Still adjusting to my new neighborhood, it has it's good and bad aspects. It's overall a pretty cliche' good ole American town. All stereotypes present and accounted for. The groovy thing is that people are starting to break the stereo types. Doing things a little different. Just yesterday I was chatting with someone from the neighborhood who saw the St. Christopher Medal I wear around my neck asked me, "What Religion are you supposed to be?"
To Which I answered, "All of them."
And he says, "Well that's kind of ambiguous, ain't it."
The coolest part, and I couldn't have imagined it better, right after he said that, he spit. He wasn't looking where it was going, whether or not someone might step in it, he just turned his head and spat then turned his head back like it was just what people do.
It happens, you identify with a group of people, any group of people and you get the good and the bad. There will always be people in your group that give everyone else in the group a bad name. Best thing to do is be good. That's simple enough, ain't it?
To Which I answered, "All of them."
And he says, "Well that's kind of ambiguous, ain't it."
The coolest part, and I couldn't have imagined it better, right after he said that, he spit. He wasn't looking where it was going, whether or not someone might step in it, he just turned his head and spat then turned his head back like it was just what people do.
It happens, you identify with a group of people, any group of people and you get the good and the bad. There will always be people in your group that give everyone else in the group a bad name. Best thing to do is be good. That's simple enough, ain't it?