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What Happened to Southern Hospitality

October 18th, 2011 by

Being born and raised right here in Arkansas, I’ve always had a lot of pride at how the rest of the country tends to think of us. I had someone from Iowa once tell me, “It’s so strange to me how you can be on line at the store around here (yes, they say ON line, not IN line) and out of no where some person you’ve never seen before will strike up a conversation with you. It must be a Southern thing…”

That conversation took place many years ago, and as I stand in line at stores today, I wonder how things have changed so rapidly. Are people really less polite today than they have ever been in the past?

I’ve taken this question and put it to the test as of late, being very deliberate in my quest to find out if most people really are leaning towards the inhospitable side of life.

I have noted a couple of happenings that I felt our community could relate to.

1. If you frequent any place often enough, you will, undoubtedly, come across a checker or clerk that obviously wishes they were anywhere but there. Especially with you.

2. From fast food workers to grocery store checkers – making eye contact with you and smiling is apparently not a priority in the customer-appreciation department.

Now, I’ve also noted some other things…

1. If you frequent any place often enough, you will absolutely find that there are many friendly, polite, eager-to-please employees.

2. These employees go out of their way to seem upbeat, positive, and happy every day at work. I’m sure their lives are imperfect, but they put on a happy face anyway.

3. Employees aren’t the only rude people in stores… have you ever stopped for a good, long while to see how customers treat not only each other, but the workers? Now that’s an eye-opener!

We as individuals can often become very small-sighted in our daily activities. It’s all about us, our time, our energy, our work, and how we feel we should be treated. I wonder if rudeness isn’t the real issue at hand in our current culture… but selfishness.

As a small experiment, I branched out of my comfort zone a bit in my most frequently shopped stores. I have my favorite few “checkers” at the grocery store. I will stand in line and wait longer just to have them ring me up, because I know they will be friendly. Many of them know not only me now, but my entire family, and genuinely ask, “Oh! How are you all today?” For the sake of “research” I took the unbeaten path and headed to the “Oh no… not this guy” check-out lines.

Instead of focusing only on how the employees were treating the customers, I took a step back and watched the interactions as a whole. No one seemed to want to speak, no one wanted to look up from what they were focused on to give a quick smile. As a “people person,” this was very odd to me.

Each time I would make my way to the conveyer belt, (with my insane amount of items, when I only went in for toilet paper…) I would gear up for that awkward moment I knew was coming.

Instead of letting the checker’s grim expression put me into the “ugh, another rude person” mindset, I decided to be as annoyingly happy as I could on that given day, and say a good ol’ southern, “Hello!”

What happened many times after that was quite amazing. They actually looked up, and said hello in return. Sure, many times it was a half-hearted attempt on their part, but a starting point none-the-less.

From there, a simple “How’s your day been so far? You guys seem really busy!” by me tended to spark up a conversation. A short, sweet, “Hey, I’m a person, you’re a person, we should care a bit about each other,” talk.

I felt a shift in the mood of the checkers almost every time. They spend all of their work days having to be “on” for hundreds of people. Asking a hundred people in a row “how are you?” and never having one sincerely ask you the same question, would likely be draining.

By now, you might be asking, “What’s the moral of this story?”

The moral is this: The Golden Rule of treat people how you would want people to treat you should be applied to each of us.

We as customers want to be treated with respect and appreciation. I would have to assume that all employees simply want the same treatment in return.

I can’t help but wonder what would happen if all of MLive’s readers made it their personal mission to spend an entire week, month, or year focusing on being incredibly nice to all service workers in our city. Instead of being angry because “I’m not being treated the right way,” or “Why doesn’t this store care how rude their employees are,” perhaps we could take matters into our own hands; combating rudeness with kindness.

“Be the change you want to see in the world.” – Mahatma Gandhi .

Choose another article

Newer article: Another Local Resident Arrested While Their Home Burns

Older article: Arrested 3 Times in 1 Day

7 Responses to “What Happened to Southern Hospitality”

  1. Lee Ann James says:

    Great challenge! This will definitely change my perspective as I make the first of my twenty weekly visits to Walmart today. Thank you for writing an article that made me turn the microscope on myself for a change!

  2. chris bradley says:

    Face it,that was the old days and we dont live in Mayberry,The way these kids are acting these days it might only get worse.

  3. Linda Davis says:

    Great idea! We all have our own agendas and things that we must get done, but it never hurts to be polite and caring when folks are doing their best to do a job for us. Thanks for the reminder, Mandy.

  4. SMH says:

    I sooo love this article!!! It’s actually good for the soul. If people would actually take the time out to do this or practice this the world or town would be a better place. Me personlly, strive to be the best person i can be. I also think it’s part of one’s up-bringing too that’s has alot to do with one’s personality/attitude. I thank God i was brought up in a great home with lots of loving people surrounding me. My parents both are great people’s person and my grandparents were also great people’s person. I’ve been living in Dallas, TX for about 8 -9 yrs now and omg you can really tell the difference in the hositality, not good at all. I know im a people’s person and the first thing i get ask when i strike a conversation with someone out the blue….”Your not from around here or your not from Texas are you?” I proudly say NO…im from a little small town name Monticello, Arkansas!! I love that good ole Southern Hospitality when i come home and hate to leave it because you can’t find that out here in Dallas, TX NOWHERE!!!!! So this is a great and wonderful article for all, let’s stop all this selfishness, silliness, and ignorance and treat people the way you would like to be treated, if they don’t treat you the same, then let God handle them…it’s not your job to punish or judge anyone…It’s all left up to GOD!!!

  5. Recia says:

    Mayberry? Nope sorry, if you go to North Ar you will find tons of happy to help you employees; ones that speak & smile.

    The staff at our local chains could take a lesson on being cordial from that sweet girl at Taco Bell. You can tell from her voice on the drive thru that she’s grinning!

  6. SMH says:

    @ Chris Bradley, no this is not Mayberry and no we don’t live in the old days, but the parents should teach these kids manners and personality. It all starts at home, of course you may have some strays or one who has been peer pressured, but if the parents teach these kids then for one you wouldn’t have peer pressure, the kids would know better. But hey peer pressure is all around us. But we also need to take a very close look at ourselves too, so there is chance for change, don’t ever give up on change!! Good Day:)

  7. Loving says:

    At Recia I agree!! Taco Bell also has wonderful workers. Just about all of them are so nice. Wish we could have workers like that everywhere especially Wendys.

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