For me I will usually cram down a slice of bread with cheese or maybe a bowl of greek yoghurt with musli, I only have 20 mins from when I wake up till I gotta leave the house in the mornings
Most Norwegians typically start work at 8 in the morning, and if you have to commute for an hour, you need to be out the door at 7. This means most people wake up at 6.30 at the latest. That leaves half an hour to get ready - so, no time to enjoy the food. Breakfast is simply sustenance, and not a meal, over here. More and more people, like myself, are simply skipping breakfast altogether.
@Randomdude21-e Yes, with the advent of flexiwork a lot of people start work earlier. This is in stark contrast to the US where it typically is 9 to 5 for office jobs. Here it's either 8 to 4 or 7 to 3
My Norwegian breakfast is usually a bowl of healthy müsli with a protein shake. It's on auto pilot before I'm even awake, survival mode. Who in Helheim actually enjoys their breakfast unless it's a holiday or something? :)
For me I will usually cram down a slice of bread with cheese or maybe a bowl of greek yoghurt with musli, I only have 20 mins from when I wake up till I gotta leave the house in the mornings
Most Norwegians typically start work at 8 in the morning, and if you have to commute for an hour, you need to be out the door at 7. This means most people wake up at 6.30 at the latest. That leaves half an hour to get ready - so, no time to enjoy the food. Breakfast is simply sustenance, and not a meal, over here.
More and more people, like myself, are simply skipping breakfast altogether.
Between 7 and 8 i would say is Normal to start work.
@Randomdude21-e Yes, with the advent of flexiwork a lot of people start work earlier. This is in stark contrast to the US where it typically is 9 to 5 for office jobs. Here it's either 8 to 4 or 7 to 3
My Norwegian breakfast is usually a bowl of healthy müsli with a protein shake. It's on auto pilot before I'm even awake, survival mode. Who in Helheim actually enjoys their breakfast unless it's a holiday or something? :)
When you read norwegian letters...your pronounciation is very good. Æ Ø Å. An american car are fÆst. Paul is PÅL. Fun is fØnn.