Instead of the pub after work, they get naked together here

导读

来自苏格兰的作者搬去德国工作,第一次文化冲突竟然是和同事在下班后联络感情的方式。在英国,同事们习惯下班后到酒吧喝一杯,而在德国,作者被拽去跟老板全裸蒸桑拿,然后跟同事跑到室外雪地淋浴甚至直接跳到冰水里。事实上,在德国、荷兰和芬兰,跟同事一起蒸桑拿是很平常的。尤其是在芬兰这种平等观念根深蒂固的国家,桑拿房里是没有职级之分的,跟老板赤身裸体地坦诚相对也不算什么。
芬兰的很多公司,比如诺基亚都配有桑拿房,很多人已经习惯每周跟同事蒸下桑拿,这种非正式的聊天不时还能激发工作上的好点子。一起蒸桑拿一度成为社交和商业活动,但由于芬兰是男女分开桑拿的,为了不把团队一分为二,桑拿后来还是停留在非正式的同事间联络感情了。
在德国和荷兰,公司大多不会配桑拿房,因为人们只把桑拿当成是有益身心的活动。德国的桑拿可以是男女混合的,而另一位搬去荷兰工作的英国人,则在跟同事打过壁球去桑拿时,看到无意间瞥到隔壁房的女同事,虽然她们看上去好像并不在意。(附注:桑拿之外,欧洲一些国家还保留着罗马蒸汽浴室,一对全裸的男女要先后进入不同温度的蒸汽浴室,虽然每个房间都是这一对专属的,但从一个房间走到另一个房间难免撞见其他全裸男女,但他们貌似也觉得很自然,淫者见淫吧)

更多剧透

第一步:解决高频单词

frown [fraʊn]

vi. vt. n. 皱眉/不同意

ease [iz]

vt. vi. 减轻/n. 轻松

sip [sɪp]

adj. 无所不在的

revitalize [,ri'vaɪtəlaɪz]

vt. 使复活/使恢复生气

ego ['iɡo]

n. 自我/自负

decoration [,dɛkə'reʃən]

n. 装饰

focal ['fokl]

adj. 焦点的

interval ['ɪntɚvl]

n. 间隔

squash [skwɔʃ]

vt. vi. 镇压/n. 壁球

strip [strɪp]

vt. vi. 剥夺/脱衣服

60p

第二步:精读重点段落

(Tips: 双击文中单词可以查释义并加入你的生词本哦)

第07段
After three years, however, he’s grown at ease with the Friday evening ritual of a sauna with colleagues, where it's also common to sip a beer and then step outside onto the open-air terrace sans clothing. He and his team spend between one and three hours in the sauna each week and while they don't formally conduct meetings, they do talk about work and, sometimes, end up with good ideas to pursue back at their desks.

  • At ease with 轻松相处
  • Step outside onto 走出去
  • Conduct meetings 开会
  • End up with 以……结束

第09段
Thanks to an invitation from his boss, Minnaert has also been to The Finnish Sauna Society’s members-only club near Helsinki where traditional wood-burning “smoke saunas” are set among silver birches overlooking the Baltic. Here, ex-presidents and other leading figures mingle in the nude with fellow sauna-goers and have the chance to jump off the pier and plunge into the sea — even in winter, when a hole is sawn through the ice.

  • Thanks to 幸亏/由于
  • Mingle with 交际/应酬
  • In the nude 裸体公开
  • Plunge into the sea 跳入大海

第17段
When Sam Critchley first moved from his native UK to Amsterdam 18 years ago, he went to play squash with colleagues. After the match, everyone headed to the sauna area and stripped off. Nobody would have minded his wearing swimming trunks, but as the only non-Dutch person there he wanted to fit in. So he sat down in the steam room and took off his towel, he says.
“Suddenly this woman appeared out of the steam - a colleague - and asked me, ‘Are you coming to eat afterwards?’. Then she opened the door and I could suddenly see on the pine benches three or four female colleagues sitting in a row,” recalls the now 43-year-old. “My instant reaction was to put my hands on my crotch.”

