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- She's from North Carolina, and speaks with an
- accent. Not the slow drawl you might expect, like
- Andy Griffith's, but more like the Swedish chef's on
- the Muppet Show. It's no wonder that world citizen
- and GEnie member Gayle Swanson is comfortable in a
- variety of settings.
-
- "I was born in Sweden," she says. "Hopped the first
- plane after the war (a converted B-17) to Iceland
- with my folks. Then to Canada. Then I moved to
- California alone. Then, 30 years later, to North
- Carolina, and now I'm home!"
-
- Gayle makes her online home on GEnie, where
- thousands of members recognize her as LADY.VIKE.
-
- World and GEnie Citizen
-
- Gayle began her sojourn on GEnie in 1990. A
- professional writer, she headed straight for the
- Writers RoundTable. From there, she branched out all
- over the system.
-
- She currently has duties in the USA East, Midwest,
- and Travel RoundTables. She's active in Conferences,
- and Bulletin Board Categories she helped start, such
- as the Native American Categories in East and
- Midwest, and a Category in Travel called Cultural
- Differences that deals with what to expect in other
- countries. She also regularly visits the Family and
- Personal Growth RoundTable and Chat Lines.
-
- As a writer, Gayle gets involved in all kinds of
- projects. Currently, she says, "What I do best is
- promotional stuff and public relations. What I want
- is to do travel articles about local travel,
- historical locations, local history and people. And
- get involved in local activities, like politics."
-
- She also does commercial writing for newsletters and
- has worked as a technical writer for a Korean
- company when, like the true world citizen she is,
- she visited South Korea for three weeks for
- "overseas employee orientation."
-
- "There were 20 employees from all over the world,"
- Gayle explains. "My roommate was an Italian, from
- their Milan office."
-
- Gayle is well-prepared for a multi-lingual group.
- "English is my primary language," she says, "but I
- can also speak Swedish, and rusty French, Italian
- and German. VERY rusty Icelandic -- you speak
- Icelandic and I answer in English. English is
- easiest."
-
- Viking Independence
-
- Right now, she's into full-time freelancing. Gayle
- says she gets up, logs on early, then works on
- "whatever I have going."
-
- She says that desperation led her to freelancing. "I
- have a hearing problem that makes interviews
- difficult. I feel like an idiot sometimes because I
- have to keep asking people to repeat. No hearing
- aid, yet."
-
- Freelancing lets her work on her own, helping
- overcome her hearing difficulty.
-
- Her unique background gives Gayle a leg up on the
- competition, though. She has more than desktop
- publishing skills. She also knows a lot about
- writing, about certain technologies, and about other
- cultures.
-
- Gayle balances her hours at the computer with a lot
- of other activities. For instance, she regularly
- posts messages about walks and driving trips in the
- USA East RoundTable. Right after our interview she
- was heading into the hills around Bone, North
- Carolina, with Helen, her 80-year-old neighbor.
-
- Verrrry Interesting
-
- Of her own interests, Gayle says, "I read a lot. I
- love history, 'specially local stuff. I have been to
- a couple of re-enactments here. Love old houses, and
- restorations. And love to explore the little back
- roads and the historic places."
-
- Wherever you find her online, you probably will
- recognize her. You may already know her anyway,
- because as she says, she is "someone who likes
- people, who likes to learn about different cultures,
- who thinks the day she doesn't learn something new
- is a baaaad day."
-
- As her GE Mail address indicates, Gayle likes to
- blaze new trails, so ask where she's headed the next
- time you see this LADY.VIKE online.
-