Seven Years in the South

 

Seven Years.

I’ve heard it takes seven years to become a true member of a community – whether northern or southern. And August marks seven years for me, a northern girl moved to the south.

I wrote a post at the 5 year mark, and this includes quite a bit from there.

Seven years…

… since we sold our city row home, packed all our earthly belongings, and moved south. Moved into a house I had never seen before, on a dirt road, and back in the trees so far we couldn’t see our neighbors. That was quite an adjustment from living in the city and having our front yard be the sidewalk, where hundreds of people walk just inches from our front windows every day.

…since I left the rolling farm land of Lancaster County and moved to the flatlands of Georgia, where the only thing that grows is pine trees and onions. (just kidding. Well, sort of. J )

IMG_2124 IMG_2127

IMG_5254

…since I left the tame farmyard animals of cows and horses to go to the native animals of armadillos, alligators, wild pigs, and snakes.

IMG_2344
[baby armadillo found several years ago outside our house)

… where living near the ocean is simply divine.

IMG_3602
[storm rapidly moving in]

 

IMG_9910

… since I moved away from everyone I had known and moved to a place where I hardly knew a soul.

… where you can drive on flat country roads with child in lap.

IMG_6198

… where wide front porches are for watching rain and neighbor waves.

Kitties in the Rain 011

 

We now live in town, which is still relative. City here is more like development, and there is nothing over two stories, except a few historic mansions. :) Walmart is nearby, and Kmart, and well, a few little shops in the one-block downtown area and a few more scattered around town, but that’s about it. I was used to having any kind of shopping desirable within 15 miles.

I felt c.u.l.t.u.r.e. s.h.o.c.k. the first few months that I lived here. That was something I was not expecting. I mean, this is still the United States, right?

I remember one of the first times I was running errands in town. I went into the bank to make a transaction, and the teller found out who I was. “Ooooh, ah know Bee-yun!” she gushed, because Ben had worked at his dad’s car wash in town several years before we got married, and learned to know quite a few local people through that. We talked for a bit, and before I left I asked her name. “Tay-nuh” she told me. “Okay, nice to meet you, Tayna!” I said. “No, it’s TAY-nuh,” she said. “Okay, Tayna!” I happened to glance at the name tag that was sitting at her desk. Too late I realized I didn’t even understand when someone told me that her name was Tina. I remember wondering if I have to learn a new language to live here!!

The drawl was only one of the new things about living in the south. Everywhere I went, I felt like I was in another country and totally didn’t fit in! That is probably why I learned to pick up the drawl, if I need to, just so I didn’t feel like such an odd ball every time I went into town! And I used to make such fun of people that move to the south and start talking like that… J

But even more than the external changes, it feels as though the Lord has really used this time to change me deeper, on the inside.

Perhaps if one has never moved out of their home area they may not fully understand the identity crisis one goes through who is suddenly the new person, when they were once loved and known. To find a place of belonging when everyone else already has a place. To struggle with the new area when other people seemingly adjust well made a new person (me) feel as though there must be something dreadfully wrong with me. Feeling so stripped as a person that I wondered if I had anything left to offer anymore. And if I did have something, would people want it, if they knew nothing about me? Leaving the security of family, the safety net of friendships formed by years of connection, to a place where I knew not a soul, and only been with my husband’s family several times…

Not everyone that moves feels all this so deeply, but to those who do, it is very very real. There is a deep sense of vulnerability. Will people get me? Will they like me? They don’t know anything about me or my family. I’m not known by anyone.

I remember someone (another ‘transplant’) asking me at church once if I was homesick, or if I was okay, and I immediately burst into tears, sobbing like a child.

And sitting out in the car waiting on my husband, because I didn’t know anyone and everyone else had someone they were already talking to.

It can kind of feel as though your life is over. :)

But I felt as though I didn’t even know who I was anymore. And the new people around me didn’t know who I was either.

