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Polish culture do's and dont's?


polishgirltx
26 May 2008 #61
always turn your lights on as soon as you start your car. i dont know why, but everyone drives around with here lights on full even in broad daylight and sun...bizzare!

no way....really?? :)

Try a specialty 'street' food. Its a long baguette, tomato sauce and melted cheese (i contest its like pizza bit no one aggrees)

it's called 'zapiekanka'...yummm...
Shawn_H
26 May 2008 #62
always turn your lights on as soon as you start your car

it's a law in Poland. Same in Canada, some US states

Yes, but in NA a lot of the cars now have their lights automatically turn on. On the car I drove last in PL, they didn't come on and I had other drivers and the local constabulary flicking their lights at me as a reminder.... No tickets though...
z_darius 14 | 3,965
26 May 2008 #63
I had other drivers and the local constabulary flicking their lights at me as a reminder.... No tickets though...

It's a new law so they may be lenient at this time . Poland joined DLR (daylight running lights) last year.

Other European countries where DLR is required: Finland, Norway, Iceland, Denmark, Hungary.

Officially no US state has a DLR law, but more and more vehicles have DLR as an option.

From my experience DLR does help, since without it some vehicles blend in with the background and are sometimes spotted a bit to late to avoid collision etc.
Shawn_H
26 May 2008 #64
may be lenient at this time . Poland joined DLR (daylight running lights) last year.

Thankfully, and I was there last summer...

DLR does help

Agreed.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
4 Apr 2009 #65
Surely this is a central thread to a Polish forum.

Discussing religion is a hot potato, sometimes best left avoided.
jacob_89 - | 23
4 Apr 2009 #66
- Don't wear sandals with socks. People consider it as stupid.
Bgutfinski - | 8
5 Apr 2009 #67
Really? I saw it all the time when I was there.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
5 Apr 2009 #68
Exactly, that's the point! ;) ;)

He didn't say what people consider it as stupid :)
Guest
6 Apr 2009 #69
do not pour milk in tea

thats like in the midwest if you add sugar to your ice tea your weird, they only add sugar to tea in the south
GabrielleCebula - | 16
24 Apr 2009 #70
don't fart ever!!!!
don't ever refuse an alcoholic drink when offered one
remember to pour a shot of vodka if you drank last
Seanus 15 | 19,674
25 Apr 2009 #71
But fart means luck. How could you say such a thing, girl? ;) ;)
Trevek 26 | 1,700
26 Apr 2009 #72
Don't forget to buy a ticket for the bus two weeks in advance because the driver probably won't have any to sell you and will ask why you didn't know you would be travelling that time and that day.

Buy a ticket for your luggage, even if it is on your knee.

Don't expect any mercy if queueing for the post office.

Don't stand behind someone at the cashpoint but do expect people to stand right up your @rse at the post office counter, usually sighing heavily.

My boss told me not to talk to people with my hands in my pockets. He also suggested not whistling whilst walking along the street.

Don't pour your own vodka in a house, let the host/hostess serve you.

If you are a Brit, don't laugh when someone tells you Sopot has an amazing pier.

If driving, it is customary (if you are obeying the speed limit) to use the hard shoulder to allow others to pass you (whichever direction they are coming from).

AM I CORRECT IN THINKING YOU SHOULD UNWRAP FLOWERS BEFORE GIVING THEM?

AM I ALSO CORRECT THAT YOU SHOULDN'T SHAKE HANDS OVER A THRESHOLD?

Don't say 'dziękuję' when paying for anything until you get the change (they'll take it as a 'keep the change').
Seanus 15 | 19,674
20 Feb 2010 #73
Poles love to talk about their culture so let's see some views here. It has the potential to be a revealing and enlightening thread.
Pibwl - | 50
20 Feb 2010 #74
never say sorry, say przepraszam

Yes, only young Poles are allowed to say "sorry" (or diminutive: "sorki" - pronounced: /sorkee/) instead of przepraszam ;-) Not foreigners.

For Americans.

Don't treat it too seriously. Most Poles who speak English don't even know the word "acquaintance", and if you're foreigner, calling others "friends" is OK.

Similarly, don't say hello or nod to people you don't know but pass on the street.

Exception: in the mountains.
beelzebub - | 444
20 Feb 2010 #75
(in cities, it may work differently in the countryside).

