Wednesday, August 12, 2020
My Old Kentucky Home
My Old Kentucky Home Its been a while since my last entry. Right now Im visiting my mom, stepdad, and four siblings in Louisville, Kentucky, and will be there for two weeks. You know, until I arrived at MIT, I didnt think I had a Southern accent. Really, I still dont think I have a Southern accent. Compared to most people in the South, I certainly dont. But in my first couple of months in New England, somebody told me I had a Southern accent at least 2-3 times a week (by now, of course, I have a group of people I interact with who have known me long enough to know what I talk like, and therefore dont feel compelled to comment). I certainly use some Southern-isms though. I remember that during some activity with my Orientation group as an incoming frosh, we got into a good-natured, vehement argument about what the proper name is for a soft drink. Most people said soda. Some people said pop (Im still unclear on what region of the country says pop). Myself and the other Southerner in the group said coke. I promise Im not making this up. In the South, coke isnt just a brand name (and that would be Coke with a capital C anyway), its a generic name for soft drinks. If you go to a restaurant and say Could I have a coke? youll be asked What kind? To me, this seems natural, but several of my MIT friends were incredulous when I explained it to them. By now, though, Ive learned to use the word soda in New England to prevent confusion. Any other Kentuckians reading this? Or Southerners in general? Were a bit underrepresented at MIT, especially if you count the Texans as their own region. Before I lived in Kentucky (we moved there when I was eleven), I lived in Georgia, in a suburb of Atlanta where my dad still lives. By the time you go that far south, youve hit the Deep South, where people still talk about damn Yankees (and mean something other than the baseball team). I was in Atlanta for the 1996 Olympics. I had just turned eleven. The Olympic torch was handed off less than a mile from my house. I went to track cycling and softball, and my mom was a volunteer for the mountain biking event. A few months later, I got a letter published in the Atlanta Journal-Contstitution talking about the prison system in Georgia and the benefits of rehabilitation, and the Chairman of the Georgia Department of Corrections read it (and my age with it) sent me a personal letter assuring me that he was a good guy, and an official Atlanta Olympics police hat. Anyway, I will continue to write entries while on vacation. Send me some questions, guys, if you have any. I feel like I hardly get any questions. I also feel like this may turn into a classic be careful what you wish for scenario, but whatever.
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