They didn’t know anything about me, except that I was Ben’s wife. Which is okay. It really wasn’t about them. But coming from an area where I knew so many people and where so many people know the family I come from,  and doing what felt like starting over with my life, it was a lost feeling.

It’s not that I was upset at people for not knowing. It’s just that I felt so lost, so who I am??

I still see so many areas that the Lord is at work in me. And like almost everyone, I’m sure there are just as many blind spots not yet revealed. But looking back, I can see how God has really used this move to strip me of my “props” and who I thought I was. Was it easy? Ohmyword, no.

Music, education, and traveling were huge to me. And really, looking back, I can see that I got my identity from those things. God had led me into so many wonderful opportunities before I was married, but I somehow had gone from looking at those opportunities as gifts to receiving my worth and affirmation from them.

It’s been a long road, this identity and stripping and growing and learning who I am all over again. Some of it has just been time. I have learned that it takes a lot of time to really feel at home.

But even more than that, it’s a releasing of what I thought I was. Of who I thought I was. Of what I expected to be. Of what I expected my life to be like. I remember sobbing to Ben once that it felt like I was being stripped of anything and everything that I ever knew and loved and cared out.

I don’t feel like I’m exactly “on the other side” of it all. But I do know that there is soul-rest within me that wasn’t present before. A fuller God-trust, that He IS good, and that His will for me IS perfect. I do not have to understand everything about life in order to trust, and believe His Sovereignty. And a letting-go, an unclenching of the fingers to be open-handed about what God wills for me. Wanting His glory more than my comfort. A release of expectation, letting go of my own way of doing things and trusting Sovereignty, the One who chose my paths since before time began.

And hopefully an identity that is more security of a true kind. Not one based on what I do or don’t do, or who my family is or isn’t, or what I’m known or not known for. But an identity based on the simple but precious truth that I am a beloved daughter of the King. That’s all. That’s all that truly matters.

Onto some every-day life experiences in a lighter note…

It’s been quite an adventure living here. It’s funny, because now, as I write this, I have to really think about what is so different. I’m much more adjusted to it than I realized I was! I’ve been thinking about this 7 Year Anniversary for a little while though, and thought of a few highlights/experiences/new things about living in the Deep South.

[and a few pictures of evening boating]

Family on the River! 073

~ For a true Southerner, so many foods are fried. Fried green tomatoes, fried okra, fried chicken… And smothered in butter. Paula Deen is the epitome of true Southern soul food – I‘ve never eaten at her restaurant but from looking at pictures and her recipes I know that! I can’t say that I’ve adopted this style of cooking, although I can eat it once in a great while!

Family on the River! 103

~For excitement if you’re a teenager: there is “The Strip” [a particular section of a particular road on a particular side of town] where you drive your car, I mean truck, and wave at all the cute girls also riding their cars, I mean trucks. Really!! This actually happened in Ben’s day! I will not say whether or not her participated… J

Family on the River! 089Family on the River! 044
[don’t these life-jacketed/swimsuits just look hysterical!?

~Other areas of excitement: mud-bogging, tractor and truck pulls, beauty pageants. I must say something about beauty pageants. I have never, never in all my life, seen so many pageants! There is at least one contest for every age girl from very newborn to Miss America age. Honestly!! The majority of Southern women care very much about their appearance, and the appearance of their much-too-young-to-care daughters.

This pageant thing is very much a status-quo in this community. And it’s for the parent more than the child. To be “cool” here, you have to have your son involved in sports and your daughter in pageants and twirling from the time they can walk.

Family on the River! 075Family on the River! 070

~ The local newspaper has mainly two sections: news and sports. And no news outside of the county. Read that: county, not country. Oh, except an entire page dedicated to Nascar! rolls eyes :)

Family on the River! 016

~ There are Rednecks that are proud as can be about being redneck. Even will differentiate between themselves [who they call classy Redneck] and other “lower-class” redneck. I was wide-eyed when I first heard this from a proud Redneck himself! These Rednecks do not say their “TH’s” and thus words become “dis, der,” and “dat” [this, there, and that]. And they say “birf-day.” :)

Family on the River! 038Family on the River! 036

~ Men do not drive cars here. Rarely, rarely, will you see a man behind the wheel of a car. It is just not cool to drive a car! A truck. Yes, a very very big truck. The bigger, the better. And the hugest tires you ever, ever have seen. Some of them look like you need a ladder to climb up into them. Seriously!!

