Looking back, I see it everywhere. The Iran–Iraq War was winding down—a slow, bloody admission that neither side could win. In sports, Mike Tyson surrendered his heavyweight title to Buster Douglas (okay, that was 1990—but close enough in spirit). And in music, you heard it in the melancholic synths of bands like Depeche Mode and The Cure: sometimes the only way through is to let go.
If you’re reading this and you’re tired—of fighting, of pretending, of trying to be someone you outgrew three versions ago—maybe 2026 is your 1988. Maybe this is your year of overgivelse .
But 1988 was the year the Berlin Wall still stood, Margaret Thatcher was in her third term, and in Denmark, where I was living at the time, the autumn rains came early and stayed late. I remember cycling through Nørrebro one November evening, coat soaked through, radio playing something melancholic, and thinking: I can’t keep doing this. Overgivelse 1988
That was overgivelse . Not giving up. Giving in. Giving over.
For me, that surrender happened in 1988. I was twenty-two, angry at everything, and convinced that if I just held on tight enough—to opinions, to grudges, to a version of myself that was always bracing for impact—I’d eventually win. Win what? I couldn’t have told you. Looking back, I see it everywhere
That was the first whisper of overgivelse .
It won’t feel like victory. It’ll feel like falling. But sometimes, falling is the only way to find out you had wings all along. And in music, you heard it in the
Overgivelse 1988: The Year I Learned to Stop Fighting
But the surrender I remember most happened on a Tuesday. I was housesitting for a friend in Valby, alone in an unfamiliar apartment. Around 2 a.m., I couldn’t sleep. I walked to the window, watched the streetlights blur through the rain, and for the first time in years, I didn’t try to solve anything. I didn’t make a plan. I didn’t rehearse a conversation. I just stood there and felt… empty. And then, strangely, light.
I’m not the same person I was in 1988. Thank god. But I still carry that night with me—the rain on the window, the quiet, the slow unclenching of a fist I didn’t know I’d been making for years.