Retire to France? What Were We Thinking?

And then the neighbors arrived, all of them, bearing flowers, bottles of wine, and smiles.

And they kissed me, three times, all 15 of them including the two little kids. Which makes 45 cheek kisses.

After the kissing, which took some time as you can imagine, we moved to the terrace. We poured wine and orange juice and one pastis. All our guests ate my various munchies with appetite. We spoke our sorry French and they complimented us, which is the ultimate of kindness, trust me. They drank more wine and said we’d made good choices and they admired our (adopted) nymph Daphne by the pool. (We found the invoice for her among the papers left in the house by the previous owners. She’s Italian. We must keep her, don’t you think? Not that we have a choice—she’s of substantial weight.)

Retire in France
Our lovely neighbors said we were very welcome in their village and they all stayed for several hours and a good time was had by all.

And then they left, and I was kissed again, another 45 times, which added up to 90 kisses in one day. I have never been cheek-kissed that much. Not even on my wedding day in Kenya.

It takes a lot of time, all those kisses. But this is the south of France, and you need to take time for the good things in life. Go slow. Relax. Be Zen. Kiss a lot.

About Karen van der Zee

Karen van der Zee grew up in the Netherlands and married an American Peace Corps Volunteer in Kenya. She has cooked, shopped, mothered, traveled and written romance novels in Africa, Asia, Europe, the US and the Middle East. She has seen her Palestinian butcher’s bedroom in Ramallah, dined on fertility goat sausage in Kenya, and almost ended up in a bush jail in Uganda. Karen is the author of 34 romance novels. Her non-fiction work has appeared in The Washington Post, the travel-humor anthology I Should Have Just Stayed Home by RDR Books, <a href="http://www.talesmag.com">Tales of a Small Planet</a>, the story collections <a href="https://tinyurl.com/y8emctwe">Female Nomad and Friends</a> by Rita Golden Gelman, and other publications. Karen and her husband have now retired to a village in France where Karen’s alter ego Miss Footloose writes light hearted tales about her (mis)adventures abroad on her <a href="http://www.lifeintheexpatlane.com">blog</a>. You can also reach her via <a href="mailto:missfootloose@gmail.com">email</a>.

2 responses to “Retire to France? What Were We Thinking?”

  1. I would love to retire to Europe, I spent some time in Italy and loved it. Definitely gonna check out France next, I bet the food is even better there. I can’t wait to taste it!

  2. This is a very funny post! Hope you’ve managed to recover and sounds like a great party you threw! At least, after such a fab soiree you can be assured of invites to others meaning you finally can enjoy the slow life!

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