~ You can say anything about anyone as along as you end with a “Bless their heart!” Example: “That girl’s teeth are so bad they look like a half-eaten cob of corn! Bless her heart!”

IMG_8835
[This blew my mind when I first saw it – however, Husband did clarify that this is not normal and would not be legal on-road, only in monster truck displays. :) But still……!!]

~ I think it is safe to say that the majority of people in this town have not traveled south farther than Florida, and north farther than one or two states (this is what Ben tells me). They simply have no reason to travel, because all or most of their family and friends are within several miles of them, right here.

Family on the River! 011

~It is very, very rude to answer/address  a person without saying, “Ma’am” or “Sir.” This is something children are taught from the time they start talking. And last names are not used when addressing someone, a big switch for me. Instead of “Mrs Yoder” I am “Ms. Clarita” and my husband is “Mr. Ben.” I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone being called by their last name.

Family on the River! 028

~ I learned to water ski in a lake known to have gators in it! No, I did not see any while we were there, but I know people that have. I was semi-okay being in the water as long as I was rapidly moving. But very very nervous when I was down in the water waiting for the boat to pick me up!!!

Family on the River! 025Family on the River! 021

~ There are two seasons: Summer, and January/February/March. J No, not really. But summertime comes early and lasts late; normally, May through October are really hot months. In the intense heat of June/July/August/September, it’s gets up to 90-100 almost daily, with high humidity. So much humidity that you’ll start sweating at 7:30 in the morning, just from stepping outside the house.

~ Most of the local radio stations are Country. There is no classical station to be found. Only one Christian station accessible here. But many Country. Did I mention there are a lot of Country stations here?

Family on the River! 003

~Gardening is very difficult. We have to plant 4 times the amount of fertile northern gardens to get barely a quarter of what they do… There is so much sand where we’re at. Our driveway is natural sand.

~“Proper” takes on a whole new meaning here. I was in a local salon one day, talking somewhat but mostly listening, very fascinated, to the locals talk. One of the very preppy ladies suddenly announced to everyone there that she “had to tinkle!” I just try to hide my wide eyes and sudden smile.

~ Everybody is a friend. Some you’re met, some you haven’t! When I go back north I wonder what everyone’s problem is – they’re just not friendly! In the north, sometimes one will see someone they know, and both parties will pretend to not see the other. Absolutely unheard of here, and now I can’t believe the lack of social politeness up north. Of course the friends you have up north are friendly, but here the general public is just nice to each other.

But a downside of that here, there is a lot of “shmooze” – not all of which is sincere I’ve found – but the general idea is to make everyone feel as good as you can! It’s like there is an invisible contest to see who can make each other feel the best about themselves. J It’s quite interesting! Here, if you meet someone’s eye, they will at least acknowledge you with a smile or nod, and it’s not uncommon to chit-chat with a total stranger you meet on the street or in the grocery isle.

But sometimes it’s not as nice as you might hope. I had an experience a little while ago at a shop in town where I was looking at a go-away bag for Zoe. The lady gave me a price about something, all the while gushing and calling me “sweetie” and “darlin’” and all sorts of things, and told me that she is waaayyyy cheaper than another store where she buys them from (and named that store in TN). Little did she know I was going to that very area of TN the next weekend, and that was why I needed a bag! I ended up buying the bag simply because I needed one, but checked out that store when I was in TN. I was chagrined to see a much cheaper price than what I had bought for! And very chagrined to realized she had straight-out lied to me! In the north, there is not so much gush and goo, but my experiences there were that people were at least honest and straight-forward. Northerns are more “what you see is what you get”, and here sometimes it can feel more fake-sweet sometimes.

