandfather is a Swedish-speaking Finn. My great aunt is Russian. But I happen to be a Finn and it's cool. It's cool to come from a country with a good reputation abroad - it's a sign of good education, possibly a great skill in languages, awesome "Scandinavian" culture that becomes more and more trendy all the time. Finland has given me enough in this life for me to be able to leave it, knowing that if I ever fall and need a cave to crawl into, Finland is waiting for me with open arms and free healthcare.

I miss Finland at times. I miss the silence. I miss how I can maintain my resting bitchface without getting asked if I'm alright dear. I miss the absolutely amazing public transportation system of Helsinki (there are still things to develop for sure, but in here it's no surprise if the bus is 25 minutes late on a daily basis). I miss my weird-ass language with its weird-ass expressions. But at this very moment of time and space, Finland is not the place for me to be.

5. Do you plan on staying in Canada for good?

Canada is absolutely breathtaking. The nature leaves me in awe everytime I put my foot out of the city and the people are as polite as all the stereotypes make you think. Despite the non-European atmosphere from architecture to city structures I've taken for granted all my life, I feel like I've settled in here rather well. Actually, I'd like to share this piece of artwork with you as a way to sum up my feelings about Canada. (side note: quebeckers don't like the Canadian national anthem. They have their own unofficial anthem "Gens du Pays" by Gilles Vigneault and Gaston Rochon. Listen to it HERE)



But no, I don't intend to stay in here for good. Why? Because I'm participating a mobility program called SWAP Working Holidays, aimed for university students and newly graduates to go and work around the world for a year with a work permit. My SWAP Canada visa is valid until the 23rd of June 2016, after which I'll have to return to Finland at least as a courtesy. My better half has also expressed his desires to leave the country, so who am I to disagree.

Instead I plan on applying for several MA programs for September 2016. Right now my destination seems to be Ireland instead of the UK due to their new, conservative-lead immigration policy which makes it almost impossible for my Canadian companion to study in the country. Besides, we're both in love with Dublin. Sláinte!
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