Mrs. Crockett: You’re a long way from home, aren’t you, Mr. Carpenter?
Klaatu: How did you know?
Mrs. Crockett: Oh, I can tell a New England accent a mile away.
I was truly a stranger in a strange land when I moved to Tennessee and Kentucky. My accent was wrong, my tastes in food was wrong, and the way I dressed, as if I still lived in Arizona, was way off. Walking into a Waffle House and asking if they had chorizo and eggs with chilis got me some of the strangest looks. Luckily, I like biscuits and gravy, even if I do douse it in hot sauce.
Moving to California when I was a teenager was a bit rough, but mostly because my manners and speech were a bit old-fashioned for my classmates. Let’s be honest: Not a lot of teenagers in the Bay Area in 1987 stood up when they spoke to a teacher and said ‘Yes, ma’am” and “No, sir”. But they got over it. I learned to like the food (there’s a reason I say I dated the United Nations when I was a junior and senior. Immigrant mothers can cook!), found a way to be polite without making the teachers uncomfortable, and got on with life.
Wherever I went, I was never rejected because I was different. True, there were the occasional “Yankee” or whatever thrown my way, but rarely out of meanness. The people I met were patient with my ignorance, open to listening to my differences, and willing to try my strange way of doing things.
It’s that openness that I miss the most when I go overseas. No matter where I have been in the United States, so long as I was respectful, others were willing to accept me. I can’t say the same about most other places I’ve been. You always have to know the ways of the local tribes when you go to a new place, but nowhere else on Earth have the local tribes been so willing to take from me as much as they give.














oldnfo
/ May 29, 2014Good point. And those that have never moved or traveled will never understand…
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WellSeasonedFool
/ May 30, 2014My accent today is fairly neutral, but I can still do the back of the mountains Rocky Mountain style. Lots of fun, especially in the South, although the Cajuns seem to understand me.
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