~ These Southern women can. gush. over. babies like you have never seen! In the north, you’ll often be met by a friendly, “Ohhhh, how sweet!” Down here, it’s a, “Looooook at the baybay! Her is sooooo precious! Yes, her is! Her is so SWATE!! [sweet]” and on and on, using terrible grammar reserved only for talking to babies. J Oh, and after being indignant several times over my baby being called this particular thing, I learned that it is actually a compliment (!!) for a baby to be called a “buggar”. Yes, really!

~ I think the Civil War is still going on down here. I don’t like to tell people I’m a Yankee. J Confederate flags still fly freely.  A little bumper sticker and T-shirt I’ve seen: “Fighting terrorism since 1861.” Are ya kidding me??? :) And there is still a a lot of racism going on… I come from an area where people of all skin colors are looked at equally. Here? There is a big distinction, and I don’t think it’s good.

~There is some Southern lingo that I had to learn when I first met Ben. I remember once when he was visiting when we were dating, and my whole family was seated at the dinner table. Ben was talking and started with, “One time when I was coming up…” and proceeded to tell the story. My whole family, including me, was lost. “Coming up where??” someone finally asked, because he never said his destination. Ben burst out laughing, and said that “coming up” is a term used in the south meaning, “growing up.” It doesn’t mean you’re going somewhere!

Another time I heard someone describe a person as a “sorry man.” I thought that meant the man was apologetic. I learned later that really means that a man is a pathetic case, or without much character to show for!

“Ugly” is another term used to describe bad behavior. “You apologize to your sister right now! You were acting so ugly to her!”

Another term used frequently is “along and along.” Up north we would say “little by little” or “as we can.” Example: Mr. Smith is fixing up his house along and along.

~ Shopping carts are called “buggies” and the signs even write them as such in parking lots.

~Your ego could grow pretty fast here! Everyone calls each other “sweetheart” and “darling” and “baby” and “doll” – even if you don’t know each other. The cashier at the grocery store will call an old gentleman “sweetheart” and he’ll respond back by calling her “baby” or some such thing. This was a NEW thing for me down here, and I was not sure how to respond to all these gushy people! Older men in particular can be very “sweet on you”.

Sooo, seven years later, I find myself feeling more at home in the midst of all this than I ever imagined I would. Yes, it’s taken a while, and Pennsylvania still feels like home to me too. And the adjustments and feelings still come and go.

But this has been quite an adventure, a rich experience to live here. I feel that I am bettered for it, and I am privileged to call many people true friends… I can laugh at some of my experiences rather than feel frustrated and out of place. I feel that I am still learning, because there are still some things that amaze me, but I think (most times!) I can take it with humor now instead of a bug-eyed where-am-I feeling!

Because, I mean, even my two daughters now say “nekked” and “ya’ll” and “don’t be ugly”  and words I never dreamed my own children would say. I’m surrounded, and I give. :)

Family on the River! 001

Y’all!  have a great day J

Image3

29 Replies to “Seven Years in the South”

  1. Ha! I love this post two years ago, and I loved it and laughed all over again! :) You have done so well with making the South your home, while still infusing your own loves and culture into your children. And I know what you mean about never imagining some of the things your children would come to know as normal or the way in which they’d say things or express themselves. I also completely agree with that paragraph about how you might never know or feel certain things until you’ve moved away from the place where you were born and raised . . .so true! Something about a “transplant” that “gets” certain things the others won’t. And that’s why we sometimes have to band together. :) But at the same time, I love my native-born-to-Lancaster-Co. friends and all the beautiful friendship they have extended to me and the lives they share with me! xoxo

  2. I laughed at this, with a lump in my throat. I could have written this: “It’s not that I was upset at people for not knowing. It’s just that I felt so lost, so who I am??”

