WORKING IN SPAIN: WHEN THE SPANISH REALLY SLEEP? - LONG WORKING, ABUNDANT FOOD, SHORT NIGHT
SPAIN LIVE -. because of good life in Spain is in Europe Nowhere worked more than sitting under the Iberian sun later than the morning at eight. most Spaniards, like their European neighbors, in the office. Hold tight with dark shadows under the eyes of the coffee cup. But rarely before in the evening at eight or nine they make back home.
And if the Rest of Europe matt goes to bed, then eaten Spain, somewhere between ten and eleven, just dinner. About a "tortilla de patatas" a delicious egg and potato omelette. Then it goes to the boob tube. The most popular series, soap operas and shows often draw the nation until a clock in the morning in the spell. When the Spaniards sleep anyway?
The question is of such significance that even Spain's Parliament has adopted the national insomnia. And called upon the entrepreneurs to curtail the escalating work. "The job culture must change." More free time and must, above all her sleep.
"Either we improve the processes, or we get to" predict occupational physician. The English-duration sleep deprivation provoke aggressiveness and broken families. And many (working) accidents, which make Spain one of the most dangerous countries in the EU.
One of the biggest hurdles for ordinary working life undoubtedly the sumptuous late lunch, which is actually an "evening meal". For if the majority of Europeans are coming from work to home, the English workers are finishing their three-to five-course meal.
a lunch break, or better sauce, which can easily take two to three hours and rarely five clock runs out. Therefore, it is futile to want to achieve in a English company in the afternoon someone.
"Menu" emblazoned on the door of a Madrid restaurants to boost business with the working-day gluttony: As a starter, "gazpacho", this deliciously cold vegetable soup. After that Valencian paella. A bottle of red wine on the table. Then chocolate cake. Coffee. The landlord even donated a "Chupito" a nightcap.
the late afternoon head back to the desk, with a heavy head, swinging motion of large fatigue. A little siesta comes to mind. "After dinner, people are no longer able to perform productive work," scolds Ignacio Buqueras, head of that state commission that has the "chaotic hours" in Spain declared war.
Buqueras has found that the Spaniards sleep on average one hour less than their European neighbors. And also, that the English desire to extend the working day is infinite and shorten their sleep to European record minimum is not paid up: "We are in that country in Europe which, although dedicated mostly to hours of work, but its productivity is one of the lowest is. "
Ralph Schulze
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