A few weeks ago, I heard some english author saying "English are too polite to be honest and Germans are too honest to be polite"
@lisaa99565 жыл бұрын
That's not really true germans are mostly shy in the way they don't know you. They need Time to get to know a person. That's one of the reasons why there seem Not so polite. Making friends in Germany: You put time in and they will stay your friends forever. And for me as a German I never forget a Person that I met.
@gyehlove64205 жыл бұрын
English are too polite to be honest??? Never heard of that, and I don't believe in it.
@niceberliner5 жыл бұрын
We Germans call a spade a spade
@TheCimbrianBull5 жыл бұрын
Ordnung muß sein!
@Stiby825 жыл бұрын
@@niceberliner Spade, shovel: similar, but not the same ;)
@teachersusanute1995 жыл бұрын
No matter where you live, you should always learn the language. Otherwise you‘ll never understand the culture.
@lucyfer46195 жыл бұрын
The funny thing here: if you say this as a German you are a Nazi.
@philippciunis5 жыл бұрын
I'm staying in south africa for half a year and i'm not learning afrikaans. I can say morning, and thanks and please. I already speak 3 languages and afrikaans is not gonna help me anywhere but here ^^ so i do believe it depends on the situation
@e0206135 жыл бұрын
@@lucyfer4619 Ääääh, nö.
@lucyfer46195 жыл бұрын
@@e020613 I see you are a beginner in learning it as well- keep it up!
@e0206135 жыл бұрын
@@lucyfer4619 Schmarrnsepp, or *rubbish-Joseph* to address the international audience over here. ,)
@lorisutherland77285 жыл бұрын
Learning the language is a sign of respect
@rookmaster75025 жыл бұрын
Also, you are missing out on experiencing some aspects of the culture if you do not learn the language.
@Matahalii5 жыл бұрын
And it is not that difficult. German and english are close relatives anyway. And you must not get stressed out about learning german. If you try you may get stuck somehow and you can very often get away with some english words and sentences. People in general will recognize your effort and kindly help you. And don't be afraid of mixing up the articles. People may smile but understand you. And accent is not at all a problem. People here are used to so many accents, may it be bavarian, saxonian, frankonian, colognian or all the foreign accents like french, english, turkish, italian, asian and what not.
@indiansummer90295 жыл бұрын
I think it is more a sign of need ;-)
@Paul543785 жыл бұрын
That respect aspect is bullshit
@ingvarjensen10885 жыл бұрын
@@stakeoutrockhound523 It's Hennebergisch which is a Franconian dialect which is spoken in the Southwest of Thuringia: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hennebergisch
@annemarilla5 жыл бұрын
You don't have to go to festivals if you don't want. There are enough Germans who avoid going to festivals.
@joannahgn56785 жыл бұрын
Sure there are, but it also depends on where you live. Where I do live (a district of hesse with a lot of villages and a few small towns) you are considered a weirdo if you do not at least attend the Kirmes of the biggest town here (that's a special kind of festival in germany, one could say it is festival to celebrate the town/village where it takes place. So all non-germans can understand my comment as well)
@Piretfreak875 жыл бұрын
@@joannahgn5678 Da frag ich mich aber, wo du wohnst. Ich komm auch aus einem kleinen Dorf in Hessen und hier interessiert es keine Sau ob du bei einem Fest auftauchst oder nicht. Dass es in einem kleinen Dorf immer irgendwen gibt, der sich über irgendwas das Maul zerreißt, das ist normal. Aber auch da sind andere Themen wesentlich weiter vorne.
@joannahgn56785 жыл бұрын
@@Piretfreak87 Werra-Meißner-Kreis, Wer nicht zumindest einmal aufs Johannis-Fest geht ist einfach seltsam, selbst die weggezogenen kommen typischerweise zu diesem wieder zurück hierher
@nunsatae5 жыл бұрын
I'm German, 24 yrs old and hate festivals. I do love drinking but more privately with people I know at my or their homes.
@Piretfreak875 жыл бұрын
@@joannahgn5678 Oh wow. O.o Dann kann ich ja froh sein, dass das hier nicht so ist. Ich bin nämlich absolut kein Mensch für Feste.
@skydragon32945 жыл бұрын
Most surprising/shocking thing for my wife (American) in Germany was the German aproach on friendships. Almost all her German coworkers seemed to be reserved, no big smalltalk or real bonding. But all of a sudden, a simple "how are you?" to one of her coworkers turned into some sort of a 2 hour therapy session... I belive, this goes along with your point of brutal honesty. First people tend to be very reserved, but if they let you get closer, you can get overwhelmed with how open Germans can be, when it comes to their personal problems. She felt, there is no inbetween, just "mutual respect" that turns into "trustworthy person".
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
Yeah, in Germany "how are you" is a real question that will get answered, it always confuses Non-Germans immensely. I guess we are really pretty weird.
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
@@stakeoutrockhound523 Actually yes, we do.
@johngill62905 жыл бұрын
"How are you?" can be a bad question to ask in Germany especially to an older person because chances are you'll spend the next hour hearing about their hernia, their kidney stone operation, the times they need to get up at night to pee and how everything compares to the time they had really bad hemorhoids that they needed to have cut open (will be described in detail with the sounds it made and the colour of the fluid.)
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
@@johngill6290 That's true! Germans are said to be very reluctant to open up but let us complain about our illnesses and we'll talk for an hour.
@xwind19705 жыл бұрын
Maybe it's because we are not as superficial as the let's say average white US Citizen. From an early age onwards we are told that you don't learn about the true character of a person during the first but rather during THE LAST meeting.
@Never_again_against_anyone5 жыл бұрын
Ahhh, brutal German honesty: We are just like "Why in hell would you ask me a question if you do not want a honest answer?! "🤔🤔🤔 No matter what the question is! Probably even if we are asked "How are you?" Okay if a non German person asks I might respond in the way the anglophone world would in a act of politeness -no matter how I am- but still be pissed that someone makes me lie for the sake of a kind of politeness that feels so wrong to me 😤 So, please do not use that as greeting in Germany, unless you really want to know how the other person is.
@avatarjiyuna31595 жыл бұрын
We were talking about icebreakers in English class and then we talked about "How are you?" and our teacher told us we always had to answer "fine". Our class was like:"Okay, I will probably die tomorrow, but I am fine.
@TheCimbrianBull5 жыл бұрын
Not a German but Danish (very similar culture and mindset). When I lived for a period of time in the United States in my younger years I found it very strange that unknown people wanted to know how I was actually doing. I just played along but never really got used to the fake politeness.
@Vivien-qo8lw5 жыл бұрын
@@avatarjiyuna3159 Well I would say that many germans really answer "I'm fine" but mostly only to strangers. Or when they dont want to talk about it. But if a friend would ask me how I am, I would be honest and just tell her/him that I don't wanna talk about it😊
@m.h.99945 жыл бұрын
Jup, I hate it when someone asks "How are you" who don't cares about me. It is more for people who know each other better and it is an invitation to tell how your life is going. If I don't feel good and I don't know or like someone I feel uncomfortable to say that I feel bad oder to lie.
@nitink.a5675 жыл бұрын
@@TheCimbrianBull Fake politeness or real politeness , you won't lose a kidney if you just say I'm fine or not fine & make a excuse and move away from that person. You people make it such a big deal out of it.
@Manu-qf8bs5 жыл бұрын
,,You don't need to spend so much money" Christmas markets: hold my Glühwein
@Manu-qf8bs5 жыл бұрын
@d21 Tumbleweed more like hoi4 channels
@juttapopp18695 жыл бұрын
Being 55 years old, let me tell you: I remember VERY hot days and summers in Germany. We just didn´t EXPECT air condition, we DEALT with it, lol. It never lasts very long.