This is funny to me especially since Poles call random people "uncle" or "cousin" etc. I never could keep track of who was actually related and who wasn't.
RonWest 3 | 120
20 Feb 2010 #76
I have to agree with this one. I was shocked at first in US, when I saw young punks on the subway, sitting and not giving up a seat to a little old lady or a man holding to a rail for their dear life, or a woman looking like she is nine months pregnent...cultural, I guess

Or just products of their upbringing. A shame, indeed.
beelzebub - | 444
20 Feb 2010 #77
The same thing happens on Polish buses, trams and subways. I saw it regularly. This is not a national thing but rather a maturity thing. But good try attempting to say Poles are more polite. (yes I know the quoted post is old and the author probably in jail now)
hague1cameron - | 85
20 Feb 2010 #78
how else are you going to make bawarka?

usually only pregnant women drink bawarka in Poland.
z_darius 14 | 3,965
20 Feb 2010 #79
Interesting changes took place in Poland.

It would have been unheard off some 20 years ago not to give up for an elderly. I guess with the benefits of the free society Poland imported the accompanied habits. Collateral damage?
beelzebub - | 444
20 Feb 2010 #80
Collateral damage?

HAHAHAHAH....you would say that. I can't be a Pole's fault it must be the dirty outsiders. Do you really wonder why people look at you like they do when this is how your culture acts most of the time? You are the most self important people ever. All the more funny because of the obvious fact it is all baseless.

Whats the matter? Trying to decide if you want to make it personal? I wouldn't.
z_darius 14 | 3,965
20 Feb 2010 #81
Not baseless at all. That' simply how we were brought up. With an elderly person, or a pregnant woman around it would have not even occur to me to compete for a seat with any of them. If I was already seated I would get up and offer the seat to those I thought need it it more. I can't think of any of my friends who would have done differently.

As someone above wrote, I too was shocked when I first took a bus in NYC and I saw all those you kids sitting right under some elderly men and women who were tossed around while the bus was negotiating street corners.
beelzebub - | 444
20 Feb 2010 #82
And I am saying you are lying if you say you never saw that in Poland. Yes it is wrong but it was being said as if Poles were so polite and we are so rude because we dont get up and you do. That is disingenuous. Poles exhibit the exact same behavior and I won't let you get away with pretending you don't know it.
z_darius 14 | 3,965
20 Feb 2010 #83
And I am saying you are lying if you say you never saw that in Poland.

I never said I never saw it in Poland, did I?
In fact I saw it perhaps 3 or 4 times in the 25 years that I lived there. I did not have a car so I always took public transportation.

as if Poles were so polite and we are so rude because we dont get up and you do.

I'm sure a lot has changed in Poland and I hear of a lot of rudness in the recent years. Whatever the reasons, people in Poland (I speak with many on a regular basis) tell me about those as "what changed".

So I have reasons to believe you that Poles these days are as rude as Americans, although at times for different reasons.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
20 Feb 2010 #84
I think certain Poles want instant solutions and results and this makes them abrupt and offhand. The same can be said about many cultures but it does seem to be quite prevalent in places here.
Trevek 26 | 1,700
20 Feb 2010 #85
I think some of this comes from years where Poles had no real chance to demand and little to choose. In some ways, images of a 'free west' where everyone had colour TVs and huge cadillacs created a false impression that such things were available on request.

I think that years of having nothing has led to a kind of impatience, or lack of desire to wait for anything now. Ironically, often change doesn't happen that fast because of a "Oh, it's always been like this" attitude which has also been drilled into the populace over the years.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
20 Feb 2010 #86
Spot on, Trevek. There has to be an inner calm and that comes through spirituality and not necessarily through the RCC. A norm in their culture seems to be to get to the end of sth without thoroughly going through it. I'm thinking specifically about teaching tasks which I set. I time my activities and get frustrated when they kill them so quickly without feeling the nature of the task.
Trevek 26 | 1,700
20 Feb 2010 #87
I'm thinking specifically about teaching tasks which I set. I time my activities and get frustrated when they kill them so quickly without feeling the nature of the task.

Ah, yes! When you set a 30 minute task and before you turn around they've all shown each other the answers and say "We have finished!"
Seanus 15 | 19,674
20 Feb 2010 #88
That's the one! You ask them not to say the answer until a certain level of info comes from their partner but still they jump in like know-alls. It's such a childish way!
Trevek 26 | 1,700
20 Feb 2010 #89
I've seen them in ones where you ask questions, just showing each other the questions and ticking off the answers.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
20 Feb 2010 #90
I never understood the frantic rush to get it done. That's the kind of thing you did in primary school.


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