Aussie's inhospitable compared to Yanks

Discuss any News, Current Events, Crimes
Forum rules
It's such a fine line between stupid and clever. Random guest posting.
Post Reply
User avatar
mantra
Posts: 9132
Joined: Wed Jun 02, 2010 9:45 am

Aussie's inhospitable compared to Yanks

Post by mantra » Wed Oct 26, 2011 8:08 am

Apparently we're not as happy as the Americans and this transfers to our friends and neighbours.

Australians generally appear fairly reserved and although good with superficial public banalities take a while before they open up to a person. We don't like people getting in our face and acting as though they're our best buddies at a first meeting and prefer a more gentle approach.

Americans of course aren't all the same, but they often come across as overly effusive and trusting which can put those from other nations on the defensive.

Australians' international reputation for ''throwing another shrimp on the barbie'' has been undermined by research that shows we are not as hospitable as we think we are.

At least compared with Americans, Australians are less likely to invite friends and neighbours home for a meal or to meet the family, the research reveals.

The results emerged from a study that asked: if Americans lived like us, would they be happier? The answer, to the surprise of Roger Patulny, a research fellow at the Social Policy Research Centre at the University of NSW, was ''no''. And the main reason was that Americans entertain at home more, and derive pleasure from it.

Transplanted into our lifestyle and schedules they would have fewer dinner parties but spend more time on unpleasant activities - such as housework - that would not make them happy. ''Australians are not as social as we think we are,'' said Dr Patulny.

He said Australians were friendly on the surface and liked to have a good time with friends and neighbours in public spaces. ''But we don't invite people into our homes the same way Americans do. At home we like to be with our nuclear family.''

The research will be presented today at a forum on emotions in social life to be held at UNSW. It uses time-use data to compare how many minutes a day Americans and Australians spend on activities that include showering, commuting, work, childcare, eating out and entertaining at home.

Information was also available on how happy people felt doing each activity. If Americans spent the same amount of time as Australians on various activities, they would experience more unpleasant - and less pleasant - time and be worse off by a net 45 minutes a day, Dr Patulny found.

Transplanted Americans would gain in spending fewer hours in unpleasant paid work. ''Most Americans don't like their jobs,'' Dr Patulny said. But this would not compensate for the loss of pleasurable time spent entertaining friends at home.

The research found women spent less time than men in pleasurable activities, whether in the US or Australia, but this was explained mainly by the great enjoyment men derived from watching TV. For women, this did not rate as a pleasurable activity, Dr Patulny said, perhaps because they often did other work at the same time.

An American in Sydney, Luke Palmerlee, an investment banker, said the preponderance of small towns in the US might explain the difference in home entertainment. ''I grew up in a small town in Wyoming and if someone came to visit, you would invite them home because the options were sub par,'' he said.

''In Sydney if you wanted to show visitors the best bits, why invite them home when you could take them to Tetsuya's?'' But he had spent as much time at backyard barbecues in Sydney as he had in US cities.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/life/sh ... z1bpVeyniY

User avatar
Neferti
Posts: 18113
Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2011 3:26 pm

Re: Aussie's inhospitable compared to Yanks

Post by Neferti » Wed Oct 26, 2011 5:34 pm

mantra wrote:Apparently we're not as happy as the Americans and this transfers to our friends and neighbours.

Australians generally appear fairly reserved and although good with superficial public banalities take a while before they open up to a person. We don't like people getting in our face and acting as though they're our best buddies at a first meeting and prefer a more gentle approach.

Americans of course aren't all the same, but they often come across as overly effusive and trusting which can put those from other nations on the defensive.
Aussies aren't all the same either. ;)

I think it has a lot to do with where you live. Sydney is an unfriendly place and I lived there for 15 years and barely knew the neighbours. In fact, to this day, I only keep in touch with one person I knew in Sydney, at Christmas, others I knew there have moved away.

I do recall going out to dinner one evening and there was a bloke who appeared very sad so we (husband and I) got talking to him and he had just split up with his wife so we invited him home. We both left for work the next morning and he was still asleep .... he didn't steal anything but I definitely wouldn't do that today. We used to invite International business colleagues home for dinner and I recall cooking 4 course meals for 6-8 people regularly. We dressed up too for these occasions. This would be the late 70's.

Canberra is unfriendly too unless you went to school/grew up here. Public Servants tend to be snobs and won't have anything to do with people below their "status" outside work hours. I found the first thing the neighbours asked when I moved here was "what level are you", so they could size you up by your income.

Melbourne, on the other hand, always asked which school you went to as a form of working out your status. Sydney just straight out asked how much you earned. No class, at all. :rofl

mellie
Posts: 10231
Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2011 7:52 pm

Re: Aussie's inhospitable compared to Yanks

Post by mellie » Wed Oct 26, 2011 5:51 pm

Class and status...excellent topic for a classless society under a socialist wanna-be watermelon republic currently being lead by a lesbian with an "Altona fishwife cheese grater voice with the multi-shaded hair of a Fitzroy trendoid,”- Courtesy of the late Matt Price.

I miss Matt Price's articles :(

_________________________________________

User avatar
Neferti
Posts: 18113
Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2011 3:26 pm

Re: Aussie's inhospitable compared to Yanks

Post by Neferti » Wed Oct 26, 2011 6:06 pm

mellie wrote:Class and status...excellent topic for a classless society under a socialist wanna-be watermelon republic currently being lead by a lesbian with an "Altona fishwife cheese grater voice with the multi-shaded hair of a Fitzroy trendoid,”- Courtesy of the late Matt Price.

I miss Matt Price's articles :(

_________________________________________
Matt Price? Is he the journo who died, suddenly, from a brain tumour last year?

Don't believe that Australia is a classless society. We all have our limits, even the Bogans.

mellie
Posts: 10231
Joined: Mon Feb 28, 2011 7:52 pm

Re: Aussie's inhospitable compared to Yanks

Post by mellie » Wed Oct 26, 2011 6:29 pm

Australians are among the happiest, according to OECD Lifestyle Index 2011, despite our rapidly deteriorating moral due to a slimy, incompetent and under-handed GALP government who would prefer we turned into Americas 53rd pleb nanny state overnight.

We;d probably be the happiest had Gillard lost the last election.

The health system over in America is cruddy (nothing like Scrubs) compared to Australia's, I know, because nurses who graduate here and who plan to nurse overseas tend to steer clear of the US, generally go to Europe, the UK...even New Zealand, ...though don't particularly want to slog it out in the US.

http://www.oecdbetterlifeindex.org/#/11111111511

We were happier still in 2007...(refer to OECD historical data)

Australia had the 14th biggest overall economy in the world and the 9th biggest industrialised economy (2007). Australia was the 15th richest nation in per capita terms, and was the 6th oldest continuously functioning democracy in the world.

Now we are the 18th richest nation per capita, and don't appear to be a continuously functioning democracy any more with an autocratic menopausal globalist communist dyke for a leader selling us to foreign investors, who have ranked us the worlds number 1 place to invest, if you happen to be a multinational corporation with a desire to rule the world.

http://www.perthnow.com.au/news/special ... 6177375320


We might be happy, but we are slipping...fortunately, a hand-over in government is expected shortly.

Sorry if this displeases some.
:thumb

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 13 guests