  • Play squash 打壁球
  • Strip off 脱衣服
  • Fit in 适应
85p

第三步:攻克必学语法

强调句的用法

He and his team spend between one and three hours in the sauna each week and while they don't formally conduct meetings, they do talk about work and, sometimes, end up with good ideas to pursue back at their desks.
不开正式会议时,他和他的团队每周都会一起桑拿一到三个小时,桑拿时他们也会谈论工作,有时还会聊出不错的点子,可以在工作中继续推进。

1. 用do放在谓语动词前强调动词,主要用于陈述的肯定句。只能用于现在时或过去式(do, does, did),不能用于进行时和完成时(is doing, has done),由do体现时态变化,后面被强调的动词用原型。此外,Do还可以用于祈使句中表示强调

He does look tired.
Do remember to close the door.

2. 用what表示强调

That’s what I want. (=the thing that)
He is no longer what he was. (=the person who)
What we can do is (to) write to him. 用于强调动词

3. 用only表示强调

Only I kissed her last night. 昨晚只有我吻了她
I kissed only her last night. 昨晚我吻的只有她

4. It is/ was + 被强调成分 + that/ who

It is because he is ill that he cannot come.
Is it because he is ill that cannot come?
Why is it that he cannot come?

5. It is/ was not until … that …

It was not until I met you that I knew what real happiness is.

100p

加分任务:精读全文

在之前的三步后,你已经完全具备了精读全文的能力。再多花半个小时,让你的学习效果达到120%!

查看/展开全文


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(Tips: 双击文中单词可以查释义并加入你的生词本哦)

Instead of pub after work, they get naked together here

[1] I’ll never forget the first time I sat naked, thigh-to-thigh on a wooden sauna bench with my boss. It was week one of a new job with a computer start-up near Heidelberg in Germany. I’m from Scotland, where socializing after work means going to the pub for drinks. I never dreamt it would involve standing outdoors with colleagues, snowflakes falling on my bare skin.

  • Thigh n. 大腿
  • Sauna n. 桑拿
  • Snowflake n. 雪花

[2] For me it was a seismic culture shock. But in Germany, Holland or Finland it’s not unusual to visit a sauna with colleagues. And in Finland it’s perfectly natural to have seen your boss without a stitch of clothing.

  • Seismic adj. 地震的
  • Stitch n. 一针

[3] “Finland is quite an equal country. We don’t have strict social classes,” says Katariina Styrman, chief executive officer of The Finnish Sauna Society in Helsinki. “It’s quite normal to go to the sauna with your boss. It’s a place where you should forget about titles and salaries.”

[4] In this northerly nation of nearly 5.5 million people, there’s about one sauna for every two people. Most companies have their own in-house sauna.

[5] Unlike Germany, where saunas are mixed, the Finnish tradition is that — outside the family circle — men and women visit the sauna separately. Even so, for non-Finnish newcomers, the first session in the log cabin with colleagues might not be quite as relaxing as it’s meant to be.

[6] “It was a bit of a stepping stone to get over,” says Kristof Minnaert, a Belgian who moved to Helsinki in 2013 to join the staff of game developer Remedy Entertainment. The company’s studio and offices in Espoo have a rooftop sauna. “You have to be naked to get in there. It’s kind of frowned upon if you do wear a towel or swimming shorts,” adds Minnaert, 30, a senior character technical artist.

  • Belgian adj. 比利时的/n. 比利时人
  • frown vt. vi. n. 皱眉/不同意

[7] After three years, however, he’s grown at ease with the Friday evening ritual of a sauna with colleagues, where it's also common to sip a beer and then step outside onto the open-air terrace sans clothing. He and his team spend between one and three hours in the sauna each week and while they don't formally conduct meetings, they do talk about work and, sometimes, end up with good ideas to pursue back at their desks.

  • at ease with 与……轻松相处
  • sip n. 一小口/vi. vt. 吸
  • sans prep. 无

[8] “It’s a bit like going to a bar but with less drinking and in a sweaty environment,” he says. “It’s nicer in winter because it can get to minus 30 degrees Celsius outside on the terrace. When you go back inside you feel really revitalized.”

  • revitalize vt. 使复活

[9] Thanks to an invitation from his boss, Minnaert has also been to The Finnish Sauna Society’s members-only club near Helsinki where traditional wood-burning “smoke saunas” are set among silver birches overlooking the Baltic. Here, ex-presidents and other leading figures mingle in the nude with fellow sauna-goers and have the chance to jump off the pier and plunge into the sea — even in winter, when a hole is sawn through the ice.

