It doesn’t seem like enough time has passed since I spent a semester in Iceland to warrant a retrospective! My time at the University of Akureyri in Iceland in 2006 had an indelible and positive impact on my life. I have very fond memories of my friends, the landscape, and much time must have passed as I even have fond memories of eating hakarl (putrid shark).
Following my return to Canada, I completed my degree in International Studies and Political Science at the University of Northern British Columbia and accepted a job with the local government of Burns Lake, British Columbia – a small (pop. 2,800), resource-based, northern community. Having lived in Akureyri, it opened my mind to moving to unfamiliar, remote
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I often think of Iceland and am in touch with a couple of my close friends from my north2north exchange. One of my fellow exchange partners is actually still living and working in Iceland, having met and fallen in love with an Icelander while she was there! While the exchange did not change my life to that extent, it did encourage me to broaden my perspective on what is possible in regards to where I could live, or pursue a career. Also, my short time in Iceland left me with a strong affinity for the country and I closely followed the collapse of the banking system in 2008 and the undeniably Icelandic response to the crisis, which included the drafting of a new constitution using social media! I am very happy to see that by all accounts, Iceland is on a strong path to recovery – much sooner than many other areas of the world.
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It’s the great, big, broad land ‘way up yonder,
It’s the forests where silence has lease;
It’s the beauty that thrills me with wonder,
It’s the stillness that fills me with peace.
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The interview was first published in Shared Voices Magazine 2013.
To read Natasha's original student profile, click here.