Ah, who doesn’t like kissing? It’s romantic, it’s intimate, it’s passionate, it’s… awkward?!
Yes, it can be weird, especially when you’re introduced to someone you don’t know, and they come towards you at full force.
It’s too late to stretch out your hand — as their upper body already awkwardly touches yours, they plant their lips first on one cheek, then on the other one… and then on the first one again. 😱
THREE KISSES! HELP!
Where does this custom of cheek kissing come from?
As uncomfortable and distressing as the above situation seems, it can be worse than this.
I can’t even count the times I panicked and moved my face to one side just to get someone’s lips on the corners of my mouth. 🤢
Is it so hard to shake hands? What are the roots of this Dutch habit of three kisses on the cheek to greet and say goodbye to people?
READ MORE | Dutch Quirk #22: Give everyone three kisses to say hello
If you think those cheeky air kisses trickled down from the British Royals, you are wrong.
The Royals only hand out two kisses, as do the chic Parisians or other upper-class members in Belgium or France, for example.
Surprisingly, this affectionate custom hasn’t even been around for that long.
It is said to have come from the Belgian and French countryside and arrived in the north of the Netherlands in the 1980s.
Before that, only one kiss on the cheek or a firm handshake was the norm in terms of greeting etiquette.
Follow the rules to avoid disaster
But is this three-kiss policy a way to show genuine affection or just a mechanical sequence of head movements that everyone follows because that’s the way it is?
While it isn’t clear, you might as well embrace it and transform this interpersonal awkwardness into a genuine gesture coming from the heart.
However, before you throw yourself into this cheeky world of (air) kisses, take note.
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The social kissing rules exist to avoid bad coordination ending up in an accidental kiss on the mouth or neck or the painful smacking of cheekbones.
If you follow this set of rules, nothing will go wrong (hopefully) when performing your cheek-kissing act:
- In general, you kiss three times when greeting friends and family (also when saying goodbye)
- You start on the right side, then move to the left cheek, and finish with a kiss on the right cheek again
- Women kiss both women and men, while men greet other men with a handshake
- Go for air kisses instead of fully planting your wet lips on your greetee’s cheek 👄
What if, even after studying these rules meticulously, you end up in a precarious kissing situation?
I’d say just laugh it off and hug it out. After all, the ice is definitely broken, and you can skip all initial formalities before starting a conversation.
Where do you stand when it comes to this Dutch custom of three kisses? Tell us in the comments below!
Gay men also do the triple kiss.
hahaha they all want to be women
I don’t think thats a gay thing:-) it beginning to look like the new norm to give a mankiss (only 1) or the brohug. Your not getting away any more with a handshaken. .
the correct order is left, right, left.
Yes, but that means right cheek, left cheek, right cheek. Alexandra was correct.
Yes, but that means right cheek, left cheek, right cheek. Alexandra was correct.
It seems like Dutchies really kiss someone else cheek, right? Here in Brazil it’s kinda a habit too, two or three kisses depending on the region of the country but it’s not a kiss exactly it’s more like the sound of a kiss or just getting someone’s cheek close to each other (do you understand what I’m trying to say? :P). Interesting o/
My mom left Holland after the war, and we’ve always done 3 kisses, so it’s definitely older than the 1980s!
OK so I had this kissy thing happen unexpectedly on my first trip to NL and it was awkward and embarrassing. In fact we banged our heads together. I tried to avoid it ever since, not because I don’t like it, but because of not knowing just what was expected or what to expect. Somebody please post is it left first or right first? Links, rechts, of wat? And who do you do this with?
You turn your head to the left first, which is your right cheek. So both the article and the commenter are correct. They were just framing it two different ways (the way your head turns vs which cheeks are touching).
Definitely before the 1980s (since we left the Netherlands in 1980s and it was well into fashion then). Also, it’s left-right-left,
It’s right cheek, touching the right cheek of the recipient you’re greeting, then left, and finally the right cheek again. Et voila! you’ve done this typical Dutch way of greeting and saying goodbye. ( mostly to people one is familiar with & have a close relationship). My two cents worth, & experience as someone from another country/culture.