    Ugh, I haaaate being in that place, but once again it’s where I find myself. (We recently moved back to Ontario after four years in Ireland.) I know what you mean about finding your identity in the circumstances surrounding you, and then when your props are taken away, you realize where your identity really is–in Christ, of course! So while I don’t like having all my crutches taken out from under me, in a big way it’s good to know that wherever I am, the Lord is here, too, and HE never changes. Thankfully. :)

    It’s so funny to read about southern culture through a northerner’s perspective. You are dead-on about so many things!

  3. Oh. my. goodness. How fun to read this. I’m from PA – born and raised. My hubby from VA. And your post here today is so “right on”… and he ain’t even from that far South. We laugh all the time at our poor kids growing up with so many “differences”~ all from Mom & Dad.
    I only have visited friends & family there (in VA, TN, NC) – never lived there. (we live in PA)… but this has come up several times – and I truly have had issue with it in the past. When “those Southerners” would correct or attempt to discipline my children… right there in front of me. I’ve had the hardest time understanding that or accepting that… (they totally mean well… and I understand it is the cultural mindset – but wow!).

    However. I love love so much about the SOUTH.. and would consider moving there myself…maybe. But I sure would miss “home”.

    ((and geehz, reading between the lines, I get that fact that you can’t even play the “Mennonite game” anymore! True?? I would be so lost… ;))

  4. Loved your post! I only moved 2 hours, so my culture didn’t change as much, but I can totally identify with the lost, “I don’t know who I am anymore” feeling. You don’t realize sometimes where you find your security until those things are taken away from you! Blessings…

  5. Hilarious. Apparently life there is a lot like life here. We don’t have many gators in the lakes, but there are snapping turtles and copperheads.;) Oh, and if we didn’t address our teachers in school as “Ma’am or “Sir” they acted as though we had not spoken at all.

    This also reminds me of when I first met you and you were telling me your name was Clarita. I said, it and you said, no, it’s ClariTa, (My version sounded like ClariDa to you). I said, that’s what I’m saying! LOL

    1. i remember her explaining that to me too. “it’s a T not a D.” haha.
      you’ll just always be clarida to us, kid. ;))

  6. I can totally relate to that lost feeling…I moved to the south right after our wedding and was totally unprepared for the “nobody knows me, I don’t know anyone, who am I” part of moving. It was good in that it strengthened the relationship between my husband & I…he really is my best friend! Feeling lost is not a good feeling! But I think, though I moved farther south than you, my town is not as true-south as yours :) Bless you as you continue to grow & see the good in your home-away-from-home!

  7. This post could have come out of my mouth… I moved from Alberta, Canada to Colorado. It’s not the south but it is different. I liked your tho’ts on how God is the same here as anywhere… A great reminder!! :) Thanks!

  8. this was so much fun to read! i haven’t moved as far as you, or experienced such a culture change, but there are differences and adjustments. we’ve lived here for 6 years- maybe in another year, we will feel totally at home! although we did seriously consider moving earlier this year, and when it came right down to it, as much as i dislike the weather a lot of the time here, and it is NOT the friendly south by any stretch of the imagination, it IS home for us, and there are a lot of reasons that it would be hard to leave.

  9. In defense of your town, ;), I worked in your local hospital and worked side by side with many dear African Americans, one of whom became a good friend. Yes, there is generally more awareness of the cultural differences, but not completely across the board. :) I love the state I moved to but there are many things I miss about my hometown. The first of marriage I woke up many a Sunday morning and burst into tears cause I could hardly face the big, (in my mind) unfriendly church I still attend and love now. :) Going to the grocery store was enough to make me shrivel and wonder what was wrong with me cause no one met my eyes, much less chatted!! Haha. I hope I have brought some of South Georgia to Ohio!!

    1. I am glad to hear that defense, and to know that, racially, it isn’t all as I have experienced it! I love to hear that! And, Carolyn, i am quite sure you have brought the warmth and charm of the south into your new area!

  10. I remember that 5 yr. post. feels like just yesterday. Always fun to hear of another’s transplant to a new/differant area. I think for me, the adjustment thing is something that kinda comes and goes, lately it’s felt a little more ‘there’ again. like is this the most unfriendly community on the planet?:-) I know it’s absolutely not. but it can feel that way sometimes. Yes, nodded my heads on your thots on finding our identity in who we once thot we were…wise words.

