The other day, Patrick the dog and I were out walking in our neighborhood here in Fort Collins, Colorado.
Not an unusual thing for us.
As we walked along a street not far from our home, we saw a neighbor couple out working in their yard. Of course, I wanted to avert my eyes, pretend I hadn’t seen them, and keep on walking. But Patrick insisted on stopping and chatting up our “new best friends.”
I found out their names were Frank and Meredith. Frank hailed from Illinois originally, but Meredith was born and raised in Colorado. After explaining that I had only moved here six months earlier, I added, “My wife and I are just AMAZED at how friendly the people are here! It really is awesome.”
To which Meredith replied, “I’ll tell you honestly… it is because of the influence of all of you Midwesterners. People from Colorado really aren’t that friendly – and I say that as a native Coloradan. You folks moving here from Iowa, and Kansas, and Ohio, and Illinois are just rubbing off on us.”
To which I replied, “Huh! Isn’t that interesting?”
After exchanging a few more pleasantries with Frank and Meredith, it was time for Patrick and I to bid them farewell and resume the Hunt for Bunnies (aka, morning walk).
But Meredith’s comment stuck with me. First, I wondered if her observation was really true. I mean, I have met a lot of friendly people from Colorado. I have also met a lot of really UNfriendly people from the Midwest.
But it also made me wonder if there really are such things as a State or Regional Personalities.
Are Midwesterners – on the whole – extraordinarily friendly?
Are Coloradans actually stuck-up and aloof?
Do Californians really check themselves in the mirror every 10 minutes and inject the word “dude” into half their sentences?
And what about people from the South? How closely do they conform to the stereotype that paints them as abnormally bigoted and uneducated?
I remember a sociology teacher in college who told us that stereotypes are so dangerous because most of them, “… begin with a small grain of truth.”
I believe we are drawn to stereotypes initially because they promise to save us time and energy. We shake hands with someone from Rhode Island and think to ourselves, “Since I already know that people from Rhode Island are vicious gossips, I won’t have to wear myself out trying to discover that personality flaw in this guy!”
Too often, though, we stop working to understand that person once the stereotype rears its ugly head.
I am sure there was a day long ago when there was such a thing as “regional flavor.” But then we invented superhighways, and jet airliners, and television, and the Internet, and little by little, our regional quirks and tics all began to blend together. It is no longer unusual for someone to be born in Ohio, move to Seattle, then to Minneapolis, then to Kansas City, then to Chicago, then to Sydney, Australia, then back to Kansas City, and finally to Fort Collins, Colorado… which, incidentally, is the story of my life’s journey.
We are each as unique as our fingerprints. Our personalities and outlooks have been shaped by thousands of different things… including the part(s) of the country we have lived in.
But isn’t it great to be reminded in scripture that EVERY ONE OF US is made in the image of God? (Genesis 1:27), no matter where we hail from? That we each carry Divine DNA in our souls? That even people from Arizona are considered to be, “… a little lower than God…” and have been, “… crowned with glory and honor,”according to the psalmist in Psalm 8?
(Sorry, Arizonans. I had to pick on somebody).
Today I invite us each to pause and celebrate the supernatural ancestry that binds us tightly together in one human family.
But let’s also not forget that the BEST bar-be-que on the planet can be found in Kansas City…
Abundant blessings;
And what about people from the South? How closely do they conform to the stereotype that paints them as abnormally bigoted and uneducated?
Having moved recently to Louisville, Kentucky (I’m guessing that’s considered “South.”) I came with a different stereotype in mind – “Southern hospitality.” And I was not disappointed. We were welcomed warmly by our new neighbors and have had no trouble making friends here. Yes, I suppose there are some unpleasant folks here, but I’d rather focus on the ones that like me. 😉
Excellent. I am so glad you found the kind of people you expected to find. Isn’t that usually the way it works?