Anonymous wrote:Bless his heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must be a troll. I don't understand this at all.
I don't know anyone who says cookout. It's BBQ. But I'm from TX, not the South[b], so maybe it's different there but never heard that.
I will say that while I have hints of Texas-isms in my speech I don't force that on my kids. My kids speak like they're from NOVA, which is how it should be. How odd.
Pssst Texas is the South.
OP, it sounds like a mental disorder.
Yeah, so you missed the part where it says, I"m from Texas, not the South explicitly in the post, huh?
No, he was correcting the PP. Wasn't that obvious?
Texas was part of the Confederacy. It's the south. I know Texans take pride in being unique, or thinking they are, at least, [b]but to the rest of the country, they're part of the South, geographically, culturally, and politically.
That's because you're too lazy to understand nuance in culture. The cultures are not the same at all. But if you're not really familiar with either, you wouldn't be able to identify the differences.
Uh huh. You know, people who grew up in Montgomery County, MD, and Arlington, VA, insist that there are dramatic differences between the two counties, they'd never live in the other one, yada yada yada. To the rest of the thinking world, they're exactly the freakin' same.
That little parable seems relevant here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd go all in. Get yourself some of those old fashioned Southern Belle dresses, complete with parasol and giant hat, adopt a Southern accent, and talk only in Southern phrases. Keep at it all day, every day until he gives in.
Not OP, but: I love your mind.
Do this, OP. Go full Scarlett O'Hara on him.
Or, go all Flo from Mel's diner on him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell him if he wants to be southern, he will have to give up the scrapple, Lebanon bologna, and chow-chow. And no gravy on his chicken and waffles, your strictly a maple syrup-with-fried chicken-and-waffles family now.
He may reconsider.
Wait, what? Scrapple is very Southern. At least, back in NC where I'm from, it's still very much on menus today. Not a thing of the past. Alas.
The origin of scrapple is Pennsylvania.
Anonymous wrote:I’m from the Deep South. I would recognize a fake accent and fake speech pattern and wonder what was wrong with the speaker. Tell your DH he isn’t fooling anyone. You don’t become southern. A cat could have kittens in an oven but it wouldn’t make them biscuits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom's family is southern. My mom calls an even where you put hamburgers on the grill a "barbeque". She also calls the cuisine that consists of pulled meat with sweet tomato-based sauce on it "barbeque".
And we call our mothers "mom". Except me, I am "mommy" to my kids. I don't think anyway has used "mama" past the age of two.
I think your husband is weird. But most husbands are weird in some way, and this is relatively benign.
DP. Just addressing part of your post, not OP's husband's problem, but: Your family does "mom" but that's your family. Our family (NC) has used "Mama" for generations--like, back into the mid-19th century--and I am "Mama" to my young adult child and always will be. It's cool whatever any family chooses, just don't assume what one family does is what others choose to use. Most of my peers (I'm Southern) used mom for their mothers and are mom themselves to their kids, and that's fine. But Mamas do still exist.
Now, if the OP's husband wants OP to call him her "Daddy," that's just....weird![/quote]
Hey, don't judge! As you said, "it's cool whatever any family chooses."
Real Southerner again. I call my husband Daddy sometimes but only when I want him to do something and no, not in bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH insists that we raise our children to speak like they are southern. I love the south and the southern culture, but we live in Northern Virginia. People don't speak that way here. My DH is just a poser. Whenever I am telling a story or visiting with other moms, my DH will interrupt me to correct a term I use if it isn't southern. For example, if I refer to a BBQ, he steps in and says "cook out". If I use the word "mom", he steps in and says "momma". All the flipping time. I should add he was raised is rural Pennsylvania and no one else in his family uses southern terms. I have progressed from giving him the evil eye to telling him how unattractive his behavior is and that enough is enough. Bless his heart!
Rant over.
OMG OP. I so wish I could witness, this is a riot, his Southern fetish. LMAO!!!
