FireDancer
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2008
- Messages
- 13,255
I would have much trepidation about a move to the South for myself personally. I have no interest in attending church, hunting, fishing, etc. I enjoy politics, but am very liberal. I was a vegetarian for a couple of years and meat/barbeque are not large parts of my diet. I drink *diet* coke, which I call soda, and I love iced tea - sweetened with something like Splenda or stevia, not sugar syrup.I feel the SEC is overrated and plays cupcake schools while the Pac-10 plays a round robin conference. And, the whole "bless his/her heart" thing is just so foreign to me, and never seems as polite as it's supposed to be. A lot of times it seems like the idea is one can say pretty much anything they want as long as it's followed up with "bless her heart."
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The interesting thing is, although I live in Oregon (clearly not the south), I live in on the very rural eastern side of the state. A lot of living here is like living in the south...lots of hunting, fishing, lots of conservative thoughts and ideals and lots of "good ol' boy" mentalities. I grew up on this side of the state, I moved to the western and much more liberal side of the state for college, and I moved back close to home after seven years away because my husband started his career here and so we could be close to family. And honestly, I miss the western side of the state a lot. There are lots of people "like me" here, but there are also a lot who are very different from me and not very interested in any sort of socialization solely for that reason.
I feel like I would experience that in the south, on an even larger scale because I feel like there would be even fewer people like myself - which isn't necessarily a product of being an Oregonian, because we're a very polarized state and there's all kinds here. I have no problem with people who believe differently than me, and was raised to be very polite - so I could (and do) certainly be friends with anyone willing to get past our differences, but I think I would have a difficult time socially in the south. I wouldn't say anything mean or judgmental about people hunting or anything like that - to each their own - but I wouldn't embrace those things for myself either. I would put political signs in my yard and they might be very different from most of my neighbors. And for as liberal as I am, I come off pretty much like your average "soccer mom" type, but I think perhaps a lack of much in common would prevent any close social ties, just because I wouldn't "assimilate" well into the southern culture or change the things I like or don't like doing just because I moved. I'm a fairly private and not terribly social person to begin with, mostly a homebody, so I just feel like I probably wouldn't end up developing many close relationships with anyone.
Anyway, a move there is not on the horizon, so it's a non-issue, but it's always been a place I've thought would be fine to visit but not to live, for me.
I can understand where you are coming from. I do imagine that there would be a culture shock from someone coming from San Francisco to a small town in Mississippi for example. I would also think the culture shock the other way would be just as great. There are places in the country that are more liberal and some that are more conservative. The vast majority are much closer to the middle and this is especially true of any large city, even in the south.
I think you would find that in any southern metropolitan area there would be a much greater balance then is often presented in the media or assumed by people from other parts of the country. The picture painted of any area isn't nearly as neat as the one that flickers to us over the television.