  • birch n. 桦树/vt. 用桦条鞭打
  • Baltic n. 波罗的海
  • saw vt. vi. n. 锯

[10] Finn Tommi Uitto, senior vice president of Nokia, explains, “In the sauna there are no titles, no clothes. There are no egos. It’s only you and your thoughts and your words and the same applies to the other person, so it’s much more human being to human being and all the unnecessary decoration is gone.”

  • ego n. 自我/自负
  • decoration n. 装饰

[11] Nokia has an in-house sauna at each of its three sites on Finnish soil. “It’s a given,” says Uitto. “Any Finn applying for a job in a Finnish company would expect that there is a sauna.”

[12] Earlier in Uitto’s career the sauna was also often used as a place to do business, he says. As well, teams would get together in the sauna to celebrate company successes and milestones, rather than going out to a restaurant or pub. But in recent years, however, the sauna has become less of a focal point, partly because Finnish firms have become more global and also schedules are tighter, he says. Also, since women and men visit the sauna separately, for many it no longer feels like a fair way of holding business discussions. It doesn’t seem right to split the team in two.

  • focal adj. 焦点的

[13] While saunas are popular in other northerly countries such as Sweden, Russia and the Netherlands, customs and etiquette vary greatly.

[14] Jan Feller has worked in both countries. “For the Finn, the sauna is the place where you go to be yourself and with other people,” says the 41-year-old. “In Germany it is almost purely about health and well-being.”

[15] In Finland, sauna-goers pour water on the coals themselves, but in Germany there is often a sauna master employed to do this at regular intervals, he says. “Just the fact that you have written rules on the wall in the sauna in Germany is something Finns smile about,” Feller says.

  • interval n. 间隔

[16] In Germany and the Netherlands you wouldn’t expect to find a sauna at your workplace. But if you take part in after-work sports with colleagues, there might well be a sauna at the sports club or gym.

  • Netherland n. 荷兰

[17] When Sam Critchley first moved from his native UK to Amsterdam 18 years ago, he went to play squash with colleagues. After the match, everyone headed to the sauna area and stripped off. Nobody would have minded his wearing swimming trunks, but as the only non-Dutch person there he wanted to fit in. So he sat down in the steam room and took off his towel, he says.

[18] “Suddenly this woman appeared out of the steam - a colleague - and asked me, ‘Are you coming to eat afterwards?’. Then she opened the door and I could suddenly see on the pine benches three or four female colleagues sitting in a row,” recalls the now 43-year-old. “My instant reaction was to put my hands on my crotch.”

  • squash vt. vi. 镇压/n. 壁球
  • strip vt. vi. 剥夺/脱衣服
  • trunk n. 躯干/adj. 躯干的
  • crotch n. 胯部
200p

frown [fraʊn]

vi. vt. n. 皱眉/不同意

ease [iz]

vt. vi. 减轻/n. 轻松

sip [sɪp]

adj. 无所不在的

revitalize [,ri'vaɪtəlaɪz]

vt. 使复活/使恢复生气

ego ['iɡo]

n. 自我/自负

decoration [,dɛkə'reʃən]

n. 装饰

focal ['fokl]

adj. 焦点的

interval ['ɪntɚvl]

n. 间隔

squash [skwɔʃ]

vt. vi. 镇压/n. 壁球

strip [strɪp]

vt. vi. 剥夺/脱衣服

不要一时兴起,就要天天在一起

明天见!


下载音频

Instead of the pub after work, they get naked together here

[1] I’ll never forget the first time I sat naked, thigh-to-thigh on a wooden sauna bench with my boss. It was week one of a new job with a computer start-up near Heidelberg in Germany. I’m from Scotland, where socializing after work means going to the pub for drinks. I never dreamt it would involve standing outdoors with colleagues, snowflakes falling on my bare skin.

[2] For me it was a seismic culture shock. But in Germany, Holland or Finland it’s not unusual to visit a sauna with colleagues. And in Finland it’s perfectly natural to have seen your boss without a stitch of clothing.

