Monday, July 5, 2010

Time off, a la francaise


France is a modern country with bustling cities and market-cornering industries.  But, most of the country looks like this.  The beauty of aged architecture and cobblestoned roads, imbued with the sun's warmth and accented with sprays of kaleidoscopic flowers, surrounds you in France. It's no wonder the French scorn the hindrance of daily travail.

In the United States, we're a bit like worker ants.  In the name of achieving our professional goals, thriving in competitive industry climates, and supporting indulgent lifestyles, we've become slaves to our employment.  The French, as a society, refuse such madness.  For them, the abundance of life's pleasures should be celebrated and enjoyed in the company of friends and family.


When my husband and I moved to the US together in 2000, he was appalled to learn his new employer only provided five days of paid vacation.  In France, everyone gets one month off in the summer for vacation.  From the apprentice in the boulangerie to the gas station attendant to the editor-in-chief of Le Figaro, every employee has one month paid vacation in France.  (After eleven years with the same company, my husband now earns the maximum amount of vacation pay: three weeks per year.)

The French don't split up their vacation time.  In other words, you won't hear someone say, "I'll take two weeks off for Christmas, and then spend two weeks at the beach this summer."  The whole month is enjoyed at once, either in July or in August.  This means a couple things:

Whole towns empty out in the summer months.  Businesses close up shop and hang signs on their doors that read, "Be Back in August."  Life slows w-a-y down.  For this reason, all pressing matters should be resolved by mid-June or tabled until after September.

Local businesses like bread makers and pharmacies have to organize themselves.  If there are two pharmacies in a village, one will be closed for July and the other will be closed for August.

Three weekends out of the summer are consider "Black Driving Days."  The first weekend of July (which could be the last weekend of June, depending on how the dates fall) finds all those taking their vacations in July on the road.  And, the last weekend of August (or the first weekend of September) finds those on the road going home after their August vacations.  But the busiest weekend out on France's highways is the one when July ends and August begins.




Le Grand Croisement Annul, or the great yearly crossroads, happens as the July vacationers make their way home at the same time the August vacationers are heading out.  I have only traveled on the highways once during that weekend, and I was shocked at the masses of people.  I'm a city girl, used to traffic jams.  I'd never seen anything like that.  It took us twenty-four hours to make a five-hour trip.  The line of cars and campers crawled at no faster than fifteen miles per hour the whole time.  Eventually we needed to rest, but every rest stop parking lot was so full of parked vehicles and people stretched out on blankets and in pup-tents that only a narrow ribbon of asphalt was visible to drive from entrance to exit.  We had no option but to merge back into the creeping circulation, stomachs still empty and bladders still full.




  
There is actually a law in France making it illegal to work more than 35 hours per week.  Another law has been in legislation for years and may never pass, but its advocates hope to reduce the retirement age from 55 years to 50 years.

Like here in the States, the French celebrate one-day holidays throughout the year.  Their Labor Day, for example, corresponds with our Memorial Day, and their Memorial Day is observed on May 8th, the day they celebrate the end of World War II.  They also observe all the lesser known Catholic holidays like The Ascension, Good Friday, and All Soul's Day.  And like here in the States, most one-day holidays are observed on a Monday or Friday.

The French have a saying: faire le pont.  Literally translated, it means "make the bridge."  When the French say they're going to faire le pont, they mean they will add a day off, either before the one-day holiday or after, so that they bridge the days off with the weekend, thus enjoying four days off of work.  This practice is so much the norm that if someone says they aren't "making the bridge," people raise their eyebrows and ask why not.


I'm looking forward to the slow pace of French life.  It will be a welcomed change for me!

Leave me a comment and earn one entry in my Vive la France! Contest.




30 comments:

Jessica Bell said...

Ah that's the way life should be. It's supposed to be like that here in Greece too, but recently laws have been changing and making retirement 60! Ridiculous. We do, however, get to break up our month into little bits if we like. I wonder whether they'll start reducing holiday days too.

Aubrie said...

One month off in the summer for vacation! Wow, that would be nice.

Liza said...

Oh, I am so envious of this lifestyle...and your pictures are lovely too.

Stina said...

Wow, a law to prevent you working more than 35 hrs/week. Like to see how they would do that in north America. I used to work 45 hrs a week, and it would have been a lot more if I hadn't had kids. It was expected of you (even if head office CLAIMED otherwise).

Love the pictures. :D

Lola Sharp said...

I really wish I was born in France. Your poor husband.
They have a lifestyle I can really get behind.

