Sydney2977
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2013
- Messages
- 1,407
Reading this thread has really made me laugh!
DH and I are both from Texas (Houston suburbs mainly) but have been in the Charleston, SC area for the last 16 years. While we joke that Texas is "a whole other country" most would probably consider it the South. There are things we find the same and things we still miss.
I would definitely say there are many differences even in the South between big city, suburban, small town, and rural areas. These stereotypes are funny though. Even within South Carolina you'll here people from the "upstate" teasing about us down here in the "low country" and vice versa. With the military having a strong presence here and in many other southern places you get a diverse group of people with lots of different experiences. Some things we've gotten accustomed to, some things we're still the same as the day we moved here, and that's ok.
Sweet tea- I think people start bottle feeding it to their kids
We had to work up to drinking it full strength, as DH and I both were just used to iced tea. He usually still just orders it half and half. My boys don't drink any tea, and some of their friends think it's weird.
Football (or sports in general)- this state has no pro teams, so college is huge! We still constantly get asked "Clemson or Carolina?" and have to tell people we don't root for either one. It is fun though to have people get all hyped about it. The schools even do fun things like a canned food drive around Thanksgiving where the kids donate to their favorite team pile to see who "wins."
Accents and phrases- every area of the country has their own way of speaking so you'll just have to be patient to pick it up. My dad's side of the family is all up in the Cleveland area and they thought we had southern accents, while people here and in Texas don't think we do at all. My kids like to tease me when I say certain things that sound like I've grown up here. They've both pretty much grown up here and don't sound like it. Actually, having an accent from "up north" can be a benefit because people will recognize you're new in town and hopefully try to make you feel more welcome. And before you know it you'll be using "y'all" and other phrases like a native.
Church- it is pretty important in most communities, but we've never felt pressure or anything about it. We're Catholic, and that's a lot more popular in Texas and on the Gulf Coast, but even here in our pretty small town there are two different Catholic churches we can go to, plus many more in surrounding towns. To me it's always more of a feeling like people understand if you can't be somewhere or do something because you have a church function or service to attend, rather than they look down on you if you don't go to church. And if they invite you to their church it's just being friendly and trying to make you feel welcome in the community.
My favorite thing about living in this area is the history and culture. Just from reading what others have posted about the area you're moving to it sounds interesting too. I'd recommend learning about the area even more. Find that thing that makes it special to you. I hope you enjoy your new home!
DH and I are both from Texas (Houston suburbs mainly) but have been in the Charleston, SC area for the last 16 years. While we joke that Texas is "a whole other country" most would probably consider it the South. There are things we find the same and things we still miss.
I would definitely say there are many differences even in the South between big city, suburban, small town, and rural areas. These stereotypes are funny though. Even within South Carolina you'll here people from the "upstate" teasing about us down here in the "low country" and vice versa. With the military having a strong presence here and in many other southern places you get a diverse group of people with lots of different experiences. Some things we've gotten accustomed to, some things we're still the same as the day we moved here, and that's ok.
Sweet tea- I think people start bottle feeding it to their kids

Football (or sports in general)- this state has no pro teams, so college is huge! We still constantly get asked "Clemson or Carolina?" and have to tell people we don't root for either one. It is fun though to have people get all hyped about it. The schools even do fun things like a canned food drive around Thanksgiving where the kids donate to their favorite team pile to see who "wins."
Accents and phrases- every area of the country has their own way of speaking so you'll just have to be patient to pick it up. My dad's side of the family is all up in the Cleveland area and they thought we had southern accents, while people here and in Texas don't think we do at all. My kids like to tease me when I say certain things that sound like I've grown up here. They've both pretty much grown up here and don't sound like it. Actually, having an accent from "up north" can be a benefit because people will recognize you're new in town and hopefully try to make you feel more welcome. And before you know it you'll be using "y'all" and other phrases like a native.

Church- it is pretty important in most communities, but we've never felt pressure or anything about it. We're Catholic, and that's a lot more popular in Texas and on the Gulf Coast, but even here in our pretty small town there are two different Catholic churches we can go to, plus many more in surrounding towns. To me it's always more of a feeling like people understand if you can't be somewhere or do something because you have a church function or service to attend, rather than they look down on you if you don't go to church. And if they invite you to their church it's just being friendly and trying to make you feel welcome in the community.
My favorite thing about living in this area is the history and culture. Just from reading what others have posted about the area you're moving to it sounds interesting too. I'd recommend learning about the area even more. Find that thing that makes it special to you. I hope you enjoy your new home!