  11. Oooh, Clarita, I love it!! I’m born and raised Southern, complete with trucks, ‘y’all’ (which no one can decide where the apostrophe goes: y’all or ya’ll…bless their hearts. *smile*), and not venturing more than two states north (if you don’t count an adventure north at age two…) *BIG smile*
    Thank you sooo much for sharing!!

    In Jesus Christ,
    Breana :)

  12. This was so fun to read! I’m from the south (FL and AL) and we recently moved to the north (VA) and people laugh at me for saying things like “ya’ll”. And my husband is a huge NASCAR fan. :) So I’m in the opposite adjustment situation as you! I can so identify with alot of what you were saying about having an identity crisis. Moving has really shaken up my security. The Lord has been teaching me a lot about resting in Him and His goodness through this. I’m still learning to unclench my hand and just trust Him. Reading your thoughts and your experience reassures me of the process. Thank you for sharing. And I love your blog!

  13. Loved this post! You put into words so well what I have felt after each move, it is so hard for me not to shut down and clam up because of the lost feelings. Thanks for sharing, it was a fun read!

  14. Well it was good to read this and again see MY hometown through the eyes of someone else. My life was revered from yours, i went from the deep south to the north. While I wish with all my heart I would have dug in and made the best of it more, I really, really missed my normal life. Funny how we see things so diff depending on how we were raised. I am one of those “redneck, truckpull, big truck” kinda girls. Just for the record the big truck pic really isnt the true southern boy truck. It makes me laugh and honestly laugh out loud at what ppl must have thought of me in the store, cause it just dawned on me that I dont think I ever quit talking to ppl in the grocery isle or check-out line. Ppl must have thought I was CRAZY;). And yes those things you push around the store that you put your things in is a buggy. There are things I now miss from the north and again wish I would have embraced more but I must say it does feel good to be back were it feels normal.

  15. I get this post, I really do.

    I occasionally visit your blog after having met you at SMBI during those long-ago (embarrassing) days when I was 18. I find it interesting that this August marks 7 years for me moving from the South to the North. My moving experience was also life changing in terms of identity and I also went through culture shock, though it was mostly the embedded Menno culture of Lancaster County. Wow, I had a lot to learn about that. Now I live in northwestern PA where the winter and lake-effect snow is the abiding season of the year and there is a redneck culture here all of its own. :)

  16. I remember your 5 year post..it was fun to read through (some of it) again! I laughed at the Tay-Nah part..so funny!
    I read this yesterday and thought a lot about how you are Ms. Clarita…we always have our kids call people by their last names. It drives me crazy how many of our friends won’t let us call them Mr. or Mrs….so we just say Aunty or Uncle. ;) I hate hearing kids call an adult by their first name, drives me crazy! It’s so disrespectful.

    Anyway, you make the south look like so much fun. I haven’t been to Georgia since we passed through on our honeymoon to Florida! That was forever ago.

    I LOVE that picture of you on the porch in the rain! I remember it from a while ago…it is such a fun and sweet picture!
    Happy Wednesday to you. :)
    XxOo

  17. You inspire me. So much of this I could have written word for word. Thank you for sharing!! Love your blog…

  18. great post, clarita. =)
    I totally know what you mean about the differences of the south and the north…living in the south three months of every year and then coming home is always culture shock and adjustment time. =)

  19. Lol, such a great post. I grew up just a little, little bit south, IN close to KY and it has a few traces of what you mentioned. Everyone waves when you’re driving, everyone talks to you, no matter where or who you are. It still shocks me when I go back, “Why are they all waving at me? Do I look weird? Oh, I’m just home.” :) Sadly, I am getting to be more and more like the northern kind.