@liliblume54685 жыл бұрын
jutta popp Never lasts very Long ?! Don’t u remember the last summer which literally startet in April and ended in September with an average temperature of 37 degrees 🤔😂
@septemberrain31975 жыл бұрын
@@liliblume5468 It's always only a couple of days with such extreme temperatures. I'd prefer air condition too but if there isn't any, so what? People are so whiny these days lol The bf of my niece couldn't even drive with his car when the ac didn't work. Like wtf? I just open the windows, end of story. smh
@liliblume54685 жыл бұрын
September Rain I live in Berlin and the temperatures are indeed very hot not only for a few days and nobody uses air conditioning, my car doesn’t even have it but still the summers are way hotter than they used to be.
@garage92835 жыл бұрын
Lili Blume until it starts raining again and you all complain. It is really only a couple days and you should enjoy the summer
@liliblume54685 жыл бұрын
Garage928 Who do you think you are to say what Germans complain about ?! The heat is dangerous, the forests are burning off and people are indeed dying so most people are happy about a bit rain after 40 degrees of temperature...U are just rude and don’t know shit. Google the fucking temperatures of last year and tell me again the heat lasts for only for a couple of days !
@Visionery15 жыл бұрын
People being brutally honest and telling you what they think is a good thing, unlike Britain where they're super friendly but actually can't stand you.
@abcxyz-cx4mr5 жыл бұрын
Especially in Scotland and Wales, also in Ireland too (I know Ireland isn’t in Britain btw).
@blackwater47075 жыл бұрын
@@abcxyz-cx4mr Are they brutally honest in those places or not?
@abcxyz-cx4mr5 жыл бұрын
Black Water - they’re not brutally honest in those places, they think brutal honesty is haughty or being “up yourself”. If you offer your honest opinion about someone’s outfit, or opinion on a personal matter, or correct someone’s grammar/spelling mistake in Wales and Scotland there’s an 80% chance that the Welsh and Scots would be offended and think you’re being rude.
@abcxyz-cx4mr5 жыл бұрын
Those countries have a sickly sweet or a sickly nice culture similar to Canada.
@blackwater47075 жыл бұрын
@@abcxyz-cx4mr If I had a pound for every time that I was called up stuck up bitch when I thought I was being polite. Lol. Thanks - I'll take that into consideration.
@DrGlynnWix5 жыл бұрын
Of course it’s a sign of ignorance to not even attempt to learn the language of a country! I really don’t understand why you would even want to live somewhere for years when you can’t even basic conversations with people.
@Philemaphobia5 жыл бұрын
So glad that most of us have a talent for languages but not everybody does and even if you move to a country wanting to learn the language you might just never get it right. In Germany people tend to like speaking english and instantly switch if they feel you have trouble with German ( pretty much robbing you of an opportunity for the sake of efficient communication, I am guilty of this too) I am still struggling with certain turkish words, although I try to learn the language since being a kid and there are plenty turkish speaking germans and foreigners in the country, but I just seem to lack some face muscles to get it right XD
@UntotesSchaf5 жыл бұрын
Well, I once had a discussion with someone on KZbin who found it absolutely not necessary to learn the language of the country he was living in because he would get away with English almost every time and he said it was no longer up to date to have to learn that language.
@DrGlynnWix5 жыл бұрын
Philemaphobia I’m a bit confused by your reply, but I just want to clarify that Antoinette and I were both clearly talking about people who make no effort, not people who try but struggle.
@DrGlynnWix5 жыл бұрын
UntotesSchaf and I would say that guy is rude and disrespectful.
@UntotesSchaf5 жыл бұрын
@@DrGlynnWix Yep but he (or maybe it was a female, I don't know) had another opinion. ;-)
@Luisa-zv1sl5 жыл бұрын
I'm German and I honestly think, the partys in little villages are literally better than the ones in big cities 😅😂
@the.9ty95 жыл бұрын
Dorffest = Village Party 👌 best partys of them all
@Luisa-zv1sl5 жыл бұрын
@@the.9ty9 trueee!🍻
@panchovan6175 жыл бұрын
Luisa True!
@mannmanuel77625 жыл бұрын
Das vorglühen der Dorfkinder ist die alkoholvergiftung der stadtkinder
@falkj.beinker65615 жыл бұрын
complete bullshit. i come from the countryside and i absolutly hate it there. the people are just closed minded and just want to get drunk while the guys think a dancefloor would be a great place to drink and try to act cool to get a girl but they won't dance and just stare at every guy who is just trying to have a good night and fucking dance ! Schützenfest and Dorffeste just suck.
@PeterPetermann5 жыл бұрын
Having grown up in germany I never felt winter much of an issue.. Until I spend my first winter in Finland. From that experience: vitamin d supplements will help a lot.
@TheCimbrianBull5 жыл бұрын
You definitely need to take the D! 😉😏
@Super-Godzilla995 жыл бұрын
Hmm I love winter there is no reason too get depressed. Ok without snow you get depressed from this grey but with snow it looks amazing.
@lianevoelker98455 жыл бұрын
I hate Winters in Germany. That's one of the reasons why I am moving away.
@thinkingagain59665 жыл бұрын
@@lianevoelker9845 moving to where?
@maxdippininmylolo64215 жыл бұрын
Liane Voelker sometimes i think it too
@Sarah-xn9li5 жыл бұрын
We don’t have air conditioning, we have „Stoßlüften“😂
@VeroxTheOne4 жыл бұрын
xDDD Das stimmt, ich musste so lachen xD
@Solidos07004 жыл бұрын
Ja obwohl ich sagen muss das ne Klimaanlage in einigen Sommern echt von Vorteil wäre. Wenn es mehr als 2-3 Tage über 35° ist bringt Stoßlüften auch nicht mehr viel ^^.
@noscheisse24554 жыл бұрын
Darauf sollte ich mich vorbereiten. Ich bin ein Deutscher Amerikaner und plane, so bald wie möglich nach Deutschland zu ziehen. Ich werde eines Tages dort ankommen. Ich habe auch Deutsch gelernt. :)
@fridolin24674 жыл бұрын
Einfach in der Nacht lüften und am Tag die Fenster zu.
@jenny1005823 жыл бұрын
it would be very ironic if we would answer the heat problem due to climate change with air conditioning which propels climate change
@Piretfreak875 жыл бұрын
I think learning the language of the country you want to live in is a sign of respect. No matter if you come to Germany or any other country in this world. Here in Germany we know that our language is not the easiest one to learn and me personally, I have a lot of respect for everyone who does learn our language. But I have to say, I do not agree with the last point on your list. I don't think that you have a problem if you don't like to celebrate in Germany. Especially if you live in a big city. Noone will care if you go to a festival or not. But even in small villages you are not forced to go to any kind of festival.
@lotharschepers22405 жыл бұрын
You are right that we do not force anyone to celebrate with us, but as we have these cultural barriers (no polite small talk or shit chat with strangers) it will be more complicated to build up any friendship here with us. But there is another way to do that, that Antoinette never had mentioned but I guess she will in the nearer future. Join a club and engage yourself in that club. Her daughter is now close to the age where she will move her attention more to her peers than to her family and at that point, it could be her wish to join a club. Often this is the moment when the parents did take some responsibilities for the club and with that, you must and will build up some new relationships.
@svenweihusen575 жыл бұрын
Thumbs up. Giving straight forward honest answers may seem weird for some of the more polite people but it really helps getting to the point. Telling my wife that some dress doesn't suit her is just saving her a lot of time figuring out if it really suits her or not.
@Sketchblopp5 жыл бұрын
When someone compliments you you also know they mean it.
@berndhoffmann77035 жыл бұрын
and it is saving her from an embarrassing appearance
@TheCimbrianBull5 жыл бұрын
@@berndhoffmann7703 Yes, correct. And it also saves you from listening to her complaining about it for a long time afterwards. 😁
@garage92835 жыл бұрын
Sven Weihusen yeah did that to my last three wife’s. Zack, divorced! HaHa..
@gallomphrattlebone3295 жыл бұрын
Na, wenn einer eine Frage stellt, dann muss er schon damit rechnen, dass er eine Antwort kriegt. Wer damit nicht klarkommt, soll halt nix fragen.
