As if tree hugging wwere not bad enough, America has apparently
become a nation of people huggers.
I will stipulate that the older crowd— I count myself among
them— preferred the old days when people greeted each other by shaking hands. Psychologist
Peggy Drexler explained in the Wall Street Journal that she is not a hugger
either.
She explains herself:
I'm not
a hugger. When I see a registered personal-space invader coming my way at a
party, the music from "Jaws" plays in my head. And there are lots of
people like me—reasonably comfortable in social situations, no particular phobias,
just a bit reserved in expressions of physical intimacy.
For us
fans of personal space, these are difficult times. America has become a hugging
culture. What's an Academy Award without a gauntlet of hugs from seat to stage?
Any sports win will ignite an orgy of whooping, full-body man hugs. Political
empathy in tragedy is measured in hugs.
Drexler is correct. Huggers invade your privacy. They are
breaking down the distance between humans. They believe that their new custom
allows people to express affection open and honestly and non-verbally.
Say what you want about shaking hands, it does not
express affection.
To me over-hugging feels like a desperate effort to connect.
Normally, people connect by sharing information, exchanging
pleasantries or making deals. Trying to short-circuit these with an intrusive and
often unwanted hug does not feel quite right.
Young people are especially prone to hugging. It makes sense
that the people who replaced dating with hooking up might be slightly numbed to the risks of invading personal space and getting too close, too personal,
too often.
Drexler places the American custom of hugging between the Japanese
practice of bowing to express respect and the Latin habit of accompanying a hug
with kisses, on one or both cheeks.
One reason the Japanese neither hug nor shake hands is
hygiene. Japan is a small country with a lot of people. Something like
125,000,000 people inhabit a space as big as California. The Japanese know, or must
have known that handshakes and hugging communicate germs. Out of respect for
each other they refuse to communicate their viruses via handshakes.
In Latin cultures where hugs are robust and people kiss on
both cheeks, the kissy-kissy ritual is normally reserved for individuals of the
opposite sex. Same-sex kissy-kissy behavior is far less prevalent.
I believe that Latins, in particular, adopt this custom because
they want to assert that romantic connection is the basis for all human
connection. Theirs is a sensuous and sensual culture. Its mores enact its
values.
Shaking hands, Drexler explains, is a guy thing:
For
men, this is newly slippery terrain. Handshakes are scripted and
reliable—a firm grip, a couple of brisk pumps, and done. There is evidence of
hand-shaking as far back as the fifth century B.C. It may have started as a
gesture of peace by proving that the hand held no weapon.
It makes good sense that showing an open hand signifies the absence of a weapon. But, it is also true that an open hand expresses an
openness to friendship. In Zen Buddhism, extending an open hand is the sound of
one hand clapping.
I also agree that handshakes are highly ritualized. Hugs, Drexler notes, are often uncertain and awkward, especially when, as
occasionally happens, only one person is a hugger.
Also, men normally use handshakes to size each other up. A
firm handshake is taken to be a sign of good character. It has the same purpose as judging people by whether they look you in the eye or address you directly. If a man has a weak handshake he will be judged
to be weak and ineffectual, someone you would not want to do business with.
In our modern world this is a problem. While some women do
have firm, direct handshakes, many have, dare I say, more womanly ways to grasp
your hand. (I would mention that in the past, men and women were not obliged to
shake hands. After all, there was little risk that a woman was carrying a
weapon.)
A woman’s weaker handshake says nothing about her
character. If women have smaller hands, a vigorous handshake with a man might
entail a risk of injury.
Thus, hugs are more gender-neutral than
handshakes.
And yet, Drexler points out, many women prefer not to hug
their bosses or co-workers:
There
are many valid reasons to hug in an office setting—anything from a big team win
to goodbyes after downsizing. But one senior executive I know shared some
universal career advice: "Don't yell, don't cry, don't hug." His
advice is backed by surveys that say that most people don't want intimacy with
other workers.
Given our advanced sensitivity to harassment, we are well
aware of the potential for abuse. Hugging might be more gender neutral than
handshakes, but it does allow men a socially accepted way to invade a woman’s
privacy.
