Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Seeing The (Northern) Light: A Temporary Arctic Retirement

Marcus, 6, and Nora, 4, eat dinner on their first night at home on Rødøy.
NPR
Marcus, 6, and Nora, 4, eat dinner on their first night at home on Rødøy.

Rødøy's population of about 180 includes a doctor, who uses the pictured ambulance boat to treat residents of neighboring islands.
NPR
Rødøy's population of about 180 includes a doctor, who uses the pictured ambulance boat to treat residents of neighboring islands.

The Botnen Chen family moved from Boston to live for a year on Rødøy, a Norwegian island north of the Arctic Circle.
NPR
The Botnen Chen family moved from Boston to live for a year on Rødøy, a Norwegian island north of the Arctic Circle.

Advertisement
When Chen went fishing, he could pretty much guarantee coming back with something for dinner, like this pollock.
NPR
When Chen went fishing, he could pretty much guarantee coming back with something for dinner, like this pollock.

Glaciers cut the Norwegian coast into thousands of islands, which outnumber the people who live here.
NPR
Glaciers cut the Norwegian coast into thousands of islands, which outnumber the people who live here.

During the summer months, the sun hardly ever sets. Chen snapped this photo on a camping outing at 2 a.m.
NPR
During the summer months, the sun hardly ever sets. Chen snapped this photo on a camping outing at 2 a.m.

Marcus on one of the family hikes.
NPR
Marcus on one of the family hikes.

The reward for enduring the winter's almost perpetual darkness is the stunning northern lights.
NPR
The reward for enduring the winter's almost perpetual darkness is the stunning northern lights.

Advertisement
Kristin cooked a traditional American Thanksgiving for neighbors on the island.
NPR
Kristin cooked a traditional American Thanksgiving for neighbors on the island.

The family would dry their fish outside the kitchen window.
NPR
The family would dry their fish outside the kitchen window.

Marcus, Kristin, Winston and Nora (left to right) left their "Arctic dream" in the summer of 2012 to return to Boston.
NPR
Marcus, Kristin, Winston and Nora (left to right) left their "Arctic dream" in the summer of 2012 to return to Boston.

Chen made to-do list for his year-long retirement, mapping out his activities, by hour, on a spreadsheet.
NPR
Chen made to-do list for his year-long retirement, mapping out his activities, by hour, on a spreadsheet.

The Botnen-Chen family moved from Boston to live for a year on Rødøy, a Norwegian island north of the Arctic Circle.
NPR
The Botnen-Chen family moved from Boston to live for a year on Rødøy, a Norwegian island north of the Arctic Circle.

When Chen went fishing, coming back with something for dinner, like this pollock, was pretty much guaranteed.
NPR
When Chen went fishing, coming back with something for dinner, like this pollock, was pretty much guaranteed.

Marcus, Kristin, Winston and Nora (from left) left their "Arctic dream" in the summer of 2012 to return to Boston.
NPR
Marcus, Kristin, Winston and Nora (from left) left their "Arctic dream" in the summer of 2012 to return to Boston.

Chen made a to-do list for his yearlong retirement, mapping out his activities, by hour, on a spreadsheet.
NPR
Chen made a to-do list for his yearlong retirement, mapping out his activities, by hour, on a spreadsheet.

Seeing The (Northern) Light: A Temporary Arctic Retirement

By all the laws of anything, Winston Chen should not have quit his well-paying, midcareer job at a software company at age 40. But one day he was watching a TED Talk, one of those popular online video presentations, delivered by a New York designer.

"He presented this absolutely irresistible idea," Chen says. "He said, 'Why don't we take five years out of retirement and spread them throughout your working life?' "

So Chen told his wife, then 39, about it. At first, convention held them at bay. "We feel the gravitational pull of what you should do as well as anybody," he says.

But two summers ago, they broke that gravitational pull. Chen took his family more than 3,000 miles away from Boston to Rødøy, a small granite island jutting from the Norwegian Sea north of the Arctic Circle. Chen's wife, Kristin Botnen, was born in Norway. But she says the move wasn't about returning home -- or leaving home, either.

"For us, this was not an escape. We really liked our lives. But we still wanted a year where we could just do something completely different," she says.

Completely different. Winston and Kristin and their two kids, ages 4 and 6, used the daylight that burns into the wee hours to explore the island of fewer than 200 residents. In their home videos, they discover beaches so pristine, they look tropical -- except the water is really cold.

They went out to fish for the big cod that roam the Barents Sea. They made chips by frying fish skin. They picked berries that bulged under the long Arctic sun and plucked eggs from seagull nests to cook for breakfast. It was wild, it was pristine. And then it got dark.

During the deep Arctic winter, the horizon held the sun down for months.

"I say the northern lights are the only consolation for the Arctic winter, which is otherwise dark and stormy and cold," Chen says.

"I don't think the cold got any of us," adds Botnen. "But the darkness -- I think that could make any stable soul a little bit shaky."

To keep things stable, Chen mapped out an hourly schedule in a color-coded spreadsheet. It was basically a to-do list for his yearlong early retirement.

"I had oil painting, photography, blogging, learning Norwegian, learning how to play the ukulele, reading long books that I haven't had time to read," Chen explains.

And he also taught himself something new: He wrote an iPhone application that reads text out loud.

"Part of that was occupying my time when it got dark," he says, "so I wrote it without knowing that it would see the light of day."

But it did. Chen posted it on Apple's App Store under the name Voice Dream and people started buying it. Now selling more than 500 copies a week, at $10 each, it's sustaining the family on their return to Boston.

At home in their apartment, Botnen says the app did not make their Arctic adventure. "It's hard to measure success based on the end product," Botnen says, "because the process, and the year that we had, really was a good one."

A good year. A retirement year, inserted into their working ones. One year that helped them find unexpected riches, personal and professional.

Copyright 2013 WBUR. To see more, visit http://www.wbur.org.