@betacrossing60705 жыл бұрын
Ha ha but germany are so touche filly if you honest to them. Like babies ha ha
@kathrin96745 жыл бұрын
@@betacrossing6070 no we aren't. Describe exactly what you mean,please.
@elenasoccer28525 жыл бұрын
Finde ich auch. Warum fragt man sonst?
@hym33235 жыл бұрын
@@betacrossing6070 I think you just can't handle the honesty, hun.
@florian34825 жыл бұрын
@@hym3323 its 50/50 i think ,from my German View 🧐✌️
@Neonsilver135 жыл бұрын
Regarding the heat, while yes it has gotten hotter in the summer compared to 10 years ago and yes german homes usually don't have airconditioning. Most homes are well enough insulated that as long as you open the windows for a time during cooler times, like early in the morning or late in the evening, the temperature can be kept below 30°C within the apartments. It can become a problem if it's very hot for several weeks since, but it's still managable. Of course that isn't true for every apartment or house, but I think it does for most. A good rule of thumb to avoid this is to make sure to avoid apartments in the uppermost floor of a building. Those tend to heat up the most, but as I said how bad it is depends on the building and some other things, like the direction the apartment windows are facing.
@johngill62905 жыл бұрын
Here's one that everyone who's lived in Germany will know but that will shock every foreigner when moving here: Medical details in small talk.
@TheCimbrianBull5 жыл бұрын
- Foreigner: "Hello, Fritz! How are you?" - Fritz: "Well, not so good as last week. I have hemorrhoids and the doctor prescribed this ointment that I must rub my anus with three times a day. But it really itches and burns!" - Foreigner: *speechless* 😳🙄😶
@anjafink89965 жыл бұрын
Exactly. It's totally normal to tell a total stranger at the busstop about how you solve your constipation problem. 😀
@lianevoelker98455 жыл бұрын
I never understood it. I moved away 6 years ago and right now I am back for a visit for 2 month and honestly, it's the weirdest thing ever. I'm so uncomfortable with it now, that I'm seriously socially awkward in Germany.
@evilstermegaman5 жыл бұрын
@@lianevoelker9845 that's called "oberflächlich". Back to the states with you, where that belongs to, I guess. 😛
@lianevoelker98455 жыл бұрын
@@evilstermegaman I live in Australia and used to live in New Zealand as well. People there are not superficial! It's just a different form of interacting with each other. And yes, I would rather be surrounded by positive people instead of constantly complaining people. It has a huge impact on your mental health!
@fridaoumpapa595 жыл бұрын
Air conditioning is really bad for the environnement too because it cools inside but warms the air outside. An endless circle.
@S_Black5 жыл бұрын
The real vicious cycle is climate change makes the air hotter -> spends tons of energy to cool down buildings -> CO2 used to produce that energy causes climate change
@claudiaduffy55005 жыл бұрын
Alternatives are available by way of 'Kühldecken', passive Houses etc.
@JBru19785 жыл бұрын
Heating homes in winter is also not exactly environment-friendly either...
@andreawirtz27285 жыл бұрын
Just lurking yes but it is more important to protect from cold climate than from hot climate. Sure both is dangerous in there own ways, but the change to survive hot weather is higher than cold weather. I am against air conditioners too but I am not against heater there are so many environment friendly methods if you inform yourself decent.
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
@@andreawirtz2728 Weather isn't climate. The heat of the past few years has led to draught, we now have the biggest ever recorded fire in the Bundesland Mecklenburg-Vorpommern thanks to last summer's heat. We also have dust storms in Brandenburg. We have dying forests and wetlands. This is not about feeling well in summer. This is about our country rapidly changing.
@peterkoller37615 жыл бұрын
reasons to celebrate: 1. first monday this week. 2. first tuesday this week. 3. first wednesday this week. 5. first thursday of the week. 5. first friday of the week. 6. first saturday of the week. 7. first sunday this week. 8. BONUS REASON: I have a birthday this year!
@RL-os9xl5 жыл бұрын
peter koller First Monday, my least favorite celebration 😆
@ThePegasus19795 жыл бұрын
You forgot the most important reason: still being alive! ;)
@berulan84635 жыл бұрын
@@ThePegasus1979 Yeah, because the only thing worse than getting older is not getting older. :)
@joannahgn56785 жыл бұрын
@@ThePegasus1979 you forgot the most important most importand reason: beer is life! :D
@lotharschepers22405 жыл бұрын
@@RL-os9xl But you have to celebrate that day because that is the easiest way to overcome the hurdles of a Monday.
@clumsiegrace61565 жыл бұрын
I always thought it's normal and actually a good thing, when people are honest. Instead I found that many American people appear kind of unauthentic. Not in a very bad way, but just a bit too friendly.
@MaskedBishop5 жыл бұрын
As a German who gets irritated looks for his honesty sometimes by other Germans I don't think I'd enjoy the US or New Zealand in that matter. 😅 IMO especially if someone is important to you he/she deserves honesty... I'd feel bad for lying, even if it were just about someone's weight, haircut or cooking.
@joana-cf1bs5 жыл бұрын
these videos always make me happy I'm German :) being proud of our nationality is not very popular I feel like, but I think it should be. It's a great country!
@DavidRamirez-qw3jp5 жыл бұрын
yea right Germany only have drunk people that's it and fat people gosh good thing I wasn't born on drunk land I will have a heart attack
@joana-cf1bs5 жыл бұрын
@@DavidRamirez-qw3jp you're really rude
@valaurica45905 жыл бұрын
I agree! I always make it a point to be proud of being German! Why shouldnt we be? Every nationality has something special!:)
@heavenandhell79745 жыл бұрын
True ^^
@deathangel45075 жыл бұрын
Deutschland Deutschland über alles
@NDFMoaB5 жыл бұрын
"It is a sign of ignorance if you live in Germany without learning the language." - I think that sentence holds true for everybody living in any country around the world, not only in Germany.
@shielajordan5579 Жыл бұрын
Ich stimme zu , I agree
@anzaia21644 жыл бұрын
"They always find an excuse to celebrate" I think you might have mispronounced "get drunk"
@yvonnehirsch96675 жыл бұрын
Antoinette, I am a German woman, who has lived in America for the last 33 years, where the culture is apparently similar with regard to people never saying what they really mean. Even after 33 years in the USA, I can not get used to people constantly saying things they do not mean. I think it is healthy to be honest with one another, of course, in a tactful way. Glad you like it in my country. Thanks for the video!
@Althemor5 жыл бұрын
Please note that there are noticeable regional differences. Beer and wine festivals are big in the south, less so elsewhere. You may know about the Oktoberfest, which is the most famous such festival - it's in Bavaria/Bayern. In fact, people in other regions jokingly call Bavaria a foreign country at times. One of the large political parties in the Bundestag is the CDU/CSU, so-called because it's actually made up of the "sister" parties CDU and CSU. On a state level these are separate, independent parties, but they have agreed that in Bavaria only the CSU runs for office whereas in the 15 other states only the CDU does so. This enables them to join together on the national level as a single parliamentary group. Fasching (the carnival) has places where it's a major celebration and other places where it has much less relevance. I think most cities have some sort of celebration, but there are places so well known for them that they are called what translates to "carnival strongholds". Keep in mind that the (first?) Unification of Germany happened less than 150 years ago. In fact, I as a German think I stand a better chance to understand most people speak English (even those who are not native speakers) than I do to understand a Bavarian speak the pure, unadulterated Bavarian dialect. Honest answers are not ubiquitous, but I guess they are rather more common. If you are asking someone how you look, the honesty will probably depend on their closeness to you. People who are not particularly close (but still want to remain friendly with you) will often tell you you look good regardless of what they actually think. And people who don't really know much about fashion (like me) might also give generally vague, positive answers. But from a certain level of closeness onwards you can expect rather brutal honesty in most things. The thought process there is that you need honest criticism to improve, and when people are close enough, they know that a bit of criticism won't actually hurt their relationship.
