 I have already known about Aarhus University while I was in Singapore and because there was collaboration between Nanning Technological University and Aarhus University. At the time when I was looking for jobs I found an open position here which fit my area of expertise so I applied against that. But then when you are moving to any place outside your normal city that you live in there are much more parameters that you would want to consider. So I was also looking for a fit because I have an 80-year-old that somewhere I can actually bring my family and as a kid he would have more things to explore, a good school for example. So yeah there were all the I would say puzzle pieces fit together and I chose to stay here. When you are coming with a family you have to consider different factors whether the city is big enough, has good entertainment for the kids, family-oriented activities whether they have a good school system, you know they have good schools or not how is the work-life balance, how are things to go around is the commute possible to be moving with family. And these were the things which were back in the back of my mind when I started to look for a place. And Aarhus University, I mean not just the university but the Aarhus City as well has been very welcoming and has been a great place to stay with a kid I would say. So it's very friendly in that sense. Yeah so Monday to Fridays are pretty packed from 8 to 4 roughly I would say. Saturdays and Sundays are great because there's a lot to explore within the city as well as around in the area and we just go cycling, we do a lot of picnics if the weather is great. We are a big fan of Aarhus Museum, we visit that a lot. And then if you want to just have a slightly longer vacation then you go to places like Billon where there's a Legoland for kids. We go to Copenhagen or Alvog or all the places nearby. So it's a pretty relaxed, nice work-life balance that you have here. When it comes to university the work-life balance as I said is a very good fit. I mean I find it it's very balancing for my life because I was used to being too much at work or not having good work-life balance back in Singapore. I'm able to give more time to my son that I find very enriching in that sense. What I find really was a bit of change for me was there's no hierarchy here. Whether you are the CEO or whether you are the Dean or you are a normal PhD student everyone is almost the same. You know we are the same level, we talk to each other as if we are colleagues which is not so the case in Asia. You have to maintain a certain decorum, certain level of respect to go through the hierarchy. I would say it's more easy to have a dialogue, it's more easy to have a communication. More channels are open for me to reach to an upper management for example if I have a problem. So I don't have to go through first I need to go to my immediate supervisor and then he or she will report to the next supervisor so on and so forth. So I think it makes it more efficient in a way. And it also instills a bit of confidence that I as a colleague to anyone or as an employee or a host university I can reach to any channels irrespective of where I stand whether I'm a student or whether I'm a professor it doesn't matter. A host university has a very good international office which I think is super. I really want to thank them I mean they have been of tremendous help to me during this journey. Advised me, answered my emails all my queries whether it was house hunting whether it was opening a bank account the information was there somebody was there to answer it. There are a lot of cultural differences for sure coming from Asia. One thing that comes straight out of my mind is sense of humor. We have a very subdued in Asia subdued kind of sense of humor. We try to layer it up in Denmark. It's very upfront and sometimes it can be very dry humor that people say things and it's just out of humor but then you are taken aback okay did the person just say that. Internationals and I would say all host university has not just the university itself but the city itself has a lot of these initiatives where they tend to bring internationals together. There are coffee meets, there are lunch meets, there are a lot of outdoor activities with international clubs and groups and if you become part of them you get to meet a lot of new people.