Any Danish GTD'ers here?

Hi all,

I'd be very interested in getting in touch with any Danish GTD'ers if any of you spend your time here as well?

If you're a Danish GTD'er, please reply here or send me a quick e-mail at lars.henriksen@gmail.com to get in touch as I'd be very interested in sharing experiences. Thanks a lot!

Cheers,
Lars

Update 2015: Still looking and today we also have a Danish GTD User Group on LinkedIn! You can find it here: https://www.linkedin.com/grp/home?gid=4300396
 
Hey Lars,

Great to meet you in here as well! Hopefully more will join and share GTD-practice - especially with regards to a Scandinavian worklife - and maybe meet up.
 
Taking into account that the world becomes "hygge-obsessed" it would be interesting to hear some comments about GTD applicability in the "hygge environment" from people who grew up in the happiest country in the world. ;-)

Poland is somehow a Denmark neighbour via Bornholm. ;-)
 
GTD applicability in the "hygge environment"
I am not not sure how the international community is talking about "hygge"/hooga - and actually it is not something we danes have meta-discussions about, why we want it, or what it can do for the soul :D. It might be a whole thread worthy

Maybe I would say, with regards to GTD, that You can't "hygge" with a gazillion things on your mind!

In this I would maybe say that hygge is an atmosphere created by being guilt-free present with a small group of people (often friend or family) AND/OR some good food, sweets, coffee, tea, beer (you name it) - often seen through a slow-pace activity. I.e. shifting into a lower gear, fully emerging yourself in the situation, and enjoying the moment/food/coffee with or without a good conversation going.
 
Maybe I would say, with regards to GTD, that You can't "hygge" with a gazillion things on your mind!

In this I would maybe say that hygge is an atmosphere created by being guilt-free present with a small group of people (often friend or family) AND/OR some good food, sweets, coffee, tea, beer (you name it) - often seen through a slow-pace activity. I.e. shifting into a lower gear, fully emerging yourself in the situation, and enjoying the moment/food/coffee with or without a good conversation going.
Thank you! I love it! If you don't mind I will quote your answer on my Polish blog.
 
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