@steffka78175 жыл бұрын
I am german and i like to watch this kind of Videos👌 its interesting to hear whats special in germany what we not realy recognize ( hope my english is not too bad 😂)
@AntoinetteEmily5 жыл бұрын
Your English is great!
@steffka78175 жыл бұрын
@@AntoinetteEmily oh thank you😊 what do you think about that germans like to come on point * better come 5-10 min earlier* to a date or apointment. I heart that we are really crazy 🤔
@jackfirmin58145 жыл бұрын
same here
@arjunvignesh90844 жыл бұрын
Hi mam, i am from india... i am willing to work germany.... it is possible?
@jimenzehym66695 жыл бұрын
This is the most accurate video about Germany I’ve seen so far :D Really good job ;-)
@carola-lifeinparis5 жыл бұрын
Such a true video. Yes, it was hardly ever over 30 degrees when I grew up. 26 were the warm days. If someone does not like Fasching, they should move to Niedersachsen. It often happened that I only remembered it is Fasching when suddenly seeing 3 dressed up elementary school children, as where I grew up, Fasching was not celebrated that much. You have to search for an event. But we have Schuetzenfest, Jazz Festival and all the other things that feel like straight out of GIlmore Girls
@juttapopp18695 жыл бұрын
LOL. Not if you grew up in Southern Germany.
@caringancoystopitum42245 жыл бұрын
Hardly ever over 30 degrees? Where in Germany did you grow up? At the north sea?
@lotharschepers22405 жыл бұрын
Lower Saxony You did not mention the Grünkohl with Pinkel tours.
@yogurt81505 жыл бұрын
"jaywalking is a huge no-no" really only when theres kids around. you can really just go if youre in a hurry and if someone goes up to you ignore them theyre being rude tbh. but dont jaywalk if there are children watching, especially very young children.
@YourSuccessSystems5 жыл бұрын
5 reasonable points that are easy to agree with! And you delivered them in an entertaining way... Love your vids :-)
@tinybiscuit65303 жыл бұрын
The honesty is great in my opinion, if i do something wrong i want to be told he yeah dont do that so i know not to do that, and when i ask a question i want an honest answer i dont want people to say what they think i wan to hear
@mimmeisinger49265 жыл бұрын
Vielen Dank für dieses schöne Video! Ich bin erfreut und überrascht, wie positiv du von Deutschland sprichst 🤩
@joana-cf1bs5 жыл бұрын
Always clicking on the videos because I enjoy listening to your kiwi accent while getting ready or cooking It reminds me of my time in NZ :)
@Birdmaster925 жыл бұрын
Feeling depressed in winter? Get a Krapfen for immediate happyness.
@evilstermegaman5 жыл бұрын
@Pustekuchen Melancholie und die Winterdepression sind zwei grundlegend unterschiedliche Dinge.
@ireaperxxl47565 жыл бұрын
das heißt Berliner
@vaniaramadhani38905 жыл бұрын
Being lived in a tropical country all my life, 30-35 degrees celcius is a very common occurence! Here it’s normally 27 degrees when I wake up (5-5.30am) and in the afternoon it’s usually 36-38 degrees and mind you it’s the rainy season:( we do have air conditioning here but it usually just doesn’t cut it :/
@MelodyCrystel5 жыл бұрын
That "tropical" is the point. :facepalm: We people in Germany & Austria have mostly DRY air. We even get grilled in the summer-sun and once it doesn't rain for a few weeks, our plants on the fields start withering because of having no water. EDIT: At my place, our heat-peak was this year freaking 39,8 degrees Celsius with air so hot that simple walking out of the house was a huge pain.
@janetweyer94155 жыл бұрын
I find in the little village I live in most people don’t speak English. I’m ok with that because I’m trying to learn the language. I think it’s beautiful. I was surprised on how many holidays they have here. My husbands like oh I have a three day weekend and then like the next week like a have four day weekend. I asked him what was the holiday and we both didn’t know. I love that Germans respect family time.
@lavenderluna53115 жыл бұрын
If you live in the eastern part of Germany the people most likely studied Russian instead of English at school. Everyone in Germany with a not just basic education speaks at least one foreign language. In Saarland this might be French, but in the most areas it will be English. Maybe in your village people just feel they are not skilled enough or they might be too shy to speak English with a native speaker.
@UntotesSchaf5 жыл бұрын
Hm my husband was growing up in the DDR and he also had English in school (and Russian additionally).
@janetweyer94155 жыл бұрын
Lavender Luna when they do speak English they told me to slow down because I’m talking too fast. My neighbor had said the same thing and I of course slow down but I also had told her that I’m actually speaking slow and most talk faster than I do. She was like wow that is crazy!!
@janetweyer94155 жыл бұрын
UntotesSchaf what’s DDR?
@lavenderluna53115 жыл бұрын
@@janetweyer9415 DDR was the german term for German Democratic Republic
@eneasntibizerwa23465 жыл бұрын
Many things totally depend on the regions in germany
@Externica5 жыл бұрын
Living in Germany and I think, this summer is not that bad. Yes, there are some days with the temperature above 30° C, but at least only for a few days. And you can let in some cool air around sunset. Last year, the hot weather started back in mid to late April and stayed that way until September, if I remember correct. And even the nights were so hot, that you coudnt sleep.
@Corinna_Schuett_GER5 жыл бұрын
Check out the #Dane Wigington YTC to learn about what Nobody will tell you in Germany!
@teutabahtiri5 жыл бұрын
3:10 i though she said ‘.. who can not handle hate’ and i was like what? 🤣🤣
@steffiblum19695 жыл бұрын
Teuta Bahtiri me too 😅🤣
@helena95635 жыл бұрын
I thought I would be the only one who understood this 😂
@lorimav5 жыл бұрын
Exactly what my eavesdropping son thought also. I didn't catch the word at all and couldn't figure out what word was said but he said "What? Hate?, Did she say "hate"?
@meiklman5 жыл бұрын
I WAS EXPERIENCING A MASSIVE HATE WAVE!!!
@abhishek-xh2ld5 жыл бұрын
...HATE - fk Nazis! Oh what Heat? OK, fk Global warming
@asakotakahashi66335 жыл бұрын
I recently discovered your channel and I love your videos. I’ve learned so much. Thank you. 🤗 Lots of Love from Japan 🇯🇵❤️
@TheMusicLauncher5 жыл бұрын
Japan is cool, but the language is so hard to learn when you only speak german or english :/
@AntoinetteEmily5 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much this makes me happy to hear. I have a good friend from Japan and I've always wanted to visit.
@asakotakahashi66335 жыл бұрын
Antoinette Emily That is great!!! :-) Thank you very much Antoinette. 😊 I would love to visit New Zealand and I would love to visit Germany. You are always welcome here in Japan. 🤗❤️
@missis_jo5 жыл бұрын
@@TheMusicLauncher Japanese is actually like english. Easy in the beginning, but difficult when you want to deep dive into it. Ever gave it a try? If you find Japanese hard to learn then maybe you just haven't found your way to learning Kanji yet. If so, don't stress about them and don't even try learning them one on one. Always put them into context. Good luck!
@caringancoystopitum42245 жыл бұрын
@@missis_jo You do realize that Japanese is rated as one of the hardest languages to learn, while English is generally known to be easy to learn, right? Hell, I learned English on my own, without school or help. Try doing that with Japanese.
@justinmarques86543 жыл бұрын
Oh my gosh i was searching for a Video like this for years! Thank you so much❤
@grietjeg13615 жыл бұрын
That’s true, in Germany we absolutely LOVE to celebrate and also to get crazy and drunk. Especially in the little villages, everyone celebrates on Saturdays and Fridays, every weekend! Almost no one is at home in the evening at the weekend which I think is great bc I love to celebrate :). I‘m german and I think your facts are true! Lots of love from the Northcoast
@grietjeg13615 жыл бұрын
K/DA Kai‘Sa wassss echt? Es gibt natürlich immer Leute die nicht gerne feiern gehen möchten und das ist auch volkommen ok, aber bei uns aufm Dorf gehen alle am Wochenende feiern haha :).
