Some French Expats Fed Up with NYC Singles Scene Head Home

Had a disappointing Valentine’s Day? Some French expats know exactly what you mean.

Source: Fed Up with Being Single in NYC, Some French Expats Head Home – French Morning

When I was teenager and confiding in someone, I said something to this person about how “dating is to find a mate for life, after all,” and he reacted like I said something incredibly intelligent. I looked at him blankly: “You’re joking, right?” He said not everyone makes that connection. As much as I respected him, part of me thought he was wacko. I thought it was obvious.

Now that I am older, I believe I see what he was talking about.

The above article from French Morning talks about how some French singles relocated to New York City for career advancement and who believed, reasonably, that they would find an American to settle down with, but who got so fed up with the singles scene in The City That Never Sleeps that they have packed it in and returned to France. Sure, they understand that just returning to France doesn’t guarantee they’ll find someone to love, but as Maud, a 32-year-old French woman put it so succinctly, “In France, the men that I meet will share my values, my culture, my codes.”

Intriguingly, it’s what the article doesn’t talk about that caught my attention: French people seem to have a much stronger expectation of marriage than Americans do. Regardless of what the statistics say in both countries — I am all-too-aware a skilled person can make statistics say whatever they want — articles like this one paint a picture whose canvas cannot be denied: French people want to marry, or at the very least, be in a committed, exclusive relationship, as opposed to being in several non-exclusive relationships at once.

Though perhaps non-exclusive dating is found mostly in big cities like New York. A psychologist cited in the article specializing in human sexuality, Professor David Buss, believes that when there is a surplus of women — or even a perceived surplus — “the whole mating system tends to shift towards short-term dating. Marriages become unstable. Divorces increase. Men don’t have to commit, so they pursue a short-term mating strategy. Men are making that shift, and women are forced to go along with it in order to mate at all.”

He believes modern technology — dating sites — only reinforces the surplus idea. I wonder: Is it that there seems to be an endless supply of women on dating sites, or are Americans so obsessed with their phones that their relationships suffer? Perhaps both?

I can only say this: As an older, single, American woman, seeing people so engrossed in their smartphones that they nearly walk into traffic is not a step in the right direction for American culture. Nor is surfing the internet rather than talking to the person you’re with having a latte with. Is this part of America’s problem? Are we so engrossed in technology that we miss noticing the available man or woman sitting nearby? Sounds like a script for a modern sit-com: A man cruises dating sites on his smartphone while an available woman sits next to him, wishes he would talk to her, and she eventually gives up and leaves.

A French couple wait out the rain at Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris

A French couple wait out the rain at Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris.

I certainly haven’t seen French citizens, smartphones in hand, nearly walking into traffic or brick walls. Let’s hope technology won’t take over the City of Light Love and start playing cupid. I’m no expert, but somehow, that doesn’t seem very French to me.

 

Au revoir!

 

Blue Bar Silo by Jason Kuffer, Flickr, CCBY 2.0. Under the Rain by Vincent Anderlucci, Flickr,
CCBY 2.0.

 

 

 

 

For Men Only: The Perfect French Woman: Myth or Not?

French women know one can go far with a great haircut, a bottle of champagne, and a divine perfume.

–Mireille Guiliano, author of “French Women Don’t Get Fat: The Secret of Eating for Pleasure”

If a French woman is the quintessential woman, Catherine Deneuve was the quintessential French woman for her generation.

If a French woman is the quintessential woman, Catherine Deneuve is the quintessential French woman for her generation.

