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I hadn't been on

Hamneskar Island

, one of Sweden's wildest and most

windswept spots

,

for 24 hours

when Lisa Enroth started talking to herself.

"I had a long conversation with the gas cooker."

Sitting in the sun on some rocks, the Swedish nurse told it on YouTube, after having seen the sunrise in complete isolation next to the Pater Noster, the famous

red lighthouse on

the islet, the only symbol of civilization until recently.

This will be your home until Saturday, a seven-day experience devised by the prestigious Gothenburg Film Festival that runs until February 8.

Enroth makes a daily chronicle of his life on the island and the movies he sees.

Because that's what it's about.

The contest chose her from among

12,000 candidates

from 45 countries to live without a telephone, without family, without friends ... with the mere company of the sea and of the 70 films that have been presented to the contest.

Passionate about cinema, the emergency nurse from Skövde saw the perfect opportunity to "reflect and be alone" after spending a year on the front lines of the pandemic.

"It's a dream," she would say overwhelmed to journalists, as soon as she set foot on the island.

After half the experience, he assures that he has not regretted it: "Not yet."

Pater Noster Island and Lighthouse.ERIK NISSEN JOHANSEN

"I cry a lot, but I'm enjoying it"

Of course, while it snows and the rocks are covered in white, Lisa assures that the emotion is taking over her.

"Feel many things. Not only because of the nature that surrounds you and the isolation, but because of the emotion that movies throw at you. I feel more fragile," he said in his last video.

"I'm crying a lot, but I'm enjoying it."

Lisa reached the island by boat, the only possible means of transportation.

Its location but also the

dangerousness of its waters

make Hamneskar an even more inaccessible place.

How would it be that the lighthouse, built in 1868, received the Latin name of Pater Noster, Our Father, because it was what the sailors prayed when approaching.

For more than a hundred years, generations of lighthouse keepers created a small society on an island that seemed destined to remain uninhabited.

The island is second to none for a solo experience like Lisa's.

But it can be recreated in a less extreme way at another time of year.

Since last year, Pater Noster has had nine rooms for guests eager for adventure.

It also has a restaurant and an open-air cafeteria.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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