@dannyben03 жыл бұрын
several times some german did not believe what i said. One day i had a toothache, so that i had to excuse to my boss to leave the office. Then, my colleague asked me repeatedly the same question why i had to leave as if i had lied. Another time, my other boss asked me whether I had read the message he sent. I had not opened my email and he asked me to open the email because he wanted to know whether I lied. Another occasion, I just served a n old frail patient and then her daughter came in. afterwards, she accused me that i had stolen her father's armwatch and reported to the doctor in the ward. I felt exploded with that stupid nonsense. the next day, the paramedic, who brought her father, gave the ward the armwatch. I understand it is necessary to have a proof to believe someone. On the flip side, it shows also a stupidity and hypocrisy if it pointed out to the wrong person.
@imrehundertwasser70945 жыл бұрын
I'm a native German, living in Germany, and I don't particularly like to celebrate anything. I guess I shouldn't live here according to Antoinette's criteria :-)
@AntoinetteEmily5 жыл бұрын
I also don't like to celebrate everything but it's fun sometimes.
@fermentedsourdough54625 жыл бұрын
I don't like too much of it either.
@roberrt21262 жыл бұрын
Great video! I've been living in Germany for 2 and a half years now and I'm leaving soon, because it's the worst country I've ever been in, hands down. For many people that want to move to Germany, please reconsider and do a lot of research about the country before. A couple of reasons why I'm leaving are that people are rude, not funny, boring and the life here is very boring, the language is not fun to learn at all, I learned it pretty fast but I began to hate it, people judge a lot (they are using the direct approach as Antoinette said in the video).
@Itsmeromy.865 жыл бұрын
Tolles Video. Ich bin deutsche und erst seit deinem video fällt mir auf das deutsche so viele Feste feiern..in unsere Stadt sind zwischen April und oktober bestimmt 5-8 Feste 🙈. Man muss ja nicht zu allen Festen hin aber es ist eine schöne Abwechslung.👍
@ShinChan-iz7hg5 жыл бұрын
Feste sind immer ein guter Vorwand um sich öffentlich besaufen zu können, ohne ein schlechtes Gewissen haben zu müssen.
@Kari_B61ex5 жыл бұрын
I have to agree with every point you raised. I lived in Germany for 6 years back in the early 1990's and loved every minute of it. ii - The heat... I was lucky enough to live in a house with a cellar, so if it got too hot overnight we used to sleep down there. During daylight hours we lived in the garden. We set-up a garden sprinkler and paddling pool to cool off. iii - Winters... I remember on my first winter living there looking outside in the morning and it looked like we had overnight rain - it wasn't rain, it was black ice. I suffered for many days after when I walked out 'normally' and ended up on my backside. iiii - Language... learning is a must for any Country you visit/live in. I learnt very basic German at school. My stock phrases when I first arrived were : Alles klar, Entschuldigung, wo ist and Guten Tag - my most used first phrase was Pommes ohne Mayo. I learnt the language as I went along and locals appreciated that I was trying, even if it resulted in many having a laugh at my expense.
@annapooraniraman72782 жыл бұрын
where do you live now? moved out of germany?
@robertofarias15454 жыл бұрын
It's so kind of you share with us these tips. I've heard the same advices from people who live in Germany too. Wheater, language, german's behavior all of them must be considered to someone has the dream to live in Germany.
@leehitt47045 жыл бұрын
When we were stationed in Schweinfurt we used to go to Fasching in Wurzburg. :-). We also loved the Federweisser festival in a small village near us, and the Schweinfurt town festival with the Ferris Wheel. And of course the Weinachtsmarkts in Salzburg, Nuremberg, and Schweinfurt. We miss going to the Wurzburger Hofbraukeller!!! We miss pretty much everything about Germany (Except the heat in the extra hot summers).
@MsMs-ur4uc5 жыл бұрын
it's part of the experience of living in a different country to learn the language. I'm a native English speaker and I find my fellow native speakers to be most ignorant and feel they should not learn the language of their host country.
@ellenmargrethelarsen805 жыл бұрын
I really love your videos I have seen many of them. I am a Norwegian that try too learn German 😀
@beadus35125 жыл бұрын
Ellen Margrethe Larsen Greetings to beautiful Norway 😍
@seankessner36575 жыл бұрын
Whenever I see your videos I have to think of my mother, who came from Ireland to Germany with my father at the age of 21 years. At the beginning the German language was very difficult for my mother but now after 56 years in German today she speaks accent-free German and I am really proud of my mother because German is a difficult language. everything you said about Germany and us Germans is so true no matter what it is. Germany has great people and we have a beautiful country. I am German and Irish myself and have lived in Australia for 2 years and had a lot of New Zealand friends there. I found New Zealanders incredibly nice and you can be proud of your country and the New Zealanders speak much better English than Australians.By the way, your German is really good. I wish you and your family good luck here in Germany and a lot of blessing. Seàn
@KimCrossesBorders5 жыл бұрын
Love this straightforward video. Not every country is everyone’s cup of tea. But if you can embrace the culture it’s so much better
@tomsplayground77125 жыл бұрын
If you ask something be sure that you don't because you want to polish up your own personality with a comfortable answer. In Germany we take you seriously and you will get a polite but truly answer. On the other side, when we made a friendship, it is a friendship with all the highest moments and the deepest moments. That is the German way of honesty.
@MartinIvanov5 жыл бұрын
Oh, there are so many other reasons, for me, even after 3 years here, I still can't get used to these things: - slow internet - bureaucracy - communication via post (are we in the middle ages!?) - superficial approach from Germans in a lot of situations
@tobimanx70265 жыл бұрын
I don't know in which village in Germany you were, but at my location in germany that's not a problem 😂
@MartinIvanov5 жыл бұрын
@@tobimanx7026 Nürnberg... 🤣
@maxdippininmylolo64215 жыл бұрын
Martin Ivanov bruh superficial is like the worst thing, people who aint got nothing to do all day long just want to get on your nerves...
@jazzjo4564 жыл бұрын
Hahaha so true!
@mariaabele80815 жыл бұрын
I'm a German German teacher. So it's always very interesting to listen to people talking about my country and culture so fondly. Thank you for your input! And good luck with learning our language. It's hard but also a beautiful language full of humor and pictures :)
@gabircik5 жыл бұрын
As a Mediterranean living in Germany for more than 8 years now, there are certain things that I found different from the culture I grew up in. 1) Some I loved immediately, 2) some I still can't accept even now, 3) some I was quite against at the beginning but realize now that they make more sense and 4) some I'm still trying to accept as such and adapt and 5) some where I try to change Germans on.:D:D Examples for 1) Their directness. Oh God, I love it. I don't have to think about what they might actually be meaning. I'm also a direct person and was probably an outsider in my culture.:) I don't mind criticism as long as it's not personal. 2) I still can't get used to being told off by people working in the service sector. A shop owner or waiter can easily shout at you. If this would happen in my country, that shop wouldn't continue business for more than a month and that waiter would right away be fired. After all, I can't stand impoliteness. There can always be a way to state something most negative in a polite way. 3) The fact that they aren't always available, that the shops or certain government offices are open at given days only. Everybody has a life outside of work and they are entitled to it. The only country I can imagine myself opening a coffee shop is Germany because it can be closed at 6pm and nobody would think it's crazy. Whenever I see shops open on Sundays, I start questioning if the boss is paying the employees extra money for this. 4) Their slowness. I have a hot blood as a Mediterranean, I can't wait.:D I try to detain myself to make the time pass for me while waiting for a German prepare something for me. :) I practice being a patient person thanks to Germans.:D 5) Their lack of solutions in cases of crisis. Because Germans do everything slowly, carefully and thoroughly, things work most of the time and in a very efficient way. But unfortunately not always.:D Because it's a rare event, they don't know how to think practically when things don't work. In such cases, I try to push them, start giving ideas in a very kind and careful way. And to my surprise, they mostly get surprised by the idea and its practicality. I'm surprised because they can't even think about it.:D Being grown up in a culture where people mostly disobey rules and create trouble, we develop our ways of solving problems, I guess. I believe Germans should be able to adapt this 'thinking out of box' thing easily because I call them an 'engineer' folk. They just need to put some risk analysis in their infamous regulations and rules books. :D Liebe Grüße an alle, die es bis hier gemacht haben! Ich mag Ihr Land so sehr!
