1. Save all manner of bacon grease. You will be instructed later how to use it.
2. If you forget a Southerner’s name, refer to him (or her) as “Bubba”. You have a 75% chance of being right.
3. Just because you can drive on snow and ice does not mean we can. Stay home the two days of the year it snows.
4. If you do run your car into a ditch, don’t panic. Four men in the cab of a four wheel drive with a 12-pack of beer and a tow chain will be along shortly. Don’t try to help them. Just stay out of their way. This is what they live for.
5. Don’t be surprised to find movie rentals and bait in the same store.
6. Do not buy food at the movie store.
7. If it can’t be fried in bacon grease, it ain’t worth cooking, let alone eating.
8. Remember: “Y’all” is singular. “All y’all” is plural. “All y’all’s” is plural possessive.
9. There is nothing sillier than a Northerner imitating a southern accent, unless it is a southerner imitating a Boston accent.
10. Get used to hearing, “You ain’t from around here, are you?”
11. People walk slower here.
12. Don’t be worried that you don’t understand anyone. They don’t understand you either.
13. The first Southern expression to creep into a transplanted Northerner’s vocabulary is the adjective “Big ol'”, as in “big ol’ truck” or “big ol’ boy”. Eighty-five percent begin their new southern influenced dialect with this expression. One hundred percent are in denial about it.
14. The proper pronunciation you learned in school is no longer proper.
15. Be advised: The “He needed killin'” defense is valid here.
16. If attending a funeral in the South, remember, we stay until the last shovel of dirt is thrown on and the tent is torn down.
17. If you hear a Southerner exclaim, “Hey, y’all, watch this!” stay out of his way. These are likely the last words he will ever say.
18. Most Southerners do not use turn signals, and they ignore those who do. In fact, if you see a signal blinking on a car with a southern license plate, you may rest assured that it was on when the car was purchased.
19. Northerners can be identified by the spit on the inside of their car’s windshield that comes from yelling at other drivers.
20. The winter wardrobe you always brought out in September can wait until November.
21. If there is the prediction of the slightest chance of even the most minuscule accumulation of snow, your presence is required at the local grocery store. It does not matter if you need anything from the store, it is just something you’re supposed to do.
22. Satellite dishes are very popular in the South. When you purchase one, it is to be positioned directly in front of your trailer. This is logical, bearing in mind that the dish cost considerably more than the trailer and should, therefore, be displayed.
23. Tornadoes and Southerners going through a divorce have a lot in common. In either case, you know someone is going to lose a trailer.
24. Florida is not considered a southern state. There are far more Yankees than Southerners living there.
25. In southern churches you will hear the hymn, “All Glory, Laud and Honor”. You will also hear expressions such as, “Laud, Have mercy”, “Good Laud”, and “Laudy, Laudy, Laudy”.
26. As you are cursing the person driving 15 mph in a 55 mph zone, directly in the middle of the road, remember, many folks learned to drive on a model of vehicle known as John Deere, and this is the proper speed and lane position for the vehicle.
27. You can ask a Southerner for directions, but unless you already know the positions of key hills, trees, rocks, and where buildings used to stand, you’re better off trying to find it yourself.

Store clerk: Jess bring yer truck around back an’ we’ll load er up fer ya!
Me: I don’t have a truck.
Store Clerk: (looking puzzled) Well what happened to it?
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Good one.
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Reblogged this on perfectlyfadeddelusions.
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Thanks so much
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Hilarious, and all true! I learned rather quickly upon moving south that “Hey” is a greeting, beer is not just beer but “cold beer”, there are no accidents, only wrecks, and I would be fixin’ to carry people various places. :)
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So true!
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And around here it’s a coke, what kind is up for debate but the first answer is coke, when asked what kind of coke it is acceptable to say Sprite, Dr Pepper, etc. oh and the Tea is always sweet. Unsweetened is a special request.
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Of course. My son married va girl from Arizona. Her father pleaded with her not to come home eati’n grits and drinking sweet!
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It is unavoidable!
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Having travelled with a friend through Louisiana without satnav (we had request it, but the care wouldn’t work and had to change it), 27 defined our trip for us. ;)
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Wish I’d known. I’d have met you somewhere!
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Just checked. You were deep in Cajun Country. How did you like it. Did you want to wander in the swamps a bit.
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I love this, and have to say, those Southerners sound rather mad!
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That’s a big ol’ piece of truth, y’all. ☺
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As a born and bred South Texas gal, this was spot on. Laudy!
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Wouldn’t you miss it. And to think other people think we talk funny!
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The first two words I learned as a transplanted Southerner were fixin’–like he’s fixin’ to go to church. The other word was buggy–shopping carts are called buggies.
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J’eat yet? Biscuits are in the oven!
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