Drexler suggests as much when she nominates Bill Clinton as the
master of the art of modern hugging.
For my part I suspect that this new American custom is an
affectation. It seems more like a way for people to assert that they are young
and hip and enlightened. It’s more an affirmation of membership in a group of right thinking people-- something like a special, not-so-secret handshake.
I attended a seminar based on the premise of "doing business in love and trust." One man gave a talk that there are huggers/touchers, about 2/3 of the general population, and non-huggers non-touchers, about 1/3. So if one is a hugger, instead of assuming a stranger is a hugger, ask first. Of course in this seminar there were probably 90% huggers who were there to desire love and trust in business, and perhaps not totally prepared for the unexpected pain that sometimes accompanies this type of this ideal desire. The women at these seminars after a day or two would absolutely be glowing and beautiful to me.
ReplyDeleteMothers use the slogan "Hugs are better than drugs" while a typical selve-serving psychiatrist or illicit drug dealer profits from the opposite slogan "Drugs are better than hugs."
I like to hug men who are equally comfortable with affection, look him in the eyes afterward, and touch my right hand to his heart. However, although I have known and shown affection with straight, bi, and gay men, I am not at all comfortable with male sexual arousal other than my own.
One of the men I know mentioned how in the photos lining the halls of an Ivy League college, he noticed the football players would be arm in arm and touching each other during the 1910s but around the end of that decade the photos changed to men standing up straight at a distance from each other. I said World War I and the Spanish flu probably changed the way men expressed affection with each other at that time. But who knows?
Drexler suggests as much when she nominates Bill Clinton as the master of the art of modern hugging.
ReplyDeleteeasier to cop a feel when hugging ...
Some people think that hugging is a more authentic, deep, personal expression of sincere friendship... where the boundaries are less formal, shields are down and there's greater vulnerability. I share this sentiment, and I do hug close friends I am really connected with in a range of environments and situations.
ReplyDeleteThat said, hugging is awkward when manufactured or obligatory, and unsettling when there are sexual hints. I have a longtime friend who is homosexual that I will hug, because our relationship is definitely platonic. I will not hug other homosexual men because I don't want them to get the wrong idea or expose myself to more "elaborate" advances.
What seems is going on here, to Stuart's point, is the perception that the lowering of so-called "walls" between persons is an optimal state. This no doubt reflects a "new universal consciousness" or some other New Age expression common for people declaring themselves "citizen of the world." Such embraces are vigorous public expressions of relationship, designed to be visible to all. It's a new way to stratify friendships, like a "BFF indicator," territory marker or something else childishly demonstrative. "Look at me!" It's Facebook LIVE!
When I hug, it's real. But I shake hands or wave until the bond is genuine and mutual, whether with men or women. The workplace is a no-no because it's become a place where sexual and legal powers give women a preemptive, unilateral nuclear first strike capability. I am deeply distrustful of sexual relationships in the worldplace, as I have almost never seen them work and almost always see them creating exponential, unspoken harm. A handshake is a sufficient sign of acknowledgement, agreement or polite courtesy.
It is important for all involved that initial introductions be polite and formal. This kind of restraint is something the Oprah crowd frowns on because traditional protocol strikes them as cold, pompous and anachronistic. It is anything but. The breakdown in social protocols, the so-called "democratization" of social customs, leaves those who know their manners distracted and uncomfortable, while those looking join in feel confused and even excluded. How does one form relationships with new persons when distracted, uncomfortable or confused? Learn the rules of protocol... comfort and conversation are what etiquette is for!
Intimacy among friends, family and business camaraderie is also important. There a hug is meaningful, and the physical contact is comforting. It is an indication of deep trust, a social and economic necessity. Indeed, physical contact itself is a human necessity. Withhold touch from a baby and he/she will die. The same can be said of Homo sapiens of all ages. Yet when it is phony, it creates debilitating social awkwardness. When it is out of obligation, it's not real. And our American culture is hungry for what's real: genuine connection, and truly authentic expression. As humans, we value what is rare and/or meaningful.
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