@lianevoelker98455 жыл бұрын
Really? The last part is actually quite unusual from my experience. I would say it is the opposite. I'm not sure which country you are from but as a German I would consider most Mediterranean Countries super slow and inefficient. That's why there is more chaos. We do have an issue with bureaucracy tho. Everything takes super long and there are papers for everything. I think the issue in Germany might be that they want thinks to be done "the old fashion way". For sure not an entrepreneur country (these times are long over). But yeah when it comes to working things need to be done quick and proper. We hate quick solutions that don't look professional ;)
@wtsalive82105 жыл бұрын
Are you became an ambassador of Germany, Antoinette? What and how you explained things was so lovely and true. AC: Yes the highest temperature were not so extreme and the period of really hot days were not so long to invest in ACs. Therefore were our winter really really cold. The winter started at mid, latest at the end of November and ended latest at mid of April. The temperatures under -10°C for a longer period were no rareness. Lowest temperature...mmh I remember something about 40°C for a few days. And we always had white Christmas! We children had sooo much fun with the snow, which was often higher than 60cm downhill to northern Germany. In some areas more than 120cm...always! But not only summer and winter...we had all seasons and we always could define what season we have now. But that is changing more and more. We have not really winter anymore and the summer becomes hotter and hotter. One famous german word: Klimawandel
@jujuli10995 жыл бұрын
In what time and mysterious part of Germany did you grow up? ;) >>Der Winter weist für die Periode 1761 bis 2017 einen Mittelwert von −0,2 °C (1961-1990: 0,2 °C) auf. [...] Der Winter 1829/30 war der kälteste der Zeitreihe mit einem Mittelwert von −6,6 °C.>Die 1960er-Jahre müssen geradezu ein Weihnachts-Winterwunderland gewesen sein. Rund die Hälfte aller Weihnachtsfeste in diesem Jahrzehnt war weiß: Dichte Schneedecke an allen drei Feiertagen. So muss es doch sein, oder? Leider Nein. Ein absolutes Ausnahme-Jahrzehnt, sagt Jens Oehmichen vom Deutschen Wetterdienst: "Das ist ein relativ seltenes Phänomen, dass es im Tiefland weiße Weihnachten gibt und wenn man mal zurückschaut in die Vergangenheit, da sieht man also, dass man pro zehn Jahre ein bis zweimal weiße Weihnachten hat im Tiefland."
@idgiethreadgoode14985 жыл бұрын
I'm German and I'm really annoyed by people who tell you what you've done wrong. Especially elderly (bitter) people do that A LOT even though there's nothing really to complain.... they complain.. 🙄 That never happend when I spent some time in the US and Australia. People are more chilled there.
@gulliverthegullible66675 жыл бұрын
Ich lebe jetzt schon seit fast 10 Jahren in Australien und hab als Teenager ein Austauschjahr in den USA gemacht. Ich versteh gar nicht mehr, wo diese Idee herkommt, dass Aussies oder gar Amerikaner "chilled" oder "laid back" sind. In beiden Ländern sind die meisten Leute stockkonservativ und oft rassistisch. Die regen sich über viele Sachen auf.
@oli87175 жыл бұрын
I think "mostly" people don't complain about what you doing wrong... they just don't want that you get in trouble...
@vimalcurio3 жыл бұрын
Lol
@idgiethreadgoode14983 жыл бұрын
@@oli8717 no
@idgiethreadgoode14983 жыл бұрын
@@gulliverthegullible6667 die Australier, die ich erlebt habe, waren cool drauf. Okay, die alten Farmer im Outback waren etwas knöchern, aber ich hatte keine Probleme. (Wie mit den Ureinwohnern umgegangen wird, ist nochmal n anderes Thema, aber da darf sich sicherlich keine Nation aus dem Fenster lehnen.) In England habe ich 4 Jahre gewohnt und um mich kurz zu fassen... da will ich nie wieder hin. (Ja, ich hab da auch nette Freunde gefunden, aber trotzdem.) Und mit den Amis hatte ich auch nicht so viele Probleme. Die sind halt bissl dumm, aber ansonsten bin ich mit denen klargekommen. (Thema Ureinwohner/Schwarze, siehe Australien.) Fest steht aber, dass der Begriff "Deutsche Meckerkultur" durchaus seine Berechtigung hat!
@PinayEngineerinGermany8884 жыл бұрын
I think as a foreigner working in another country we need to be openminded and take the challenges. Of course be prepared to all those negative things and survive. Good insights, very informative.
@lenah.27475 жыл бұрын
My husband and I are thinking about moving to New Zealand. We absolutly hate the grey and cold weather in German Winter.
@i.i.iiii.i.i5 жыл бұрын
Get enough bright lights in the house for the time until you move... (several 1500+ lumen bulbs per room!) It seriously makes a huge difference when your room is brighter than the winter-daylight :P
@vimalcurio3 жыл бұрын
I like that weather lol
@666church9994 жыл бұрын
Funny stuff Antoinette! I started travelling to Germany about 5YRS ago. I'm a naive Texan, but have lived in San Diego for over 25YRS. I went alone to an Industrial/Goth music festival that's held in Cologne every year. It was absolutely the best time ever! I walked around & every single person was super friendly. I picked up very quickly that Germans are totally fascinated by both Texas & California. In fact, most of the time I would look down at my watch & an hour had already passed. I would then have to politely end the conversation & move on of course. Anyway, I met some people that lived in the small village of Schwerte. All the people I met & their families are "salt of the earth", "give you the shirt off their backs" Country German folks! To make a long story short - I consider them my 2nd family, visit twice a year, & they've even visited San Diego once (more after they retire soon). I just really lucked out!!! They all want me to move there (especially my GF of course), but I just can't pull the trigger for various reasons. Ah to be young & just starting your life like you were/are....... ( ;
@magnusgerke2395 жыл бұрын
Haha, is that Kiwi dialect? Me hearing: "Don't come to Germany if you don't stand the hate".... Me: "Whatwassat?" --"...because it can get really hot here..." 😅
@shannah69935 жыл бұрын
Same for me :D
@BlackAmberMoon5 жыл бұрын
😆I only understood it because English is my native language and I'm familiar with that accent. It definitely sounds like hate.
@magnusgerke2395 жыл бұрын
I did get it after a second... But yes, I have frequent problems just acoustically decoding what native english speakers say... But my comment about kiwi dialect had no mean intent, I find such dialects sweet to listen to actually😊
@sane0matic5 жыл бұрын
I was kinda scared about that "hate-wave" O.o
@Corinna_Schuett_GER5 жыл бұрын
@@magnusgerke239 I did understand the same "hate" and was curious what would come next... 😅
@maggie20675 жыл бұрын
Germany ist really hot - but now in November its dark and cold. I hate winter in Germany. Summer is always too short.
@valerietaylor96153 ай бұрын
Summer is always too short for me, too, and I live in California. 😮
@rekordia48855 жыл бұрын
I love these reflections of things that seem absolutely normal to me ...and yes, I get the winter-blues, too :)
@SnorriSnibble5 жыл бұрын
2:35 I know I'm nitpicking, but just because someone put on weight doesn't mean they don't look great or that you have to lie about the answer. Even if you put on weight, you can STILL look great. Or you can look great BECAUSE you put on some weight.
@aspiringm5 жыл бұрын
Yeah, in the 80s/90s it was like max of 2-3 weeks over 30-35 degrees per summer. Nearly 40 degrees were less common than today, at least it’s like that in my memory. It was usually ok to get somehow through that short period of time. On the opposite side, I remember living in Wellington for 4 years and my Kiwi friends complaining about the “unbearable heat” ;-) when the temperature rose over 24 degrees in summer, but it has becomer warmer there too. Well, the starting point is just what people are used to as the “normal” temperature. I can definitely relate to the winter experience. That struck me hard after returning to Germany and is still noticable. Kiwi expat friends of mine feel the same as you.
