I’ll Take a Little Southern Hospitality, Please

Southern hospitality

 When I was in Texas, everyone was so darn friendly I couldn’t believe it. Was this real? Where I visited, in The Woodlands, people still have block parties and new neighbors are welcomed with hot casseroles and freshly baked cookies. Southern hospitality, I’m told.

While jogging in Savannah, Georgia, I noticed just about every person coming my way said hello or waved. It happened so often I started to feel guilty if I ran past someone without acknowledging them in some way — eye contact or perhaps a nod.

joggers

In South Carolina, the waitstaff in restaurants seemed happy to be there and it reflected in their service. One waitress asked, “How’s that iced tea taste, honey?” And you know what? I think she actually wanted to know. Our water glasses were repeatedly filled by the bus boy who was never without a smile. And every local we met seemed interested in chatting. I thought I was in the Twilight Zone.

waitress

You see, I live in Marin County where that type of thing doesn’t happen often. (Strangers interested in you, or acting like they are.) I’m generalizing, of course. But Marin is, for the most part, a wealthy community. I might be getting myself in trouble here but money sometimes breeds entitlement, which then turns into self-absorption…not exactly an environment conducive to someone caring how your iced tea tastes, let alone bothering to ask.

Now don’t get me wrong; I’m not insinuating everyone in beautiful Marin is rude or disinterested in others. But I’m sort of missing that Southern hospitality in my hometown. It seems these days I hear more horns honking; people are less tolerant and quick to anger. 

rant

Take last week…I was driving 65 mph down the freeway in the middle lane, when I approached a car crawling along at maybe 55. Why the driver wasn’t in the slow lane where she belonged, I can’t say. But cars continued to pass her on both sides.

When I was around 20 yards behind her, she began pumping her brakes, apparently telling me to slow down. Nothing seemed to be in the road for her to warn me about, so I passed via the fast lane. That’s when she put her window down, stuck her arm up and out (like a Nazi salute) and flipped me the bird. I’d always been a virgin to being the recipient of someone’s middle finger, but sadly, that record no longer stands.

flipping the bird

As I passed her, I looked over and noticed she was yelling at me. REALLY yelling. I couldn’t read her lips since I flew past her (I admit I’m a fast driver) but my thought was: what warranted such behavior?  Was she afraid I’d ram into her? I wasn’t tailgating, so that couldn’t be it. But her extreme response to whatever perceived atrocity I did to anger her was just plain rude and…

over the top

Then there’s the guy who used our online neighborhood bulletin board of sorts to say he’d lost his cat, Monty, and to be on the lookout (even though fur was found next to his torn collar). Since I run a cat rescue, and never pass up a chance to educate those not in the know, I first posted how sorry I was that a coyote most likely took Monty, then reminded folks of the importance of keeping pets indoors at night since we reside alongside these small animal predators.

coyote

Apparently, I offended a man who posted a rebuttal and titled it, Dear Jackass: (that would be me). He disagreed with my assessment that Monty was no longer alive, saying I was being pessimistic and dashing hope from Monty’s owner that his cat might be hiding nearby. I’m all for positive thinking but I was being realistic since our area is laden with coyotes. Monty’s owner later posted that, unfortunately, bloodhounds detected coyotes ate his cat. Anyway, my point is, wasn’t there a more polite way for a rebuttal without name calling? 

Now don’t get me wrong (again); I love my hometown in Northern California…

Stafford Lake

 

marin
View of Mt. Tamalpais

I wouldn’t want to live anywhere but here. Still, I have to admit I miss the social niceties of those places I’ve visited where people have that friendly, inviting drawl. Some might say Southern hospitality isn’t always genuine, but that’s okay with me. I’ll take fake nice over genuinely rude any day of the week.

ya all come back now

Originally posted in 2014, and I’m happy to report I’ve never again been flipped the bird…yet.

 


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