Guys! I’ve made this incredible discovery, and I need to share
it with you. Everything makes so much sense now! I should really start at the
beginning though, instead of jumping in at the middle.
Part of
doing a long-term stay or study abroad (like I’m doing now) is figuring out how
to adjust your mentality to the cultural logic of wherever you’re staying. I’ve
run into this in many ways here in France , my favourite example being
closed-door etiquette. In Canada ,
if you’re hanging out in your room with the door closed it implies that you’re
busy, you’re doing other stuff and you don’t want to be interrupted. As a
result, it’s pretty normal to leave the door open a crack, or wide open
depending on what you’re doing. If I’m just reading on my bed and the house isn’t
too noisy, my door is hardly ever closed. That’s not how it works in France though.
Here, houses and apartments are smaller, the walls are quite thin, and space is just more limited. I’m pretty sure that’s what’s helped in creating
this closed-door norm that I experience regularly. The door to my room is to be
closed, basically always. If I’m in the room, if I’m not in the room, whatever;
the door is to be closed. I’m told this is a privacy thing. Space is limited and
therefore it’s easier to respect everyone else’s space and privacy if doors are
closed.
Grisette is definitely the first cat in this situation, Grisette is a door ninja... |
Awesome,
but do you have any idea how hard it is to predict when Catherine is going to
call me for dinner if my door is closed? I’m not supposed to peek out of my
room at 8:00pm to see what stage things are at, because that’s when the family
gets to sit down and chat (just them). Ok, rude to interrupt that. It’s also
rude for me to wait quietly in my room until someone knocks though, because
then they’re being rude by interrupting whatever I’m doing behind my closed
door. (… o.0!) The compromise I’ve arrived at is cracking my door just a bit so
I can hear when she yells from the kitchen that dinner is ready. This works so
long as Grisette isn’t feeling adventurous, and pushes my door open properly to
come and visit. Then the door is open, and that’s not supposed to happen.
So that’s
the door example of a shift in cultural logic. Here’s the logical impasse I’d
been trying to figure out; European men tend to be able to dance, and North
American men tend not to be able to dance. These are pretty broad stereotypes,
so stick with me. It’s not considered negative in Canada if you’re male and can’t
dance. In fact, if you show up at a club and all you do is stand around and
drink in a corner, or stand in the middle of the dance floor and bob your head
a bit, no one bats an eyelash at that. That’s pretty normal. In France , I have
encountered very few men who don’t have rhythm. Herein lies my confusion, why
is there such a difference between the two? What do we do differently that has
led to this dichotomy of dancing men?
The French
men can dance because they’re all in my Body Attack class at the gym on
Tuesdays.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UfcebRPubY8 |
Twice a
week I am at the Piscine Olympique doing some of the hardest cardio I have ever
done. On Fridays it’s something called Body Combat, which is a class that
resembles some sort of cross between kickboxing and Zumba. (Yes, please feel
free to giggle, I did too when I realized what I’d signed up for.) That being
said, I actually contemplated not finishing the class it was so difficult.
Three cheers for blackbelt grit on that one, and one point to Zumba-like
exercise. By contrast, Tuesdays I’m in Body Attack, which is by all rights much
more girly (and somewhat easier) than Body Combat. Body Attack is very similar
to Zumba, only… possibly more like a rave, with fewer drugs, no glow sticks and
more arm-waving/running in circles/hip gyration. I was honestly expecting a
very female crowd to show up for Body Attack given that the more masculine
class by far in the series is Body Combat. Nope, it was actually an even 50/50
split, and only a few were clearly gay.
This blew
my mind.
That link below the image takes you to a video example of this class. Yes, she does say 'and Superman!' then do a dance move, multiple times, at about 1:50min.
I’ve been
back twice now to verify my findings, Body Attack is full of French men who
dance better than I do, and because of this are really fit. It all makes so
much sense now! Gentlemen, are you taking notes on this yet? Not only is Body
Attack fun because it’s so ridiculous, but you could be learning to dance, in a
studio full of enough men that you’re not emasculated, and women who are outrageously
happy because they’re dancing instead of running on treadmills. Why do we not
have this in Canada ?!
Ahem…
anyway… in other news I’ve been moved up to B1 (yay!) and yesterday it was my
turn to take home the class diary and write a bit about my week. Our instructor
Elise then corrects it, and passes it on to the next person. The result is
actually a really useful learning tool, but the entries are all remarkably
similar… There are definitely people who spice up their entries with little
sketches, pictures or maps of the places they’ve been on excursions, etc. every once in awhile, it’s
all very slice-of-life though. It’s alright to go back and review the other
entries, but they’re not exactly exciting. Don’t worry, I have a solution.
Class Diary, complete with tiny cartoon me! |
Next week,
when I am the person with the diary, I am going to write an entry about how a
dragon appeared as I was walking to the tram station. Not only will there be a
dragon to slay, I’m thinking the tram it sits on should be full of innocent
nuns. Possibly I will bribe it off of the tram with my newfound vocabulary of fine french food, like truffles, champagne, beaujolais nouveau and macarons. Or pacify it with roquefort cheese. I’ll be sure to keep you posted on exactly how well this is all received.