[3] “Finland is quite an equal country. We don’t have strict social classes,” says Katariina Styrman, chief executive officer of The Finnish Sauna Society in Helsinki. “It’s quite normal to go to the sauna with your boss. It’s a place where you should forget about titles and salaries.”

[4] In this northerly nation of nearly 5.5 million people, there’s about one sauna for every two people. Most companies have their own in-house sauna.

[5] Unlike Germany, where saunas are mixed, the Finnish tradition is that — outside the family circle — men and women visit the sauna separately. Even so, for non-Finnish newcomers, the first session in the log cabin with colleagues might not be quite as relaxing as it’s meant to be.

[6] “It was a bit of a stepping stone to get over,” says Kristof Minnaert, a Belgian who moved to Helsinki in 2013 to join the staff of game developer Remedy Entertainment. The company’s studio and offices in Espoo have a rooftop sauna. “You have to be naked to get in there. It’s kind of frowned upon if you do wear a towel or swimming shorts,” adds Minnaert, 30, a senior character technical artist.

[7] After three years, however, he’s grown at ease with the Friday evening ritual of a sauna with colleagues, where it's also common to sip a beer and then step outside onto the open-air terrace sans clothing. He and his team spend between one and three hours in the sauna each week and while they don't formally conduct meetings, they do talk about work and, sometimes, end up with good ideas to pursue back at their desks.

[8] “It’s a bit like going to a bar but with less drinking and in a sweaty environment,” he says. “It’s nicer in winter because it can get to minus 30 degrees Celsius outside on the terrace. When you go back inside you feel really revitalized.”

[9] Thanks to an invitation from his boss, Minnaert has also been to The Finnish Sauna Society’s members-only club near Helsinki where traditional wood-burning “smoke saunas” are set among silver birches overlooking the Baltic. Here, ex-presidents and other leading figures mingle in the nude with fellow sauna-goers and have the chance to jump off the pier and plunge into the sea — even in winter, when a hole is sawn through the ice.

[10] Finn Tommi Uitto, senior vice president of Nokia, explains, “In the sauna there are no titles, no clothes. There are no egos. It’s only you and your thoughts and your words and the same applies to the other person, so it’s much more human being to human being and all the unnecessary decoration is gone.”

[11] Nokia has an in-house sauna at each of its three sites on Finnish soil. “It’s a given,” says Uitto. “Any Finn applying for a job in a Finnish company would expect that there is a sauna.”

[12] Earlier in Uitto’s career the sauna was also often used as a place to do business, he says. As well, teams would get together in the sauna to celebrate company successes and milestones, rather than going out to a restaurant or pub. But in recent years, however, the sauna has become less of a focal point, partly because Finnish firms have become more global and also schedules are tighter, he says. Also, since women and men visit the sauna separately, for many it no longer feels like a fair way of holding business discussions. It doesn’t seem right to split the team in two.

[13] While saunas are popular in other northerly countries such as Sweden, Russia and the Netherlands, customs and etiquette vary greatly.

[14] Jan Feller has worked in both countries. “For the Finn, the sauna is the place where you go to be yourself and with other people,” says the 41-year-old. “In Germany it is almost purely about health and well-being.”

[15] In Finland, sauna-goers pour water on the coals themselves, but in Germany there is often a sauna master employed to do this at regular intervals, he says. “Just the fact that you have written rules on the wall in the sauna in Germany is something Finns smile about,” Feller says.

[16] In Germany and the Netherlands you wouldn’t expect to find a sauna at your workplace. But if you take part in after-work sports with colleagues, there might well be a sauna at the sports club or gym.

[17] When Sam Critchley first moved from his native UK to Amsterdam 18 years ago, he went to play squash with colleagues. After the match, everyone headed to the sauna area and stripped off. Nobody would have minded his wearing swimming trunks, but as the only non-Dutch person there he wanted to fit in. So he sat down in the steam room and took off his towel, he says.

[18] “Suddenly this woman appeared out of the steam - a colleague - and asked me, ‘Are you coming to eat afterwards?’. Then she opened the door and I could suddenly see on the pine benches three or four female colleagues sitting in a row,” recalls the now 43-year-old. “My instant reaction was to put my hands on my crotch.”

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