  20. I don’t know if you’ll ever know how much I can identify with this. Finding my identity….oh my lanta (another southern expression) I cannot seem to remember to find it in Christ and nothing else!! Anything else will let me down time and time again and I know it, but cannot seem to remember to apply it. Most of the time, while everyone else is probably thinking I’ve got plenty of confidence to spare, I am wallowing around in insecurity. What a great post and thanks for sharing!! The “teeth like a corn cob” comment had me laughing out loud. And I think no matter WHERE you go in the United States you can experience culture shock, because even if the states are similar, the communities can be TOTALLY different. I was encouraged to hear the 7 year thing! So that means I don’t have to have it all figured out yet. Also, I have to try not to be jealous of your Southern life….I would LOVE to live down south! Summer most of the year sounds like Heaven to me. But I’m sure it’s not all perfect.:) Blessings to you and yours—–

  21. I love this post! I can relate on so many levels! We’ve moved three times in the last four years (I’ve lived in 7 towns in 20 years of marriage) and the hardest part is not feeling like I belong. The move from Georgia to Kentucky three years ago was so hard. Now that we’ve just moved again, I am trying to remind myself that this will feel like home eventually. I love where we are living now so I’m hoping that will make our transition here smoother! :)
    There is nothing quite like south Georgia, is there?! Even though I’d lived in Ga. the majority of my life, south Ga was a surprise in a lot of ways. We still laugh about the lady we heard talking about “tah-cooohs” and “bean buh ree toooohs”!
    You and your family are so beautiful!

  22. i could write all these exact same things about life in canada – only the total opposite! :)

    all i can say is we must have some pretty special guys to uproot for and take on a whole new culture. glad that home is about so much more than just a place.

    love ya friend.

  23. Oh what fun to read this!!! Cultures are so unique and different! Having married a Southern boy myself, I didn’t know that his momma fried EVERYTHING or that the only mayonnaise is Duke’s and that the trunk of a car is a “boot.” (true story) Reading this reminded me of that phrase from Love & Respect…….”Not wrong, just different!!!!”

  24. Thanks so much for your post…I just got married last October and moved from Harrisonburg, VA to Barnwell, SC area. The last year has been a world-wind of similar feelings. Yes, I’m considered a Yankee here too, so it’s hilarious when I see all these people back in VA commenting about how they are proud to be from the south and I just have to roll my eyes :-). I drive through “town” and half the people here have shingles missing on the roof and or siding falling off the side of the house…and guess what…they don’t fix it…like ever!!! That was so foreign to me! Come on people, take care of what you have! I work for my husband in his business and customers would call in and I couldn’t even figure out what their names were, much less help them, so I had to about snort over your experience with Tay-na the bank teller! In addition, we sell tires and these people would call in with tire sizes that were so ridiculously large, I figured they must have the wrong size! I’ve had to really think and try to identify WHAT my problem is here…my husband has asked me the same thing many times! So I really liked your point about how who we were before is simply an identity and often, when we are stripped from that identity we can’t quite function “normally” or at least the way that we once had. Thanks so much for your post…I can’t wait to show my husband that I’m not the only one that thinks this way (even though he was born in PA and lived in VA for 5ish years and still can’t quite see the differences that I’m talking about)!!! May God continue to work in us Transplant Southern Girls!!

  25. I love this! I moved from rural Maryland to the big city 21 years ago – talk about culture shock, and it was in the same STATE! There are so many people around at any given moment and we mostly just ignore each other. No waving, no interaction, unless we actually know each other. I could have used your knowledge all those years ago as I tried to find myself in a new setting. We almost moved south last year. That move isn’t completely off the table but it’s not looking likely. I knew I would be in for more culture changes. The most terrifying? Getting my generally polite children to say yes ma’am and yes sir so they actually appear polite. Also – my southern name is Bath. Drawn out.

  26. Wow. I just recently starting dating a guy who is a gentlemanly dream come true. However, marrying him would mean uprooting my Shenandoah Valley heart. All the way to Minnesota, no less. It’s good for me to hear from you successful transplants. I don’t need to hear that it’s easy….I just need to know that there is hope. :) Thanks for sharing.

Comments are closed.