@caciliawhy51955 жыл бұрын
I love winter and leave Germany in the summer.
@peterdoe26175 жыл бұрын
Testing myself: I saw it , coming up. Never watched it (too busy). Now I'm forwarding this to my best friend. She is from Australia. I will forward it. No matter what. And I bet: it's gonna be brilliant. But right now, I'm only at =0:12. I'll let you know more while watching. About #4:the language: I think you'll earn respect in every country all over the world, when you at least show that you are willing to learn the language. I got introduced to a bunch of friends of my (step)daughter in the US. A few days after arrival she told me: "I told them beforehand that you do speak english." (shrugging) haha! Yes: I was my wish to learn it good! About disrespect: Carlos Santana was rewarded a price in the US. After more than 25 years of living there. And was not able to speak english. A friend of mine said: "what an arrogant **shole". And I could only agree. I already stated this with my friend, before commenting on all of this: having you, living here, makes Germany a better place to live. I'm not into carnival. I'm from the north. But I surely love your positivety ;-) And: yes! You have another subsciber, now! I'm mostly subscribed to cooking channels. But You've been my role model about describing life in Germany for so long, now: time to give it credit. Pls check out the other channels, I'm subscribed to. A lot of fantastic recipes from around the globe. And now: my question to you as a kiwi: "WHAT IS YOUR FAMILY RECIPE for PAVLOVA? Pls share with us! I'm sure there must be one. Not without giving back something: pls google for: 1GU-Fahrer You will find me, there! Thanks again, for sharing your thoughts. Heartly welcome!
@zombiekillinmumma5 жыл бұрын
Also subscribed
@peterdoe26175 жыл бұрын
@@zombiekillinmumma Haha! Have fun! Antoinette is sunshine, walkin' the earth!
@peterdoe26175 жыл бұрын
@@zombiekillinmumma Staci and Bibo have arrived yesterday. Staci is also watching.
@zombiekillinmumma5 жыл бұрын
Say hi for me
@lorisutherland77285 жыл бұрын
Can you go over the schools in Germany Compared to qiwi
@AntoinetteEmily5 жыл бұрын
My daughter starts school in September so I'm sure there will be some school-related content coming.
@millyhartz56045 жыл бұрын
Looking foward to hear something about how are schools there
@evilstermegaman5 жыл бұрын
@@AntoinetteEmily oogh, look out for good schools. Otherwise your daughter could get bullied cause she's a "white unbeliever, and female". Sounds like 1940, but is actually true...
@IMH155 жыл бұрын
Learning a language is a sign for us that someone is truly is interested in being part of Germany and that they will "follow our rules". Not learning the language was actually a point which was highly criticized in the refugee debate. Which is by the way another point: We love debating. I think air conditioning are good, but there are not enough days that are worth it. I mean it is freezing again just one week after you posted this video XD And being honest is just the most efficient way. And Germans always try to be efficient and practical.
@byakuyakuchiki65705 жыл бұрын
I live in Germany for many years now, well I'm German so nothing special about that xD The funny thing about it is, that some of those points you had are actually things I don't like. The worst of them is heat. I'm melting the last couple of days.😭 But I love Autumn und winter doesn't bother me at all. I love snow😍❄ What you said about learning German is totally true. When we see that someone is trying to learn German we appreciate that a lot. But you should prepare yourself for a few giggles. Personally I think every person who tries to learn German has my respect. It's a really difficult language (I think I could have never learnt it when I weren't born here😂). But every time I hear someone attempt to speak German I need to laugh or giggle, not because we think it's bad, but it sounds way to cute. ❤😂. You should definitely prepare for that. I actually didn't notice, that we party a lot, but now that you mention it🤔 we even have specific music genres just for partying 😂 so yeah apparently we party a lot 💃😂
@jjj130319843 жыл бұрын
I am different, I am German and I almost get anxiety thinking of the dark winters. It gets me down every year when days get short.
@yelenayeli95295 жыл бұрын
I live in The Netherlands and I’m born in the sixtees. Summer in the west of Europe is always a surprise. But I do remember the hot summers very well. With heatwaves too. And also the summers full of rain and cold temperatures. There isn’t that much change in the weather. But what did change is that there ate more large city’s and all the bricks keep the heat so much longer than when you live in the country. And when I was younger weathermen were very happy and excited to tell about warm weather and now they bring the news about the same weather as problematic hot. Also in The Netherlands most homes don’t have AC. In The Netherlands people don’t tell often when you broke a rule (most of them are not fond of rules) but in my experience Dutch people are a lot more blunt than German people.
@FirleFranzi1815 жыл бұрын
I am german. And I should not live here according to this video. Anyone want to move with me?
@dasaggropop12445 жыл бұрын
yeah new zealand sounds awesome XD
@whosthedena84405 жыл бұрын
Ich hasse feiern. Vorallem karneval nervt mich und Ich bin berliner😂
@dasaggropop12445 жыл бұрын
@@whosthedena8440 sei froh, dass du dich ausm rheinland kommst. ich bin münchner und hasse die wiesn XD
@FirleFranzi1815 жыл бұрын
@@whosthedena8440 ugh! Ich wohne in Köln. Karneval ist der pure Horror!
@heha69845 жыл бұрын
@@FirleFranzi181 Karnevallll? Wos isn des? Fasching? Hommer net und braungmer aa net. Gell?
@m.c91465 жыл бұрын
Very kind and decent comments to the point. Well done
@ulrichlehnhardt42935 жыл бұрын
Interesting video it is always fun to see oneself through someone else's glasses but I don't agree with those Germans who told you that it was not that hot when they grew up. I was born in 1961 and there has always been heatwaves throughout my childhood. I don't recall a single summer without temperatures above 30. Summer 1976 was extremely hot and dry with temperatures of 37 C e.g.... so it might be that we beat some records the recent years but to say that it was not hot, seems to be wishful thinking of some..
@berndhoffmann77035 жыл бұрын
Ulrich Lehnhardt I would say last year and 2003 it was exceptionally hot for a long period of time.
@ulrichlehnhardt42935 жыл бұрын
@@berndhoffmann7703 it is not exceptional that some years have longer summers than others. This May e.g. was exceptionally cold and rainy. The next two weeks we will have 20 degrees in Berlin which is exceptionally cold for july. Whenever the temperatures rise above 30 nowadays people think that this is abnormal. it is not. In 1473 there was an extremely hot summer which lasted 4 months. People could cross the Danube by foot because it had dried out completely. If this happened today people would panic.
@oliverhuhn98895 жыл бұрын
Also the days with high temperatures above 30 C in 1976 were not many. Most was in Rheinstetten with 17 days. Don't trust memories, it's always better to look at real statistics.
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
Statistics are 100% in agreement that the past 20 years have been hotter than any decades before.
@simpleyllesx39525 жыл бұрын
Some some towns even have public swimming pool parties. Its crazy. like the whole town is coming together to swim, drink beer and wine, listen to good music and just sit together. Thats a beautiful tradition in germany! Everyone should have such stuff.
@katibarrett87795 жыл бұрын
I think I would love Germany. It's my heritage from my paternal grandmother, her family is called Chronister, and my name is Katharina. 💓
@Delvman5 жыл бұрын
if you are interested in how Germany looks, watch this: "this is Germany" from Dr. Ludwig on KZbin
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
Any chance of you coming by for a visit maybe? :)
@katibarrett87795 жыл бұрын
I would love to visit Germany, it's a dream of mine, to see my ancestral land. I must save up money!
@agnes151019685 жыл бұрын
@@katibarrett8779 Pls give me an email addy if you consider working as an au-pair for 4-6 weeks next summer in Germany! My then thirteen-year-old son would love to have somebody to talk to in English and show him/her around and you could earn some money.
