Like most other places, West Virginia has a many different kinds of people and ways of life-- especially since our two panhandles reach far into other areas. Go to the northern part of the state,and it is like the Northeast. Go to the far eastern part of the state and you'll identify with Washington, D. C. Take a trip to the southern reaches, and you are definitely in the South. And when you're in the far west, you are in the Midwest. If you grew up in the middle part of the state, like I did, you can chose whatever you want to identify with because there are bits of everything.
Also, like most other places, there are rich people and there are poor people. There are well educated people and there are poorly educated people. There are people who like grits and ramps, and others who don't like them at all (that would be me). But I'd say that almost everyone likes biscuits.
Besides biscuits, there are other things that bind the state together. People here have a connection to the land. This is where they hunt and fish and where they grow their vegetables and graze their cows or goats. They also appreciate the beauty around them. Everywhere you turn there is a feast for your eyes. Whether it is hilly terrain of hills and hollows (hollers), or long mountain ridges with long stream valleys, it's all very scenic. They are also a very resilient group of people. Life has not always been easy for many people here, but they find a way to keep going.
But the thing that strikes me the most about West Virginia is the friendliness of the people. I have found friendly people everywhere I lived, but not always the comfortable friendliness that I have experienced with the people of West Virginia. I hadn't realized this until a young Theo asked me a question one day as we were traveling back to visit his grandparents. He said, "What makes everyone so friendly where Grandad and Grandma live? It's different from where we live." I started to notice, that he was correct.
So there you have it. I have just summarized 24,230 square miles of land, 1.85 million people, and over 150 years of history of West Virginia. Maybe another time, I'll tell you more.
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Whenever I hear "West Virginia" I want to break out in my best John Denver medley. :) We used to drive through WV when I was a kid on the way to visit my brother in South Carolina. It was very pretty but I don't think I met many, if any, people there.
ReplyDeleteI don't like grits and I don't think I would like ramps, either.
When I was a kid, I thought John Denver's song was the prettiest I'd heard. Our PBS station would open with it everyday showing scenes from around the state. If I were home, like in the summer, I'd tune the TV in just to hear it.
DeleteAs time passes, I get my heartstrings tugged when I hear the line from it, "I get a feeling that I should have been home yesterday."
I remember the John Denver song about West Virginia and thought when I would hear it, it must be a very beautiful state. I've been back east once, when my brother took me, with his extra airline miles, to see the White House and D.C. for a weekend. It was a very fast trip and that's all I have seen. But I google map tour places and now will do so in West Virginia because it's got some of romantic beauty attached to its name, from that song.
ReplyDeleteGoogle Map touring is an interesting idea. Maybe I should start that with all 50 states.
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