It's very similar in Brazil, so far as a right-and-left embrace is concerned; although often between men is is abbreviated to just saying 'I hug you'; the two kisses seem to be reserved between the sexes but they are not 'air kisses'. Again, I think that the Latin temperament and conditioning (or lack of it) has more to do with it than anything and is in stark comparison with the 'reserve' of the Anglo-American 'tradition'.alden wrote:I think the Sicilians, in general, are about as macho as men are allowed to be anymore (and their native women and female tourists, who often come to sample the wares, love them for it.) But Sicilian men embrace each other and exchange a kiss on meeting the same way women do.For a closer look to our past(s) read this Photo History of Male Affection.
As an adopted Sicilian, I do the same. Sometimes when visitors come down to the island from abroad, they are greeted with a solid hug my yours truly. If the inadvertent trauma has affected any of you, I publicly apologize.
Cheers
I can recall two particular events from early in our arrival here. The first was when the former owner of the house and his daughter came to stop by one day and, when they left, she (a twenty something lovely, with tumbling hair), flung her arms around us both in turn and hung and nestled in for several seconds before letting go. I was greatly relieved that she had included my Good Lady in this exercise as, otherwise, I imagine that I would have 'received words' afterwards and, besides, her father and her boyfriend (holding onto a very large dog) were just feet away but, in the event, this was just a very normal way for her of bidding a warm 'farewell'.
The other occasion involved an electrician who has often done work for us and, one day, in the supermarket, I saw him and he also flung his arms wide and advanced, smiling; leaving me, a chilly Briton, just standing there like a sour lemon, vaguely worried and holding out my paw, in a way that I instantly regretted as I must have appeared, according to his standards, vaguely offensive or, at least, gauche. Still, we live and learn.
The modern British 'reserve' is undoubtedly down to a conditioning along Victorian lines, which is still alive and kicking well over a hundred years after Queen Victoria died. It was probably also compounded by those affected by the two World Wars.
NJS