You hick, hillbilly, redneck, yokel, backwoods idiot, poor, shoeless, toothless, dirty, grubby, scum of the earth.
I believe my first exposure to the depiction of a hillbilly was a bugs bunny cartoon – Hillbilly Hare. I absolutely loved the square dance scene. My brother and I sat in my grandfather’s basement rolling on the cold linoleum brick patterned floor laughing. I had no idea at that point that the county I grew up in nestled softly in the Appalachian mountain range was to the majority of the outside world filled with a bunch of hicks, rednecks, yokels, backwoods people – hillbillies.
On warm summer weekends once a month our small town would block off the street between the court house and the bank. People would bring their folding chairs and a live band would play upon a wagon. Old men and women would dance in the street and young children would bop around together as the square dance calls filled the air. I was far too shy to dance, but I loved these events. The street brimmed with so much joy and happiness and community. I assumed every town did the same.
The self consciousness and shame of my mountain accent and my Appalachian culture came later. By the time I was fifteen I was well into the process of washing the twang from my voice. The beautiful melody replaced with the voices I heard on the TV. I thought my intelligence and ability to succeed would be questioned if I let the voice of the Appalachian mountains come through.
By the time I was a young adult I witnessed many times over the negative stereotypes like the images flashed upon the screen in Deliverance. The Hillbilly Hare no longer made me laugh. I felt shame. I felt misunderstood and misrepresented.
Today when I drive the curves of the five mountains to return to my family home I roll down the windows to let the fresh cool air of Ramsey’s draft pour into the car. I can finally take a deep breath. I know I am on my way home to the Blue Grass Valley and the mountains of Appalachia.
Hillbilly proud am I.
I am free
I am wild
I am raised by the mountains
I know where the wild ginseng grows
I walk in the darkest of evenings without a stumble
I know the sweetest strawberries grow in mossy bogs along the Fork
I am free
I am wild
I am raised by the mountains
Wood smoke always perfumes my hair
I wear dandelion chains around my neck
And squirrel tails streamers on my bike handles
I am free
I am wild
I am raised by the mountains
The twang in my voice was a badge of honor
The callouses on my hands and feet a sign of real living
These mountains taught me how to truly love and to just be me.
The twang I washed away is something I regret.
But the pride of where I come from will never fade.
Hillbilly proud am I.
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