I hope y'all are enjoying your vacation. (since you aren't cheating and hopping on here once in a while, like I am forced to do on my vacation, because I want, NEED, to win this contest! ;)

Love,
Lola

Laura S. said...

I love this about Europe! I love how they slow down and enjoy the little moments in life. Life isn't only about work– it's about play, too! But that's unacceptable in America, boooo!

I'd take my vacation a week earlier and come back a week earlier than everyone else to avoid that awful traffic!

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

I'd take the whole month off, but I wouldn't want to take my vacation when everyone else was taking it

Hannah said...

That sounds fantastic! I think I'd be okay with a whole month off. :)

Talli Roland said...

Love the pics!

This is what I love about life in Europe. In Canada, I had two weeks' vacation - maybe three, if I was lucky. In Europe, 4 weeks! And my husband has seven weeks! SEVEN! Unheard of in America.

Hope you're having a great trip!

Jemi Fraser said...

I think we all could live better if we followed these traditions. For sure our lives would be fuller and happier.

Summer Frey said...

Wow. I couldn't stay in the car for 24 hours. I'd just get out and jog!! :-) But I could dig a month off, for sure!

Unknown said...

France sounds like a wonderful country. I hope to visit it someday.

CD

Wendy Ramer, Author said...

I know I'm getting redundant here, but I get it...again.

I specifically remember in May, 2005 visiting Paris. I arrived the day after a cold spell had finally passed. It was a Wednesday, gloriously sunny and about 60 degrees. I was thrilled to spend the day in Luxembourg Gardens but NOT thrilled to find no available chairs to lounge on. "Don't these people have jobs?" I asked my resident friend. "Yes, but when the weather's like this," she informed, "Workers would be mocked for staying indoors and not appreciating the beautiful day."

Vive la France!

Vicki Rocho said...

I could get used to that! Well, except for that crazy traffic. I'd have to stay off the roads or have a nervous breakdown!

Mary Aalgaard said...

I'm catching up on your blog posts. The photos are amazing and the cultural comparisons are fascinating. The bathrooms - yikes! The vacations - wow! What's up with Americans? Workaholics.

Anonymous said...

That sounds like THE dream life. I am moving to France when I grow up -- I probably should start learning French now! :)

And a law that makes it illegal to work 35+ hours/week! That sounds so amazing.

Pat Tillett said...

great post. If I was a working person, I'd move to France. Except for the grocery stores barely being open, it sounds good...

Anonymous said...

This makes me want to move to France. That is all.

*sigh*

Cherie Reich said...

It sounds fantastic to be off for a month and get all the little holidays, including the "faire le pont". Although, I think I wouldn't mind missing the traffic jams. LOL!

Sarah Ahiers said...

i hate the american pace. I have a hard time finding reasons for it...

Lenny Lee said...

hi miss nicole! love the pictures. the bicycle one is sooo cool. i dont think it could be much fun to get caught up in all that traffic cause it would spoil our holiday for sure specially the driver.

Southpaw said...

Beautiful photos (except for the traffic one).

Anonymous said...

I should take tips from the French and relax a bit.

The photos are lovely.

Lisa_Gibson said...

I know I should be in France. :) I could just imagine how wonderful it would be to not live at such a break-neck pace.

Amber at The Musings of ALMYBNENR said...

OMG I'm sold! I'm moving to France! I'll learn the language as I go...I wish the U.S. could just take it a weeee bit more easy!

DL Hammons said...

I get four weeks of vacation a year (along with 7 holidays) and I usually end up carrying a couple days from one year to the next. I love my job and don't feel the need to flee it for vacation. I am usually drawn somewhere when I finally do schedule some. :)

PS. Have I mentioned lately that I still miss you?!

Courtney Barr - The Southern Princess said...

*SIGH*

oh those rose colored glasses are such an envious fashion statement...


Visit My Kingdom Anytime

Deniz Bevan said...

Oh my, that sounds idyllic! I think I'd put up with a couple crazy traffic jams if it meant retiring at 55, working no more than 35 hours per week and having one month off paid... You've made me jealous :-)
And that photo with the bicycle is gorgeous!

Anonymous said...

The architecture and scenery in France is beyond gorgeous! And I like their penchant for life's pleasures, and their one month paid vacation per year. Although I don't think I'd need oen that goes on for a month; I'd rather split it up into two 2-week vacations.

sarahjayne smythe said...

Those pictures are so gorgeous I want to go there. :) And it all sounds so civilized compared to the way we do things here.