"I remember Spokane Valley, where we lived," Joonas said. "It was beautiful."
But Joonas' time in Washington was cut short when he was 12. His parents got divorced, and Hakala-Oden returned to Finland with her sons.
"First they thought that it was like we were going on vacation, so it was fun," she said. "But when the reality hit that they had to go to school and live here forever, that's when it started to be tough for them."
Joonas said adjusting from living in Spokane to life in Haukipudas, a town of 19,000 near Oulu, Finland's fifth-largest city, was a challenge, especially because he didn't speak Finnish.
"To be honest, me and my brother didn't really like it and we wanted to go back [to Washington]," said Joonas, who now understands Finnish better than he speaks it. "We decided to deal with it, and we loved it after all."
Because the move was such a big disruption in her sons' lives, Hakala-Oden vowed to keep them involved in hockey, no matter the cost.
"They lost their friends, they lost their homeland, they lost their language, they lost their dad, everything," she said of the divorce. "But hockey -- I love hockey myself, and I see the passion in their eyes when they play. I see that they can make friends. Hockey people are like family, so that was important for me to keep them there."