Many of us who are Southern and have chosen to live elsewhere, if fed truth serum, would probably admit that on some levels we ran away from home. The South is a beautiful, bitter, heartbreaking, emotional place, and for those of us with fragile hearts and righteous indignity (especially twenty-something righteous indignity), it’s a difficult place to stay. Oh, who am I kidding? A better way of putting that is that I was a coward. I just never really fit in down there. Instead of staying and becoming involved in trying to make systemic changes, I focused on getting far away and leaving that hard work up to others (okay, in fairness, I also wanted to go somewhere that had a little more snow than North Carolina).
No place is perfect, though (although Maine comes pretty close). I learned that quickly enough, and I sometimes regret that I’ve always been so hard on
The first year I was living in
It’s still complicated. It’s like a family member. I will complain about it all the time to others, but if anyone dares to say anything negative about it in my presence, I will snap to its defense, wondering “How could you say that?” But I am oh-so-proud of my home states of
Southland in the Springtime
Indigo Girls
Maybe we'll make Texas by the morning
Light the bayou with our tail lights in the night
800 miles to el paso from the state line
And we never have the money for the flight
I'm in the back seat sleepy from the travel
Played our hearts out all night long in New Orleans
I'm dirty from the diesel fumes, drinking coffee black
When the first breath of Texas comes in clean
And there's something 'bout the Southland in the springtime
Where the waters flow with confidence and reason
Though I miss her when I'm gone it won't ever be too long
Till I'm home again to spend my favorite season
When God made me born a yankee he was teasin'
There's no place like home and none more pleasin'
Than the Southland in the springtime
In Georgia nights are softer than a whisper
Beneath a quilt somebody's mother made by hand
With the farmland like a tapestry passed down through generations
And the peach trees stitched across the land
There'll be cider up near Helen off the roadside
And boiled peanuts in a bag to warm your fingers
And the smoke from the chimneys meets its maker in the sky
With a song that winter wrote whose melody lingers
And there's something 'bout the Southland in the springtime
Where the waters flow with confidence and reason
Though I miss her when I'm gone it won't ever be too long
Till I'm home again to spend my favorite season
When God made me born a yankee he was teasin'
There's no place like home and none more pleasin'
Than the Southland in the springtime
6 comments:
This song makes ME homesick and I'm a different kind of Southerner! I LOVE the Indigo Girls ... reminds me of being in my late teens and a stonking great virulent feminist, but also going to the beach and wearing a bikini and dreaming of boys. Great times.
I love me some Indigo Girls.
I've always had problems with The South.
My stepfather was southern (until 1986, when he died) and even as a kid I was more yankee than most Michiganders.
I know I'm unfair to The South almost all of the time and that understanding generally checks the excesses of mouth or keyboard. (I hope)
What a great, great post! I love the Indigo Girls and often wonder if I am a displaced Southerner given my penchant for both southern music and southern literature. This post makes me homesick for a home that isn't even mine!
I was born and raised in Chicago and moved to the south (to Georgia) twenty years ago. I believe that qualifies me as a Yankee. Nevertheless, I am surprised when I hear someone make an issue of the fact that a state in the south would vote for a candidate without regard to his or her racial makeup. I have found that not just the south - but the country as a whole - got over the race thing quite some time ago. At least that is what I have found. I guess I'm a little incredulous over the incredulity.
Charlotte, oh yes, weren't those contradictory days of teenage-dom fun? (Because you know, to be forty-something isn't to be the least bit contradictory.)
Nigel, well, I've never noticed your being unfair to the South, so you must be doing a good job.
Court, then you must love that line "When God made me born a Yankee he was teasing."
Grad, you're incredulous because you are living in the New South. I'm not incredulous that anyone in the South would choose not to vote for a candidate based on race, either (I AM incredulous that both my, traditionally very conservative, home states voted for a Democrat).
However, race would have mattered a mere forty years ago, and what I have always found incredulous (since moving to the North in 1987) is that there are so many in the North who still believe the South is what it was forty years ago.
Oh, and unfortunately, there are still communities around this country where it does matter. I happen to be living in a place where many people did not vote for Obama because of his race, but they will only tell you that behind closed doors (luckily, it is a very tiny community, and its vote had no effect).
Well, yes, there are individuals who won't vote for someone for any number of goofy reasons. Georgia is fairly conservative. That is why Obama did not do all that well here (although there were certainly a fairly good number of bumper stickers supporting him). I never heard any racial reasons given, even behind closed doors. There were other, legitimate, reasons why he was not an attractive candidate for many voters. Hopefully, now that an invisible barrier has been broken, people can express their support or non-support of a candidate without fear of being labled as a racist, or a sexist, or a...whatever-ist. Which was my point, actually.
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