@janethockey90705 жыл бұрын
agnes1510196 Nice and tell your son that listening to BBC radio should help with his pronunciation in English
@lavenderluna53115 жыл бұрын
Well, most people aged 80+ can't speak English but I suppose in my generation ( I am 60) many people do. My children started learning English in elementary school and my younger daughter even in kindergarten. At my school we studied English, Latin, French and some of us Italian and Russian. Almost every german with a higher education speaks at least one foreign language. So we are prepared for our visitors :) and love to practise our skills. Which does not mean you should not learn our language. It might be fun and rewarding.
@randykroells80495 жыл бұрын
I drove a bike to work every day in heavy traffic and I never got hit,I wouldn't do that in the States.
@ann-kathrinschmidt24225 жыл бұрын
I was born in Bamberg and raised up in the region you were living right now, so I love your Videos. The photos remind me so much on my youth, were I loved to spend time on winefests ;)
@RJ_Ehlert4 жыл бұрын
This must be why I've been described as "brutally honest", coming from a German family.
@andywalker20775 жыл бұрын
Germany was already hot in the past. Temperatures over 30 degrees were common in Summer and below minus 20 in Winter.
@shark9615 жыл бұрын
What do you think about the situation with all the refugees we have now in Germany ?
@Corinna_Schuett_GER5 жыл бұрын
This is not "Germany" any longer.
@annaandmartin14555 жыл бұрын
I admire how positive you are about all these things and especially about the first thing you mentioned. I have lived in different cities in Germany for over 7 years but I've only experienced this behavior since I moved to Hamburg about a year ago. I don't think I can put such a positive spin on it. In my experience the people telling others "what they are doing wrong" are simply unable to coexist with other human beings and believe they are more important than others. I wonder if it's a local thing or it's me.
@nunsatae5 жыл бұрын
Ahhh this feels good to hear someone else pointing out the things I realised as a German while being in Florida for 4 months. At some point I missed the German honesty so so much. I didn't really like the all happy and nice vibes of Americans since I'm used to blunt confrontation. Thanks for the vid I really enjoyed watching it.
@Corinna_Schuett_GER5 жыл бұрын
USA and other countries alike dont attract me at all to live there as I absolutely CANNOT STAND HYPOCRISY not even in Germany.
@LauraTheRed5 жыл бұрын
I live in Düsseldorf and have MS, so the heat is not my friend. During the heatwave I hid in the air conditioned movie theater until I bought an AC unit. They do sell them at Bauhaus, home improvement stores, and online .
@tasminoben6865 жыл бұрын
Moin Antoinette, sehr wahre Worte, sehr gutes Video!
@LythaWausW5 жыл бұрын
Although I prefer the Winters to the Summers in Germany, I use my Christmas lights to brighten the short days. I'm not allowed to put them up before Totensonntag, which is really late for me as an American, but I leave them up through January which I'd never do back home. I swear some people keep them up til March to endure the short days at latitude 51!
@Toni-or7dk5 жыл бұрын
Didn't remember the early bird being such a pretty one. ;-) Anyway, it is of quite some interest to listen to your personal experience with German habits. Seems people here are not as bad as some other foreign people think. :-) Lower Frankonia is as any other region a fairly special one to live in. Sure, they do Fasching there not knowing the true festivals name is Karneval, but they are still friendly people there. :-) Have a good day and thank you for your interesting videos presented in this calm and understandable way. :-)
@thebeautyofnature36165 жыл бұрын
4:00 sry but this is just not true. when i was a kid we also had 35 to 40 degrees every summer. u can look up this data on official websites. also: we are "not prepared" because summer is not that long in central europe. we have hot temperatures for 1 or 2 weeks, then it turns cold again ... its just not needed.
@kathom675 жыл бұрын
Napoleon Bonaparte about Germany: "Six months there is winter and six months there is no summer. And that is what they call 'fatherland'". 😂
@Delvman5 жыл бұрын
we have four seasons: June Juli August and Winter ;-)
@Corinna_Schuett_GER5 жыл бұрын
Check Out #Dane Wigington YTC to educate yourself on the GLOBAL weather situation and WHY that is.
@Cornu3415 жыл бұрын
My old teacher used to say: nine months winter and three months cold :D
@valerietaylor96153 ай бұрын
I've never heard that quotation before, but it's a great one. I'm going to have to write that down in my notebook of quotations.
@valerietaylor96153 ай бұрын
For me, the chief drawback of living on Germany would be the cold winters. I have lived in California most of my life, and have very little tolerance for cold. I dont mind the heat, so the lack of air-conditioning wouldnt bother me. That said, Ive always been fascinated by Germany. I visited Munich and Heidelberg in the late 1980s, and I loved it. I yried to speak German as much as possible ( Im not that fluent, despite my four years of high school German), but every German I spoke to, seemed to appreciate the effort. 🇩🇪
@milanvitu39635 жыл бұрын
Iam from north east germany and i never was on a festival... Never drank any wine... never had fasching... Never any party... Only vodka with real boys.. So iam russian?????
@0ldFrittenfett5 жыл бұрын
What do you mean with north east? Like real north east (danish border) or just north of hannover like fake north? But obviously you are russian.
@221091sanmel5 жыл бұрын
very important thing to do in order to not get depressed during the long winters: don't end your day when it gets dark. find activities to do after work no matter how cold and shitty weather is :)
@karind75135 жыл бұрын
Ironic that you complain about the lack of air conditioning while attributing the high temperatures to global warming...... 😆
@JBru19785 жыл бұрын
I don't think ac is the cause of global warming... it is actually a combination of many bad human habits. If energy is produced green (solar, wind, ...), then why is ac so bad? (asking seriously, not sarcastically)
@Ninchennase5 жыл бұрын
@@JBru1978 AC creates heat. It takes energy to cool something, and it creates warmth. Plus we don't have 100% renewable energy, which means AC adds to the general output of problematic substances.
@JBru19785 жыл бұрын
@@Ninchennase I thought it mostly just "displaced" heat (from the inside to the outside, so not generating extra heat). Thx for the answer.
@d.l.68385 жыл бұрын
She has just mentioned, that there is no air conditioning in Germany, which is true...where is your problem? Surely you are aware that air condition is very common in other countries? Manche Leute müssen sich einfach immer wichtig machen....🙄
@markogrotke97475 жыл бұрын
My wife is Polish and she had issues when she came to Germany because in Poland if somebody asks you if you would like sth. you have to say "no" for the first two times to be polite. When she and her familiy came to Germany, somebody offered a coffee, they wanted to be polite and refused, so the German took it serious and did not ask again. My wife told me, they thought the German was so unpolite because he did not really mean the offer for coffee. It took some years untill they understood that you will not be asked several times if you want sth. ;)
@vimalcurio3 жыл бұрын
Lol same in India
@makersmark56075 жыл бұрын
Ha! I may be American, but I still dish out "Brutal German Honesty". It's in the blood perhaps.
@abcxyz-cx4mr5 жыл бұрын
I know US- Americans (like BuueyTribe and Jodis Expat Life on KZbin) who find southern England brutally honest/harsh/critical which is shocking, they’d be in for a surprise if they saw the brutal honesty in Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark, the Netherlands etc.
@NewBlueTrue5 жыл бұрын
Africans are pretty brutally honest. That’s level 1 brutal honesty.
@Corinna_Schuett_GER5 жыл бұрын
What is wrong about HATING HYPOCRISY?
@CLipka23735 жыл бұрын
The reason Germany may not be _known_ as a hot-climate country - and also probably the reason why air conditioning still isn't common - is that this is a quite recent development. 30 years ago, you'd get at most 10 really hot days each summer, with peaks typically around 32°C; now, we seem to get approximately 20 really hot days every summer, and peaks above 35°C have become the norm.
@Steffsworld5 жыл бұрын
Loved this video!!! I've been living in Ireland for the last 2.5 years and am originally from the states, I've been struggling with coming up with videos that showcase difference in cultures/norms and life in general.... So thank you not only for entertaining and informative videos but also for ideas! ❤️❤️❤️