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Tuesday, 10 August 2010

Status-update

My apartment in Oslo is now just about empty; only the moving boxes, suitcase and my laptop remain. Everything that needs to be packed has been packed, the cleaning is done, and the empty Urge-bottles have been returned for recycling. My dear parents (aka mother and father), who drove me to Oslo to give a hand with the cleaning (A THOUSAND THANKS!), are now driving on the E6 back home towards Alnes (or, at least E6 all the way to Dombås).

On Thursday I'll get up extra early and jump on a plane (6:55am) in direction of Montreal - with a small stop in Frankfurt along the way. With a bit of luck I'll manage to navigate through the airport there without missing the plane onwards to Montreal. Then, when the plane finally lands in Canada we'll see if the immigration authorities let me through customs and all that. Rumours have it that the process through security, immigration and customs can take up to 3 hours. Urgh...

Temporary apartment has also been taken care of. Hopefully I'll have found a more permanent apartment (I'm not buying, but renting) before my moving boxes arrive in Canada in a container alongside moving loads from other Funcom-people, so I won't have to drag those boxes around or pay for storage or any such nonsense.

Well, that was that! Next status-update? Maybe after I've arrived in Montreal. See you, Norway!

Monday, 10 May 2010

Au revoir, Oslo; Bonjour, Montreal?

Time for an update again!

At the end of March over two years ago I stepped out of the basement at Alnes and all the way south to a gigantic 34 square meters large apartment in Tigerstaden (The City of Tigers). Now I feel it's almost time to up and go once more, and this time I'm planning to take a giant leap onwards. Or to be more specific, a 570(ish)-mile (Norwegian mile) leap; by the time the month of August is over this year I'll most probably find myself located on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, more specifically in Montreal, Canada, in an apartment of as of yet unknown format, size and address!

View of downtown Montreal
Actual date for when I move is unclear, and there still remains a ton of paperwork (renewal of passport, photo for passport, scanning of passport, high-school diploma, CV, references, proof of health insurance, etc), planning, preparation and other stress that needs taking care of before I can wave Oslo goodbye and say hello to Montreal. Or maybe "bonjour" fits better, as the official language in Montreal is French, and the city has (according to the Wikipedia) a population where 52.4% speak French, while only 12.5% speak English as their main language. So I'll probably have need of the small amount of French I managed to suck in during the 90's when I for some inexplicable reason watched "Hélène et les Garçons on TV.

Anyways - Canada; This has been in the cards for a while, considering that Funcom have already moved a bunch of people over there, and we have earlier been unofficially asked about where we stand concerning moving, but when the official request/inquiry about whether I wanted to move finally arrived, I still hadn't manage to decide. At times like this one does maybe get (at least I did) a feeling of standing at an important crossroad in life, where the road chosen will have ripples far beyond what one can imagine.

Thus, I took this weekend to think things over, but eventually came to the conclusion that - yep, I both want to and probably should try this. What tipped the scales was maybe the fact that opportunities like this don't grow on trees, currant bushes or other "buksevekster" (note: Norwegian play on words, not translatable); to actually get to go work in a different country, and in a different (a little, anyways) culture, is a unique opportunity to experience something new and exciting, and there is in any case very little that holds me back in Oslo or Norway in general - outside of family and relatives, of course, but hopefully they'll all still be there when I get back home. Last, but not necessarily least, the fact that I get to keep working with game development also plays an important part...

I should probably also knock on wood, throw some salt over my shoulders and say "nothing is 100% certain just yet". As the eternal pessimist that I am, I won't count anything as a "done deal" until I'm sitting on the plane above the Atlantic Ocean, and maybe not even until I've been in Montreal for a week or two!

Note: The picture in this blog-post was borrowed from the Wikipedia-article on Montreal, and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License