anyone live in France?
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Date: January 9th, 2025 8:46 PM Author: shitlib shibboleth
I've lived in France as a singlemo. Mostly in Paris but several two week plus stays in other parts of the country.
It's a great place to live but nothing is perfect. The work/life balance is way, way better than the U.S. The food and wine are obviously better and they are genuinely more interested in culture (e.g., reading books, going to museums, seeing movies, music, etc.) There is great natural beauty in the Alps, Pyrenees, and South of France to name just a few highlights.
But it's much harder to make friends with French people and date women, and the bureaucracy is real. Knowing rudimentary French is the least of it, you need to understand the culture and how things are done and (more important) not done. You have to do things the way French people expect them to be done or they will basically freeze up and be unable or unwilling to help you. They will never explain why or how you should be doing what you are supposed to be doing--you should just know. You may hear the passive expression "ça se fait pas," which literally means "that is not done," but which in actuality means I'm not going to help you because I don't like you, you don't have some stamp you need on this paper I need to sign off on, etc., and I am done being polite. I speak fluent French and still would have an incident like this 2-3x per years, usually when trying to do something that would be pretty easy in the US, like book a train trip, rent a car, go to the doctor, do passport-related stuff, sign a lease, etc. Also, they are much lazier than us and you have to wait a long time for shit that you are not used to waiting for, like repairs in your apartment, dry cleaning, etc.
Ultimately, I decided not to live there long-term because it was too frustrating to work a corporate job there with all the bullshit paperwork and passive aggressive office politics (which you could write a book about), and because it would be too hard to find a hot, loyal French wife who would want to actually get married and have kids. Lots of them just "partner up" and live in sin, few ever go to church, etc. It's still a great place to visit, and they have become a little less assholish and tolerant of foreigners since I left.
I also am considering retiring there, as these issues would be fine once I have the time and patience to deal with them and wouldn't have to deal with finding a mate. Both Paris and the SOF would be 180 places to be retired and not give a fuck about anything.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5661798&forum_id=2:#48538440) |
Date: January 9th, 2025 11:56 PM Author: OldHLSDude
I used to go to France a lot on business and had a small group that reported to me in the Sophia Antipolis tech park in SE France. The most memorable thing that ever happened was when we had a meeting with a joint venture partner (a famous large French company). The CEO showed up and in heavily accented English said, "I would like to welcome all our American friends who come here from time to time to wash their dirty assholes." I LOL'd but all the other Americans present were frostily silent. I don't think he meant it as a joke. I think he genuinely disliked each and every one of us.
At one point I went to visit the now closed Superphénix fast breeder reactor east of Lyon. They served wine at lunch in the reactor employee dining room. I asked about it and as near as I could understand it was either legally mandated or a union thing. Shades of Homer Simpson!
Was at an Ariane rocket assembly area clean room in Toulouse and saw a Frenchman up on a ladder working on a rocket. He was dressed in a clean room bunny suit, but had a cigarette dangling from his mouth.
Had a lot of fun on business, but think as previously pointed out it's a very tough place for an ex-pat to live without the anchor of a company affiliation and colleagues.I had an office in Paris headed by an ex-pat American who was strictly ARE country. He actually did OK socially, but I do think it was because of the company connections. Had a similar Japanese office and I don't think France was any easier.
OTOH, I have good friends in NYC who rented an apartment in Paris for the summer last year and they said it was totally 180. They are retired, but the wife in super fluent in French to point of being mistaken for a native. Maybe if you live in Manhattan going to France is less shocking.
Give it a shot but leave an exit option.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5661798&forum_id=2:#48538946) |
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