• Kongar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    57 minutes ago

    Yup

    Par for the course in Boston and southern New England generally speaking. You can have my firstborn if you really need it, but I reserve the right to break your balls forever.

    We’re not nice but we are kind. It’s how we keep each other sane when the fuckin sun goes away at 4:30, and the plow just un-shoveled what we just finished shoveling (cue the ice storm to make that snow extra wet and heavy only to later freeze into a foot thick block of ice).

    • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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      3 minutes ago

      I think it’s far more north south than east west. The PNW is definitely kind, though they’re neither nice nor mean, more just uncomfortable you’re talking to them. Meanwhile the southeast gives California a run for their money in polite cruelty.

      People are aware that without a culture built around it places like Alaska with 22+ hours of light/dark a day can make people a little crazy, but I think the inverse also can cause problems without a culture built around it. Winter is good for you even if it sucks

    • Lydia_K@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Bostonites will give you the shirt of their back but will berate you the entire time for being so fucking stupid that now I gotta give you my shirt you fucking idiot, don’t you think at all?

    • TheseusNow@lemmy.zip
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      38 minutes ago

      No wonder I feel at home in the north east, but here I am in Texas where people will gladly vote against their best interrest.

    • MirthfulAlembic@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      It’s a very accurate description of the Northeast. People will help you dig your car out of the snow while passively aggressively exhaling very loudly to emphasize how much of a pain it is. But then they’ll just walk away not even expecting a thank you.

    • ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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      4 hours ago

      You know, as someone that’s live on both coasts for extended periods of time, that’s exactly right. I’ve never been able to explain it but that’s spot on. Thanks!!

    • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      I dunno, I found people on the West Coast would go out of their way to accommodate my wife when she was unable to walk.

  • Aeao@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I feel the need to do a Texas one as a Texan

    Tex: you must be lost

    Person: yes I was traveling…. Looking for… do you know

    Long silence

    Tex: yep… see I knew you were probably lost. When I saw your car I told my buddy bubba over bubba tips his hat “hey bubba I think he’s lost. Probably looking for the highway.” Are ya… looking for the highway that is.

    Person: yes

    Tex: ya. That’s what I figured. (Long silence but right before you say something else) you’re probably gonna want to take that road there. It’ll get you to Edna.

    Person: is the highway in Edna?

    Tex: no, but… you should probably go thru Edna. Less trouble that way. Then you’ll see where the old windmill used to be. Make a left”

    Person: left… to the highway?

    Tex: no… but that’ll get you to fire station

    Person: do I need the fire station

    Bubba laughs

    Tex: bubba! No but you’re going to need their help with the tree that fell back in August . You didn’t really think you could move a tree that size with (gestures judgingly at your car. Regardless of the make or model) that… thing…

    Bubba laughs

    Tex: Bubba!

    Person: uhh okay… thank you… I guess I’ll head to that fire station.

    That conversation took an hour and a half but they fed you. also you have to come back next season because Mary lost her husband and you gotta do your due to help out. Then you end up just living there because after every time you help someone says “I suppose you’ll be off then won’cha. I can’t say I blame ya”

    How can you leave after that?! It’s so passively judgmental!

    Edit (might be adding a hat to hat here but I’m trying to reach peak texan): The good news is you can legally wear cowboy boots now and you measure a lot of thing by “heads” for quantity or “hand” for size. Plus if you ever don’t want to answer a question you can just gaze off into the distance and say “I don’t claim to know but if I’ve learned a damn thing in these dusty years is that you’ll find your answer right out there. when those answers want to find you I can’t rightly say… I’d be a damn fool to try”

    • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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      1 hour ago

      Used to a know a guy named Mop who had a dog named Filanges on account of his long toes. He called me bud and gave me brisket every chance he could as long as I stayed for a conversation

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      That’s painfully accurate in some places down here. And if you’re ever through that way again there’s some decent fishing in Lake Texana. Got a whole mess of catfish out there a couple of weeks back.

      • Aeao@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Exactly! It’s helpful it’s just… “you in some kind of hurry?”

        As for your fishing spot. I’ll answer in Texan

        “Sounds great but I know how people enjoy a good spot once they found it. We’ll head out sometime together. You bring the beer.”

  • TomMasz@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    I flew into Boston back in the ‘80s and was driving a rental car to my hotel. I get to an intersection and it’s blocked for a 10K road race. So I ask the cop diverting traffic if there was an alternate route to the hotel. He shrugs his shoulders, says he doesn’t know, and waves me on. I ended up driving around until the roads reopened.

  • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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    4 hours ago

    That fits. I live an hour north of Boston and that is one of the most Bostonian things… esp. the walking away w/o saying a word. It’s just the Northeast flintiness most native New Englanders have.

  • slothrop@lemmy.ca
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    4 hours ago

    Boston is absolutely, hands-down my favourite US city. My daughter just returned from a few days there and can confirm.