Source: The Myth of the Perfect French Woman isn’t New, but it’s Not Getting Old Either – French Morning

French women are viewed by many as the quintessential model for women: elegant, classy, thin, mysterious. Ever wonder where this view started? According to a lecturer at La Sorbonne, it all started at the 1900 World’s Fair in Paris (“Exposition Universelle”). The Fair showed off many French technological achievements — the Grande Roue de Paris Ferris Wheel, escalators, and talking films, to name a few — but the first thing visitors to Paris saw at that time was an effigy of a French woman, wearing fashionable clothes and an ‘insouciant’ attitude. She appeared on the scene at the precise moment when French businesses needed a unique way to market their products (though I’m not saying they were conscious of this need). Virtually overnight, a star was born: the image was used to promote French fashion and beauty and luxury products. To own these products was to be as beautiful and remote as that 1900 image. French fashion and beauty products, and by extension, French women, became synonymous with style, elegance, class.

Coco Chanel's influence in French haute couture is unparalleled.

Coco Chanel’s influence on French haute couture is unparalleled.

Coco Chanel (1883-1971) was 17 years old at the time of the 1900 World’s Fair. Like all French women (and men, for that matter), she would have seen how this beautiful, fashionable, non-chalant image was a driving force in French culture. She certainly wanted to be on the inside of this force rather than outside looking in, but having been born into poverty, she either had to marry well or make her own fortune. Having learned to sew while living in an orphanage, she started work as a seamstress, and eventually opened her own millinery shop. Her business took off when an actress of the time wore her hats in the play Bel Ami in 1912.

We’ll never know if it was the ‘insouciant’ attitude that influenced her early designs, but whatever it was, she made jaws drop by designing elegant, casual clothes in fabric previously reserved for men only. Casual clothes? Pants! A revelation for women at the time. She went on to design suits, “the little black dress,” handbags, and perfume, her most famous being Chanel No. 5. (You know the story, don’t you? The 5th formula that the designers presented her with was the one she liked; Chanel No. 5 is now the world’s best selling perfume.) Coco Chanel may not be the first French designer to design perfume — but she perfected it.

Today, Marion Cotillard carries the torch of the quintessential French woman.

Today, Marion Cotillard carries the torch of the quintessential French woman.

With this as background, French Morning reports that La Sorbonne offers a course during the summer months on the myth and reality of idealizing French women. What do you think? Do you think French women have an edge over all others? I can only say this: When I was last in Paris and walking along the Champs-Elysees, this well-dressed young French woman walked by, and every male head in a 5-meter radius whipped their head around to take a look. Many American women think men don’t appreciate feminine women; my experience says otherwise.

Something to think about the next time you meet a woman who has that…certain something…that je ne sais quoi (“I do not know what”) that holds your attention.

 

Au revoir!

 

Image of Catherine Deneuve in a 1979 ad for Chanel No. 5 by Classic Film, Flickr, CCBY 2.0. Image of Coco Chanel by Hto2008, Flickr, CCBY 2.0. Image of Marion Cotillard by Studio Harcourt, Wikimedia Commons, CCBY 3.0.

Reference: “Exposition Universelle, 1900” by Wikipedia, CCBY 3.0.

Sept. 26-27, 2015: Best of France in Times Square

Can’t get to France this fall? France is coming to the U.S.!

Source: Cultural Extravaganza Best of France is Set to Take Over Times Square – French Morning

A Best of France extravaganza in New York, September 26-27, 2015!

A Best of France extravaganza in New York, September 26-27, 2015!

If you love France but can’t travel this fall, France is coming to New York! Meant to be ‘the biggest event in the world dedicated to France ever organized abroad,’ Best of France is coming to Times Square with over 200 exhibits, organized in small villages, such as “Rendez-vous en France” on tourism, beauty & fashion, food, and performing arts. There will even be Moulin Rouge dancers making their New York debut.

Read the French Morning link to learn about the event. By the way, they need hundreds of volunteers to help with the event. They are also looking for children ages 5-7 to model French fashions. Email casting@bestoffrance.org to get your child involved. Click on the links provided below for a little help making your travel arrangements.

See you in New York!

Hotels near Times Square

Flights to New York

 

Au Revoir!

 

 

“New York” by Nic Taylor, courtesy of Flickr, CCBY 2.0.