Last summer I drove back to Indiana, a place with which I have a pretty tortured relationship. This is probably best displayed by the fact that I still list Rising Sun, a town where I lived part of the time through first grade, and not Lawrenceburg, where I graduated from high school and where my father still lives, as my hometown. I guess I've never been a good fit as a Hoosier for any number of reasons. First off, I just don't like basketball, even though it was the only sport I could play with any sort of middling proficiency - that alone is ground for excommunication (especially if you're tall). Plus, the state is so distressingly conservative, and, well, obviously I'm not. Over the years several of my old high school classmates have tracked me down on Facebook, which is actually OK, although I've had to defriend a couple of them because of their ridiculously arch-conservative - bordering on reactionary - if not racist - rants. The point of Facebook is to remind me of birthdays and for my friends to post pictures of their dogs and kids and grandkids (preferably in that order), not for serious political dialogue (and this is why I spend more time on Twitter). Finally, Hoosiers just don't leave the state, and I love to travel. For all of these reasons I always have very mixed emotions on returning to the state.
Now, it doesn't mean that Hoosiers aren't friendly, because they are remarkably nice folks - and certainly much more pleasant and honest and open and real than Vermonters. When Sanford and I made our Trip of Excellence to Oklahoma a few years ago he left quite convinced that Indiana was the friendliest state, best exemplified by the postmaster in North Vernon who ran after our car to tell us about a restaurant she thought we should visit.
What made this trip so rewarding was that I was able to spend some time with my people. Any Southerner, and the hills of southern Indiana are much more than quasi-Southern, knows that "my people" means your family. So, for instance, if a man tells a woman that he wants her to meet his people, then things are progressing nicely. On this particular trip I was able to spend time with my Mom and Dad and Aunt Em (yes, I have an Aunt Em) and cousin Jana and my brother Eric and his girlfriend Linda and their various and sundry kids - including talking fantasy football with my nephew Cam and chatting with my nephew Cole.
I was also able to make it out to the cemetery in Rising Sun to spend time with family members who have passed, which, naturally, was a bittersweet moment. I was afraid that I would not be able to find the tombstones but was pleasantly surprised that I remembered.
Now, it doesn't mean that Hoosiers aren't friendly, because they are remarkably nice folks - and certainly much more pleasant and honest and open and real than Vermonters. When Sanford and I made our Trip of Excellence to Oklahoma a few years ago he left quite convinced that Indiana was the friendliest state, best exemplified by the postmaster in North Vernon who ran after our car to tell us about a restaurant she thought we should visit.
What made this trip so rewarding was that I was able to spend some time with my people. Any Southerner, and the hills of southern Indiana are much more than quasi-Southern, knows that "my people" means your family. So, for instance, if a man tells a woman that he wants her to meet his people, then things are progressing nicely. On this particular trip I was able to spend time with my Mom and Dad and Aunt Em (yes, I have an Aunt Em) and cousin Jana and my brother Eric and his girlfriend Linda and their various and sundry kids - including talking fantasy football with my nephew Cam and chatting with my nephew Cole.
I was also able to make it out to the cemetery in Rising Sun to spend time with family members who have passed, which, naturally, was a bittersweet moment. I was afraid that I would not be able to find the tombstones but was pleasantly surprised that I remembered.
There is something remarkably heart-warming about a well-maintained tombstone, complete with flowers and flags, in a country cemetery. |
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