March 13, 2009

  • Freed from the fear of tackiness

    Has the concept of “tackiness” been just completely wiped out of our culture?
    In
    my youth, it seems like I spent a lot of my time worrying about whether
    or not something was “tacky.” Now that I’m eligible to join AARP, the
    concern about tackiness rarely crosses my mind.

    Maybe it was just
    living in the Deep South. Maybe other parts of the country just aren’t
    as concerned about avoiding tackiness as I was in my growing-up years,
    being raised by two expatriate Mississippians, and later in my college
    and younger-adult years living in the Magnolia State myself.

    Mama
    and Daddy had both been raised in what would be considered “genteel”
    Southern homes, where good table manners were stressed and linen
    napkins and sterling silver flatware were part of daily life. Having
    each graduated from Ole Miss, where they had lived in the rule-bound
    Greek culture of the Fifties, and then living the etiquette-bound lives
    of a U. S. Naval officer and wife, they were very aware of the dictates
    of polite society. Neither of my parents were the least bit snobbish or
    snooty, but they were products of their upbringing and culture, and
    they each had firm ideas about the “nice way to do things.”

    Our
    family ate dinner together at the dining room table most nights. We
    always enjoyed visiting with each other at the table, but we were
    taught never to talk with our mouths full, and we were encouraged to
    put our forks down after each bite, and to carefully place our knife
    and fork across the top of our plate when we were finished. We kept our
    napkins — and our left hands — in our laps.

    Putting the ketchup
    bottle or the mayonnaise jar on the table was tacky, and was just not
    done except in the most hurried-up, emergency situations. Mama would
    spoon relish or mayonnaise into a little dish and put it on the table.
    We learned not to butter our rolls with the butter knife, but to scoop
    some butter up out of the dish with the butter knife and put it on the
    edge of our dinner plate (my grandmothers used bread-and-butter
    plates), and butter our roll with our own dinner knife. Mama did break
    with our grandparents’ family tradition and stooped to using paper
    napkins, but with five kids and no household help to iron the napkins,
    our grandmothers didn’t blame her.

    The concept of not being tacky
    encompassed not only table manners, but almost every area of life. For
    example, tattoos, especially for a girl, were so tacky they were off
    the chart. My daddy even thought pierced ears were not for “nice
    girls.” As the oldest of his four daughters, I was the one who asked
    first if I could get my ears pierced, probably when I was about 14. He
    grinned and told me I could only get my ears pierced if I got a tattoo
    first, which in those days was a totally outlandish and horrifying
    idea, so I knew he didn’t mean it. The only people we knew who had
    tattoos were older Navy enlisted men — certainly not teenage girls.

    It
    was okay for children to go barefooted when we were at home or playing
    in the yard, but for a child to go to the grocery store or anywhere but
    the swimming pool barefooted was tacky.

    When I went down to Columbus
    at age 17 as a freshman at Mississippi State College for Women in 1973,
    I learned a whole new set of rules of propriety. We were not allowed to
    walk around campus with our hair rolled up. We could smoke in our dorm
    rooms — and I’m not proud to say I burned through a whole lot of
    Virginia Slims Light Menthols in those days — and we could smoke
    outside on the campus, but the rules said we had to be sitting down,
    not walking around with a lit cigarette. So my well-groomed friends and
    I would sit down on the curb under one of the ancient magnolia trees
    and fire up a cigarette anytime the urge hit, and for some reason, that
    WASN’T tacky.

    Most of us “’W’ girls” had been raised by Mississippi
    mamas, and as hard as we tried to be cool, we still couldn’t get past
    the major rules that were tattooed into our genetic code. We were so
    terrified of being tacky, you couldn’t pay us to wear white shoes
    before Easter or after Labor Day. If we had on a skirt or a dress, we
    had on pantyhose — it was REAL tacky not to wear stockings. At least we
    were a little more liberated than most of our own mothers and all of
    grandmothers, who were still under the impression that a lady wore a
    girdle at all times, no matter if it was 104 swelteringly humid degrees
    outside.

    And for goodness sake, wearing pants to Sunday morning
    church would have been the tackiest thing we could imagine. Up until
    the 90s, we were all wearing heels and our best dresses  — and of
    course, stockings — to the First Methodist Church. I can still remember
    my shock the first time I saw an out-of-town visitor at a church
    funeral wearing a dark pantsuit. A lady wearing pants to church! Lawdy,
    Miss Scarlett.

    We’ve come a long way, Baby. Most of the time these
    days, I live my life free of the burdens of being worried about
    tackiness, but I’m not sure whether that’s a good thing, or a loss. We
    use paper napkins at our house with impunity. I’ve been known to put
    the ketchup bottle on the table (forgive me, Poppy). I wear pants to
    church all the time, and sometimes even jeans.

     I even finally got my ears pierced — but no tattoos for me, Daddy, I promise!

    By Celia DeWoody
    Published March 11, 2009 in the Harrison (Ark.) Daily Times
    Copyright CPI, Inc. 2009





Comments (7)

  • I still would have a hard time wearing white before Easter and after Labor Day.  Tacky is still tacky and so many things today are just that and should be labeled as such.  I am so thankful that I didn't get into the "girdle" thing.  I don't think some of these older women could function without one now.  Their backs are probably not strong enough to hold them up!

    I never have gone out in curlers either.  But I sure do wear pants for almost everything now.  It is too cold in MO to have much leg exposed in winter now.  My arthritis protests! 

    So much of the language people use is tacky.  Most even on tv news programs, murder good English.

    No one seems to write thank you notes.  That was always drilled into me.

    Times do change and we change with them but some things will always remain tacky.

  • At the high school so many things are normal that i (same generation as you, although a yankee) woulld consider tacky.  And the language the kids use -- I tell them that when I was young, "good girls' didn't use cuss words, and boys didn't use them in front of girls.... and tacky is now the "norm" in so many areas of dress and conduct!  Love you, Gerrie

  • Recognizing 'tacky' is a lost art.

  • Interesting.  I didn't have "tacky" growing up.  But much of what you categorize that way seems to be manners.  It's tough to get kids today to pay attention to manners, because none of their friends give a rip.  Just little things are hard.  My wife's current battle with all our sons is to put their napkin in their lap.  Also, to get them to stop putting huge chunks of food in their mouth.  They treat her with politely deaf ears.

    You do describe a more genteel time, growing up. 

  • Until I got to 5th grade, girls wouldn't been seen dead at school in pants. We used paper napkins but I do remember using the good china and crystal goblets when we had company, We got dressed up for holiday dinners, my family still does.  Hubbys doesn't.  I don't like sweat pants for Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner, that's TACKY or even Sunday dinner for that matter.  Great post.  Dawn

  • I wonder if we haven't sacrificed some civility and common sense along the way to "doing our own thing."  No one knows anymore what to wear to any event.  Children grow up having eaten food mostly with their hands and have difficulty managing a knife and fork.  Many don't even know what a napkin is for, paper or otherwise.  And if I see another pierced navel in the mall, I think I will scream!  There must be a happy medium in all things.  I am more than ready for the pendulum to swing back. -April

  • It's a puzzle, isn't it, the habits or rules that survive and those that don't?  Some are so much with us we do them without thought...  but sitting to the table for a family meal [apart from the odd time or two..]  still seems so important for literally seeing eye to eye and talking about things.  Reading this has certainly made me think!

    P

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