Luxe Beat Magazine JANUARY 2015 | Page 121

Book Excerpt es, French eastern rance one exchanges two kisses, starting on the left. In Finistère, at the furthest tip of Brittany, it is customary to give just one kiss but in whole swathes of the South including the départements of Cantal, Aveyron and the Drôme, one exchanges three. And across the départements of northern France, the affectionate locals share as many as four bisous on average. To guide the uninitiated through the labyrinthine landscape of French kissing, in 2007 a Frenchman named illes ebunne produced a wonderfully helpful kissing map of France, combiende bises.free.fr, an interactive site where over , rench people have registered their kissing preferences by region. But even here, there is confusion within regions. In Pas-de-Calais, for example, roughly 50 per cent of respondents say they kiss twice as a greeting, while the other 50 per cent declare that they kiss four times. In the Charente, in southwestern rance, the situation is even more obscure, with voters divided between two, three, and four or more kisses. In general, Parisians will limit themselves to two, starting on the right cheek; just one kiss gives a dangerous suggestion of secret intimacy, and more than two runs the risk of one being regarded as a provincial bumpkin or, as they would disparagingly say, un plouc). Generally, the urban bourgeoisie limit themselves to fewer kisses than effusive provincials. If these French kissing conventions seem complicated, they are as nothing compared with Belgium, where one kiss is the norm for someone the same age as oneself, but three a mark of respect for someone at least ten years older. social minefield, especially when it comes to women d un certain ge. So much for the number of kisses; but what type of kiss are we talking about? The ancient Romans, after all, distinguished between the friendly peck on the cheek (osculum), the passion- ate meeting of mouths (basia), and the kiss involving the use of tongues (suavia). The French bise or social kiss is none of these. In fact, it is barely a kiss at all. If done correctly, it involves merely the lightest brushing of cheek to cheek; but at the moment of brushing, one is expected to make a loud and explosive sound of the lips, as if to imitate a good mwah . It is here that some nglo Saxons can get it wrong, with a slobby lip to cheek or worse, lip-to-lip) contact that has the average aul cringing with disgust. To the extent that several Frenchmen abroad have remarked that they would prefer to shake hands, or even par- take of a good, old-fashioned merican style hug, than wipe off saliva juices from a bearish foreigner.10 Which brings us to the time honoured alternative to the bise, the handshake. Surely a safe retreat from the ha ardous minefield of the social kiss? Not quite. It should not be forgotten that the French expression for shake a person s hand is serrer la main, in other words, a hand squeeze and not a handshake. In France, it is not customary to grasp the hand and energetically pump it up and down, as nglo Saxon practice dictates. France – like Japan and China – is a country of limp handshakes. This is especially true if you are a woman, as it is considered the height of rudeness energetically to grasp or pump a woman s hand. So if your ealous piston meets a limp wristed response, don t take it personally. Nor should you make the faux pas of proffering a hand to someone older or more senior than yourself. French bourgeois eti uette always concerned with establishing boundaries and limits – dictates that the older or more senior person, or a woman, proffers their hand first. Social minefield as it may be, those who would love to kiss goodbye to the rench bise will be disappointed. Despite a brief period of panic during the bird u epidemic of , when the official advice was to avoid social kissing (some schools installed kissing boxes in classrooms for pupils to post kiss notes to their friends rather than swapping possibly contagious pecks on the cheek), the bise has fought back with a vengeance. Social snogging is now pretty much de rigueur in France between friends as it increasingly is among the chattering classes of Britain and the United States. Die-hard enemies of the social kiss can, however, take comfort in the fact that in some parts of the world, including many parts of Asia and Africa, 2 121 kissing is looked upon with repugnance. In China, for example, kissing was for many years considered a revolting allusion to cannibalism, and in southern Africa the native tribes people recoiled at the European habit of sucking each other s saliva and dirt . So if you really can t cope with friends and colleagues slobbering over you, there are places to escape to. But if you come to France, you have no real option other than to dive in and have a go at the kissing game; but if you botch it, be prepared to take it on the chin. Myth Evaluation: True. The French kiss when they greet you most of the time, certainly between family and friends, but there is huge variation in the number of kisses and with which cheek to start. The safest bet is to give two kisses and start with the right-hand side. Excerpted from hey Eat orses, on t They? The Truth About the French by iu arie Eatwell. opyright by the author and reprinted by permission of Thomas Dunne Books.