"Momma"![]()
Tell me it ain't real. Momma? lol!!
Can he do other role play instead, like Dungeons and Dragons?
How could you even be expected to go along with this with a straight face? Yes to D and D as an alternative. He can hole up in the basement for a few hours every week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom's family is southern. My mom calls an even where you put hamburgers on the grill a "barbeque". She also calls the cuisine that consists of pulled meat with sweet tomato-based sauce on it "barbeque".
And we call our mothers "mom". Except me, I am "mommy" to my kids. I don't think anyway has used "mama" past the age of two.
I think your husband is weird. But most husbands are weird in some way, and this is relatively benign.
DP. Just addressing part of your post, not OP's husband's problem, but: Your family does "mom" but that's your family. Our family (NC) has used "Mama" for generations--like, back into the mid-19th century--and I am "Mama" to my young adult child and always will be. It's cool whatever any family chooses, just don't assume what one family does is what others choose to use. Most of my peers (I'm Southern) used mom for their mothers and are mom themselves to their kids, and that's fine. But Mamas do still exist.
Now, if the OP's husband wants OP to call him her "Daddy," that's just....weird![/quote]
Hey, don't judge! As you said, "it's cool whatever any family chooses."
Anonymous wrote:My DH insists that we raise our children to speak like they are southern. I love the south and the southern culture, but we live in Northern Virginia. People don't speak that way here. My DH is just a poser. Whenever I am telling a story or visiting with other moms, my DH will interrupt me to correct a term I use if it isn't southern. For example, if I refer to a BBQ, he steps in and says "cook out". If I use the word "mom", he steps in and says "momma". All the flipping time. I should add he was raised is rural Pennsylvania and no one else in his family uses southern terms. I have progressed from giving him the evil eye to telling him how unattractive his behavior is and that enough is enough. Bless his heart!
Rant over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must be a troll. I don't understand this at all.
I don't know anyone who says cookout. It's BBQ. But I'm from TX, not the South[b], so maybe it's different there but never heard that.
I will say that while I have hints of Texas-isms in my speech I don't force that on my kids. My kids speak like they're from NOVA, which is how it should be. How odd.
Pssst Texas is the South.
OP, it sounds like a mental disorder.
Yeah, so you missed the part where it says, I"m from Texas, not the South explicitly in the post, huh?
No, he was correcting the PP. Wasn't that obvious?
Texas was part of the Confederacy. It's the south. I know Texans take pride in being unique, or thinking they are, at least, [b]but to the rest of the country, they're part of the South, geographically, culturally, and politically.
That's because you're too lazy to understand nuance in culture. The cultures are not the same at all. But if you're not really familiar with either, you wouldn't be able to identify the differences.
Uh huh. You know, people who grew up in Montgomery County, MD, and Arlington, VA, insist that there are dramatic differences between the two counties, they'd never live in the other one, yada yada yada. To the rest of the thinking world, they're exactly the freakin' same.
That little parable seems relevant here.
Anonymous wrote:OP is correct with poser. I have never seen anyone use poseur. Poseur is esoteric at best, but technically okay in circles of French descent. https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/poserAnonymous wrote:It's poseur.
- foreigner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH insists that we raise our children to speak like they are southern. I love the south and the southern culture, but we live in Northern Virginia. People don't speak that way here. My DH is just a poser. Whenever I am telling a story or visiting with other moms, my DH will interrupt me to correct a term I use if it isn't southern. For example, if I refer to a BBQ, he steps in and says "cook out". If I use the word "mom", he steps in and says "momma". All the flipping time. I should add he was raised is rural Pennsylvania and no one else in his family uses southern terms. I have progressed from giving him the evil eye to telling him how unattractive his behavior is and that enough is enough. Bless his heart!
Rant over.
OMG OP. I so wish I could witness, this is a riot, his Southern fetish. LMAO!!!
"Momma"![]()
Tell me it ain't real. Momma? lol!!
Can he do other role play instead, like Dungeons and Dragons?