Thanks Mariama for your counsels. And you are right, mean talk is very common in little villages. But I have the impression that mean talk is also cultural. I don't remember of mean talk when I was living in Canada, this mean talk was very new to me when arriving here, in Spain. Even in the big cities like Barcelona, there was mean talk in the building where I was living. When someone is criticizing someone in front of me I try to change the subject or simply I close my ears. Clap! I continue to listening without listening. Or I listen trying to understand why this person is criticizing the other person and then I have an insight about the criticizer. Cafés in the around are ideal places to criticize others, and since I don't go anymore to the cafés because I don't have money and because we can not smoke anymore in them, I am far away or the critics of other people. In Canada you can walk with a monkey on your head, nobody says anything. Here you give a kiss to your dog and they start a reputation of a crazy woman.
There is a French phrase that says: Vaut mieux en rire qu'en pleurer. And that means: it is better to laugh than to cry.
There is a French phrase that says: Vaut mieux en rire qu'en pleurer. And that means: it is better to laugh than to cry.